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socklessinside

JAX

me all the time

104
posts
752
followers
974
following

until next time


3
1 weeks ago


until next time


3
1 weeks ago

or something


78
3
3 weeks ago

or something


78
3
3 weeks ago

or something


78
3
3 weeks ago

or something


78
3
3 weeks ago

words words ambiguity more words


45
1 months ago

1000 Whispers From Our Future: Post Show Spirit Flower

One of my favorite videos I created in collaboration with @pat.waves for his Audium residency this winter. What an absolute joy to share these beautiful projections with everyone that came to the shows. Enjoy this excerpted version of the piece.

Shot & Edited by me :P
Sound Design by Pat Mesiti-Miller


3
1
2 months ago


Experiments with stop motion and teeth and filters and gloves and magic and god

#stopmotion #decay


3
3
3 months ago

eroded by time as nature intended

ink transfer on biopolymer 10”h x 8.5”w
made sometime in 2024 i think


56
3
3 months ago

eroded by time as nature intended

ink transfer on biopolymer 10”h x 8.5”w
made sometime in 2024 i think


56
3
3 months ago

big if true [true]


26
1
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago


This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago


This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

This is an imperfect post. I picked some of Larry’s least favorite photos. The crop ratios are messed up. The videos aren’t pre-edited. Larry knew the first image was my favorite photo I’ve taken of him. It made it onto one of our mail-out postcards and I had it hung up on the cork board behind my computer. He’d comment on it from time to time. So would I. The thing about being a photographer and having someone you love pass is you realize you’re behind the camera more times than you’re in front of it. I can’t find any pictures of Larry and I together, but in every photo i took of him, we were. Telling people he was my boss always felt weirdly formal in a way I knew we didn’t exactly operate. The ShadowLight office is in a room in his house. “I’ll be in at 9:30”, I’d say. “Come at 11”, he’d respond. No!! I’d show up early anyway and he’d still be asleep in his bed. He’d make us breakfast, lunch, and sometimes when I stayed late enough he’d share dinner. He’d take bites of my sandwich if it looked good to him. Larry and ShadowLight have spoiled me rotten with the most wonderful job, community, and friendships i didn’t even think I could ask for. I don’t know how to express the pain of this loss because I’m still processing it, as I’m sure we all are. I’ve seen Larry a few days out of every week for the past 5 years and now he’s gone. I didn’t know who he was before meeting him. I didn’t know anything about shadow theater. Over the years I’ve learned of his literal international reach. There are people all over the world who can point to this man’s kindness, creativity, and spark as a source of inspiration that they live and work by. He was a polyglot. He was still learning to play clarinet at 81. He had books mailed to his house weekly. I’m rambling. A light has gone out and the world is mourning. Larry I love you. I miss you so much and I’ll miss you forever. Thank you for seeing me. Thank you for welcoming me into your life and your home. I hope it’s beautiful on the other side. “The fighting has ended, but the story lives on.”


94
8
3 months ago

1000 Whispers Q&A recap ✨✨✨✨
Thanks everyone who came out! Was an absolute joy talking with you all :D
Artist talk Q&A pt II with @socklessinside at @audiumsf 01/09/26

Camera: @ysomal
🎵: by pat


109
9
4 months ago

Visuals for 1000 Whispers -> Working with @socklessinside on these projections was so fun. Jax is so creative!! ✨✨✨ We filmed with drones and cameras to capture the concrete clipped with resistance and took a trip to a special nature place where I have been reconnecting with the land and spirit over the last year. When jax put together the spirit flower slide (3)🪻and pressed play forreal i gasped - just look at those colors! For me, this is the materialization of spirit into physical form, from the ether into earth, through which all life exists.

These works interact with the sculptures and flow in a cycle through the space.
The sound design tells the story too -> FUCK !CE!

We’ll be q&a talking after tonights showat @audiumsf hope to see u!! ✨🌀✨


100
5
4 months ago

Visuals for 1000 Whispers -> Working with @socklessinside on these projections was so fun. Jax is so creative!! ✨✨✨ We filmed with drones and cameras to capture the concrete clipped with resistance and took a trip to a special nature place where I have been reconnecting with the land and spirit over the last year. When jax put together the spirit flower slide (3)🪻and pressed play forreal i gasped - just look at those colors! For me, this is the materialization of spirit into physical form, from the ether into earth, through which all life exists.

These works interact with the sculptures and flow in a cycle through the space.
The sound design tells the story too -> FUCK !CE!

We’ll be q&a talking after tonights showat @audiumsf hope to see u!! ✨🌀✨


100
5
4 months ago

Visuals for 1000 Whispers -> Working with @socklessinside on these projections was so fun. Jax is so creative!! ✨✨✨ We filmed with drones and cameras to capture the concrete clipped with resistance and took a trip to a special nature place where I have been reconnecting with the land and spirit over the last year. When jax put together the spirit flower slide (3)🪻and pressed play forreal i gasped - just look at those colors! For me, this is the materialization of spirit into physical form, from the ether into earth, through which all life exists.

These works interact with the sculptures and flow in a cycle through the space.
The sound design tells the story too -> FUCK !CE!

We’ll be q&a talking after tonights showat @audiumsf hope to see u!! ✨🌀✨


100
5
4 months ago

Visuals for 1000 Whispers -> Working with @socklessinside on these projections was so fun. Jax is so creative!! ✨✨✨ We filmed with drones and cameras to capture the concrete clipped with resistance and took a trip to a special nature place where I have been reconnecting with the land and spirit over the last year. When jax put together the spirit flower slide (3)🪻and pressed play forreal i gasped - just look at those colors! For me, this is the materialization of spirit into physical form, from the ether into earth, through which all life exists.

These works interact with the sculptures and flow in a cycle through the space.
The sound design tells the story too -> FUCK !CE!

We’ll be q&a talking after tonights showat @audiumsf hope to see u!! ✨🌀✨


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5
4 months ago

TONIGHT: an after-show Artist Q&A with Pat Mesiti-Miller @pat.waves in conversation with X Medianoche @experimentsatmidnight ~ there will be space for questions from the audience as well ~~ join us!

This weekend, 1000 Whispers From Our Future performance continues sounding~~ Live & evolving ~~~( ( ( The show changes every performance, so join us for more whispers and visions if you need another dose of liberation sonified ) ) ) Lobby install: in collaboration with visual artists @socklessinside @ysomal

December 4, 2025 through Janurary 3, 2026
~~~ every Thurs/Fri/Sat (except Dec 25-27)
~ Doors 7:30pm; show 8:00pm ~

audium.org or bio for 🎟️

~~~see you soon~~~~~~~

#bayarea #bayareaevents #sanfrancisco #sfbayarea #bayareaartist #soundart


32
4
5 months ago

Just a lil snippet of some of my visual work up at Audium SF created in collaboration with Pat Mesiti-Miller for his spatial sound performance & art installation, 1000 Whispers From Our Future. If you haven’t been it yet, there are six more shows!! Tickets in my bio.


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3
5 months ago


Przeglądaj historie na Instagramie w tajemnicy

Instagram Story Viewer to proste narzędzie, które pozwala na ciche oglądanie i zapisywanie historii Instagram, filmów, zdjęć lub IGTV. Dzięki tej usłudze możesz pobrać zawartość i cieszyć się nią offline, kiedy chcesz. Jeśli znajdziesz coś interesującego na Instagramie, co chcesz sprawdzić później, lub chcesz oglądać historie pozostając anonimowym, nasz Viewer jest idealny dla Ciebie. Anonstories oferuje doskonałe rozwiązanie do ukrywania swojej tożsamości. Instagram po raz pierwszy uruchomił funkcję historii w sierpniu 2023 roku, która szybko została zaadoptowana przez inne platformy ze względu na jej angażujący, czasowo ograniczony format. Historie pozwalają użytkownikom dzielić się szybkimi aktualizacjami, czy to zdjęciami, filmami, czy selfie, wzbogaconymi o tekst, emotikony lub filtry, i są widoczne tylko przez 24 godziny. Ten ograniczony czas sprawia, że historie cieszą się dużym zaangażowaniem w porównaniu do zwykłych postów. W dzisiejszym świecie historie to jeden z najpopularniejszych sposobów komunikacji na mediach społecznościowych. Jednak gdy oglądasz historię, twórca może zobaczyć Twoje imię na liście oglądających, co może stanowić problem związany z prywatnością. Co jeśli chcesz przeglądać historie, nie będąc zauważonym? Tutaj Anonstories staje się przydatne. Umożliwia oglądanie publicznej zawartości Instagram bez ujawniania tożsamości. Wystarczy wpisać nazwę użytkownika profilu, który Cię interesuje, a narzędzie wyświetli ich najnowsze historie. Cechy Anonstories Viewer: - Anonimowe przeglądanie: Oglądaj historie bez pojawiania się na liście oglądających. - Brak konta: Oglądaj publiczną zawartość bez logowania się na konto Instagram. - Pobieranie zawartości: Zapisuj dowolną zawartość historii bezpośrednio na swoje urządzenie do użytku offline. - Przeglądaj najważniejsze: Dostęp do Instagram Highlights, nawet po 24 godzinach. - Monitorowanie repostów: Śledź reposty lub poziom zaangażowania w historię na prywatnych profilach. Ograniczenia: - Narzędzie działa tylko z publicznymi kontami; konta prywatne pozostają niedostępne. Korzyści: - Przyjazne dla prywatności: Oglądaj zawartość Instagram bez bycia zauważonym. - Proste i łatwe: Brak potrzeby instalacji aplikacji lub rejestracji. - Ekskluzywne narzędzia: Pobieraj i zarządzaj zawartością w sposób, którego Instagram nie oferuje.

Zalety Anonstories

Oglądaj IG Stories Prywatnie

Śledź aktualizacje na Instagramie dyskretnie, chroniąc swoją prywatność i pozostając anonimowym.


Prywatny Viewer na Instagramie

Oglądaj profile i zdjęcia anonimowo za pomocą Prywatnego Viewera.


Bezpłatny Story Viewer

To darmowe narzędzie pozwala oglądać historie Instagram anonimowo, zapewniając, że Twoja aktywność pozostaje ukryta przed twórcą historii.

Najczęściej zadawane pytania

 
Anonimowość

Anonstories pozwala użytkownikom oglądać historie na Instagramie bez informowania twórcy.

 
Kompatybilność z urządzeniami

Funkcjonuje płynnie na iOS, Android, Windows, macOS i nowoczesnych przeglądarkach takich jak Chrome i Safari.

 
Bezpieczeństwo i Prywatność

Priorytetem jest bezpieczne, anonimowe przeglądanie bez konieczności logowania się.

 
Brak rejestracji

Użytkownicy mogą oglądać publiczne historie, wpisując nazwę użytkownika – bez konieczności zakładania konta.

 
Obsługiwane formaty

Pobiera zdjęcia (JPEG) i filmy (MP4) z łatwością.

 
Koszt

Usługa jest bezpłatna.

 
Konta prywatne

Treści z prywatnych kont mogą być dostępne tylko dla obserwujących.

 
Użycie plików

Pliki są przeznaczone do użytku osobistego lub edukacyjnego i muszą być zgodne z przepisami dotyczącymi praw autorskich.

 
Jak to działa

Wpisz publiczną nazwę użytkownika, aby oglądać lub pobrać historie. Usługa generuje bezpośrednie linki do zapis