Mountain*7 - for the person with nothing better to do

Jenks Miller and Nicholas Szczepanik – American Gothic

Sunday, January 9. 2011



My review of the excellent new album from Jenks Miller and Nicholas Szczepanik, partly a meditation on the new ruins of America is now up at The Liminal.

I've previously reviewed two of Szczepanik's other releases (The Chiasmus and Dear Dad), and The Invisible Mountain by Jenks Miller's band Horseback.


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Dead planes

Friday, March 12. 2010







Some astounding images of a dead Russian sea plane. (Spotted on a @eleventhvolume tweet).

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The Aesthetics of Abandonment

Thursday, August 20. 2009


Detroit Book Depository


Michigan Central Station


City Hall Subway


Toronto Subway

A couple of great recent galleries on ruins and abandoned buildings. The first, from Web Urbanist is a general look at the increase in ruins and our appreciation of them; the second, from the Infrastructurist site, is a look primarily at abandoned stations and their strong allure.

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The village that died for England...

Thursday, April 16. 2009


Tyneham - closed

Twice I have gone looking for Tyneham, the fabled lost village in the Purbeck Hills of Dorset. The first time we read the maps all wrong and ended up at another 'attraction' - a blue phone box in the middle of nowhere. The second time, a blazing February afternoon, we drove up, up into the chalk ridges, armed with pack-satchels and binoculars. Dorset has a peculiar cut-off feel to it as it is, Purbeck even more so - I feel time fall away when driving or walking there, other older timescales slipping across each other: the deep time of geological shifts, cut into the land in the toothed ridges, the impossible slant of the hills and chasms; the gentle yet ungraspable imprint of near history in the low-lying farms and the destructive clatter of the MOD presence - land claimers and land-shapers in their own way.

On this day the sense of being cut off was heightened by the presence of a heat-haze running deep into the valleys and hovering dense and white above the distant sea. Each ridge seemed a separate floating island of chalk and loam. We'd got directions off a toothy pub landlord and we're by now high on a ridge, scanning the MOD fences for a sign - anything to indicate where Tyneham might be located, crouching. Then, near the top of the next rise, we saw the sign telling us that the range, and the village were 'closed' - access denied. The ghosts of Tyneham were at peace this day and if we trespassed we were liable to get shot or blown up. Mostly I was beset with a kind of poetic tension - the tense urge to set eyes on a village, a village abandoned in full working order, and the feeling that it should remain sealed off, free from greedy prying eyes such as ours. As it was we continued to the top of the rise and tried to see into the appropriate valley, eyes straining to see through Purbeck stone, to see through Purbeck mist. It was an impossibility. It had to remain elusive for now. For ever perhaps.


Tyneham - ruins

The guys at Nothing to See Here however, recently managed to get sight of the place in all its cold-stone glory. In the quiet light of these pictures it isn't eerie or ghosted as I suspected it might be; instead it looks as though it might be waiting - waiting for the return of footfalls and the heavy thrumming weight of life. See for yourself with this Flickr set.

Also, check out Anne's iLike site if you get the chance.

And apropos of not much, I've been thinking about this track an awful lot recently:

Download: Meursault - A General Term

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Ghosts of Neverland

Thursday, February 19. 2009


Ghosts

We haven't had a ruined fairground on here for an age - and this is the ruined fairground that contains all others. If ever a metaphor outgrew itself and monstrously claimed that which it was used to describe then this is it. There isn't much else to say.

A flickr set of the abandoned Neverland fairground.

(spotted at Fantastic Journal)

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Sleepy City sleeps. For a time.

Tuesday, October 21. 2008


DLR. East London 2008

Sleepy City leaves London for Paris.


Paris 2008

Long live Sleepy City...

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Opacity - Riverside Hospital

Friday, September 5. 2008


Curvature

It's been an age since we featured anything from motts over at Opacity - this latest photo set from the abandoned shell of the Riverside Hospital on North Brother Island in New York's East River has some fabulous images.


Buffalo State Hospital, Darkness

For some other examples of his work, see this set of the Buffalo State Hospital.

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