Archive for the ‘Art’ Category

BioBoost!

Tuesday, February 19th, 2013

OMG! Just the other day, Max Factory Japan announced a whole new series of Figma’s, which included such stuff as Avengers, Bruce Lee, Spider Man, dozens of new anime characters and… well, and this guy:

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Yes my friends, a new Guyver figure! And a Figma at that!

It’s like God came down from Heaven to give me an early birthday present πŸ™‚

But the news doesn’t stop there! I also recently read that the long-delayed Alcanfel bio-fighter model kit has not been canceled and will one day be released. Here’s a shot of it, as displayed at Winter Fest 2008:

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He’s (one of) the ‘big bads’ of Guyver, and I’d love a good kit of him. Here’s what he looks like in the series:

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All this excitement makes me want to spring $270 for the Imakarum Miribalis kit, which is the only bio-fighter I don’t have. Here’s a shot:

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It’s available on Amazon right now. But $270?!?! That’s crazy isn’t it? It’s more than double what I paid for Pluqstahl (almost six years ago now!).

But my birthday is fast approaching…

My New Novel!

Thursday, February 7th, 2013

Here’s the cover of my upcoming novel:

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I was going to call it Apotheosis Of The Machine-Brain but that name is apparently already taken πŸ˜›

New Year’s Resolution?

Saturday, February 2nd, 2013

When I returned from Australia, for some reason I started becoming very aware of the piles of stuff that filled my house. Books to be read. Games to be played. Media to be consumed.

When I was young there was so much I wanted but couldn’t have. Now I can have it all, but – especially in the last year – have been accumulating it faster than I can enjoy it. The reasons are varied (work, World of Warcraft, age), but I’ve never purchased anything I didn’t really want to read, watch or play and, by Jove, it was time to do just that!

So, my first ever (?) New Years resolution: Consume more media!

How much am I talking about here? I will preface by saying we all have little ‘to read’, ‘to watch’ and (some of us) ‘to play’ piles. For instance, I know for a fact quite a few of you – SFL, AW, BS – certainly do. But mine had gotten quite large. As in very large. And it’s time to climb them.

I’ll revisit this resolution at the end of this year, but here’s the scope of what I’m tackling. All of this just describes what is in the house right now, not anything I expect to obtain in the next few weeks or months…

Books

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That’s the English version of Monster Hunter Illustrations, which came out over a year ago and is jam-packed with all sorts of fascinating MH art. It’s on my pile with two additional japanese MH books including the sequel (!) and a different art book on TCG art. These share a shelf with no less than four additional art books (including Genzoman, Queen’s Blade and the recently released Hyrule Historia Zelda art book). I could probably look through all these in a long afternoon.

But that’s hardly all. There are some 30+ volumes of manga (Bleach, Bakuman amongst others), 16 novels (including some purchased five years ago when a local bookstore went out of business), 2 academic texts (one, on cryptozoology, is almost 800 pages long), about 50 comics and 20 odd magazines. This list doesn’t even include the approximately 100+ gamebooks from a collection of over 200 that I haven’t played through.

How much of this can I read in one year?

Movies and TV

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I got the above for Christmas. It’s the long-awaited (by me, for one) second full Ultraman series finally translated into English. And it’s 19 hours long. It sits on a shelf right now next to DVD collections of all 4 series of Lexx (over 40 hours in total) and the first three seasons of the Keroro Gunso TV anime (20+ hours). Add to this list 22 more anime DVDs or Blu-Rays adding to more than 35 hours (including the full series of Claymore) and about another 28 hours of UK TV series collections and 30 more hours of (sometimes untranslated) Japanese or Korean series and I start to wonder realistically how we could watch all this in a single year? I haven’t even considered the movies…

Games

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I currently have, unplayed and in most cases still shrinkwrapped:
– 8 PS3 games (including Hyperdimension Neptunia 2 and Resonance Of Fate)
– 6 Nintendo DS games (including Pokemon Conquest and Shepherd’s Crossing 2)
– 17 (!) PSP games, almost all RPGs, many of which look great (including God Eater Burst and Ragnarok Tactics)
– 11 3DS games, many of which were Christmas gifts (including Theatrythym Final Fantasy and Paper Mario Sticker Star)

That’s 42 games on my ‘to play’ list. With some embarrassment I’ll reveal I have already preordered about 6 more online, and yet right now much of my gaming time is spent playing Warcraft. I think I’ll have to be more disciplined πŸ™‚

Will I succeed? Can I possibly consume all this media before getting overrun? Also, will I stop buying more until what I have has been enjoyed? I’ll revisit this post at the end of the year, and it will be interesting to see how effective my resolution has been!

Rubber Duck

Saturday, January 12th, 2013

It was an early start yesterday, on the 6:41 am train from Broadmeadow to Sydney.

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As with my previous three train trips, I saw only a single Kangaroo on the trip. Once again the glimpse was fleeting and I was unable to photograph it. Here’s an artists impression:

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I was in Sydney early, and after dropping my stuff at Adams set out for the city. I had an inkling to hit the shops!

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I did the usual places – Kinokuniya, QVB, Pitt Street – before heading to Darling Harbour. There was something there I had to see…

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It’s a 3-storey tall inflatable duck art installation, which is floated in Darling Harbour for the Sydney Festival. I’m lovin it!

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As I got closer to Darling Harbour I began to see signs advertising dugongs at Sydney Aquarium. I’d never seen a dugong, so decided it was worth a look.

The cost was $38, and the first few displays were decidedly underwhelming. I’d been to this aquarium several times before and feared it may have gone off a bit.

My fears were unjustified! The displays are now themed, and it was just that the first set – Australian river fishes – were just a bit drab. As I wandered through the next I was treated to a kelp forest, a sunken ship, a steampunk themed crab and lobster display and a remarkable ray tank:

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And then, the dugongs! Seeing them float around happily almost brought a year to my eye πŸ™‚

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They have two, a male and female, who have been there for three years. They are two of the only six dugongs (a south pacific relative of the manatee) in captivity in the world. They eat 50 kg of lettuce each a day!

They are in one of the giant walk-through tanks at the aquarium, which are submerged under the water level of the Harbour.

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It’s a very peaceful and special way to see the animals.

There is a mural painted on the walls of the ramp leading down to the bottom of the dugong tank. It details one aspect of man’s history with these beasts:

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Sailors jump from a ship pursuing a lovely mermaid…

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But mermaids don’t exist and it’s a dugong!

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But then later on we discover there is a real mermaid after all πŸ™‚

Fancy a real dugong? Well that would be difficult, but the shop sells the next best thing:

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There wasn’t a price tag πŸ™‚

Overall the aquarium was spectacular, and I’m very pleased I visited.

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Changing tack a bit, the above is ‘Dark Escape 4D’, a new light gun shooter I played (for $4 a go!) The game is in 3D (you wear glasses) and has a moving seat, an air gun that blasts your face and even a pulse sensor in the gun handle that makes the gun fail if you panic! It *is* a scary game (you sit enclosed in a dark room), but it’s a bit slow for my taste.

I wandered over to The Star casino, where I would boggle at the variety of machines and how geared to Chinese Tourists they have become. $10 of my hard earned dollars went – in equal portions – into the paired games Ice Horse and Fire Horse, mostly because I was attracted by the pretty fantasy horses galloping through the videos πŸ™‚

A bit later I visited an Uggs shop in which no employees seemed to speak English. Do you think Chinese tourists buy a lot of Uggs:

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I wasn’t there for the shoes though. A stuffed animal had caught my eye:

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Yes it’s real fur, but the price tag scared me away! Will I return?

Two more photos to end this epic post. First, a magazine from 1990 I bought at a comic store:

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And lastly, this…

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Happy New Year!

Monday, December 31st, 2012

Here’s a shot of the foyer of our hotel, the Crowne Plaza:

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It’s a very nice hotel, with massive rooms and comfortable beds! It’s also very close to the CBD, which seems to be one massive shopping center. It was into this tangle I ventured in the early hours searching for breakfast. I found this:

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Yes readers, that’s a fresh from the oven cheese & bacon roll. I would eat 3 of these today alone.

The CBD shopping area is home to a great amount of wonderful graffiti murals and stencils. Here are some examples:

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Our first destination today was the National Gallery, and the Toulouse-Lautrec exhibit which is on display right now.

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Look at AW boulevarding in that photo! The exhibit was impressive, but I have to say I was particular taken by a few other exhibits in the museum. One was this painting by Melville, entitled The Squatters Hut:

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It’s quite large in person, and brighter than the above image suggests. I was especially charmed by the cockatoo! This was one of many wonderful Colonial Australian paintings on exhibit, and the beauty of the collection almost excused the travesty that is the failure to display Norman Lindsay.

This was my lunch:

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After I ate the horribly dry thing shown above we headed to our next destination, the War Memorial.

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This is a remarkable museum that honors all Australians ever killed in war. It is a deeply moving place with more to see that can be seen in any one visit, and a wall of remembrance upon which the names of all fallen Australian soldiers are listed:

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That’s just a small portion of the wall, showing some of the tens of thousands of Australians list in the Great War. The red things are artificial poppies placed there by visitors.

Of all the countless exhibits in the museum the one I find most moving is this photo:

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Australian soldiers took some kangaroos with them to Egypt at the start of the First World War to remind them of home. Ours was a small country then, but we fought alongside England and many, many Australians were killed. The kangaroos survived, and in 1915 were donated to Cairo zoo.

Today is New Year’s Eve, and around 9 we headed to the official celebration in the CBD. Here’s Adam displaying the typical crowd response to the entertainment, which was Johnny “I was famous 20 years ago” Diesel:

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Mercifully his set was brief, and at 9 pm we were treated to a spectacular firework display:

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Tomorrow is a new year. Happy New Year to everyone reading this, and best wishes for the year ahead πŸ™‚