Thursday, September 15, 2011

The Art of Mario Mariotti

In going through photographs with my mother, I saw she had downloaded some striking images of hands painted to look like animals. These are the work of an Italian artist, Mario Marriotti (1936-1997), with photography by Roberto Marchiori.

Mario Mariotti was an experimental and conceptual artist who lived and worked in Florence. He began to experiment with painting his own hands in the late 1960's.  Animani, which was published in 1980, shows the colorful representations of animals Marriotti created with his hand art. Subsequent books include Umani, Rimani, Humands, Hanimations, Hand Games, and Hands Off.

Photographs of Mariotti's work also were on display at an exhibition, Animani, from November 29, 2009 through April 11, 2010 at the Instituto degli Innocenti in Florence.  This exhibition was curated by Stefano Filipponi, Francesca Mariotti, Gianni Pozzi and Andrea Rauch, and included workshops showing children how to re-create Mariotti's hand characters

In learning about Mariotti, I discovered a collaborative art project he organized in which the citizens of Florence were invited to submit images which were projected onto the exterior of the Santo Spirito during a performing arts festival.  You can see some of the striking results in  Santo Spirito Projections at the website Fictional Cities.

For your enjoyment, I've provided a slideshow of photographs by Roberto Marchiori of Marriotti's body art.



Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Astrophotography with FITS Liberator

Modern astronomical telescopes save their raw data in a format known as FITS (Flexible Image Transport System). The colorful images we see from space are created by transforming FITS imaging data into a standard graphical format, such as TIFF, to create a set of files that can be imported into an image editing application such as Photoshop or GIMP. If you know how to use image editing software, you can create your own "pretty pictures" of astronomical subjects by obtaining FITS files (available from a number of sources) and using the FITS Liberator to transform them into TIFF images.

FITS Liberator, developed by ESA/ESO/NASA, was originally a plug-in for Adobe Photoshop.  With the release of version 3, the open-source FITS Liberator has become a stand-alone application, with versions available for both Windows and Mac OS X.

Using FITS data I obtained from NASA's virtual observatory, SkyView, I created the above image of M51, also known as the Whirlpool Galaxy.  There are no doubt better images of M51 around, but this one is uniquely mine. Creating it was a fun learning experience.

You can learn more about FITS data and how to obtain it from The FITS Support Office
at NASA/GSFC
and from Image Processing Resources for Astronomy Teaching by by the Astronomy Education Committee of the American Association of Physics Teachers.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Google Custom Search Engines

Google provides tools for creating a Customized Search Engine (CSE) that can be embedded in blogs and other websites to provide specialized searches. In this blog, for example, I might wish to provide an Astronomy search that would respond to a query for "tadpole" with a list of web pages providing information about the galaxy by that that rather than web pages about immature frogs.

Blogger has a Search Box gadget that can be configured to search over a list of links, such as the Space Exploration links listed on the side panel of this blog. I could use that to create a search that would query only the websites in the list, and this might give the kind of results I wanted in most cases. If I wanted to have a search feature like this within a post rather than on the sidebar, I could do that quickly and easily by visiting the webpage for Google's on-the-fly CSE to find code that I can add to my posting using the HTML editor.

The Blogger search box and the on-the-fly CSE are both limited to searching linked sites. With a little more effort, it's possible to create a CSE that is more finely tuned. Using Google's CSE wizard lets you create a gadget that you can embed using an automatically generated code snippet. You can later manage your CSE, editing and refining as you gain experience with its workings. Using this method, I've created a CSE for an Astronomy search and provided a gadget below that you can use to try that CSE. I haven't yet gone much beyond what the wizard creates, so you may or may not find the kind of information you're looking for. To see how it works, try searching on "tadpole," "egg," and "mice" -- and have fun comparing the orange links returned by the CSE with the sponsored links that appear above and to the right of those.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Searching Google+

When a Google+ post is public, that post is available on the Internet for anyone to see.  This allows public posts and their comments to be found using a search engine.

Suppose Ann Able adds a comment about Yosemite Falls to a post that Bob Baker puts on Google+ asking about places to hike and camp in California.  Later on Ann wants to find that comment.  If Ann remembers it was Bob who made the post, she can go into Bob's profile and look through his posts until she finds the one that includes her comment.  But suppose Ann doesn't remember who made the original post -- is there a way she can search Google+ to find her comment?  Yes there is, provided that Bob's post was public.  Using the Google search engine, Ann can enter a query that looks like this:

site:plus.google.com "Ann Able" "Yosemite Falls"

This will result in a search across all public posts on Google+ for those that include Ann's name and the keywords she provided.  The search results will show a list of all the public posts and profile pages (a) that people named Ann Able have created, commented on or shared, and (b) that also include the phrase "Yosemite Falls."  If that's a short list, Ann should be able to find her comment easily.

This same technique can be used to search for public posts and comments on a specific topic.  For example, if Ann is interested in what people are saying in public posts on Google+ about earthquakes, she might use the search query:

site:plus.google.com "earthquake"

Going back to the original example, suppose Ann wants to look at all the comments she's made on Bob's public posts.  So she tries this:

site:plus.google.com "Ann Able" "Bob Baker"

This gives her a listing of all posts and profile pages throughout Google+ that somewhere include the names Ann Able and Bob Baker.  Suppose this turns out to be a long list, in part because there are other people named Ann Able and Bob Baker.  Ann can narrow her search to the posts and profile page of the Bob Baker she knows by using Bob's ID number rather than his name.  To find that number, Ann need only look at the URL for any of Bob's posts or Bob's profile page; the ID number appears in the URL immediately after https://plus.google.com/.

For understandable reasons, these techniques only work for public posts.  Posts that are shared on a limited basis cannot be found in this way, even by those with whom the post was shared.  In the future, Google may provide a way for Google+ users to search both the public and the private posts that have entered their stream, or all the posts they have made, or all the posts they have commented on.  At this time, however, I'm not aware of any way to do these things.