WHAT’S MOVING US

A blog for members to share the art, ideas, and inspirations that move them.

Guest contributor:
Keith Walpole is a writer and musician based in Brooklyn, NY. Alongside his Substack ‘Circles in Space’, he publishes a weekly newsletter, ‘Five Bullets’, which covers everything from art to music to history and science.


Vanessa Hock Vanessa Hock

The Seven Vital, or Creative Principles, Hiram E. Butler, 1887.
+acitythatendures

The Seven Vital, or Creative Principles, Hiram E. Butler, 1887.

+acitythatendures

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Vanessa Hock Vanessa Hock

In lieu of the whole Mercury in Retrograde business, I present a vintage geographical and astronomical clock poster.
John Phillips Emslie, circa 1840.
Source
+acitythatendures

In lieu of the whole Mercury in Retrograde business, I present a vintage geographical and astronomical clock poster.

John Phillips Emslie, circa 1840.

Source

+acitythatendures

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Vanessa Hock Vanessa Hock

wired:

TAMBOPATA, Peru — After six months of speculation, we finally know what’s building these bizarre silk structures in the Amazon: a spider! But its precise identity is still a mystery that scientists are scrambling to solve as I write this.
La…

wired:

TAMBOPATA, Peru — After six months of speculation, we finally know what’s building these bizarre silk structures in the Amazon: a spider! But its precise identity is still a mystery that scientists are scrambling to solve as I write this.

Last week we followed these spider-hunting scientists, led by entomologist Phil Torres, deep into the Amazon rainforest as they attempted to find the tiny silk towers and figure out where they came from. It has not been an easy case to crack.

“With a lot of other weird mysteries, once you make an observation of some sort, spend enough time out there, the pieces kind of fit together,” said Torres, a graduate student at Rice University. “I’m surprised by how difficult this one is to solve.”

The bizarre structures first surfaced on the internet late this summer, when graduate student Troy Alexander posted photos to Reddit and Facebook, hoping that somebody could tell him what the structures were. He had discovered them on a small island near the Tambopata Research Center, deep in the Peruvian Amazon.

Made out of silk, the intricate constructions have two parts: a tall, central tower, and a circular fence that’s about 6 millimeters across. Back then, we asked as many entomologists as we could find, but no one had any idea what the structures were, or what made them. Until now.

[MORE: That time we went to the Amazon to find out what makes these weird web-tower things]

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What’s Moving Us Today

A blog about what’s inspiring us today.


Member Curator of the Week

Paralegal by day, drummer by night, and curious by nature, Keith is typically researching various topics at any given moment. His interests include music, writing, all things creative, and exploring the natural world. Posts will encompass his most recent findings, exhibit visits, and important topics pertaining to creatives today.