
O-R-G: Three Times (in Blue and Yellow) by Karel Martens
NB: Please note this is a digital product. Once your order is processed, you will be emailed a PDF with install instructions. Should you desire hard mailing, please include the instruction with your order.
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Dutch graphic designer Karel Martens has made clocks for years. Starting somewhere around 1968, Karel attached new faces toĀ existing clock mechanismsĀ to produce graphic compositions, which by their nature, are constantly changing.Ā This screensaverĀ works the same way.
Based onĀ a wall clockĀ designed by Karel forĀ his exhibition at P!Ā (New York), the screensaver software uses three yellow and blue spinning disks to display the hours, minutes, and seconds of the current time. It does very little, other thanĀ spin contentedly. But, on the way, the passing of time produces a collection of graphic arrangements as so many discrete moments.
Recently, it was suggested that Karel's persistent interest in clocks was a symptom of working on his own for many years and that a clock might just be a symbol for āthe long gestation period of independent ideas.ā
(Text courtesy O-R-G.)
Original: $25.00
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Description
NB: Please note this is a digital product. Once your order is processed, you will be emailed a PDF with install instructions. Should you desire hard mailing, please include the instruction with your order.
******
Dutch graphic designer Karel Martens has made clocks for years. Starting somewhere around 1968, Karel attached new faces toĀ existing clock mechanismsĀ to produce graphic compositions, which by their nature, are constantly changing.Ā This screensaverĀ works the same way.
Based onĀ a wall clockĀ designed by Karel forĀ his exhibition at P!Ā (New York), the screensaver software uses three yellow and blue spinning disks to display the hours, minutes, and seconds of the current time. It does very little, other thanĀ spin contentedly. But, on the way, the passing of time produces a collection of graphic arrangements as so many discrete moments.
Recently, it was suggested that Karel's persistent interest in clocks was a symptom of working on his own for many years and that a clock might just be a symbol for āthe long gestation period of independent ideas.ā
(Text courtesy O-R-G.)





















