Cal is not the reading type, but that book woman keeps visiting. This is the moving story of the Pack Horse Librarians, whose bravery and commitment helped rural children find something wonderful in books.
During an ordinary visit to the library, a young girl pulls out a not-so-ordinary book from the shelves. As she turns the pages in this book about coral reefs, the city around her slips away and she finds herself surrounded by the coral cities of the sea and the mysterious plants and animals that live, hunt, and hide there.
Two hands, they can create everything, but also destroy everything. Hands help a person to achieve everything, without them there would be no books or houses. They need to be protected, since they can help everyone to live. Look at the hands and they will tell you about their owner.
Doggy Dong and Gold fell in love. Gold’s dad kept warning him not to fall in love. He never wanted to listen. Life has beaten him hard because the words from his dad were coming true…
The uprising movement in Syria was stolen by the extremists, this short pixilation Film, tells how the Syrian people's lives turned to black, how their dreams were shattered, and how their future can no longer be thought of. This movie is one minute, but it shows a whole year I lived in the city of Raqqa in 2013, Where everything changed, from revolution and freedom to darkness by the group (ISIS)
A cryptic young creature takes the train from Dublin to Sandycove, confronting ideas of a splintered self-image, loneliness, and being seen in a fundamentally blind world.
Tala Madani (b. 1981, Tehran, Iran) makes paintings and animations whose indelible images bring together wide-ranging modes of critique, prompting reflection on gender, political authority, and questions of who and what gets represented in art
Sorrow is an analog animation in which through black, red and gold ink the internal conflict of a being who tries to inhabit his own house, but how they do not allow themselves to do so. As they try to go about everyday activities, mysterious creatures interrupt everything they intend to do.
Children fall in love with the wonderful characters as they "Know the Numbers." This video was developed as a result of the extraordinary success that Conoce las Letras has had. Children who watch Know the Numbers easily learn the numbers from 0 to 10 in a few days. Know the Numbers is designed to instruct infants and toddlers to numerical characters during the stage when they begin to speak. You'll be amazed at how easily your little ones learn numbers!
Know the Letters is a powerful instrument designed to teach the alphabet to infants and toddlers for an opportune period of time when they begin to speak. A recent study of more than 50 infants and children who watched "Know the Letters" daily resulted in most children gaining full recognition of upper and lowercase letters by the end of two months. Many of them learned in less than two weeks. You will be amazed at how easily your little ones can learn letters!
Both abject through its texture and relatable in its fragility, WETWARE offers hyperreality without the common symptoms of alienation. A seemingly self-sustaining ‘organism’ is generated completely in digital through synthesis without reliance on ’real’ imagery. The resulting image is limitless, perpetually spilling outside itself. Suggesting a feed pulsating beyond a bodily surface or even any bodily context, the work examines digital intimacies while also referencing worship music in its relaxing albeit disorienting sonic composition.
Three cyborg couples enter a newly opened building: the Human Museum. They are confronted with exhibits of humanity: statues of intertwined bodies, anatomical informations, and educational films, reacting emotionally with astonishment, disgust, fear, and curiosity toward the objects in the exhibit. In an inevitable process of machine learning, the six protagonists change during their visit, learning to simulate the rules of arousal and attraction. The pairs are not just the juxtaposition of two cyborgs. Can the machines ever feel what their bodies skillfully mimic: desire?