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Brummbaer Albert Hofmann Print (Base Price $500)
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Brummbaer Albert Hofmann Print (Base Price $500)
Code: BAH
Price: $500.00
• This edition of prints was created to help fund MAPS-sponsored
LSD
and psilocybin research as well as to commemorate Albert's
100th birthday. 50% of the profits from the sale
of these prints will go towards this research.
Printed under supervision of the artist in a limited issue of 25, each hand numbered and signed by the artist.
Each print is accompanied with a Certificate of Authenticity.
MAPS and the artist are now offering 25 medium versions of this beautiful painting.
The image size is 18" x 24"
Printed with archival pigment ink either on:
- Acid free - 100% cotton, 310gm watercolor-paper.
- Or on demand: Canvas with a water & UV resistant barrier coating.
Secure shipping included.
About the Artist:
Brummbaer is a German-American digital artist who has done work as an art director, designer, graphic artist, and 3-D modeler. His fine art and underground magazine Germania brought him recognition in Europe during the 1960s, and he orchestrated light shows for musicians such as Frank Zappa and Tangerine Dream. In 1985 the International Synergy Institute in Los Angeles invited Brummbaer to be their artist in residence, and work on their Fairlight CVI computer. Brummbaer began focusing on computer graphics. He created several short computer-generated animations and has done visual effects for a number of popular films. Brummbaer was one of the primary computer animators responsible for the special effects in the Tristar motion picture Johnny Mnemonic. Brummbaer also created an innovative opener for SIGGRAPH's 1995 "Electronic Theater," and has long been a pioneer in the world of digital animation, where he has been noted for his signature hallucinogenic style. In the autumn of 2003 Brummbaer was diagnosed with squamous head and neck cancer. During several months of chemo- and radiation-therapy he wrote the biographical novel On the Street: DXM in 1964 (Or My Best Friend Jesus.) For four years the squamous head and neck cancer has not returned, although now he is inflicted with bladder-cancer. Brummbaer recently completed his second book, What's So Wrong With Love and Peace: 1965-67. To find out more about Brummbaer's work visit his Web site: www.brummbaer.net
And now, here comes Brummbaer to show us how to use the screen for interpersonal communication; how to embrace, fondle, cuddle, snuggle, enliven our brain-exchanges to the level of the high spiritual art of India, China, Tibet, Rome, Egypt, Venice, Berlin. He has sculpted digital pixels into tender,
caressing mind inter-play things.
It is always the artists who blueprint and design the spirit of a culture. The 21st Century is beginning to express itself in the shimmering electronic realities of these digital wizards.
Timothy Leary Nov. 1990 Los Angeles
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