I stumbled upon the 1976 Italian animated film Alegro Non Troppo while working at Braken library's audio visual section twenty years after it being made in 1996. I remember feeling like I had found a great treasure when watching it for the first time. The film animates six pieces of classical music, which is why it's often compared to Disney's Fantasia. But it also fluctuates from color to black and white, and from comedy to tragedy. A classic.
Michael C. McMillen is a mixed-media artist based in Santa Monica, California, whose installations and sculptures made out of recyclable materials, or as he calls them "the cast-offs of our material society," play around the themes of time, change, and illusion as a means to create what he refers to as "visual spiritual poetry." It's very interesting work with a magic of its own. The two friends I've brought with me to view his work have referred to his pieces as post-apocalyptic. I see it more as a beautiful display of decay. They had a similar eerie effect on me as when I visited a ghost town of the Gold Rush era, here in California, for the first time. Like a glimpse at the ancient ruins of the future. To fully appreciate his installations you really must experience them. You can view his work in person at an upcoming exhibit at the Oakland Museum of California from April 16, 2011 to August 14, 2011, entitled Train of Thought .