I once did a long form art where I left a spoiled gallon of milk in my fridge for 4 years, opened it, took a whiff and threw up.
@Spax_8 ай бұрын
o7
@cihloun8 ай бұрын
truly a work of an artist
@SwitchyWitch_8 ай бұрын
@@Spax_ you
@cobsofficial8 ай бұрын
some of my friends and i were on a class trip where we decided to put a bunch of random leftover food items from the cafeteria into a water bottle and just let it sit. for all i know, its still somewhere in the backyard of the apartment complex my family moved out of 2 years ago
@tophatbecausehatiscool95668 ай бұрын
o7
@MrMrPurple8 ай бұрын
How I feel when I accidentally leave the stopwatch on my phone going for a couple days
@mariobros2378 ай бұрын
Same but with my Casio Wristwatch. The battery on hose things goes forever.
@Pehmokettu8 ай бұрын
I have left some games run on Steam for several days by accident when I have not been able to use my PC so if a future digital acheologist looks at my Steam stats they may wonder why the hell I played some games so long.
@PJM2578 ай бұрын
my phone's stopwatch is currently at 410 days
@PhilNubbins7 ай бұрын
i once left my apple watch's stopwatch going for over a year
@t.m.24157 ай бұрын
@@mariobros237 Casio Wrist watch overflows to 0 after an hour
@AndyHappyGuy8 ай бұрын
The “Zyn Garden” pun is genius
@TaRAAASHBAGS8 ай бұрын
"I am a monument to all your Zyns."
@Kenneth_James8 ай бұрын
@@TaRAAASHBAGS That is genius as well by Andy's logic
@williamromero-auila9218 ай бұрын
I've never zyn a garden with towers
@custos32498 ай бұрын
Getting reeeeeal loose with the application of "genius" these days
@RERM0018 ай бұрын
Reminds me of wow_mao's pyramid. Although a little bit more of an official art work than that one (RIP).
@fallenoffatree8 ай бұрын
"YOU WILL LIVE TO SEE EVERYONE AROUND YOU DIE... WHAT WILL YOU HAVE AFTER 500 YEARS???" "I'll have a 5cm stalagmite dad"
@underscoredfrisk7 ай бұрын
And a bunch of different bunches of people in Germany will place a couple of rock blocks!
@KingThrillgore8 ай бұрын
One of the earliest examples of "slow art" I was exposed to, and a bit shocked you didn't include it, was "Organ2/ASLSP" by John Cage, an organ piece he wrote to play from 20-70 mins. A church in Halberstadt is choosing to play it very slowly, for 639 years. They had a special organ built and all. The next note will come in 2026!
@aymanachkaj33338 ай бұрын
I heard about it few years ago, you're right missed opportunity here.
@owain_rj8 ай бұрын
Haha I thought this one was gunna get a mention as well
@Ferrochrome128 ай бұрын
i came here to comment this exact thing!
@Mewy1018 ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure he’s mentioned in another video, but i’m not sure which one
8 ай бұрын
My hometown!!! It is a very underwhelming project though. But the monastry where the organ is located is quite nice. Drank eggnog with my best friend under the lime tree there.
@JackRackam8 ай бұрын
I met a traveller from an antique land, who said "It's gonna take a lot to drag me away from you"
@WheneverIsm7 ай бұрын
Ozymandias?
@Nopointasking7 ай бұрын
@@WheneverIsm The wild dogs cry out into the night
@Joneender6 ай бұрын
there's nothing that 100 men or more could never do
@cozz1246 ай бұрын
did he bless the rains down in africa
@Joneender6 ай бұрын
@@cozz124 I'm not sure, but upon thinking about this, i now realize that I better take some time to do the things we never had
@Coms72748 ай бұрын
This channel has, nearly single-handedly, given me an interest in the philosophy of art
@JDLupus8 ай бұрын
For me, it's a combination of Solar Sands and Nerdwriter. I would highly recommend Nerdwriter if you enjoy Solar Sands :)
@qrstasdf64738 ай бұрын
I’d also recommend Jacob Geller
@Coms72748 ай бұрын
@@JDLupusI’ll watch some. Thanks for the recommendation
@matthewboire68438 ай бұрын
Philosophy is not something I used to care about, I find it quite interesting now
@flyingpies8 ай бұрын
I recommend jacob geller's "art for no one" and "who's afraid of modern art"
@xliquidflames8 ай бұрын
I spent most of my adult life working in call centers. Once I got good enough at a particular job, I would be able to finish documenting each call in the case system on the computer really fast. I'd then be stuck sitting there walking a caller through some tech support issue with nothing to do with my hands. I took to doodling on scraps of paper. I started keeping those scraps. One day, I got the idea to start a clean sheet plain 8.5 x 11 printer paper. Once I filled it with random doodles, I grabbed a fresh sheet and taped it to the original at the edges. I then had a larger canvas that was 1 sheet x 2 sheets, half full and half empty. I filled it up and taped a third sheet on. Now it was 1 sheet x 3 sheets, two thirds full, one third empty. I filled it up. I then taped three more sheets along the bottom so it was now 2 x 3, half full and half empty. I kept doing this for 11 years at three different jobs with three different companies. By the time I became disabled and couldnt work anymore, it was a rolled up at one end and I was working on the newest 3 sheets I had taped to the end of it. It was 3 sheets wide x 196 sheets long. If I unrolled the whole thing, it would have been just shy of 180 feet long by 25.5 inches wide. And it was kind of a record of everything that popped into my head for the past 11 years while on the phone with customers. Sketches, song lyrics, things people said, famous quotes, and more sketches and doodles. The whole thing was black ink. Sometimes a coworker would come by and see me working on it, grab a pen, and add their own little doodle. Maybe a spiral or a heart or their signature. There were a lot of "...was here". Then, I got sick, my stuff went into storage while I was in and out of the hospital, and eventually I had to stop working. When I finally got settled again and got my things out of storage, it was gone. I don't know what happened to it. Family and friends packed my apartment because I was in the hospital so it probably got thrown out thinking it was trash. I only have one photo of it when it was just seven sheets of paper long. I wish I still had it but I'm kind of glad it's gone, otherwise I may still be doodling right now instead of typing this.
@homomorphichomosexual8 ай бұрын
thats super cool, ty for sharing!
@FacebookStabber8 ай бұрын
Sounds really neat.
@visual_Memories8 ай бұрын
How incredible if it were still out there somewhere. Lovely story-- thank you for sharing.
@ishanator38198 ай бұрын
that's amazing
@xliquidflames8 ай бұрын
@@visual_Memories thanks for reading it
@spacefinn8 ай бұрын
Long art - also known as the time it takes Solar Sands to put out a video...
@Nogardtist8 ай бұрын
try making a video yourself xD
@hereniho8 ай бұрын
so original 🙄
@Yezpahr8 ай бұрын
Or the time it takes for climate change to put out the rapid oxidation events called 'humans'.
@thegoalistheplan38688 ай бұрын
It’s always worth it though
@alfredoyelisa8 ай бұрын
@@Yezpahr cyanobacteria in the corner laughing at their little 'prank' from 2 billion years ago
@ghostwarrior03298 ай бұрын
12:40 That ZYN garden is actually pretty cool. "The sculpture is a physical record of the cost of addiction and, more importantly, of time passing" I wonder what the suppliers would think of it
@numerum_bestia8 ай бұрын
It reminds me of the character Chris Miles from the first season of the British T.V show Skins (2007) He would pin the empty boxes of different pharmaceuticals he had consumed on a corkboard in his bedroom.
@truis8 ай бұрын
He said the thing! at the end of the video!
@when_the_8 ай бұрын
My favorite part is when Solar Sands said "It's sandin' time!" and totally sanded all those guys
@akunekochan8 ай бұрын
it was funnier than it have any right to be
@bafflingbullshit8 ай бұрын
Honestly, that make me jump a bit
@PacoCotero12218 ай бұрын
this really has been a solar sand
@sithdude24368 ай бұрын
I loved that part of the movie where Solar Sands said "No... *we* are Solar Sands," then shot a solar beam at the bad guy
@marreco63478 ай бұрын
One of my favorite (accidental) works of arts is watching trees grow into and swallow the environment around them. Roots coming out of asphalt bumps, barbed wire firmingly stuck inside the core and forming a triangle as the tree grows upward, nails, coins and fences slowly being swallowed up. Abandoned roads and dilapidated houses can have some truly beautiful sights if you are willing to see it.
@jadenyager40078 ай бұрын
On a hike as a kid I came across a very thick old tree (probably an oak or something similar) with two metal rings around it at the base, just barely loose enough to wiggle in place. But I realized years later, those were the rings that held a barrel in place a hundred or more years ago. Maybe some kid on the Oregon trail tossed the old barrel rings around a young sapling and forgot about them. Maybe they fell and by chance a tree sprouted from the middle of the rings and kept ahold of them years later. I don’t know where that tree was, just somewhere in the Idaho woods. But I wonder if the rings are slowly getting swallowed up by now
@mihailmilev99094 ай бұрын
@@jadenyager4007 wow
@mihailmilev99094 ай бұрын
@@jadenyager4007 thank you so much for this lol
@mihailmilev99094 ай бұрын
@@jadenyager4007 I'm def gonna share this I think lol
@mihailmilev99094 ай бұрын
@@jadenyager4007 or at least I intend to lol
@ScottsShots8 ай бұрын
I once made my own "long term" film called Sixty Glances. I went to the park on the Spring Equinox, took 15 shots of various locations of trees, benches, parking lots, etc. Each shot lasted exactly one minute, timed to the frame. Three months later I returned on the Summer Solstice and did the exact same thing, as well as for the fall and winter. The entire project took nine months to complete. It's hard to define why I did it. I was inspired by some of James Benning's works. I wanted to see how much a location would change over a time, and if a "story" would appear. What was odd, a story did in fact appear. With every season more and more humans showed up in frame, cars passed by, helicopters whirred overhead, until the final shot--a massive tree I found--appeared to be missing limbs. It made me think of how humans incidentally affect the environment without even knowing it. I'm not claiming it's super deep or anything. I mostly made the film for myself. I rarely watch the videos I make because I cringe really hard but I find myself returning to this one over and over again.
@SpencerPaire8 ай бұрын
Thanks for adding this. It sounds like a great video! And isn't it funny how stories always seem to emerge like that? I feel like it a mix: Humans always percieve stories, and the universe always produces them.
@TitularHeroine8 ай бұрын
I like this. I wish I could see it, and I also understand your wish to keep it private. Thank you
@rainbowlack8 ай бұрын
@@TitularHeroineit seems to be on their KZbin channel!
@ScottsShots8 ай бұрын
@@TitularHeroine Not sure why my reply isn't showing up, but it's on my channel.
@ScottsShots8 ай бұрын
@@SpencerPaire Absolutely. I think everything is part of a vast story, but it's so complicated we'll never understand it. Like play with billions of parts.
@poogissploogis8 ай бұрын
I'm a crocheter and there's a popular project called a "temperature blanket", where we make blankets and crochet one row every day in a specific color that represents a certain range of temperatures. It's only a year but it's a very cool long art project! I've always wanted to make one. Some people also do mood blankets, and I've even seen someone do one based on the color/consistency of their poops.
@maddiewaters71128 ай бұрын
Oh god the TikTok poop blanket 😂 It was awesome
@Joneender6 ай бұрын
All i know is that if i made a temperature blanket, it would be bright red with some small strips of green and blue in it 😔
@stevemustang71028 ай бұрын
This reminds me of the game The Longing. It's a delightful game on Steam about a little guy covered in coal and ash. He's tasked by the sleeping underground king to wait 400 days.
@orb-enjoyer49808 ай бұрын
yeah, that's the perfect game for this topic, it's unfortunate that it's not that popular of a game, one of my favorite
@regrets3318 ай бұрын
absolutely, i loved playing that game
@draig82598 ай бұрын
It's a bit of a disappointing game, actually, given there's not that much to explore in the map, and there are mechanics for speeding up the game's clock. I played it and felt it wasn't radically devoted to its promise.
@gilagal7778 ай бұрын
I was not expecting an r/place mention- I was a part of the 2022 r/place, and truly the experience was so special, it sounds stupid, but it will always be so memorable to me.
@eechotunes5 ай бұрын
same! I was looking at the timelapse of the 2023 one in this video and spotting the little areas that I helped maintain, that were created by communities I'm a part of, and was just going "oh. :) we made an impact here, in a way. that's neat." r/place was such a special experience both times that I was a part of it. it's cool.
@cathyrayTV8 ай бұрын
honestly the most amusing thing to me about toto forever is that its location isn't disclosed. for something that obviously seems to cash in on a viral meme you'd think it would be a big tourist attraction but instead it's effectively hidden in the middle of nowhere, the only chance of it being found is completely arbitrary and it might just be discovered by someone who has no idea what it is. makes me wonder if there are any other installations out there presented like "here's this thing i made, i'm not telling you where it is, go find it"
@G-Cole-018 ай бұрын
I think the lack of disclosed location is to prevent it from being destroyed via vandalism or the aftereffects of said tourism.
@monsterguyx8 ай бұрын
This made me think of the so-called "Utah Monolith," the strange metal structure found in the desert a few years ago. Its creators and purpose are still unknown, but it seems to have been an artwork that was created with just such a thought in mind. And of course, after it was "discovered," it didn't take long for people on the internet to track it down, dismantle and remove it, which only led to more controversy. kzbin.info/www/bejne/fYvUhYqqdtuDeJYsi=MO84QzHUozVJ-ryt
@DueySR8 ай бұрын
I narrowed down the location of Toto Forever a few years ago, and can say with near certainty that it's not there anymore (I suspect the artist cleaned it up when he left, so at least he didn't litter). The location isn't remote at all, it only looks that way... it's 10 minutes away from an international airport and major city, and next to a dune buggy rental company. I don't think this detracts from it though: the point of art is the evoke feeling, and a video of Africa by Toto playing amongst the dunes evokes remoteness. Creating that illusion is part of the art.
@lequanghuy60278 ай бұрын
Those flimsy plastic electronics wouldnt last a week under the desert sun 😂
@kqlolll26188 ай бұрын
@@monsterguyxi heard of that one. Hearing it was dismantled saddens me
@fanaticoso83388 ай бұрын
From a channel dedicated to devianart critiques to art philosophy, solar sand is truly a long term art piece
@an0therW8 ай бұрын
I'm so glad an essayist I like also enjoys seeing things wear out over time, it's such a specific feeling. When I was a kid I used to be obsessed with wearing out my shoes and school supplies, and even now I don't want to get rid of things that I'm using until they become completely useless just because I like seeing how they wear down. That slow sense of progress is comforting I think.
@eljaibas168 ай бұрын
You just described me wtf. Even when I was younger I painted some stripes across the sole of my shoes to see how they would wear down lol.
@abrasi0n_faiiry8 ай бұрын
one of my favorite pieces or art is “zen for film” by nam june paik, 1965. a möbius strip of blank film is setup on a projector that runs continuously and over time the dust and scratches that accumulate create natural texture and form that is than projected onto a wall. the film is reduced to its basic elements: light and time, and as time passes the piece also allows for the interaction of the viewer to create shadows with the light, in a very specific moment of time in which you are taking in the piece itself.
@froggod64848 ай бұрын
If only this video was 500 years long 😢
@KamielDV28 ай бұрын
You can play it at 0.000000001% speed ;)
@cheekibreeki9048 ай бұрын
@@KamielDV2KZbin doesn't have the option yet.
@gravidust.28 ай бұрын
You can loop it
@varflock97778 ай бұрын
@@KamielDV2 Let's optimistically assume this video has 60 fps. Slowing it that much would turn it into video with a 6e-10 fps which is... not very interesting. With the slow motion you suggested, the visible frame would change every 52.85 years making it probably the slowest slideshow ever.
@OpposingFork8 ай бұрын
@@varflock9777 I'd rather watch a kilometer of paint dry
@OtakuUnitedStudio8 ай бұрын
The irony of "Long Art" being the name of one of your shortest essay videos is kinda funny on its own. But then that punchline at the end. Chef's kiss.
@Kimosabes2hot8 ай бұрын
Honestly? I dig it. It takes a unique individual to create something that won't come to fruition and speaks as a testament to patience and what can be seen over the course of several decades. Like the garden you plant that you may or may not see. It's kind of like waiting for that *Tumblr* video to come out. One day, it will. Or it won't. Who's to say.
@SuperRat4208 ай бұрын
Takes a softhanded, blowhard to stack a couple cubes up and pretend it's meaningful ya mean
@lucyditee8 ай бұрын
I’m curious, what tumblr video are you referring to?
@CureSmileful8 ай бұрын
@@lucyditee same and I am NOT waiting
@xoldragon8 ай бұрын
wait what video?
@niceanimationsforkids8 ай бұрын
"- What will you have in 500 years!? - 5 cm high stalagmite, dad"
@DoodleChaos8 ай бұрын
I love long art! Thank you for teaching me there is a word for this. I think 2b2t could fall into this category as well
@blockmaniac48987 ай бұрын
Agreed, 2b2t would definitely fall under this category 👍 (Also Hi Doodlechaos 😉)
@koharumi18 ай бұрын
7:47 - 8:18 love how Canada is struggling to draw a leaf while the "Bad Apple" animation is running seamlessly next to it. (Look near the Osu! Image)
@JordanBeagle8 ай бұрын
The OG 2017 r/place was the best
@thealphasam73508 ай бұрын
I am surprised that a perpetually running comic book series wasn’t mentioned. Each month three new chapters are added. It is called One Piece, would have been interesting to talk about. /s
@xaf150018 ай бұрын
You're joking, but there was a comic where every year the artist adds another page, and it now has 5 pages.
@vbgvbg11338 ай бұрын
@@xaf15001 its A Manga World That Gets One Page Once A Year, 6 pages now.
@nebelungmist62628 ай бұрын
@@xaf15001what’s it called?
@indecay87568 ай бұрын
@@nebelungmist6262 hunter x hunter
@smittzero84635 ай бұрын
Probably because that's actually a work of art, rather than pretentious nonsense.
@pawpatrolnews8 ай бұрын
I've been doing a long form 'art' outside our house. Every year, our car license plate get renewed and the DMV sends us the new year sticker in the mail. Each year, the stickers are a different color, and they always have a tab that says 'Peel here'. One year, I stuck one to a pole outside our house, and every year since I add another one next to the old one. I've made a ring around 3 sides of the square pole, and will start on the 4th side next year. To my surprise last year, someone else added their sticker to the collection! Fun fact: the sticker covers are a cycle and repeat themselves every 7 years.
@qwertyman5068 ай бұрын
There's a TV show called Life After People that talks about some of this. Things like, plastic-wrapped cookies could theoretically outlive humanity and how amusement parks would look after dozens of years without maintenence
@JamesLawner8 ай бұрын
That show is responsible for my existential anxiety/dread.
@alexsiemers78988 ай бұрын
God I loved that show
@4.99dollarchickenstripbask78 ай бұрын
amazing how fruitcake can outlive most modern structures by hundreds of years
@seahawksfan767 ай бұрын
I remember watching episodes of it on KZbin. So fascinating
@lukehealy17222 ай бұрын
17:01 he did it guys
@DennisSengthong8 ай бұрын
we have truly become the solar sands
@amberhide048 ай бұрын
but- but i thought he was the solar sans 💀
@ingrowsmith51488 ай бұрын
When I was learning English, I was once popped in a class 3 years above me, who were getting ready for exams. Showing up randomly didn't dissuade my teacher from giving me an exercise sheet that contained tasks and grammar a full 3 years above my level of competence. This was not by accident. My teacher was not only a plain old English teacher, but in fact a linguist and researcher in experimental fields of cognitive development in children. Obviously he didn't expect me to solve the tasks, but he held the firm belief that children can do much better, if they are not told that they are not supposed to be able to solve the task given to them. However he did not anticipate that I was not planning to earnestly engage in the excerises given to me. It's one thing not being able to identify a word. It's another to be completely clueless about half a paragraph. So instead of doing the expected thing, and using my brain, I decided to abandon even pretending to do work alltogether. Instead I started to draw teddy bears. Or at least what my teacher decided to call teddy bears. In fact they were pixel perfect copies of a mob monster, in a sidescrolling game that some of the older students managed to sneak onto one of the language lab computers. Now having grown up in a time, where home computers were an unthinkable luxury to even a wealthy household, this was a rare opportunity for me to see wonderful fairytale characters move about and bounce around in interesting ways, and most importantly, me have an impact on their movements. However access to all of this was obviously limited to a few minutes after classes. And really what I was most interested in was the look of the world, since playing it was pretty much an impossibility given the number of children thronging the one computer available. Now my hand-to-eye coordination wasn't very good at the time, so I couldn't reliably copy the characters I liked by rounding them down. But I did notice that they were all made up of nice square blocks of color. So not having any other option, I observed the character I most liked, in this case a bear, and dutifully noted down the construction of its form, going left to right, line by line. Having correctly reasoned that no matter how bad I am at drawing, if I have a record of each line that makes up the image, and the correct color of each square in each line, I can have the image of the game character for myself exactly. Now back to the impossible lingustics. Having immediately given up on the tasks handed to me, I was getting bored in the long silence when everyone else was dutiflly working. So I decided to use my color code notes, and use the ample amount of blank space on my work sheets to draw the bear I so dearly wanted to have a precise picture of. And of course as luck would have it, I botched the spacing, since the bear was either going off the sheet or into the printed text, since much like when you start to write a label on jar, if you don't account for the length of the text in advance, you might get some very cramped and wonky writing by the end. Either way, I was getting in an ever fouler mood, so instead of caring for a neat clean background, I started to go on top of the printed texts, the back, the edges in the multiple attempts to draw my bear. Now of course the teacher was bound to notice, that while other children were dutifully making an effort, I was just wasting valuable time and resources, both that of the school and of my own, larking about. And he was heading towards me in a huff, to give me a telling off, that admittedly I somewhat deserved. However when he saw my work sheet, he just went quiet, and started talking in a mellow way, very much out of character for the situation. In fact he left me to my own devices, and later gave me texts and tasks relating to art and drawing, which I thought rather neat of him. Unbeknownst to me, this very same teacher was giving developmental classes to children with very severe forms of autism and ADHD in the early morning and late afternoon. And obviosuly, he just had to take one look at my worksheet, and suspect some sort of mental problem to be carefully helped and treated, instead of just a lazy kid being a bit miffed about having to do hard work. He thought I had autism, when in fact I was just being lazy. Anyway, this video reminded me of this story for some reason.
@purplehaze23588 ай бұрын
This video ended way quicker than I thought it would. It felt like it was just getting started.
@marvinlee15858 ай бұрын
The human body is a work of long art. The tear of scars, the pigmentation of moles, the wear of face lines, the insertions of ink, and so much more. This is why i try to remember every scar, every tattoo, as in itself is what I think gives myself worth. Humans are artists and art themselves. - - Mb for yapping but I really enjoyed this video
@aetherxsn15918 ай бұрын
no need to apologise for yapping, you cooked
@jonnevitu49798 ай бұрын
"then they will trully become... the solar sands" lol
@crystalquarry7 ай бұрын
As a gem cutter I appreciate even the brief time you gave to show our craft. In a way, precision cut gem cutting is also a long form art from start to finish, but seldom people know just how much time and focus goes into transforming a gem to its fullest optical potential
@_Ordinace_8 ай бұрын
New solar sands video always means its gonna be a good day
@jasonhess84708 ай бұрын
When I saw the title I immediately thought of Richard Linklaters films. In Boyhood he shot the film over the course of the main characters actual life in real time as he grew up. And his “Before” series are made every ten years with the actors and characters both aging at the same time. Also The Disintegration Loops are a series of musical projects in which old tapes looped until they physically disintegrate, and you get to hear the entire process over the course of an hour or so. Apparently one of these loops was done on the morning of 9/11
@vaszgul7368 ай бұрын
"Art is how we decorate space. Music is how we decorate time."
@Ben_B_Artist8 ай бұрын
where is this from?
8 ай бұрын
@@Ben_B_Artist Quote by Jean Michel Basquiat
@Ben_B_Artist8 ай бұрын
@ thank you 🙏
@The-Man-On-The-Mountain8 ай бұрын
Music is art, and also decorates spaces.
@Ferrostitan8 ай бұрын
There was a tiny crater in my grandmother's concrete floor at her old house where I used to visit and play in as a child. I never knew what caused it to appear - most likely someone dropped a really heavy object once upon a time - but from the first time I discovered it I started digging away at it to pass the time when I became exceptionally bored (this was in the 90s so there wasn't much entertainment going on). Sometimes I used a toothpick, sometimes a pencil, and sewing needles on two separate occasions. I wanted to try and dig as far as I could, to see if the concrete would give way to another layer of the ground. Sadly I never really got close to my goal since she sold the house 10 years after I started my secret mission, but I'm quite certain that I made about an inch's worth of progress if not more. It's not really 'long art' as defined in the context of this video, but the idea of letting the passage of time play a part in the transformation of the mundane has caused this bit of childhood memory to resurface from near oblivion. Thanks for that - appreciate your videos as always.
@adamandtheeveningnstuff81468 ай бұрын
I am always flawed by your innate ability to draw me in with your content, I don’t know if it’s your calm, considered tone, or your fascination with all things extra-ordinary but thank you for this video. I was just sitting down to draw for the first time in months and like magic this was here. Thank you for your content as always!
@kalvisjatnieks77408 ай бұрын
in the philadelphia art museum, at the japanese tea house they have a little bamboo water drop thing that slowly drips water onto a rock. there's a tiny pool there already, but it's just been slowly growing for decades.
@Purin958 ай бұрын
Every thousand years, this metal sphere ten times the size of Jupiter floats just a few yards past the Earth. You climb on your roof and take a swipe at it with a single feather- hit it once every thousand years, til you've worn it down to the size of a pea. Yea, I'd say that's a long time.
@JNJNRobin13378 ай бұрын
alright but what if it burns up, or is eroded past ones reach but while too large?
@cheekibreeki9048 ай бұрын
Its gravitational field alone would mess up the Earth so much it will no longer be able to sustain life.
@MatthewT3948 ай бұрын
im just wondering how'd a metal sphere got there in the first place
@KerbGoboom8 ай бұрын
16:59 : oh oh he said it
@ollychismon-hurst3718 ай бұрын
Missing my child's birth to watch this
@MrStanFungi8 ай бұрын
quit lying bro i know you're single
@petaflop.8 ай бұрын
worth
@fishsticks50108 ай бұрын
funny how your missing a work of art grow to watch a video about works of art growing.
@KingThrillgore8 ай бұрын
Get your ass back in that delivery room, and receive
@hereniho8 ай бұрын
@@MrStanFungi he prolly never even done the deed either 🤣🤣🤣
@MightZJPoepet8 ай бұрын
"Knowing the last black hole in the universe will cease to exist one day, it fills you with determination" -Solar Sans (probably)
@UATU.8 ай бұрын
Thank you this is intriguing. I thought the “Clock of the Long Now” would make the list but I love these projects.
@GeorgeEllis-q1u8 ай бұрын
I also felt this should have been included,,, as it is intended to instill exactly the sentiment of this video.
@verdanteridium8 ай бұрын
With 'Art for No One' and now 'Long Art', weird art philosophies is coming to the spot light (again?). I love it!
@derenjoy3r8 ай бұрын
the staircases you showed show quite well how the bird / mountain example could take place. People walked on there bare foot and with shoes, yet the much harder stone eroded. Its not just all mohs hardness scale
@jaxoncanseeyou8 ай бұрын
But the bottoms of their feet/shoes had particles picked up elsewhere from the ground, likely containing sand/mineral dust
@TheHolyHandGrenade798 ай бұрын
In addition to the shoes picking up hard particles, there is also the fact that there was someone coming through and sweeping the dust away. Otherwise those steps would be covered in bits of shoe soles, adding to their height.
@derenjoy3r8 ай бұрын
@@TheHolyHandGrenade79 yeah ofc, but particles of creatine on a mountain would also be swept away by the wind
@derenjoy3r8 ай бұрын
@@jaxoncanseeyou that may be true, but that just goes to show that such a phenomenon cannot be simply derived from whether the 2 substances have different mohs hardness or not
@TheStarBlack7 ай бұрын
Sandstone is very easily eroded
@LoganJohnson-ht4di26 күн бұрын
I saw the Tropfesteinmachine in Hamburg when i went for the first time in may. Ive been low key obsessed with it since, it makes me feel so warm and fuzzy i cant explain it
@Asaenz24688 ай бұрын
HE SAID THE THING!
@Maxsmack8 ай бұрын
My god, you never fail to make some of the most surreal and profound videos I have the privilege to watch, you almost always to give me chills. These are also some of my favorite works of art, the Zyn garden is great piece, i love the pun.
@ryleytaylor60638 ай бұрын
Babe, wake up! Solar Sands has uploaded
@_sfg_47508 ай бұрын
Bro go to sleep
@adamandtheeveningnstuff81468 ай бұрын
Not gonna lie, the first thing i did was send my girlfriend a link to this.
@aymanachkaj33338 ай бұрын
No, we DON'T sleep when Solar Sands drops a banger,.. we watch, we appreciate, we open our mind to the endless oceans of philosophy and art, staring at the horizon were they meet..and there , at the end point we find the new banger .. and I watch it, and you wake up, and we watch it together..(it was all as if it was a dream, or it was?)🎉
@valentinbrunn49378 ай бұрын
"so a normal BIRB" - 5:45
@7PebblesReported3 ай бұрын
I love how natural he says it
@TheSquishyBoi8 ай бұрын
Just what I needed after a horrible week, love to see it.
@OfficiallyMaidenless8 ай бұрын
I paused this at 3:34 and watched Dune part I and II, came back to my computer and played about an hour's worth of Yu Gi Oh Duel Links before realising I still had this open. I press play and the very first word I hear is "come" 💀
@mcordonhouston4 ай бұрын
LOL
@DilSnaps8 ай бұрын
this was the solar sands of all time
@BoatSniper498 ай бұрын
7:45 I'm still incredibly stunned that Bad Apple was successfully recreated on r/place.
@ZealanTanner8 ай бұрын
I have a rubix cube that is actually a calendar. Each day I solve the side. When I got this cube it was already worn down a lot clearly from someone else solving it daily. I always wondered what looked like when it was new. But now it’s my burden to bear, I must continue the long art
@decafjava85652 ай бұрын
The story about the bird and the mountain was used in the Dr. Who episode "Heaven Sent" where the Doctor (played by Peter Capaldi as the 12th Doctor) is punching a crystal wall - is killed, "resurrects" from a transporter type device and repeats until he finally punches through.
@doddermodd8 ай бұрын
you know what else is long?
@jcprod-english8 ай бұрын
THIS DI-
@Sen93938 ай бұрын
Your entrails?
@MomirsLabTech8 ай бұрын
MY MOOOM
@_kaleido8 ай бұрын
My ongoing love for Jesus Christ and the Bible
@TheZerovirus10008 ай бұрын
Your reply to this comment?
@f5tornado8318 ай бұрын
I got some major nostalgia from that minecraft festive music.
@cheeseburgermonkey71048 ай бұрын
The long art focused around weathering/erosion also shows the forward march of entropy that will never stop until the universe's heat death... really makes you think different 🤔
@sabrinatscha25548 ай бұрын
The Japanese are masters of “long art”. The time and patience that they will put into making a single piece of lacquered dining ware, or a silk kimono, is insane. My BF and I met an artist who uses an old Japanese technique for glazing ceramic pottery; wherein a single piece is set on a pedestal in front of a 20-30’ long tunnel, through which smoke is constantly fed via a wood fire at the other end. I forgot wether or not the fire needs to be going continuously, but long story short, it takes about a year to glaze just a few pieces. How many pieces can be glazed at a time, depends on the size of the wood fire, and the circumference of the tunnel through which the smoke is fed.
@Safno48 ай бұрын
In a rare instance i had some time to myself with nothing to do. I hadn’t looked for/thought of Solarsands for a while, just search his name up out of curiosity and I see uploaded 13 minutes ago. Nothing could have made me happier :)
@sarabretting30338 ай бұрын
Thank your for this video. All of your videos, actually. I am an artist and I love when others become obsessed with concepts like this one or the one you made about monumentality.
@JuraIbis8 ай бұрын
The sun is the longest living long artist
@serenavoice668 ай бұрын
My fave channel uploaded again aw hell yeah
@lejoueurfreetoplay8 ай бұрын
"Hey bro, look at my art, it destroys your walls"
@Legend1O12 ай бұрын
I once saw a project like these in Bristol, it had a pump with water and people could pump the water which would fall onto a granite rock with the purpose of seeing how long it would take to erode the rock
@oskarjokull8 ай бұрын
Great video! I am however disappointed you didn't mention the Halberstadt performance of John Cage's piece "As Slow As Possible". It's such an iconic piece of long art
@roecocoa8 ай бұрын
Came here to say this. Two of my friends got into a weirdly intense argument over As Slow As Possible when there was a news story about the changing of the pipes.
@SICHTKRAFT8 ай бұрын
@@roecocoa I was also expecting this to be mentioned. But there is a surprising amount of long art out there, so it probably just didn't make the cut. Another one is Roman Opałkas "1965 / 1 - ∞".
@t1mmy138 ай бұрын
"During my incarceration in school" WOW that hit me, that was so true for me too. This is the first video I've seen from you, it's really well made and I really like it!
@leviathantoobz8 ай бұрын
I quit my job to watch this
@CosmicHase5 ай бұрын
I have an idea for a long art. A blank place. There's construction materials and a sledgehammer. People can go in and build something, or destroy something with the sledgehammer. Basically a small scale irl anarchy server.
@adognamedcat138 ай бұрын
OH OH HE SAID IT!! 16:57
@anikanamisu24568 ай бұрын
My long artwork is that I make lots and lots of paper stars, put them in bag (I'm talking about three thousand a bag) and then give those to people around me, and likely because you don't just throw thousands of hand-made stars away they will be living on as gifts to different people. Also, I'm on my eleventh bag and I'm very proud of myself :)
@Vibragarlic8 ай бұрын
thats actually such a cool idea i might do something similar
@gameview64508 ай бұрын
I started Hormone Replacement Therapy 3 months ago meaning I take estrogen everyday and day by day my body slowly changes. One of my favorite parts of the process is how a million small things change every moment that I don't even notice or realize. Later I notice how these things have accumulated to something noticeable and I'm happy but there is a large amount of peace to the fact that things are always changing even if slowly.
@ArcticArca8 ай бұрын
it reminds me a lot of the digital version of something like this, specifically those videos of people taking photos of themselves every day. it resonated with me more, as i've been doing a project like that with myself. it's been only 2 and a half years since i started, and i dont know when im gonna take my last photo, but it really reminds me of that, as it shows not just the passage of time like the pieces you talked about, but also the aging of a person, both physically and somewhat mentally
@Dalekscientist8 ай бұрын
5:17 Heaven Sent!!!
@MURDERPILLOW.7 ай бұрын
Yaaayy!!!
@Real_Dystopian4 ай бұрын
“Now you might say that’s an awfully long time, but I’d say, that’s a hell of a bird!”
@blue_birb8 ай бұрын
mmm myes more solar sands philosophy for my brain I truly love your videos. your line of thinking reminds me of my own and the philosophy and art you feature and talk about makes me feel some sort of profound satisfaction.
@CrappycrapCrappy8 ай бұрын
Are fart jars a form of long art?
@glorbojibbins24854 ай бұрын
My weenor is a form of long art
@emilyofemily8 ай бұрын
i can’t believe i’ve watched you for so long solar, you were my favorite art channel when i was younger listening to your rants about art stuff you hate. now you are still my favorite art channel, just now it’s rants about art stuff you DO like. please keep uploading, i love your work ❤
@xanderkhan738 ай бұрын
As a trans girl, I couldn't help but cry as you talked about acts of devotion and progress - treasuring the time it takes to fulfill my "art", my own body. Thank you for helping me view myself in a kinder way ❤
@randomations118 ай бұрын
Man, I love this channel.
@karaholzhauer77468 ай бұрын
Why did I think the title literally meant art that was long in length 😭
@RadeonVega645 ай бұрын
same
@ianviviTV8 ай бұрын
I've been watching your channel for years and watching it grow. From the deviant art critique days to now. I'm proud. You always make good content.
@BuiltBy_K7 ай бұрын
Im going to start this by saying i am a prop/ costuming artist. This video demonstrates why i get pleasure out of tedium and why i get disgruntled when people say they hate tedious tasks. The beauty of tedium or long tasks or long art is the moment. You mentioned in the segment of the zyn tower that the true art is the process and i 100% agree. If it is anything i enjoy the process of making my art rather than the finished product.
@Rerbun8 ай бұрын
I'm very happy this video got recommended to me, I've never seen any videos from Solar Sands before but this video is incredible! Fascinating topic, both on the art parts and the "things being worn out over time" parts
@CerealExperimentsMizuki8 ай бұрын
I love how someone just rigged a door to damage someone's wall and they called it art. I would've loved to have seen them pitch the idea.
@BUG_CIRCUS8 ай бұрын
thanks for putting my art at the end solar! :3
@giladshayer31188 ай бұрын
These are my favorite kind of videos
@Crowskie048 ай бұрын
In school, I actually did a few “long” art projects. One I placed common but out of place objects around campus and took photos of the location from the same spot every day for a few weeks. Most objects were moved or removed within a few days, but often other items or changes became the focus of that spot. My favorite was a project where I used the smooth cardboard backing from a large drawing pad as a sketch pad for 6 months. It became almost like a single sheet journal of that time covered in notes, ideas, and rough sketches.
@aperson18 ай бұрын
5:12 actually, in capilano suspension bridge park in vancouver BC, there's a piece tucked away in a corner of the park showing the erosion of rock over time. There's a continuous but small stream of water passing over a number of different rocks, one for 15 years, one for 25, and one for 50. it's not unbelievably long, but it is fascinating to see the differing erosion of the rocks. There are some photos online under the relevant keywords.
@lowendlove51398 ай бұрын
vsauce3 vibes. good work man. love this type of content
@Anonymouthful8 ай бұрын
10:47 You could have used any other picture here and you went and decided this was the most fitting thing you could think of.
@gabiausten87748 ай бұрын
I marvel at weathering and decay, it fuses something artificial with nature, giving it something inbetween life and death…it’s wonderful.
@thatonebee60958 ай бұрын
In your essays you really mange to capture something deeply existential in our relation with time. Like creating art and reflecting on it can be both viewed as ways of handling the everlooming knowledge of our own transience. We can do nothing about our mortality both as individuals and on a universial scale but at least, we can try to cope with it by making art and expressing our feelings or by trying to make sense of it all through reflection and analysis, finding comfort by instilling meaning in the world around us and sharing our thoughts and emotions with other people.
@chrisgaming95678 ай бұрын
This reminds me of a project I've recently begun, sending messages to other stars via modulated radio signals. They'll take years or even decades to arrive, and any response will similarly take years or decades longer to be received.
@sunprotectionfactor4208 ай бұрын
I’ve been subscribed since you did those deviant art videos. And man am I glad that I stuck around. Your videos are very thought provoking and niche (in a good way). I don’t see a lot of channels that discus these types of topics. I’m just so happy that you’re still making videos! I feel like I matured with you in a way. Went from making fun of cringy fetish art to philosophical art videos. Keep it up! You’re the only one left from that era lol.
@ghostrucok66178 ай бұрын
I utilize this type of art in my sealed terrariums. Placing random objects in the soil of a fully self-sustaining ecosystem in a jar