Typography by Polimekanos for Sebastian Wrong’s “Font Clock” (for Esablished & Sons).
»Cancelled Count«, 2003. The Cancelled Count clock is mounted on a motor which runs counter-clockwise at the speed of one rpm. Both the hour hand and numbers spin backwards while the second hand, which runs clockwise at one rpm, remains static.
»Forwards and Reverse« (2005) is a backwards running clock which is displayed beside a mirror. When viewed in the mirror, the numerals and clock motion run forwards in a coherent manner. By James Hopkins.
»Untitled« (Perfect Lovers), 1991. These two identical, adjacent, battery-operated clocks were initially set to the same time, but, with time, they will inevitably fall out of sync. By Felix Gonzalez-Torres.
“Hourglass Mirror” by Daniel Rozin. The image of the viewer is created by the movement of the grains of sand in the upper part of the hourglass, in the lower part of the hourglass a representative color of the viewer is settled to create a sediment that keeps building up creating a history of a few minutes worth of viewers. Video.
»Null Event (Tomorrow): 12:00 AM Local Time, Continuously«, 2006. Countdown, simulated LCD. A timer which reaches “000:000:00:00:00:000″ (years:days:hours:minutes:seconds:milliseconds) at the start of the next day. By Damon Zucconi.
»Life clock«, 2008. Clock mechanism slowed down 61320 times (each number represents years). By Bertrand Planes.
»Time Piece« (2002). Postcards representing the time in which the photographs were taken in chronological order. By Jonathan Monk.
»Wapok«, 2006 (porcelain rice cookers)
»Epuration élective«, 2004
»Snooze«, 2004 (80 radio clocks) by Fayçal Baghriche.
»Home-made electronic watch«, 2004. The watch is a result of an experiment seeking to determine how long it takes to construct a simple hand watch from scratch for someone with no education in engineering. By Janek Simon.
»It’s about time!« (sundial), 2006
»Ode to the CMB: Am I not a man and a brother?«, 2006 by Hank Willis Thomas.
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