Sunday, May 10, 2026

Day 5007: Getty Digitized 16th C Mexico Manuscript & The Baby Hippo.

"On My Mind": junk collage, photos, digital collage.



                                                                       
  

Want music?



    Click: Hall & Smokey Robinson, Sara Smile




2GN2S

The Getty Digitizes a Rare 16th-Century Manuscript from Indigenous Mexico


“Papalomichin and Ocelomichin,” Book 11, Folio 62v

In 1577, Franciscan friar Bernardino de Sahagún finished a monumental encyclopedia of Mesoamerican culture. Working in collaboration with Nahua writers, artists, and elders, Sahagún documented life in the Aztec empire around the time of the Spanish conquest, together creating nearly 2,500 illustrations and 12 books recording the daily practices and culture of 16th-century Mexico. The text is widely regarded as one of the most important resources of Indigenous knowledge, especially considering most history is derived from colonial perspectives.

“Glue-hardening process,” Book 9, Folio 64v, Artist K. All images courtesy of The Getty

The Getty Research Institute recently released a digitized version of La Historia General de las Cosas de Nueva España, which is best known as the Florentine Codex—this name comes from the text’s mysterious storage in the Medici family libraries for centuries. Although the Library of Congres and UNESCO’s Memory of the World have offered scanned iterations of the books since 2012 and 2015, respectively, this edition is the most widely accessible because of its searchable interface and additional context.

“Metztli icualoca: lunar eclipse,” Book 7, Folio 7r, Artist N

Organized by topic, text, and images, the new platform contains both the original Nahuatl and Spanish writings alongside English translations. In a conversation with Hyperallergic, Kim Richter, a researcher leading the project, described the dual texts as complementary and offering unique perspectives on the same events. Although the manuscript was originally thought to lack “aesthetic value…Today, we see them as an important testament of a tumultuous period in Mexico in the early decades following the conquest of Mexico,” Richter says.

“Disguised merchants in Tzinacantlan,” Book 9, Folio 18v, Artist N

The books, which begin with gods and rituals and end with conquest, are available to view page-by-page, with special sections devoted to deities, animals, and other aspects of everyday life from tamales and cacao to coyotes and chapulin, or grasshoppers. Included are Nahua ritual calendars, depictions of midwives attempting to heal those suffering from a grim smallpox outbreak, and the omens and horrors that accompanied the Spanish invasion.

“Macuilocelotl,” Book 9, Folio 58r

Since launching earlier this month, the Florentine Codex has already inspired a video game set amid the aftermath of the 1520 Toxcatl massacre. The Getty also plans to release additional resources in conjunction with the digital archive, which provides a necessary addendum to colonial history.






 



  
 
A 5+ minute video, Wild Bunch,  here. 

 
Just because ...

Black-chinned Mountain Tanager.



Sunday's Smiles ... 

 






















Hoping you see all the good things in your day.


  


 

 

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Day 5006: Suspended Halos & The Arctic Boar.

     

"Judi": junk collage, photo, digital.



  

Want music?



    Click: Hall & Oates, Every Time You Go Away.



2GN2S


Suspended ‘Halos’ in a Florentine Factory


Earlier this month, dozens of metallic discs suspended from the ceiling of a large industrial space invited viewers to immerse themselves in what SpYdescribes as “a continuous choreography of movement and reflection.” The artist is known for his large-scale installations, often repurposing objects like traffic cones and metallic rescue blankets to create striking urban interventions.


SpY’s most recent room-scale work, titled “Halos,” reimagined the industrial interior of a former railway-related factory in Florence—a place we typically associate with Renaissance elegance as opposed to brutalist design—as part of the city’s Bright Festival.





Three stories high, “Halos” interacts with the natural breeze that flows throughout the space, which is exacerbated by people moving around. Glimmering light further lends a sense of ethereality and even magic. See more on Instagram.






The Siberian wild boar survives winters that would overwhelm many large mammals, but the way it stays warm is what makes it extraordinary.
Most mammals rely on a special tissue called brown fat to generate heat in extreme cold. Packed with mitochondria, this tissue burns energy directly into warmth, acting like a built-in furnace when temperatures collapse. But pigs lost much of this classic cold-defense system long ago.
For an animal living through the brutal winters of Siberia, that should have been a disaster.
Instead, the wild boar adapted differently. Its liver takes over part of the job, pushing energy through alternative metabolic pathways that produce heat when ordinary defenses are missing. Rather than relying on the standard biological solution, its body created a backup strategy—an emergency system powerful enough to keep it functioning in freezing conditions.
That is what makes this animal so fascinating. It is not simply enduring the cold because it was perfectly equipped from the beginning. It is surviving because evolution found another path when the obvious one was gone.
Nature often appears efficient, but sometimes its greatest strength is improvisation. When one system fails or disappears, life searches for another way forward.
If an animal can survive one of Earth’s harshest climates using a biological workaround, how many other hidden backup systems exist in nature that we still barely understand?

 



  
 
A 4+ minute video,  Ugly Snail, here.


 
Just because ...

Speckled mousebirds 



Saturday's Smiles ... 

 


















Hoping you see all the good things in your day.


  


 

 

Friday, May 8, 2026

Day 5005: Artist, Laura K.Sayers & Moment of Parting.


    
"concentration": torn junk collage.



                                                                       
  

Want music?



    Click: Rufus, Do You Love What You Feel?



2GN2S


Laura K. Sayers’ Vibrant Postage Stamps 

From recognizable scenes around her home in Scotland to delicately rendered snapshots of places she visits, Laura K. Sayers’ meticulously crafted postage stamps nod to connections from afar. The artist, who also illustrates children’s books and is commissioned for special projects like greeting cards, incorporates itty-bitty cuts of colorful paper into tiny tableaux that can fit in the palm of a hand.



Much of the work seen here is currently on view solo in Sayers’ solo exhibition of miniatures titled The Wee Small Hours at N. atelier. An array of everyday scenes is chronicled in a format we typically associate with significant events and remembrance, documenting fleeting moments like little treasures. Some of her recent pieces are inspired by the Finnish landscape that emerged during the artist’s stay at the Fiskars Artist-in-Residence program, organized by Onoma.


The Wee Small Hours continues through this weekend in Glasgow. And keep an eye out for a joint update from Tiny Art Show. Find more on Sayers’ Instagram.










                                               


Mr. & Mrs. Manu and Jacob (GH#2) Salloum celebrated their fifth month marriage anniversary. Jacob dropped off flowers for me, since I won't be here for Mother's Day. What a great couple.


                                                                         


  


In India, a deeply emotional moment was described between two elephants who had been raised together but were being separated and taken to different destinations.
As the vehicles prepared to go their separate ways, the two elephants reportedly reached out and intertwined their trunks—an interaction that looked like a final farewell. The scene left a strong impression, highlighting the emotional depth often associated with these animals.
Elephants are known for their intelligence, memory, and complex social bonds. Moments like this are often interpreted as expressions of connection, reminding us of the sensitivity and social nature of wildlife.
 



  
 
A 4+ minute video,  A toda marchahere.


 
Just because ...

Carmine Bee-eaters on Kori Bustard


Friday's Smiles ... 

 




















Hoping you feel all the good things in your day.