THE WORLD’S FAIRS and other conspiracies: a film by KALKI

I made this movie for two reasons.

My dad didn’t understand my first movie ROMA which is a tour of Italy including the Vatican without ever setting foot in Italy.

This movie is about The World’s Fairs and the Idea of “Tartaria”

I became interested in the World’s Fairs when all the Tartaria conspiracies were going wild on x. I decided to look into where it was all coming from.

It seemed like the source were pictures from the World’s Fairs where the buildings we were told were “temporary structures” all looked very immense and sturdy. Some even still stand today like Field Museum in Chicago.

It didn’t make sense. We never saw these pictures in high school. Most of us who are interested in this topic probably graduated from high school in 2000 or before.

Anyways, after more research into how both San Francisco and Chicago were on maps before the 13 colonies, I discovered that that Kodak invented the commercial camera shortly before these World’s Fairs happened.

And then mysteriously everything was burned down. It made me wonder, was there a civilization here previously that left structures–perhaps even the French–like Louis XIV–who liked the type of architecture we see in the World’s Fairs. There were no cameras before The World’s Fairs.

There are a lot of reasons not to burn down such structures. But there is only one reason to. Politics. See for yourself, do these look like temporary structures made out paper mache?

Continue ReadingTHE WORLD’S FAIRS and other conspiracies: a film by KALKI

THE WORLD’S FAIRS

I made this movie for two reasons.

My dad didn’t understand my first movie ROMA which is a tour of Italy including the Vatican without ever setting foot in Italy.

This movie is about The World’s Fairs and the Idea of “Tartaria”

I became interested in the World’s Fairs when all the Tartaria conspiracies were going wild on x. I decided to look into where it was all coming from.

It seemed like the source were pictures from the World’s Fairs where the buildings we were told were “temporary structures” all looked very immense and sturdy. Some even still stand today like the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago.

It didn’t make sense. We never saw these pictures in high school. Most of us who are interested in this topic probably graduated from high school in 2000 or before.

Anyways, after more research into how both San Francisco and Chicago were on maps before the 13 colonies, I discovered that that Kodak invented the commercial camera shortly before these World’s Fairs happened.

And then mysteriously everything was burned down. It made me wonder, was there a civilization here previously that left structures–perhaps even the French–like Louis XIV–who liked the type of architecture we see in the World’s Fairs. There were no cameras before The World’s Fairs.

There are a lot of reasons not to burn down such structures. But there is only one reason to. Politics. See for yourself, do these look like temporary structures made out paper mache?

-Kalki

music by:

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ST. LOUIS

CINCINNATI

Antique photograph of World’s famous sites: Fountain square, Cincinnati

BONUS MATERIAL

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St. Jerome in the Wilderness

i became interested in this topic bc of davinci. it seems the paintings tell a story. he met an angel and then stood guard over a place for a long time. reminds me of that knight from indiana jones and the last crusade.

GR13132 St. Jerome in the Wilderness by Elsheimer, Adam (1578-1610); Galleria dell’ Accademia Carrara, Bergamo, Italy; German, out of copyright
Saint Jerome in the wilderness, writing, print maker: anonymous, publisher: Edward Cooper, print maker: England, publisher: London, c. 1682 – 1725, paper, height 177 mm, width 133 mm, print. (Photo by: Sepia Times/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
AMO100855 St. Jerome in the Wilderness (oil on canvas) by Sustris, Lambert (1515/20-68) (attr. to)
oil on canvas
95×112
© Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford, UK
Netherlandish, out of copyright
Nicolo Boldrini (Italian, born ca. 1500, active Venice 1530–70) St. Jerome in the Wilderness, mid 16th century Italian, Woodcut; sheet: 15 1/8 x 21 1/4 in. (38.4 x 54 cm) The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Rogers Fund, 1922 (22.73.3-119) http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/358295
Campi, Bernardino; Saint Jerome in the Wilderness; National Trust, Hatchlands; http://www.artuk.org/artworks/saint-jerome-in-the-wilderness-217343
Veronese, Saint Jerome in the Wilderness, Italian, 1528 – 1588, c. 1580, oil on canvas, Samuel H. Kress Collection
GUERCINO
(b. 1591, Cento, d. 1666, Bologna)

St Jerome in the Wilderness
c. 1650
Oil on canvas, 307 x 332 cm
The Hermitage, St. Petersburg






— Keywords: ————–

Author: GUERCINO
Title: St Jerome in the Wilderness
Time-line: 1601-1650
School: Italian
Form: painting
Type: religious

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welcome

welcome to the new studiobanksy. we are free from the hackers. cough cough. i wonder how the weather is over there these days. lmao. you’re so funny. i have a cool project i’m working on. i can’t reveal the details. lol. it involves a lot of spray paint. btw, the acrylic spray paint looks much nicer indoors than old rusty.

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