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Archive for the ‘Ballardosphere’ Category

The kid stays in the picture

By • May 15th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, CCTV, celebrity culture, film, gated communities, surveillance

Samuel L. Jackson is back in the game, soon to work with the best material he’ll ever clap eyes on.



Indexed out of existence…

By • May 2nd, 2008 •

Category: alternate worlds, Ballardosphere, celebrity culture, censorship, features, humour, pastiche, short stories, Will Self

Is Woody Allen a Ballard fan? Lucy Vickery at The Spectator certainly is.



The Car that Ate Bournville

By • Apr 30th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, David Cronenberg, suburbia, urban revolt, urban ruins, visual art

Out in the suburbs, the Birmingham-based Ballard exhibition Zodiac 3000 draws first blood…



Zodiac 3000

By • Apr 22nd, 2008 •

Category: architecture, Ballardosphere, celebrity culture, consumerism, deep time, photography, psychology, Salvador Dali, sexual politics, speed & violence, surrealism, visual art

For this upcoming exhibition, the International Project Space in Birmingham will be transformed into the J.G. Ballard Centre for Psychopathological Research, “an institute built to interrogate the New Psychology explored in Ballard’s fiction.”



J.G. Ballard: London's 28th Most Erotic Writer

By • Apr 22nd, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, sexual politics, speed & violence, statistics, Toby Litt

It’s official: Ballard is the 28th most erotic writer in London.



Miracles nominated for Samuel Johnson prize

By • Apr 22nd, 2008 •

Category: autobiography, Ballardosphere, non-fiction

Miracles of Life is in the running for the £30,000 Samuel Johnson non-fiction prize.



Relocating Absence exhibition

By • Apr 21st, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, deep time, inner space, urban ruins, visual art

Details of a new exhibition in London that “often plays with the constants of space and time”. It includes the work of Michelle Lord, whose “Future Ruins” series previously featured on Ballardian.



Virtual Death: The Game Show

By • Apr 18th, 2008 •

Category: alternate worlds, Ballardosphere, boredom, CCTV, consumerism, death of affect, inner space, surveillance, television, YouTube

A man is trapped in an elevator for 41 hours, steadily losing his mind. But to you, he’s just another bug crawling around on a security-camera lens. What do you do?



"Now: Zero" vs Death Note

By • Apr 17th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, comics, Japan, manga, paranormal, short stories

Good old postmodernism. Here’s another claim about manga being influenced by an obscure Ballard story.



J.G. Ballard … you know, for kids

By • Apr 16th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, science fiction, television

Squirrel Boy meets Concrete Island, and the kids are alright.



One Nation Under CCTV

By • Apr 15th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, CCTV, dystopia, surveillance, technology, visual art

Banksy’s latest masterpiece.



False Space & Time of the Apartment

By • Apr 15th, 2008 •

Category: architecture, Ballardosphere, visual art

Information on a forthcoming exhibition at The University of Texas at Dallas School of Arts and Humanities, inspired by Ballard and The Atrocity Exhibition.



Ballard's 'The Recognition' on BBC7

By • Apr 10th, 2008 •

Category: audio, Ballardosphere, short stories

“What kind of animals are being exhibited?” Ballard’s “The Recognition” is currently featuring on BBC Radio 7.



'Vomit, violence, tabloid architecture…'

By • Mar 11th, 2008 •

Category: architecture, Australia, Ballardosphere, celebrity culture, fascism, media landscape, micronations, psychology, sport, television, urban revolt

MelbPsy gets all Atrocity Exhibition on the House that Sam Newman built, the ‘tabloid architecture’ sheathing yet another backyard Aussie micronation.



Dossier on Ralph Nader

By • Feb 27th, 2008 •

Category: America, Ballardosphere, consumerism, film, speed & violence

Here’s a dossier on presidential candidate Ralph Nader, courtesy of The Atrocity Exhibition.



Ballardian Home Movies: winners soon…

By • Feb 26th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, film, technology

Entries have closed for the Ballardian Festival of Home Movies. More soon…



R.I.P. Alain Robbe-Grillet

By • Feb 22nd, 2008 •

Category: academia, Ballardosphere, film, inner space, science fiction

A repost of this tribute to Robbe-Grillet, with the addition of some extra quotes that either illuminate or obfuscate…



Psychogeography? Psychopathology, maybe…

By • Feb 21st, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Iain Sinclair, psychogeography, Will Self

Iain Sinclair and Will Self on the same stage talking about psychogeography and Ballard? Who knew.



Reminder: Ballardian Home Movies

By • Feb 14th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, gated communities, technology

Reminder: six days left to submit your entry for the Ballardian Home Movie Competition. Here is some extra background…



Book of the Week: Miracles of Life

By • Feb 14th, 2008 •

Category: audio, autobiography, Ballardosphere

Miracles is BBC Radio 4’s Book of the Week.



Porcine Psychopathology

By • Feb 12th, 2008 •

Category: architecture, Ballardosphere, Chris Marker, consumerism, Iain Sinclair, photography, urban ruins

infinite thØught takes a Ballard-inspired tour of Bluewater, one of the inspirations for JGB’s Kingdom Come.



RE/Search News: Vintage Ballard photos, JGB book bonus

By • Feb 11th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Salvador Dali, Shepperton, William Burroughs

Vintage Ballard photos now online from RE/Search Publications.



'My name is Maitland, Donald Maitland…'

By • Feb 9th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, enviro-disaster

Was Ballard influenced by Ian Fleming at the onset of his career? Or was there a sparkle of satirical intent in the author’s eye?



'Enigmatic Engineering' in The Wind from Nowhere

By • Feb 9th, 2008 •

Category: architecture, Ballardosphere, comics, Japan, manga

Could it really be possible that a Japanese manga artist was influenced by J.G. Ballard’s most obscure novel?



Steve Severin

By • Feb 6th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, film, gated communities, Jean Baudrillard

A few notes on Steve Severin, the Banshees, and Ballard…



'You did what?'

By • Feb 4th, 2008 •

Category: advertising, Ballardosphere, crime, gated communities, media landscape

I caved in and implemented two site-specific scenarios that I possibly thought I wouldn’t do in any especially near version of the future…



Over to you…

By • Feb 3rd, 2008 •

Category: architecture, Ballardosphere, consumerism, fashion, photography, sexual politics, Shanghai, speed & violence, surveillance, travel, urban revolt, visual art

This post is given over to recent links readers have sent me. ‘Ballardian’ or not? You decide.



Big British Ballard Buzz

By • Feb 2nd, 2008 •

Category: autobiography, Ballardosphere

Recent media action surrounding Miracles of Life.



On the phone to Ballard

By • Feb 2nd, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, David Cronenberg, film

The Guardian’s Danny Leigh gets behind our Ballardian Home Movie competition.



Ballard on BBC Radio 3

By • Jan 29th, 2008 •

Category: audio, Ballardosphere

From BBC Radio 3: ‘Philip Dodd meets two of the most important voices in contemporary British writing: Martin Amis and JG Ballard, who are both publishing new works of non-fiction.’



More extracts from Miracles of Life

By • Jan 29th, 2008 •

Category: autobiography, Ballardosphere, boredom, psychology, science fiction, speed & violence, visual art

The Times has two more extracts from Miracles of Life. In the first, Ballard reminisces about his time as a trainee air force pilot. In the second, he discusses the ideas behind Crash.



Ballard & Kunzru, part 2

By • Jan 28th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, WWII

Photo from Waterstones Book Quarterly; photographer Gautier Deblonde. British readers should note that the Waterstones Book Quarterly has published the full print version of Hari Kunzru’s filmed interview with JGB. Still no major revelations, but yet another great quote from Ballard: We’re all shaped by our childhoods, but particularly so if one’s childhood takes place [...]



Territories Re-Imagined and more news from Phil Smith

By • Jan 28th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, psychopathology

Phil Smith of the wonderful Wrights & Sites collective has sent me information on forthcoming ‘walk-orientated performances, events and objects’. While not explicitly linked to Ballard, various themes and preoccupations will be familiar to readers of this site: First of all the show I have written based on my Easter 2007 walk following the route [...]



La Jetée ciné-roman back in print

By • Jan 25th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Chris Marker, film, inner space, New Worlds, science fiction

I am delighted to report that the book of Chris Marker’s La Jetée is back in print through Zone Books — and in hardcover, too. It will be out in (US) Spring 2008. Thank you, thank you: for years, second-hand copies were changing hands via Amazon and eBay for anything up to $400. Unable to [...]



New Ballard video interview

By • Jan 25th, 2008 •

Category: autobiography, Ballardosphere, Shanghai, Shepperton, WWII

Still from Hari Kunzru’s interview with J.G. Ballard. © Waterstone’s Books Quarterly. Waterstones is featuring a video interview with JGB, conducted by Hari Kunzru to promote Miracles of Life. There are no surprises here. Kunzru asks Ballard about the relationship of Miracles to JGB’s semi-autobiographical novels, Empire of the Sun and The Kindness of Women, [...]



Authentic literature

By • Jan 23rd, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, literature, science fiction

I had to smile when I read this from Wired’s Clive Thompson [via Boing Boing]: If you want to read books that tackle profound philosophical questions, then the best — and perhaps only — place to turn these days is sci-fi. Science fiction is the last great literature of ideas. From where I sit, traditional [...]



An American architecture critic in London: BLDGBLOG crosses the pond

By • Jan 23rd, 2008 •

Category: architecture, Ballardosphere, film

Geoff Manaugh of BLDGBLOG fame is giving a lecture tonight at the Bartlett School of Architecture in London, home of the innovative built-environment module, Unit 15, led by Nic Clear and Simon Kennedy. I’m sure Ballard will pop up somewhere in Geoff’s talk. Not only have I previously interviewed Geoff about the intersections between JGB [...]



Hello America, goodbye Liberty

By • Jan 22nd, 2008 •

Category: alternate worlds, America, Ballardosphere, urban ruins

Gerry Canavan collects images of a ruined Statue of Liberty. Ballard is partial to the meme, too…



BBC World Book Club show cancelled

By • Jan 22nd, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere

JGB’s BBC World Book Club show has been cancelled due to the author’s serious illness.



Self on Ballard

By • Jan 21st, 2008 •

Category: audio, Ballardosphere

Forthcoming on BBC Radio 4: Will Self on J.G. Ballard.



12 Steps Down: reviewed

By • Jan 21st, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, short stories, visual art

Guardian columnist Jean Hannah Edelstein reviews the 12 Steps Down exhibition, based on J.G. Ballard’s short story, ‘The Drowned Giant’.



Miracles of Life extract & interview

By • Jan 20th, 2008 •

Category: autobiography, Ballardosphere, features, Lead Story, Shanghai, WWII

The Times is featuring an extract from Ballard’s forthcoming autobiography, Miracles of Life. There’s also an accompanying interview, in which it’s revealed that Ballard has been diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer.



More on Sinclair and Ballard

By • Jan 18th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Iain Sinclair, psychogeography

I’ve just come across news of a collection of essays, City Visions: The Work of Iain Sinclair. It came out in April 2007, but completely flew under my radar. If you click on ‘sample pdf’ at the bottom of that link, you’ll come across this: Chapter 11: Re-Placing the Novel: Sinclair, Ballard and the Spaces [...]



Questions for Ballard

By • Jan 16th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere

The BBC have contacted me regarding the World Book Club radio Q&A they are doing with J.G. Ballard on Jan 24, talking about Empire of the Sun. In addition to on-the-spot questions from the local audience, they are keen for questions to be put to Ballard from people outside the UK. As I was told: [...]



Love among the mannequins

By • Jan 15th, 2008 •

Category: advertising, Ballardosphere, body horror, consumerism, death of affect, fashion, visual art

Here’s a new campaign from fashion label Dsquared2, featuring sex with crash-test mannequins. But it doesn’t appear to be selling anything. What exactly *is* it selling? Note the photographer: none other than our old mucker, Steven Meisel.



'Accident' or 'Vulva'? The battle for your Ballardian dollar

By • Jan 11th, 2008 •

Category: advertising, Ballardosphere, body horror, David Cronenberg, fashion, speed & violence

What’s more Ballardian? A fragrance for women patterned after the smell of burnt rubber, brake fluid and excrement? Or a scent designed to evoke the smell of a woman’s vagina? You decide.



'12 Steps Down': art inspired by 'The Drowned Giant'

By • Jan 10th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, short stories, visual art

News of a ‘site-concerned work’ inspired by Ballard’s short story ‘The Drowned Giant’ and by ‘the labyrinthine, vernacular architecture of Shoreditch Town Hall’s basement’, with 25 artists invited to produce work around these themes.



Ballard Southbank show cancelled

By • Jan 10th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere

I have been informed that unfortunately JGB’s Southbank appearance on the 20th of February has been cancelled due to his ill health. Anyone who has bought tickets should contact the Southbank Centre for options. UPDATE: Kevan writes: ‘Sad news. I’ve just spoken to the South Bank Centre – they’re automatically refunding all past credit-card ticket [...]



Ballard, braces & bonnets

By • Jan 8th, 2008 •

Category: alternate worlds, Ballardosphere, media landscape, television

Lest you have any doubt that Mr Ballard is in fact Mr Rent-a-Quote, here he is, commenting on costume dramas, of all things, for the Observer: The fear of some of our best contemporary writers is that the British love of classic adaptations reflects an unhealthy obsession with the past. Novelist JG Ballard is blunt [...]



Come in no. 27, your time is up

By • Jan 6th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, celebrity culture, David Cronenberg, Jean Baudrillard

Ballard comes in at no. 27 in the Times list of the Greatest British Writers Since 1945. But one thing baffles me…