profile pic for  jack brown (@jaaaaackb

jack brown (@jaaaaackb)

35 posts - 761 followers - 1834 following

free palestine
📍london
open for bookings & collabs
@jack.schnapps

a weekend detached with @erifilii & @unplugged.rest

What inspires London’s creatives to be creative? ☁️ We asked them at the @litcreativecrew X @creatorsoncreators mixer and here’s what they said. We wanted to see how differently people tend to think about creativity, from relating it to storytelling, to food, to all kinds of freedom of expression 🫶🤝 🎥 Filming: @jaaaaackb 🎬 Editing: @erifilii 🎤 Interviewed: @maynard.sabellano @yonickvelasco @bohdanlee @deequatro @kierannewman_ @beingele @eniola_belle @thekainaatbibi @bydrpeace jtmstudios8 canishatutsiraii 🫶

jack brown - @jaaaaackb media

change in the ways of my world rotating

Some Valencia visual postcards from a weekend in 🇪🇸 #always823 #cinematography #valencia #film

Westminster but make it #cinematic on Kodak Gold 200 Shot on #sonya7iii & #bronicaetrs

jack brown - @jaaaaackb media

Like butter on warm toast.

“Tube-O-Nauts 24” by me. I found the artwork Tube-o-Nauts’ Travels in the Tate Britains archive collection upon my first visit. The 1970s work by Felipe Ehrenberg stood out to me as London’s tube network fascinated me as a child, and Ehrenberg’s work resonated with me. I loved the 70s feel about the pictures Rodolfo “Laus” Alcaraz took to accompany Ehrenberg’s experimental analysis of the underground system. Observing as a modern-day audience member, I felt I was being transported back to the 70s, comparing and contrasting the tube network to now. The original text has two mediums which make it a visual artwork, consisting of 6 photographs and a printed document. The document outlines an “experiment” where Ehrenberg & Laus take the first train from a designated station, and remain in the tube system until the last train to the station which was the point of departure. Tube-O-Nauts’ Travels debuted as a part of the FLUXSHOE exhibitions run by David Major throughout England in the 1970s. This worldwide movement called Fluxus, saw artists such as Yoko Ono, George Maciunas, Yayoi Kusama & Nam June Paik join the collective and draw from Dadaist and Futurist inspiration. Major helped unlock the English movement, initiating a festival of exhibitions for emerging Fluxus artists to convey their work, one being Ehrenberg himself. This is my remediation, and homage to the work and Felipe Ehrenberg.

jack brown - @jaaaaackb media

“Tube-O-Nauts’ Travels” by Felipe Ehrenberg, 1970. Make sure to zoom in to see the text. Found in the archives gallery at Tate Britain.

jack brown - @jaaaaackb media

Few things that bring me joy

jack brown - @jaaaaackb media

🕴️🕴️🕴️

jack brown - @jaaaaackb media

seeing a friend a day keeps the loneliness at bay

jack brown - @jaaaaackb media

Istanbul does simply deserve its own post because it was magnificent