While looking for a picture for my memorial to the bomb, I found a number of related links. This blog is sometimes nothing more than an annotated bookmark list, and this is why….
The Bomb Project describes itself as:
a comprehensive on-line compendium of nuclear-related links, imagery and documentation. It is intended specifically as a resource for artists, and encourages those working in all media, from net.art, film and video, eco-intervention and site-specific installation to more traditional forms of agitprop, to use this site to search for raw material.
Google, however, pointed me to their old index. It’s there that I found links to Bruce Conner’s Bombhead and Robert Longo’s Nagasaki{#744&cid=57509&wid=423879536&page=1&group=&max_tn_page=}, part of his Sickness of Reason{#744&cid=57509} gallery.
Gregory Walker at Virgina Polytechnic‘s Center for Digital Discourse and Culture maintains pages of information on the effects of nuclear weapons and nuclear war. It’s here that you’ll find three videos of nuclear tests, including a house blown away, planes destroyed, and trees snapped like matchsticks. These things are scary, even rotten.com has a page on atomic bombs.
Carey Sublette’s The Nuclear Weapon Archive is included in this list mainly because it quotes H.G. Wells:
…And these atomic bombs which science burst upon the world that night were strange even to the men who used them.
Finally, Animation World Network has an interesting story on Walt Disney’s nuclear propaganda. More amusing than that, however, may be this 1957 atomic revolution comic book, from which the image above is taken.
Extra: don’t forget Blondie’s Atomic{#XfFSogqWv7s&offerid=78941&type=3&subid=0&tmpid=1826&RD_PARM1=http%253A%252F%252Fphobos.apple.com%252FWebObjects%252FMZStore.woa%252Fwa%252FviewAlbum%253FselectedItemId%253D74137535%2526playListId%253D74137589%2526originStoreFront%253D143441%26partnerId%3D30}.