We received this picture from the publisher – Pamphlet 34 has been printed and should be available soon

NB: Steven Pippin notes that the axes “Space ” and “Time” should be swapped.
We visited Steven Pippin’s studio yesterday – here he explains the collapse of the universe and the basis of his Omega = 1 project by drawing on his workshop wall. Lots of stunning work.
A couple more images of the individual instruments that feature in Pamphlet Architecture 34. It should be out soon – you can get a copy HERE
Some more stereo views of the interior of the Nautilus in Paris. The difference between seeing the two dimensional image and the stereoscopic three dimensions is pronounced (view in the normal way – or check back a couple of posts for the most recent suggestion of how to view stereo pairs). I have been in a few submarines and am intrigued by the nature of space made almost entirely by programme – the equipment that lines the habitable volume. I took these a few years ago and it was when I sent another pair from this series in an E-mail discussion with Perry Kulper that I discovered the possibility of how to float shadows in space (posted in the earliest post on Instrument Six).
The sculptural bones of this skeleton are heavier than those of its neighbours in the Booth Museum in Brighton – to carry the weight of the absent armour. The stereo separation is quite wide ont hese so if you are not used to viewing stereo pairs you might experience a little eye strain in trying to register them.
To resolve the images go cross-eyed so that one image registers over the other. Try to relax so that the full stereo depth appears. If you are having trouble, make the images smaller.