[Illustration Omitted]
The camera obliterated o·blit·er·ate o·blit·er·at·ed, o·blit·er·at·ing, o·blit·er·ates: 1) To do away with completely so as to leave no trace; 2) the memory of the objects’ tiny size, making everyday throwaway throwaway bits and pieces loom like strange forms from outer space.
Cast-off cast·off : 1) One that has been discarded 2) Printing a calculation of the amount of space a manuscript will occupy when set into type. adj. also cast-off Discarded; rejected planks and bricks serve new functions as makeshift steps or parking-space savers.
The structures now seem lonely on the highway, like flesh-picked skeletons but also like the Constructivist con·struc·tiv·ism: A movement in modern art originating in Moscow in 1920 and characterized by the use of industrial materials such as glass, sheet metal, and plastic to create nonrepresentational, often geometric objects sculpture of long ago.
Altarpiece
The idea of the lemon
Originated with Barry Cowan-Dime.
Go west into the sun.
Reprogramming a Scanner
A circular table of glass
Motorized tracks beneath
The scanner’s long cylindrical unsleeping eye
360 degrees of memory
No more, no less





