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The nuances of city life that epitomize the urban existence are what he dwells upon.Īdblock Adblock Plus Adblocker Ultimate Ghostery uBlock Origin Others Logan uses his art to explore the microcosm in which he is a cell, just part of a whole. Confined spaces on subways, honeycomb living structures it is a labyrinth of working systems limited only by its border, its ‘skin’. The outside world is effectively shut out while the city creates its own reality. Buildings block passageways, walls block views, doors hide openings. It is alive a breathing creature where the ebb and flow of people washing over its sidewalks act as cells circulating through its veins. With his photorealistic style, Logan draws a parallel between the cold, harsh city and a warm, vibrant organism. It is this symbiotic relationship with the city that fuels his work. A perfect union was conceived by spraypainting stencils of his subjects: the dirty and gritty nature of the spraypaint thoroughly depicted the decay of the city while the muted shine of metallic paint mirrored the faint glimmer of hope and life within it. Stenciling started as a substitution for screenprinting, but quickly morphed into Logan’s medium of choice. The video above features Logan Hicks speaking on the new show, talking about historical photographs and feeling alone in the busiest place in the world.
Logan Hicks brings his meticulously stenciled, expressive landscapes to the show while Anthony Lister’s painterly spray can antics deliver more defaced heroes and Michael Kalish makes mangled license plates bloom into portraits.
I didn't find any custom metadata introduced by Opera Neon, but I would be happy to be wrong.Tomorrow marks the opening of a new group show featuring works from Logan Hicks, Anthony Lister and Michael Kalish.
I digged a bit in the compiled code of Opera Neon and, as far as I can see, the page icon is generated starting from the Facebook image og:image, falling back to the Twitter image twitter:image if the Facebook one is missing. But I also think Opera Neon might have a specific meta tag for this which isn't documented yet, so we just have be patient :) So my conclusion is that the bubble tabs are made for showing a featured image related to a page/article and is using Open Graph meta tags to handle this. If you're adding your own website to the "speed dial" you will notice it will use the image from og:image meta tag or use a screenshot of the page if the meta tag is missing. I've been looking through all of the meta tags and icon resources and didn't find any that could match the ones used in the "speed dial", so my conclusion is that those icons where added by default and not in the related webside source code. I also noticed that most of the pages in the "Speed Dial" don't have a og:image meta tag on the front page.
It took a while for the browser to scrape the new information, but it changed after a while (I'm still looking into how to force scraping new information).
To confirm that Opera Neon is using the images from og:image meta tag I ran some tests on a website where I changed the src in the og:image meta tag and noticed the image changed in the bubble tab. That is why bubble tab images may vary on different pages on a website. So if you're having a og:image meta tag (with a working source) on your website, Opera Neon will use this as the image in Bubble Tab. Soultion: I suspected that Opera Neon is using the Open Graph protocol to select the images. You'll see on the image you shared that the fav icon is already in the second bubble on the bubble tab.įor example if you click on an article on The Verge you will see the bubble tab is using the article's featured image as the "icon". The "bubble tabs" is mainly used to show images related to the page/article, and not icons like a fav icon. īut I also think Opera Neon might have a specific meta tag for this which isn't documented yet. Short answer: Opera Neon is using the Open Graph og:image meta tag to show images in the bubble tabs.