John Dowland
Wikipedia - "John Dowland (1563 – buried 20 February 1626) was an English composer, singer, and lutenist. He is best known today for his melancholy songs such as 'Come, heavy sleep" (the basis for Benjamin Britten's Nocturnal), 'Come again', "Flow my tears', 'I saw my Lady weepe' and 'In darkness let me dwell', but his instrumental music has undergone a major revival, and has been a source of repertoire for classical guitarists during the twentieth century."
Wikipedia, Naxos, Youtube, (1)
Wikipedia, Naxos, Youtube, (1)
In & Out of Amsterdam: Travels in Conceptual Art, 1960–1976
"This exhibition examines approximately seventy-five works by artists of different nationalities relating to travel and the city of Amsterdam, which was the nexus of intense art activities in the 1960s and 1970s, when artists converged there from all over the world. Hanne Darboven, Gilbert & George, Sol LeWitt, Charlotte Posenenske, Allen Ruppersberg, and Lawrence Weiner, among others, spent considerable amounts of time in Amsterdam and often produced works in direct relation to the city."
MoMA
MoMA
Tullio Lombardo and Venetian High Renaissance Sculpture
A Young Couple (Bacchus and Ariadne)
"Led by Tullio Lombardo (c. 1455–1532), the great Venetian sculptors of the High Renaissance created new ideals of beauty, shaped by a poetic and nostalgic approach to classical antiquity."
NGA
The Hidden History of Tango
"For the first century of its history, while Tango music struggled for and then achieved respectability, the dance was neglected by historians and academics. The articles on these pages are based on many years of research in areas sometimes not covered by the official histories of Tango. The aim is to get to the heart of the Tango from a dancer's perspective, but not forgetting the rich history of the music."
The Hidden History of Tango
The Hidden History of Tango
Tour de France
Wikipedia - "The Tour de France is an annual bicycle race that covers more than 3,500 kilometres (2,200 mi) throughout France and bordering countries. The race usually lasts 23 days and attracts cyclists from around the world."
Wikipedia, Tour de France - Guardian, VS, Steephill, Tour de France 2009, Bicycling, Tour de France history - BBC, Pitchfofk - Tour de France Soundtracks, YouTube - 1, (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), (12)
Wikipedia, Tour de France - Guardian, VS, Steephill, Tour de France 2009, Bicycling, Tour de France history - BBC, Pitchfofk - Tour de France Soundtracks, YouTube - 1, (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), (12)
Leaves of Ash, Paris
"Inspired by the poet Walt Whitman, Michael Nevin and Julia Dippelhofer set out to gather the work of artists that are contributors to the journal, and their friends and neighbors in Brooklyn. The fragmented natural world, portrayed by the six artists that make up this show, is both a reflection and a fabrication, a witty questioning of their surroundings as well as an observant documentation of them."
Fake-RealAX, Suzanne Tarasieve
Fake-RealAX, Suzanne Tarasieve
Jacques Villeglé
Wikipedia - "Jacques Villeglé, born Jacques Mahé de la Villeglé (1926, Quimper, Brittany) is a French mixed-media artist and affichiste famous for his alphabet with symbolic letters and decollage with ripped or lacerated posters."
Wikipedia, Modernism, artnet, global moxie
Wikipedia, Modernism, artnet, global moxie
Pina Bausch, 1940-2009
"Pina Bausch, the German choreographer who combined potent drama and dreamlike movement to create a powerful form of dance theater that influenced generations of dancemakers, died on Tuesday in Wuppertal, Germany. She was 68."
NYT, A Stage for Social Ego to Battle Anguished Id - NYT, Pina Bausch - NYT, Wikipedia, Stanford Presidential Lectures in the Humanities and Arts, Ballet Magazine, npr, Pina Bausch: A Worldly Choreographer - NYT, Pornography of pain: Dancer Pina Bausch's turbulent career - The Independent, Video, UBU, YouTube, (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10)
NYT, A Stage for Social Ego to Battle Anguished Id - NYT, Pina Bausch - NYT, Wikipedia, Stanford Presidential Lectures in the Humanities and Arts, Ballet Magazine, npr, Pina Bausch: A Worldly Choreographer - NYT, Pornography of pain: Dancer Pina Bausch's turbulent career - The Independent, Video, UBU, YouTube, (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10)
Sophie Calle
“Prenez soin de vous”, 2007. Installation view.
"It’s often presumed that privacy is a myth in our technologically enmeshed world. Yet it’s a testament to the reverse that artist Sophie Calle, after more than 25 years of stealing strangers’ phone books (L’Homme au carnet), photographing hotel visitors’ underwear (L’Hôtel) and stalking strange men through Europe (Suite vénitienne), still manages to find uncomfortable aspects of the private—often in her own life—and expose them through art in unique and provocative ways."
Canadian Art, Wikipedia, Issue 5: Venice Special (Tate), Guardian, YouTube, Google
"It’s often presumed that privacy is a myth in our technologically enmeshed world. Yet it’s a testament to the reverse that artist Sophie Calle, after more than 25 years of stealing strangers’ phone books (L’Homme au carnet), photographing hotel visitors’ underwear (L’Hôtel) and stalking strange men through Europe (Suite vénitienne), still manages to find uncomfortable aspects of the private—often in her own life—and expose them through art in unique and provocative ways."
Canadian Art, Wikipedia, Issue 5: Venice Special (Tate), Guardian, YouTube, Google
French New Wave
The 400 Blows
Wikipedia - "The New Wave (French: La Nouvelle Vague) was a blanket term coined by critics for a group of French filmmakers of the late 1950s and 1960s, influenced (in part) by Italian Neorealism[3] and classical Hollywood cinema."
Wikipedia, Moving Image Source, fictionwise
Wikipedia - "The New Wave (French: La Nouvelle Vague) was a blanket term coined by critics for a group of French filmmakers of the late 1950s and 1960s, influenced (in part) by Italian Neorealism[3] and classical Hollywood cinema."
Wikipedia, Moving Image Source, fictionwise
Home on the Hudson: Women and Men Painting Landscapes, 1825-1875
Hudson Valley at Croton Point, 1869. Julie Hart Beers
"SHAKESPEARE is not the only attraction at Boscobel this summer. On the lower level of the historic Boscobel House, an elegant example of Federal architecture completed in 1808, is a small exhibition gallery that opened last year."
NYT, Home Hudson (PDF)
Andy Denzler
"Figures referenced from mass media, photography, cinema and other areas of popular culture, are removed from their original contexts and placed into ambiguous spaces."
Andy Denzler, artnet, re-title
Andy Denzler, artnet, re-title
Hazel & Alice
"Protest and folksinger Hazel Dickens grew up the eighth of 11 children in a large, poor mining family in West Virginia, and she has since used elements of country and bluegrass to spread truth about two causes close to her heart: the plight of non-unionized mineworkers and feminism, born not of the '60s movement but traditional values."
eMusic, Rhapsody, MySpace, last.fm
'I got a new head, and I'm fine'
"The bikes ... the robots ... the dream of man and machine in perfect harmony. How is the Kraftwerk vision of the future shaping up? Ralf Hütter gives a rare interview to John Harris."
Guardian, Paul Morley's showing off... Kraftwerk
Guardian, Paul Morley's showing off... Kraftwerk
Peter and Gordon
Martayan Lan
Paris, 1627. Carte de l'Amerique.
"Whether you are starting a new collection or further developing an existing one, we are always happy to offer you the benefit of our experience. We would like to encourage you to contact us with any questions you might have."
Martayan Lan
Keith Coventry
Bird Songs
"Songs and calls of some New York State birds.'Speak, cry, warble, call, speak each one according to your variety, each, according to your kind.' Popol Vuh I."
SUNY
SUNY
Gerhard Richter
4,096 Colors, 1974
Wikipedia - "Richter has stated that the use of photographic imagery as a starting point for his early paintings resulted from an attempt to escape the complicated process of deciding what to paint, along with the critical and theoretical implications accompanying such decisions within the context of a modernist discourse."
Wikipedia, Gerhard Richter, YouTube
Wikipedia - "Richter has stated that the use of photographic imagery as a starting point for his early paintings resulted from an attempt to escape the complicated process of deciding what to paint, along with the critical and theoretical implications accompanying such decisions within the context of a modernist discourse."
Wikipedia, Gerhard Richter, YouTube
“Portugal Is Not a Small Country”
"Yet Portugal is loath to think of itself as a small country. Or at least it was, before its overseas empire collapsed. Built up over centuries of exploration, trade and colonisation, the Portuguese Empire once spanned four continents. The jewel in its crown was Brazil, but Portugal lost control over its South American colony in 1822."
Strange Maps
Strange Maps
Napoleon III and Paris
"This dossier photography exhibition will focus on the changing shape of Paris during the Second Empire, when the city’s narrow streets and medieval buildings gave way to the broad boulevards and grand public works that still define the urban landscape of the French capital."
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYT
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYT
Robert Altman
Wikipedia - "Robert Bernard Altman (20 February 1925 – 20 November 2006) was an American film director known for making films that are highly naturalistic, but with a stylized perspective."
Wikipedia, IMDb, Robert Altman Photography, senses of cinema, NYT
Wikipedia, IMDb, Robert Altman Photography, senses of cinema, NYT
The Easybeats
Wikipedia - "The Easybeats were a rock and roll band from Australia. They formed in Sydney in late 1964 and split at the end of 1969. They are widely regarded as the greatest Australian pop band of the 1960s and were the first Australian rock and roll act to score an international pop hit with their classic 1966 single 'Friday on My Mind'."
Wikipedia, last.fm, YouTube, (1), (2),
Wikipedia, last.fm, YouTube, (1), (2),
Jorge Rodriguez-Gerada
Wikipedia - "Jorge Rodriguez-Gerada is a Cuban-American contemporary artist. He was born in Cuba and grew up in the United States. He became a founding member of the culture jamming movement in New York City in the early 1990s, first with the group Artfux and later with the group Cicada Corps of Artists."
Wikipedia, Jorge Rodriguez-Gerada, NY ARTS, Wooster Collective
Wikipedia, Jorge Rodriguez-Gerada, NY ARTS, Wooster Collective
Lucas Samaras
Self Portrait, 1973
"Over the years, Samaras has created drawings, furniture, jewelry, paintings, photographs, sculpture and room-sized installation using a variety of material including beads, chicken wire, clay, Cor-ten steel, fabric, mirrors, pastel, pencil, pins, plaster and oil."
Pace Wildenstein, The Getty, Lucas Samaras Interview
Flower Mound Observatory
"During the course of developing the skills needed to be a good astro-photographer sometimes it becomes necessary to take the law into your own hands and build what you need. Not everything out there is tailor made these days to fit your exact application."
Flower Mound Observatory
Flower Mound Observatory
Vera Lutter
"Vera Lutter, with the help of The Print Center and Amtrak, positioned a custom-made 8-by-16 foot camera obscura on the northwest corner of the second floor of the Amtrak parking garage at 30th Street Train Station."
The Print Center, galerie xippas 06_2009 spaces
The Print Center, galerie xippas 06_2009 spaces
Peter Gordon
"Young composers, taking their cue from La Monte Young, Terry Riley and others, were using simple tonal materials -- sometimes as a drone, sometimes with a palpable pulse -- to create a new kind of art music, one that used amplification (sometimes, though not always, at high levels) and borrowed from Asian, Indian, and (often uncredited) African music traditions."
MySpace, (1), PETER GORDON, Lovely, YouTube, (1), (2)
World Digital Library
1562, Diego Gutierrez, Spain
"The WDL makes it possible to discover, study, and enjoy cultural treasures from around the world on one site, in a variety of ways. These cultural treasures include, but are not limited to, manuscripts, maps, rare books, musical scores, recordings, films, prints, photographs, and architectural drawings."
World Digital Library
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