The 35 Best Dance Sequences in Film
"Forget the so-so acting and formulaic plots — there is a long and illustrious history of great dance moments captured on film. Be it Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire tap dancing, John Travolta doing the disco, Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Gray practicing lifts in the water, or Julia Stiles fusing ballet and hip hop, everyone has a favorite dance scene that they have tried to memorize and perform. After the jump, we have compiled our favorite dance scenes from film in chronological order. We’re willing to bet you won’t stay in your chair for long.'
Flavorwire
Che
Wikipedia - "Ernesto 'Che' Guevara (... June 14, 1928 – October 9, 1967), commonly known as El Che or simply Che, was an Argentine Marxist revolutionary, physician, author, intellectual, guerrilla leader, diplomat, military theorist, and major figure of the Cuban Revolution. Since his death, his stylized visage has become a ubiquitous countercultural symbol and global insignia within popular culture."
Wikipedia, W - 1, Che Guevara Archive, Che Lives, la red del Che : the Che network, Spartacus, Che Guevara: Where You'd Never Imagine Him - Netflix, amazon, The Motorcycle Diaries - Netflix, amazon, Che - Netflix, amazon, Criterion - Che, Criterion - "Why Che?", Amy Taubin
Wikipedia, W - 1, Che Guevara Archive, Che Lives, la red del Che : the Che network, Spartacus, Che Guevara: Where You'd Never Imagine Him - Netflix, amazon, The Motorcycle Diaries - Netflix, amazon, Che - Netflix, amazon, Criterion - Che, Criterion - "Why Che?", Amy Taubin
The Philosophers' Football Match
Wikipedia - "The Philosophers' Football Match is a Monty Python sketch depicting a football match in the Olympiastadion at the 1972 Munich Olympics between philosophers representing Greece and Germany. Starring in the sketch are Archimedes (John Cleese), Socrates (Eric Idle), Hegel (Graham Chapman), Nietzsche (Michael Palin), Marx (Terry Jones) and Kant (Terry Gilliam)."
Wikipedia, Philosophers Football, Telegraph
The Belles Heures
"The Belles Heures (1405–1408/9) of Jean de Berry, a treasure of The Cloisters collection, is one of the most celebrated and lavishly illustrated manuscripts in this country. Because it is currently unbound, it is possible to exhibit all of its illuminated pages as individual leaves, a unique opportunity never to be repeated."
Met Museum
Charles Olson: August 1963
"Charles Olson's monumental reading (2 hr 45 mins) at the Vancouver Poetry Festival, August 1963"
Penn Sound
Dark ambient
Necropolis Necrosphere
Wikipedia - "Dark ambient is a subgenre of ambient music that features foreboding, ominous, or discordant overtones. Dark ambient emerged in the 1980s and 1990s with the introduction of new synthesizer and sampling technology in the electronic music genre and other technical advances in music. Dark ambient is an unusually diverse genre, related to industrial music, noise, ethereal wave, and black metal, yet generally free from derivatives and connections to other genres or styles."
Wikipedia, darkambient, last.fm, Cold Warning, Dark Ambient Radio, Dark Ambient Music, Cold Spring, YouTube, (1), (2), (3), (4), (5)
Ulysses "Seen"
"Throwaway Horse projects are meant to be mere companion pieces to the works themselves-by outfitting the reader with the familiar gear of the comic narrative and the progressive gear of web annotations, we hope that a tech-savvy new generation of readers will be able to cut through jungles of unfamiliar references and appreciate the subtlety and artistry of the original books themselves which they otherwise might have neglected."
Ulysses "Seen", The Webcomic Overlook #93: Ulysses Seen, Ulysses "Seen" Blog, The New Yorker, Wikipedia
Moyra Davey
16 Photographs from Paris, 2009
"Photographer Moyra Davey takes quiet but ravishing photographs of typically overlooked and banal objects. Newspapers, dust, books, money, empty bottles, and the things on top of refrigerators all figure in series of pictures that bring viewers into a state of increased sensitivity to their everyday lives. Long Life Cool White features forty-five of the artist’s photographs from the past two decades."
Yale Press, Dust: Videos by Moyra Davey, Exposure Project
The Honeycombs
Wikipedia - "The Honeycombs were an English beat/pop group, founded in 1963 in North London. The group had one chart-topping hit, the million selling 'Have I the Right?', in 1964. After that song the interest in the group ebbed away, and they split up in late 1966. The group's most distinguishing mark was their female drummer, Honey Lantree."
Wikipedia, YouTube, (1)
Borges—The Conjectural Poem
Eugène Delacroix, The Battle of Taillebourg (1834)
"Lawyers can be dishonest, venal and self-serving. Lawyers can be intoxicated by power and can do evil to achieve it. But lawyers can be heroes, though sometimes tragic ones, whose vision provides inspiration across the ages. Consider this amazing poem by Borges, a salute to his ancestor, Francisco Narciso de Laprida, a lawyer who struggled to bring democratic liberalism anchored in the rule of law to the southern cone of Latin America."
Harpers
Rock-paper-scissors
Factory Records
Wikipedia - "Factory Records was a Manchester based British independent record label, started in 1978 by Tony Wilson and Alan Erasmus, which featured several prominent musical acts on its roster such as Joy Division, New Order, A Certain Ratio, The Durutti Column, Happy Mondays, and (briefly) James and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark."
Wikipedia, Factory Records, A Factory Discograpy, Google, YouTube - BBC, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
W.R. MacAskill
"We have also taken some of MacAskill's 16mm silent colour film footage from the 1930s and converted it for online viewing. The MacAskill Travelogue presents Nova Scotia for potential tourists, while the Bluenose footage provides truly exciting coverage of the last International Fishermen's Trophy Race, off Gloucester, MA in 1938."
Nova Scotia, W.R. MacAskill: The Man and His Time
Willie Mays
Paul Bowles (1910-1999)
"The American writer and composer, Paul Bowles, reflects on his life in Morocco, his adopted home for over fifty years. Dir. Mohamed Ulad-Mohand. Runtime: 27 min. "
UbuWeb
The Ronettes
Wikipedia - "The Ronettes were a 1960s girl group from New York City, best known for their work with producer Phil Spector. The group consisted of lead singer Veronica Bennett (a.k.a. Ronnie Spector); her sister, Estelle Bennett; and their cousin Nedra Talley."
Wikipedia, The Ronettes, last.fm, YouTube, (1), (2), (3), (4)
Stencil graffiti
Stencil near Rush and State Street, Chicago
Wikipedia - "Stencil graffiti makes use of a paper, cardboard, or other media to create an image or text that is easily reproducible. The desired design is cut out of the selected medium and then the image is transferred to a surface through the use of spray paint or roll-on paint."
Wikipedia
No Depression
Wikipedia - "No Depression was a bi-monthly magazine that covered a broad range of roots music, including alternative country and Americana. It was launched in September 1995 (as a quarterly) by co-editors/co-founders Grant Alden and Peter Blackstock, who brought in Kyla Fairchild as a co-publisher shortly thereafter."
Wikipedia, No Depression
Leslie Hewitt
Untitled, 2005
"Leslie Hewitt is inspired by 'the everyday and the transformative power of circumstance or situation,' as she notes in Modern Painters, taking on the forsaken documents of our past—brittle pictures, forgotten books, repressed films, and ephemera—to repurpose them in the present."
Whitney, Leslie Hewitt
Olympic Pictograms Through the Ages
"Designer Steven Heller traces the evolution of the tiny symbols for each Olympic sport since their appearance in 1936."
NYT
William T. Wiley
Alchemical Lyon, 2007
Wikipedia - "William T. Wiley (born October 21, 1937, in Bedford, Indiana) is a contemporary American artist. His practice spans a broad range of media including drawing, painting, sculpture, film, performance, and pinball. At least some of Wiley's work has been referred to as Funk art."
Wikipedia, William T. Wiley, artnet
David Tudor
Wikipedia - "David Eugene Tudor (January 20, 1926 – August 13, 1996) was an American pianist and composer of experimental music."
Wikipedia, David Tudor, The Getty, Sonic Memorial for David Tudor, YouTube - Realisation of David Tudor's Rainforest IV, (1), (2)
In & Out of Amsterdam: Travels in Conceptual Art, 1960–1976
Jan Dibbets. Untitled. 1969
"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."
MoMA, artcritical, Brooklyn Rail, NYT
Prince Buster
Wikipedia - "Cecil Bustamente Campbell, O.D. (born 28 May 1938), better known as Prince Buster and also known by his Muslim name Muhammed Yusef Ali, is a musician from Kingston, Jamaica is regarded as one of the most important figures in the history of ska and rocksteady music. The records he made on the Blue Beat label in the 1960s inspired many reggae and ska artists."
Wikipedia, last.fm, ska2soul, YouTube, (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6)
New York Cubans
Wikipedia - "The New York Cubans were a Negro Leagues baseball team that played during the 1930s and from 1939 to 1950. Despite playing in the Negro Leagues, the team occasionally employed white-skinned Hispanic baseball players as well, because Hispanics in general were largely ignored by the major league baseball teams before Jackie Robinson played for the Brooklyn Dodgers for the first time."
Wikipedia, Negro League Baseball Players Association
dance on paper
Pina Bausch
"Who is dancing on paper? Dance on Paper is an open space for writing about movement and its many manifestations. Previously from Paris and New York City, now from Riverside, CA, I intend this site mostly for my own documentation, but also to relay interesting discourse on contemporary dance from French into English."
dance on paper
Gotham City
Wikipedia - "Gotham City, a fictional city appearing in DC Comics, is best known as the home of Batman. Batman's place of residence was first identified as Gotham City in Batman #4 (Winter 1940)."
Wikipedia
Bauhaus: The Face of the 20th Century (1994)
"The Bauhaus school of design, craftsmanship and architecture, founded by Walter Gropius at Weimar in 1919, was largely responsible for revolutionizing the structure of art school tuition, and its basic tenets of design are now a modern commonplace."
UbuWeb
Tapedeck
"Tapedeck.org is a project of neckcns.com, built to showcase the amazing beauty and (sometimes) weirdness found in the designs of the common audio tape cassette. There's an amazing range of designs, starting from the early 60's functional cassette designs, moving through the colourful playfulness of the 70's audio tapes to amazing shape variations during the 80's and 90's."
Tapedeck
Z'EV
Wikipedia - "Z'EV (born Stefan Joel Weisser, at 7:58 a.m. on February 8, 1951 in Los Angeles, California) is an American text-sound artist, poet and mystic who is perhaps best known for his work as a catacoustic (reflected sound-based) percussionist."
Wikipedia, MySpace, Z'ev: Swords into Plowshares, YouTube, (1), (2)
Gustav Metzger
Liquidation of the Warsaw Ghetto, April 28 1943, (1995/2009)
Wikipedia = "Gustav Metzger (born 1926) is an artist and political activist who developed the concept of Auto-Destructive Art and the Art Strike. Together with John Sharkey, he initiated the Destruction in Art Symposium in 1966. Metzger is recognized for his protests in the political and artistic realms."
Wikipedia, Guardian, Gustav Metzger, artinfo, YouTube, (1), (2), (3)
Folk America
The Bently Boys
"Clips and commentary about or by the Carter Family, Jimmie Rodgers, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Charlie Poole, Fiddlin' John Carson, Dock Boggs, Mississippi John Hurt, Judy Collins, Steve Earle, Pete Seeger, Honeyboy Edwards, Slim Bryant, Leadbelly, Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Rambling Jack Elliot, Anna Lomax, Mary Travis, Tom Paxton, Roger McGuinn, Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Robbie Robertson, Stephen Stills, Country Joe McDonald, Odetta, Tom Paxton and more."
Folk America: Birth Of A Nation, Folk America: This Land Is Your Land, Folk America: Blowin' In The Wind
NYPL Map Rectifier
"The NYPL Map Rectifier is a tool for digitally aligning ('rectifying') historical maps from the NYPL's collections to match today's precise maps. Visitors can browse already rectified maps or assist the NYPL by aligning a map. Play the video above to tour the site and learn how to rectify a map yourself."
NYPL
Éric Rohmer
Wikipedia - "Éric Rohmer (4 April 1920 – 11 January 2010) was a French film director, film critic, journalist, novelist, screenwriter and teacher. A figure in the post-war New Wave cinema, he was a former editor of Cahiers du cinĂ©ma."
Wikipedia, NYT, Films de France, IMDb
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)