Orshi Drozdik
Individual Mythology, I Project On Myself My History, 1977, photographs, performance.
"Hungarian visual artist. Orsolya – known as Orshi – Drozdik studied graphic arts at the Hungarian University of Fine Arts from 1970 to 1977. A post-conceptual artist, she uses the full range of techniques that fine art has to offer, from drawing to installation. While her work finds its roots mainly in conceptual art, it builds on the constitution and definition of the self and on the question of gender identity. As such, it positions itself between the poles of the female self and the creative self. ..."
AWARE: Women Artists
W - Orshi Drozdik
Orshi Drozdik: Deconstructing Gender and the Self
Orshi Drozdik
Archive: Orshi Drozdik Retrospective Exhibition Ludwig Museum Budapest 2001/02 (Video)
August Wilson's Blues Poetry
"If the blues is the wash of black suffering hung up to dry in the sun of pitiless self-reflection, then August Wilson was our greatest lyrical washerman. He was also the most gifted blues poet on the American stage. He bathed the soil of bigotry in the rhetoric of black spirituality. And he made raucous black vernacular an agitator to stir hope into motion. 'I think the blues is the best literature that we as blacks have created since we’ve been here,' Wilson said. 'And it’s a lot of philosophical ideas. I call it our sacred book. So what I’ve attempted to do is mine that field, to mine those cultural ideas and attitudes and give them to my characters.' When Wilson says the blues are literature, he is not exaggerating its importance but underscoring the blues’ sublime literary qualities. ..."
HUMANITIES, March/April 2015
PBS: August Wilson and the Blues (Video)
August Wilson: Poetic playwright as historian (Audio)
[PDF] August Wilson and the African-American Odyssey By Kim Pereira
Hill District Map
2017 July: Fences (2016), 2017 August: The Ground on Which I Stand, a Speech on Black Theatre and Performance (1992), 2018 July: Pittsburgh Cycle, 2018 August: August Wilson in St. Paul: A MN Original Special
Medieval "Dark Eclipse" Helps Date Ice Cores — and Time Volcanic Eruptions
"You never know where an astronomical event might turn up in old historical records, and how it might link up with evidence from modern science. Researchers at the University of Geneva recently uncovered such an astronomical tale from the archives, using contemporary accounts of a curiously dark lunar eclipse to give insight into volcanic eruptions and their effect medieval climate. The researchers, who published their study April 21st in Scientific Reports, were examining ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica over the past couple millennia, looking for sulfate spikes that would indicate volcanic eruptions. ..."
Sky and Telescope
Seeing Robert Wilson plain
"When Gabrielle Dean first visited Robert Wilson in 2009 at his home on Maryland's Eastern Shore, her intention was to collect photographs that Wilson wanted to add to the personal papers he had donated to Johns Hopkins' Sheridan Libraries in 2003 and 2004. ... Then Wilson, A&S '43, a well-regarded bookseller, obsessive book collector, and author who for more than 25 years owned and operated the Phoenix Book Shop in Greenwich Village, ushered Dean into his voluminous library, located in a special addition to the house, to show her his collection, notably his Gertrude Stein materials, a spectacular trove of inscribed first editions by the iconic and idiosyncratic 20th-century author—a total of 1,396 volumes, representing 1,187 unique titles, plus much more Stein-related material. ..."
Johns Hopkins University
2007 November: Gertrude Stein, 2011 July: The making of "Tender Buttons", 2012 March: The Steins Collect, 2012 May: Gertrude Stein's War Years: Setting the record straight, 2014 November: Lost Generation, 2015 January: The Making of an American by Edward White, 2015 March: Twenty-two on 'Tender Buttons' - Gertrude Stein
Léon Augustin Lhermitte
Harvest (1874)
"The artist I am looking at today is the French painter Léon-Augustin Lhermitte. I suppose his work could be categorised by three artistic terms: Naturalism, Realism and Ruralism, as he will probably be remembered for his paintings depicting peasant farmers and their families at work in the fields. However, as you will find out, there were more strings to his bow. Léon-Augustin Lhermitte was the only son of a local schoolmaster. He was born on July 31, 1844 in Mont-Saint-Père, a commune in the Aisne department in Hauts-de-France in north-eastern France, which lies about eighty kilometres north east of the French capital. The village was close to Chateau Thierry, a farming region close to the Champagne region around Rheims. This rural setting was to provide a wealth of ideas, inspiration, and realist subject matter throughout the artist’s life. ..."
my daily art display
W - Léon Augustin Lhermitte
A Rest from the Harvest
Coronavirus in the U.S.: Latest Map and Case Count
"More than 1,429,100 people in the United States have been infected with the coronavirus and at least 86,000 have died, according to a New York Times database. Though the numbers of new cases and deaths have started trending downward, the virus continues to circulate widely within the United States. As many states move to partly reopen their economies, thousands of new cases are still being identified each day and true normalcy remains a distant vision. Every day, more beloved events are scrubbed from the calendar. There will be no Jericho ATV Festival in New Hampshire, no World’s Largest Brat Fest in Wisconsin, no Lake Placid Horse Shows in New York. ..."
NY Times
NY Times: What Is the Real Coronavirus Death Toll in Each State?
Vanished into Music
"There’s a man on the ferry. He’s wearing jeans and a baseball jacket, and standing at the stern, his handsome face pitted with acne scars. Everyone else is looking at Manhattan. It’s 1986: the twin towers dominate the view. But this man isn’t looking at the buildings. He’s staring at the swirling water, the confluence of tides, the East River and the Hudson coming together in the harbor of the city. Out here, everything is expansive. Out here, everything falls away. He has his Walkman in his pocket, his headphones around his ears. The music he’s listening to is a mix he finished late last night. When he was done—though nothing he does is ever done, exactly—he took the cassette and left the studio. Full moon, of course. He has been recording this album every full moon for three years now. Sometimes he curls up in the studio for a nap, waking in the small hours with a new idea, an unprecedented sound bubbling through his mind. His name is Arthur Russell. ..."
The Paris Review
Listen To This Imaginative New Arthur Russell Documentary (Audio)
2015 November: Love Of Life Orchestra – Extended Niceties EP (1980), 2015 September: Arthur Russell, 2017 January: Instrumentals (2007), 2017 April: The Infinite Worlds of Arthur Russell, 2018 December: The World Of Arthur Russell (2004), 2019 May: Another Thought (1994)
Are ghosts haunting the British Museum?
"In the late evening, after the last members of the public have been ushered out of the building and the outer gates have been bolted shut, a swift and palpable change comes over the British Museum. The museum is the most popular tourist attraction in Britain, ahead of Tate Modern and the National Gallery: more than 6.2m people visited in 2019, over 17,000 every day. Without these visitors, the relentless thrum of activity beneath the glass-and-steel lattice roof of the Great Court fades to a whisper. A thick silence fills the cavernous galleries that surround it, each one loaded with artefacts that encompass the arc of human history. ..."
1843 Magazine
A statue of Buddha overlooks the haunted staircase
Lewis and Clark Expedition
Corps of Discovery meet Chinooks on the Lower Columbia, October 1805
"The Lewis and Clark Expedition from August 31, 1803, to September 25, 1806, also known as the Corps of Discovery Expedition, was the first expedition to cross the western portion of the United States. ... The Corps of Discovery was a select group of U.S. Army and civilian volunteers under the command of Captain Meriwether Lewis and his close friend Second Lieutenant William Clark. President Thomas Jefferson commissioned the expedition shortly after the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 to explore and to map the newly acquired territory, to find a practical route across the western half of the continent, and to establish an American presence in this territory before Britain and other European powers tried to claim it. The campaign's secondary objectives were scientific and economic: to study the area's plants, animal life, and geography, and to establish trade with local American Indian tribes. The expedition returned to St. Louis to report its findings to Jefferson, with maps, sketches, and journals in hand. ..."
Wikipedia, W - List of species described by the Lewis and Clark Expedition (174 plants and 134 species and subspecies of animals, etc.), W - Sacagawea
Lewis and Clark: A Timeline of the Extraordinary Expedition
Discovering Lewis & Clark
YouTube: 23rd March 1806: The Lewis and Clark Expedition begins its return journey, Lewis and Clark | A film by Ken Burn, Lewis and Clark: Meriwether Lewis and William Clark (FULL Audiobook)
A map depicting the route taken by Lewis and Clark on their first expedition from the Missouri River (near St. Louis, Missouri) to the mouth of the Columbia River (at the Pacific Ocean in Oregon), and their return trip, 1804 - 1806.
Calvin and Hobbes and quarantine
"When I think of Calvin, that glorious little menace, I first remember the depth of his imagination. His was an external life born explicitly of the internal: distant planets, bed monsters, mutant snowscapes, gravity-defying wagon rides, crass Transmogrifications, and of course, one tuna-loving tiger BFF. But the second thing I remember was exactly why the kid had such a big imagination to begin with: Calvin was looking for a way out. He was trying to escape. He didn’t like school, so he fled it as Spaceman Spiff. Bathtime, a nightmare for small children, saw Calvin turning into a tub shark or being attacked by a bubble-bath elemental. ..."
Polygon
2011 January: Calvin and Hobbes, 2015 March: Bill Watterson talks: This is why you must read the new ‘Exploring Calvin and Hobbes’ book, 2015 July: Calvin and Markov, 2017 November: 23 Stupendous Vocabulary Words I Learned From ‘Calvin & Hobbes’
Romeo Void - White Sweater/Apache (1981)
"Romeo Void formed in San Francisco when Debora Iyall and Frank Zincavage met at the San Francisco Art Institute. They were both working at their art school over the summer and did a video performance piece. Not before long they began to write songs & rehearsing them in Debora’s flat, using rugs to dampen the noise. Peter Woods also took part in rehearsals. ... Debora Iyall was also a backing singer in the same band. Jay Derrah soon followed to form the original line up that officially formed on Valentine’s Day in 1979. Benjamin Bossi, an inspirational saxophone player, would join not long after, combining his riffs to Debora Iyall’s voice. ... 1981 was the year that Romeo Void would begin to make a breakthrough. 415 Records, a music label based in San Francisco that specialised in post-punk bands signed Romeo Void. February saw them release their first single ‘White Sweater’ which also included ‘Apache’. ..."
Scatterclicks
Genius (Audio)
YouTube: White Sweater, Apache
Tangier’s Jazzmen — and their phantom producer
"... He is Jacques Muyal – the Moroccan-born producer and aficionado who is one of the most enigmatic and influential figures in the world of jazz. The animated, quick-to-smile 77-year old has been in the news of late for various reasons: because of the release of his latest record 'The 4 American Jazzmen in Tangier,' based on recordings he made in Morocco in 1959; the release of a Swiss-television documentary, Jazz: The Only Way of Life of which he is the subject; and because at the recent Dizzy Gillespie centennial at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., he screened a 90-minute film about the late trumpeter, made from previously unreleased home footage. ..."
Africa is a Country
BBC: The story of the four American Jazz-men in Tangier (Audio)
amazon: Jazz, The Only Way Of Life (Trailer)
Oscar Dennard and his quartet in Tangier. Published with permission from Jacques Muyal.
Poet in New York - Federico Garcia Lorca (1930)
On Lorca’s Poet in New York - "What a strange, vital, careening book—what a book for now. Yet also, what a fascinating document of the early 20th century. A Poet in New York, 'New York in a Poet,’ as Lorca himself glossed it: this is clearly one of the great works of transnational modernism, a cracked Andalucían mirror held up to New York’s crazed, vibrant, and disgusting face. The best poetry is 'news that stays news,’ as Pound put it. This book seems to me news I can use—registering the skyscrapered canyons of the city, its savage underbelly everywhere humming with reptilian life (all those iguanas and crocodiles running around in the poems), the titanic fraudulence of Wall Street, the vomiting crowds of a Coney Island Sunday.”
FSG Work In Progress
Lorca: Introduction
Lorca in New York: A Celebration
NY Times: Poetic Love Affair With New York; For Garcia Lorca, the City Was a Spiritual Metaphor
Back Tomorrow. Federico García Lorca in New York
amazon, Grove Atlantic
Federico García Lorca, Young man and pyramids, 1929-1930
2011 August: Federico Garcia Lorca , 2013 July: A Mural of a Spanish Poet in Bushwick, Confounding and Enchanting
John Singer Sargent and His American Contemporaries in Venice
John Singer Sargent, Venetian Interior, 1882.
"Born to American parents in Florence, Italy, in 1856, John Singer Sargent spent his youth traveling through Europe with his family. From 1874 to 1885 he lived in Paris, receiving formal training in fine art and forming friendships with artists from around the world, including American painters. On visits extending from 1880 into 1881 and again in 1882, Sargent returned to Italy for several months at a time, beginning his mature artistic exploration of the city of Venice. An American art colony had already begun to form there and these artists were joined by painters and printmakers from a number of European nations, as well as artists from various provinces of the newly united Italian Kingdom; and more significantly, a thriving and innovative company of Venetian painters. ..."
incollect
John Henry Twachtman, Venice, Campo Santa Marta, circa 1878.
2013 October: John Singer Sargent Watercolors, 2015 May: Sargent: Portraits of Artists and Friends, 2016 November: A Street Scene in Venice (1880-81)
This Week's Sky at a Glance, May 8 – 16
"... Monday, May 11. Before and during early dawn on Tuesday the 12th, the waning gibbous Moon shines under Jupiter and Saturn as shown above. For skywatchers in North America's Central and Mountain time zones, they'll form a virtually perfect right triangle while dawn is brightening. Tuesday, May 12. Vega is well up in the east-northeast as evening advances. Look for its faint little constellation Lyra, the Lyre, hanging down from Vega with its two-star bottom canted a bit to the right. Take advantage of these moonless evenings to work through a fine clutch of galaxies in the northern reaches of the Virgo Cluster high overhead, using the Deep-Sky Wonders article and charts in the May Sky & Telescope, page 54. The five selections there range from magnitude 9.6 to 12.8. ..."
Sky and Telescope
The unused, unlit taxi signs across Manhattan
"Sometimes you come across one outside tony pre- and postwar apartment buildings (and some businesses): a small sign that says taxi, or just a lone light bulb under the awning or affixed to the facade. It’s probably unlit when you see it, but illumination is the whole point. At night, if a resident needed a taxi, a doorman could turn on the sign from inside. A cabbie looking for a fare would see the lighted sign from the street and drive over. (Below, on Sutton Place and East 57th Street) In a city whose yellow taxi fleet has been squeezed by ride hailing apps (not to mention this year’s stay-at-home orders), the idea of relying on a sign to get a cab sounds old-timey. ..."
Ephemeral New York
Baseball: Part 7: The Capital of Baseball
1953 World Series
"For those who hated the New York Yankees—and there were many who did—the 1950s were best imagined through the eyes of Joe Boyd, the middle-aged, fictional protagonist from Damn Yankees! who sold his soul to the Devil to become a superstar for the Washington Senators and help win the pennant over the Yankees. Fairy tales like this were practically the only way to comprehend the Yankees anywhere else but first place. If there ever was a need for parity in the majors, the American League of the 1950s was it; the Yankees with eight pennants during the decade, the Cleveland Indians and the Chicago White Sox always trading off second and third place—and, deep down, hopeless ballclubs such as the aforementioned Senators or the Philadelphia/Kansas City A’s—a franchise often rumored to be a subsidiary of the Yankees due to the wealth of lopsided trades in New York’s favor. ..."
This Great Game: 1950s A Monopoly of Success
PBS: Part 7: The Capital of Baseball (Video)
W - Major League Baseball relocation of 1950s–1960s
Dig the 1950s
This Great Game: 1950 Gee Whiz!
This Great Game: 1954 At Least They Stopped the Yanks
Willie Mays
10 Best 1950s Baseball Rookie Cards
W - Shot Heard 'Round the World, W - Willie Mays, W - Mickey Mantle, W - Duke Snider, W - Gil Hodges, W - Hank Aaron
YouTube: Willie Mays, The Lost Ball Parks: Ebbets Field, Farewell Polo Grounds & Ebbets Field (1958), New York Yankee Highlights From Early 1950's Featuring Joe DiMaggio & Mickey Mantle, 1950s Baseball Radio Broadcasts - 44 videos
World Series: 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959
1955 World Series
The Origins of Scandinavian Noir
Martin Lewis, The Great Shadow, 1925
"Sometime in the early eighties, I began reading a series of mysteries that featured a Swedish homicide detective named Martin Beck. I was living in Berkeley at the time, studying for a Ph.D. in English literature as I worked a variety of part-time jobs, and I knew a lot of people both inside and outside the academy. Being a talkative sort, I started telling everyone around me about this incredible Scandinavian cop series. Soon we were all reading it. What I knew at the time was that it was written by a couple, Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö, who had from the very beginning envisioned it as a sequence of ten books that would portray Swedish society from a distinctly Marxist perspective. ..."
The Paris Review
W - Martin Beck
CIS: A guide to the Martin Beck series
amazon: Martin Beck (10 book series)
Original Outlaws: 10 Country Heroes Who Paved The Way For Americana
Johnny Cash
"Americana, a music deeply rooted in the musical culture of the United States, has arguably been around in one form or another for a more than a century: country heroes such as Jimmie Rodgers and his travelling tent shows of the late 20s were one of the earliest incarnations. And while “Americana” has been a category recognised at the Grammy awards since 2009, the term has been in widespread use for three decades. ... Here we present 10 groundbreaking country heroes who paved the way for the modern Americana explosion. ..."
udiscover (Video)
V. - Thomas Pynchon (1963)
"Nothing more intricately conceived than Thomas Pynchon’s first novel has appeared in American fiction since the work in the thirties by Faulkner, Nathaniel West and Djuna Barnes, the last two being among the writers who have given him the courage of his artifices and of the assumptions that go with them. V. is full of self-mystified people consistently avoiding direct relations with one another through disguise or evasion, people living the disrupted existences either of the Cook’s Tour, in one plot or in the other, of a kind of contemporary tourism called 'yo-yoing,' the pointless repetitive passage and return on any convenient ferry or subway. Neither of the two interwoven plots is presented in sequence. ..."
The New York Review of Books (June 1, 1963)
W - V.
Guardian: 'Reader beware ...'
amazon
This Ever New Self: Thoreau and His Journal - II
This Ever New Self: Thoreau and His Journal
"Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862) occupies a lofty place in American cultural history. He spent two years in a cabin by Walden Pond and a single night in jail, and out of those experiences grew two of this country’s most influential works: his book Walden and the essay known as 'Civil Disobedience.' But his lifelong journal—more voluminous by far than his published writings—reveals a fuller, more intimate picture of a man of wide-ranging interests and a profound commitment to living responsibly and passionately. ..."
The Morgan Library & Museum
The Morgan Library & Museum: The Protester: April 1851, Etc. (Audio)
The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau
amazon: The Journal of Henry David Thoreau, 1837-1861
Gutenberg: The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Writings of Henry David Thoreau
A Map of Radical Bewilderment - Daegan Miller
"Although he is now remembered mostly as a romantic nature writer, in his own time and place Henry David Thoreau was a highly trained, well regarded, disciplined though eccentric land surveyor. In the summer of 1859, he stood under a willow beside the Concord River contemplating a gash he had cut low in the tree’s trunk, to gauge the water level. In 22 miles the Concord fell only 32 inches — it was very nearly a pond — and any additional water heaved the river up and over its banks, before gravity’s current slowly siphoned it out to sea. Yet flooding wasn’t necessarily a problem. Indeed, the annual springtime deluge was the town’s lifeblood, because the waters always rolled back, leaving behind a thick, black, nutrient-rich muck spread all across the bottomlands, whose field grasses grew fat and sleek on nature’s bounty, perfect fodder for the farming town’s livestock. ..."
Places Journal
Lessons in Constructive Solitude From Thoreau
"During most of his life Henry David Thoreau was, by conventional standards of success, a failure. He rarely left the farm town of Concord, Mass., where he was born in 1817. There he was viewed by at least some of his neighbors as a marginal figure, standoffish, politically radical, a loner, a crank. As a member of the New England literary world he cut a graceless figure and had an inauspicious professional start. His first book, 'A Week on the Concord and the Merrimack River,' self-published in 1849, was a bust. He sold a mere fraction of its 1,000-copy press run. When the printer dumped the remainders on him, Thoreau stacked them up in his bedroom and wrote in his journal: 'I now have a library of nearly nine hundred volumes, over seven hundred of which I wrote myself.' ..."
NY Times
Against Everything: Thoreau Trailer Park
"... This excerpt is taken from his concluding essay 'Thoreau Trailer Park - The Meaning of Life, Part IV', in which Greif reflects on Thoreau, public parks, and the Occupy Movement. It is hard to remember what Thoreau said because it is all so disturbing. It is easier on us to think of a thin man who erected a cabin with his own hands on the shores of a lovely pond. Thoreau deliberately didn’t build his cabin from scratch. He hacked a free timber frame from someone else’s trees, got friends to help him raise it, and recycled the rest from a laborer’s bivouac, buying cheap, for boards and roof, 'the shanty of James Collins, an Irishman who worked on the Fitchburg Railroad.' This was philosophical, with all its shortcuts and offenses. ..."
Verso
Thoreau: American Resister (and Kitten Rescuer)
"When my father was in high school he worked summers as a lifeguard at Walden Pond. As a kid, I used to hang out there, bird-watching, reading from a slender volume of Henry David Thoreau’s journal and soaking up Transcendentalist vibes from the big glacial bowl of clear water ringed with firs and footpaths. Even off-season I wasn’t alone. Pilgrims kept turning up in search of Thoreau. The little cabin — he called it a house — that he’d built there in 1845, furnished with a green-painted pine desk, and lived in for two years, was long gone. But a cairn of loose stones marked the site, and each visitor would, by tradition, toss a fresh stone on the pile. Doing so gained you a little hit of Thoreau; a moral lesson (give, don’t take); and a sense that you’d added something to history. ..."
NY Times
Thoreau and the Language of Trees
"In the fall of 1860, trees were at the center of Thoreau’s life. His long interest in how they live, grow, and propagate intensified after his lecture on succession on September 20, the acclaim for which gave him a rare bit of outside encouragement. He threw himself into forest history, measuring trunks, counting rings, and digging up the roots and shoots of trees with almost the same youthful zeal with which he had fathomed the bottom of Walden Pond years earlier. ..."
LitHub: VIA University of California Press Henry David Thoreau, Tree-Hugger
Thoreau on Nature as Prayer
amazon
J.M.W. Turner: Wreckers—Coast of Northumberland, with a Steam-Boat Assisting a Ship off Shore, 1834
Walden on the Rocks - Ariel Dorfman
"The bodies are strewn everywhere along the beach. Burials are complicated because nobody knows the names of the dead—mostly women and children fleeing famine and poverty, trying to reach the land of plenty that has been promised to them but finding, instead, an early end in turbulent waters. Spectators gape at the debris from the recent shipwreck 'cracked up like an eggshell on the rocks,' while others go about their business. ... This scene of devastation and indifference seems torn from the latest headlines or photos from around the world, just one more group of refugees appearing fleetingly on our screens and in our consideration. ... The eyewitness referred to above, without whom we might not remember the incident at all, was none other than Henry David Thoreau. ..."
NYBooks
Everybody Hates Henry
"In a prominent national magazine, there appeared an indictment of the late Henry D. Thoreau whose literary stock the indictment’s author judged to be grossly overvalued. It wasn’t just Thoreau’s writing that deserved a take-down; so did the man himself, if in Thoreau’s case one could even distinguish between the two. Thoreau was conceited, indolent, egotistical. Also: a failure, selfish, self-involved, useless, unimaginative, provincial. The indictment compared Thoreau to Montaigne—unfavorably; called him a sophist, a hypocrite, a humorless boor. ..."
New Republic
Thoreau Farm
"... The picture they draw of life on Virginia Road provides a glimpse into early 19th-century Concord farm life as well as into the mind of Thoreau, who valued the simplicity of Concord’s farmers in an age increasingly dominated by progress and machine.After the Thoreaus left, the farm went through several hands before it eventually became a tenant-farm in the latter half of the 19th century worked primarily by African-Americans and immigrants from Ireland, Nova Scotia, and Scandinavia. In 1878, the house was moved 300 yards down the road and a new house was built on the original site. ..."
About Thoreau Farm
Video
POLITICAL THEORY 5:47
CANOEING IN THE WILDERNESS - FULL AudioBook 2:39:39, Walking Full Audiobook 1:28:52, Life Without Principle 42:49
April 2020: Henry David Thoreau - I
We Are in This Together
Stay-at-home orders have some people feeling trapped, but a home is what you make of it, and a fire escape can be a yard.
"Good morning, if it is morning where you are, good afternoon and evening, too. Welcome to At Home, a newsletter and section of The Times devoted to the belief that we can live rich lives at home even while we are quarantined during the coronavirus pandemic, even while we are maintaining social distance from one another, even as we contemplate the slow, unsteady steps toward re-opening our cities and states, our world. Because you are at home, I think? I am, as so many of us are these days, at least those of us who aren’t laboring in dangerous conditions for the betterment of all: in hospitals and on buses, in processing plants and logistics hubs, police and fire stations, newspaper printing plants, on farms. We’re on lockdown, many of us. We’re hunkered down in an invisible storm, at home. ..."
NY Times
We’re on the Brink of Cyberpunk
Ridley Scott - Blade Runner (1982)
"Where is the president in Blade Runner? Beneath the 1982 neo-noir’s trappings of genetically engineered human automatons is a story about corporate power over and indifference to life, alienation in the face of wealthy indifference to the plight of workers. Replace the Tyrell Corporation with Amazon and reframe the replicants as 'essential services,' and suddenly you have a world of workers terrified that their jobs are inherently a death sentence—moving straight from fiction to reality. ..."
Slate
William Gibson, Neuromancer (1984)
2010 September: Cyberpunk, 2010 October: Bruce Sterling, 2011 July: William Gibson, 2015 May: Mirrorshades: The Cyberpunk Anthology - edited by Bruce Sterling (1986), 2015 July: A Global Neuromancer, 2016 May: The Difference Engine - William Gibson and Bruce Sterling (1990), 2017 August: Sprawl trilogy, 2019 February: Storming the Reality Studio: A Casebook of Cyberpunk & Postmodern Science - Edited by Larry McCaffery (1992), 2019 December: How William Gibson Keeps His Science Fiction Real
Columbia Noir #1: Dead Reckoning (1947)
"In his book The American Cinema, critic Andrew Sarris listed John Cromwell in the Lightly Likable category. Sarris meant this as a mild put-down of the 'formal deficiencies' in Cromwell's films, so don't get the idea that there's anything light about pictures such as Of Human Bondage [1934] and The Goddess [1958]. There's plenty of darkness in Dead Reckoning, too, which is natural for a 1947 mystery thriller from film noir's golden age. Sarris also wrote that the motto of Cromwell's cinema is cherchez la femme, but while it's true that he worked well with female stars, the most memorable face in Dead Reckoning belongs to Humphrey Bogart, not Lizabeth Scott although the riddle that keeps the movie clicking is whether Scott's character is a femme fatale, or just a femme caught up in events none of the characters can control. ..."
TCM
W - Dead Reckoning
Obscure Train Movies
Criterion: Dead Reckoning (Video)
YouTube: Theme of the Month - COLUMBIA NOIR, Film Noir - COLUMBIA NOIR
Fairfield Porter: Raw—The Creative Process of an American Master
"Fairfield Porter (1907–1975) was an artist and critic whose works were grounded in the real world during years when abstraction largely dominated American art. Described as a reticent realist, he painted the world immediately surrounding him: his family, his friends, his studio, and his homes in Spruce Head Island, Maine, and Southampton, New York. This exhibit of thirty-nine works, many of them unfinished, reflects on his working method and creative process. In 1949 Fairfield Porter established his home and studio on South Main Street in Southampton, where he lived until his death in 1975. Four years later some 250 works were given to the Parrish by his widow Anne. The bequest included, in addition to major paintings and important works on paper, a large number of works in various states of completion, including a sketchbook, unstretched paintings on canvas that had been stored by the artist rolled-up, and many paintings on various kinds of boards. ..."
Middlebury College Museum of Art (Audio)
Parrish Art
amazon
Calverton, 1954
2008 May: Fairfield Porter, 2010 June: Fairfield Porter - 1, 2011 August: "Respect For Things As They Are" - by John Ashbery, 2013 March: "The Great Spruce" by Alex Carnelevale, 2013 July: In Fairfield Porter / James Schuyler country: Penobscot Bay, Maine
Doin' Allright - Dexter Gordon (1961)
"From the first track of this record—in Blue Note's 45rpm double-disc reissue series—tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon certainly seems to be doing just fine. That opener, 'I Was Doing All Right,' lilts along with a nice 'n' easy, early 1960s treatment of an insistently positive George Gershwin melody. Gordon doesn't rush his solo, but allows it to intensify naturally from the surrounding breeze. He explores the entire range of his instrument, allowing his pace to ebb and flow while never jettisoning himself from the track of comfortable swing. Trumpeter Freddie Hubbard enters on—and retains—a brasher course, slashing through a stream of jagged, harmonic lines. Pianist Horace Parlan goes farther afield, injecting the tune with some passing abstract figures. ..."
All About Jazz
W - Doin' Allright
Discogs (Video)
amazon
YouTube: Doin' Allright 40:57
2014 April: Night in Tunisia, Whats new, Blues Walk (Holland, 1964), 2015 May: Our Man in Paris (1963), 2015 August: Ballads, 2016 June: One Flight Up (1964)
The painter who captured the soul of New York
Eighth Street Macdougal Alley
"New York right now feels like it’s at a crossroads. People are fearful of walking the streets with the threat of a virus literally in the air. Subway problems, homelessness…the city doesn’t always seem to be working. To restore your faith in Gotham, take a look at these paintings by Alfred S. Mira, whose vivid street scenes of the 1930s and 1940s city capture the life, passion, and activity inherent in New York’s soul. Mira wasn’t a native New Yorker. Born in Italy in 1900, he came to New York as a boy with an 'insatiable desire to draw,' as he put it. ..."
Ephemeral New York
Ephemeral New York: A Village painter’s dynamic 1930s street scene
artnet
St. Bartholomew's New York City, 1943
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)