Tarot Deck: Rider-Waite, Tarot de Marseille, Sola Busca

"The Rider-Waite tarot deck, originally published 1909, is the most popular tarot deck for tarot card reading. Other names for this deck include the Waite-Smith, Rider-Waite-Smith, or Rider tarot deck. The cards were drawn by illustrator Pamela Colman Smith from the instructions of academic and mystic A. E. Waite and were originally published by the Rider Company. The deck has been published in numerous editions and inspired a wide array of variants. While the images are simple, the details and backgrounds feature abundant symbolism. Some imagery remains similar to that found in earlier decks, but overall the Waite-Smith card designs represent a substantial departure from their predecessors. ..."  W - Rider-Waite tarot deckW - Major Arcana, W - Minor Arcana, The Deck of Cards That Made Tarot A Global Phenomenon, The Pictorial Key to the Tarot By Arthur Edward Waite, Illustrations By Pamela Colman Smith.[1911]

Tarot of Marseilles
"The Tarot of Marseilles or Tarot of Marseille, also widely known by the French designation Tarot de Marseille, is one of the standard patterns for the design of tarot cards. It is a pattern from which many subsequent tarot decks derive. Michael Dummett's research led him to conclude that (based on the lack of earlier documentary evidence) the Tarot deck was probably invented in northern Italy in the 15th century and introduced into southern France when the French conquered Milan and the Piedmont in 1499. The antecedents of the Tarot de Marseille would then have been introduced into southern France at around that time. The 78-card version of the game of Tarot died out in Italy but survived in France and Switzerland. When the game was reintroduced into northern Italy, the Marseilles designs of the cards were reintroduced with it. ..." W - Tarot de Marseille, Marseille Tarot of Lando 1832
 

 
Tarot Mythology: The Surprising Origins of the World's Most Misunderstood Cards
"The Empress. The Hanged Man. The Chariot. Judgment. With their centuries-old iconography blending a mix of ancient symbols, religious allegories, and historic events, tarot cards can seem purposefully opaque. To outsiders and skeptics, occult practices like card reading have little relevance in our modern world. But a closer look at these miniature masterpieces reveals that the power of these cards isn’t endowed from some mystical source—it comes from the ability of their small, static images to illuminate our most complex dilemmas and desires. Contrary to what the uninitiated might think, the meaning of divination cards changes over time, shaped by each era’s culture and the needs of individual users.  ..." Collectors Weekly
 
    
 
 Behold the Sola-Busca Tarot Deck, the Earliest Complete Set of Tarot Cards (1490)
"Whatever you think of the predictive power of tarot cards, the story of how humanity has produced them and put them to use provides a fascinating cultural history of the last 500 years or so. We've featured a variety of tarot decks here on Open Culture, mostly from the past century: decks designed by Aleister Crowley, Salvador DalĂ­, and H.R. Giger, as well as one featuring the characters from Twin Peaks. But today we give you the oldest extant example, and a highly distinctive one for reasons not just historical but aesthetic: the Sola-Busca tarot deck, dating from the early 1490s, which L'Italo Americano's Francesca Bezzone describes as '78, beautifully illustrated cards, 22 major arcana and 56 minor arcana, engraved on cardboard and hand painted with tempera colors and gold.' ..." Open Culture, W - Sola Busca tarot, Sola-Busca & Waite-Smith Tarot
 

amazon: The Ultimate Guide to the Rider Waite Tarot, The Original Rider-Waite Tarot Set, Sola Busca Tarot: Museum Quality Kit, Marseille Tarot Professional Edition, Golden Tarot of Marseille 


Various : Drone Islands - Land Rising (2019)


"Pitchfork Media and Allmusic journalist Mark Richardson defined drone music thus: 'The vanishing-point music created by drone elders Phill Niblock and, especially, LaMonte Young is what happens when a fixation on held tones reaches a tipping point. Timbre is reduced to either a single clear instrument or a sine wave, silence disappears completely, and the base-level interaction between small clusters of 'pure' tone becomes the music's content. This kind of work takes what typically helps us to distinguish 'music' from 'sound,' discards nearly all of it, and then starts over again from scratch.'  Since LaMonte Young early experiments till today, drone music has come a long way. Eighth Tower Records is proud to present an anthology featuring 12 projects from artists who work on classic and new stimulating paths for the drone music. ..."

Bandcamp (Audio)  

Soundohm (Audio) 

Discogs

Who is the man on this York Avenue building?

"1221 York Avenue is a handsome, brown-brick apartment house built in 1923. Shaded by trees, this six-story building between 65th and 66th Streets blends nicely into the streetscape. But on a recent walk past it, I could see through the tree leaves two bas reliefs of male figures, each on the facade right above the building’s wide main entrance. The facade also features another bas relief of a sailing ship positioned high along the second floor. The ship, plus the colonial-era clothes worn by the men (or man, since it appears to be different profiles of the same person)—seems to hint that this person was an explorer. ..."

Ephemeral New York

Possession: A Romance - A. S. Byatt (1990)

"Possession: A Romance is a 1990 bestselling novel by British writer A. S. Byatt that also won the 1990 Booker Prize. ... The novel follows two modern-day academics as they research the paper trail around the previously unknown love life between famous fictional poets, Randolph Henry Ash and Christabel LaMotte. Possession is set both in the present day and the Victorian era, pointing out the differences between the two time periods, and satirizing such things as modern academia and mating rituals. The structure of the novel incorporates many different styles, including fictional diary entries, letters and poetry, and uses these styles and other devices to explore the postmodern concerns of the authority of textual narratives. ..."

Wikipedia  

NY Times: Unearthing the Secret Lover  

The New Canon  

amazon

Diane di Prima

"Diane di Prima (August 6, 1934 – October 25, 2020) was an American poet, known for her association with the Beat movement. She was also an artist, prose writer, and teacher. Di Prima authored nearly four dozen books. ... She edited the newspaper The Floating Bear with Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) and was co-founder of the New York Poets Theatre and founder of the Poets Press. On several occasions she faced charges of obscenity by the United States government due to her work with the New York Poets Theatre and The Floating Bear. In 1961 she was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for publishing two poems in The Floating Bear. According to di Prima, police persistently harassed her due to the nature of her poetry. In 1966, she spent some time at Millbrook with Timothy Leary's psychedelic community. ..."

Wikipedia  

Poetry Foundation 

NY Times: Diane di Prima, Poet of the Beat Era and Beyond, Dies at 86  

Revolutionary Letters 1-3  

amazon: Diane di Prima

‘Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy)’: How Brian Eno Plotted Art Rock’s Future

"A mere 10 months after his solo debut, Here Come The Warm Jets, Brian Eno consolidated his standing as one of rock’s least orthodox provocateurs with the release of the seductively subversive album number two, Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy). Issued by Island Records in November 1974, Taking Tiger Mountain derived its title from a set of postcard photos depicting a Peking opera, one of the eight 'model plays' permitted during the Chinese Cultural Revolution of 1966-76. Indeed, references to China recur in the album’s lyrics, hence a widespread assumption that the album is a concept piece – though this remains tricky to substantiate. ..."

udiscover  

W - Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) 

amazon  

YouTube: Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy)

BIDEN BEATS TRUMP

"Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. was elected the 46th president of the United States on Saturday, promising to restore political normalcy and a spirit of national unity to confront raging health and economic crises, and making Donald J. Trump a one-term president after four years of tumult in the White House. Mr. Biden’s victory amounted to a repudiation of Mr. Trump by millions of voters exhausted with his divisive conduct and chaotic administration, and was delivered by an unlikely alliance of women, people of color, old and young voters and a sliver of disaffected Republicans. Mr. Trump is only the third elected president since World War II to lose re-election, and the first in more than a quarter-century. The result also provided a history-making moment for Mr. Biden’s running mate, Senator Kamala Harris of California, who will become the first woman to serve as vice president. ..."

NY Times - Biden Wins Presidency, Ending Four Tumultuous Years Under Trump  

NY Times - Election Highlights: Biden Defeats Trump as Pennsylvania Puts Him Over the Top

NY Times - In Torrent of Falsehoods, Trump Claims Election Is Being Stolen

Neil Young Releases a Never-Before-Heard Version of His 1979 Classic, “Powderfinger”: Stream It Online

"If Neil Young proved anything in his feud with Lynyrd Skynyrd (actually 'more like a spirited debate between respectful friends,”'writes Ultimate Classic Rock), it’s that Canadians could play southern rock just as well as the Southern Man, an argument more or less also won at the same time by The Band’s Music from Big Pink. Young’s songwriting contributions to the tradition are just as well recognized as 'The Weight.' Foremost among them, we must place 'Powderfinger,' covered by everyone from Band of Horses to Cowboy Junkies (below) to Rusted Root to Phish, and which Young sent to Ronnie Van Zant, who might have recorded it for the next Skynyrd album had he not died in 1977. ..."

Open Culture (Video)

2008 February: Neil Young, 2010 April: Neil Young - 1, 2010 April: Neil Young - 2, 2010 May: Neil Young - 3, 2010 October: Neil Young's Sound, 2012 January: Long May You Run: The Illustrated History, 2012 June: Like A Hurricane, 2012 July: Greendale, 2013 April: Thoughts On An Artist / Three Compilations, 2013 August: Heart of Gold, 2014 March: Dead Man (1995), 2014 August: Ragged Glory - Neil Young + Crazy Horse (1990), 2014 November: Broken Arrow (1996), 2015 January: Rust Never Sleeps (1979), 2015 January: Neil Young the Ultimate Guide, 2015 March: Old Black, 2015 September: Zuma (1975), 2016 January: On the Beach (1973), 2016 April: Sleeps with Angels (1994), 2016 November: Eldorado (EP - 1989), Long May You Run - The Stills-Young Band (1976), 2017 June: "River Of Pride" / "White Line" (1975), 2017 July: "Thrasher" [Live at the Cow Palace, 1978], 2017 November: Words (Live at Red Rocks, 2000)

BirdNET

"How can computers learn to recognize birds from sounds? The Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the Chemnitz University of Technology are trying to find an answer to this question. Our research is mainly focused on the detection and classification of avian sounds using machine learning – we want to assist experts and citizen scientist in their work of monitoring and protecting our birds. This page features some of our public demonstrations, including a live stream demo, a demo for the analysis of audio recordings, an Android app and its visualization of submissions. All demos are based on an artificial neural network we call BirdNET. We are constantly improving the features and performance of our demos – please make sure to check back with us regularly. We are currently featuring 984 of the most common species of North America and Europe. We will add more species and more regions in the near future. Click here for the list of supported species. ..."

BirdNET  

BirdNET: Species List

Cool Cats Invasion: 102 tracks for lovers of highlife, palm‑wine and jĂąjĂş

"This gigantic compilation from the Moochin’ About label brings together a collection of classics from the Ghanaian and Nigerian music of the 1950s and 1960s. Cool Cats Invasion (Highlife, Juju & Palm-wine) offers a captivating musical journey through time. The selection of tracks is impressive: it includes the Nigerian juju singer and guitarist Tunde Nightingale, one of the disciples of the great Tunde King, as well as the first highlife and calypso records from Fela Kuti, captured in London in 1959. To better understand what is at stake in this compilation, let’s start with a bit of history. Highlife is a type of popular West African music and dance that originated in Ghana at the end of the 19th century, then spread to western Nigeria and flourished in both countries during the 1950s. ..."

PAM (Video/Audio)  

Moochin About (Audio)

Historical Close-Up: Modern Cuban Painters at MoMA, 1944

In a photographic detail, MarĂ­a Luisa GĂłmez Mena stands with a core group of artists and critics in the doorway of GalerĂ­a del Prado, c. 1942-1944. GĂłmez Mena stands sixth from the left, in front. Others in the shot include JosĂ© GĂłmez Sicre, Mario Carreño, Cundo BermĂşdez, Alfredo Lozano, Amelia Peláez, Mestre, MLGM, Roberto Diago, and Eugenio RodrĂ­guez. 

"... On March 17, 1944, the Museum of Modern Art opened the exhibition Modern Cuban Painters. Organized by Alfred H. Barr, Jr. in consultation with a young Cuban art critic and curator by the name of JosĂ© GĂłmez Sicre, the exhibition was hailed by the art criticism establishment, from the conservative Royal Cortissoz to the more liberal Edward Alden Jewell. In Art News, H.F. Kraus described it as 'an exhibition of color and verve and home grown baroque sensibility . . . very different from the Mexican work seen in these very galleries four years ago.' Cuban art was not a complete stranger to New York audiences. ..."

Historical Close-Up: Modern Cuban Painters at MoMA, 1944, Part 2: Spotlight on MarĂ­a Luisa GĂłmez Mena, Part 3: More on Maria Luisa GĂłmez Mena

An exhibition at the Galería del Prado, c. 1942. The works on view include pieces by Amelia Peláez, Mario Carreño, Felipe Orlando, and Mariano Rodríguez.

How the Iconic Colors of the New York City Subway System Were Invented: See the 1930 Color Chart Created by Architect Squire J. Vickers

"There may be no more welcome sight to a New Yorker than their own Pantone-colored circle on an arriving subway train. (Provided it’s also the right train number or letter; is making local stops (or express stops); has not been rerouted due to track work, death or injury, etc.) The psychological effect is not unlike a preschooler spotting her brightly-colored cubby at the end of a long day. Therein lies the comforting lovey—screen time, climate control, maybe a nap in a window seat on the way home…. But as every New Yorker also knows, the color-coded subway system didn’t always have such a cheerful, Sesame Street-like look. Buried beneath the MTA’s modern exterior, with those colored circles adopted piecemeal over the chaotic 1970s, is a much older system—three systems, in fact—that had far less navigable signage. ..."

Open Culture  

The (Mostly) True Story of Helvetica and the New York City Subway


Ras I-Dre & Ranking Joe – Up Deh!

 
 
"We’re always excited when the Happy As A Lark crew out of Chicago has a new release. Why you ask? We’ll tell you. Ushering in the best of new reggae artists while also keeping the spirit and moxie of reggae itself alive, HAAL in our opinion is one of the best reggae labels out there today. An authentic purveyor of riddims and real deal reggae music, this latest forty-five featuring Chicago newcomer Ras I-Dre and veteran deejay Ranking Joe is no less than a heat rock. The talented duo both toast over a version of the world-renowned 'Lecturer Riddim' from the veteran band Akasha (which includes the bass sounds of the present day and the total vibe of say ’68 or ’69). ..."   
 
 
 

When Waking Begins

Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, The Procession of the Trojan Horse in Troy (detail), 1760

"Glowing brighter and brighter. Slowly the eyes open. Rays fall across retinas. Drowsily they roam about and, for a brief spell, memory of reality meshes with this most current impression and the space becomes both familiar and strange. Then waking begins. Walter Benjamin writes that every true waking is a reshaping of reality. He describes this waking as a technique: the reclamation of what is past, not as complete facts or truths but as a period of time that can be reshaped simply by making contact with the waker’s present. ..."

The Paris Review

2015 September: In praise of dirty, sexy cities: the urban world according to Walter Benjamin, 2020 September: On Benjamin’s Public (Oeuvre)

A Plague Infects the Land, as Passion Vexes Hearts

 

"It’s no surprise that one of the best scenes in the latest and third film iteration of W. Somerset Maugham’s novel 'The Painted Veil' doesn’t happen in the book. It’s the 1920s, and as China seethes with revolutionary unrest and cholera, an unhappily married British couple, played by Naomi Watts and Edward Norton, drift into a new state of coexistence, carried aloft on opium smoke and their newly liberated desire. ... First published in 1925, 'The Painted Veil' recounts the moral awakening of a vain, careless young woman, Kitty (Ms. Watts), who has been raised for a life of abject uselessness. Thrown into a panic after her younger sister marries, and encouraged by her revolting mother, Kitty hastily marries a bacteriologist, Walter Fane (Mr. Norton) and moves with him to Shanghai. ..."  

NY Times  

W - The Painted Veil (2006 film), W - The Painted Veil, W. Somerset Maugham (novel), amazon  

YouTube: The Painted Veil (2006) Trailer #1


Over and Over and Over Again, History Has Vindicated Edward Snowden

"At the heart of the case of Edward Snowden, the NSA whistleblower who leaked a massive tranche of agency documents in 2013 and revealed the breathtaking scope of US government spying, there was always a fundamental absurdity. Snowden was hunted, pushed into exile, and forced to live knowing he could have SEAL Team Six kick down his door any moment and spirit him off to some clammy military prison, all for doing something that authorities and even the people going after him tacitly admitted was a vital public good. ... He even put together a panel of national security luminaries and his own loyalists to review surveillance policy, which eventually recommended a range of limits to it. ..."

Jacobin 

2015 October: Citizenfour (2014), 2017 July: Snowden - Oliver Stone (2016)

Robert Fisk

"Robert Fisk (12 July 1946 – 30 October 2020) was a writer and journalist who held British and Irish nationality. He was an international correspondent, and covered the civil wars in Lebanon, Algeria and Syria, the Iran-Iraq conflict, the wars in Bosnia and Kosovo, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the Islamic revolution in Iran, Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait, the US invasion and occupation of Iraq. Fluent in Arabic, he was among the few Western journalists to interview Osama bin Laden, which he did three times between 1993 and 1997. The journalist began his career at the Sunday Express. From there, he went to work for The Times as a correspondent in Northern Ireland, Portugal and the Middle East, in which he was based on Beirut intermittently since 1976. ... Fisk also wrote books, such as Pity the Nation: Lebanon at War and The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East. ..."

Wikipedia  

Independent  

amazon: Robert Fisk  

YouTube: Life after ISIS (2016) 58:09, Full Lecture: From the Frontline: An Eyewitness Account from the Middle East (2016) 54:07

November 2020: Cassiopeia Rules

"This episode is sponsored by Celestron, manufacturer of high-quality telescopes and an industry leader in developing exciting optical products with revolutionary technologies. About three fists to the upper right of Polaris, look for five medium-bright stars crudely shaped like a '3' or like a broad 'W' tipped up on its left corner. This is the constellation Cassiopeia, who is a queen in Greek mythology. Ancient poets say Cassiopeia was queen of either Ethiopia or Joppa, the city now called Jaffa in Israel. In any case, she was both beautiful and boastful. Cassiopeia’s misdeeds landed her up in the sky, doomed to hang upside down half the time and clinging to her throne so she doesn’t fall off. But there's much more to this story, as you'll learn in this month's Sky Tour astronomy podcast. ..."

Sky & Telescope (Audio)  

W - Cassiopeia

Cassiopeia


Decapitation in the “Low” Surrealist Revolution

"The legacy and concept of 'revolution' resonated with the Surrealists. This is best exemplified by the more archetypal journals associated with the Surrealist movement, such as La Révolution Surréaliste (1924-1929) or La Surréalisme au service de la révolution (1930-33). Emerging in Paris during the interwar period, the Surrealist revolution responded to a set of conditions, including economic decline, inequality, xenophobia and populism during a period punctuated by political unrest. Their revolutionary agenda was concerned with both economic and existential liberation and was expressed through an intersection of innovative cultural production and political activism. The Surrealists of the entre guerre were emphatically radical politically, having had an uneasy affiliation with the French Communist Party from around 1927. ..."

Age of Revolutions  

The Pivotal Role That Women Have Played in Surrealism

2016: DADA Companion, 2016: The Growing Charm of Dada, 2012 December: Impressionism and Fashion, 2017: How Baudelaire Revolutionized Modern Literature, 2017: The Dada Painters and Poets: An Anthology - Mary Ann Caws, 2018 May: Europe After the Rain: Watch the Vintage Documentary on the Two Great Art Movements, Dada & Surrealism (1978), 2020 October: What is Surrealism? - André Breton (1924)

La Calavera Catrina - José Guadalupe Posada

'El jarabe en ultratumba', (c.1910). Zinc etching.

"La Calavera Catrina or Catrina Ljazmun a Calavera Garbancera ('Dapper Skeleton', 'Elegant Skull') is a 1910–1913 zinc etching by the Mexican printmaker, cartoon illustrator and lithographer JosĂ© Guadalupe Posada. She is offered as a satirical portrait of those Mexican natives who, Posada felt, were aspiring to adopt European aristocratic traditions in the pre-revolution era. La Catrina has become an icon of the Mexican DĂ­a de Muertos, or Day of the Dead. The zinc etching depicts a female skeleton dressed only in a hat. Her chapeau en attente is related to European styles of the early 20th century. The original leaflet describes a person who was ashamed of her indigenous origins and dressed imitating the French style while wearing much makeup to make her skin look whiter. This description also uses the word garbancera, a nickname given to people of indigenous ancestry who imitated European style and denied their own cultural heritage. ..."

Wikipedia  

JosĂ© Guadalupe Posada, the Illustrator Who Made Catrinas an Iconic Symbol of DĂ­a de Muertos  

JosĂ© Guadalupe Posada: Skulls, Skeletons and Macabre Mischief  

W - JosĂ© Guadalupe Posada  

YouTube: Day of the Dead: Political cartoonist Jose Posada

Earth Couldn’t Contain Sun Ra’s Ideas. His Arkestra Is Still Exploring Them.

 

"In the early 2000s, the pianist Farid Barron read that his idol John Coltrane had once received a papyrus from Sun Ra that was said to stop time. 'That’s why I came over here, to look for the manuscript,' Mr. Barron, 49, said on a recent Saturday afternoon, standing on the steps outside the Arkestral Institute of Sun Ra, where he now lives. An unassuming stone rowhouse in this city’s Germantown neighborhood, it is where Ra — a pianist, composer, poet and mystic whose influence on culture has only seemed to grow since his death in 1993 — held court for the last quarter-century of his life. Members of his ensemble, the Sun Ra Arkestra, continue to live and rehearse there, surrounded by his artifacts and aura. ..."

NY Times  

The Quietus - Angels & Demons At Play: Swirling By The Sun Ra Arkestra (Audio)  

Discogs (Video)  

amazon  

YouTube: Tusk Virtual 2020 - Sun Ra Arkestra (Live) 1:08:00, Angels and Demons at Play, Sea of Darkness / Darkness, Queer Notions

City Bakery founder opening a hot chocolate bar in Greenwich Village

 

"City Bakery founder Maury Rubin has spent the past weeks in a 'Wonka-ish frenzy,' Grub Street tells us, as he prepares to launch his latest venture: the Wonderbon Chocolate Co. Rubin and his partner have taken out a three-month lease on a storefront at 257 Bleeker Street—most recently occupied by Sugar and Plumm—which will feature a menu of twelve hot chocolate flavors in an espresso-bar setting. The opening comes just in time for February, the month Rubin made famous for his hot chocolate festival at City Bakery, a tradition he began in 1992 that attracted more than 50,000 customers each year. ..."

6sqft 

NY Times: A New Home for the City Bakery’s Hot Chocolate  

Wonderbon

The Real Deal - The Warriors (1979)

 

"I don’t know with absolute certainty if The Warriors is a kids movie, but it’s a movie about kids that I saw as a kid myself. So let’s start there. The premise is simple enough: a New York street gang from Coney Island, the titular Warriors, must get from the Bronx back to their home turf after being framed for a murder they didn’t commit. It’s a survive-the-night feature—a premise much scarier and realer to me as a child than as an adult. As a kid, I was afraid of the dark and by extension, the night. ... The Warriors packs a slightly different punch as an adult. First of all, it’s silly. Really silly. Maybe even a little campy. ..." 

Bright Wall/Dark Room 

2015 September: Cast of 'The Warriors' to Reunite in Coney Island One Last Time

Art Blakey And His Jazz Messengers With Sabu ‎– Cu-Bop (1959)

 

"... A fantastic Johnny Griffin leads this Latin-tinged session along with Bill Hardman's unmistakable trumpet. The album opens with an excellent rendition of Dizzy's 'Algo bueno (Woody 'n' You)' and is followed by a rather intense jam ('Sakeena') in which SabĂş MartĂ­nez shines throughout while the rest of the guys try to keep up on various percussion instruments. The tune resolves sensationally in a very Cuban way, although Dockery could have added a bit of mambo there. ... More jamming can be heard on the last track, 'Dawn on the Desert' (originally composed by Charlie Shavers), with its memorable riff that Charlie Parker used to quote so much. This is the Messengers' most Latin album and one I would always recommend to fans of Cuban and jazz music alike. ..."

Holland Tunnel  

W - Cu-Bop  

YouTube: Cu-Bop! (Full Album)


Lockdown Be Damned! Raffaello 1520–1483: An Exhibition in Rome

 

"Like the artist himself, the long-anticipated Raphael exhibition that opened in Rome on March 5, 2020, was struck down by infectious disease. Raphael succumbed to a sudden fever on April 6, 1520, his thirty-seventh birthday. The exhibition that marked the five hundredth anniversary of his death lasted only four days. On March 9, the Italian government issued a decree prohibiting 'every form of gathering in public places' to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, and every public institution in Italy shut its doors. Raphael’s birthday came and went with his legacy under lockdown. ..."

Riot Material  

YouTube: A walk in the exhibition 12:51



Fassbinder and Kraftwerk: A Marriage Made in a New Germany

 

 "According to Kraftwerk member Wolfgang FlĂĽr, it was toward the end of the group’s first U.S. tour when his bandmates Ralf HĂĽtter and Florian Schneider grew fascinated by the phenomenon of American radio. Their time in the States had been successful largely thanks to local stations in the U.S., which, in the halcyon days before corporations like Clear Channel dictated playlists, had disseminated their music and conducted interviews with them. But the concept was a novelty to these nerdy young men—at that time, there were no local German radio stations on either side of the wall. ..."

Criterion (Video)

2014 May: Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 2014 June: Effi Briest (1974), 2014 July: Ali: Fear Eats the Soul (1974), 2014 September: A Little Chaos: A Short Crime Film by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Enfant Terrible of New German Cinema, 2014 October: Lola - (1981 BRD Trilogy), 2014 October: The Marriage of Maria Braun (1979 BRD Trilogy), 2014 December: Veronika Voss (1982 - BRD Trilogy), 2015 January: Digital Anthology: Rainer Werner Fassbinder - $0.99, 2016 February: The Merchant of Four Seasons (1971), 2019 June: Berlin Alexanderplatz (1980)

2008 April: Kraftwerk, 2011 March: Kraftwerk and the Electronic Revolution, 2011 March: Kraftwerk - Documentary, 2011 April: Krautrock: The Rebirth of Germany, 2011 May: Autobahn, 2011 October: Trans-Europe Express, 2012 February: Retrospective 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8, 2012 October: Radio-Activity, 2014 May: "The Telephone Call" (1987), 2014 November: Kraftwerk - live at Cirkus, Stockholm, 2020 September: Tour de France Soundtracks (2003)

Harvey Pekar: The Splendor of Ordinary Life

 

"Harvey Pekar carried himself with a slouch. He had a disheveled comb-over and dark, haunted eyes. A file clerk at the Veterans Administration hospital in Cleveland, he spoke with a cantankerous rasp. If you sat next to him on the bus, you might not even notice him. Yet this ordinary man, who died this week at age 70, made his unremarkable day-to-day life in a typical city immortal, thanks to his comic, 'American Splendor.' Through these autobiographical comic books, Pekar found a devoted following, moved by the way he captured the particular loneliness of American life. ..."

Collectors Weekly

2009 December: Harvey Pekar, 2018 August: Jazz Jams With Harvey Pekar, 2020 August: Students for a Democratic Society: A Graphic History 

An Apocalyptic Collage Made Entirely of Media Images From Trump’s Presidency

 


"At eye level, artist Chris Santa Maria’s six-foot-high collage 'PRESIDENT TRUMP' (2016-2020), currently on view at Jim Kempner Fine Art in Manhattan, depicts a gargantuan figure hovering above a densely populated landscape. However, a closer look reveals thousands of individual photographs — some as small as three-eighths of an inch — meticulously cut out from newspapers, magazines and internet print-outs in the last four years. Patches of orange-tinted skin, tiny puckering mouths, and eyes evocative of genitalia crystallize into the immediately recognizable head of the giant. He floats in a galaxy of emojis, jungle animals, reclining nudes from famous paintings, and tabloid shots of pop culture figures, from Barack Obama to Kanye West. Every element in the cacophonous scene, a hybrid of a Where’s Waldo puzzle and Hieronymus Bosch’s 'Garden of Earthly Delights,' has been culled from the unsettlingly familiar visual torrent of Trump’s presidency. ..." (Mike B.)

Hyperallergic  

Chris Santa Maria

Jo Johnson & Hilary Robinson - Antenna Echoes (2020)


 "Jo Johnson and Hilary Robinson’s album Antenna Echoes has its origins in chance and error: a meeting in a shared neighborhood, and a broken piano. The result of those external influences is a Covid-era collaboration of deeply interior music, all cavernous echoes and warm feedback. Piano is the near constant through the album’s three tracks ('Maze Echoes,' 'Antenna Gain,' 'Fresh Air and the Usual Low-grade Hedonism'), but it would be inaccurate to claim its presence necessarily grounds the plush synthesizer and pervasive sound-design drones. ..."

disquiet (Audio)  

Discogs


182 Days of Marcel Proust

 

"This is a journal about reading Proust's In Search of Lost Time at the rate of at least ten pages a day. The text I've chosen is the recent Penguin translation, the first four volumes of which were published in America by Viking. The last three have not been published here because of copyright limitations, but are available in paperback editions imported from Britain. The page numbers, unfortunately, may not correlate with other editions, so I've added the beginning and ending phrases for each day's section. ..."

182 Days of Marcel Proust  

182 Days of Marcel Proust: Day-by-Day Summary  

182 Days of Marcel Proust: People, Places, Things, Ideas  

Got a Spare 153 Hours? Listen to Proust’s Masterpiece, Unabridged, Naxos Audio

"Landscape with a Calm (Un Tem[p]s calme et serein)," Nicolas Poussin, 1650 - 1651.

2008 June: Marcel Proust, 2011 October: How Proust Can Change Your Life, 2012 April: Marcel Proust - Ă€ la recherche du temps perdu, 2013 February: Marcel Proust and Swann's Way: 100th Anniversary, 2013 May: A Century of Proust, 2013 August: Paintings in Proust - Eric Karpeles, 2013 October: On Reading Proust, 2015 September: In Search of Lost Time: Swann's Way: A Graphic Novel, 2016 January: In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower (1919), 2016 February: Chasing Lost Time: The Life of C.K. Scott Moncrieff: Soldier, Spy and Translator, 2016 May: The Guermantes Way (1920-21), 2016 August: Marcel Proust’s Search for Lost Time — Patrick Alexander, 2016 October: My Strange Friend Marcel Proust, 2017 March: Sodom and Gomorrah (1921-1922), 2017 August: Letters To His Neighbor by Marcel Proust; translated by Lydia Davis, October: Proust's Ă€ la recherche – a novel big enough for the world, 2017 October: Proust Fans Eagerly Await Trove of Letters Going Online, 2017 December: The Prisoner / The Fugitive (1923-1925), 2018 May: Time Regained (1927), 2018 September: CĂ©leste Albaret, 2018 November: In the Footsteps of Marcel Proust, 2019 February: On the Anxiety and Vanity of Marcel Proust, Debut Novelist

The Ghosts of Newspaper Row

 

Newsboys and newsgirls on Newspaper Row, Park Row, NYC.

"The reporters would pant up five flights of stairs to reach their dingy, dim newsrooms, where light eked through the dirt-cloaked windows and the green shades over the oil lamps were burned through with holes. They wended through hobbled tables piled high with papers, walked past cubbies so chaotically stuffed with scrolled proofs no outsider could guess the system. The reporters reeked of five-alarm smoke, or had coat pockets bulky with notes and a pistol from the front, or were tipsy from a gala ball, or dusty from a horse race. If they held important news in those notebooks, a copy boy would crowd by their elbow as they wrote, snatch the ink-wet sheets from their hands, and rush them off to the copyholder to 'put them into metal.' The center of news in the nineteenth century lined the streets around City Hall Park, only a short sprint to Wall Street, close to the harbor. ..."

The Paris Review