Monday, December 31, 2012

sake

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/0/0f/Bereiding_van_sak%C3%A9_1781.jpgFor those of you looking for a slightly different "ale" for the New Year's celebration, consider sake.  Wonderful, of course, with sushi (which doesn't have to be with fish, raw or cooked).

Photo credit/Wikipedia, user: Tenmei, Title page of Bereiding van Sacki, by Isaac Titsingh: earliest explanation of the sake brewing process in a European language. Published in 1781, in Batavia, Dutch East Indies.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

type city

via It's Nice That - Type City, a website by Dan Cooper, a last year student at Birmingham Institute of Art and Design.  He is collecting photographs of lettering around the U.K.   Check out the Funfair stream.  A little London TransportLondon Markets.   No dogs allowed on the city walls.  Rrrff!

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

vegetarian soups

 

Where else?  Mark Bittman's minimalist soup kitchen, of course.   Now that it's time to loosen your belt before New Year's.  At that link, instructions for creamy, brothy, earthy, or hearty vegetarian soups.  And just when you thought you had finished eating.


* Photo credits.  New York Times/photographer: Yunhee Kim.  Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero.  Prop Stylist: Deborah Williams.

Monday, December 24, 2012

street fashion

Just love this New York Times video, Dandies In The West Village, speaking with random pedestrians about their great sense of street fashion.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

the insects' christmas

The Insects' Christmas, a dreamlike 1913 stop motion animation by director Vladislav Starevich. Interestingly enough, he also worked for a Lithuanian natural history museum and is known for his insect flicks.   XmasFlick added the Edward Scissorhands soundtrack while modifying some rougher elements in the original.  Via boing boing with more weirdly wonderful holiday shorts at this link.
 

Saturday, December 22, 2012

storytellers


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/36/Die_Maerchenfrau.jpgLooking for last minute gift ideas?  I couldn't resist this imaginatively provocative portrait of farmer and storyteller Dorothea Viehmann who told Brothers Grimm a number of their famously recorded folk tales. The picture is shown in a handwritten edition housed at The Brothers Grimm Museum in Kassel, Germany.

The storyteller was the daughter of a tavern keeper who heard most of these tales from her father's guests-- bards of old, then sharing them with the Grimm brothers who were making major inroads in the scientific documentation of folklore. According to the folklorists, the also mother of seven had an astounding memory, recalling many of these tales, word for word, as told to her.

The brothers published their first edition 200 years ago on December 20, 1812 as Children's and Household Tales.  Now familiarly known around the world as Grimms' Fairy Tales, it is the 2nd most distributed work of German origins next to the Lutheran Bible.  Yet scholars have found that the origins of these stories go way beyond Germany and even Europe, with parallel tales existing on every continent.

The art book publisher Taschen released a new edition last year celebrating the 200 year anniversary and culling from among the best and most memorable vintage illustrations dear to now-grown readers' hearts. 

Review here from Brain Pickings who says the book retains the "the shadow play and shape shifting at the heart of the stories" with a visually stunning edition basically geared towards these former readers of now vintage publications who wish to share the best of those experiences with their own children - who, in the publisher's words, "take seriously a child’s exposure to stories and images with depth and historical meaning."

Spiegel reports the more gruesome stories tailored down or edited out altogether.  Although this is tied to the view that the stories were originally for broader audiences or just adults, looking at some synopses, I found myself wondering if older societies had the equivalent to our modern problems with violent video games.  (Yet presumably couldn't care less, given the prevailing view of children in those times.)  For this similarly come-of-age reader, I remember the scene, for example, whereby Cinderella's stepsisters savagely cut off their own toes, an act that still agreeably revealed to me, in the deep pools of childhood's tender wisdom, the extent of the stepsisters' depravity, and in a world where justice ultimately reigns.  Spiegel reports there were even more chilling tales of brutality - details and stories that *didn't make the final cut* (and that evaded my earlier experiences, as well).  Still the publishers successfully avoid sanitizing the literature, or sapping and perverting the deeper psychological meanings (as beloved Disney has long been criticized), and which we adults (banished from Neverland) must nevertheless conclude eludes video.  "The horse's head is still nailed to the fence in 'The Goose Girl,'" says editor Noel Daniel,  "and various people in different tales lose appendages."

Photostream here from Spiegel.

You can also peruse free ebook versions here at Media Bistro and thanks to the informative tweets from Somers Public Library.

On the other hand, forge your own vintage archaeological findings with online used booksellers.

The "woild," as Popeye used to say, is still your oyster.

Friday, December 21, 2012

los vestidos de frida


Frida-kahlo-dresses-on-display-exhibition-in-mexico-city.

Via Swide, the Museo Frida Kahlo in Mexico City opens a first-ever exhibition of Frida Kahlo's wardrobe exploring the artist's enduring relationship with fashion.  Housed in the artist's former home, also known as Casa Azul or Blue House, the museum teamed with Vogue Mexico arranging long-stored trunks of Frida Kahlo's dresses, skirts, petticoats, blouses, jewelry, Tehuana shawls, ribbons, corsets, bathing suits, and shoes.  

Curated by Circe Henestrosa, the exhibit runs to November 22, 2013, titled Las Apariencias Engañan: Los vestidos de Frida Kahlo, or Appearances Can Be Deceiving: The Dresses of Frida Kahlo.

http://0.tqn.com/d/arthistory/1/0/p/b/fk200708_04.jpgA wonderful selection of photos here from editor Valentina Zannoni who writes

The exhibition traces how Kahlo’s courage and taste still affect fashion today, from Alexander McQueen to Gwen Stefani. Dolce&Gabbana’s Spring Summer 2013 collection also inadvertedly references the artist’s style, Folk is back, while Frida has never left us.

More here from Vogue Mexico.

Photo credits/top, via Valentina Zanooni, Swide/left, from about.com art hisotory "Self Portrait With A Necklace," 1933 (Frida Kahlo, Mexican, 1907-1954z0.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

on the porch

Classic bluegrass filmed in 1964 by David Hoffman with his new 49 pound 16 mm hand-held camera.  He spent three weeks driving the Madison County, North Carolina back-country in the heart of Appalachia, accompanied by 82 year old Bascom Lamar Lunsford, founder of the Asheville Mountain Music and Dance Festival.  His film, Bluegrass Roots, was shown on public television the following year.

 

Sunday, December 16, 2012

the hot dog

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/20/HillbillyHotDogs.jpg 
Thinking about Coney Island coupled with this recent photostream of Brooklyn's Barclay Center got me thinking about .. well .. the culture and art of creating and eating a hot dog. 

One of the most memorable descriptions I've read about rituals in savoring this New York and Chicago based comfort food - and now spread almost everywhere else (and so ingeniously in some cases, you could swear hot dog originated there instead) - arrived via eighty-something Renaissance woman Maya Angelou (who is also interviewed, there, by August McLaughlin last December).  It went something like this link in Redbook, only more delectably drawn-out, concerning a grilled Hebrew National with ice cold Corona, no lime, just sitting enjoying the flavors all for oneself - ringing phones, door knocks, appointments, to-do's, shelved for the focused pleasure of this pastime Americana.  August McLaughlin shares Maya Angelou's recipe for home-made chili, and for when hot dog is most resplendently topped.

Redbook also reports that the writer hosts a tree trimming party every December serving her chili, only with cornbread, and lots of wine.


* Photo credit/Photographer is Youngamerican at Wiki/Hillbilly Hot Dogs, a roadside hot dog stand located on West Virginia State Route 2 north of Huntington, West Virginia. The photo was taken on 8 July 2006.  Visit Hillbilly Hot Dogs here on the web.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

life of pi

A new Museum of Mathematics opens its doors today in Manhattan.  Edward Rothstein reports, among other delights, "lasting resonance" from "the physical sensation of being immersed in a world shaped by a mathematical idea."

Friday, December 14, 2012

Thursday, December 13, 2012

hand-drawn maps

An archive and project devoted to collecting people's hand-drawn maps from around the world.  The route to a party in the middle of the mountains, a daily commute, the seemingly ordinary  instructional scribble,  more deliberated ingenuity, an eventful hike to Macchu Picchu, the high road to Taos, how to get to the ruins of Noisy Castle. Tulsa.

Known as The Hand Drawn Map Association, projects culminated in a publication, From Here To There, an exhibit at Arcadia University titled Nowhere, as well as other curated collections.  They are no longer accepting submissions, but seeking a permanent home for these wonderful maps from everywhere and everyone.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

les saintes-maries-de-la-mer

Romany music as seen through the ancient story of Les Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer, a town in the Camargue region of France where "gypsies" throughout Europe travel each May on a religious pilgrimage to honor their Saint Sarah in prayer and song.  The music at this yearly gathering has inspired and "pollinated" flamenco, Django Reinhardt's jazz, traditional Hungarian and Balkan brass, the Gipsy Kings' Rhumba.  A wonderful little film piece from Django Reinhardt biographer Michel Dreni including additions from 1910s Romany violinist Georges Boulanger, Thierry Robin, and Django Reinhardt's great-grandson, Dallas Baumgartner.




The filmmaker also reports
My children (ages 7 and 13) filmed the events during our family vacation—except for the knifefight, which I filmed by chance (my children were in bed, happily). I was shooting the church at night when the fight broke out; you won't actually see the blades, but the footage was shot amidst the panic as the crowd ran in fear. The fight was a crime of passion: a spurred Romany lover decided to slice his beloved. He tried to get her earlier in the day, then returned at night, leaving her with blood running down her arm and her clan vowing revenge. Next year, Disneyland instead. Ha!

Monday, December 10, 2012

robotics

Via boing boing, Darwin Aerospace figures out how Mexican restaurants can dramatically parachute burrito deliveries with drones.  Could this be a new way  of sending singing telegrams?  Pizza?  Another round of brew?  Kevin O'Brien looks at possibilities for household chores, as researchers in Japan work on a robotic wheelchair that can walk up stairs.  Here too are 12 that may be become as "mainstream as microwave ovens and dishwashers."

Still, says Professor Andrew Ng, director of the Artificial Intelligence Lab at Stanford University, “I think we’re still some years away from useful personal robots making pervasive appearances in our homes."

Remember these two?


Sunday, December 9, 2012

potato gratin

Kate over at Fork and Vine has a lovely one made with gruyère (the only way I know how), plus you can watch her try on vintage wedding gowns at Xtabay Vintage Bridal Salon in Portland.  Mama and sister nibble on goodies and mock manikins, while hostess Joanna serves up mimosas.

(Kate appears to have since disappeared .. into the sunset .. with a last November 17th blog entry ...?)

Saturday, December 8, 2012

the event of a thread

Ann Hamilton's installation, the event of a thread, opens at the Park Avenue Armory through January 6th.  Roberta Smith has a review here, replete with photostream and video, detailing the engineering of an immense, billowing white curtain strung throughout the rafters of the Wade Thompson Drill Hall's vast and seemingly cetological interior.  The cords and curtains toss and dance, put into motion by the audience, as individuals are pushed by one another on huge swing planks suspended on long cords from the towering ceiling.  Other visitors choose to perhaps lay beneath the waves of curtain or walk around holding radios wrapped in brown paper to their ears, listening to literature transmissions "murmured" by actors seated somberly at a refectory table and while a writer scribbles on a miked surface, seated off by herself in a corner.  Pigeons are supposed to be released at the end of each day, to fly around the space and then be homed back into their cages.

The work is described as reminiscent of Christo and Jean-Claude's 1972 outdoor land-art piece Valley CurtainMs. Hamilton is also a weaver and has an extensive background in textiles.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Sunday, December 2, 2012

to wok

Or not to wok.  The art of stir fry here and here may persuade you, whatever the season.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

parallel universe

 

Georgia O'Keefe paints Hawaii instead of the American southwest.  A Honolulu Museum of Art exhibition exploring Hawaiian revelations by Georgia O'Keefe alongside American photography legend Ansel Adams.  Titled Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams: The Hawai‘i Pictures, the show premieres July 18, 2013 and runs through January 12, 2014.



* Photo credit/NewYork Times/1939, Georgia O'Keefe in Hawaii, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

wanderlust

Los Angeles Public Library receives tens of thousands of maps belonging to the late adventurer John Feathers.  Accidentally discovered, this October acquisition makes the library one of the nation's top five map archives.  Mr. Feathers' wide-ranging trove includes "run-of-the-mill" gas station and Chamber of Commerce street maps, as well as "historic gems" from 1592, oddities like a 1918 official paved road guide to the United States, a 1956 Lubbock Texas pictorial map, a 1942 street guide to Los Angeles, and a pre-World War I guide to London and other suburbs, and showing streets, parks, lakes, and rivers.  Photostream here.

Monday, November 26, 2012

e.b. white

A 1969 Paris Review interview with E.B. White on The Art Of The Essay. 
WHITE:  I’m not familiar with books on style. My role in the revival of Strunk’s book was a fluke—just something I took on because I was not doing anything else at the time. It cost me a year out of my life, so little did I know about grammar.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

the haunted house

The Haunted House, a 1908 film by Segundo de Chomón, a Catalan filmmaker and contemporary of Georges Meliés, known for his development of stop motion techniques.


Sunday, October 28, 2012

starry night


Overnight View of Hurricane Sandy

Hmm .. van Gough still busy?   From NASA Earth Observatory, an image of Hurricane Sandy through the night sky.
The storm was captured by a special “day-night band,” which detects light in a range of wavelengths from green to near-infrared and uses filtering techniques to observe dim signals such as auroras, airglow, gas flares, city lights, and reflected moonlight. In this case, the cloud tops were lit by the nearly full Moon (full occurs on October 29). Some city lights in Florida and Georgia are also visible amidst the clouds.

found art


 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/98/Pablo_picasso_1.jpg

Under a Picasso, another.  And what appears to be an early Inness work uncovered in Dallas.


Wednesday, October 3, 2012

color combos

Unusual color combos that work at Apartment Therapy

I like to think of this as the art of self-acceptance via design.   I "walk away" ("surf away?") feeling as if the world is a better place.  I feel hopeful, more at peace.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

outsider art

Baltimore is getting hot.  Including an inspiring museum collection devoted entirely to outsider art - The American Visionary Art Museum.

I want to go to Baltimore right now and visit the museum, eat a tower of shellfish at L.P. Steamers, chow down for breakfast with the locals.

street fashion

I love street fashion and the creative ways the everyday person combines unusual and ordinary.  Here's a latest video from the New York Times;  also a photo stream on Street Style: Gender Bending, including the androgynous look and "borrowing the best from both sexes." 

bach

I'm enjoying the Brandenburg Concertos these days -- especially conducted by Rinaldo Allessandrini.  Here's a joyful No. 3 in G for three violins, three violas, three cellos, and bass.  HARMONICO101 says it is Winner of the Grammaphone editor's Choice award, and the 2006 Grammaphone award for best baroque instrumental recording.