https://thecoastnews.com/2012/01/investigation-into-veterinarians-death-continues/
I used to volunteer at this veterinary clinic when I was 11 or 12 or so and still wanted to be a veterinarian.
Dr. Stonebreaker was a cool guy. What a crazy story way to go.
Friday, December 27, 2013
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Joan of Arc
Is my favorite film (1928). I just wanted to record quickly some thoughts.
Libretto made for the silent film in the 1980s: http://www.richardeinhorn.com/vol/vol.libretto.pdf
Why did Joan of Arc suddenly become sainted in the early 20th century? Surely this was a political move by the Catholic church.
The Arcade Fire just released a song about her on their most recent album, Reflektor.
Libretto made for the silent film in the 1980s: http://www.richardeinhorn.com/vol/vol.libretto.pdf
Why did Joan of Arc suddenly become sainted in the early 20th century? Surely this was a political move by the Catholic church.
The Arcade Fire just released a song about her on their most recent album, Reflektor.
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
How do you tune a bowl? (MC Richards - Centering)
Oftentimes I put quotes up here from my reading that I'd like to keep around for later. M.C. Richards book, Centering, would require me to transcribe every page. So instead, I'll put up this brief thought on ceramics.
I realized watching this that combining sound and ceramics is a genius idea. Resonance provides a completely different and legitimate way of understanding a given piece's integrity, wholeness, composition, structure, tone. What a brilliant way of expressing the invisible.
I realized watching this that combining sound and ceramics is a genius idea. Resonance provides a completely different and legitimate way of understanding a given piece's integrity, wholeness, composition, structure, tone. What a brilliant way of expressing the invisible.
Sunday, September 8, 2013
The Star-Splitter
"hugger-mugger"
"Don't call it blamed; there isn't anything
More blameless in the sense of being less
A weapon in our human fight," he said.
Robert Frost - The Star-Splitter
"That telescope was christened the Star-Splitter,
Because it didn't do a thing but split
A star in two or three the way you split
A globule of quicksilver in your hand
With one stroke of your finger in the middle.
It's a star-splitter if there ever was one,
And ought to do some good if splitting stars
'Sa thing to be compared with splitting wood."
"Don't call it blamed; there isn't anything
More blameless in the sense of being less
A weapon in our human fight," he said.
Robert Frost - The Star-Splitter
"That telescope was christened the Star-Splitter,
Because it didn't do a thing but split
A star in two or three the way you split
A globule of quicksilver in your hand
With one stroke of your finger in the middle.
It's a star-splitter if there ever was one,
And ought to do some good if splitting stars
'Sa thing to be compared with splitting wood."
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Piet Hein's Squircle
Piet Hein is a fantastic poet-mathematician of little aphorisms he calls "Grooks." He got me thinking about how mind boggling it is that poetry and mathematics are not taught hand in hand. What could be more poetic than defining an equation which aptly combines the best qualities of a square and a circle ("squircle")?
Our choicest plans
have fallen through,
our airiest castles
tumbled over,
because of lines
we neatly drew
and later neatly
stumbled over.
Regarding the Squircle, Piet Hein had this to say:
Our choicest plans
have fallen through,
our airiest castles
tumbled over,
because of lines
we neatly drew
and later neatly
stumbled over.
Regarding the Squircle, Piet Hein had this to say:
Man is the animal that draws lines which he himself then stumbles over. In the whole pattern of civilization there have been two tendencies, one toward straight lines and rectangular patterns and one toward circular lines. There are reasons, mechanical and psychological, for both tendencies. Things made with straight lines fit well together and save space. And we can move easily — physically or mentally — around things made with round lines. But we are in a straitjacket, having to accept one or the other, when often some intermediate form would be better. To draw something freehand — such as the patchwork traffic circle they tried in Stockholm — will not do. It isn't fixed, isn't definite like a circle or square. You don't know what it is. It isn't esthetically satisfying. The super-ellipse solved the problem. It is neither round nor rectangular, but in between. Yet it is fixed, it is definite — it has a unity.I'll post some more Grooks at a later moment.
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Methinks we are too much like oysters..
Yes, there is death in the business of whaling—a speechlessly quick chaotic bundling of a man into Eternity. But what then? Methinks we have hugely mistaken this matter of Life and Death. Methinks that what they call my shadow here on earth is my true substance. Methinks that in looking at things spiritual, we are too much like oysters observing the sun through the water, and thinking that thick water the thinnest of air. Methinks my body is but the lees of my better being. IN fact, take my body who will, take it I say, it is not me. And therefore three cheers for Nantucket; and come a stove boat and stove body when they will, for stave my soul, Jove himself cannot.
—Moby-Dick, "The Chapel"
Verbal and Visual
“It is in the
remarkably fluid and complex interaction of [the verbal and the visual] that
one of the great motors of human culture can be discerned. Humbling the image is no antidote to
humiliating the word. It is far
healthier to nurture in both what is best called a mutual regard.” —Martin Jay, Force FIelds: Between Intellectual History and Cultural Critique, 1993.
"The relation between text and illustration is clearly reciprocal. Each refers to the other. Each illustrates the other, in a continual back and forth movement [recursive] movement which is incarnated in the experience of the reader as his eyes move from words to picture and pack again, juxtaposing the two in a mutual establishment of meaning...Such an intrinsic relation between text and picture sets up an oscillation or shimmering of meaning in which neither element can be said to be prior. The pictures are about the text; the text is about the pictures." —George Cruikshank
"I hold to a theory re book illustration, to wit: Book illustration is dull, inept, stupid, stifling, and gratuitous when ti seeks to provide a kind of visual nomenclature for the text, when it strives to make palpably visible the images trapped in the text; it is doubly useless when it snares and limits the range of words in terrible cages mechanically contrived. A writer could have no worse fate. Book illustration is meaningful, splendid, useful, apt, and bright when it performs as a partner, paralleling the text; the illustration should extend implications, deepen tragedy, heighten insights. The illustrations should stand as works, without the text; they should comment on the text, argue with it, elevate it, and ultimately be an extension of it...Ultimately, it is the illustrator's task to extend the context of meaning, to overlay the text with a structure of the artist's devising." —Leonard Baskin Sculpture, Drawings, Prints, 1970.
"The relation between text and illustration is clearly reciprocal. Each refers to the other. Each illustrates the other, in a continual back and forth movement [recursive] movement which is incarnated in the experience of the reader as his eyes move from words to picture and pack again, juxtaposing the two in a mutual establishment of meaning...Such an intrinsic relation between text and picture sets up an oscillation or shimmering of meaning in which neither element can be said to be prior. The pictures are about the text; the text is about the pictures." —George Cruikshank
"I hold to a theory re book illustration, to wit: Book illustration is dull, inept, stupid, stifling, and gratuitous when ti seeks to provide a kind of visual nomenclature for the text, when it strives to make palpably visible the images trapped in the text; it is doubly useless when it snares and limits the range of words in terrible cages mechanically contrived. A writer could have no worse fate. Book illustration is meaningful, splendid, useful, apt, and bright when it performs as a partner, paralleling the text; the illustration should extend implications, deepen tragedy, heighten insights. The illustrations should stand as works, without the text; they should comment on the text, argue with it, elevate it, and ultimately be an extension of it...Ultimately, it is the illustrator's task to extend the context of meaning, to overlay the text with a structure of the artist's devising." —Leonard Baskin Sculpture, Drawings, Prints, 1970.
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Chris Hadfield, be my friend.
Add this to my list of life goals: befriend Chris Hadfield. Have him over for dinner.
Thursday, May 9, 2013
White Cube
Writing about your past writing is the clsoest you get to
coming back from the dead. You assume a fasle superiority over your previous
self, who did all the work. [109]
A gallery is constructed along laws as rigorous as those for
building a medieval church. The outside
world must not come in, so windows are usually sealed off. Walls are painted white. The ceiling becomes the source of light. The
wooden floor is polished so that you click along clinically, or carpeted so
that you pad soundlessly, resting the feet while the eyes have at the wall. The
art is free, as the saying used to go, ‘to take on its own life.’… Unshadowed,
white, clean, artificial—the space is devoted to the technology of
esthetics. Works of art are mounted,
hung, scattered for study. Their ungrubby surfaces are untouched by time and
its vicissitudes. Art exists in a kind of
eternity of display, an dthough there is lots of ‘period’ (late modern), there
is no time. The eternity gives the
gallery a limbolike status; one has to have died already to be there. Indeed
the presence of that odd piece of furtniture, your own body, seems superfluous,
and intrusion. The space offers the
thought that while eyes and minds are welcome, space-occupying bodies are
not—or are tolerated only as kinesthetic mannequins for further study…Here at
last the spectator, oneself, is eliminated. You are there without being there.
[15]
Regarding 19th century salons, hung cheek-to-jowl:
“What perceptual law could justify (to our eyes) such barbarity? One and only
one: Each picture was seen as a self-contained entity, totally isolated from
its slum-close neighbor by a heavy frame around and a complete perspective
system within. Space was discontinuous
and categorizable, just as the houses in which these pictures hung had
different rooms for different functions.
The nineteenth century mind was taxonomic, and the nineteenth century
eye recognized hierarchies of genre and the authority of the frame. [16]
Progress can be defined as what happens when you eliminate
the opposition. [27]
Couldn’t modernism be taught to children as a series of
Aesop’s fables? It would be more
memorable than art appreciation. Think
of such fables as “Who Killed Illusion” or “How the Edge Revolted Against the
Center.” “The Man Who Violated the
Canvas” could follow “Where Did the Frame Go?” It would be easy to draw morals:
think of “The Vanishing Impasto That Soaked Away – and Then Came Back and Got
Fat.” And how would we tell the story of
the little Picture Plane that grew up and got so mean? How it evicted
everybody, including Father Perspective and Mother Space, who had raised such
nice real children, and left behind only this horrid result of an incestuous
affair called Abstraction, who looked down on everybody, including – eventually
– its buddies, Metaphor and Ambiguity; and how Abstraction and the Picture
Plane, thick as thieves, kept booting out a persistent guttersnipe named
Collage, awho just wouldn’t give up. Fables give you more latitude than art
history. [35]
The content of the empty canvas increased as Modernism went
on. Imagine a museum of such potencies, a temporal corridor hung with blank
canvasses—from 1850, 1880, 1910, 1950, 1970.
Each contains, ebfore ab rush is laid on it, assumptions implicit in the
art of its era. As the series approaches
the present, each member accumulates a more complex latent content. Modernism’s classic void ends up stuffed with ideas all ready to jump on the first
brushstroke. [36]
Who is this Spectator, also called the Viewer, sometimes
called the Observer, occasionally the Perceiver? It has no face, is mostly a
back. It stoops and peers, is slightly
clumsy. Its attitude is inquiring, its puzzlement discreet. He – I’m sure it is more male than female –
arrived with modernism, with the disappearance of perspective. He seems
born out of the picture and, like some
perceptual Adam, is drawn back repeatedly to contemplate it. The Spectator seems a little dumb; he is not
you or me. Always on call, he staggers into place before every new work that
requires his presence. This obliging
stand-in is ready to enact our fanciest spectualtions. He tests them patiently
and does not resent that we provide him with directions and responses: ‘The
viewer feels…’; ‘the observer notices…’; ‘the spectator moves….’ He is
sensitive to effects: ‘The effect on the spectator is….’ He smells out
ambiguities like a bloodhound: ‘caught between these ambiguities, the
spectator….’ HE not only stands and sits on command; he lies down and even
crawls as modernism presses on him its final indignities. Plunged into darkness, deprived of perceptual
cues, blasted by strobes, he frequently watches his own image chopped up and
recycled by a variety of media. Art
conjugates him, and he is a sluggish verb, eager to carry the wight of meaning
but not always up to it. He balances; he
tests; he is mystified, demystified. In
time, the Spectator stumbles around between confusing roles: he is a cluster of
motor reflexes, a dark-adapted wanderer, the vivant in a tableau, an actor
manqué, even a trigger of sound and light in a space land-mined with art. He may even be told that he himself is an
artist and be persuaded that his contribution to what he observes or trips over
is its authenticating signature. [39-41]
If the house is the house of modernism, what knocks can you
expect? The house itself, built on ideal foundations, is imposing, even though
the neighborhood is changing. It has a Dada kitchen, a fine Surrealist attic, a
utopian playroom, a critics’ mess, clean, well-lighted galleries for what is
current, votive lights to various saints, a suicide closet, vast storage rooms,
and a basement flophouse where failed histories lie around mumbling like
bums. We hear the Expressionist’s
thunderous knock, the Surrealist’s coded knock, the Realist at the tradesman’s
entrance, the Dadas sawing through the back door. Very typical is the
Abstractionist’s single, unrepeated knock. And unmistakable is the peremptory
knock of historical inevitability, which sets the whole house scurrying. [65]
If the white wall cannot be summarily dismissed, it can be
understood. This knowledge changes the white wall, since tis content is
composed of mental projections based on unexposed assumptions. The wall is our assumptions. It is imperative for every artists to know
this content and what it does to his/her work…..Was the white cube nurtured by
an interneal logic similar to that of its art? Was its obsession with enclosure
an organice response, encysting tart that would not otherwise survive? Was it
an economic oconstruct formed by capitalist models of scarcity and
demand?....What keeps it stable is the lack of alternatives. [80]
For avant-garde gestures have two audiences: one which as
there and one – most of us – which wasn’t.
The original audience is often restless and bored by its forced tenanc
of a moment it cannot fully perceive – and that often uses boredom as a kind of
temporal moat around the work. Memory
(so disregarded by modernism which frequently tries to remember the future by
forgetting the past) compeltes the work years later. The original audience is, then, in advance of
itself. We from a distance know better. [88]
Visual art does not progress by having a good memory. And
New York is the locus of some radical forgetting. You can reinvent the past,
suitably disguised, if no one remembers it. Thus is originality, that patented
fetish of the self, defined. [109]
The economic model in place for a hundred eyars in Europe
and the Americas is product, filtered
through galleries, offered to collectors and public institutions, written about
in magazines partially supported by the galleries, and drifting towards the
academic apparatus that stabilizes ‘history’ – certifying, much as banks do,
the holding of its major repository, the museum. History in art is, ultimately, worth money.
Thus do we get not the art we deserve but the art we pay for. This comfortably system went virtually
unquestioned by the key figure it is based upon: the artist. [109]
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
David Foster Wallace: This Is Water
Worth watching more than once. Reminds me of my brief stay at the box factory.
Not that that mystical stuff's necessarily true. The only thing that is capital T 'True' is that you get to decide how you're going to try to see it. This, I submit, is the freedom of real education. Of learning how to be 'well-adjusted.' You get to consciously decide what has meaning and what doesn't.
Must we all circulate the same three articles that come across our feeds? Must we all share and re-share the same Huffington Posts articles and TED Talks?
Yes. Absolutely yes. (So long as it's David Foster Wallace).
Why? Because the modern condition is one of perpetual forgetting.
Leo Steinberg: Other Criteria
Contemporary Art and the Plight of its Public
Steinberg, Leo. Other Criteria: Confrontations with Twentieth-Century Art. 1975. Read
Leo Steinberg voices his complex experience of approaching art (Neo Dada) that he, great critic that he was, did not immediately understand. His reaction is an important lesson in humility and learning.
Steinberg, Leo. Other Criteria: Confrontations with Twentieth-Century Art. 1975. Read
Leo Steinberg voices his complex experience of approaching art (Neo Dada) that he, great critic that he was, did not immediately understand. His reaction is an important lesson in humility and learning.
Leo Steinberg (36) “My own first reaction was normal. I disliked the show, and would galdy have
thought it a bore. Yet it depressed me
and I wasn’t sure why. Then I began to
recognize in myself all the classical symptoms of a philistines reaction to
modern art. I was angry at the artist,
as if her had invited me to a meal, only to serve something uneatable…I was
irritated at some of my friends for pretending to like it—but with an uneasy
suspicion that perhaps they did like it, so that I was really mad at myself for
being so dull, and at the whole situation for showing me up.”
Leo Steinberg 38-39
“I am alone with this thing, and it is up to me to evaluate
it in the absence of all available standards.
The value which I will put on this painting tests my authenticity as an
individual. Here I can discover whether
I am man enough to sustain an encounter with a completely original
experience. Am I escaping it by being
overly clever? There things that I see—are
they really me, or have I been eavesdropping on conversations? I have been trying to formulate certain meanings
seen in this art; are they designed to demonstrate something about myself, or
are they really an inward experience? Do the things I have just written seem
very good to me? This threat of vanity is more serious than the mere rise of
nonsense; and yet I wonder—ten years from now, I will I look silly if It should
become universally obvious that all this was junk? Or have I failed myself already in asking
these questions, being overly conscious about myself, instead of surrendering
to the experience which is reaching out to me?
"Alfred Barr, of hte mOuseum of Modern Art, has said that if one out of ten piantings that the Museum of Modenr Art has acquired should remain valid in retrospect, they will ahve scored very well. I take this to be, not a confession of inadequate judgment, but an assertion about the nature of contemporary art."
"[Modern Art] demands a decision in which you discover yourself, your own quality as a man; and this decision is always a 'leap of faith' to use Kierkegaard's famous term."
Comparing Modern art to Exodus 16. "When I read this much, I stopped and thought how like contemporary art this manna was; not only in that it was a God-send, or in that it was a desert food, or in that no one could quite understantd it--for "they wist not what it was." Nor even because a part of it was immediately put away in a museum--"to be kept for your generations"; nor yet because the taste of it has remained a mystery, since the phrase here translated as "wafers made with honey," is in fact, a blind guess; the Hebrew word i sone that occurs nowhere else in ancienct literature, and no one knows what it really means. Whence the legend that manna tasted to every man as he wished; though it came from without, it's taste in the mouth was his own making."
=Art always makes its public feel othered—great new art always makes us uncomfortable, makes
"Alfred Barr, of hte mOuseum of Modern Art, has said that if one out of ten piantings that the Museum of Modenr Art has acquired should remain valid in retrospect, they will ahve scored very well. I take this to be, not a confession of inadequate judgment, but an assertion about the nature of contemporary art."
"[Modern Art] demands a decision in which you discover yourself, your own quality as a man; and this decision is always a 'leap of faith' to use Kierkegaard's famous term."
Comparing Modern art to Exodus 16. "When I read this much, I stopped and thought how like contemporary art this manna was; not only in that it was a God-send, or in that it was a desert food, or in that no one could quite understantd it--for "they wist not what it was." Nor even because a part of it was immediately put away in a museum--"to be kept for your generations"; nor yet because the taste of it has remained a mystery, since the phrase here translated as "wafers made with honey," is in fact, a blind guess; the Hebrew word i sone that occurs nowhere else in ancienct literature, and no one knows what it really means. Whence the legend that manna tasted to every man as he wished; though it came from without, it's taste in the mouth was his own making."
=Art always makes its public feel othered—great new art always makes us uncomfortable, makes
anxieties of
the modern moment felt and real.
+This has been true since at least
Cezanne.
=Leo Stein’s example: hated
Matisse but went again and again to see the paintings and after a few weeks
decided he loved them and bought them up.
This is necessary humility
when approaching new great art.
=”Contemporary art is constantly inviting
us to applaud the destruction of values which we still cherish.” …. “It seems
to me a function of modern art to transmit this anxiety to the spectator.”
=Steinberg laments his anxiety of “not
getting it” with Neo Dada, particularly J. Johns, but sticks with it.
=”If I dislike these things, why
not ignore them?” – well most people do, but the heroicism of the art critic is
his humility and doggedness to stick with things he doesn’t like and persevere,
to understand precisely why or why not, to not simply give a glib kneejerk
reaction.
=Art as analogous to god-sent mana
(a hapax legnomenon, no one knows what it is) – manna tastes to everyoy man as
he wished; the gathering of manna and art must be done as a leap of faith.
Steinberg,
Leo “Jasper Johns: The First Seven Years of His Art”
Steinberg notes the wide range of critical responses to
Johns, many of them wrong (this is the mark of great art)
=Then he
hones on in the 8 basic attributes of Johns paintings (p.26)
+Most
critical is the flatness, the unification of signifier and signified.
1.
All man-made objects. Man-made assuresthat they are makeable; non
man-made things can only be simulated (skies, trees, space)
2.
All objects are commonplace – but Johns doesn’t
give us the commonplace in a painting, he gives us the commonplace as a painting. What Johns loves about
the commonplace is that they are nobody’s preference, not even his own (this is
the paradox).
3.
All respected ritual or conventional
shapes. Using conventional things so he
can worry about deeper issues. Did you
pick these letter types because you like them or because theats hwo the
setencils come? JJ: But that’s what I
like about them, that they come that way.
a.
He likes things that are, in their quotidian
state, seem not to be art yet.
4.
Johns subjects are wholeentities or complete
systems; full objects, whole primary colors, can be looked at from any angle or
side.. meh okay. He is playing with the limits of meaning making.
5.
Johns objects/systems predetmine the pictures
shape and dimensions. Naturally. 1:1; ratio.
6.
Flatness – you can’t smoke Magritte’s pipe, but
you can throw darts at Johns targt.
7.
Non-heirarchic – maintaining “alloverness”
democrartic equality to all parts fo the painting.
a.
“Moral: Nothing in art is so true that its
opposite cannot be made even truer.”
8.
Johns objects associate with sufferance, not
action. They are receptive things; they let things happen.
What is painting? ß
central question of Johns.
Johns advances many hypotheses. What is the surface of a painting? Not a
window, nor an uprighted tray, noran object with projections into actual space….
He want spictures to be objects alone.
In conclusion: Johns puts two
flinty thingsotgether in a picure and makes them work against one another so
hard tha the mind is sparked.
“The elements of Johns’s picture
lie side by side like flint pebbles.
Rubbed together they could spark a flame, and that istheir meaning
perhaps. But johns does not claim to
have ever heard othe invention of ifre. He merely locates the pebbles.”
“Becoming a painter is like
groping one’s way out of a cluttered room in the dark. Beginning to walk, he tubmbles over another
man’s couch, changes course to colloide with someone’s commode, then
buttsagainst a work table that can’t be disturbed.”
“It is in the character of the
critic to say no more in his best moment sthan whay everyone in the following season
epeats; he is the generator of the cliché.”
To achieve Pollock’s effect through
absolute banality, without the pretension of heroism and hypermasculinity.
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