[article by Nicolai Ouroussoff, reprinted in full from the November 25 edition of the New York Times.]
A Berkeley Museum Wrapped in Honeycomb
By Nicolai Ouroussoff
Published: November 24, 2008
BERKELEY, Calif. — I have no idea whether, in this dismal economic climate, the University of California will find the money to build its new art museum here. But if it fails, it will be a blow to those of us who champion provocative architecture in the United States.
Designed by the Japanese architect Toyo Ito, the three-story structure suggests an intoxicating architectural dance in which the push and pull between solitude and intimacy, stillness and motion, art and viewer never ends. Its contoured galleries, whose honeycomb pattern seems to be straining to contain an untamed world, would make it a magical place to view art.
Beyond its aesthetic appeal, however, Mr. Ito’s design underscores just what is at stake as so many building projects hang in the balance. On a local level, the museum could help break down the divide between the ivory tower at the top of the hill and the gritty neighborhood at the bottom. More broadly, it could introduce an American audience to one of the world’s greatest and most underrated talents, sending out creative ripples that can only be imagined.
The museum would replace the existing Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, a bunkerlike building completed in 1970 that was badly damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.
Standing on a rough commercial strip at the campus’s southern edge, the old building is still marred by the big steel columns that were installed after the quake to support its cantilevered floors. Its rough, angular concrete forms and oddly shaped galleries are awkward settings for art.
The new museum would rise several blocks away, at the seam between the main entrance to the university’s leafy hillside campus and Berkeley’s downtown area. Mr. Ito conceived the design as part of a drawn-out public promenade, and he has packed the bookstore, a cafe, a gallery, a 256-seat theater and a flexible “black box” onto the ground floor. The more contemplative galleries, which include spaces for temporary exhibitions and the museum’s permanent collections of Western and Asian art, are on the second and third floors.
In the renderings the building’s creamy white exterior vaguely resembles a stack of egg cartons that has been sliced off at one end to expose the matrix of contoured chambers inside. The forms peel away at various points to create doorways and open up tantalizing, carefully controlled views into the interiors, as if the building’s facade had been slowly eroding over the millenniums.
Teasingly voyeuristic, the effect brings to mind partly demolished buildings and the aura of intimate secrets about to be revealed. But Mr. Ito is not interested in simply obliterating boundaries, as you would with a conventional glass box. His aim is to create a relaxed relationship between private and public life: while acknowledging that contemporary museums are often hives of social activity, he understands that they can also be places where we want to hide from one another and lose ourselves in the art.
The ground floor is conceived as an intense, compressed version of the surrounding street grid. Once inside, visitors will have to pay to enter a formal temporary gallery just to the right of the main entry. Or they can slip around it and follow the procession through the more informal interstitial spaces, which will be used for video art and site-specific installations. The theater and black box space are tucked away in the back.
Mr. Ito once said that he would like to create spaces that are like “eddies in a current of water.” The interstitial spaces seem to swell open and close up to regulate the movement of people through the building; the self-contained, honeycomblike spaces, by contrast, produce a sense of suspension rather than enclosure, as if you were hovering momentarily before stepping back into the stream.
As you ascend through the museum, this effect intensifies, and the spaces become more contemplative. The main staircase is enclosed in one of the contoured volumes, giving you psychological distance from the activity below. Once you reach the main gallery floors, the experience becomes more focused: the rhythm through the rooms is broken only occasionally, when a wall peels back to allow glimpses of the city.
Mr. Ito has positioned most of the doorways in the galleries’ contoured corners, which allows for a maximum of uninterrupted wall space for the art while emphasizing the rooms’ sensual curves. Most of the galleries have a single opening; others are contained in interstitial spaces, part of the general flow through the building. The contrast, which creates unexpected perspectives, has more to do with Tiepolo’s heavens than with Mondrian’s grids.
As with all of Mr. Ito’s work, the building’s structural system is not an afterthought but a critical element of the ideas that drive the design. The honeycomb pattern gives the building a remarkable structural firmness, allowing for walls only a few inches thick. Made of steel plates sandwiched around concrete, they will have a smooth, unbroken surface that should underscore the museum’s fluid forms. The tautness of the bent steel should also heighten the sense of tension.
Of course, Mr. Ito is still fine-tuning his design, and critical decisions have yet to be made. Museum officials plan to eliminate two 30-foot-high galleries that were part of the original proposal to add wall space and cut costs. This is unfortunate: the soaring spaces would tie the building together vertically and create voids on the upper floors that would add to the sense of mystery.
The museum is also pushing to make the curved corners in the galleries more compact to add still more wall space, which could create an impression that the art is crammed in.
For decades now, Mr. Ito has ranked among the leading architects who have reshaped the field by infusing their designs with the psychological, emotional and social dimensions that late Modernists and Post-Modernists ignored. They have replaced an architecture of purity with one of emotional extremes. The underlying aim is less an aesthetic one than a mission to create a more elastic, and therefore tolerant, environment.
These ideas have found their firmest footing in Europe and Japan and are now filtering into the mainstream here. It would be a shame to leave Mr. Ito out of that cultural breakthrough. The museum would not only be an architectural tour de force but would also introduce him to a broad American audience, stirring an imaginative reawakening in a country that sorely needs it.
[graphic and photograph from the Times. Captions: "A model of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive." Toyo Ito & Associates, Architect." Photograph: "A photograph enhanced to show the area to be occupied by the new museum. University of California, Berkeley:]
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Paul Desmond
[On the occasion of the anniversary of the eighty-fourth anniversary of the birth of composer|saxophonist Paul Desmond, a video of a 1975 performance of Johnny Mandel's "Emily, a tune that spotlights Mr. Desmond's exquisitely smooth approach to the instrument."
Paul Desmond died in 1977 on May 30.]
Paul Desmond died in 1977 on May 30.]
Monday, November 24, 2008
Limit one per customer!
Exactitudes
[thanks to GC in CC, NV for the scouting tip:]
"Rotterdam-based photographer Ari Versluis and profiler Ellie Uyttenbroek have worked together since October 1994. Inspired by a shared interest in the striking dress codes of various social groups, they have systematically documented numerous identities over the last 14 years. Rotterdam's heterogeneous, multicultural street scene remains a major source of inspiration for [them], although since 1998 they have also worked in cities abroad."
"Exactitudes"
[screen grab and text from project web site. The text is a excerpted from an introduction by by Wim van Sinderen, Senior Curator The Hague Museum of Photography]
"Rotterdam-based photographer Ari Versluis and profiler Ellie Uyttenbroek have worked together since October 1994. Inspired by a shared interest in the striking dress codes of various social groups, they have systematically documented numerous identities over the last 14 years. Rotterdam's heterogeneous, multicultural street scene remains a major source of inspiration for [them], although since 1998 they have also worked in cities abroad."
"Exactitudes"
[screen grab and text from project web site. The text is a excerpted from an introduction by by Wim van Sinderen, Senior Curator The Hague Museum of Photography]
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Architectures of Survival
Outpost for Contemporary Art
Los Angeles, California U.S.A.
Architectures of Survival
Curated by Komplot and presented in conjunction with Art2102
"The work of Hungarian architect Yona Friedman (*1923, Budapest, lives in Paris) is the starting point for this exhibition with the title itself being a reflexive reference to Friedman's 1975 book 'Architecture Of Survival' (MIT Press, USA). The book looks at the precarious nature of modern society and suggests creative strategies for countering the problems thrown up by hyper-consumption and capitalist modes of spatial and social organisation"
artists | events
[graphic from Outpost Web site.]
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Fringe in the rearview mirror
From November 13 through November 16, New Orleans played host to the New Orleans Fringe Festival.
Click here for an entire listing of the participating artists and venues of this remarkable event.
[graphic from Fringe Web site.]
Click here for an entire listing of the participating artists and venues of this remarkable event.
[graphic from Fringe Web site.]
Friday, November 21, 2008
Happy Birthday Mac Rebennack
[Today marks the 68th anniversary of the birth of New Orleans music giant Mac Rebennack aka Dr. John. Below is one of a generous number of YouTube videos of Mr. Rebennack performing his composition "Such A Night." Many happy returns!]
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Marco Perego | Amy Winehouse | William Burroughs
Half Gallery
New York, New York
"NEW YORK.- Marrying the hyperrealist tradition of Duane Hanson and Andy Warhol’s prophetic approach to pop culture, Marco Perego unveils his most ambitious set piece to date, a sculpture of William Burroughs murdering Amy Winehouse entitled, “The Only Good Rock Star is a Dead Rock Star.” Perhaps only Maurizio Cattelan – another curious Italian— or Damien Hirst could come close to producing an artwork as macabre as it is hilarious. Perego’s installation speaks concurrently to the steep price of fame and an infamous literary game gone deadly, creating a provocative situation that while historically impossible is visually plausible through-and-through. The Minnie Mouse mask next to her lifeless body is not just a nod to Disney, but a reference to the infamous Amy Wine-mouse video of her partying with Pete Doherty. Perego challenges the viewer to abandon our antiquated notions of chronology and reinvent a timeline to match the projected calculus of our imagination. A series of drawings (some studies, some indirectly related) further explore the linkage between sex and violence, borrowing from childhood memories of chivalry, innocence and romance.
All images are included in the forthcoming Marco Perego monograph to be published by tarSIZ. The book features an essay by noted dealer John McWhinnie and French Vogue editor Carine Roitfeld, as well as a conversation with the artist himself."
[text and photo from artdaily.org web site. Caption: "Marco Perego, The Only Good Rock Star Is A Dead Rock Star (detail). Courtesy of Half Gallery." The exhibition opened on November 14.]
Monday, November 17, 2008
Workers
Austin Museum of Art
823 Congress Avenue at 9th Street
Austin, Texas
November 15, 2008 - February 8, 2009
Workers: Photographs by Sebastiao Salgado
"AUSTIN, TX.- The Austin Museum of Art (AMOA) presents Workers: Photographs by Sebastião Salgado. Sixty-two large-scale, black and white photographs are included in the exhibition. Salgado’s work poses many disparate questions. Do the photographs honor the dignity of labor, or expose brutal working conditions? Do they document economic growth and development, or provide insight into the human toil that supports our increasing consumption?
The exhibition also taps into Austin’s strong interest in photography, as reflected by numerous local galleries devoted to the medium, impressive public and private collections, and the many important documentary photographers who live in the region.
Educated as an economist, Salgado began his photography career in 1973. In the early 1970s, while working for the International Coffee Organization, Salgado borrowed his wife’s camera for a trip to Africa. It was after this trip that he decided to pursue his passion for photography. Salgado initially worked with the Paris-based agency, Gamma, but in 1979 he joined the international cooperative of photographers Magnum Photos. He left Magnum in 1994 and formed his own agency in Paris, Amazonas Images, to represent his work. Salgado began Workers in 1986. Over the next six years he traveled to 23 countries to photograph manual laborers. Workers was a monumental undertaking that confirmed his reputation as a photo documentarian of the first order.
...
Throughout his thirty-five-plus years as a photographer, Sebastião Salgado has remained committed to documenting humanity’s challenges and hopes. Salgado’s transformative images bestow dignity on the most isolated and neglected, from famine stricken refugees in the Sahel to the indigenous peoples of South America. His series, Workers, stands as a testament to the world’s laborers at a time of transition.
Divided into six categories—Agriculture, Food, Mining, Industry, Oil, and Construction — Workers is a global project that transcends mere imagery and affirms the enduring spirit of working men and women throughout the world. The photographs span the realities of work in myriad forms—from rolling Cuban cigars, to picking tea on Rwandan plantations to fishing in Italy. Salgado undertook this epic project because of concerns about changes in way the people work around the world. Fifteen years later, Workers stands as the activist-artist’s manifesto. Inspired by globalization, he set out to document its effects on methods of production in the developing world. Some agricultural practices in the third world, as shown in his photographs of workers gathering Brazilian cocoa or coal mining in India, have remained unchanged for centuries. Other countries, like India and China, have undergone an industrial revolution in the last decade, forever changing how work is defined in those societies. Salgado consciously reveals that much of the world’s work force still labors to make goods they cannot afford. With growing inequity between the first and third world, this body of work is relevant to today’s dynamic global markets. Sebastião Salgado’s Workers is a photographic homage to changing methods of work, and a tribute to the humanity of the world’s workers.
“I hope that the person who visits my exhibitions, and the person who comes out, are not quite the same,” says Salgado. “I believe that the average person can help a lot, not by giving material goods but by participating, by being part of the discussion, by being truly concerned about what is going on in the world.”"
[image and text from artdaily.org. Caption: "Workers emerging from a coal mine. Dhanbad, Bihar State, India, 1989, Gelatin Silver Print, 19 5/8 X 23 1/2 inches, Photograph by Sebastião Salgado/Amazonas Images.]
823 Congress Avenue at 9th Street
Austin, Texas
November 15, 2008 - February 8, 2009
Workers: Photographs by Sebastiao Salgado
"AUSTIN, TX.- The Austin Museum of Art (AMOA) presents Workers: Photographs by Sebastião Salgado. Sixty-two large-scale, black and white photographs are included in the exhibition. Salgado’s work poses many disparate questions. Do the photographs honor the dignity of labor, or expose brutal working conditions? Do they document economic growth and development, or provide insight into the human toil that supports our increasing consumption?
The exhibition also taps into Austin’s strong interest in photography, as reflected by numerous local galleries devoted to the medium, impressive public and private collections, and the many important documentary photographers who live in the region.
Educated as an economist, Salgado began his photography career in 1973. In the early 1970s, while working for the International Coffee Organization, Salgado borrowed his wife’s camera for a trip to Africa. It was after this trip that he decided to pursue his passion for photography. Salgado initially worked with the Paris-based agency, Gamma, but in 1979 he joined the international cooperative of photographers Magnum Photos. He left Magnum in 1994 and formed his own agency in Paris, Amazonas Images, to represent his work. Salgado began Workers in 1986. Over the next six years he traveled to 23 countries to photograph manual laborers. Workers was a monumental undertaking that confirmed his reputation as a photo documentarian of the first order.
...
Throughout his thirty-five-plus years as a photographer, Sebastião Salgado has remained committed to documenting humanity’s challenges and hopes. Salgado’s transformative images bestow dignity on the most isolated and neglected, from famine stricken refugees in the Sahel to the indigenous peoples of South America. His series, Workers, stands as a testament to the world’s laborers at a time of transition.
Divided into six categories—Agriculture, Food, Mining, Industry, Oil, and Construction — Workers is a global project that transcends mere imagery and affirms the enduring spirit of working men and women throughout the world. The photographs span the realities of work in myriad forms—from rolling Cuban cigars, to picking tea on Rwandan plantations to fishing in Italy. Salgado undertook this epic project because of concerns about changes in way the people work around the world. Fifteen years later, Workers stands as the activist-artist’s manifesto. Inspired by globalization, he set out to document its effects on methods of production in the developing world. Some agricultural practices in the third world, as shown in his photographs of workers gathering Brazilian cocoa or coal mining in India, have remained unchanged for centuries. Other countries, like India and China, have undergone an industrial revolution in the last decade, forever changing how work is defined in those societies. Salgado consciously reveals that much of the world’s work force still labors to make goods they cannot afford. With growing inequity between the first and third world, this body of work is relevant to today’s dynamic global markets. Sebastião Salgado’s Workers is a photographic homage to changing methods of work, and a tribute to the humanity of the world’s workers.
“I hope that the person who visits my exhibitions, and the person who comes out, are not quite the same,” says Salgado. “I believe that the average person can help a lot, not by giving material goods but by participating, by being part of the discussion, by being truly concerned about what is going on in the world.”"
[image and text from artdaily.org. Caption: "Workers emerging from a coal mine. Dhanbad, Bihar State, India, 1989, Gelatin Silver Print, 19 5/8 X 23 1/2 inches, Photograph by Sebastião Salgado/Amazonas Images.]
Sunday, November 16, 2008
[Prospect.1] New Orleans for the long haul
"But in a way, [Dave] McKenzie's art taps as deeply into the root of Prospect.1 as any of the other event's stars. The show was devised as a gift to the damaged city. Many of the Prospect.1 artists have done their best to express their empathy and loyalty to New Orleans through their art. McKenzie has conceptually cut out the middle man, so to speak. He's expressing his empathy and loyalty to New Orleans by artistically adopting us, as simple as that. Why complicate matters by making a painting or sculpture?"
read full Times Picayune article by arts writer Doug MacCash.
[image from the NASA Visible Earth web site.]
read full Times Picayune article by arts writer Doug MacCash.
[image from the NASA Visible Earth web site.]
Friday, November 14, 2008
Top 10 Ugly Buildings
[from Reuters]
"SYDNEY (Reuters Life!) - Travel can open your eyes to some of the world's most beautiful sights and buildings -- and to some of the ugliest.
Web site VirtualTourist.com (www.virtualtourist.com) has come up with a list of "The World's Top 10 Ugliest Buildings and Monuments" according to their editors and readers. Reuters has not endorsed this list.
"Some of these picks have all the charm of a bag of nails while others are just jaw-dropping in their complexity. Love them or hate them, the list is certainly entertaining," said General manager Giampiero Ambrosi."
read full article
[photograph of Tower of Montparnasse, Paris, France.]
"SYDNEY (Reuters Life!) - Travel can open your eyes to some of the world's most beautiful sights and buildings -- and to some of the ugliest.
Web site VirtualTourist.com (www.virtualtourist.com) has come up with a list of "The World's Top 10 Ugliest Buildings and Monuments" according to their editors and readers. Reuters has not endorsed this list.
"Some of these picks have all the charm of a bag of nails while others are just jaw-dropping in their complexity. Love them or hate them, the list is certainly entertaining," said General manager Giampiero Ambrosi."
read full article
[photograph of Tower of Montparnasse, Paris, France.]
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
"Today's Paper"
[With thanks to SL in NYC for the tip on FB, below a brilliant hypertext document. Text below from the 'Today's Paper' link on the front page of "The New York Times." Click on image to enlarge. Click the link while you can – we imagine it might not be active indefinitely.]
"The Fine Print
By Amal Maamlaji
Published: July 4th, 2009
This special edition of The New York Times comes from a future in which we are accomplishing what we know today to be possible.
The dozens of volunteer citizens who produced this paper spent the last eight years dreaming of a better world for themselves, their friends, and any descendants they might end up having. Today, that better world, though still very far away, is finally possible — but only if millions of us demand it, and finally force our government to do its job.
..."
"The Fine Print
By Amal Maamlaji
Published: July 4th, 2009
This special edition of The New York Times comes from a future in which we are accomplishing what we know today to be possible.
The dozens of volunteer citizens who produced this paper spent the last eight years dreaming of a better world for themselves, their friends, and any descendants they might end up having. Today, that better world, though still very far away, is finally possible — but only if millions of us demand it, and finally force our government to do its job.
..."
Sunday, November 09, 2008
Framing the Presidency
The New School - Tishman Auditorium
Alvin Johnson/J. M. Kaplan Hall
66 West 12th Street
New York City, New York
Wednesday, November 12, 2008, 7:00 p.m.
Free admission
Aperture Foundation at The New School
"Confounding Expectations, Photography in Context"
“Framing the Presidency”
"The Aperture Foundation, the Photography Department of Parsons, The New School for Design, and the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School present a new season of panel discussions focusing on photography. The second event is “Framing the Presidency,” which explores the collision of photography, mass media, and politics in the 2008 presidential campaign and beyond. Artists and media experts share their experiences and explore the power of photography in constructing our image of the presidency.
With
Tim Davis, photographer
Robert Hariman, Chair of Communication Studies at Northwestern
University
Todd Heisler, Pulitzer Prize winning photojournalist
David Scull, New York Times campaign picture editor photographer
[photo by Todd Heisler/The New York Times. Caption: "Clinton supporters at an event in Beaumont, Texas on Monday."]
Alvin Johnson/J. M. Kaplan Hall
66 West 12th Street
New York City, New York
Wednesday, November 12, 2008, 7:00 p.m.
Free admission
Aperture Foundation at The New School
"Confounding Expectations, Photography in Context"
“Framing the Presidency”
"The Aperture Foundation, the Photography Department of Parsons, The New School for Design, and the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School present a new season of panel discussions focusing on photography. The second event is “Framing the Presidency,” which explores the collision of photography, mass media, and politics in the 2008 presidential campaign and beyond. Artists and media experts share their experiences and explore the power of photography in constructing our image of the presidency.
With
Tim Davis, photographer
Robert Hariman, Chair of Communication Studies at Northwestern
University
Todd Heisler, Pulitzer Prize winning photojournalist
David Scull, New York Times campaign picture editor photographer
[photo by Todd Heisler/The New York Times. Caption: "Clinton supporters at an event in Beaumont, Texas on Monday."]
Saturday, November 08, 2008
Data Vis: 2008 U.S. General Election Results
[with thanks to MFC in Saugus, CA, click link below.]
Maps of the 2008 US presidential election results
[graphics from results Web site.]
Friday, November 07, 2008
Art Criticism and Its Enemies
The New School
Theresa Lang Community and Student Center
55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor
New York City, New York
Monday, Nov. 10, 2008 - 7 p.m.
AICA* Lecture: Linda Nochlin “Art Criticism and Its Enemies”
"In her far-reaching exploration of the art critic’s insights into every aspect of contemporary art, including performance, installation and video, Linda Nochlin pointedly refutes those who doubt the ability of art critics to assess the range of new media. In the course of this examination, she also distinguishes between the goals of the art critic and those of the art historian in terms of audiences and intention. What are the obligations of the critic, and what are the pleasures in writing criticism? Nochlin concludes this probing analysis with references to her own approach as a critic considering a wide range of artists, from Courbet and Manet through Lucien Freud, Jenny Saville and Sam Taylor-Wood.
Dr. Linda Nochlin is the Lila Acheson Wallace Professor of Modern Art at the Institute of Fine Arts/New York University. She has previously held professorial chairs at Yale, at the City University of New York, and at Vassar College.
* AICA: Association Internationale des Critiques d’Art
[still from The Last Century (2005) by Sam Taylor-Wood]
Theresa Lang Community and Student Center
55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor
New York City, New York
Monday, Nov. 10, 2008 - 7 p.m.
AICA* Lecture: Linda Nochlin “Art Criticism and Its Enemies”
"In her far-reaching exploration of the art critic’s insights into every aspect of contemporary art, including performance, installation and video, Linda Nochlin pointedly refutes those who doubt the ability of art critics to assess the range of new media. In the course of this examination, she also distinguishes between the goals of the art critic and those of the art historian in terms of audiences and intention. What are the obligations of the critic, and what are the pleasures in writing criticism? Nochlin concludes this probing analysis with references to her own approach as a critic considering a wide range of artists, from Courbet and Manet through Lucien Freud, Jenny Saville and Sam Taylor-Wood.
Dr. Linda Nochlin is the Lila Acheson Wallace Professor of Modern Art at the Institute of Fine Arts/New York University. She has previously held professorial chairs at Yale, at the City University of New York, and at Vassar College.
* AICA: Association Internationale des Critiques d’Art
[still from The Last Century (2005) by Sam Taylor-Wood]
Labels:
AICA,
Courbet,
Jenny Saville,
Linda Nochlin,
Lucien Freud,
Manet,
New School,
Sam Taylor-Wood
Thursday, November 06, 2008
Bush Arts Appointment
[missed in the election excitement, with props to CB in NYC for the catch, from the November 3 Los Angeles Times:]
Bush appoints Lee Greenwood to National Arts Council
4:28 PM, November 3, 2008
Lee Greenwood's main claim to fame is writing and singing the hit patriotic hymn "God Bless the U.S.A." Soon Greenwood's blessing will matter on the American arts scene -- at least the part interested in tapping into federal largess via grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. Appointed by President Bush and confirmed by the Senate, the Nashville-based country singer is scheduled to be sworn in Nov. 17 as one of the 14 regular members of the National Council on the Arts. Council members advise the NEA chairman, and their portfolio includes reviewing and making recommendations on applications for grants from the $145-million-a-year federal agency. Greenwood will serve a six-year term.
-- Mike Boehm
[Photo caption: Lee Greenwood performs "God Bless the U.S.A." in concert in Warner Robins, Ga., in late September 2001. Credit: Danny Gilleland / Associated Press"]
Bush appoints Lee Greenwood to National Arts Council
4:28 PM, November 3, 2008
Lee Greenwood's main claim to fame is writing and singing the hit patriotic hymn "God Bless the U.S.A." Soon Greenwood's blessing will matter on the American arts scene -- at least the part interested in tapping into federal largess via grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. Appointed by President Bush and confirmed by the Senate, the Nashville-based country singer is scheduled to be sworn in Nov. 17 as one of the 14 regular members of the National Council on the Arts. Council members advise the NEA chairman, and their portfolio includes reviewing and making recommendations on applications for grants from the $145-million-a-year federal agency. Greenwood will serve a six-year term.
-- Mike Boehm
[Photo caption: Lee Greenwood performs "God Bless the U.S.A." in concert in Warner Robins, Ga., in late September 2001. Credit: Danny Gilleland / Associated Press"]
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
FYA: Don't Forget to Vote!
[With thanks to KMcL in NYC for the link: A visit to the CNNBC Website started for me with the following alert: "Notice: The video you're about to see portrays events that haven't happened... yet. It was prepared just for you. But if you go vote today you can make sure this joke doesn't become a reality."
For Americans registered to vote in the General Election, The Data Stream encourages you to do so! And please feel free to substitute your name for mine while viewing!]
[Brought to you by those wacky funmeisters over at MoveOn.org Political Action]
For Americans registered to vote in the General Election, The Data Stream encourages you to do so! And please feel free to substitute your name for mine while viewing!]
[Brought to you by those wacky funmeisters over at MoveOn.org Political Action]
Monday, November 03, 2008
Nerve – U.S. Electoral Politics
[With thanks to HP in DC, here's a bit of U.S. electoral politics electronic anthropology. For those of us Stateside, the final hours until the votes are tallied, in what's felt to us in Iowa like an interminable, exhilarating race, are restless, anxious ones.]
enjoy
[graphic: screen grab from Nerve.]
Sunday, November 02, 2008
Home
November 3 - 26, 2008
Monday - Wednesday 2-5PM
Home 1996 – 2008
1256 Leavenworth Street
(at the corner of Clay St.)
San Francisco
Home 1996 – 2008 is a site-specific installation/environment that utilizes the interior space of the home to explore and challenge notions of comfort and protection, private and public, and the boundaries between art/life/architecture/design.
And by appointment, please email: megawilson at aol dot com
more
[image from Megan Wilson Web site.]
Monday - Wednesday 2-5PM
Home 1996 – 2008
1256 Leavenworth Street
(at the corner of Clay St.)
San Francisco
Home 1996 – 2008 is a site-specific installation/environment that utilizes the interior space of the home to explore and challenge notions of comfort and protection, private and public, and the boundaries between art/life/architecture/design.
And by appointment, please email: megawilson at aol dot com
more
[image from Megan Wilson Web site.]
Saturday, November 01, 2008
Community in action
"And this is my belief, too: that it's the community in action that accomplishes more than any individual does, no matter how strong he may be."
Louis "Studs" Terkel
May 16, 1912 – October 31, 2008
[from NPR:]
"Born in 1912, Pulitzer Prize-winning oral historian Studs Terkel moved to Chicago shortly before the Great Depression. Although trained as a lawyer, he worked as an actor, sportscaster, disc jockey, writer and interviewer. Terkel hosted a Chicago radio program for 45 years and has authored 12 oral histories about 20th-century America."
listen to a segment on NPR's "This I believe."
[Ed C. in Buffalo, New York notes on his Facebook status that he "is sad that Studs Terkel didn't hang around just a few more days to see his fellow Chicagoan Barack Obama elected President."]
[photo by Nubar Alexanian from NPR Web site.]
Louis "Studs" Terkel
May 16, 1912 – October 31, 2008
[from NPR:]
"Born in 1912, Pulitzer Prize-winning oral historian Studs Terkel moved to Chicago shortly before the Great Depression. Although trained as a lawyer, he worked as an actor, sportscaster, disc jockey, writer and interviewer. Terkel hosted a Chicago radio program for 45 years and has authored 12 oral histories about 20th-century America."
listen to a segment on NPR's "This I believe."
[Ed C. in Buffalo, New York notes on his Facebook status that he "is sad that Studs Terkel didn't hang around just a few more days to see his fellow Chicagoan Barack Obama elected President."]
[photo by Nubar Alexanian from NPR Web site.]
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