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What’s Wrong With the American Essay |
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Topic: Arts |
9:46 pm EST, Dec 1, 2007 |
The essay is in a bad way. It’s not because essayists have gotten stupider. It’s not because they’ve gotten sloppier. And it is certainly not because they’ve become less anthologized. More anthologies are published now than there have been in decades, indeed in centuries. The Best American Essays series, which began in 1986, has reached 20 volumes. The problem is that these series rot in basements -- when they make it as far as that. I’ve found the run of American Essays in the basement of my local library, where they’ll sit -- with zero date stamps -- until released gratis one fine Sunday morning to a used bookstore that, in turn, will sell them for a buck to a college student who’ll place them next to his dorm bed and dump them in an end-of-semester clean-out. That is the fate of the essay today.
What’s Wrong With the American Essay |
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Topic: Arts |
9:46 pm EST, Dec 1, 2007 |
Happy birthday! Mr. Barzun always sought to be a teacher in the widest possible sense, and his books were directed as much to those outside the walls of academia. In his memoir of this time, Mr. Barzun quotes Matthew Arnold: "The men of culture are the true apostles of equality. They have a passion . . . for carrying from one end of society to the other the best ideas of their time." Then Mr. Barzun adds: "It is clear in retrospect that not we alone but the mid-century as a whole, particularly in the United States, made a many-sided effort to carry out the Arnoldian mandate. The hope of a collective enjoyment of the best in thought and art was still strong."
Two other posts on Barzun's 100th: Age of Reason, in The New Yorker Jacques Barzun at 100 , in The New Criterion
For more, see Barzun 100, a blog dedicated to the celebration of Jacques Barzun's 100th year. Jacques Barzun Turns 100 |
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Gritty 'Wire' wrapping up final season |
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Topic: Arts |
9:45 am EST, Dec 1, 2007 |
A fervent following is eagerly awaiting the final season of an HBO drama. No, this story isn't a year old. While the final hurrah of "The Sopranos" had the weight of a genuine cultural event, the last season of "The Wire" is a more cultish affair. The longest-running dramatic series on HBO, "The Wire" will enter its fifth and final season Jan. 6. In certain circles, this is already cause for nail-biting anticipation.
Count mine bitten. Gritty 'Wire' wrapping up final season |
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MySpace aesthetics revisited |
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Topic: Arts |
9:44 am EST, Dec 1, 2007 |
So the other day I asked: If “good design” is more important than ever, then why is (the basically hideous) MySpace so popular?
MySpace aesthetics revisited |
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Rare & Beautiful Vintage Visions of the Future |
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Topic: Arts |
9:44 am EST, Dec 1, 2007 |
This is the start of a new series, collection of the most inspiring & hard-to-find retro-futuristic graphics. We will try to stay away from the well-known American pulp & book cover illustrations and instead will focus on the artwork from rather unlikely sources: Soviet & Eastern Bloc "popular tech & science" magazines, German, Italian, British fantastic illustrations and promotional literature - all from the Golden Age of Retro-Future (from 1930s to 1970s). Click to enlarge most images.
Rare & Beautiful Vintage Visions of the Future |
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Ed Burtynsky's beautifully monstrous 'Manufactured landscapes' |
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Topic: Arts |
9:42 am EST, Dec 1, 2007 |
If you are planning (you should) to go see Jennifer Baichwal’s documentary "Manufactured landscapes", which opened last week in theaters across the US after spending a year mesmerizing film festivals audiences and will soon arrive in Europe, make sure you get there in time, for nothing describes the scale and essence of today's globalized industry more tellingly than the opening scene: a seven-minutes tracking shot of the floor of a boundless Chinese factory, row after row after row of disciplined workers and efficient repetition that Stanley Kubrick could have filmed.
Regarding the repetition, in one scene which observes the manual assembly of circuit breakers, I thought of Michael Haneke and the ping-pong scene from 71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance. (In the film, this scene runs for around seven minutes.) The opening scene of "Landscapes" brought to mind Jean-Luc Godard's Tout Va Bien, especially the closing scene, consisting of a long tracking shot along the innumerable aisles of check-out counters in a supermarket. The film is now available on DVD. Amazon says: Manufactured Landscapes works triple-time as a documentary portrait, a tone poem, and a work of protest.
Ed Burtynsky's beautifully monstrous 'Manufactured landscapes' |
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Topic: Arts |
9:42 am EST, Dec 1, 2007 |
... gorgeous ... mesmerizing ... important, disquieting ... absorbing, if unsettling ...
Make time to see this film. (Don't forget about Iraq in Fragments.) Edward Burtynsky is internationally acclaimed for his large-scale photographs of nature transformed by industry. Manufactured Landscapes – a stunning documentary by award winning director Jennifer Baichwal – follows Burtynsky to China, as he captures the effects of the country’s massive industrial revolution. This remarkable film leads us to meditate on human endeavour and its impact on the planet.
Wired offers photographs, along with an interview with the photographer Ed Burtynsky: "I started to think: where is all this natural material going, where does it get formed into the products that we buy?"
Manufactured Landscapes |
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The Dance of Evolution, or How Art Got Its Start |
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Topic: Arts |
8:58 pm EST, Nov 28, 2007 |
Perhaps the most radical element of Ellen Dissanayake’s evolutionary framework is her idea about how art got its start. She suggests that many of the basic phonemes of art, the stylistic conventions and tonal patterns, the mental clay, staples and pauses with which even the loftiest creative works are constructed, can be traced back to the most primal of collusions — the intimate interplay between mother and child.
The book is Art and Intimacy. The Dance of Evolution, or How Art Got Its Start |
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