Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Friday, February 26, 2010

a dance like clockwork honey

It is an interesting experience to watch a performance

and be continually flooded throughout the viewing with other

images and thoughts it conjures in ones mind. I felt that way

this evening, watching the Mark Morris Dance Group at BAM.

Accompanied by a few stragglers running from the train though

the slush coming out of the sky, I was temporarily seated in the

back of the orchestra for the first piece, Behemoth. Being level

with the dancers for this part was ideal, to see the patterns, the

repeats, the prints in the space made with their bodies and

limbs. On all of their costumes, marigold and kelly greens,

each one had a little piece of mirror on their chest and they

would twist and one would hit the light and make little shadows

and sparks all over the room. It was clever and at first you think,

is that someone’s watch reflecting, what is going on? But, when

you realize it is the dancers and its part of their movements, it

brings a quiet smile.


I was thinking about Atomic City, a beautiful, thoughtful show with

acrobats that my brilliantly talented previous roommate, Aidan

performed in. It reminded me of the movements in that show. I

loved that about Behemoth, the repetitions of their playful, silly

movements, flopping feet like fish, the zigzag twisting with fingers

and to witness the reverb of these motions. The silence and space

in between become motions in another thought, in itself.


A scene started with five bodies, lying slightly to the side, feet facing

us. I immediately thought of one of my favourite passages in Albert

Camus' A Happy Death, where Patrice and his companions are at

the house on the top of the world in Algiers, sunning themselves until

they melt with pleasure. The cats are mentioned in this section of the

book, being lazy, carnal creatures and then some of the dancers were

stretching long and crawling across the stage, seemingly worshiping

the warmth of something and slowly scampering to reach it.


I started to think about those old wristwatches where you can see all

the springs and gears and everything is turning and it has its place but

there does appear to be a randomness about it. The dance felt like this,

but as if there was honey between the gears, making some motions in

between a flux.


I loved the tenderness when one of the male dancers picked up his lady

counterpart and held her up, displayed to the world and then laid her

back down, sliding her on to his back. It was quiet. I liked that.


The second piece ‘Looky’ was hilarious and fun. The backdrop was

like a Rothko painting and a Bill Viola art video to start and then the

dancers were running around in what I deemed to be Dolce and

Gabbana pajamas (but there was one star printed Miu Miu bodysuit,

I swear!) and making a tableau vivant turned barnyard hoe down.

But, don’t get me wrong, it felt so entirely Italian. This transformed

into a drippy gossip heavy formal ball a la Jane Austen. From there,

we turn to the jazz age, straight out of the chapter in The Great Gatsby

where Fitzgerald is writing about the citrus fruit for the lawn party.

It was drunken and erratic, with saltwater taffy melting soft Bob Fosse
struts and then wrapped with a slight resemblance to a Greek tragedy,

which is not too far off because the final dance was exactly that,

the death of Socrates.


I got all referential in this entry and that is not my intention, but I wanted

to stay true to everything that passed my mind and all the scribbles in

my notebook. Nonetheless, see this show at BAM if you can. Its worth it

for all your own set of inspirations and images.


Mark Morris Dance Group

@ BAM

February 26, 27 7:30pm


Tuesday, February 23, 2010

claudia

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Claudia has been my daily cooking inspiration as of late. Slowly, her
masterpiece, The New Book of Middle Eastern Food is becoming my bible.
I just love those simple peasant recipes that are a nice break to create during
a day of work at home. Major shout out to Amy G for kindly giving me the book.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

the wounds from red shoes

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john waller was on wnyc yesterday morning talking about the
dancing plagues. i am utterly fascinated by this piece of history.
hoping to pick this up real soon.

eating is the only real legitamate reason for travel

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books about good eats. i mean, does it get better?
here is to another year of fantastic food.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Sunday, November 8, 2009

foreshadowed

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something must have been swirling around in the air with my thoughts
turning toward the thunder perfect mind prada video the other day.
on friday, prada debuted their book. finally.
i popped in yesterday and picked up a copy and was weirdly recognized
by the staff and we had a mini critique of the resort prints. (which are beautiful!)
its really amazing and much more than a reprint of the campaigns.
its all about production, their various artistic explorations and stores-
and there are thumbnails of every look from every collection.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

sing into my mouth

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i was introduced to this cookbook during my wwofing experience in Andalucia
and had the chance to make a couple of the recipes,
including paella and pea soup with jamon
there is a concentration on dishes from Andalucia and especially those
with a Moroccan influence - it already has a place on my kitchen shelf

Thursday, March 26, 2009

on the books

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reading now...in preparation and anticipation

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

words adorned with sails

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their first kiss was witnessed by the Seine River carrying gondolas of street lamps
reflections in its spangled folds, carrying haloed street lamps flowering on the bushes of
black laquered cobblestones, carrying silver filigree trees opened like fans beyond whose
rim the river's eyes provoked them to hidden coquetries, carrying the humid scarfs of
fog and the sharp incense of roasted chestnuts.
everything fallen into the river and carried away except the balcony on which
they stood.
their kiss was accompanied by the street organ and it lasted the whole length of
the musical score of Carmen, and when it ended it was too late; they had drunk the
potion to its last drop.
the potion drunk by lovers is prepared by no one but themselves.
the potion is the sum of one's whole existence.
every word spoken in the past accumulated forms and colors in the self. what
flows through the veins besides blood is the distillation of every act committed, the
sediment of all the visions, wishes, dreams, and experiences. all the past emotions
converge to tint the skin and flavor the lips, to regulate the pulse and produce
crystals in the eyes.
the fascination exerted by one human being over another is not what he emits
of his personality at the present instant of encounter but a summation of his entire
being which gives off this powerful drug capturing the fancy and attachment.
no moment of charm without long roots in the past, no moment of charm
is born on bare soil, a careless accident of beauty, but is the sum of great sorrows,
growths, and efforts.
but love, the great narcotic, was the hothouse in which all the selves burst
into their fullest bloom...
love the great narcotic was the revealer in the alchemist's bottle rendering
visible the most untraceable substances
love the great narcotic was the agent provocateur exposing all the secret
selves to daylight
love the great narcotic lined fingertips with clairvoyance
pumped iridescence into the lungs for transcendental x-rays
printed new geographies in the lining of the eyes
adorned words with sails, ears with velvet mutes
and soon the balcony tipped their shadows into the river, too, so that
the kiss might be baptized in the holy waters of continuity.

taken from the four-chambered heart by anais nin
what a beautiful gift to find her at this moment.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

i'm in love with Ferrán Adrià

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i can never resist a food dude, especially not this one...

i dream of this journey.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

art, events, films, locales to discover.

+self healing material. nature.com

+superjam.co.uk
+exploding flowers. mummeryschnelle.com
+artist, roger dean. flights of icarus from floating islands series
+cassiemercantile.com
+herdubreid at home
+stalker directed by andrei tarkovsky. mosfilm. 1979
+artist, phi frost. totem
+der garten. arno fischer. riflemaker.org
+stardust. riflemaker.org
+stan brakhage. mothlight, 1963. by brakhage:an anthology. criterion 2003
+artist, peter doig. tate britain. judith nesbitt. tate.org.uk/peterdoig
+fiskedon by goran dyhlen. tate britain
+radical lave and subversive knitting. museum of arts and design ny.
+threads of light. chinese embrodiery from suzhou. UCLA fowler museum of cultural history
+hieronymus bosch
+simonfinch.com
+hotel portillo. www.drn.cl www.skiportillo.com
+artist, helio oiticica. the body of colour. tate modern. london
+gary hume. american fan XXVI (gloss)
+pear light by nick foley
+ruth.gurvich.free.fr

books to find

+an illustrated life. charley harper.

+wabi-sabi:for artists, designers, poets, philosophers. leonard koren. 
stone bridge press. ISBN 1880656124
+l'espirit serge lutens: the spirit of beauty. edition assouline.
+wabi-sabi for writers. richard powell.
+real allegories. olivier richon.
+garden people: valerie finnis and the golden age of gardening. ursula buchan. thames/hudson.
+the gentle art of domesticity. jane brocket. hodder/stoughton.
+living normally-where life comes before style. trevor naylor/niki medlik. thames/hudson.
+the architecture of happiness. alain de botton.
+sanaa houses: kazuyo sejimat ryue nishizawa. augustin perez rubio. actar/musac
+rare bird of fashion the irrevent iris apfel. eric boman. thames/hudson
+william christenberry. e.brown/walter hopps/andy grundbery/howard n fox. aperture.
+dominant wave theory. david carson/andy hughes. booth-clibbon editions
+sweet earth-experimental utopias in america. joel sternfeld. steidl
+snapshot chronicles:inventing the american photo album. stephanie snyder/barbara levine/
matthew stadler/terry toedtemeier. princeton architectural press.
+svenska formgivare. caroline soderhold. historiska media
+domestic landscapes:a portrait of europeans at home. bert teunissen. aperture.
+audubon's birds of america. john james audubon.
+reflex:a vik muniz primer. aperature.
+masterpieces of the mineral world. wendell e. wilson/joel a bartsch/mark mauthner
publisher harry n abrams inc.
+element and shape. ratoruzv. ISBN 489977074x