Thursday, February 7, 2008

Bees

Photographer Adam Makarenko's miniature/photo bee projects are mesmerizing.

Recently awarded the American Photo of the Year, "[i]n this project, Makarenko created a detailed imaginary world -- a 'pseudo garden of Eden' he calls Langstroth Range, located in Canada's Yukon Territory."

Sunday, February 3, 2008

A grey mood


There's a certain Slant of light, Winter Afternoons--
That oppresses, like the Heft Of Cathedral Tunes--

~ Emily Dickinson (No. 258)


Renowned Vancouver architect Arthur Erickson said of his favourite medium: "Concrete is the marble of the 20th century." His creations are anywhere from fascinating to confounding to starkly beautiful. But his contributions to this city, one socked-in by grey for much of the year, sometimes simply overwhelm.

It's the 21st century, is our future to remain grey?


***

The Gray Areas of Jasper Johns
By Carol Vogel

February 3, 2008

ONLY one artwork hangs in Jasper Johns’s all-white Caribbean home here. It’s a nearly nine-foot-tall canvas in three sections: a harlequin pattern that cascades down on the right, a series of colored circles on the left, and a montage of gray encaustic brush strokes in the center. Two overlapping wooden slats are attached to the painting.

Full New York Times article

Thursday, January 31, 2008


The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts
~ Bertrand Russell


Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Don't argue with happiness




Man is the artificer of his own happiness
~ Henry David Thoreau



I am a kind of paranoiac in reverse. I suspect people of plotting to make me happy ~
J. D. Salinger


North Americans just cannot seem to get enough. Of anything. So many laughed at the face, their own face, as they saw themselves in Super Size Me. We tsk at the excesses of others who drink, drug and dance too much. And yet.

We can't seem to get enough happiness.

The backlash toward Jerome Weeks, from those angered by his Salon article on doctors' over-prescribing antidepressants, points to a similar sort of guilt-driven indignation, and inability to read a message clearly.

Weeks clearly notes that there are those who legitimately need medication, that he is not trying to undermine its importance in some people's lives. Yet a maelstrom of but-buts once again welled, from folks who would formulate their protests before hearing out, or fully reading, the argument.

Happiness has become the most recent in inexplicable commodifications of the human condition. And we're hooked. Funny thing is, no one's ever been able to define it, so how can it be boxed, sold and prescribed?

I saw a production of Tom Waits' Black Rider last night, and I'm now thinking of these Waits/William Burroughs words from 'Crossroads', about selling out something integral for some temporary kicks:

Now, George was a good straight boy to begin with, but there was bad blood
In him; someway he got into the magic bullets and that leads straight to

Devil's work, just like marijuana leads to heroin; you think you can take

Them bullets or leave 'em, do you?

Just save a few for your bad days

Well, now, we all have those bad days when you can't shoot for shit.

The more of them magics you use, the more bad days you have without them
So it comes down finally to all your days being bad without the bullets
It's magics or nothing

Time to stop chippying around and kidding yourself

Kid, you're hooked, heavy as lead

Sunday, January 27, 2008

The inner sleuth

One spring, maybe a thousand years ago, a wallet that'd been stolen while I was on Christmas holiday, arrived in the mail. The postmark named a city in BC's interior I'd never been to, thousands of miles away from where the theft had occurred, and hundreds of miles from where I was then living. The wallet, mostly intact except for the missing $200, was accompanied by a note detailing the Good Samaritan's dog's retrieval from a rose bush. I knew who had stolen the wallet, though had no proof, but I had to see that person every day for the rest of the trip knowing he had gotten away with it. That someone had taken the time to package and send the found wallet to me, though, helped reaffirm my faith in the kindness of strangers.

And as I searched my wallet contents, wondering how it had finally gotten back to me, I considered how there's something sort of fun in the sleuth work, tracking down an individual based on the few clues available, as this article attests, about the kindhearted New Yorker who went to great lengths to return a lost camera.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Beah's latest battle raises many questions

Recent reports that some facts in Ishmael Beah's memoir, A Long Way Gone, are being challenged concerns writers and readers everywhere.

The complexities of the situation are well-delineated on Ben Peek's blog and over at Booklist Online.

The suggestion that Beah may have been exploited by his publisher; that the Australian media has a history of calling out book liars; the distinction between journalist and memoirist; the accusation of misquotation; the uncomfortable debate about degrees of tragedy... And many other prickly concerns.

I'll reserve any judgment for now while the story unfolds. From what I've researched, though, The Australian is a formidable opponent, so Beah's battle will likely not be a cakewalk.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Photo Samples

Here's a handful of photography samples. I'm looking forward to developing my skills, through practice and more formal learning. As I come across more of my favourites, I'll post them.