28 August 2015

Clasical Economic Theory as expounded by Round Baldwin



"For De Certeau, the walking body moves in search of a familiar thing in the city. He invokes Freud, saying that walking recalls baby’s moves inside of the maternal body: ‘To walk is to be in search of a proper place. It is a process of being indefinitely absent and looking for a proper.’"
—Doina Petrescu, The Indeterminate Mapping of the Common

The fuzz in Alberta


The Song of the Smoke

BY W. E. B. DU BOIS
   I am the Smoke King
   I am black!
I am swinging in the sky,
I am wringing worlds awry;
I am the thought of the throbbing mills,
I am the soul of the soul-toil kills,
Wraith of the ripple of trading rills;
Up I’m curling from the sod,
I am whirling home to God;
   I am the Smoke King
   I am black.

   I am the Smoke King,
   I am black!
I am wreathing broken hearts,
I am sheathing love’s light darts;
   Inspiration of iron times
   Wedding the toil of toiling climes,
   Shedding the blood of bloodless crimes—
Lurid lowering ’mid the blue,
Torrid towering toward the true,
   I am the Smoke King,
   I am black.

   I am the Smoke King,
   I am black!
I am darkening with song,
I am hearkening to wrong!
   I will be black as blackness can—
   The blacker the mantle, the mightier the man!
   For blackness was ancient ere whiteness began.
I am daubing God in night,
I am swabbing Hell in white:
   I am the Smoke King
   I am black.

   I am the Smoke King
   I am black!
I am cursing ruddy morn,
I am hearsing hearts unborn:
   Souls unto me are as stars in a night,
   I whiten my black men—I blacken my white!
   What’s the hue of a hide to a man in his might?
Hail! great, gritty, grimy hands—
Sweet Christ, pity toiling lands!
   I am the Smoke King
   I am black.

A lot of work to do

randian 燃点
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中、美、欧艺术精英全球交流项目
Global Exchange Program for Art Specialists in China, USA and Europe
•    Wonderka Art Management, LLC, New York • Paris 依托北京艺海廊桥文化艺术中心、中国国际广播电台国际在线书画频道、国大公益等中国艺术传播机构,联合中、美、欧顶尖艺术机构和院校,在北京、上海、纽约、伦敦、巴黎等城市全面推出“中、美、欧艺术精英全球交流项目”。

•    该项目由中国模块―国际艺术精英课程、美国模块――纽约文化艺术深度之旅、欧洲模块―欧洲文化艺术深度之旅三个部分构成。

•    Wonderka邀请国际著名艺术人士,以短期课程和考察访问为形式,融专题授课、实地参访、交流座谈、策展和收藏咨询为一体, 与海外高端文化艺术活动紧密结合,为中国广大艺术爱好者深度考察欧、美文化艺术提供高品质的服务。

第二期纽约文化艺术深度之旅(行程) The 2nd High-end Tour for New York Culture and Art

第1天,6月15日  (June 15th)

上午(Morning Events):
参观美国艺术联盟 (American Federation of Arts),了解如何与美国美术馆和博物馆进行项目对接
Visit American Federation of Arts and learn how to connect/collaborate with American museums and art museums.

下午(Afternoon Events):

•    参观戈勃朗基金会 (Gabarron Foundation),交流艺术基金会的管理与运作

Visit Gabarron Foundation and exchange experiences in the management and operation of art foundations

•    前往纽约第五大道购物,并参加世界顶级奢侈品牌Prada旗舰店的特许欢迎酒会。

Shopping at the 5th Ave and attend the welcome wine banquet at the Prada Flagship.

晚间(备选):Evening Events  (Optional)  

前往纽约林肯中心(Lincoln Center)观赏纽约地标。Visit the Lincoln Center

第2天,6月16日  (June 16th)

上午(Morning Events):

参观Hort家族艺术品收藏。Hort家族经过5代人的努力,现有私人藏品超过3,000 件,享誉纽约私人收藏界

Visit the Hort Family Collection. The Hort Family is well-known among the New York private collectors for their over 3,000 items in their collections after the endeavor of five generations.

下午(Afternoon Events):

参观德意志银行画廊, 德意志银行有超过5万7千件藏品分布在全球900多家办公室

Visit 60 Wall Gallery, Deutsch Bank. It has over 57,000 items in the collection distributed among over 900 offices globally.

晚间(备选):Evening Events (Optional)

前往百老汇大街欣赏景点剧目――歌剧魅影

Go to Broadway and watch the classic musical—The Phantom of the Opera

第3天,6月17日  (June 17th)

日间 (Day Events):

参观艺术和创新开拓中心(艺术家工作室)。该中心鼓励艺术家进行创新,强调艺术与科学的结合,并开设驻留、教育、培训等多种项目

Visit Pioneer Works Center for Art and Innovation (Artist studios). The center helps produce creative work and social change. Collaboration between the arts and sciences is critical. Residency, educational and training programs are also offered in the center.


晚间(备选):Evening Events (Optional)

哈德逊河豪华游轮夜游

Hudson River Night Cruise

第4天,6月18日  (June 18th)

上午(Morning Events):

参观大都会博物馆,美国最大的艺术博物馆,共收藏有300万件展品

Visit Metropolitan Museum of Art, the largest art museum in America with over 3 million items in the collection.


下午(Afternoon Events):

参观弗里克美术馆,该馆以收藏欧洲老油画闻名

Visit the Frick Collection, which is famous for its collection of Old Master Paintings from Europe.


晚间(备选):Evening Events (Optional)
欣赏卡耐基音乐厅音乐会
Concert at Carnegie Hall

第5天,6月19日  (June 19th)

上午(Morning Events):

参观惠特尼美国艺术博物馆―有超过2万1千件藏品,其双年展为众多年轻艺术家和新兴艺术家提供了更多的展示机会

Visit Whitney Museum of American Art with over 21,000 items in the collection. The Whitney Biennale provides unique opportunities for younger and less well-known artists

下午(Afternoon Events):

参观纽约现代艺术博物馆,世界上最著名和最具影响力的现代艺术博物馆。其藏品包括绘画,雕塑,版画,摄影,印刷品,商业设计,电影,建筑,家具及装置艺术等。

Visit MoMA, which is often considered the most influential museum of modern art in the world. The museum's collection offers an overview of modern and contemporary art, including works of architecture and design, drawing, painting, sculpture, photography, prints, illustrated books and artist's books, film and electronic media.

第6天,6月20日  (June 20th)

日间(Day Events):

•    参观白宫―美国总统的官邸和办公室

Visit the White House

•    参观林肯纪念堂――被视为美国永恒的塑像及华盛顿市标志,为纪念美国第十六届总统亚伯拉罕·林肯而建

Visit the Lincoln Memorial

•    参观华盛顿纪念碑――为纪念美国首任总统乔治·华盛顿而建造

Visit the Washington Monument

•    参观美国国会大厦――美国国会大厦是美国国会所在地,是民有、民治、民享政权的最高象征

Visit the United States Capitol

第7天,6月21日  (June 21th)

上午 (Morning Events):

参观国立美术馆,其藏品很好的记录了西方艺术从中世纪至今的发展里程,并拥有美洲地区唯一一件达芬奇的作品

Visit National Gallery of Art, the Gallery's collection traces the development of Western Art from the Middle Ages to the present, including the only painting by Leonardo da Vinci in the Americas



下午 (Afternoon Events):

参观弗瑞尔美术馆和赛克勒美术馆,两者被合称为“美国国立亚洲艺术博物馆”

Visit The Freer Gallery and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, which are called jointed as “NATIONAL Gallery of Asian Art” 

第8天,6月22日  (June 22th)

上午(Morning Events):
参观私人藏家收藏 Mr. David C. Levy
Visit private collections by David C. Levy

下午(Afternoon Events):

参观纽约视觉艺术学院,被选为历史50年以来最重要的三所设计与艺术学院之一;也被评为在50年内最顶尖的设计专业学院。几乎所有美国历史上的美国动漫大片和特效大片都有SVA老师与学生的参与,包括玩具超人,蜘蛛侠,蝙蝠侠,功夫熊猫,赛车总动员,米老鼠与唐老 鸭,WALL.E, 海底总动员,等等
Visit School of Visual Arts, New York, which has been voted as one of the three most important schools that combine design and art in the past 50 years, as well as the No.1 design school in the past 50 years. Almost all the famous fimls and cartoons are related with professor and students from SVA, including Superman, Spiderman, Kongfu Panda, Car, Wall. E. Finding Nemo, etc.

晚间 (备选):Evening Events (Optional)

芭莎之夜, 纽约最闻名的夜间嘉年华
Night Bazaar

第9天,6月23日  (June 23th)

日间 (Day Events):
参观画廊(高古轩,佩斯,大卫斯沃纳,詹姆斯科恩,凯尚,前波,否画廊等)

•    高古轩画廊(Gagosian Gallery)是拉里•高古轩(Larry Gagosian)创办的一家当代艺术画廊,代理了安迪沃霍尔(Andy Warhol)、达明赫斯特(Damien Hirst)、德库宁(Willem de Kooning)、杰夫昆斯(Jeff Koons)等当代顶尖艺术家作品

•    佩斯画廊是全球最有影响力之一的画廊,在纽约、伦敦和北京和香港均由画廊,代理查克克劳斯(Chuck Close)、毕加索(Pablo Picasso)、张晓刚、张洹等顶尖艺术家作品

•    大卫斯沃纳画廊集中展出新兴的美国和国外艺术家的作品,代理了杰夫昆斯(Jeff Koons)、草间弥生(Yayoi Kusama)詹姆斯韦林等当代顶尖艺术家
Visit galleries (Pace, Gagosian, James Cohan, David Zwirner, Klein Sun, Chambers, Fou, etc)

晚间 (备选):Evening Events (Optional)
直升机夜游纽约
Helicopter Tour  

2 June 2015

Preregulation


 "The following must go into my finished Directives: When you meet a Gethenian you cannot and must not do what a bisexual naturally does, which is to cast him in the role of Man or Woman, while adopting towards him a corresponding role dependent on your expectations of the patterned or possible interactions between persons of the same or the opposite sex. Our entire pattern of socio-sexual interaction is nonexistent here. They cannot play the game. They do not see one another as men or women. This is almost impossible for our imagination to accept. What is the first question we ask about a newborn baby? Yet you cannot think of a Gethenian as "it." They are not neuters. They are potentials, or integrals. Lacking the Karhidish "human pronoun" used for persons in somer, I must say "he," for the same reasons as we used the masculine pronoun in referring to a transcendent god: it is less defined, less specific, than the neuter or the feminine. But the very use of the pronoun in my thoughts leads me continually to forget that the Karhider I am with is not a man, but a manwoman. The First Mobile, if one is sent, must be warned that unless he is very self-assured, or senile, his pride will suffer. A man wants his virility regarded, a woman wants her femininity appreciated, however indirect and subtle the indications of regard and appreciation. On Winter they will not exist. One is respected and judged only as a human being. It is an appalling experience."
— Ursula K. Le Guin The Left Hand of Darkness

25 May 2015

baklava balaclava









"Affirmation here is not some sort of naïve, silly and candid-like “oh, I want the world to be a better place.” No, it’s a very gutsy engagement with the present. It takes a lot of courage to take on the present. It is very depressing stuff. If you want to do critical theory this way, you’re going to be a pretty gloomy person, a very depressed partner, and somebody that will never be invited to witty dinner parties, you will be just too depressed. So I always say, clock in and clock out; engage with the present just enough, and then have a good gin and tonic and get on with it, it’s Friday afternoon after all, so what the hell. But dosing the amount of horror that you take in, what Bourdieu called la misère du monde, the misery, the wretchedness, that negative consciousness that is so much a part of critical theory, to actually fight for justice you have to take on the burden of the injustice. To want to improve the situation you need to take stock of what it is; it takes a lot of courage. No wonder many people just go out the door and do whatever they do in the science departments… I’m just doing this, I’m not looking at the global picture… In the humanities, in critical theory, in feminism, we look at the global picture. I have lost so many of my friends either to burn out, to early death, or to forms of completely opportunistic conformism, that I have started thinking seriously about the politics of affirmation as a praxis, as a practice; you engage with the horrors of the world, you take it in, we dose it very carefully in space and time, and then we process it. This is what I think the micro political comes down to. You dose it, you focus, you frame it, and you act on it. And you can only do it in very localized manners and in very sustainable doses. Because we critical theorists are just as human as others, slightly more mortal than most, however. And that vulnerability that comes with this courage, this recklessness, or taking on the misery of the world, is something that we need to add to the general picture, or the methodology or pedagogics of critical theory. We really don’t want any more dead heroes. And we don’t want anymore of our students fighting losing battles in the margins, facing poverty and precarity, we want you to succeed. And this means dosages."
—Rosi Braidotti, "Nomadic Feminist Theory in a Global Era" (lecture 2012)

24 April 2015

Greek Rhythms


“‘Young Architecture’ as a discrete catagory [sic] reflects the atrophied aspirations of our cultural moment, in which, among a generation poorer than our parents, a growing majority will be unable to graduate to architecture, freedom, home-ownership or traditional debt-free marks of vocational maturity − a subtle but de facto form of slavery is creeping up on us.
Meanwhile the healthy ecologies formed of intermediate-scale architectural practice coupled with critical journalism and socially minded procurement have decayed through a process of polarisation − towards the very large and the very small, Establishment and emerging. In this context of power vs exploitation, the term ‘Young Architecture’ offers a vehicle for a compromised partnership between a cosy architectural press, morally bankrupt late-capitalist development and a disenfranchised generation of graduates with limited options. 
‘Young Architecture’: a tainted brand
Brand ‘Young Architecture’ is perilously close to becoming shorthand for a privileged clique purveying minor and pop-up buildings, instantly and uncritically published in a sycophantic hype driven by individualism, consumerism and an obsession with youth, in a way that increasingly apes the fashion industry. While the works themselves are consistently imaginative and delightful, demonstrating the skill of their authors, it is the term of ‘Young Architecture’ and the values it is coming to imply that must be interrogated.
‘Young Architecture’ makes a virtue of an injustice. The ageist mantle demands a level of knowing self-parody from emerging designers who it smothers as it belittles, imposing low expectations as default. In segregating architects into binary camps, the term smuggles through tacit approval for the Establishment while cementing the position of knowingly under-remunerated outsiders: the young.
(…) The reactive definition of an adolescent stage in career development places inflated emphasis on conspicuous displays of ‘authenticity’. Vulnerable, self-initiated projects necessarily embody a humane frugality. However, communicating this ethic in a visual language that is Tumblr-friendly constrains much of the work to a style measured in the thin rustic novelty of pop-up DIY-like production: chipboard, shipping containers, bare bricks, spontaneous installation and time-limited demountability.
Architecture has finally become fast enough to simulate the frivolity of throw-away fashion. But before it congratulates itself for this renaissance of dynamic participation and urban vitality, sedulous emerging designers should question the direct social consequences of the burgeoning pop-up industry which courts them and the widespread co-option of this architectural froth as a game of distraction. The permission for and sponsorship of such installations ties these energetic works to a broader political question around who owns the city for whom.”
— Phineas Harper, Phil Pawlett Jackson, The Architectural Review

15 April 2015

Bacon









Bacon's emotions are in every brushstroke. He's the real deal and you'll understand and feel that again at some point. You have a habit of changing your mind several times about an artist, which is fine, as long as it's genuine at the time you write, not because it keeps you in a job.
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  •  HeathCardwell
    34
    Bacons emotions are in every film.He's the real deal and you'll understand and feel that when you watch Flash dance again.You have a habit of changing your mind several times about an actor(Tremors),which is fine as long as its genuine at the time you watch Stir of Echoes, not because it keeps you going to work
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  •  MrPrintmaker
    12
    Bacons taste is in every pan that fries it.Its the real deal and you'll understand and taste that when you put it in bread .You have a habit of changing your mind several times about a meat,which is fine as long as its genuine at the time you put the sauce on it.
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  •  MrPrintmaker
    12
    OK, I get it, you're frustrated. We all know how that feels MrPrintmaker.
    Reply

13 April 2015

Ludlum™




"If it was correct that the next step in art was predictable, then it didn't matter who took it. Anyone actualizing that step would enjoy some degree of acceptance based on the accuracy of apparent inevitability of that step. The steps might be suggested to someone else and they might produce the work, unaware of my influence. When their piece was accepted by either being published or shown, my piece would be completed. The principal worked, the process was predictable. I became somewhat apprehensive of the manipulative aspects of this direction and discontinued any further pursuit." 

— Raivo Puusemp quoted in Stephen Wright, "An Art Without Qualities: Raivo Puusemp's 'Beyond Art -- Dissolution of Rosendale, N.Y.'"




28 March 2015

Manga PhD





"Remember—we are not reading the work of an overconfident undergraduate here, trying to find his way amid the complications of critical theory and thus protesting too much while understanding too little. We’re reading a book by the Rita Shea Guffey Chair in English at Rice University, whose previous two books were published by Harvard University Press. So what is going on here?

I’ve titled this review essay “The Nadir of OOO” because I think that the absurdities of Realist Magic are due at least in part to those it inherits from the incoherent ontology it wants to popularize and extend. In order to stake its claim to originality and supremacy, “OOO” has to fulminate against what it sees as a threatening field materialists, purveyors of “scientism,” process philosophers, Deleuzians, and systems theorists. It has to establish itself as “the only non-reductionist, non-atomic ontology on the market.” So Marx, as well, will have to be laid low. Since it would be prove difficult to mount a plausible or relevant critique of historical materialism from a perspective committed to a universe of objects withdrawn from relation, the object-oriented ontologist can only flail wildly at his target, hoping to construct arguments so preposterous that they can’t possibly be accused of trying to be serious. “Going ker-plunk or whatever”: the style affects an insouciance its desperation belies, and it amounts to self-parody.

What is the point, then, of talking about the book, even to criticize it? On a blog discussing Realist Magic, a reader says he wants to “dive deep enough into the object-oriented aspects of Morton’s thought to get some grasp of what he is trying to do.” The reader quotes a long passage concerning the essence of a cinderblock, which ends as follows:
You could explode a thousand nuclear bombs and you would not reveal the secret essence of the cinder block. You could plot the position and momentum of every single particle in the block (assuming you could get around Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle) and you wouldn’t discover the withdrawn essence of the block. Ten of the world’s greatest playwrights and film directors (let’s say Sophocles, Shakespeare, Garcia Lorca, Samuel Beckett, Akira Kurosawa and David Lynch just for starters) could write horrifying, profound tragedies and comedies and action movies about the block and still no one would be closer to knowing the essence of the block. (Timothy Morton)
“Something tells me,” the reader writes, “if I can understand the passage above I might just be able to pick up what Tim is putting down.” But take care, dear reader: in order to pick up what Morton is putting down, you would need to understand less, not more. The difficulty of getting “some sort of grasp on what he’s trying to do” is inherent to the book, not any deficit of your own comprehension. Yet many readers, perhaps trying to find an initial foothold in philosophy and theory, will find themselves in a position from which this might not be apparent. And the problem with obscurantism is that its strategy is to reinforce incomprehension, rather than alleviating it. To the extent that this strategy can itself be clarified, its effect—the cultivation of ignorance and error—is mitigated. That is why it may be worth noting some reasons why no one should hope to understand anything by reading Realist Magic.

“OOO” seems to be relatively popular at the moment. But obscurantism usually gleans the sort of popularity that does not last. Despite the present popularity of “OOO” the conceptual weakness, the scholarly irresponsibility, and the rhetorical desperation of Realist Magic offer ample evidence that it is not aging well. Academic theory will shortly try out a new flavor of the month—and the sooner the better, I suppose. It could not be more tasteless."

—Simon Brown, “The Nadir of OOO”


21 March 2015

Ruin Porn

How to interpret Art Deco style: "Canadian retailer Joe Fresh is expanding its business in Bangladesh, almost one year after the deadly collapse of the garment factory building where some of its clothes were made"


"I have often been utterly astonished, since I came to the north, to find persons who could speak of the singing, among slaves, as evidence of their contentment and happiness. It is impossible to conceive of a greater mistake. Slaves sing most when they are most unhappy. The songs of the slave represent the sorrows of his heart; and he is relieved by them, only as an aching heart is relieved by its tears. At least, such is my experience. I have often sung to drown my sorrow, but seldom to express my happiness. Crying for joy, and singing for joy, were alike uncommon to me while in the jaws of slavery. The singing of a man cast away upon a desolate island might be as appropriately considered as evidence of contentment and happiness, as the singing of a slave; the songs of the one and of the other are prompted by the same emotion."
Frederick Douglass, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave