Tuesday, June 8, 2010

The tarting up of Miley Cyrus


Is anyone really surprised to see the Miley Cyrus image morph into the latest tarted up Lolita? I for one, am not. It strikes me as quite unoriginal, premeditated, contrived and predictable. It is something I knew was inevitable during the heyday of Hannah Montana. It's been years in the making. We saw it building with Vanity Fair a few years ago. Does anyone remember the sexy leaked cell phone photos. The pole dance—the lap dance now the latest; girl on girl –kissing, gyrations and stripper/porn star costumes. It all seems contrived, full of pretense, lacking authenticity."Growing up" for many female performers these days, automatically means you thrust your female physical attributes to the fore and overemphasize the whole sex thing.I'm sure this career turn was propelled by Miley herself. As young women/actresses/models/pop stars and aspiring whatevers think this is the way to be "empowered."

Sunday, June 6, 2010

English language word of the week: Aplomb

Main Entry: aplomb
Pronunciation: \ə-ˈpläm, -ˈpləm\
Function: noun
Etymology: French, literally, perpendicularity, from Middle French, from a plomb, literally, according to the plummet
Date: 1823
: complete and confident composure or self-assurance : poise
synonyms see confidence

Friday, June 4, 2010

Hillary Swank, Diane Lane, Reality Shows and Reality

HIlary Swank can't seem to get decent roles between her Oscar winning performance roles.

Did Diane Lane do that salacious internet porn picture detective gritty unglamorous role to have an "assured" box office hit?
Does Ms. Swank feel pressure to have a box office hit?

Prostitutes do have to have sex with "gross" guys. That is the inhibiting factor as to why more women don't charge men--Mr Super Freakonomics.

Documentary: go to cattle call auditions. Docu. on out of work and working actors auditioning Reality Shows. Reality shows are now viable jobs for actors. Paritcularly if it is a reality show on struggling actors. Thier life of auditions and up and downs would be employment.

It an authentic Fake. Not the fake fake but the real fake. Is it an authentic fake. Is this the fake?--no it's the fake fake this is the real fake.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

LA Times Obit. Louise Bourgeois


Louise Bourgeois, an internationally revered artist whose intensely personal work was inspired by psychological conflict, feminist consciousness and a fertile imagination, has died. She was 98.

Bourgeois died Monday at Beth Israel Medical Center in Manhattan after suffering a heart attack on Saturday, said Wendy Williams, managing director of the Louise Bourgeois Studio in New York.

Known for sculptures of giant spiders, women with extra breasts, double-headed phalluses and rooms that resonate with loneliness and dread, Bourgeois was a fearless creative force whose work could be disturbing and perversely witty. Although she got little attention from the art world until her seventh decade, she became its grande dame, constantly in demand and showered with honors.

Bourgeois often left viewers with questions about the meaning of her work, but made no secret of painful experiences that shaped it. The spiders — including "Maman," a 35-foot-tall piece commissioned for the inauguration of the Tate Modern gallery in London in 2000 — are a tribute to her beloved mother, whom she described as a pillar of inner strength who was "clever, patient and neat as a spider."


Her father, whom the artist perceived an a domineering philanderer, didn't fare so well. In "The Destruction of the Father" — a 1974 installation that appeared at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art in 2008-2009, in a traveling retrospective — Bourgeois re-created a youthful fantasy of her father being dismembered and devoured by his family.

"She smashed a taboo," said Christopher Knight, The Times' art critic. "Bourgeois was the first modern artist to expose the emotional depth and power of domestic subject matter. Before her, male artists had only nibbled around the edges, and women just weren't allowed."

Born in Paris on Christmas Day 1911, Bourgeois lived in France until 1938. The second of three children born to Josephine Fauriaux and Louis Bourgeois, she was part of a family that operated a tapestry gallery below their apartment on Boulevard Saint-Germain and a tapestry restoration firm in a village south of Paris. They had a comfortable life, except for a period during World War I, but her parents' marriage was fraught with tension that escalated when Louis had a liaison with an Englishwoman who was the children's live-in tutor.

Louise's resentment about the ménage à trois eventually became fodder for her art. In a 1982 New York Times interview, she said that twisted forms in her work reflected her childhood dream of getting rid of her father's mistress by "twisting her neck." But Bourgeois' indomitable spirit and creative energy prevailed.

"My work is a form of psychoanalysis," she wrote in an e-mail exchange with the Los Angeles Times in 2007. "It is a way of coming to grips with my anxiety and fears. It is an attempt to be a better person.… There is a lot of ambivalence in the work. There are many hanging pieces, which signify a fragile state. There are pieces that oscillate and rock, which also convey fragility. We all have pink days and blue days. I am trying to seek a balance between the extremes that I feel. I want to be reasonable."

In the art world's eyes, she succeeded.

Art historian Robert Storr has praised Bourgeois as "among the most inquisitive and best-informed artists of her generation. No analysis of her work or its internal dynamics that sidesteps this fact, or fails to consider the unique mix of intuition and erudition, psychological compulsion and sheer intelligence that has guided her, can possibly claim to measure the full range of its meanings."

Bourgeois studied art at several Parisian schools, including the Académie des Beaux-Arts and the Académie Julian, and in the studio of painter Fernand Legér. In 1938, she married American art historian Robert Goldwater and moved to New York, where she spent the rest of her life.

She began to establish herself as an artist in the 1940s while raising three sons, Michel, Jean-Louis and Alain, and had her first solo exhibition in 1945 at a New York gallery. Her husband, a professor at New York University, became known for exploring connections between so-called primitivism and Western modernism. The couple enjoyed a rich intellectual life until Goldwater's death in 1973, about a decade before Bourgeois gained wide recognition.

She began her career as a painter of tapestry-like abstractions, but soon became intrigued with the Surrealists' exploration of the subconscious as a source of images and ideas. Her "Femme-Maison" paintings of 1946 and1947 merge Surrealism with feminism in depictions of women with houses for heads, defined by their domestic roles.

As her interest shifted to three-dimensional forms, she turned to sculpture and worked with many materials, including wood, metal, latex, plaster, marble and bronze. Her early totem-like figures led to sexually explicit sculptures and ambitious installations that evoke troubling states of mind and physical conditions.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Alice in Wonderland/Disney


Alice in Wonderland appeals to the intellect and not the heart. A flop upon first release.

JIngoism: English Language word of the week.

Jingoism is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as "extreme patriotism in the form of aggressive foreign policy".[1] In practice, it refers to the advocation of the use of threats or actual force against other countries in order to safeguard what they perceive as their country's national interests, and colloquially to excessive bias in judging one's own country as superior to others – an extreme type of nationalism.
The term originated in Britain, expressing a pugnacious attitude towards Russia in the 1870s. During the 19th century in the United States, journalists called this attitude spread-eagleism. "Jingoism" did not enter the U.S. vernacular until near the turn of the 20th century. This nationalistic belligerence was intensified by the sinking of the battleship USS Maine in Havana harbor that led to the Spanish-American War of 1898.

This is from Wikipedia

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Questions for Michael Douglas



Questions for MIchael Douglas:

Did you ever talk with Karl Malden about Brando and Kazan?

Your character was a gender role reversal: in Basic Instinct, Fatal Attraction and Disclosure --the victim of the predatory female, You even shrieked like a woman in BI. We don't see the predatory female that much. ( I would ask Susan Douglas about that.)

Some people, like Kirk Douglas I heard, thought Jack Nicholson was just playing himself and not the character. Some were critical about Jack's much lauded performance--which I thought was untouchable. Jack in coo-coos Nest which I saw when I was about 15. Why didn't Kirk Douglas play the role himself as he planned?

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Francesca Woodman photographer from Colorado



Yet another artist whose existence I was previously unaware of. I love learning about new artists, photographers, actors and other historical figures. In fact, it is about my very favorite thing in life. I especially enjoy it if there is some sort of weirdness associated with them. Ms. Woodman is from right here in Colorado and went to Boulder HS. It was apparent that from an early age she was gifted in photography. She did a lot of self-portraits and I love this one with the hairy armpits. I am pretty sure it is her, although she did on occasion use models. What a sad waste to end her life at 22 years young. Read something about her parents (well known artists themselves) being stingy with releasing a lot of her work in their possession. That probably has something to do with the overwhelming grief they experienced about their daughter's suicide.



Francesca Woodman was born April 3, 1958, in Denver, Colorado, to well-known artists George Woodman and Betty Woodman.[4][6] Her older brother Charles later became an associate professor of electronic art.[7]
Woodman attended public school in Boulder, Colorado, between 1963 and 1971 except for second grade in Italy. She began high school in 1972 at the private Massachusetts boarding school Abbot Academy, where she began to develop her photographic skills. Abbot Academy merged with Phillips Academy in 1973; Woodman graduated from the public Boulder High School in 1975. Through 1975, she spent summers with her family in Italy.[4](p.154)[6]
Beginning in 1975, Woodman attended the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) in Providence, Rhode Island. She studied in Rome, Italy between 1977 and 1978 in an RISD honors program. As she spoke fluent Italian, she was able to befriend Italian intellectuals and artists.[4](pp.26-30,154) She went back to Rhode Island in late 1978 to graduate from RISD.[4](p.154)[6]
Woodman moved to New York City in 1979. After spending summer 1979 in Stanwood, Washington, she returned to New York. There, "to make a career in photography" she sent portfolios of her work to fashion photographers, but "her solicitations did not lead anywhere."[4](p.155) In summer 1980 she was an artist-in-residence at the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, New Hampshire.[4](p.155)[6]
In late 1980 Woodman became depressed due to her work and to a broken relationship.[8] On January 19, 1981, she committed suicide by jumping out a loft window in New York.[4](p.155)[6] An acquaintance wrote, "things had been bad, there had been therapy, things had gotten better, guard had been let down."[9]
[edit]Works

Saturday, May 22, 2010

English language word of the week: Numinous


nu·mi·nous   [noo-muh-nuhs, nyoo-] Show IPA
–adjective
1.
of, pertaining to, or like a numen; spiritual or supernatural.
2.
surpassing comprehension or understanding; mysterious: that element in artistic expression that remains numinous.
3.
arousing one's elevated feelings of duty, honor, loyalty, etc.: a benevolent and numinous paternity.
Origin:
1640–50; < L nūmin- (s. of nūmen) numen + -ous
Dictionary.com Unabridged

Surpassing comprehension or understanding---Oh I like that!!!!!

Art by Lichtenstein