Category Archives: Art and Culture

Stuff

Samhain                                                           Moon of the Winter Solstice

A chilly start here.  15 degrees.  We may have some more snow–or cold rain–tomorrow.  Rain?  The week before the Winter Solstice.  Insult.

Two more TCW tours today.  5th graders.

(Carvaggio.  see the Cindy Sherman version below.)

Out of the 50,000 who started the MOOC (massive open online course) on Greek and Roman Mythology, 2,500 of us finished all the requirements.  Of that number 2,200 received a certificate with distinction.  Not exactly a shiny new degree but anything with distinction feels nice.

Kate and I are well into the Hanukkah spirit, lighting the candles, reading the liturgy, having latkes and brisket.

 

Better

Samhain                                                             New (Winter Solstice) Moon

Well into my stride now with the Terra Cotta Warriors tours.  Very satisfying.  Great questions, interested and attentive participants.  Doesn’t get much better.  I’ve stuck with telling the story of the Qin state and the arc of violence from the Spring and Autumn Period to the time of Qin Shi Huang Di.

Cindy and Lonnie

Samhain                                                         New (Winter Solstice) Moon

Lunch today with Lonnie Helgeson, an old friend.  We’d gone to the Walker together for lunch many times prior to our mutual engagement in child rearing, got off track.  Nice to get started again.

We saw the Cindy Sherman show.  Lonnie’s a big fan.  I am, too, but I didn’t know as much as Lonnie.  It’s interesting to consider a artistic career built on substantial modification to one’s self, then the recording of it through photography.  It’s as if she has become her own doll, dressed in many costumes and posed in interesting places.

Her work is evocative of stories happening just off camera.  Her early black and white work–like many photographers working today her career spans the film to digital change–is vulnerable, has a yearning.  She’s fascinated with horror films and it shows in her work.

Lonnie alluded to one way of seeing her entire corpus, as a Jungian set of inner selves, archetypes carried deep within her, many within all of us.

There is, too, a playful side to her work, but more often she veers toward the exploratory, the serious, the strange.  In this last case her clown series look like they might have been cast in Killer Klowns from Outer Space.

Sunday in the Snow

Samhain                                                       Thanksgiving Moon

Drove in.  Plows had moved snow, but on all roads only one or two lanes were open.  The traffic, as a result, moved slow, but steady, somewhere between 30 and 45 mile an hour, mostly a function of congestion.

The Rav4, which has not had a lot of winter driving, performed well.  I felt safe as it shifted from 4D to 2D, from slip and slide stabilization to none.

The tour was good, had a lot of folks, maybe 20-30.  I thought they were attentive, stayed with me, but at the end just a thank you.  Not sure what it meant.  I thought we bonded along the way, maybe they were just undemonstrative.

An hour plus both ways, on what is a maximum 45 minutes and often less.  Shot the afternoon.  Back home.  Had stew, some bread.  Now to read a bit.  Sundays are slower than the other days.  Habit, I guess.

The Humanities. Another post.

Samhain                                                                        Thanksgiving Moon

I’ve spent my whole adult life within the ambit of the humanities.  At an early age, perhaps junior high, the notion of a liberal arts education took hold.  An education in disciplines for which an inner passion, a vocation, burns will produce the best person.  Not, necessarily the best job.  Just the best person.

Note, not a better person.  But, the best person possible.  Why?  Our passions call from us the sum totals of our powers, render them available and useful.  Therefore we might reach a peak of human potential, one described solely by our own history and our particular genetics.

Yes, this is a fuzzy idea, full of the wishy washy and the self-indulgent.  Yes, it seems to come down right beside the point of an education, at least today’s education.  Today it seems apparent to everyone that an education should enable you to get ahead.  Get going.  Start maximizing, not necessarily yourself, but your earning potential.

That is a far different thing from becoming the best person you can be.  This is the person as tool, as instrument, sharpened and lubed for the truest fit in the gears of our economy.  Not insignificant and a surprising number of people prefer to be tools, used by managers and companies, getting financial and status rewards along the way.  Even so, tools, like their machines, need to be guided, shaped, aimed.

What is an appropriate, healthful, just, socially useful aim?  Ah, now we have the entered the realm of the humanities.  Weighing the lessons of one historical era against another’s.  Investigating the variety of ways in which we can be human.  Reading the tales and legends and novels and poems of others, so that we might know ourselves.  No bomb will know where it should be dropped.  Or why.  Is the expansion of health care services to a population a wise, just act?  How can we decide whether to go further than our moon?  What brings beauty into our life?  Who creates it?

Should the state interfere with individual’s nutrition?  Exercise?  Only with careful and sustained study of the human story can we make these kind of decisions.  Ethical decisions. Aesthetic decisions.  Social policy decisions.  Even space exploration decisions.

Imagine.  How might we decide as a world to engage a mission to Mars.  Incredibly expensive.  Dangerous.  Exciting.  Adventurous.  I might begin with reading the diaries of Rogers and Clark.  The journals of James Cook.  Zeng He.  The navigation methods of Polynesian islanders.  Examining the archaeological record of human migration.  What do we need to know?  How have we come to know such things?  What are the unexpected results of exploration?  Are they cautions?

Of course, the politics and the economics of the day will press hard upon the answer, too.  Here, too, the historical record, political history and economic history of joint endeavors would prove instructive.

My point?  Neither the scientific feasibility, the economic practicality nor political realities can make us want to go.  Can make us search for a way through the inevitable difficulties and barriers.  Only decisions shaped by our common humanity, in the present and in the past, can guide us.  Can make us decide it’s worth it, no matter what.

I don’t know.  Perhaps this is all special pleading, the sentimental journey of one long committed to a life lived with books, ideas, art.  All I can say is that the ancientrail of the humanities has been a rich vein for me.  For my whole life.  And continues to be.

Workin’

Samhain                                                                     Thanksgiving Moon

Went through several verses of Jason and Medea, brain began to ache.  Stopped.  I have time on Friday to discuss the parts I didn’t get.  Greg says the real way to advance in translating is to read, read, read.  Which means translate, translate, translate.  I can see it, but I have to pace it.  It’s fun, but it’s also hard.

I’ve trimmed back my schedule, only outside the house commitment I have now is the MIA.  And, of course, the Woollies.  Since I finished the Mythology course on Sunday, that means I have almost ten days with very few interruptions.  That means I can focus and work the way I find best, mornings hard at it and afternoons for clean up.

Kate’s sold more of her work to the store in Anoka; she plans to set up an Etsy site with my help and will apply tomorrow, too, to a consignment store situated next to the Red Stag.  She’s having fun.  Energized.  Retirement has been good for her.  I’m glad.

 

Endings

Samhain                                                    Thanksgiving Moon

Took my final quiz.  Graded my five assignments of others.  The mythology class is over for me.  This week, too, I finished the first revision (not at all the last) of Missing.  And, too, it was just this week, Friday, that all the research I’d done prior to the Terra Cotta Warrior exhibition finally came together and created a good tour, maybe a very good one.

That means three areas where I’ve put a lot of energy over the last three months, since September, have all come to fruition and closure in the same week.  An accident, I think, but it has left me feeling exhilarated on the hand and let down on the other.  Sort of a dip, a consequence of juggling three large balls for a significant period of time, then having them all disappear.  What do I do now?

(Hermann-Hendrich-The-Norns-1906)

Well, I know the answer to that.  Latin.  This whole next week will be focused on translation.  Then, the week after that I’ll turn to learning how to print out my manuscript using the new software, making a few revisions of location and joining of scenes–and, I’ll add a scene I realized over dinner that I need to include.  A result of a change made earlier.

In the last week of the month, Christmas week, I’ll start writing Loki’s Children, Book II of the Tailte trilogy.  Looking forward to that.

TCW

Samhain                                                                   Thanksgiving Moon

A public tour of the Terra Cotta Warriors today.  Hitting my stride.  All the work beginning to pay off.  Interested, engaged attendees.  Lots of questions.  Folks hanging around after.  Felt good.

Metropolitan Books Available for Download Free

Samhain                                                              Thanksgiving Moon

The MET has got some wonderful, fully illustrated textbooks that are available online for free! (X)

DOWNLOAD

  1. Art of the Islamic World
  2. The Art of Africa
  3. The Art of Ancient Egypt
  4. The Art of the Ancient Near East
  5. The Art of Renaissance Europe
  6. The Art of South and Southeast Asia
  7. The Arts of Korea
  8. Auguste Rodin: The Burghers of Calais
  9. Greek Art from Prehistoric to Classical
  10. Islamic Art and Geometric Design: Activities for Learning
  11. A Masterwork of Byzantine Art — The Story of David and Goliath
  12. Medieval Art
  13. Nature Within Walls: The Chinese Garden Court at The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  14. Roman Art

A Year Ago

Samhain                                                                    Thanksgiving Moon

one of my favorite days on our cruise…

Follow The Green Sidewalk

Posted on November 19, 2011 by Charles

Spring Moon of the Southern Cross

Montevideo, Uruguay On the banks of the Rio de la Plata, overlooking the Atlantic to the East

Travel brings the unexpected. A primary purpose, of course, but after tours with guides, I had become a bit dulled to the canned formula of the best this and the most that and the very special music. Not saying it was all boring, far from it, but too predictable.

Not today. In Montevideo, a city of which I had no expectations, Kate and I had a wonderful day. After being pressed sideways into the dock, we ended up within walking distance of the old part of Montevideo. At about 10:30 I suggested to Kate that we walk into town, something we could do in only a handful of ports. She agreed.

Our way took us first past two warehouses, both as I described earlier, three stories high with iron doors spaced about 50 feet apart on each story, brick with chipped and rusted concrete outlining the doors and interior bays. The iron doors, once gray now have rust blooms, some just a few, others with the gray vanishingly small.

When we got past these, a painted walkway led us through a port welcome area with guides hawking city tours and a free shuttle to a leather factory. Beyond them a memorial to the sinking of the Graf Spee shared a park-like space with painted anchors and their chains, or sheckles, as we learned from our Captain. Policia Turistica sported chartreuse fluorescent vests and stared off, wherever people stare who face an entire day of standing in roughly the same spot.

Across an intersection a sign said, “Tourists Follow Green Sidewalk.” Guess what that made me want to do? Kate said, “We’re following the green sidewalk.” Oh, ok.

A large boulevard with some cobblestone lanes opened in front of us. The buildings were somewhat dilapidated, like the warehouses, concrete and brick that had seen better days. Or, maybe not. There was a shabby chic to it that appealed to me.

A wandering fellow tourist told us about a market hidden by buildings ahead. We walked over that way. Sure enough there was a large open air market with many different things for sale, many of them tourist oriented, but just as many artisans selling their products.

Off the market area, pedestrian only somewhat like Florida Street in Buenos Aires, a large building held more shops and a number of restaurants each of which featured huge fires and metal grills filled with roasting meat: chicken, sausage, beef tenderloin, pork, lamb. Each restaurant had an awning with its name around four sides of an island that contained the fire, the roasting meat, a bar and an area for washing dishes. Tables and chairs flanked the islands in the open area created by the building, fans turning, cooling the diners.

When we firsts went through, tables were set and glasses sparkled. The smells of roasting meat had only begun to fill the room.

We looked in several shops, but continued up another, older pedestrian way with a slight incline. This had a few tourists shops, too, but began to sport a carneteria here, a fruit and vegetable market with their wares colorfully displayed in wooden crates on the sidewalk there, a bar named “Los Beatles” and a petfood store.

The buildings have a colonial look, similar to the older part of Panama City that we saw well over a month ago, balconies, molded cornices, plaster decorations. A few of the buildings had pastel colors, recently added.

Like the warehouses and the building across from the green tourist sidewalk these buildings had a shabby but not run down look to them, more like a neighborhood in which people really lived. As the mid-day heat had begun to settle on us, Kate started talking about air conditioning. About 45 minutes before that, I told her I’d give my 12:30 tour a pass to meander around Montevideo with her.

We walked back down the hill toward the large building with the restaurants.

Inside we walked past several folks hawking their restaurants, “Sir, a refreshing drink?” “Some lunch, mister?” and found a table underneath a fan at the Cafe Veronica.

The waiter welcomed us to Montevideo and to Uruguay with a genuine and warm greeting. When Kate got up to take a quick picture of the fire, another waiter came up and encourage her to go inside the kitchen to take her picture. After some insisting, she did. We had a meal that exceeded our expectations and a dessert, pancakes con leche that would bring me back to Cafe Veronica in a hurry if it weren’t so damned far away.

This was the kind of day I’d been missing, a day of just poking around, meeting some folks, sticking our heads into various places, seeing the layout for ourselves, discovering rather than being led.

We had a great day together then came back and took a nap.