Today was low key. I didn't travel too far on the web or on the page. But I did find some new things, and they are below. The best, and the one to spend some time with, is the passage from Kazantzakis. I'm reading his text, Journeying. More to come in the days that follow. So, for today:
crookedbrains.net
Headlines from the New York Times:
"US-Afghan Relations Strained Over Election"
"Ahmadinijad Urges Prosectuion of Political Rivals"
imaginationcubed.com
liveplasma.com
A quote from the Bhagavad Gita - "Bring your mind back every time it wanders away."
And from Buddha - "All that we are is the result of what we have thought."
goodwincreekgardens.com
shopadam.com
daubandbauble.com
terrakeramik.com
spoonsisters.com
roseandradish.com
zindelceramics.com
pancakeandfranks.com
From Journeying by Kazantzakis. His essay titled "Saint Francis"
"He preaches: 'The supreme virtue is poverty.' This widow of Christ, rejected by every home, wandered streets, scorned, and no one wanted her. And Francis loved her and took her for his wife. Poverty, obedience and chastity; behold the three great Franciscan virtues.
If these three virtues had prevailed, if everyone had become Franciscans, the world would be lost. If, again, Francis had preached more practical ideas, his preaching would not have the madness that alone can transport and save men's souls. The ideal, if it wants to renew the face of the earth, must stand much higher than the power of men. In this rests its secret strength, the pull, the painful straining of the soul to reach it, that formidable lifting upward that enlarges the stature of man."
Until tomorrow.
Friday, August 28, 2009
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
It's Been A Busy Summer
Okay, so I'm way behind on posting. I have faithfully kept up with the April 1st Project in my journal, but I've been deficient here. So let's leap through the months of April until this point in August. What follows is a listing of the most interesting things I discovered and wrote down. Let me know what you think.
Paris' new bistros:
On the Left Bank -- Afaria, L'Aagussin, L'Epigramme, Itineraires, Jadis, Le 21
On the other side of the Seine -- Bigarrade, Le Chateaubriand, La Gazzeta, Le Hide-Koba's Bistro, Le Bistrot Paul Bert, and Spring
Time to head to the Gallic capital.
In April, discovered that the US is retaliating against Italy's ban on American hormone-fed beef and was putting a tariff on Italian mineral water. My question is why then is Pelegrino on all of the restaurant menus? It's hard to find a spot that serves Perrier.
Some notable Greek Painters:
Sp. Papaloucas
Yannis Tsarouchis
N. Chatjikyriakos Ghikas
Yannis Moralis
Gerasimos Steris
Alekos Fasianos
Constantinos Maleas
Constantinos Parthenis
Nicolaos Lytras
Giorgos Bouzianis
Kostas Tsoklis
I'd have to add Yannis Mavides, our friend in Thessaloniki.
Interesting web sites discovered on June 1:
Seems I was musing on June 13 and wrote: catching up, making commitment, moving forward, spending time - not my typical entry. Also on that day, I decided to capture the headlines at one moment off of the Wall Streeet Journal. They read:
Ahmadinejad Win Sparks Clashes
North Korea Says It Will Weaponize Plutonium
Britain Warned of New Wave of Islamic Terrorism
Johnny Depp Stars as John Dillinger
Chief: BofA Coerced into Merrill Deal
China Refuses to Reduce Its Carbon Emissions
A quote from June 18th: "Art is the only legacy that lasts." - Octavio Paz.
I have read him, but not widely enough. He could distill life and the world to create authentic sentences about what it all means.
I discovered the web site for Canongate Books. I have begun to work my way through the myth series. I read Margaret Atwood's telling of Penelope. Quite funny.
On July 2, I watched Steve Jobs' Stanford Commencement Speech 2005 and howled at a gay British Travelocity commercial. You should look them up.
I found Thomas Merton's description of the individual. I'm certain it came out of the New Yorker. It goes: "I have what you have not. I am what you are not. I have taken what you have failed to take and I have seized what you could never get. Therefore you suffer and I am happy, you are despised and I am praised, you die and I live; you are nothing and I am something, and I am all the more something because you are nothing. And thus I spend my life admiring the distance between you and me." If you know me, then it makes sense that this was a two-by-four to the head. It infused me, and I've been bobbing along on the strength of these words.
On July 8, a quote from Franco Zeffirelli: "I have always believed that opera is a planet where the muses work together, join hands and celebrate all of the arts." He's so right.
And on July 15th, Pablo Neruda whispered in my ear -- "Two things make a story. The net and the air that falls through the net."
On July 17th, the headlines screamed that Iran faced more protests, more tear gas, and more discord. The protesters are brave. How many of us would risk our lives like that?
Fun sites that I chanced upon:
More words of wisdom from the sage Martin Buber: "When two people relate to each other authentically and humanly, God is the electricity that surges between them."
I reread Iphigenia in Aulis by Euripides. I'm working on a play, and so I've been reading and rereading favorites. In this play, the chorus speaks the most beautiful lines about the most horrible of acts - war.
CHORUS:
...The Achaean army will close in a circle of blood;
There will be heads forced back, throats cut;
Streets stripped, every building gutted and crashed;
Screams and sobs from young women;
And from Priam's wife;
And Helen daughter of Zeus
Shall learn what it is to leave a husband.
God grant that neither I nor my children's children
Ever face such a prospect.
As Lydian and Phrygian wives will see awaiting them
When they sit, glittering in gold, before their looms
And ask each other; who will be the man
Who twists his hard hand in my silken hair
And like a plucked flower drags me away
While my tears flow hot and my home burns?
Wow! That's powerful.
I recorded the death of Corazon Aquino on August 1st, and I noted a song titled "Look at Me" by the Mirrors.
With all the Julia Child craze - and I'm really guilty here - I sought out some of her thoughts. She was really a funny lady.
"I just hate health food."
"In France, cooking is a serious art form and a national sport."
"Life itself is the proper binge."
On August 2, I watched Isabella Allende speak at Ted. It was on You Tube - a must see. Her subject: Truer than Truth. She, too, has powerful words.
Disgusted by what is wrongly termed a 'debate' about healthcare, I cut out an article that came from the Los Angeles Times titled "Congress' own health benefits: Membership has its privileges." Look it up. You'll see why it's easy for them - both sides - to make decisions about healthcare in America.
Les Paul died on August 12. And on the 14th, I read Oprah's book club and found a list of books that had meaning to Ben Affleck. What an interesting guy. I had no idea that he majored in Middle Eastern studies. He understands the uprising in Iran in a way that the average person can't without having had those discussions. He recommended "Shah of Shahs" by Ryszard Kapuscinski and also "All the Shah's Men." His entire book list was fascinating and now on my long list of 'to read.'
August 16 was a busy day in history.
In 1896, god was discovered in Yukon
In 1969, Woodstock ended
In 1991, there was a coup against Gorbachev
In 1959, hawaii became the 50th state
I'll post photos of my journal tomorrow to highlight the images that I cut out and glue into it.
Meanwhile, let me know what you think of the April 1st Project and any of the links, lists, quotes, or thoughts.
Sunday, April 5, 2009
What I hear, I do not name
I began my day on Friday with some quiet time, and I read from The Wisdom of the Desert by Thomas Merton. Here's a passage:



XII
A certain brother went to Aboot Moses in Scete,
and asked him for a good word.
And the elder said to him:
Go, sit in your cell,
and your cell will teach you everything.
I have tried to meditate, to quiet my mind, to breath, and to let things come in and go out without judgement. This is excruciatingly difficult for me. My mind has gotten louder over the years. The conversations have risen to a din that is hard to silence, and my brain can multi-task and flit about from thing to thing.
Successful meditation is about focus. Some people focus on an object or a mantra or a prayer. I find that watching the birds out the window and trying to 'hear' their voices is a form of focus that works. To 'do it,' I have to quiet my mind so that I can hear them. It's like hearing the grandfather clock. Some days I only hear the half hour chime. A great exercise that I use periodically is to try to listen and determine how many different sounds I hear. The white noise of the day. What do I hear? The ticking of three clocks. My watch. The birds. The wind. Sometimes passing vehicles. House sounds.
On Saturday morning, I read from the Tao. I'm reading Wayne Dyer's book on the Tao. From the 2nd verse:
Under heaven all can see beauty as beauty,
only because there is ugliness
All can know good only because there is evil.
--
Being and nonbeing produce each other.
The difficult is born in the easy.
Long is defined by short,
the high by the low
Before and after go along with each other
...
It goes back to naming things. Labeling them. Giving them parameters. The moment you do it, the thing becomes bound. It is no longer free. It is restricted. How many times a day do we restrict? How can I listen to a bird's song and not think 'beauty' and just hear it. That is my challenge.
Below are some notes from the April 1st Project:
Friday, April 3, 2009
My 21st Century Collage
It occurs to me that this is my art form -- a collage.
Seth Godin: "You can only market to people who are willing participants."
I found a fortune from a cookie in my wallet. It says, "Never be less than your dreams." Dream big. I do.
P.S. The lucky numbers were 5, 12, 18, 32, 37, 45
I read a very interesting article in a back issue of the New Yorker about Santiago Calatrava. He's an artist disguised as an architect. Some others in his profession mentioned are Frank Gehry, Rem Koolhaas, and Zaha Hadid. I like them all. What was most interesting in the article was that it indicated that Calatrava and his wife speak to each other principally in German, his fifth language and her second. I'm clearly impressed that they have mastered German (and assuming all the other tongues) to such a degree that they can communicate complex and intimate thought.
ovoid - resembling an egg shape
Discovered Atomic Ranch Magazine - www.atomic-ranch.com. For all those like me who love mid century modern.
In an e-newsletter from Consulting Magazine, Bob Potter says, "In competitive markets you need to get to the client first even before they have decided to use the services that you and your competitors offer, and then escort that decision to become the preferred or sole provider. The idea is to engage clients earlier in their decision process and win the business before it becomes competitive. The best way to win in competition is to avoid competition."
The Tennessean ranked Pinot Noir and selected 2007 Rodney Strong Russian River Pinot Noir as their top pick.
Emailed from my friend Rita, a poem by Mary Oliver:
"Listen, are you breathing just a little,
and calling it a life?...
For how long will you continue to
listen to those dark shouters,
caution and prudence?
Fall in! Fall in!"
Liz Hurley is teaming up with Prince Charles to launch a range of organic foods in England, according to Specialty Food News. I think that's quite cool.
I rediscovered Oingo Boingo. "Just another day" popped into my head and would not leave. A nice reminder and a roadtrip back many years.
A photo:
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Launched: April 1st Project
So it begins - or at least it did yesterday - a catalog of sorts, a repository of ideas, web sites visited, images captured, quotes, useful and not so useful information, and whatever suits my fancy. A catalog to last an entire year. No set format. No rules. Let's just see what happens.
This is the 4/1/09 post:
New book: An Island in Greece: On the shores of Skopelos by Michael Carroll. Should be good. Must preorder.
www.mtyci.com More than you can imagine
This is the 4/1/09 post:
New book: An Island in Greece: On the shores of Skopelos by Michael Carroll. Should be good. Must preorder.
www.mtyci.com More than you can imagine
Ate two eggs with Ciabatta bread at 9:30 a.m.
Trivia: Peter Sellers was the first male on the cover of Playboy. The year was 1964.
Chronicle mentions a new documentary: Pocket Full of Soul - about the harmonica. Did you know that Abe Lincoln carried one in his pocket? Huey Lewis (just saying his name makes me smile) narrates. Yes, I do believe in love!
At left: from my walk.
Two sites: createspace.com and booksurge.com
Signed up for Looking at Art
Celiac Disease - common to western Europeans and some around the Med. Hmmm.
From a New Yorker article titled Sole Sisters -- High heels weren't always a girl thing. In the 1500s, the
riding shoes of French noblemen were fitted with raised heels so that their feet stayed put in the stirrups. Over the next few decades, heels inched higher on dress shoes, particularly among men of privelege. The term well healed came to mean a man who could afford such extravagances.
Tom Stoppard's Rock 'n' Roll is coming to the Alley. Love his work.
virtue - interesting word today
trompe l'oeil - sounds like tromp louie - Webster says:
1. a style of painting in which objects are depicted with photographically realistic detail
2. a trope l'oeil painting or effect
3. something that misleads or deceives: illusion
Like that last one
Some artists to consider: Francis Picabia, John Currin, Elizabeth Peyton, Ed Ruscha, Richard Prince -- all mentioned in another article
The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros - celebrating 25 years
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