Log24

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Saturday July 22, 2006

Filed under: General — m759 @ 9:00 pm
Today’s Saint as
The Dark Lady:

Mary Magdalene
(Portrait by Nikos Kazantzakis
and Martin Scorsese):

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“Magdalene lay on her back, stark naked, drenched in sweat, her raven-black hair spread out over the pillow and her arms entwined beneath her head.  Her face was turned toward the wall and she was yawning.  Wrestling with men on this bed since dawn had tired her out.”

— Nikos Kazantzakis,
   The Last Temptation of Christ

Related material:

Time and Chance

   (See yesterday’s entry.) 

Time:
NY lottery mid-day today:
606
(See morning of 6/6.)

Chance:
NY lottery this evening:
017
(See Art Wars: Just Seventeen.)

Friday, July 7, 2006

Friday July 7, 2006

Filed under: General — m759 @ 7:00 pm

ART WARS continued
 

To the “Endgame Art” review
in today’s New York Times,
a magic-realism response:

Now

In memory of
Roderick MacLeish:

Now, we are seven.
— Yul Brynner

Related material:

Log24 for 6/6/6

  and
Plato, Pegasus, and
the Evening Star.

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

Tuesday June 6, 2006

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 5:01 am
D-Day Morning,
62 Years Later

Review: ART WARS
on Sept. 12, 2002:

Und was fur ein Bild des Christentums 
ist dabei herausgekommen?

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(Pentecost was Sunday, June 4, 2006.
The following Monday was formerly a
French public holiday.)

This morning's meditation:

Sous Rature

"… words must be written
sous rature, or 'under erasure.'"

Deconstruction:
 Derrida, Theology,
and John of the Cross

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The above Bild, based
 on Weyl's Symmetry,
might be titled
Rature sous Rature.
 

Monday, June 5, 2006

Monday June 5, 2006

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 12:06 am

Sermon

Baccalaureate:
A farewell address
in the form of a sermon
delivered to a graduating class.

"Stuff comes up,
weird doors open,
people fall into things."
— David Sedaris,
baccalaureate address
at Princeton yesterday

"The truth is that man's capacity for symbol-mongering in general and language in particular is so intimately part and parcel of his being human, of his perceiving and knowing, of his very consciousness itself, that it is all but impossible for him to focus on the magic prism through which he sees everything else."

Walker Percy, The Message in the Bottle: How Queer Man Is, How Queer Language Is, and What One Has to Do with the Other. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1975, page 29.

Review: ART WARS
on Sept. 12, 2002:

Und was für ein Bild des Christentums 
ist dabei herausgekommen?

Voilà:

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Related material:
Bright Star.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Wednesday May 24, 2006

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:07 pm
Dark Lady

Today is the feast of St. Sarah,
patron saint of the Gypsies.

 
In her honor, as well as that of
  Bob Dylan and Rosanne Cash,
whose birthdays are today,
here are a picture and
two songs.

Sunrise in Death Valley

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(Click to see the larger original,
a photo by Michael Trezzi)

A song for Rosanne Cash:

Jesus Wants Me for a Sunbeam.

A song for Bob Dylan:

Curtain up, light the lights,
You got nothin’ to hit

but the heights!

(The original cast album
of “Gypsy” was recorded
on St. Sarah’s Day, 1959.)

(The photo was found
during a search
for the phrase
“great gray space.”
See the review
by John Updike
linked to in yesterday’s
Art Wars entry.)

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Tuesday May 23, 2006

Filed under: General — m759 @ 10:18 am
ART WARS
continued

Exhibit A:
A science vulgarizer in today’s New York Times–

“Somewhere out there, more elusive than a snow leopard, more vaunted in its imagined cultural oomph than an Oprah book blurb, is the Science Movie.

You know, the film that finally does for science and scientists what ‘The Godfather’ did for crime and what ‘The West Wing’ did for politics, accurately reproducing the grandeur and grit of science while ushering its practitioners into the ranks of coolness.”

Dennis Overbye

Exhibit B:
John Updike’s review in the May 22 New Yorker of a new novel by Michel Houellebecq, The Possibility of an Island

“Nor is Houellebecq…. entirely without literary virtue.  His four novels– Whatever (1994), The Elementary Particles (1998), and Platform (2001) are the three others– display a grasp of science and mathematics beyond that of all but a few non-genre novelists.”

A character in the new novel– “a lengthy exercise in futuristic science fiction”– writes that

“The dream of all men is to meet little sluts who are innocent but ready for all forms of depravity– which is what, more or less, all teenage girls are.”

Exhibit C:
A mathematician hopes for more exciting vulgarizations of his subject–

“I would hope that clever writers might point out how mathematics is altering our lifestyles and do it in a manner that would not lead Garfield the Cat to say ‘ho hum.'”

— Philip J. Davis, “The Media and Mathematics Look at Each Other” (pdf), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, March 2006

Exhibit D:
Today’s Garfield

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Exhibit E:
Log24 entry of May 18, a parody of “Contact,” a 1997 film that vulgarized science–

Space Cadet

“They should have
sent a poet.”

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Exhibit F:
Gilbert and Sullivan, “The Mikado“–

“(With great effort) How de do, little girls, how de do? (Aside) Oh, my protoplasmal ancestor!”

Coda

“It might be asking too much
to make us cool.”
— Science vulgarizer   
Dennis Overbye

The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060523-Godfather2.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Robert De Niro as the
young Vito Corleone

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Saturday May 13, 2006

Filed under: General — m759 @ 4:00 pm

ART WARS continued…

A Fold in Time

From May 13, Braque’s birthday, 2003:


Braque


Above: Braque and tesseract

“The senses deform, the mind forms.  Work to perfect the mind.  There is no certitude but in what the mind conceives.”

— Georges Braque, Reflections on Painting, 1917

Those who wish to follow Braque’s advice may try the following exercise from a book first published in 1937:

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Hint: See the above picture of
Braque and the construction of
a tesseract.

Related material:

Storyline and Time Fold
(both of Oct. 10, 2003),
and the following–

“Time, for L’Engle, is accordion-pleated. She elaborated, ‘When you bring a sheet off the line, you can’t handle it until it’s folded, and in a sense, I think, the universe can’t exist until it’s folded– or it’s a story without a book.'”

Cynthia Zarin on Madeleine L’Engle,
“The Storyteller,” in The New Yorker,
issue dated April 12, 2004

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Tuesday April 25, 2006

Filed under: General — m759 @ 7:35 am
A Trinity
for Rebecca

(For Rebecca Goldstein of Trinity College)

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Sources: today's New York Times
and the five Log24 entries ending
on the morning of April 7, 2006:

ART WARS
in Poetry Month

Of what use the above trinity
might be to Rebecca, I am unsure.

I find it helpful in traveling back to
a summer night on 52nd St. in 1948

Jazz clubs on 52nd St. in 1948

Saturday, April 8, 2006

Saturday April 8, 2006

Filed under: General — m759 @ 4:09 pm

ART WARS from
April 9 two years ago:

3 PM
Good
Friday

 
For an explanation
of this icon, see
 
Art Wars
and
 To Be.

Related material:
The five Log24 entries
ending on Pi Day, 2006.

Friday, April 7, 2006

Friday April 7, 2006

Filed under: General — m759 @ 9:27 am
ART WARS
in Poetry Month

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Tomorrow is the final day
for the Liza Lou exhibit at
  London’s White Cube gallery.

For related material, see
Log24, March 24-26, and
the entries culminating
on Pi Day.

Saturday, March 18, 2006

Saturday March 18, 2006

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:07 pm

ART WARS:
The Crimson Passion continues…

How to Grow
a Crimson Clover

Published in the Harvard Crimson
on Thursday, March 16, 2006, 6:24 PM
by Patrick R. Chesnut,
Crimson staff writer


Stephen Dedalus, James Joyce’s literary alter ego, once described the trappings of Irish culture as nets that hold a soul back from flight. By his standards, Harvard has soared.

Irish culture has been an indelible part of Boston, but the names on our red-brick buildings tell a different story: Adams, Lowell, Winthrop. It would be easy to assume that for Harvard students, Irish culture consists of little more than guzzling alcohol in Tommy Doyle’s Irish Pub or at St. Patrick’s Day Stein Club.

Recently, however, a small but lively Irish subculture, centered on Celtic music and language, has been developing at Harvard. But despite its vivacity, it remains largely unnoticed by the broader student body.

Efforts by groups like the Harvard College Celtic Club and by the producers of the upcoming Loeb mainstage of J.M. Synge’s “The Playboy of the Western World” may be just the sort of first step needed to finally make Harvard a place where Irish artistic culture lives….

REACHING OUT

“The Playboy”– which will run from April 28 through May 6– revolves around the disruption of life in a provincial Irish village when an outsider arrives with an extravagant story. All points converge at this play’s production: members of the Celtic Club coordinated and will perform the play’s music, the producers hope to draw Boston’s Irish community, and the production will present Harvard’s students with a script deeply entrenched in Irish history, but that boasts a universal appeal.

As Kelly points out, the Irish roots of “The Playboy” are clearer than in the plays of the nominally Irish, but Francophone, absurdist writer Samuel Beckett. And unlike the plays of Sean O’Casey, which are extremely rooted in Irish culture, “The Playboy” boasts a visceral appeal that will be accessible to Harvard students.

From a site linked to in yesterday’s St. Patrick’s Day sermon as the keys to the kingdom:

“In the western world, we tend to take for granted our musical scale, formed of whole tone and half tone steps. These steps are arranged in two ways: the major scale and the minor.”

From the obituary in today’s online New York Times of fashion designer Oleg Cassini, who died at 92 on St. Patrick’s Day, Friday, March 17, 2006:

“… he was always seen in the company of heiresses, debutantes, showgirls, ingenues. Between, before or after [his first] two marriages, he dated young starlets like Betty Grable and Lana Turner and actresses like Ursula Andress and Grace Kelly, to whom he was briefly engaged.

‘He was a true playboy, in the Hollywood sense,’ said Diane von Furstenberg, the fashion designer and a friend of Mr. Cassini’s. ‘Well into his 90’s, he was a flirt.'”

“How strange the change from major to minor…
      Ev’ry time we say goodbye.”
   — Cole Porter

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Tuesday February 21, 2006

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 1:00 pm
Conceptual Lens

"Contemporary literary theory did not emerge in an intellectual and cultural vacuum. The subordination of art to argument and ideas has been a long time in the works. In The Painted Word, a rumination on the state of American painting in the 1970s, Tom Wolfe described an epiphany he had one Sunday morning while reading an article in the New York Times on an exhibit at Yale University. To appreciate contemporary art– the paintings of Jackson Pollock and still more so his followers– which to the naked eye appeared indistinguishable from kindergarten splatterings and which provided little immediate pleasure or illumination, it was 'crucial,' Wolfe realized, to have a 'persuasive theory,' a prefabricated conceptual lens to make sense of the work and bring into focus the artist's point. From there it was just a short step to the belief that the critic who supplies the theories is the equal, if not the superior, of the artist who creates the painting."

Peter Berkowitz, "Literature in Theory"


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Cover art by Rea Irvin

On this date in 1925,
The New Yorker
first appeared.

Related material:

Aldous Huxley on
The Perennial Philosophy
(ART WARS, March 13, 2003)
and William James on religion:

"James points out that… a mystical experience displays the world through a different lens than is present in ordinary experience. The experience, in his words, is 'ineffable'…."

For an experience that is
perhaps more effable,
see the oeuvre of
 Jill St. John.

Related material:

A drama for Mardi Gras,
The Crimson Passion,
and (postscript of 2:56 PM)
today's Harvard Crimson
(pdf, 843k)

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Saturday February 11, 2006

Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:12 pm
ART WARS
(Continued from
April 6-7, 2004)

Blue Dream
For Ray Charles
 
http://www.log24.com/theory/images/Symm-axes.jpg

(Spider Web)

and Jay Dee
(Donuts)

From Dogma Part II: Amores Perros:

"Do Catholics believe that when you die your soul goes up in the sky? To heaven, if they go to heaven?"
 — Hope of Heaven, by John O'Hara (1938), Carroll & Graf paperback, 1985, page 162

"My blue dream of being in a basket like a kite held by a rope against the wind…. It's fun to stretch and see the blue heavens spreading once more, spreading azure thighs for adventure."
 — F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Last Tycoon (1941), Collier paperback, 1986, page 162

The following work of art
illustrates the above remarks.

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Saturday, February 4, 2006

Saturday February 4, 2006

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 10:00 am
Raiders of
the Lost Matrix

(continued)

The Archaeologist
with a Thousand Faces

"From often humble beginnings, and often with a childhood fascination for antiquity, the archaeologist leaves familiar surroundings to undergo exacting professional training under a series of mentors and when armed, at last, with the intellectual weapons of the profession, sets off for unfamiliar or exotic realms, braving opposition and danger to solve an ancient mystery.  The lives of… real-life archaeologists… have lent themselves to this style of retelling… as have such fictional heroes as John Cullinane (Michener 1965) and Indiana Jones."

— From "Promised Lands and Chosen Peoples: The Politics and Poetics of Archaeological Narrative," by Neil Asher Silberman, pp. 249-262 in Nationalism, Politics, and the Practice of Archaeology, edited by Philip L. Kohl and Clare Fawcett, Cambridge University Press, paperback, published Feb. 8, 1996.

From Today in History,
by the Associated Press:

Thought for Today:
"Character consists of what you do
on the third and fourth tries."

James Michener,
American author (1907-1997),
attributed by
Simpson's Contemporary Quotations
to Chesapeake, Random House, 78.

The Matrix:

First try:

On Linguistic Creation
June 25, 1999

Second try:
Art Wars: Picasso's Birthday,
Oct. 25, 2002

Third try:
Matrix of the Death God,
May 25, 2003

Fourth try:
Happy Birthday,
July 26, 2004

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Tuesday January 24, 2006

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 7:00 am
ART WARS
for Michael Harris
(See previous entry.)
 

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Related material:
A classic book in a postmodern
(“free-floating signs”) cover —

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This is my Princeton Companion
to Mathematics
, from the days
when Princeton University Press
had higher scholarly standards.

Friday, December 16, 2005

Friday December 16, 2005

Filed under: General,Geometry — m759 @ 2:00 pm
Jesus vs. the Goddess:
A Brief Chronology

In 1946, Robert Graves published King Jesus, an historical novel based on the theory and Graves’ own historical conjecture that Jesus was, in fact, the rightful heir to the Israelite throne… written while he was researching and developing his ideas for The White Goddess.”

In 1948, C. S. Lewis finished the first draft of The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe, a novel in which one of the main characters is “the White Witch.”

In 1948, Robert Graves published The White Goddess.

In 1949, Robert Graves published Seven Days in New Crete [also titled Watch the North Wind Rise], “a novel about a social distopia in which Goddess worship is (once again?) the dominant religion.”

Lewis died on November 22, 1963, the day John F. Kennedy was killed.

Related material:
Log24, December 10, 2005

Graves died on December 7 (Pearl Harbor Day), 1985.

Related material:
Log24, December 7, 2005, and
Log24, December 11, 2005

Jesus died, some say, on April 7 in the year 30 A.D.

Related material:

Art Wars, April 7, 2003:
Geometry and Conceptual Art,

Eight is a Gate, and

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Plato’s Diamond

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— Motto of
Plato’s Academy

“Plato is wary of all forms of rapture other than reason’s. He is most deeply leery of, because himself so susceptible to, the literary imagination. He speaks of it as a kind of holy madness or intoxication and goes on to link it to Eros, another derangement that joins us, but very dangerously, with the gods.”
 
Rebecca Goldstein in
    The New York Times,
    three years ago today
    (December 16, 2002) 
 
“It’s all in Plato, all in Plato;
 bless me, what do they
teach them at these schools?”
 
— C. S. Lewis in
the Narnia Chronicles

“How much story do you want?”
— George Balanchine

Monday, December 12, 2005

Monday December 12, 2005

Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:00 am
For Jennifer Connelly
on Her Birthday:

Collector’s Edition

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And the price is right!

Related material:

Music of the Dark Lady,

ART WARS: Dark City.

Monday, December 5, 2005

Monday December 5, 2005

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 1:00 pm
Magical Thinking
 
for Joan Didion
on Her Birthday

The Associated Press on the Kennedy Center honors yesterday:

"Dancer Suzanne Farrell was feted by her former colleague at the New York City Ballet, Jacques d'Amboise. The company, led by George Balanchine, 'was the center of American ballet and she was the diamond in its crown,' d'Amboise said."

Log24 on Balanchine

As Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, paraphrasing Horace, remarks in his Whitsun, 1939, preface to the new edition of the Oxford Book of English Verse, "tamen usque recurret Apollo."
 

The New York Lottery yesterday:

The mid-day number was 926;
the evening number was 373.

For the significance of 926,
see 9/26 2002 and
Balanchine's Birthday.

For the significance of 373, see

  Art Wars,
May 2, 2003,

 White, Geometric, and Eternal,
Dec. 20, 2003,

 Directions Out,
April 26, 2004,

 Outside the World,
April 26, 2004,

 The Last Minute,
Sept. 15, 2004,

and

Diamonds Are Forever,
Jan. 25, 2005.

See also the link
at the end of
  yesterday's entry.

For related material that is
more personally linked to
Joan Didion, see
Log24, June 1-16, 2004.
 

Friday, November 25, 2005

Friday November 25, 2005

Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:48 pm

Rehearsing Hell

Art critic Michael Kimmelman
in today’s New York Times:

The Los Angeles veteran Mike Kelley’s latest show is a sprawling, scabrous spectacle of noisome installations and hilarious videos, occupying the whole of the cavernous Gagosian Gallery in Chelsea. Ingratiating Mr. Kelley’s work never has been, nor is it now. But serious it is, in its brainy, abrasive, black-humored way, and this is by far his most ambitious and perversely entertaining effort, an attempted Gesamtkunst-werk of satanic rituals and advertising jingles mingled with allusions to Godard, German Expressionist cinema and Stockhausen….
    A teenage girl dressed like a hillbilly recounts a nonsense parable in the manner of H. P. Lovecraft crossed with William Faulkner as part of a faux-reality show….
    Did I mention the church confirmation in which a plump female communicant morphs into a devil worshiper, and teenage boys dressed in Nazi outfits suddenly rap about sex with fat women?….
     … Mr. Kelley’s deep roots are in the performance tradition going back to the Vienna Actionists.

For descriptions of the Vienna Actionists, do a Google search.

From yesterday:

Angels
  Even devils too
  Wait to show
How far we come
To joy
— Chris Whitley, “To Joy    
(Revolution of the Innocents)” —
mp3 and lyrics.

It seems that Mike Kelley and Michael Kimmelman are among Chris Whitley’s “devils.”  Let us hope that they enjoy the company of General Augusto Pinochet (see previous entry) in the afterlife.

Related material: Art Wars and The Crimson Passion.

Sunday, June 19, 2005

Sunday June 19, 2005

Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , — m759 @ 4:00 am
ART WARS:
Darkness Visible
“No light, but rather darkness visible
 Serv’d only to discover sights of woe”
John Milton, Paradise Lost,
Book I,  lines 63-64

From the cover article (pdf) in the
June/July 2005 Notices of the
American Mathematical Society–

Martin Gardner


A famed vulgarizer, Martin Gardner,
summarizes the art of Ad Reinhardt
(Adolph Dietrich Friedrich Reinhardt,
  Dec. 24, 1913 – Aug. 30, 1967):

“Ed Rinehart [sic] made a fortune painting canvases that were just one solid color.  He had his black period in which the canvas was totally black.  And then he had a blue period in which he was painting the canvas blue.  He was exhibited in top shows in New York, and his pictures wound up in museums.  I did a column in Scientific American on minimal art, and I reproduced one of Ed Rinehart’s black paintings.  Of course, it was just a solid square of pure black.  The publisher insisted on getting permission from the gallery to reproduce it.”

Related material
from Log24.net,
Nov. 9-12, 2004:

Fade to Black

“…that ineffable constellation of talents that makes the player of rank: a gift for conceiving abstract schematic possibilities; a sense of mathematical poetry in the light of which the infinite chaos of probability and permutation is crystallized under the pressure of intense concentration into geometric blossoms; the ruthless focus of force on the subtlest weakness of an opponent.”

— Trevanian, Shibumi

“‘Haven’t there been splendidly elegant colors in Japan since ancient times?’

‘Even black has various subtle shades,’ Sosuke nodded.”

— Yasunari Kawabata, The Old Capital

An Ad Reinhardt painting
described in the entry of
noon, November 9, 2004
is illustrated below.

Ad Reinhardt,  Greek Cross

Ad Reinhardt,
Abstract Painting,
1960-66.
Oil on canvas, 60 x 60 inches.
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

The viewer may need to tilt
the screen to see that this
painting is not uniformly black,
but is instead a picture of a
Greek cross, as described below.

“The grid is a staircase to the Universal…. We could think about Ad Reinhardt, who, despite his repeated insistence that ‘Art is art,’ ended up by painting a series of… nine-square grids in which the motif that inescapably emerges is a Greek cross.

Greek Cross

There is no painter in the West who can be unaware of the symbolic power of the cruciform shape and the Pandora’s box of spiritual reference that is opened once one uses it.”

— Rosalind Krauss,
Meyer Schapiro Professor
of Modern Art and Theory
at Columbia University

(Ph.D., Harvard U., 1969),
in “Grids”

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Krauss

 
In memory of
St. William Golding
(Sept. 19, 1911 – June 19, 1993)

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

Tuesday June 14, 2005

Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:00 am

ART WARS:
Dark City

Jennifer Connelly at
premiere of “Cinderella Man” —

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In memory of Martin Buber,
author of Good and Evil,
who died on June 13, 1965:

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“With a little effort, anything can be
shown to connect with anything else:
existence is infinitely cross-referenced.”

— Opening sentence of
Martha Cooley’s The Archivist

Woe unto
them that
call evil
good, and
good evil;
that put
darkness
for light,
and light
for darkness

Isaiah 5:20

 

As she spoke
about the Trees
of Life and Death,
I watched her…. 
The Archivist

The world
has gone
mad today
And good’s
bad today,

And black’s
white today,
And day’s
night today


Cole Porter

Jennifer Connelly in “Dark City”

(from journal note of June 19, 2002) —

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And, one might add for Flag Day,
“you sons of bitches.”

The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050614-Flag.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
 

Sunday, June 12, 2005

Sunday June 12, 2005

Filed under: General,Geometry — m759 @ 12:00 am
ART WARS
continued

From The New Yorker of June 6, 2005:

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Recommended geometry:

The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050612-Loco2.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Click on picture to enlarge.

Related material:

ART WARS

Geometry for Jews

Mathematics and Narrative.

Saturday, April 30, 2005

Saturday April 30, 2005

Filed under: General — m759 @ 9:00 am
Nine is a Vine,
continued

The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05/HopeOfHeaven1938-2.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Larry Gelbart on the film
Up Close and Personal:
“A Brenda Starr is Born.”

Related material:
O’Hara’s Fingerpost,
Eight is a Gate,
Art Wars,
In the Details,
and the words
“White Christmas.”

Friday, April 15, 2005

Friday April 15, 2005

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 7:11 am
Leonardo Day

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In memory of Leonardo and of Chen Yifei (previous entry), a link to the Sino-Judaic Institute’s review of Chen’s film “Escape to Shanghai” —

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Click on the above for details.

Related material
from Log24.net:


Saturday, December 27, 2003  10:21 PM

Toy

“If little else, the brain is an educational toy.  While it may be a frustrating plaything — one whose finer points recede just when you think you are mastering them — it is nonetheless perpetually fascinating, frequently surprising, occasionally rewarding, and it comes already assembled; you don’t have to put it together on Christmas morning.

The problem with possessing such an engaging toy is that other people want to play with it, too.  Sometimes they’d rather play with yours than theirs.  Or they object if you play with yours in a different manner from the way they play with theirs.  The result is, a few games out of a toy department of possibilities are universally and endlessly repeated.  If you don’t play some people’s game, they say that you have ‘lost your marbles,’ not recognizing that,

while Chinese checkers is indeed a fine pastime, a person may also play dominoes, chess, strip poker, tiddlywinks, drop-the-soap or Russian roulette with his brain.

One brain game that is widely, if poorly, played is a gimmick called ‘rational thought.’ “

— Tom Robbins, Even Cowgirls Get the Blues

Sol LeWitt
June 12, 1969
:

“I took the number twenty-four and there’s twenty-four ways of expressing the numbers one, two, three, four.  And I assigned one kind of line to one, one to two, one to three, and one to four.  One was a vertical line, two was a horizontal line, three was diagonal left to right, and four was diagonal right to left.  These are the basic kind of directions that lines can take…. the absolute ways that lines can be drawn.   And I drew these things as parallel lines very close to one another in boxes.  And then there was a system of changing them so that within twenty-four pages there were different arrangements of actually sixteen squares, four sets of four.  Everything was based on four.  So this was kind of a… more of a… less of a rational… I mean, it gets into the whole idea of methodology.”

Yes, it does.
See Art Wars, Poetry’s Bones, and Time Fold.


Friday, December 26, 2003  7:59 PM

ART WARS, St. Stephen’s Day:

The Magdalene Code

Got The Da Vinci Code for Xmas.

From page 262:

When Langdon had first seen The Little Mermaid, he had actually gasped aloud when he noticed that the painting in Ariel’s underwater home was none other than seventeenth-century artist Georges de la Tour’s The Penitent Magdalene — a famous homage to the banished Mary Magdalene — fitting decor considering the movie turned out to be a ninety-minute collage of blatant symbolic references to the lost sanctity of Isis, Eve, Pisces the fish goddess, and, repeatedly, Mary Magdalene.

Related Log24 material —

December 21, 2002:

A Maiden’s Prayer

The Da Vinci Code, pages 445-446:

“The blade and chalice?” Marie asked.  “What exactly do they look like?”

Langdon sensed she was toying with him, but he played along, quickly describing the symbols.

A look of vague recollection crossed her face.  “Ah, yes, of course.  The blade represents all that is masculine.  I believe it is drawn like this, no?”  Using her index finger, she traced a shape on her palm.

“Yes,” Langdon said.  Marie had drawn the less common “closed” form of the blade, although Langdon had seen the symbol portrayed both ways.

“And the inverse,” she said, drawing again upon her palm, “is the chalice, which represents the feminine.”

“Correct,” Langdon said….

… Marie turned on the lights and pointed….

“There you are, Mr. Langdon.  The blade and chalice.”….

“But that’s the Star of Dav–“

Langdon stopped short, mute with amazement as it dawned on him.

The blade and chalice.

Fused as one.

The Star of David… the perfect union of male and female… Solomon’s Seal… marking the Holy of Holies, where the male and female deities — Yahweh and Shekinah — were thought to dwell.

Related Log24 material —

May 25, 2003:
Star Wars.
 


Concluding remark of April 15, 2005:
For a more serious approach to portraits of
redheads, see Chen Yifei’s work.

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Thursday, April 7, 2005

Thursday April 7, 2005

Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:00 am
ART WARS Toys

From Maureen Dowd’s New York Times column of June 9, 2002:

“The shape of the government is not as important as the policy of the government. If he makes the policy aggressive and pre-emptive, the president can conduct the war on terror from the National Gallery of Art.”

Last year’s suggested ART WARS toy:

     Wednesday, April 07, 2004

As a Little Child

Today’s birthdays:

Francis Ford Coppola and
Russell Crowe.

From MindfulGroup.com:

Welcome to our imaginative and inspiring toy catalog!

Today is Wednesday 7-April 2004. On this day in 30 Jesus crucified by Roman troops in Jerusalem (scholars’ estimate)

What you will discover in this site is what we have been able to find in our everlasting search for the most original, innovative, amusing and mind bending toys from around the world.

Have Fun.    

Coliseum Tell me more
Coliseum The Coliseum Builder Block System can be used to recreate the Roman Coliseum. Reenact ancient Gladiator matches and bring Ancient Rome into your home.


This year’s suggested ART WARS toy:

The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05/050407-MusicBox.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

To order, see the
Amazing Music Box & Gifts Company.

Thursday, March 31, 2005

Thursday March 31, 2005

Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:16 am

“In collage, juxtaposition is everything.”

    April 2, 2004

The above material may be regarded
as commemorating the March 31
birth of René Descartes
 and death of H. S. M. Coxeter.

For material related to Descartes,
see The Line.
For material related to Coxeter,
see Art Wars.

Tuesday, November 9, 2004

Tuesday November 9, 2004

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 12:00 pm

The Nine
(Readings for
Weyl’s birthday)

“The grid is a staircase to the Universal….
We could think about Ad Reinhardt, who,
despite his repeated insistence that
‘Art is art,’
ended up by painting a series of…
nine-square grids in which the motif
that inescapably emerges is
a Greek cross.


Greek Cross

There is no painter in the West
who can be unaware of
the symbolic power
of the cruciform shape and the
Pandora’s box of spiritual reference
that is opened once one uses it.”

— Rosalind Krauss,
Meyer Schapiro Professor
of Modern Art and Theory
at Columbia University

(Ph.D., Harvard U., 1969),
in “Grids”

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Krauss

“Nine is a very powerful Nordic number.”
— Katherine Neville, author of The Eight,

The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix04B/041109-Magic.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

in The Magic Circle,
Ballantine paperback,
1999, p. 339

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Neville

“To live is to defend a form.”

(“Leben, das heisst eine Form verteidigen“)
attributed to Hölderlin

For details on the above picture,
which deals with properties of the
nine-square grid, see

Translation Plane.

For more on the defense
of this form,


see the Log24.net entry of
June 5, 2004, A Form,
and the Art Wars entries
for St. Peter’s Day, 2004.

Tuesday, October 5, 2004

Tuesday October 5, 2004

Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:00 am

Tea Privileges

On Janet Leigh,
 who died Sunday:

The Manchurian Candidate

MARCO — What’s your last name?

ROSIE — Chaney.  I’m production assistant for a man named Justin who had two hits last season.  I live on 54th Street, a few doors from the Modern Museum of Art, of which I’m a “tea privileges” member,  no cream.  I live at 53 West 54th Street, apartment 3B.  Can you remember that?

MARCO —  Yes.

ROSIE — El Dorado 5-9970.  Can you remember that?

MARCO —  Yes.

On the redesigned
Museum of Modern Art,
11 West 53rd Street:

“… the ultimate judgment will have to wait: Taniguchi himself told a MoMA curator who’d complimented him that considering the building without the art in it is like admiring the tea cup without the green tea. Next month the museum will have art on the walls and crowds in the galleries—and then the tea ceremony will begin.”

— Cathleen McGuigan, Newsweek,
    issue dated Oct. 11, 2004

Related material:

Review of A Man and His Art, a book of paintings by Frank Sinatra:

“… he’s a solid abstractionist with an excellent eye for color, composition and geometric precision.”

Booklist (Jan. 15, 1992)

“Blue Eyes took his Sunday painting seriously.”

Eric Banks in Artforum Magazine,
    September 2004

See also
Art Wars.

Tuesday, August 17, 2004

Tuesday August 17, 2004

Filed under: General — m759 @ 7:29 pm

Tribute

Un train peut encacher un autre.

Modern Times:

ART WARS September 27, 2002 —

From the Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, October 2002, p. 563:

“To produce decorations for their weaving, pottery, and other objects, early artists experimented with symmetries and repeating patterns.  Later the study of symmetries of patterns led to tilings, group theory, crystallography, finite geometries, and in modern times to security codes and digital picture compactifications.  Early artists also explored various methods of representing existing objects and living things.  These explorations led to…. [among other things] computer-generated movies (for example, Toy Story).”

— David W. Henderson, Cornell University

From an earlier Log24.net note: 

John Frankenheimer’s “The Train” —

Und was für ein Bild des Christentums
ist dabei herausgekommen?

Wednesday, August 4, 2004

Wednesday August 4, 2004

Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:29 am

Shell Beach

“It was a dark and stormy night….”

— Opening of A Wrinkle in Time, a classic novel by Madeleine L’Engle.

For those who seek religious significance in the name of Hurricane Alex:

Alex Proyas directs this futuristic thriller about a man waking up to find he is wanted for brutal murders he doesn’t remember. Haunted by mysterious beings who stop time and alter reality, he seeks to unravel the riddle of his identity.”

— Description of the 1998 film Dark City

See also ART WARS of June 19, 2002.

Thursday, July 8, 2004

Thursday July 8, 2004

Filed under: General — m759 @ 2:00 am
ART WARS:
Bronze Star

Recommended reading on the visual arts:

Both of the above are Log24 entries for Friday, July 2, 2004.  This date is notable for the following celebrity deaths:

  • Ernest Hemingway
  • Mario Puzo
  • Vladimir Nabokov

For a meditation on these three admirable men, see

Another name can now be added to this list of public figures to admire:

Murphy drew a strip for the Sunday papers which, according to Wolfgang Saxon in today’s  New York Times,  “mines the literary tradition of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table.”  I personally prefer the versions of  T. H.  White and  C. S. Lewis; but, Saxon, à chacun son goût.

In view of the Log24 entries of the date of Murphy’s death, which are in turn based on the preceding day’s entry on Rocky Balboa and the Philadelphia Museum of Art, I am beginning to believe there may be some truth in the saying, “God is in the details.”   Some details from Saxon:

“He sold his first illustrations while still in high school. He drew boxers to publicize matches, sold his first cover illustration to the Knights of Columbus magazine before he was 20, and in 1940 sold a cover to the popular magazine Liberty.

In World War II, Mr. Murphy served in infantry and antiaircraft units in the Pacific, rose to the rank of major and won a Bronze Star. He also drew and painted portraits of the soldiers and their commanders, as well as sketches of Japanese life, which were published in The Chicago Tribune.

He then worked as an illustrator and cover artist for magazines, including Esquire and Collier’s. In 1949, Mr. Murphy started ‘Big Ben Bolt,’ a comic strip about a young boxer, which lasted almost 25 years.”

No Walt Kelly, perhaps, but definitely a contender.

Thursday, July 1, 2004

Thursday July 1, 2004

Filed under: General — m759 @ 7:59 pm
Every Picture
Tells a Story

(ART WARS for
St. Peter’s Day
,
continued)

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Pictured above:

The Pantheon, Rome
(courtesy of the Philadelphia
Museum of Art)

The Philadelphia Museum of Art

Rocky Balboa

For some philosophical
perspective, see

Peter: The Original Rocky.

Tuesday, June 29, 2004

Tuesday June 29, 2004

Filed under: General — m759 @ 11:22 pm

ART WARS
for St. Peter's Day

Compare and contrast:

The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix04A/040629-Pantheon.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
Pigi Cipelli for The New York Times

The Pantheon, Rome

 

The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix04A/040629-BigNothing.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Institute of Contemporary Art,

Philadelphia

Tuesday, June 22, 2004

Tuesday June 22, 2004

Filed under: General — m759 @ 9:00 am

Dirty Trick

Some quotations in memory of philosopher Stuart Hampshire, who died on June 13, 2004.

From the Hampshire obituary in The Guardian:

I

He frequently told the story of how, towards the end of the war, he had to interrogate a French traitor (imprisoned by the Free French), who refused to cooperate unless he was allowed to live. Should Hampshire, knowing the man was condemned to die, promise him a reprieve, which he was in no position to give, or truthfully refuse it, thereby jeopardising the lives of Resistance fighters?

“If you’re in a war,” said Hampshire, “you can’t start thinking, ‘Well I can’t lie to a man who’s going to be shot tomorrow and tell him that he isn’t.’ ”

But what the whole anecdote, and its incessant retelling, revealed was that Hampshire had, in fact, thought precisely what he said was unthinkable, and that whichever of the two decisions he finally took lay heavy on his conscience ever afterwards. Indicatively, too, it was especially loathsome to him because, although he did not say this in so many words, the traitor was almost a mirror image of himself – a cultivated young intellectual, looking like a film star, much influenced by elegant literary stylists – except that, in the traitor’s case, his literary mentors were fascist.

II

It is hard to know how Hampshire’s academic career was vitiated by the scandal over his affair with Ayer’s wife Renee, whom he married in 1961 after a divorce in which he was named as co-respondent. Even if less a matter of the dons’ moral conviction than their concern over how All Souls would appear, the affair caused a massive furore….

From a log24 entry on the day before Hampshire’s death:

I

“Hemingway called it a dirty trick.  It might even be an ancient Ordeal laid down on us by an evil Inquisitor in Space…. the dirty Ordeal by Death….”

— Jack Kerouac in Desolation Angels

II

The New Yorker of June 14  & 21, 2004:

…in ‘The Devil’s Eye,’ Bergman’s little-known comedy of 1960. Pablo seduces the wife of a minister, and then, sorrowful and sated, falling to his knees, he addresses her thus:

‘First, I’ll finish off that half-dug vegetable patch I saw. Then I’ll sit and let the rain fall on me. I shall feel wonderfully cool. And I’ll breakfast on one of those sour apples down by the gate. After that, I shall go back to Hell.’ “

Whether Hampshire is now in Hell, the reader may surmise.  Some evidence in Hampshire’s  favor:

His review of On Beauty and Being Just, by Elaine Scarry, in The New York Review of Books of November 18, 1999.  Note particularly his remarks on Fred Astaire, and the links to Astaire and the Four Last Things in an earlier entry of June 12, which was, as noted above, the day before Hampshire’s death.

As for the day of death itself, consider the  following  remark with which Hampshire concludes his review of Scarry’s  book:

“But one must occasionally fly the flag, and the flag, incorrigibly, is beauty.”

In this connection, see the entry of the Sunday Hampshire died, Spider Web, as well as entries on the harrowing of hell — Holy Saturday, 2004 — and on beauty —  Art Wars for Trotsky’s Birthday and A Mass for Lucero (written, as it happens, on June 13, 2002).

Thursday, April 29, 2004

Thursday April 29, 2004

Filed under: General — m759 @ 5:12 pm

X

Tonight on PBS:
The Jesus Factor

From Good Friday:

3 PM
Good
Friday

For an explanation
of this icon, see

Art Wars
and
To Be.

From Eternity:

Red Hook! Jesus!

From Holy Saturday:

“There is a suggestion of Christ descending into the abyss for the harrowing of Hell.  But it is the Consul whom we think of here, rather than of Christ.  The Consul is hurled into this abyss at the end of the novel.”

— Introduction to
Under the Volcano

Couleurs

In memory of
René Descartes
(born March 31)
and
René Gruau
(died March 31)

On the former:

“The predominant use
of the letter

x
to represent
an unknown value
came about in
an interesting way.”

On the latter:

“The women he drew
often seemed
to come alive.”

“…a ‘dead shepherd who brought
tremendous chords from hell
And bade the sheep carouse’ “

(p. 227, The Palm at the End of the Mind: Selected Poems and a Play. Ed. Holly Stevens. New York: Vintage Books, 1990)
— Wallace Stevens
    as quoted by Michael Bryson

See also the entries of 5/12.

Monday, April 26, 2004

Monday April 26, 2004

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:00 pm

Directions Out

Part I: Indirections

“By indirections, find directions out.”

— Polonius in Hamlet: II, i

“Foremost among the structural similarities between Kierkegaard and Wittgenstein… is the use of indirect communication: as paradoxical as it may sound, both authors deliberately obfuscate their philosophy for the purposes of clarifying it….  let us examine more closely particular instances of indirect communication from both of the philosophers with the intention of finding similarity. ‘By indirections, find directions out.’ – Polonius in Hamlet: II, i

WowEssays.com

On religious numerology (indirections)…

For the page number373” as indicating “eternity,” see

Zen and Language Games (5/2/03), which features Wittgenstein,

Language Game (1/14/04), also featuring Wittgenstein, and

Note 31, page 373, in Kierkegaard’s Works of Love (1964 Harper Torchbook paperback, tr. by Howard and Edna Hong),  

  • Publisher: Perennial (Nov. 7, 1964)
  • ISBN: 0061301221

    which says “Compare I John 4:17.”

    Okay….

    4:17  Herein is our love made perfect, that we may have boldness in the day of judgment: because as he is, so are we in this world.

    The reference to Judgment Day leads us back to Linda Hamilton, who appears (some say, as noted in Zen and Language Games, as the Mother of God) in Terminator 2: Judgment Day, and to Part II of our meditation….

    Part II: Directions Out

    “This Way to the Egress”

    — Sign supposedly written by P. T. Barnum

    A Google search on this phrase leads to the excellent website

    The Summoning of Everyman.

    Related thoughts….

    A link from Part I of a log24 entry for Thursday, April 22:

    ART WARS:
    Judgment Day
    (2003, 10/07)

    to the following —

     

    Frame not included in
    Terminator 2: Judgment Day

    Dr. Silberman: You broke my arm!

    Sarah Connor: There are
    two-hundred-fifteen bones
    in the human body,
    [expletive deleted].
    That’s one.

    This suggests, in light of the above-mentioned religious interpretation of Terminator 2, in light of the 2003 10/07 entry, and in light of the April 22 10:07 PM log24 invocation, the following words from the day after the death of Sgt. Pat Tillman:

    Doonesbury April 23, 2004

    A more traditional farewell, written by a soldier, for a soldier, may be found at The Summoning of Everyman site mentioned above:

    A Few Noteworthy Words 
    From an American Soldier
    .

  • Thursday, April 22, 2004

    Thursday April 22, 2004

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , — m759 @ 10:07 pm

    Minimalism

    "It's become our form of modern classicism."

    — Nancy Spector in 
       the New York Times of April 23, 2004

    Part I: Aesthetics

    In honor of the current Guggenheim exhibition, "Singular Forms" — A quotation from the Guggenheim's own website

    "Minimalism refers to painting or sculpture

    1. made with an extreme economy of means
    2. and reduced to the essentials of geometric abstraction….
    3. Minimalist art is generally characterized by precise, hard-edged, unitary geometric forms….
    4. mathematically regular compositions, often based on a grid….
    5. the reduction to pure self-referential form, emptied of all external references….
    6. In Minimal art what is important is the phenomenological basis of the viewer’s experience, how he or she perceives the internal relationships among the parts of the work and of the parts to the whole….
    7. The repetition of forms in Minimalist sculpture serves to emphasize the subtle differences in the perception of those forms in space and time as the spectator’s viewpoint shifts in time and space."

    Discuss these seven points
    in relation to the following:

     
    Form,
    by S. H. Cullinane

    Logos and Logic

    Mark Rothko's reference
    to geometry as a "swamp"
    and his talk of "the idea" in art

    Michael Kimmelman's
    remarks on ideas in art 

    Notes on ideas and art

    Geometry
    of the 4×4 square

    The Grid of Time

    ART WARS:
    Judgment Day
    (2003, 10/07)

    Part II: Theology

    Today's previous entry, "Skylark," concluded with an invocation of the Lord.   Of course, the Lord one expects may not be the Lord that appears.


     John Barth on minimalism:

    "… the idea that, in art at least, less is more.

    It is an idea surely as old, as enduringly attractive and as ubiquitous as its opposite. In the beginning was the Word: only later came the Bible, not to mention the three-decker Victorian novel. The oracle at Delphi did not say, 'Exhaustive analysis and comprehension of one's own psyche may be prerequisite to an understanding of one's behavior and of the world at large'; it said, 'Know thyself.' Such inherently minimalist genres as oracles (from the Delphic shrine of Apollo to the modern fortune cookie), proverbs, maxims, aphorisms, epigrams, pensees, mottoes, slogans and quips are popular in every human century and culture–especially in oral cultures and subcultures, where mnemonic staying power has high priority–and many specimens of them are self-reflexive or self-demonstrative: minimalism about minimalism. 'Brevity is the soul of wit.' "


    Another form of the oracle at Delphi, in minimalist prose that might make Hemingway proud:

    "He would think about Bert.  Bert was an interesting man.  Bert had said something about the way a gambler wants to lose.  That did not make sense.  Anyway, he did not want to think about it.  It was dark now, but the air was still hot.  He realized that he was sweating, forced himself to slow down the walking.  Some children were playing a game with a ball, in the street, hitting it against the side of a building.  He wanted to see Sarah.

    When he came in, she was reading a book, a tumbler of dark whiskey beside her on the end table.  She did not seem to see him and he sat down before he spoke, looking at her and, at first, hardly seeing her.  The room was hot; she had opened the windows, but the air was still.  The street noises from outside seemed almost to be in the room with them, as if the shifting of gears were being done in the closet, the children playing in the bathroom.  The only light in the room was from the lamp over the couch where she was reading.

    He looked at her face.  She was very drunk.  Her eyes were swollen, pink at the corners.  'What's the book,' he said, trying to make his voice conversational.  But it sounded loud in the room, and hard.

    She blinked up at him, smiled sleepily, and said nothing.

    'What's the book?'  His voice had an edge now.

    'Oh,' she said.  'It's Kierkegaard.  Soren Kierkegaard.' She pushed her legs out straight on the couch, stretching her feet.  Her skirt fell back a few inches from her knees.  He looked away.

    'What's that?' he said.

    'Well, I don't exactly know, myself."  Her voice was soft and thick.

    He turned his face away from her again, not knowing what he was angry with.  'What does that mean, you don't know, yourself?'

    She blinked at him.  'It means, Eddie, that I don't exactly know what the book is about.  Somebody told me to read it once, and that's what I'm doing.  Reading it.'

    He looked at her, tried to grin at her — the old, meaningless, automatic grin, the grin that made everbody like him — but he could not.  'That's great,' he said, and it came out with more irritation than he had intended.

    She closed the book, tucked it beside her on the couch.  She folded her arms around her, hugging herself, smiling at him.  'I guess this isn't your night, Eddie.  Why don't we have a drink?'

    'No.'  He did not like that, did not want her being nice to him, forgiving.  Nor did he want a drink.

    Her smile, her drunk, amused smile, did not change.  'Then let's talk about something else,' she said.  'What about that case you have?  What's in it?'  Her voice was not prying, only friendly, 'Pencils?'

    'That's it,' he said.  'Pencils.'

    She raised her eyebrows slightly.  Her voice seemed thick.  'What's in it, Eddie?'

    'Figure it out yourself.'  He tossed the case on the couch."

    — Walter Tevis, The Hustler, 1959,
        Chapter 11


    See, too, the invocation of Apollo in

    A Mass for Lucero, as well as 

    GENERAL AUDIENCE OF JOHN PAUL II
    Wednesday 15 January 2003
    :

    "The invocation of the Lord is relentless…."

    and

    JOURNAL ENTRY OF S. H. CULLINANE
    Wednesday 15 January 2003
    :

    Karl Cullinane —
    "I will fear no evil, for I am the
    meanest son of a bitch in the valley."

    Friday, April 9, 2004

    Friday April 9, 2004

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:00 pm

    3 PM
    Good
    Friday

     
    For an explanation
    of this icon, see
     
    Art Wars
    and
     To Be.

    Wednesday, April 7, 2004

    Wednesday April 7, 2004

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:30 am

    ART WARS:
    Mother of Beauty

    In memory of architect Pierre Koenig

    Mother of Beauty: A Note on Modernism.

    “… Case Study House #22 … was high drama — one in which the entire city becomes part of the architect’s composition. Approached along a winding street set high in the Hollywood Hills, the house first appears as a blank concrete screen. From here, the visitor steps out onto a concrete deck that overlooks a swimming pool. Just beyond it, the house’s living room — enclosed in a glass-and steel-frame — cantilevers out from the edge of the hill toward the horizon.

    The house was immortalized in a now famous image taken by the architectural photographer Julius Shulman. In it, two women, clad in immaculate white cocktail dresses, are perched on the edge of their seats in the glass-enclosed living room, their pose suggesting a kind of sanitized suburban bliss. A night view of the city spreads out beneath them, an endless grid of twinkling lights that perfectly captures the infinite hopes of the postwar American dream….

        “My blue dream…”  
    — F. Scott Fitzgerald

    Perhaps no house, in fact, better sums up the mix of outward confidence and psychic unease that defined Cold War America….”

    Los Angeles Times, Nicolai Ouroussoff

    Friday, April 2, 2004

    Friday April 2, 2004

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 2:29 pm

    ART WARS Update

    Two New York Times reviews today are relevant to the themes of ART WARS:

    Minimal Art, by Michael Kimmelman

    Hannah and Martin, by Margo Jefferson.

    The themes of these reviews
    — a minimalist dividing line,
    and polar opposites —
    are combined in my March 15 page,

    The Line.

    Wednesday, March 31, 2004

    Wednesday March 31, 2004

    Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 12:25 am

    To Be

    A Jesuit cites Quine:

    "To be is to be the value of a variable."

    — Willard Van Orman Quine, cited by Joseph T. Clark, S. J., in Conventional Logic and Modern Logic: A Prelude to Transition,  Woodstock, MD: Woodstock College Press, 1952, to which Quine contributed a preface.

    Quine died in 2000 on Xmas Day.

    From a July 26, 2003, entry,
    The Transcendent Signified,
    on an essay by mathematician
    Michael Harris:

    Kubrick's
    monolith

    Harris's
    slab

    From a December 10, 2003, entry:

    Putting Descartes Before Dehors

          

    "Descartes déclare que c'est en moi, non hors de moi, en moi, non dans le monde, que je pourrais voir si quelque chose existe hors de moi."

    ATRIUM, Philosophie

    For further details, see ART WARS.

    The above material may be regarded as commemorating the March 31 birth of René Descartes and death of H. S. M. Coxeter.

    For further details, see

    Plato, Pegasus, and the Evening Star.

    Saturday, February 28, 2004

    Saturday February 28, 2004

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 7:00 pm

    Inner Truth
    and Outer Style

    Inner Truth:

    Hexagram 61: Inner Truth

    Outer Style:


    Joan Didion

    “Everything I learned,
    I learned at Vogue.”

    Joan Didion, Nov. 2001 interview
    with Amy Spindler.

    Spindler died on Friday, Feb. 27, 2004.

    For related material, see

    Truth and Style: ART WARS at Harvard

    and

    blogs.law.harvard.edu/m759/.

    Saturday February 28, 2004

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 1:00 pm

    Truth and Style

    From today’s New York Times obituary for Amy M. Spindler, former fashion critic of The New York Times and style editor of its magazine, who died yesterday at 40:

    “Anna Wintour, the editor in chief of Vogue, whom Ms. Spindler regarded as a competitor when she became style editor of The Times Magazine, in 1998, said: ‘She took criticism in a new direction. She wasn’t afraid to tell the truth.’ “

    “I don’t believe in truth. I believe in style.”
    — Hugh Grant in Vogue magazine, July 1995

    Again from Spindler’s obituary:

    “In a front-page article on Sept. 5, 1995, she [Spindler] noted a new piety on parade, marked by store windows and catalogs full of monastic robes, pilgrim’s boots and dangling crosses. Perhaps, she wrote, ‘the financially strained fashion industry is seeking salvation from above.’ “

    Perhaps.


    Amy M. Spindler

    See also
    Strike That Pose (August 1995)
    and the two previous log24.net entries
    on art and religion at Harvard.

    For even more context, see
    Truth and Style: ART WARS at Harvard.

    Thursday, February 26, 2004

    Thursday February 26, 2004

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 4:07 pm

    ART WARS at Harvard

    From today’s Harvard Crimson:

    “The VES [Visual and Environmental Studies] department is still recovering, both internally and in public perception, from the firing of former chair Ellen Phelan in spring 2001. Phelan, a distinguished painter who brought in top New York artists, was replaced by Kenan Professor of English Marjorie Garber, an English scholar with no formal background in the practice of visual arts.”

    Here’s more on Phelan and art at Harvard (rated R for colorful language).

    See also Strike That Pose.

    Follow-up from the Harvard Crimson,
    Friday, Feb. 27, 2004:


    Crimson/Gloria B. Ho
    Harvard President
    Lawrence H. Summers
    struck a thoughtful pose
    while meeting with students
    last night.

    By Lauren A. E. Schuker
    Crimson Staff Writer

    Summers… expressed his strong commitment to the visual and performing arts at Harvard.

    “In many ways, the arts are the highest achievements of man,” Summers said, “and universities have always been focused on humanities.”

    Summers added that he was concerned that there is a disparity between critiquing and creating works of art.

    “You don’t have to be particularly accomplished to study macroeconomic theory or European history,” he said, “but you do if you want to study creative writing or musical performance. That is problematic.”

    Summers also added that he hoped to see the University develop more respect for the arts and more “explicit academic evaluation” in the future.

    Sunday, January 18, 2004

    Sunday January 18, 2004

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 10:12 am

    A Living Church

    "Plato has told you a truth; but Plato is dead. Shakespeare has startled you with an image; but Shakespeare will not startle you with any more. But imagine what it would be to live with such men still living. To know that Plato might break out with an original lecture to-morrow, or that at any moment Shakespeare might shatter everything with a single song. The man who lives in contact with what he believes to be a living Church is a man always expecting to meet Plato and Shakespeare to-morrow at breakfast. He is always expecting to see some truth that he has never seen before."

    — G. K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy

    C. P. Snow on G. H. Hardy in the foreword to A Mathematician's Apology:

    "… he had another favourite entertainment.  'Mark that man we met last night,' he said, and someone had to be marked out of 100 in each of the categories Hardy had long since invented and defined.  STARK, BLEAK ('a stark man is not necessarily bleak: but all bleak men without exception want to be considered stark')…."

    S. H. Cullinane on religion and Hollywood:

    "If the incomparable Max Bialystock were to remake 'Up Close and Personal,' he might retitle it 'Distant and Impersonal.'  A Google search on this phrase suggests

    a plot outline for Mel Brooks & Co."

    In memory of
    producer Ray Stark,
    an excerpt from that plot outline:

    The Oxford University Press summary of

    God:
    Myths of the Male Divine,
    by David Leeming and Jake Page

    "They [Leeming and Page] describe the rise of a male sky God as 'the equal to, the true mate, of Goddess, who was still associated with Earth.' In the Iron Age, the sky God became more aggressive, separating from the Goddess and taking his place as the King God, as Zeus, Odin, and Horus. Ultimately he emerged as the creator, a more distant and impersonal force. Here Leeming and Page also illuminate an important trend–a sense that the divine is beyond gender, that it permeates all things (as seen in the Chinese Tao and En Sof of the Kabbalah). They see a movement in the biography of God toward a reunion with the Goddess."

    As for the Goddess, see

    Art Wars: Just Seventeen

    (December 17, 2002). 

    Stark, a saint among Hollywood producers, died yesterday, January 17.  If, as Chesterton might surmise, he then met Plato and Shakespeare in Heaven, the former might discuss with him the eternal Platonic form of the number 17, while the latter might offer the following links on Stark's new heavenly laptop:

    Cartoon Graveyard and

    Art Wars: At the Still Point

    This concludes the tribute to Stark.  For a tribute to Bleak, click here.

    Saturday, December 27, 2003

    Saturday December 27, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 10:21 pm

    Toy

    “If little else, the brain is an educational toy.  While it may be a frustrating plaything — one whose finer points recede just when you think you are mastering them — it is nonetheless perpetually fascinating, frequently surprising, occasionally rewarding, and it comes already assembled; you don’t have to put it together on Christmas morning.

    The problem with possessing such an engaging toy is that other people want to play with it, too.  Sometimes they’d rather play with yours than theirs.  Or they object if you play with yours in a different manner from the way they play with theirs.  The result is, a few games out of a toy department of possibilities are universally and endlessly repeated.  If you don’t play some people’s game, they say that you have ‘lost your marbles,’ not recognizing that,

    while Chinese checkers is indeed a fine pastime, a person may also play dominoes, chess, strip poker, tiddlywinks, drop-the-soap or Russian roulette with his brain.

    One brain game that is widely, if poorly, played is a gimmick called ‘rational thought.’ “

    — Tom Robbins, Even Cowgirls Get the Blues

    Sol LeWitt
    June 12, 1969
    :

    “I took the number twenty-four and there’s twenty-four ways of expressing the numbers one, two, three, four.  And I assigned one kind of line to one, one to two, one to three, and one to four.  One was a vertical line, two was a horizontal line, three was diagonal left to right, and four was diagonal right to left.  These are the basic kind of directions that lines can take…. the absolute ways that lines can be drawn.   And I drew these things as parallel lines very close to one another in boxes.  And then there was a system of changing them so that within twenty-four pages there were different arrangements of actually sixteen squares, four sets of four.  Everything was based on four.  So this was kind of a… more of a… less of a rational… I mean, it gets into the whole idea of methodology.”

    Yes, it does.
    See Art Wars, Poetry’s Bones, and Time Fold.

    Friday, December 26, 2003

    Friday December 26, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 7:59 pm

    ART WARS, St. Stephen’s Day:

    The Magdalene Code

    Got The Da Vinci Code for Xmas.

    From page 262:

    When Langdon had first seen The Little Mermaid, he had actually gasped aloud when he noticed that the painting in Ariel’s underwater home was none other than seventeenth-century artist Georges de la Tour’s The Penitent Magdalene — a famous homage to the banished Mary Magdalene — fitting decor considering the movie turned out to be a ninety-minute collage of blatant symbolic references to the lost sanctity of Isis, Eve, Pisces the fish goddess, and, repeatedly, Mary Magdalene.

    Related Log24 material —

    December 21, 2002:

    A Maiden’s Prayer

    The Da Vinci Code, pages 445-446:

    “The blade and chalice?” Marie asked.  “What exactly do they look like?”

    Langdon sensed she was toying with him, but he played along, quickly describing the symbols.

    A look of vague recollection crossed her face.  “Ah, yes, of course.  The blade represents all that is masculine.  I believe it is drawn like this, no?”  Using her index finger, she traced a shape on her palm.

    “Yes,” Langdon said.  Marie had drawn the less common “closed” form of the blade, although Langdon had seen the symbol portrayed both ways.

    “And the inverse,” she said, drawing again upon her palm, “is the chalice, which represents the feminine.”

    “Correct,” Langdon said….

    … Marie turned on the lights and pointed….

    “There you are, Mr. Langdon.  The blade and chalice.”….

    “But that’s the Star of Dav–“

    Langdon stopped short, mute with amazement as it dawned on him.

    The blade and chalice.

    Fused as one.

    The Star of David… the perfect union of male and female… Solomon’s Seal… marking the Holy of Holies, where the male and female deities — Yahweh and Shekinah — were thought to dwell.

    Related Log24 material —

    May 25, 2003:
    Star Wars
    .

    Wednesday, December 10, 2003

    Wednesday December 10, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 6:13 pm

    Putting Descartes Before Dehors

          

    “Descartes déclare que c’est en moi, non hors de moi, en moi, non dans le monde, que je pourrais voir si quelque chose existe hors de moi.”

    ATRIUM, Philosophie

    For further details, see ART WARS.

    Friday, November 21, 2003

    Friday November 21, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 2:17 pm

    Chinese Theatre, Part II:

    Just Say NO

    For more on the above “spider” symbol, see

    ART WARS for Trotsky’s Birthday
    (Oct. 26, 2003), Parts I and II

    and the site from which
    the above figure is taken,

    Yin & Yang and the I Ching.

    For some Chinese poetic justice, see

    The Song of Saint Ezra,

    Library of Paradise, and

    Endings and Beginnings.

    See, too, the Chinese character for “end”
    used to sell the work of Ian Fleming:

    Note, in Endings and Beginnings, the strong resemblance between this character and the name of the Chinese-American architect of the Robert Frost Library at Amherst College.  Then meditate on the following passage by Amherst graduate Stephen Mitchell:

    “We dance round in a ring and suppose,
    But the Secret sits in the middle
        and knows,”
    Robert Frost wrote,
    looking in from the outside.
    Looking out from the inside,
        Chuang-tzu wrote,
    “When we understand, we are at
        the center of the circle,
    and there we sit while Yes and No
        chase each other
    around the circumference.”

    A view of the Robert Frost Library
    from the inside is available in the entry

    Library of Paradise

    mentioned above.

    See, too, my entry

    Keats and the Web

    of July 28, 2002.

    Thursday, November 13, 2003

    Thursday November 13, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 7:30 pm

    The Tables of Time

    Implied by previous two entries:

    “This Jack, joke, poor potsherd, patch, matchwood, immortal diamond,

                    Is immortal diamond.”
     

    — Gerard Manley Hopkins,

    That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire

    and of the Comfort of the Resurrection

    New York Times, Nov. 13, 2003:

    Peace Rune
    Hexagram 11,
    Jan. 6, 1989

    Picnic Symbol 

    Picnic site symbol,
    British Sea Scouts

    See, too, Art Wars and Time Fold.

    Tuesday, November 4, 2003

    Tuesday November 4, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 11:55 am

    Library of Paradise


    Click to enlarge.

    In memory of architect Philip Chu, who designed the above library at Amherst College:

    “Chu was best known for his designs of college libraries, which his family said blended ‘modern influences from such innovators as Frank Lloyd Wright, the Oriental use of space and exterior design together with the traditional materials.’ Critics characterized his designs as ‘warm and inviting,’ his family said in a written statement.

    Among his designs were the Robert Frost Library at Amherst College, which was dedicated by President John Kennedy…”

    Honolulu Advertiser, Nov. 3, 2003

    And now I was beginning to surmise:
    Here was the library of Paradise.

    Hermann Hesse, Magister Ludi

    Chu died at 83 in Honolulu on
    October 27, 2003.

    See Dream of Heaven, Oct. 27, 2003.

    See, too, ART WARS for Oct. 26, 2003
    Forty years to the day after Kennedy’s remarks at Amherst.

      

    Saturday, November 1, 2003

    Saturday November 1, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: — m759 @ 1:05 pm

    Symmetry in Diamond Theory:
    Robbing Peter to Pay Paul

    "Groups arise in most areas of pure and applied mathematics, usually as a set of operators or transformations of some structure. The appearance of a group generally reflects some kind of symmetry in the object under study, and such symmetry may be considered one of the fundamental notions of mathematics."

    Peter Webb

    "Counter-change is sometimes known as Robbing Peter to Pay Paul."

    Helen Kelley Patchwork

    Paul Robeson in
    King Solomon's
    Mines

    Counterchange
    symmetry

    For a look at the Soviet approach
    to counterchange symmetry, see

    The Kishinev School of Discrete Geometry.

    The larger cultural context:

    See War of Ideas (Oct. 24),
    The Hunt for Red October (Oct. 25),
    On the Left (Oct. 25), and
    ART WARS for Trotsky's Birthday (Oct. 26).
     

    Sunday, October 26, 2003

    Sunday October 26, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:17 am

    ART WARS for

    Trotsky’s Birthday

    Part I:
    Symbols

    From my entry of July 26, 2003, in memory
    of Marathon Man director John Schlesinger:

    Bright Star and Dark Lady

    “Mexico is a solar country — but it is also a black country, a dark country. This duality of Mexico has preoccupied me since I was a child.”

    Octavio Paz,
    quoted by Homero Aridjis

    Bright Star

    Amen.

    Dark Lady

    For the meaning of the above symbols, see
    Kubrick’s 1x4x9 monolith in 2001,
    the Halmos tombstone in Measure Theory,
    and the Fritz Leiber Changewar stories.

    No se puede vivir sin amar.


    Part II:
    Sunday in the Park with Death

      To Leon from Diego —
    Details of a mural,
    A Dream of a Sunday Afternoon
    in Alameda Park,
    Fresco, 1947-48,
    Alameda Hotel, Mexico City:

    Three’s a Crowd:

    Symbol:


    Tuesday, October 7, 2003

    Tuesday October 7, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 5:09 pm

    ART WARS:
    Judgment Day

    “…Mondrian and Malevich are not discussing canvas or pigment or graphite or any other form of matter.  They are talking about Being or Mind or Spirit.  From their point of view, the grid is a staircase to the Universal….”

    — Rosalind Krauss, “Grids”

    Krauss is the Meyer Schapiro Professor of Modern Art and Theory at Columbia University.

    For more on Meyer Schapiro, see the link on the phrase “art historian” in my March 10, 2003, entry.

    To view that entry in a larger context, see the web page Art at the Vanishing Point, which includes a picture of Mondrian’s own Paris staircase.  The picture below might be thought of as illustrating Krauss’s “grid is a staircase”… a staircase to, in fact, a vanishing point.

     

    Frame not included in
     Terminator 2: Judgment Day

    For a different view of what the New York Times Book Review has characterized as “high culture,” see the link on that phrase also in my March 10, 2003, entry.  This leads to a work by T. S. Eliot titled Christianity and Culture.   See too the remarks of the Meyer Schapiro Professor in my Oct. 5, 2003, entry, “Art Theory for Yom Kippur,”  in which she likens the Cross to Pandora’s box.

    Eliot’s attitude toward this Jewish approach to high culture might be summarized by the following remarks of Sarah Connor in Terminator 2: Judgment Day

    Dr. Silberman: You broke my arm!

    Sarah Connor: There are two-hundred-fifteen bones in the human body, [expletive deleted]. That’s one.

    Sunday, October 5, 2003

    Sunday October 5, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 5:01 pm

    Ado

    Born on this date:
    Producer Joshua Logan.

    March 9, 1975:
    Broadway Tribute to Joshua Logan

    March 9, 2000:
    Is Nothing Sacred?

    “Of course there is nothing afterwards.”
    Thoughts of a dying man in Nabokov’s The Gift

    “There is nothing like a dame.”
    — Oscar Hammerstein II, South Pacific

    For more on the religious significance of the date March 9, see

    Art Wars.

    Friday, October 3, 2003

    Friday October 3, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 8:23 pm

    ART WARS:
    Time and the Grid

    Art theorist Rosalind Krauss and poet T. S. Eliot on time, timelessness, and the grid.

    Wednesday, September 17, 2003

    Wednesday September 17, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:00 am

    Time’s Breakdown

    “… even if we can break down time into component Walsh functions, what would it achieve?”

    — The Professor, in “Passing in Silence,”
        by Oliver Humpage

    “Being is not a steady state but an occulting one: we are all of us a succession of stillness blurring into motion on the wheel of action, and it is in those spaces of black between the pictures that we find the heart of mystery in which we are never allowed to rest. The flickering of a film interrupts the intolerable continuity of apparent world; subliminally it gives us those in-between spaces of black that we crave.”

    Gösta Kraken, Perception Perceived: an Unfinished Memoir (p. 9 in Fremder, a novel by Russell Hoban)

    “The Underground’s ‘flicker’ is a mechanical reconciliation of light and darkness, the two alternately exhibited very rapidly.”

    Hugh Kenner on T. S. Eliot’s “Burnt Norton” in Four Quartets

    From last year’s entries:

    ART WARS September 12, 2002

    Artist
    Ben
    Shahn
    was
    born
    on
    this
    date
    in
    1898.

    For some further reflections on flickering time,
    see an essay by Nicholson Baker on

    the Geneva mechanism
    in movie projectors
    .

    “At three o’clock in the morning
    Eurydice is bound to come into it.”
    —Russell Hoban,
    The Medusa Frequency

    For June Carter Cash as Eurydice,
    see The Circle is Unbroken.

    Let us pray that Jesus College
    will help this production,
    with Johnny Cash as Orpheus,
    to have a happy ending.

    Monday, September 8, 2003

    Monday September 8, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 1:25 pm

    Pre- and Post-Cognition

    Majority Report:

    From

    A Matter of Life and Death,

    an entry from Sept. 13, 2002, linked to in last night’s ART WARS notes:

    “In the sun, Dante and Beatrice find themselves surrounded by a circle of souls famous for their wisdom on earth. They appear as splendid lights and precious jewels who dance and sing as they lovingly welcome two more into their company.”

    Minority Report:

    Doonesbury, Monday morning, Sept. 8, 2003:

    ©2003 G.B. Trudeau

    For more chanting,
    click here.
     

    Monday September 8, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 4:24 am

    ART WARS Sept. 1, 2003:

    Sir Terry Frost Dies

    A noted English abstract painter died at 87 on Monday, September 1.  From a memorial essay on Sir Terry Frost, born in 1915, in The Daily Telegraph: 

    “He was educated at Leamington Spa Central School where he edited the art magazine, but left at 15 to work….” His first jobs included, the Telegraph says, painting “the red, white and blue targets on to fighter planes.”

    The “target” the Telegraph refers to
    is known as the Royal Air Force Roundel.

    It may indeed have functioned as a target, but it was originally intended only as a distinctive identifying mark.

    Some of Frost’s later work may be viewed at the British Government Art Collection.  For some of Frost’s work more closely related to his early “target” theme, see the Badcock’s Gallery site.

    An example:

     

    For related religious
    and cinematic material, see

    Pilate, Truth, and Friday the Thirteenth,

    a meditation for Good Friday of 2001,

    A Matter of Life and Death,

    a meditation for Friday the Thirteenth
    of September, 2002,

    and

    The Unity of Mathematics,

    from the day Frost died, which concludes
    with links related to the religious symbol of

    2001:

    Monolithic Form
    and
    ART WARS.

    Monday, September 1, 2003

    Monday September 1, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:33 pm

    The Unity of Mathematics,

    or “Shema, Israel”

    A conference to honor the 90th birthday (Sept. 2) of Israel Gelfand is currently underway in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

    The following note from 2001 gives one view of the conference’s title topic, “The Unity of Mathematics.”

    Reciprocity in 2001

    by Steven H. Cullinane
    (May 30, 2001)

    From 2001: A Space Odyssey, by Arthur C. Clarke, New American Library, 1968:

    The glimmering rectangular shape that had once seemed no more than a slab of crystal still floated before him….  It encapsulated yet unfathomed secrets of space and time, but some at least he now understood and was able to command.

    How obvious — how necessary — was that mathematical ratio of its sides, the quadratic sequence 1: 4: 9!  And how naive to have imagined that the series ended at this point, in only three dimensions!

    — Chapter 46, “Transformation”

    From a review of Himmelfarb, by Michael Krüger, New York, George Braziller, 1994:

    As a diffident, unsure young man, an inexperienced ethnologist, Richard was unable to travel through the Amazonian jungles unaided. His professor at Leipzig, a Nazi Party member (a bigot and a fool), suggested he recruit an experienced guide and companion, but warned him against collaborating with any Communists or Jews, since the objectivity of research would inevitably be tainted by such contact. Unfortunately, the only potential associate Richard can find in Sao Paulo is a man called Leo Himmelfarb, both a Communist (who fought in the Spanish Civil War) and a self-exiled Jew from Galicia, but someone who knows the forests intimately and can speak several of the native dialects.

    “… Leo followed the principle of taking and giving, of learning and teaching, of listening and storytelling, in a word: of reciprocity, which I could not even imitate.”

    … E. M. Forster famously advised his readers, “Only connect.” “Reciprocity” would be Michael Kruger’s succinct philosophy, with all that the word implies.

    — William Boyd, New York Times Book Review, October 30, 1994

    Reciprocity and Euler

    Applying the above philosophy of reciprocity to the Arthur C. Clarke sequence

    1, 4, 9, ….

    we obtain the rather more interesting sequence
    1/1, 1/4, 1/9, …..

    This leads to the following problem (adapted from the St. Andrews biography of Euler):

    Perhaps the result that brought Euler the most fame in his young days was his solution of what had become known as the Basel problem. This was to find a closed form for the sum of the infinite series

    1/1 + 1/4 + 1/9 + 1/16 + 1/25 + …

    — a problem which had defeated many of the top mathematicians including Jacob Bernoulli, Johann Bernoulli and Daniel Bernoulli. The problem had also been studied unsuccessfully by Leibniz, Stirling, de Moivre and others. Euler showed in 1735 that the series sums to (pi squared)/6. He generalized this series, now called zeta(2), to zeta functions of even numbers larger than two.

    Related Reading

    For four different proofs of Euler’s result, see the inexpensive paperback classic by Konrad Knopp, Theory and Application of Infinite Series (Dover Publications).

    Related Websites

    Evaluating Zeta(2), by Robin Chapman (PDF article) Fourteen proofs!

    Zeta Functions for Undergraduates

    The Riemann Zeta Function

    Reciprocity Laws
    Reciprocity Laws II

    The Langlands Program

    Recent Progress on the Langlands Conjectures

    For more on
    the theme of unity,
    see

    Monolithic Form
    and
    ART WARS.

    Monday, August 18, 2003

    Monday August 18, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , — m759 @ 3:09 pm

    Entries since Xanga’s
    August 10 Failure:


    Sunday, August 17, 2003  2:00 PM

    A Thorny Crown of…

    West Wing's Toby Ziegler

    From the first episode of
    the television series
    The West Wing“:

     

    Original airdate: Sept. 22, 1999
    Written by Aaron Sorkin

    MARY MARSH
    That New York sense of humor. It always–

    CALDWELL
    Mary, there’s absolutely no need…

    MARY MARSH
    Please, Reverend, they think they’re so much smarter. They think it’s smart talk. But nobody else does.

    JOSH
    I’m actually from Connecticut, but that’s neither here nor there. The point is that I hope…

    TOBY
    She meant Jewish.

    [A stunned silence. Everyone stares at Toby.]

    TOBY (CONT.)
    When she said “New York sense of humor,” she was talking about you and me.

    JOSH
    You know what, Toby, let’s just not even go there.

     

    Going There, Part I

     

    Crown of Ideas

    Kirk Varnedoe, 57, art historian and former curator of the Museum of Modern Art, died Thursday, August 14, 2003.

    From his New York Times obituary:

    ” ‘He loved life in its most tangible forms, and so for him art was as physical and pleasurable as being knocked down by a wave,’ said Adam Gopnik, the writer and a former student of his who collaborated on Mr. Varnedoe’s first big show at the Modern, ‘High & Low.’ ‘Art was always material first — it was never, ever bound by a thorny crown of ideas.’ ”

    For a mini-exhibit of ideas in honor of Varnedoe, see

    Fahne Hoch.

    Verlyn Klinkenborg on Varnedoe:

    “I was always struck by the tangibility of the words he used….  It was as if he were laying words down on the table one by one as he used them, like brushes in an artist’s studio. That was why students crowded into his classes and why the National Gallery of Art had overflow audiences for his Mellon Lectures earlier this year. Something synaptic happened when you listened to Kirk Varnedoe, and, remarkably, something synaptic happened when he listened to you. You never knew what you might discover together.”

    Perhaps even a “thorny crown of ideas“?

    “Crown of Thorns”
    Cathedral, Brasilia

    Varnedoe’s death coincided with
    the Great Blackout of 2003.

    “To what extent does this idea of a civic life produced by sense of adversity correspond to actual life in Brasília? I wonder if it is something which the city actually cultivates. Consider, for example the cathedral, on the monumental axis, a circular, concrete framed building whose sixteen ribs are both structural and symbolic, making a structure that reads unambiguously as a crown of thorns; other symbolic elements include the subterranean entrance, the visitor passing through a subterranean passage before emerging in the light of the body of the cathedral. And it is light, shockingly so….”

    Modernist Civic Space: The Case of Brasilia, by Richard J. Williams, Department of History of Art, University of Edinburgh, Scotland

     

    Going There, Part II

    Simple, Bold, Clear

    Art historian Kirk Varnedoe was, of course, not the only one to die on the day of the Great Blackout.

    Claude Martel, 34, a senior art director of The New York Times Magazine, also died on Thursday, August 14, 2003.

    Janet Froelich, the magazine’s art director, describes below a sample of work that she and Martel did together:

    “A new world of ideas”

    Froelich notes that “the elements are simple, bold, and clear.”

    For another example of elements with these qualities, see my journal entry

    Fahne Hoch.

    The flag design in that entry
    might appeal to Aaron Sorkin’s
    Christian antisemite:

     

    Fahne,
    S. H. Cullinane,
    Aug. 15, 2003

    Dr. Mengele,
    according to
    Hollywood

     

    Note that the elements of the flag design have the qualities described so aptly by Froelich– simplicity, boldness, clarity:

    They share these qualities with the Elements of Euclid, a treatise on geometrical ideas.

    For the manner in which such concepts might serve as, in Gopnik’s memorable phrase, a “thorny crown of ideas,” see

    “Geometry for Jews” in

    ART WARS: Geometry as Conceptual Art.

    See also the discussion of ideas in my journal entry on theology and art titled

    Understanding: On Death and Truth

    and the discussion of the wordidea” (as well as the word, and the concept, “Aryan”) in the following classic (introduced by poet W. H. Auden):

     

     

    Saturday, August 16, 2003  6:00 AM

    Varnedoe’s Crown

    Kirk Varnedoe, 57, art historian and former curator of the Museum of Modern Art, died Thursday, August 14, 2003.

    From his New York Times obituary:

    ” ‘He loved life in its most tangible forms, and so for him art was as physical and pleasurable as being knocked down by a wave,’ said Adam Gopnik, the writer and a former student of his who collaborated on Mr. Varnedoe’s first big show at the Modern, ‘High & Low.’ ‘Art was always material first — it was never, ever bound by a thorny crown of ideas.’ “

    For a mini-exhibit of ideas in honor of Varnedoe, see

    Fahne Hoch. 

    Verlyn Klinkenborg on Varnedoe:

    “I was always struck by the tangibility of the words he used….  It was as if he were laying words down on the table one by one as he used them, like brushes in an artist’s studio. That was why students crowded into his classes and why the National Gallery of Art had overflow audiences for his Mellon Lectures earlier this year. Something synaptic happened when you listened to Kirk Varnedoe, and, remarkably, something synaptic happened when he listened to you. You never knew what you might discover together.”

    Perhaps even a “thorny crown of ideas”?

    “Crown of Thorns”
    Cathedral, Brasilia

    Varnedoe’s death coincided with
    the Great Blackout of 2003.

    “To what extent does this idea of a civic life produced by sense of adversity correspond to actual life in Brasília? I wonder if it is something which the city actually cultivates. Consider, for example the cathedral, on the monumental axis, a circular, concrete framed building whose sixteen ribs are both structural and symbolic, making a structure that reads unambiguously as a crown of thorns; other symbolic elements include the subterranean entrance, the visitor passing through a subterranean passage before emerging in the light of the body of the cathedral. And it is light, shockingly so….”

    Modernist Civic Space: The Case of Brasilia, by Richard J. Williams, Department of History of Art, University of Edinburgh, Scotland


    Friday, August 15, 2003  3:30 PM

    ART WARS:

    The Boys from Brazil

    It turns out that the elementary half-square designs used in Diamond Theory

     

    also appear in the work of artist Nicole Sigaud.

    Sigaud’s website The ANACOM Project  has a page that leads to the artist Athos Bulcão, famous for his work in Brasilia.

    From the document

    Conceptual Art in an
    Authoritarian Political Context:
    Brasilia, Brazil
    ,

    by Angélica Madeira:

    “Athos created unique visual plans, tiles of high poetic significance, icons inseparable from the city.”

    As Sigaud notes, two-color diagonally-divided squares play a large part in the art of Bulcão.

    The title of Madeira’s article, and the remarks of Anna Chave on the relationship of conceptual/minimalist art to fascist rhetoric (see my May 9, 2003, entries), suggest possible illustrations for a more politicized version of Diamond Theory:

     

    Fahne,
    S. H. Cullinane,
    Aug. 15, 2003

    Dr. Mengele,
    according to
    Hollywood

     

    Is it safe?

    These illustrations were suggested in part by the fact that today is the anniversary of the death of Macbeth, King of Scotland, and in part by the following illustrations from my journal entries of July 13, 2003 comparing a MOMA curator to Lady Macbeth:

     

    Die Fahne Hoch,
    Frank Stella,
    1959


    Dorothy Miller,
    MOMA curator,
    died at 99 on
    July 11, 2003
    .

     


    Thursday, August 14, 2003  3:45 AM

    Famous Last Words

    The ending of an Aug. 14 Salon.com article on Mel Gibson’s new film, “The Passion”:

    ” ‘The Passion’ will most likely offer up the familiar puerile, stereotypical view of the evil Jew calling for Jesus’ blood and the clueless Pilate begging him to reconsider. It is a view guaranteed to stir anew the passions of the rabid Christian, and one that will send the Jews scurrying back to the dark corners of history.”

    — Christopher Orlet

    “Scurrying”?!  The ghost of Joseph Goebbels, who famously portrayed Jews as sewer rats doing just that, must be laughing — perhaps along with the ghost of Lady Diana Mosley (née Mitford), who died Monday.

    This goes well with a story that Orlet tells at his website:

    “… to me, the most genuine last words are those that arise naturally from the moment, such as

     

    Joseph Goebbels

     

    Voltaire’s response to a request that he foreswear Satan: ‘This is no time to make new enemies.’ ”

    For a view of Satan as an old, familiar, acquaintance, see the link to Prince Ombra in my entry last October 29 for Goebbels’s birthday.


    Wednesday, August 13, 2003  3:00 PM

    Best Picture

    For some reflections inspired in part by

    click here.


    Tuesday, August 12, 2003  4:44 PM

    Atonement:

    A sequel to my entry “Catholic Tastes” of July 27, 2003.

    Some remarks of Wallace Stevens that seem appropriate on this date:

    “It may be that one life is a punishment
    For another, as the son’s life for the father’s.”

    —  Esthétique du Mal, Wallace Stevens

    Joseph Patrick Kennedy, Jr.

    “Unless we believe in the hero, what is there
    To believe? ….
    Devise, devise, and make him of winter’s
    Iciest core, a north star, central
    In our oblivion, of summer’s
    Imagination, the golden rescue:
    The bread and wine of the mind….”

    Examination of the Hero in a Time of War, Wallace Stevens

    Etymology of “Atonement”:

    Middle English atonen, to be reconciled, from at one, in agreement

    At One

    “… We found,
    If we found the central evil, the central good….
    … we and the diamond globe at last were one.”

    Asides on the Oboe, Wallace Stevens


    Tuesday, August 12, 2003  1:52 PM

    Franken & ‘Stein,
    Attorneys at Law

    Tue August 12, 2003 04:10 AM ET
    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Fox News Network is suing humor writer Al Franken for trademark infringement over the phrase ‘fair and balanced’ on the cover of his upcoming book, saying it has been ‘a signature slogan’ of the network since 1996.”

    Franken:
    Fair?

    ‘Stein:
    Balanced?

    For answers, click on the pictures
    of Franken and ‘Stein.


    Monday, July 28, 2003

    Monday July 28, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 11:11 pm

    11:11

    At the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, 1918, the Great War ended.  See

    Plato, Pegasus, and the Evening Star.

    Concluding Unscientific Postscript:

    Maggio

    For Maggio.

    See also

    ART WARS.

    Sunday, July 13, 2003

    Sunday July 13, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , — m759 @ 5:09 pm

    ART WARS, 5:09

    The Word in the Desert

    For Harrison Ford in the desert.
    (See previous entry.)

        Words strain,
    Crack and sometimes break,
        under the burden,
    Under the tension, slip, slide, perish,
    Will not stay still. Shrieking voices
    Scolding, mocking, or merely chattering,
    Always assail them.
        The Word in the desert
    Is most attacked by voices of temptation,
    The crying shadow in the funeral dance,
    The loud lament of
        the disconsolate chimera.

    — T. S. Eliot, Four Quartets

    The link to the word "devilish" in the last entry leads to one of my previous journal entries, "A Mass for Lucero," that deals with the devilishness of postmodern philosophy.  To hammer this point home, here is an attack on college English departments that begins as follows:

    "William Faulkner's Snopes trilogy, which recounts the generation-long rise of the drily loathsome Flem Snopes from clerk in a country store to bank president in Jefferson, Mississippi, teems with analogies to what has happened to English departments over the past thirty years."

    For more, see

    The Word in the Desert,
    by Glenn C. Arbery
    .

    See also the link on the word "contemptible," applied to Jacques Derrida, in my Logos and Logic page.

    This leads to an National Review essay on Derrida,

    The Philosopher as King,
    by Mark Goldblatt

    A reader's comment on my previous entry suggests the film "Scotland, PA" as viewing related to the Derrida/Macbeth link there.

    I prefer the following notice of a 7-11 death, that of a powerful art museum curator who would have been well cast as Lady Macbeth:

    Die Fahne Hoch,
    Frank Stella,
    1959


    Dorothy Miller,
    MOMA curator,

    died at 99 on
    July 11, 2003
    .

    From the Whitney Museum site:

    "Max Anderson: When artist Frank Stella first showed this painting at The Museum of Modern Art in 1959, people were baffled by its austerity. Stella responded, 'What you see is what you see. Painting to me is a brush in a bucket and you put it on a surface. There is no other reality for me than that.' He wanted to create work that was methodical, intellectual, and passionless. To some, it seemed to be nothing more than a repudiation of everything that had come before—a rational system devoid of pleasure and personality. But other viewers saw that the black paintings generated an aura of mystery and solemnity.

    The title of this work, Die Fahne Hoch, literally means 'The banner raised.'  It comes from the marching anthem of the Nazi youth organization. Stella pointed out that the proportions of this canvas are much the same as the large flags displayed by the Nazis.

    But the content of the work makes no reference to anything outside of the painting itself. The pattern was deduced from the shape of the canvas—the width of the black bands is determined by the width of the stretcher bars. The white lines that separate the broad bands of black are created by the narrow areas of unpainted canvas. Stella's black paintings greatly influenced the development of Minimalism in the 1960s."

    From Play It As It Lays:

       She took his hand and held it.  "Why are you here."
       "Because you and I, we know something.  Because we've been out there where nothing is.  Because I wanted—you know why."
       "Lie down here," she said after a while.  "Just go to sleep."
       When he lay down beside her the Seconal capsules rolled on the sheet.  In the bar across the road somebody punched King of the Road on the jukebox again, and there was an argument outside, and the sound of a bottle breaking.  Maria held onto BZ's hand.
       "Listen to that," he said.  "Try to think about having enough left to break a bottle over it."
       "It would be very pretty," Maria said.  "Go to sleep."

    I smoke old stogies I have found…    

    Cigar Aficionado on artist Frank Stella:

    " 'Frank actually makes the moment. He captures it and helps to define it.'

    This was certainly true of Stella's 1958 New York debut. Fresh out of Princeton, he came to New York and rented a former jeweler's shop on Eldridge Street on the Lower East Side. He began using ordinary house paint to paint symmetrical black stripes on canvas. Called the Black Paintings, they are credited with paving the way for the minimal art movement of the 1960s. By the fall of 1959, Dorothy Miller of The Museum of Modern Art had chosen four of the austere pictures for inclusion in a show called Sixteen Americans."

    For an even more austere picture, see

    Geometry for Jews:

    For more on art, Derrida, and devilishness, see Deborah Solomon's essay in the New York Times Magazine of Sunday, June 27, 1999:

     How to Succeed in Art.

    "Blame Derrida and
    his fellow French theorists…."

    See, too, my site

    Art Wars: Geometry as Conceptual Art

    For those who prefer a more traditional meditation, I recommend

    Ecce Lignum Crucis

    ("Behold the Wood of the Cross")

    THE WORD IN THE DESERT

    For more on the word "road" in the desert, see my "Dead Poet" entry of Epiphany 2003 (Tao means road) as well as the following scholarly bibliography of road-related cultural artifacts (a surprising number of which involve Harrison Ford):

    A Bibliography of Road Materials

    Thursday, June 26, 2003

    Thursday June 26, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 5:00 am

    ART WARS:
    Art at the Vanishing Point

    From the web page Art Wars:

    "For more on the 'vanishing point,'
    or 'point at infinity,' see
    Midsummer Eve's Dream."

    On Midsummer Eve, June 23, 2003, minimalist artist Fred Sandback killed himself.

    Sandback is discussed in The Dia Generation, an April 6, 2003, New York Times Magazine article that is itself discussed at the Art Wars page.

    Sandback, who majored in philosophy at Yale, once said that

    "Fact and illusion are equivalents."

    Two other references that may be relevant:

    The Medium is
    the Rear View Mirror
    ,

    which deals with McLuhan's book Through the Vanishing Point, and a work I cited on Midsummer Eve  …

    Chapter 5 of Through the Looking Glass:

    " 'What is it you want to buy?' the Sheep said at last, looking up for a moment from her knitting.

    'I don't quite know yet,' Alice said very gently.  'I should like to look all round me first, if I might.'

    'You may look in front of you, and on both sides, if you like,' said the Sheep; 'but you ca'n't look all round you — unless you've got eyes at the back of your head.'

    But these, as it happened, Alice had not got: so she contented herself with turning round, looking at the shelves as she came to them.

    The shop seemed to be full of all manner of curious things — but the oddest part of it all was that, whenever she looked hard at any shelf, to make out exactly what it had on it, that particular shelf was always quite, empty, though the others round it were crowded as full as they could hold.

    'Things flow about so here!' she said at last in a plaintive tone…."

     "When Alice went
         through the vanishing point
    "
     

    Sunday, May 25, 2003

    Sunday May 25, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: — m759 @ 7:11 pm

    ART WARS

    Mental Health Month, Day 25:

    Matrix of the Death God

    Having dealt yesterday with the Death Goddess Sarah, we turn today to the Death God Abraham.  (See Jacques Derrida, The Gift of Death, University of Chicago Press, 1996.)  For a lengthy list of pictures of this damned homicidal lunatic about to murder his son, see The Text This Week.

     

    See, too, The Matrix of Abraham, illustrated below.  This is taken from a book by R. M. Abraham, Diversions and Pastimes, published by Constable and Company, London, in 1933.

    The Matrix of Abraham

    A summary of the religious import of the above from Princeton University Press:

    “Moslems of the Middle Ages were fascinated by pandiagonal squares with 1 in the center…. The Moslems thought of the central 1 as being symbolic of the unity of Allah.  Indeed, they were so awed by that symbol that they often left blank the central cell on which the 1 should be positioned.”

    — Clifford A. Pickover, The Zen of Magic Squares, Circles, and Stars, Princeton U. Press, 2002, pp. 71-72

    Other appearances of this religious icon on the Web:

    On Linguistic Creation

    Picasso’s Birthday

    A less religious approach to the icon may be found on page 393 of R. D. Carmichael’s Introduction to the Theory of Groups of Finite Order (Ginn, Boston, 1937, reprinted by Dover, 1956).

    This matrix did not originate with Abraham but, unlike Neo, I have not yet found its Architect.

    Friday, May 9, 2003

    Friday May 9, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: — m759 @ 7:20 pm

    ART WARS:
    The Religion of Cubism

    In the dome of the Capitol at Washington, DC, a painting depicts The Apotheosis of Washington .  Personally, I prefer the following pair of pictures, which might be titled Apotheosis of the Cube.

     


    logo

     

    Die

    A New York Times article says Tony Smith's instructions for fabricating Die  were as follows:

    "a six-foot cube of quarter-inch hot-rolled steel with diagonal internal bracing."

    The transparent cube in the upper picture above shows the internal diagonals.  The fact that there are four of these may be used to demonstrate the isomorphism of the group of rotations of the cube with the group of permutations on an arbitrary set of four elements.  For deeper results, see Diamond Theory.

    For an explanation of why our current president might feel that the cube deserves an apotheosis, see the previous entry, "The Rhetoric of Power."

    See, too, Nabokov's Transparent Things :

    "Its ultimate vision was the incandescence of a book or a box grown completely transparent and hollow.  This is, I believe, it: not the crude anguish of physical death but the incomparable pangs of the mysterious mental maneuver needed to pass from one state of being to another.  Easy, you know, does it, son."

    Friday May 9, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — m759 @ 6:30 pm

    ART WARS

    The Rhetoric of Power:
    A meditation for Mental Health Month

    From “Secondary Structures,” by Tom Moody, Sculpture Magazine, June 2000:

    “By the early ’90s, the perception of Minimalism as a ‘pure’ art untouched by history lay in tatters. The coup de grâce against the movement came not from an artwork, however, but from a text. Shortly after the removal of Richard Serra’s Tilted Arc from New York City’s Federal Plaza, Harvard art historian Anna Chave published ‘Minimalism and the Rhetoric of Power’ (Arts Magazine, January 1990), a rousing attack on the boys’ club that stops just short of a full-blown ad hominem rant. Analyzing artworks (Walter de Maria’s aluminum swastika, Morris’s ‘carceral images,’ Flavin’s phallic ‘hot rods’), critical vocabulary (Morris’s use of ‘intimacy’ as a negative, Judd’s incantatory use of the word ‘powerful’), even titles (Frank Stella’s National Socialist-tinged Arbeit Macht Frei and Reichstag), Chave highlights the disturbing undercurrents of hypermasculinity and social control beneath Minimalism’s bland exterior.  Seeing it through the eyes of the ordinary viewer, she concludes that ‘what [most] disturbs [the public at large] about Minimalist art may be what disturbs them about their own lives and times, as the face it projects is society’s blankest, steeliest face; the impersonal face of technology, industry and commerce; the unyielding face of the father: a face that is usually far more attractively masked.’ ”

    From Maureen Dowd’s New York Times column of June 9, 2002: 

    “The shape of the government is not as important as the policy of the government. If he makes the policy aggressive and pre-emptive, the president can conduct the war on terror from the National Gallery of Art.”

    From the New York Times
    Friday, May 2, 2003:

    The National Gallery of Art in Washington has just acquired Tony Smith’s first steel sculpture: “Die,” created in 1962 and fabricated in 1968.

    “It’s a seminal icon of postwar American art,” said Earl A. Powell III, director of the National Gallery.

    Die (Tony Smith)

    Bishop Moore

    From a New York Times obituary,
    Friday, May 2, 2003:

    Bishop Dies

    by Ari L. Goldman

    Paul Moore Jr., the retired Episcopal bishop of New York who for more than a decade was the most formidable liberal Christian voice in the city, died yesterday at home in Greenwich Village. He was 83….

    Bishop Moore argued for his agenda in the most Christian of terms, refusing to cede Biblical language to the Christian right. Although he retired as bishop in 1989, he continued to speak out, taking to the pulpit of his former church as recently as March 24, even as illness overtook him, to protest the war in Iraq.

    “It appears we have two types of religion here,” the bishop said, aiming his sharpest barbs at President Bush. “One is a solitary Texas politician who says, `I talk to Jesus, and I am right.’ The other involves millions of people of all faiths who disagree.”

    He added: “I think it is terrifying. I believe it will lead to a terrible crack in the whole culture as we have come to know it.”….

    [In reference to another question] Bishop Moore later acknowledged that his rhetoric was strong, but added, “In this city you have to speak strongly to be heard.”

    Paul Moore’s early life does not immediately suggest an affinity for the kinds of social issues that he would later champion…. His grandfather was one of the founders of Bankers Trust. His father was a good friend of Senator Prescott Bush, whose son, George H. W. Bush, and grandson, George W. Bush, would become United States presidents.

    Related material (update of May 12, 2003):

    1. Pilate, Truth, and Friday the Thirteenth
    2. The Diamond Theory of Truth
    3. Understanding

    Question:

    Which of the two theories of truth in reading (2) above is exemplified by Moore’s March 24 remarks?

    Friday May 9, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 4:44 pm

    ART WARS:
    Invitation to the Dance

    While checking the claim of art historian Anna Chave that “the veil is an age-old metaphor used from Plato through Hegel and Heidegger for the concept of truth as aletheia or unveiling,”  I came across the following essay:

    “Taking the Veil,” by Jessica Kardon.

    Kardon writes very well.  A related essay I particularly like is

    “Invitation to the Dance.”

    Today’s entry on Kardon is part of my “ART WARS” series of journal notes.  This title began partly as a joke, but it seems rather appropriate in light of Anna Chave’s claim that minimalism in the 1960’s was part of the “rhetoric of power.”  See my later entry today on Tony Smith at the National Gallery.

    If we are in a war of art,

    the essays of Jessica Kardon

    are a powerful weapon.

    Friday, May 2, 2003

    Friday May 2, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 4:15 pm

    ART WARS:

    The following flashback to March 2002 seems a suitable entry for May, which is Mental Health Month.

    Zen and Language Games

    by Steven H. Cullinane
    on March First, 2002

    Two Experts Speak —

    A Jew on Language Games

    From On Certainty, by Ludwig Wittgenstein (Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1969):

    #508: What can I rely on?
    #509: I really want to say that a language game is only possible if one trusts something. (I did not say “can trust something”).
    — Quoted by Hilary Putnam in Renewing Philosophy, Chapter 8 (Harvard University Press, 1992)

    An Arab on Deconstruction

    From “Deconstructing Postmodernism,” by Ziauddin Sardar, at the website “The Free Arab Voice”:

    Doubt, the perpetual and perennial condition of postmodernism, is best described by the motto of the cult television series The X-files: ‘Trust no One’….

    Deconstruction – the methodology of discursive analysis – is the norm of postmodernism. Everything has to be deconstructed. But once deconstruction has reached its natural conclusion, we are left with a grand void: there is nothing, but nothing, that can remotely provide us with meaning, with a sense of direction, with a scale to distinguish good from evil.

    Those who, having reviewed a thousand years of lies by Jews, Arabs, and Christians, are sick of language games, and who are also offended by the recent skillful deconstruction of the World Trade Center, may find some religious solace in the philosophy of Zen.

    Though truth may be very hard to find in the pages of most books, the page numbers are generally reliable. This leads to the following Zen meditations.

    From a review of the film “The Terminator”:

    Some like to see Sarah as a sort of Mother of God, and her son as the saviour in a holy context. John Connor, J.C. , but these initials are also those of the director, so make up your own mind.
    — http://www.geocities.com/
       hackettweb2/terminator.html

    From a journal note on religion, science, and the meaning of life written in 1998 on the day after Sinatra died and the Pennsylvania lottery number came up “256”:

    “What is 256 about?”
    — S. H. Cullinane

    From Michael Crichton’s Rising Sun (Ballantine paperback, 1993) —
    John Connor (aka J. C.) offers the following metaphysical comment on the page number that appears above his words (256):

    “It seems to be.”
    “Is your investigation finished?”
    “For all practical purposes, yes,” Connor said.

    Connor is correct. The number 256 does indeed seem to be, and indeed it seemed to be again only yesterday evening, when the Pennsylvania lottery again made a metaphysical statement.

    Our Zen meditation on the trustworthiness of page numbers concludes with another passage from Rising Sun, this time on page 373:

    Connor sighed.
    “The clock isn’t moving.”

    Here J. C. offers another trenchant comment on his current page number.

    The metaphysical significance of 373, “the eternal in the temporal,” is also discussed in the Buddhist classic A Flag for Sunrise, by Robert Stone (Knopf hardcover, 1981)… on, of course, page 373.

    Monday, April 28, 2003

    Monday April 28, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , , — m759 @ 12:07 am

    ART WARS:

    Toward Eternity

    April is Poetry Month, according to the Academy of American Poets.  It is also Mathematics Awareness Month, funded by the National Security Agency; this year's theme is "Mathematics and Art."

    Some previous journal entries for this month seem to be summarized by Emily Dickinson's remarks:

    "Because I could not stop for Death–
    He kindly stopped for me–
    The Carriage held but just Ourselves–
    And Immortality.

    ………………………
    Since then–'tis Centuries–and yet
    Feels shorter than the Day
    I first surmised the Horses' Heads
    Were toward Eternity– "

     

    Consider the following journal entries from April 7, 2003:
     

    Math Awareness Month

    April is Math Awareness Month.
    This year's theme is "mathematics and art."


     

    An Offer He Couldn't Refuse

    Today's birthday:  Francis Ford Coppola is 64.

    "There is a pleasantly discursive treatment
    of Pontius Pilate's unanswered question
    'What is truth?'."


    H. S. M. Coxeter, 1987, introduction to Richard J. Trudeau's remarks on the "Story Theory" of truth as opposed to the "Diamond Theory" of truth in The Non-Euclidean Revolution

     

    From a website titled simply Sinatra:

    "Then came From Here to Eternity. Sinatra lobbied hard for the role, practically getting on his knees to secure the role of the street smart punk G.I. Maggio. He sensed this was a role that could revive his career, and his instincts were right. There are lots of stories about how Columbia Studio head Harry Cohn was convinced to give the role to Sinatra, the most famous of which is expanded upon in the horse's head sequence in The Godfather. Maybe no one will know the truth about that. The one truth we do know is that the feisty New Jersey actor won the Academy Award as Best Supporting Actor for his work in From Here to Eternity. It was no looking back from then on."

    From a note on geometry of April 28, 1985:

     
    The "horse's head" figure above is from a note I wrote on this date 18 years ago.  The following journal entry from April 4, 2003, gives some details:
     

    The Eight

    Today, the fourth day of the fourth month, plays an important part in Katherine Neville's The Eight.  Let us honor this work, perhaps the greatest bad novel of the twentieth century, by reflecting on some properties of the number eight.  Consider eight rectangular cells arranged in an array of four rows and two columns.  Let us label these cells with coordinates, then apply a permutation.

     


     Decimal 
    labeling

     
    Binary
    labeling


    Algebraic
    labeling


    Permutation
    labeling

     

    The resulting set of arrows that indicate the movement of cells in a permutation (known as a Singer 7-cycle) outlines rather neatly, in view of the chess theme of The Eight, a knight.  This makes as much sense as anything in Neville's fiction, and has the merit of being based on fact.  It also, albeit rather crudely, illustrates the "Mathematics and Art" theme of this year's Mathematics Awareness Month.

    The visual appearance of the "knight" permutation is less important than the fact that it leads to a construction (due to R. T. Curtis) of the Mathieu group M24 (via the Curtis Miracle Octad Generator), which in turn leads logically to the Monster group and to related "moonshine" investigations in the theory of modular functions.   See also "Pieces of Eight," by Robert L. Griess.

    Sunday, April 27, 2003

    Sunday April 27, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — m759 @ 3:24 pm

    ART WARS:

    Graphical Password

    From a summary of “The Design and Analysis of Graphical Passwords“:

    “Results from cognitive science show that people can remember pictures much better than words….

    The 5×5 grid creates a good balance between security and memorability.”

     Ian Jermyn, New York University; Alain Mayer, Fabian Monrose, Michael K. Reiter, Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies; Aviel Rubin, AT&T Labs — Research

    Illustration — Warren Beatty as
    a graphical password:

    Town & Country,”
    released April 27, 2001

    Those who prefer the simplicity of a 3×3 grid are referred to my entry of Jan. 9, 2003, Balanchine’s Birthday.  For material related to the “Town & Country” theme and to Balanchine, see Leadbelly Under the Volcano (Jan. 27, 2003). (“Sometimes I live in the country, sometimes I live in town…” – Huddie Ledbetter).  Those with more sophisticated tastes may prefer the work of Stephen Ledbetter on Gershwin’s piano preludes or, in view of Warren Beatty’s architectural work in “Town & Country,” the work of Stephen R. Ledbetter on window architecture.

    As noted in Balanchine’s Birthday, Apollo (of the Balanchine ballet) has been associated by an architect with the 3×3, or “ninefold” grid.  The reader who wishes a deeper meditation on the number nine, related to the “Town & Country” theme and more suited to the fact that April is Poetry Month, is referred to my note of April 27 two years ago, Nine Gates to the Temple of Poetry.

    Intermediate between the simplicity of the 3×3 square and the (apparent) complexity of the 5×5 square, the 4×4 square offers an introduction to geometrical concepts that appears deceptively simple, but is in reality fiendishly complex.  See Geometry for Jews.  The moral of this megilla?

    32 + 42 = 52.

    But that is another story.

    Thursday, April 24, 2003

    Thursday April 24, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:13 pm

    ART WARS:

    A Terrible Beauty

    On this date in 1905, Robert Penn Warren, the first poet laureate of the United States, was born.  

    This is also the date of Ireland’s 1916 Easter Monday rebellion, of which Yeats wrote that “a terrible beauty is born,”  and the date of Vatican I’s 1870 attack on reason, Dei Filius.

    My comment on Yeats’s remarks:

    “No honourable and sincere man, said Stephen, has given up to you his life and his youth and his affections from the days of Tone to those of Parnell, but you sold him to the enemy or failed him in need or reviled him and left him for another. And you invite me to be one of you. I’d see you damned first.”

    — James Joyce, Portrait of the Artist, published 1914-15 in serial form

    My comment on the Vatican’s remarks:

    “[Robert Penn] Warren taught for years at Yale and became toward the end of his life one of the most vocal critics of deconstruction, which had Yale as its headquarters. He is said to have exclaimed, ‘They got a whole new line of bullshit up here.’ ”

    Dr. Gerald McDaniel 

    Warren wrote that

    “…only, only,
    In the name of Death do we learn
        the true name of Love.”

    For some clues as to whether this, too, is bullshit, see my note of Easter Monday 2003,

    Time, Song, and Tragedy.

    Saturday, April 5, 2003

    Saturday April 5, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: — m759 @ 9:49 am

    Art Wars:
    Mathematics and the
    Emperor's New Art

    From Maureen Dowd's New York Times column of June 9, 2002: 

    "The shape of the government is not as important as the policy of the government. If he makes the policy aggressive and pre-emptive, the president can conduct the war on terror from the National Gallery of Art."

     

    NY Times, April 5, 2003:
    U.S. Tanks Move Into Center of Baghdad
    See also today's op-ed piece
    by Patton's grandson.

    Meanwhile, at the Washington Post, another example of great determination and strength of character:

     

    Donald Coxeter Dies: Leader in Geometry

    By Martin Weil
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Saturday, April 5, 2003

    "Donald Coxeter, 96, a mathematician who was one of the 20th century's foremost specialists in geometry and a man of great determination and strength of character as well, died March 31 at his home in Toronto."

    From another Coxeter obituary:

    In the Second World War, Coxeter was asked by the American government to work in Washington as a code-breaker. He accepted, but then backed out, partly because of his pacifist views and partly for aesthetic reasons: "The work didn't really appeal to me," he explained; "it was a different sort of mathematics."

    For a differing account of how geometry is related to code-breaking, see the "Singer 7-cycle" link in yesterday's entry, "The Eight," of 3:33 PM.  This leads to a site titled

    An Introduction to the
    Applications of Geometry in Cryptography
    .

    "Now I have precisely the right instrument, at precisely the right moment of history, in exactly the right place."

     — "Patton,"
    the film

    Quod erat
    demonstrandum
    .


     

    Added Sunday, April 6, 2003, 3:17 PM:

    The New York Times Magazine of April 6
    continues this Art Wars theme.


                     (Cover typography revised)

    The military nature of our Art Wars theme appears in the Times's choice of words for its cover headline: "The Greatest Generation." (This headline appears in the paper, but not the Internet, version.)

    Some remarks in today's Times Magazine article seem especially relevant to my journal entry for Michelangelo's birthday, March 6.

    "…Conceptualism — suddenly art could be nothing more than an idea….

    LeWitt moved between his syntax of geometric sculptures and mental propositions for images: concepts he wrote on paper that could be realized by him or someone else or not at all.  Physical things are perishable.  Ideas need not be."

    — Michael Kimmelman, chief art critic of the New York Times, April 6, 2003

    Compare this with a mathematician's aesthetics:

    "A mathematician, like a painter or a poet, is a maker of patterns.  If his patterns are more permanent than theirs, it is because they are made with ideas."

    — G. H. Hardy, A Mathematician's Apology (1940), reprinted 1969, Cambridge U. Press, p. 84 

    It seems clear from these two quotations that the real conceptual art is mathematics and that Kimmelman is peddling the emperor's new clothes.

    Friday, March 21, 2003

    Friday March 21, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 9:29 am

    ART WARS:

    Readings for Bach's Birthday

    Larry J. Solomon:

    Symmetry as a Compositional Determinant,
    Chapter VIII: New Transformations

    In Solomon's work, a sequence of notes is represented as a set of positions within a Latin square:

    Transformations of the Latin square correspond to transformations of the musical notes.  For related material, see The Glass Bead Game, by Hermann Hesse, and Charles Cameron's sites on the Game.

    Steven H. Cullinane:

    Orthogonal Latin Squares as Skew Lines, and

    Map Systems

    Dorothy Sayers:

    "The function of imaginative speech is not to prove, but to create–to discover new similarities, and to arrange them to form new entities, to build new self-consistent worlds out of the universe of undifferentiated mind-stuff." (Christian Letters to a Post-Christian World, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1969, p. xiii)

    — Quoted by Timothy A. Smith, "Intentionality and Meaningfulness in Bach's Cyclical Works"

    Edward Sapir:

    "…linguistics has also that profoundly serene and satisfying quality which inheres in mathematics and in music and which may be described as the creation out of simple elements of a self-contained universe of forms.  Linguistics has neither the sweep nor the instrumental power of mathematics, nor has it the universal aesthetic appeal of music.  But under its crabbed, technical, appearance there lies hidden the same classical spirit, the same freedom in restraint, which animates mathematics and music at their purest."

     "The Grammarian and his Language,"
    American Mercury 1:149-155, 1924

    Thursday, March 13, 2003

    Thursday March 13, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:44 pm

    ART WARS:

    From The New Yorker, issue of March 17, 2003, Clive James on Aldous Huxley:

    The Perennial Philosophy, his 1945 book compounding all the positive thoughts of West and East into a tutti-frutti of moral uplift, was the equivalent, in its day, of It Takes a Village: there was nothing in it to object to, and that, of course, was the objection.”

    For a cultural artifact that is less questionably perennial, see Huxley’s story “Young Archimedes.”

    Plato, Pythagoras, and
    the diamond figure

    Plato’s Diamond in the Meno
    Plato as a precursor of Gerard Manley Hopkins’s “immortal diamond.” An illustration shows the ur-diamond figure.

    Plato’s Diamond Revisited
    Ivars Peterson’s Nov. 27, 2000 column “Square of the Hypotenuse” which discusses the diamond figure as used by Pythagoras (perhaps) and Plato. Other references to the use of Plato’s diamond in the proof of the Pythagorean theorem:

    Huxley:

    “… and he proceeded to prove the theorem of Pythagoras — not in Euclid’s way, but by the simpler and more satisfying method which was, in all probability, employed by Pythagoras himself….
    ‘You see,’ he said, ‘it seemed to me so beautiful….’
    I nodded. ‘Yes, it’s very beautiful,’ I said — ‘it’s very beautiful indeed.'”
    — Aldous Huxley, “Young Archimedes,” in Collected Short Stories, Harper, 1957, pp. 246 – 247

    Heath:

    Sir Thomas L. Heath, in his commentary on Euclid I.47, asks how Pythagoreans discovered the Pythagorean theorem and the irrationality of the diagonal of a unit square. His answer? Plato’s diamond.
    (See Heath, Sir Thomas Little (1861-1940),
    The thirteen books of Euclid’s Elements translated from the text of Heiberg with introduction and commentary. Three volumes. University Press, Cambridge, 1908. Second edition: University Press, Cambridge, 1925. Reprint: Dover Publications, New York, 1956.

    Other sites on the alleged
    “diamond” proof of Pythagoras

    Colorful diagrams at Cut-the-Knot

    Illustrated legend of the diamond proof

    Babylonian version of the diamond proof

    For further details of Huxley’s story, see

    The Practice of Mathematics,

    Part I, by Robert P. Langlands, from a lecture series at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.

    From the New Yorker Contributors page for St. Patrick’s Day, 2003:

    Clive James (Books, p. 143) has a new collection, As of This Writing: The Essential Essays, 1968-2002, which will be published in June.”

    See also my entry “The Boys from Uruguay” and the later entry “Lichtung!” on the Deutsche Schule Montevideo in Uruguay.

    Tuesday, March 11, 2003

    Tuesday March 11, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:09 pm

    ART WARS:

    The Producers


    Broadway City Arcade


    "Aryan Christ"
    Carl G. Jung


    Bloomberg & Bernstein,
    Mayor & Producers' Head

    Simon and Garfunkel's Tribute to Synchronicity:

    Fools, said I,
       you do not know
    Silence like
       a cancer grows.
    Hear my words
       that I might teach you.
    Take my arms
       that I might reach you….

    Dummköpfe, sagte ich,
       ihr wißt nicht,
    daß die Stille wie
       ein Krebs wächst.
    Hört meine Worte,
       die ich euch sage.
    Nehmt meine Hände,
       die ich euch reiche….

    And the people
       bowed and prayed
    To the neon god
       they made.

    Und die Menschen
       verbeugten sich vor dem
    Neon-Gott, den sie schufen,
       und beteten zu ihm.

                       — Paul Simon

    For more on Jung, see

    See also the Synchronicity album of The Police,
    inducted last night into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

    Monday, March 10, 2003

    Monday March 10, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , — m759 @ 5:45 am

    ART WARS:

    Art at the Vanishing Point

    Two readings from The New York Times Book Review of Sunday,

    March 9,

    2003 are relevant to our recurring "art wars" theme.  The essay on Dante by Judith Shulevitz on page 31 recalls his "point at which all times are present."  (See my March 7 entry.)  On page 12 there is a review of a novel about the alleged "high culture" of the New York art world.  The novel is centered on Leo Hertzberg, a fictional Columbia University art historian.  From Janet Burroway's review of What I Loved, by Siri Hustvedt:

    "…the 'zeros' who inhabit the book… dramatize its speculations about the self…. the spectator who is 'the true vanishing point, the pinprick in the canvas.'''

    Here is a canvas by Richard McGuire for April Fools' Day 1995, illustrating such a spectator.

    For more on the "vanishing point," or "point at infinity," see

    "Midsummer Eve's Dream."

    Connoisseurs of ArtSpeak may appreciate Burroway's summary of Hustvedt's prose: "…her real canvas is philosophical, and here she explores the nature of identity in a structure of crystalline complexity."

    For another "structure of crystalline
    complexity," see my March 6 entry,

    "Geometry for Jews."

    For a more honest account of the
    New York art scene, see Tom Wolfe's
     
    The Painted Word.
     

    Thursday, March 6, 2003

    Thursday March 6, 2003

    Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , — m759 @ 2:35 am

    ART WARS:

    Geometry for Jews

    Today is Michelangelo's birthday.

    Those who prefer the Sistine Chapel to the Rothko Chapel may invite their Jewish friends to answer the following essay question:

    Discuss the geometry underlying the above picture.  How is this geometry related to the work of Jewish artist Sol LeWitt? How is it related to the work of Aryan artist Ernst Witt?  How is it related to the Griess "Monster" sporadic simple group whose elements number 

    808 017 424 794 512 875 886 459 904 961 710 757 005 754 368 000 000 000?

    Some background:

    Friday, February 21, 2003

    Friday February 21, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:00 am

    ART WARS:

    All About Lilith

    Today’s birthdays:

    Sam Peckinpah (Feb. 21, 1925)
    The New Yorker Magazine (Feb. 21, 1925)
    Alan Rickman, 57
    Kelsey Grammer, 48
    Mary Chapin Carpenter, 45
    Jennifer Love Hewitt, 24
    Charlotte Church, 17

    This list suggests that in an ideal future life Sam Peckinpah would direct, and The New Yorker review, a prequel to “All About Eve.”

    Casting would be as follows:

    Mary Chapin Carpenter as Margo Channing
    (originally, Bette Davis)
    Charlotte Church as Lilith, sister of Eve Harrington
    (originally, Anne Baxter)
    Jennifer Love Hewitt as Claudia Casswell
    (originally, Marilyn Monroe)
    Alan Rickman as Bill Sampson
    (originally, Gary Merrill)
    Kelsey Grammer as Addison DeWitt
    (originally, George Sanders).

    Since today is also the anniversary, according to Tom’s Book of Days, of Schultes’s identification of teonanacatl in 1939, the following classic painting, “ Caterpillar’s Mushroom,” by Brian Froud, might be adapted for a poster for our heavenly production*, to be titled, in accordance with celestial fairness doctrines,

    All About Lilith 

    * A footnote in memory of publicist/producer Jack Brodsky (“Romancing the Stone,” etc.), who died on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2003 — See the website Eight is a Gate for the mystical significance of the number “78” in Judaism. The New Yorker and Sam Peckinpah were born 78 years ago today.

    Thursday, January 16, 2003

    Thursday January 16, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 5:05 pm

    ART WARS
    At the Still Point

    “At the still point, there the dance is.”

    — T. S. Eliot in Four Quartets

    Humphrey Carpenter in The Inklings, his book on the Christian writers J. R. R. Tolkien, C. S. Lewis, and Charles Williams, says that

    “Eliot by his own admission took the ‘still point of the turning world’ in Burnt Norton from the Fool in Williams’s The Greater Trumps.”

    The Inklings, Ballantine Books, 1981, p. 106

    Carpenter says Williams maintained that

    It is the Christian’s duty to perceive “the declared pattern of the universe” — the “eternal dance” of Williams’s story The Greater Trumps — and to act according to it.

    — Paraphrase of Carpenter, pp. 111-112

    “The sun is not yet risen, and if the Fool moves there he comes invisibly, or perhaps in widespread union with the light of the moon which is the reflection of the sun.  But if the Tarots hold, as has been dreamed, the message which all things in all places and times have also been dreamed to hold, then perhaps there was meaning in the order as in the paintings; the tale of the cards being completed when the mystery of the sun has opened in the place of the moon, and after that the trumpets cry in the design which is called the Judgement, and the tombs are broken, and then in the last mystery of all the single figure of what is called the World goes joyously dancing in a state beyond moon and sun, and the number of the Trumps is done.  Save only for that which has no number and is called the Fool, because mankind finds it folly till it is known.  It is sovereign or it is nothing, and if it is nothing then man was born dead.”

    The Greater Trumps, by Charles Williams, Ch. 14

    If we must have Christians telling stories, let them write like Charles Williams.

    Note that although Williams says the Fool Tarot card has no number, it is in fact often numbered 0. See

    The Fool as Zero.”

    See also Sequel — about the work, life, and afterlife of Stan Rice, husband of Anne Rice (author of The Vampire Chronicles) — and the following story from today’s N.Y. Times:

    The New York Times, Jan. 16, 2003:

    ‘Dance of the Vampires,’
    a Broadway Failure, Is Closing

    By JESSE McKINLEY

    In one of the costliest failures in Broadway history, the producers of “Dance of the Vampires,” a $12 million camp musical at the Minskoff Theater, will close the show on Jan. 25, having lost their entire investment.

    Its gross for the week ending on Sunday [Jan. 12], $459,784, was its lowest, and that, finally, was the kiss of death for the show.

    The death and arrival at heaven’s gate
    of The Producers‘ producer, Sidney Glazier,
    on Dec. 14, 2002, is described in the web page
    Eight is a Gate.
     

    Saturday, January 11, 2003

    Saturday January 11, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 6:24 pm

    METROPOLITAN ART WARS:

    The First Days of Disco

    Some cultural milestones, in the order I encountered them today:

    From Dr. Mac’s Cultural Calendar:

    • “On this day in 1963, Whiskey-A-Go-Go—believed to be the first discotheque in the world—opened on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles with extraordinary hype and fanfare.”

    From websites on Whit Stillman’s film, “The Last Days of Disco”:

    Scene: Manhattan in the very early 1980’s.

    Alice and her friend Charlotte are regulars at a fashionable disco.

    Roger Ebert:

    “Charlotte is forever giving poor Alice advice about what to say and how to behave; she says guys like it when a girl uses the word ‘sexy,’ and a few nights later, when a guy tells Alice he collects first editions of Scrooge McDuck comic books, she…”

    Bjorn Thomson:

    “… looks deep into his eyes and purrs ‘I think Scrooge McDuck is sexy!’ It is a laugh-out-loud funny line and a shrewd parody, but is also an honest statement.”

    (Actually, to be honest, I encountered Thomson first and Ebert later, but the narrative sequence demands that they be rearranged.)

    The combination of these cultural landmarks suggested that I find out what Scrooge McDuck was doing during the first days of disco, in January 1963.  Some research revealed that in issue #40 of “Uncle Scrooge,” with a publication date of January 1963, was a tale titled “Oddball Odyssey.”  Plot summary: “A whisper of treasure draws Scrooge to Circe.”

    Further research produced an illustration:

     

    Desiring more literary depth, I sought more information on the story of Scrooge and Circe. It turns out that this was only one of a series of encounters between Scrooge and a character called Magica de Spell.  The following is from a website titled

    Duckburg Religion:

    “Magica’s first appearance is in ‘The Midas Touch’ (US 36-01). She enters the Money Bin to buy a dime from Scrooge. Donald tells Scrooge that she is a sorceress, but Scrooge sells her a dime anyway. He sells her his first dime by accident, but gets it back. The fun starts when Scrooge tells her that it is the first dime he earned. She is going to make an amulet….”

    with it.  Her pursuit of the dime apparently lasts through a number of Scrooge episodes.

    “…in Oddball Odyssey (US 40-02). Magica discovers Circe’s secret cave. Inside the cave is a magic wand that she uses to transform Huey, Dewey and Louie to pigs, Donald to a goat (later to a tortoise), and Scrooge to a donkey. This reminds us of the treatment Circe gave Ulysses and his men. Magica does not succeed in transforming Scrooge after stealing the Dime, and Scrooge manages to break the spell (de Spell) by smashing the magic wand.”

    At this point I was reminded of the legendary (but true) appearance of Wallace Stevens’s wife on another historic dime.  This was discussed by Charles Schulz in a cartoon of Sunday, May 27, 1990:


      

    Here Sally is saying…

    Who, me?… Yes, Ma’am, right here.

    This is my report on dimes and pennies…

    “Wallace Stevens was a famous poet…
    His wife was named Elsie…”

    “Most people do not know that Elsie was the model for the 1916 ‘Liberty Head’ dime.”

    “Most people also don’t know that if I had a dime for every one of these stupid reports I’ve written, I’d be a rich person.”

    Finally, sitting outside the principal’s office:

    I never got to the part about who posed for the Lincoln penny.


    I conclude this report on a note of synchronicity:

    The above research was suggested in part by a New York Times article on Ovid’s Metamorphoses I read last night.  After locating the Scrooge and Stevens items above, I went to the Times site this afternoon to remind myself of this article.  At that point synchronicity kicked in; I encountered the following obituary of a Scrooge figure from 1963… the first days of disco:

    The New York Times, January 12, 2003

    (So dated at the website on Jan. 11)

    C. Douglas Dillon Dies at 93;
    Was in Kennedy Cabinet

    By ERIC PACE

    C. Douglas Dillon, a versatile Wall Street financier who was named secretary of the Treasury by President Kennedy and ambassador to France under President Eisenhower, and was a longtime executive of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, died Friday [Jan. 10, 2003] at New York Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan. Mr. Dillon, who lived with his wife on Jupiter Island in Hobe Sound, Fla., was 93.

    Mr. Dillon was born to wealth and influence as the son of the founder of Dillon, Read & Company, an international banking house. Mr. Dillon was widely respected for his attention to detail — he had a reputation for ferreting out inconspicuous errors in reports — and his intellect, which his parents began shaping at an early age by enrolling Mr. Dillon in elite private schools.

    Mr. Dillon is said to have been able to read quickly and to fully comprehend what he read by the time he was 4 years old. At the Pine Lodge School in Lakehurst, N.J., Mr. Dillon’s schoolmates included Nelson, Laurance and John Rockefeller III. Mr. Dillon later graduated magna cum laude from Harvard and sharpened his analytical powers on Wall Street.

    Strapping and strong-jawed, Mr. Dillon sometimes seemed self-effacing or even shy in public, despite his long prominence in public affairs and in business. He served over the years as chairman of the Rockefeller Foundation, president of Harvard University’s board of overseers…”

    Et cetera, et cetera, and so forth.

    (See yesterday’s two entries, “Something Wonderful,” and “Story.”)

    Two reflections suggest themselves:

    “I need a photo opportunity.
    I want a shot at
    redemption.
    Don’t want to end up a cartoon
    In a cartoon graveyard.”
    — Paul Simon

    Ending up in a cartoon graveyard is indeed an unhappy fate; on the other hand…

    It is nice to be called “sexy.”

    Added at 1:50 AM Jan. 12, 2003:

    Tonight’s site music, in honor of Mr. Dillon
    and of Hepburn, Holden, and Bogart in “Sabrina” —
     “Isn’t It Romantic?”

     

    Saturday, January 4, 2003

    Saturday January 4, 2003

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 7:26 pm

    ART WARS:

    The Reader
    Over Your Shoulder

    Recommended:

    The Reader Over Your Shoulder: A Handbook for Writers of English Prose
    by Robert Graves and Alan Hodge, London, Jonathan Cape, 1943.

    See also last night’s entry on “Red Dragon” and
    this news story on a Chinese cannibal-artist
    from today’s Toronto Globe and Mail.

    Wednesday, January 1, 2003

    Wednesday January 1, 2003

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:24 pm

     

    ART WARS:

    That Old Devil Moon


    Kylie Minogue

        From The New York Times, Wed., Jan. 1, 2003:

    Richard Horner, 82,
    Broadway Producer, Is Dead

    Richard Horner, a Broadway theater owner and producer who won a Tony Award for the 1974 revival of Eugene O'Neill's "Moon for the Misbegotten," died on Saturday [December 28, 2002] at his home in Palm Springs, Calif. He was 82.

    According to one source, the O'Neill revival opened on December 28, 1973 — the same date on which the life of one of its producers was later to close.

    From a CurtainUp review:

    The revival at the Morosco was dubbed by its company "The Resurrection Play" since Jason Robards undertook the part just after a near fatal car accident and its legendary director José Quintero had just given up drinking.

    According to the Internet Broadway Database, this revival, or resurrection, took place officially not on December 28 — the date of Horner's death — but, appropriately, a day later.

    At any rate, O'Neill's title, along with my weblog entry of December 28, 2002,

    "On This Date," featuring Kylie Minogue,

    suggests the following mini-exhibit of artistic efforts:

     

    Curtain Up!

    July 2000
    issue of GQ
    :

    Australian pop star Kylie Minogue strikes a pose. The cover is a takeoff on an Athena tennis poster.

     

     

    Under the Volcano:

    A painting based on Malcolm Lowry's classic novel.

    Having played tennis, Dr. Vigil and M. Laruelle talk about the events a year earlier.

    The view is of Cuernavaca from the Casino de la Selva hotel.

    Painting by
    Julian Heaton Cooper.

     

     

     

    For further details on Kylie, Mexico, tequila, and
    Under the Volcano,
    see my entry of November 5, 2002.

    For today's site music, click "Old Devil Moon" here.

    Addendum of 9:30 pm 1/1/03:

    For a politically correct view
    of the above GQ cover,
    see Charlotte Raven's essay,
    "
    The Opposite of Sexy,"
    from The Guardian, June 13, 2000.

    For a more perceptive analysis,
    see George Orwell's essay,
    "
    The Art of Donald McGill,"
    from Horizon, September 1941.

    An Example of McGill's Art

    If there is a devil here,
    I suspect it is less likely to be
    Kyllie Minogue than Charlotte Raven.

    Today's birthdays:

    J. D. Salinger (Nine Stories),
    E. M. Forster ("Only connect"), and
    Sir James Frazer (The Golden Bough).

    Frazer might appreciate the remarks in
    the SparkNotes essay on The Natural,
    cited in my note "Homer" of Dec. 30, 2002,
    on bird symbolism and vegetative myths.

     


    Not amused: Charlotte Raven

     

    Raven, take a bough.

     

    Thursday, December 19, 2002

    Thursday December 19, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:07 am

    ART WARS:

    Bach at Heaven’s Gate

    From a weblog entry of Friday, December 13, 2002:

    Divine Comedy

    Joan Didion and her husband
    John Gregory Dunne
    (author of
    The Studio and Monster
    wrote the screenplays for
    the 1976 version of “A Star is Born”
    and the similarly plotted 1996 film
    Up Close and Personal.”

    If the incomparable Max Bialystock 
    were to remake the latter, he might retitle it
    Distant and Impersonal.”
    A Google search on this phrase suggests
    a plot outline for Mel Brooks & Co.

    From The Hollywood Reporter:

    Producer Sidney Glazier dies
    Dec. 18, 2002

    Academy Award-winning producer
    Sidney Glazier died early Saturday morning
    [Dec. 14, 2002] of natural causes
    at his home in Bennington, Vt. He was 86.
    Glazier… is best known for producing
    the 1968 film “The Producers.”
    That film, which has since become a
    Tony Award-winning Broadway play,
    also marked comedian Mel Brooks’
    directing debut.

    In addition to “The Producers,”
    Glazier produced…
    the 1973 television drama “Catholics.”
    [Based on a novel by Brian Moore]

    His nephew is “Scrooged” screenwriter
    Mitch Glazer.

    (Josh Spector)

    Recommended reading —

    FINAL CUT:

    Art, Money, and Ego in the Making of
    “Heaven’s Gate,”
    the Film that Sank United Artists,

    Second Edition,
    by Steven Bach

    From Newmarket Press:

    Steven Bach was the senior vice-president and head of worldwide production for United Artists at the time of the filming of Heaven’s Gate…. Apart from the director and the producer, Bach was the only person to witness the evolution of Heaven’s Gate from beginning to end.”

    See also my journal entry
    “Back to Bach”
    of 1:44 a.m. EST
    Saturday, December 14, 2002.

    Wednesday, December 18, 2002

    Wednesday December 18, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 1:23 am


    ART WARS:
    Birthdate of Paul Klee

    To accompany today's site music, "Nica's Dream" —
    Klee's "Notte egiziana":

    Tuesday, December 17, 2002

    Tuesday December 17, 2002

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:00 am

    ART WARS:


    Just Seventeen

    'Just 17' illustration

     

    Durga

    Today's site music*
    is in honor of
    a memorable date.

     

    1963
    Northern Songs.

    Quiet may be restored by using
    the midi control box at the top right
    of this page.  Please let me know
    if your browser is not showing
    this control box.

     

     

    Veronica  

    From a June/July 1997
    Hadassah Magazine article:

    "Plato is obviously Jewish."

    — Rebecca Goldstein

    Readings on the Dark Lady  

    From a July 27, 1997
    New York Times article
    by Holland Cotter:

    "The single most important and sustained model for Khmer culture was India, from which Cambodia inherited two religions, Buddhism and Hinduism, and an immensely sophisticated art. This influence announces itself early in this exhibition in a spectacular seventh-century figure of the Hindu goddess Durga, whose hip-slung pose and voluptuous torso, as plush and taut as ripe fruit, combine the naturalism and idealism of the very finest Indian work."

    From The Dancing Wu Li Masters,
    by Gary Zukav, Harvard '64:

    "The Wu Li Masters know that physicists are doing more than 'discovering the endless diversity of nature.' They are dancing with Kali [or Durga], the Divine Mother of Hindu mythology."

    "Eastern religions have nothing to say about physics, but they have a great deal to say about human experience. In Hindu mythology, Kali, the Divine Mother, is the symbol for the infinite diversity of experience. Kali represents the entire physical plane. She is the drama, tragedy, humor, and sorrow of life. She is the brother, father, sister, mother, lover, and friend. She is the fiend, monster, beast, and brute. She is the sun and the ocean. She is the grass and the dew. She is our sense of accomplishment and our sense of doing worthwhile. Our thrill of discovery is a pendant on her bracelet. Our gratification is a spot of color on her cheek. Our sense of importance is the bell on her toe.

    This full and seductive, terrible and wonderful earth mother always has something to offer. Hindus know the impossibility of seducing her or conquering her and the futility of loving her or hating her; so they do the only thing that they can do. They simply honor her."

    How could I dance with another….?

    — John Lennon and Paul McCartney, 1962-1963  

    Friday, December 13, 2002

    Friday December 13, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 5:24 pm

    ART WARS:

    Shall we read? — The sequel

    Two stories related to my recent entries on the death of Stan Rice (Sequel, 12/11/02) and the career of Jodie Foster (Rhyme Scheme, 12/13/02)  —

    From BBC News World Edition,
    Thursday, 12 December, 2002, 15:34 GMT 

    Entertainment Section

    • Poet Stan Rice dies

      Stan Rice, the poet, painter and husband of author Anne Rice, has died of brain cancer at the age of 60….

      He met his wife, the author of the Vampire Chronicles, when the pair studied journalism together.

    • Abba hit tops dance music poll

      Dancing Queen by Abba has been voted the top dancefloor tune of all time, according to viewers of cable music channel VH1.

    That's Entertainment!

    See also my entry of December 5, 2002,
    Key (for Joan Didion's birthday):

    I faced myself that day
    with the nonplused apprehension
    of someone who has come across a vampire
    and has no crucifix in hand.

    — Joan Didion, "On Self-Respect,"
    in Slouching Towards Bethlehem

    Divine Comedy

    Didion and her husand John Gregory Dunne
    (author of The Studio and Monster
    wrote the screenplays for
    the 1976 version of "A Star is Born"
    and the similarly plotted 1996 film
    "Up Close and Personal."

    If the incomparable Max Bialystock 
    were to remake the latter, he might retitle it
    "Distant and Impersonal."
    A Google search on this phrase suggests
    a plot outline for Mel Brooks & Co.

    Wednesday, December 11, 2002

    Wednesday December 11, 2002

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:08 pm

    Sequel

    ART WARS
    Stan Rice,
    Poet and Painter,
    Is Dead at 60…

    New York Times  
    Wed Dec 11
    06:27:00 EST 2002

    “This world is not conclusion;
    A sequel stands beyond….”

    Emily Dickinson (See yesterday’s notes.)

    And the hair of my flesh stood up (Job 4:15).
    The emotional quality of the moment is
    The religious experience of the atheist.
    This is Day Three.
    Ezra Pound makes me sit
    Under the gold painted equestrian statue
    At Central Park South and 5th.

    — Stan Rice, “Doing Being” (See yesterday’s notes.)

    Stan Rice died on Monday.
    Today is Wednesday. 
    This is Day Three

    15  Then a spirit passed before my face;

            
    the hair of my flesh stood up:
    16  it stood still,

            
    but I could not discern the form thereof:
    an image was before mine eyes,
    there was silence, and I heard a voice, saying,
    17  Shall mortal man be more just than God?

            
    Shall a man be more pure than his Maker?

    Monday, December 9, 2002

    Monday December 9, 2002

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 2:27 pm

    ART WARS: 

    A Metaphysical State

    Diane Keaton

    Frank Sinatra

    “Heaven is a state, a sort of metaphysical state.”

     — John O’Hara, Hope of Heaven, 1938

    “I’ve always been enthralled by the notion that Time is an illusion, a trick our minds play in an attempt to keep things separate, without any reality of its own. My experience suggests that this is literally true, but not the kind of truth that can be acted upon….

    I’m always sad and always happy. As someone says in Diane Keaton’s film ‘Heaven,’ ‘It’s kind of a lost cause, but it’s a great experience.'”

     — Charles Small, Harvard ’64 25th Anniv. Report, 1989

    “As a child she would wait out her naptime like a prison sentence.  She would lie in bed and stare at the wallpaper pattern and wonder what would happen if there were no heaven.  She thought the universe would probably go on and on, spilling all over everything.  Heaven was kind of a hat on the universe, a lid that kept everything underneath it where it belonged.”

     — Carrie Fisher, Postcards from the Edge, 1987

    Today’s site music illustrates 
    the above philosophical remarks.

    Saturday, December 7, 2002

    Saturday December 7, 2002

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 9:30 pm

    ART WARS:

    Shall we read?

    From Contact, by Carl Sagan:

      “You mean you could decode a picture hiding in pi
    and it would be a mess of Hebrew letters?”
      “Sure.  Big black letters, carved in stone.”
      He looked at her quizzically.
      “Forgive me, Eleanor, but don’t you think
    you’re being a mite too… indirect? 
    You don’t belong to a silent order of Buddhist nuns. 
    Why don’t you just tell your
    story?”

    From The Nation – Thailand
    Sat Dec 7 19:36:00 EST 2002:

    New Jataka books
    blend ethics and art

    Published on Dec 8, 2002

    “The Ten Jataka, or 10 incarnations of the Lord Buddha before his enlightenment, are among the most fascinating religious stories….

    His Majesty the King wrote a marvellous book on the second incarnation of the Lord Buddha…. It has become a classic, with the underlying aim of encouraging Thais to pursue the virtue of perseverance.

    For her master’s degree at Chulalongkorn University’s Faculty of Arts, Her Royal Highness Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn wrote a dissertation related to the Ten Jataka of the Buddha. Now with the 4th Cycle Birthday of Princess Sirindhorn approaching on April 2, 2003, a group of artists, led by prominent painter Theeraphan Lorpaiboon, has produced a 10-volume set, the “Ten Jataka of Virtues”, as a gift to the Princess.

    Once launched on December 25, the “Ten Jataka of Virtues” will rival any masterpiece produced in book form….”

    “How much story do you want?” 
    — George Balanchine

    Monday, November 25, 2002

    Monday November 25, 2002

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:43 pm

    ART WARS

    Driving the Point Home

    From

    SUSAN WEIL

    EAR'S EYE FOR JAMES JOYCE:


    From Finnegans Wake,
    by James Joyce, p. 293:

    The Vesica Piscis,
    also known as
    The Ya-Ya:

    See also the
    Geometries of Creation
    art exhibit at the University of Waterloo.

    Friday, November 1, 2002

    Friday November 1, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 9:40 am

    ART WARS:

    Art Director of "Harvey" Dies at 95

    Friday, October 25, 2002

    Friday October 25, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 12:00 pm

    ART WARS:
    Picasso's Birthday

    From an art quotes website:

    Dore Ashton's Picasso on Art —

    "We all know that Art is not truth.
    Art is a lie that makes us realize truth,
    at least the truth that is given us
    to understand." — Pablo Picasso

    From "Xanadu" —

    "You have to believe we are magic."
    — Olivia Newton-John

    The Muse
    Picasso

     

    Soul Kiss
    Olivia
    Newton-John

     

     

     

    A is for Art
    Cullinane

     
    "A work of art has an author and yet,
    when it is perfect, it has something
    which is essentially anonymous about it."
    Simone Weil, Gravity and Grace 

     

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/images/021025-AddsUp.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Sunday, October 20, 2002

    Sunday October 20, 2002

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:17 am

    ART WARS:

    Music for Henry

    HomerTheBrave has provided a link to an excellent Tom Tomorrow strip dealing with Ford’s Feb. 23, 1997, commercial-free sponsorship of “Schindler’s List” on TV.

    To honor Henry Ford, founder of Ford Motor Co. and author of

    The International Jew: The World’s Foremost Problem,

    which includes a chapter titled

    Jewish Jazz Becomes Our National Music,

    this site’s music is now Rhapsody in Blue.

    For more on art and power, see the article on Cardinal Richelieu by Deborah Weisgall in today’s New York Times.

    Wednesday, October 9, 2002

    Wednesday October 9, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 5:01 pm

    ART WARS:

    Apollo and Dionysus

    From the New York Times of October 9, 2002:

    Daniel Deverell Perry, a Long Island architect who created the marble temple of art housing the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Mass., died Oct. 2 in Woodstock, N.Y…. He was 97.

    Apollo

    Clark Art Institute

    Nymphs and Satyr

    Elvis

    From The Birth of Tragedy, by Friedrich Nietzsche (tr. by Shaun Whiteside):

    Chapter 1….

    To the two gods of art, Apollo and Dionysus, we owe our recognition that in the Greek world there is a tremendous opposition, as regards both origins and aims, between the Apolline art of the sculptor and the non-visual, Dionysiac art of music.

    Chapter 25….

    From the foundation of all existence, the Dionysiac substratum of the world, no more can enter the consciousness of the human individual than can be overcome once more by that Apolline power of transfiguration, so that both of these artistic impulses are forced to unfold in strict proportion to one another, according to the law of eternal justice.  Where the Dionysiac powers have risen as impetuously as we now experience them, Apollo, enveloped in a cloud, must also have descended to us; some future generation will behold his most luxuriant effects of beauty.

    Notes: 

    • On the Clark Art Institute, from Perry’s obituary in the Times:

      “When it opened in 1955, overlooking 140 acres of fields and ponds, Arts News celebrated its elegant galleries as the ‘best organized and most highly functional museum erected anywhere.'”

    • The “Nymphs and Satyr” illustration above is on the cover of “CAI: Journal of the Clark Art Institute,” Volume 3, 2002.  It is a detail from the larger work of the same title by William Bouguereau.
    • Today, October 9, is the anniversary of the dedication in 28 B.C. of the Temple to Apollo on the Palatine Hill in Rome.  See the journal entry below, which emphasizes the point that Apollo and Dionysus are not as greatly opposed as one might think.

    Friday, October 4, 2002

    Friday October 4, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:17 am

    ART WARS:
    The Agony and the Ya-Ya

    Today's birthdays:

    • Charlton Heston
    • Anne Rice
    • Patti LaBelle

    To honor the birth of these three noted spiritual leaders, I make the following suggestion: Use the mandorla as the New Orleans Mardi Gras symbol.  Rice lives in New Orleans and LaBelle's classic "Lady Marmalade" deals with life in that colorful city.

    What, you may well ask, is the mandorla? This striking visual symbol was most recently displayed prominently at a meeting of U.S. cardinals in the Pope's private library on Shakespeare's birthday.  The symbol appears in the upper half of a painting above the Pope.

    From Church Anatomy:

    The illustration below shows how Barbara G. Walker in her excellent book "The Woman’s Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets" describes the mandorla.

     

     

     

    The Agony
    and the Ecstasy

    Based on a novel by Irving Stone, this 1965 movie focuses on the relationship between Michelangelo (Charlton Heston) and Pope Julius II (Rex Harrison), who commissioned the artist to paint the Sistine Chapel ceiling.

    Vesica piscis

    Mandorla, "almond," the pointed-oval sign of the yoni, is used in oriental art to signify the divine female genital; also called vesica piscis, the Vessel of the Fish. Almonds were holy symbols because of their female, yonic connotations.

    Christian art similarly used the mandorla as a frame for figures of God, Jesus, and saints, because the artists forgot what it formerly meant. I. Frazer, G.B., 403

     

     

     
    For further details on the mandorla (also known as the "ya-ya") see my June 12, 2002, note The Ya-Ya Monologues.
     
    A somewhat less lurid use of the mandorla in religious art — the emblem of the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina, taken from the website of St. Michael's Church in Charleston — is shown below.
     

    Friday, September 27, 2002

    Friday September 27, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 11:56 pm

    ART WARS
    on the Feast of St. Edgar Degas

    Edgar Degas died in Paris on September 27, 1917.


    See also today's news stories about the new permanent sculpture exhibit at the National Gallery in Washington, D. C.

    Friday September 27, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 9:59 pm

    ART WARS for the clueless

    Someone's weblog entry for 9/27/02:

    [27 Sep 2002|08:33pm]

    "After a while you learn to cope with things like seeing your dead grandmother crawling up your leg with a knife in her teeth."
    -Hunter S. Thompson

    My comment:

    How to Handle a Thompson
    by m759 2002-09-27 09:05 pm

    "What it all boiled down to really was everybody giving everybody else a hard time for no good reason whatever… You just couldn't march to your own music. Nowadays, you couldn't even hear it… It was lost, the music which each person had inside himself, and which put him in step with things as they should be."

    The Grifters, Ch. 10, 1963, by
    James Myers Thompson
    (born on September 27th, 1906)

    "The Old Man's still an artist
     with a Thompson."

    — Terry in "Miller's Crossing "

    Friday September 27, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 5:10 pm

    Modern Times

    ART WARS September 27, 2002:

    From the Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, October 2002, p. 563:

    "To produce decorations for their weaving, pottery, and other objects, early artists experimented with symmetries and repeating patterns.  Later the study of symmetries of patterns led to tilings, group theory, crystallography, finite geometries, and in modern times to security codes and digital picture compactifications.  Early artists also explored various methods of representing existing objects and living things.  These explorations led to…. [among other things] computer-generated movies (for example, Toy Story)."

    — David W. Henderson, Cornell University

    From an earlier log24.net note: 

     

    ART WARS   September 12, 2002

    Artist 
    Ben
    Shahn
    was
    born
    on
    this
    date
    in
    1898.

    John Frankenheimer's film "The Train" —

    Und was für ein Bild des Christentums 
    ist dabei herausgekommen?

    From Today in Science History:

    Locomotion No. 1

    [On September 27] 1825, the first locomotive to haul a passenger train was operated by George Stephenson's Stockton & Darlington's line in England. The engine "Locomotion No. 1" pulled 34 wagons and 1 solitary coach…. This epic journey was the launchpad for the development of the railways….

    From Inventors World Magazine:

    Some inventions enjoyed no single moment of birth. For the steam engine or the motion-picture, the birth-process was, on close examination, a gradual series of steps. To quote Robert Stevenson: 'The Locomotive is not the invention of one man, but a nation of mechanical engineers.' George Stevenson (no relation) probably built the first decent, workable steam engines…  Likewise the motion camera developed into cinema through a line of inventors including Prince, Edison and the Lumière brothers, with others fighting for patents. No consensus exists that one of these was its inventor. The first public display was achieved by the Lumière brothers in Paris.

    From my log24.net note of Friday, Sept. 13th:

    "Dante compares their dance and song to God’s bride on earth, the Church, when she answers the morning bells to rise from bed and 'woo with matins song her Bridegroom's love.' Some critics consider this passage the most 'spiritually erotic' of all the one hundred cantos of the Comedy."

    From my log24.net note of September 12:

     

    Everybody's doin'
    a brand new dance now…

    Thursday, September 12, 2002

    Thursday September 12, 2002

    Filed under: General — m759 @ 6:41 pm

    ART WARS   September 12, 2002

    Artist 
    Ben
    Shahn
    was
    born
    on
    this
    date
    in
    1898.

    John Frankenheimer's film "The Train" —

    Und was fur ein Bild des Christentums 
    ist dabei herausgekommen?

    Sunday, September 8, 2002

    Sunday September 8, 2002

    Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:24 pm

    ART WARS of September 8, 2002:

    Sunday in the Park with Forge

    From The New York Times obituary section of Saturday, September 7, 2002:

    Andrew Forge, 78, Painter
    and a Former Dean at Yale, Dies

    By ROBERTA SMITH

    Andrew Forge, a painter, critic, teacher and former dean of painting at the Yale School of Art, died on Wednesday [Sept. 4] in New Milford, Conn. He was 78…

    [As a painter] he reduced his formal vocabulary to two small, basic units: tiny dots and short, thin dashes of paint that he called sticks. He applied those elements meticulously, by the thousands and with continual adjustments of shape, color, orientation and density until they coalesced into luminous, optically unstable fields.

    These fields occasionally gave hints of landscapes or figures, but were primarily concerned with their own internal mechanics, which unfolded to the patient viewer with a quiet, riveting lushness. In a New York Times review of Mr. Forge’s retrospective at the Yale Center for British Art in 1996, John Russell wrote that “the whole surface of the canvas is mysteriously alive, composing and recomposing itself as we come to terms with it.”

    Above: Untitled image from Andrew Forge: Recent Paintings, April 2001, Bannister Gallery, Rhode Island College, Providence, RI

    See also

    An Essay on the work of Andrew Forge
    by Karen Wilkin
    in The New Criterion, September 1996

    From that essay:

    “At a recent dinner, the conversation—fueled, I admit, by liberal amounts of very good red wine—became a kind of Socratic dialogue about the practice of art criticism…. There was… general agreement that it’s easier to find the rapier phrase to puncture inadequate or pretentious work than to come up with a verbal equivalent for the wordless experience of being deeply moved by something you believe to be first rate.”

    See also my journal note of March 22, 2001, The Matthias Defense, which begins with the epigraph

    Bit by bit, putting it together.
    Piece by piece, working out the vision night and day.
    All it takes is time and perseverance
    With a little luck along the way.
    — Stephen Sondheim

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