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Monday, October 18, 2004

Lists of Best of the Bests : Books Movies Music

Lists of Best of the Bests : Books Movies Music

Lists of Bests has links
to best of best lists
for books, movies and music.

Saturday, October 16, 2004

Ivan Hajek : The World's Greatest Accordion Player

Ivan Hajek : The World's Greatest Accordion Player

So you think the accordion player is old-fashioned? That is just a bit of misinformation about what is possible with this instrument.

Want to hear the man we regard to be the world's greatest accordion player?
You have never heard an accordion played like this - and I am a fan of rave and modern music. Turn it up LOUD. This man has the gift of God in him.
This is fabulous stuff - sort of like a one-man orchestra.
It will lift you out of your seat and you will feel the magic of music.

Ivan plays on TV and in concert, but he loves the contact to his audience. I met him on the main square in Munich, where he was playing for onlookers for free, who gathered around in great numbers, even though they did not know who he was.

Take a look at Akkordeonspieler Ivan.Hajek - his pages are available in English, German, Italian, Czech, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Polish, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean.

Make sure you try the samples - his music is out of this world.
Unfortunately, he only delivers his CD's in Germany. But if you like his music, WRITE to him. Maybe that will change.

(cross-posted to the LawPundit, the LexiLine Group and ArtsPundit)

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

Art Blog of Marja-Leena Rathje

Art Blog of Marja-Leena Rathje

There is a nice art blog at

Marja-Leena Rathje


with some good materials on prehistoric art.

Monday, August 30, 2004

Van Eyck, Chandeliers, Perspective and Art History

Did early Renaissance painters use optical tricks to paint with perfect perspective?

See this August 26, 2004 article by Sarah Boxer in the New York Times entitled Computer People Reopen Art History Dispute

Saturday, May 29, 2004

Visual Art Taking Over?


Visual Art Taking Over?

The Weekend edition of the Financial Times, May 29/May 30 2004 - which I was given gratis today at the Frankfurt Airport, thank you! - has an article entitled "Visual art on the rise" in its FT Arts and Weekend section.

The article concludes that the British art audience "has changed forever" in recent eras and that the visual arts are supplanting literature and music because they "seem best equipped to take the pulse of contemporary life, to describe the now".

Where does this put blogs? Should we be adding more pictures?

Monday, January 19, 2004

World's Greatest Sidewalk Art Painter


World's Greatest Sidewalk Art Painter

Go to this link to see some pictures by what we dub the World's Greatest Sidewalk Art Painter bouncechrissy: ***Pictures are back up!***.

The pictures as so 3-D it is hard to believe they are two-dimensional paintings on a sidewalk. This is "modern art" at its best. This guy should be famous - maybe he will be. Nobody seems to know his name- he's an Englishman.

Saturday, January 10, 2004

Speech pauses like you know and uh more frequent among humanities professors


The following article of January 3, 2004 by Michael Erard in the New York Times refers to various studies about speech disfluencies such as "uh" or "um".

Interesting is one study showing that speech pauses such as "you know" and "uh" are more frequent among humanities professors and social scientists. As Erard writes:

But it may be Nicholas Christenfeld, a psychologist at the University of California, San Diego, and other researchers who have come up with the most appealing findings. He counted uhs among professors giving lectures and found that the humanities professors say you know and uh 4.85 times per minute, social scientists 3.84 and natural science professors 1.39 times, which, he said, suggests that humanists have more expressive options from which to choose.

We suspect, however, that it means that the natural science professors are lecturing about more certain factual materials, whereas the social scientists and humanities professors need these verbal pauses to "construct" their statements about things which - in the last analysis - are relatively more uncertain.

Wednesday, January 07, 2004

Mandarin Design Daily:The MEG Blog


Via Mandarin Design Daily:The MEG Blog and Whiskey River (which is a blog with many fabulous quotations) we are led to this quotation, to which we ascribe and have, most of our life:

"Don't ask yourself what the world needs;
ask yourself what makes you come alive.
And then go and do that.
Because what the world needs
is people who have come alive."

- Harold Whitman

Wednesday, December 31, 2003

Pink Floyd - Still the Best?


Is Pink Floyd still the best?

Now led by one of the world's best guitarists, David Gilmour, Pink Floyd seems invincibly perched at the top of the rock heap - at least, that is my impression, as I watch - here in Germany - the ARTE TV Pink Floyd show on December 30, 2003. Great music, especially when you consider Gilmour was born in 1946 - hey, that's my birth year too. Amazing.

But wait a minute, the video is from 1987. Still, great stuff. Will have to get that video.

Saturday, November 29, 2003

ArtsJournal: Blog Central


Arts Journal : Blog Central

ArtsJournal: Blog Central has initiated several exceptional blogs on the arts.

These are:

Culture
About Last Night - Terry Teachout, Arts in New York City
Artful Manager - Andrew Taylor, The Business of Arts & Culture
blog riley - Rock Culture
Straight Up | - Jan Herman, Arts, Media & Culture News

Dance
Seeing Things - Tobi Tobias, Dance

Media
In Media Res - Bob Goldfarb, Media

Music
Adaptistration - Drew McManus, Orchestra Management
Sandow - Greg Sandow, Classical Music
PostClassic - Kyle Gann, Music

Wednesday, November 12, 2003

What movie Do you Belong in?


Here is the result of my movie quiz - really, I hardly ever go to the movies.

CWINDOWSDesktopMoulinRouge.jpg
Moulin Rouge!

What movie Do you Belong in?(many different outcomes!)
brought to you by Quizilla

Most Wanted Works of Art


"The Most Wanted Works of Art", an article by Kelly Devine Thomas at Art News Online, comes via Tyler Cowen and the Marginal Revolution blog.

This article gives a bird's eye view of some trends in art tastes and art desires. Interesting to read for example are the artists that Gates has collected and which oil paintings by private owners are simply "not for sale".

Friday, November 07, 2003

Please Touch the Art


Via the Explorator of Dave Meadows at Yahoo Groups we are directed to an article of November 2, 2003 by Carol Kino at the New York Times entitled Please Touch the Art

As Kino relates, a new method of "virtual" visits of museums can be seen at the Art Institute of Chicago in an exhibition entitled "Dreaming in Pictures : The Photography of Lewis Carroll", a virtual method first organized by Douglas R. Nickel for the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

This method can be called a "virtual book", probably first developed at the British Library in 1998 as a temporary display called "Turning the Pages". That this method is state of the art might even be inferred from David Small's use of small interactive displays for the recent opening in Manhattan, New York City Museum of Sex.

Similar "virtual books" have been used at the Detroit Institute of the Arts by Matt Sikora and then at the Philadelphia Museum of Art for the exhibition "Degas and the Dance".

William Noel at The Walters Art Museum in Baltimore also uses a virtual book to display nine rare books.

The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston (I link here to the School since the museum website is not accessible as of this writing) in its coming Exhibition "Gauguin Tahiti" will also include digital kiosks.

The Museum of Modern Art, New York City, has used virtual-book kiosks.

Look also at the Russian Avant-Garde Book 1910-1934 online.

Tuesday, November 04, 2003

2blowhards.com and lousy Ivy educations


Oh dear, this blog is so good that I am really a bit unhappy to have found it - the time, the time, it will take to read this marvelous stuff.

The two blowhards, Michael and Friedrich, who describe themselves as a "media flunky and arts buff" and an "entrepeneur and arts buff" have a blog called, you might have imagined it from the beginning, 2blowhards.com, which they describe as follows:

"In which two graying eternal amateurs discuss their passions, interests and obsessions, among them: movies, art, politics, evolutionary biology, taxes, writing, computers, these kids these days, and lousy Ivy educations."

To which - I must exclaim - that when the grass is always greener, they could have gone to Nebraska instead. And then they would have noticed they mispelled Freidrich in their template.

Their most recent posting - as of this date of course - is that "We Need a Sociobiological Economics", Friedrich writing to Michael, in a superb discussion - and beyond - of a book by Robert Axelrod, “The Evolution of Cooperation.”

Although they do not say it, it all has something to do with John von Neumann, the greatest mathematician of the 20th century, father of the internal programming of computers and of game theory, a theory which you can reduce to the basic principle that "if all other things are equal, the winner of the game is determined by the rules".

So, do the 2 Blowhards discuss "the rules"? Take a look at their blog.

Monday, November 03, 2003

Out of Lascaux


The culture blog Out of Lascaux not only has some wonderful postings on its own but also has a nice side-bar of links to "Culture Blogs" and we will be examining some of these blogs in the future.

We definitely agree with her statements about "Class Distinctions" as posted by Alexandra on October 27, 2003.
Crass is not class.

It is also good to see links to the real official sites (and not the imitators) for
Lascaux
and
Chauvet

These are among the most stunning sites about ancient humanity on the web.

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