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mr-damon

Last seen: 3 weeks ago

Mr. Damon is a person from Virgin Islands (U.S.)

Est modus in rebus.

  • http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/01/19/news/beijing.1-410...

    Rated Jan 19 2009 2 reviews architecture, china, history, art, news feature iht.com

    The destruction of this 800-year-old city usually proceeds as follows: the Chinese character for "demolish" mysteriously appears on the front of an old building; the residents wage a fruitless battle to save their homes; and quicker than you can say "Celebrate the New Beijing," a wrecking crew arrives, often accompanied by the police, to pulverize the brick-and-timber structure.

    But before another chunk of ancient Beijing disappears entirely, a hospice administrator named Li Songtang can often be found poking around the rubble, looking for remnants that honor what was among the world's best-preserved metropolises until a merciless wave of redevelopment gained the upper hand.

    Since the 1970s, when Mao inspired his Red Guards to pummel every "reactionary" Confucius temple and Ming Dynasty statue they could find, Li has been salvaging architectural remnants and stowing them away, sometimes at considerable risk.

    Manchu hitching posts. Ornate wooden doorways. A giant granite horse that graced an emperor's palace. These and thousands of other objects fill Li's warehouse and spill across the grounds of the hospice he runs in the western suburbs of Beijing.

    Every item has a tale. That Song Dynasty lintel etched with a frenzy of folk scenes? Pulled from a pig sty. The lacquered screen that tells the history of a clan of scholars? Fished from the burn pile.

    The most historically significant items are displayed in his private museum, where every Sunday he can be found leading tours and exhorting people to cherish the old before it is too late. "For 50 years I've been watching the destruction of this magnificent city," he'll say in admonishment. "We've been treating history like garbage."
    http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/01/19/news/beijing.1-410734.php
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  • http://www.sandycarsongallery.com/artists/carter/carter.html
  • Waves on the Turquoise Lake: Contemporary Expressions of Tibetan Art
  • The Dance of Evolution, or How Art Got Its Start - New...

    Rated Nov 29 2007 1 review biology, culture, evolution, art, creativity nytimes.com

    "Ellen Dissanayake, an independent scholar affiliated with the University of Washington, Seattle, offered her sweeping thesis of the evolution of art, nimbly blending familiar themes with the radically new. By her reckoning, the artistic impulse is a human birthright, a trait so ancient, universal and persistent that it is almost surely innate. But while some researchers have suggested that our artiness arose accidentally, as a byproduct of large brains that evolved to solve problems and were easily bored, Ms. Dissanayake argues that the creative drive has all the earmarks of being an adaptation on its own. The making of art consumes enormous amounts of time and resources, she observed, an extravagance you wouldn't expect of an evolutionary afterthought. Art also gives us pleasure, she said, and activities that feel good tend to be those that evolution deems too important to leave to chance.

    "What might that deep-seated purpose of art-making be? Geoffrey Miller and other theorists have proposed that art serves as a sexual display, a means of flaunting one's talented palette of genes. Again, Ms. Dissanayake has other ideas. To contemporary Westerners, she said, art may seem detached from the real world, an elite stage on which proud peacocks and designated visionaries may well compete for high stakes. But among traditional cultures and throughout most of human history, she said, art has also been a profoundly communal affair, of harvest dances, religious pageants, quilting bees, the passionate town rivalries that gave us the spires of Chartres, Reims and Amiens.

    "Art, she and others have proposed, did not arise to spotlight the few, but rather to summon the many to come join the parade -- a proposal not surprisingly shared by our hora teacher, Steven Brown of Simon Fraser University. Through singing, dancing, painting, telling fables of neurotic mobsters who visit psychiatrists, and otherwise engaging in what Ms. Dissanayake calls 'artifying,' people can be quickly and ebulliently drawn together, and even strangers persuaded to treat one another as kin. Through the harmonic magic of art, the relative weakness of the individual can be traded up for the strength of the hive, cohered into a social unit ready to take on the world...

    "After studying hundreds of hours of interactions between infants and mothers from many different cultures, Ms. Dissanayake and her collaborators have identified universal operations that characterize the mother-infant bond. They are visual, gestural and vocal cues that arise spontaneously and unconsciously between mothers and infants, but that nevertheless abide by a formalized code: the calls and responses, the swooping bell tones of motherese, the widening of the eyes, the exaggerated smile, the repetitions and variations, the laughter of the baby met by the mother's emphatic refrain. The rules of engagement have a pace and a set of expected responses, and should the rules be violated, the pitch prove too jarring, the delays between coos and head waggles too long or too short, mother or baby may grow fretful or bored.

    "To Ms. Dissanayake, the tightly choreographed rituals that bond mother and child look a lot like the techniques and constructs at the heart of much of our art. "These operations of ritualization, these affiliative signals between mother and infant, are aesthetic operations, too," she said in an interview. "And aesthetic operations are what artists do. Knowingly or not, when you are choreographing a dance or composing a piece of music, you are formalizing, exaggerating, repeating, manipulating expectation and dynamically varying your theme." You are using the tools that mothers everywhere have used for hundreds of thousands of generations."
    The Dance of Evolution, or How Art Got Its Start - New York Times
  • Stella Im Hultberg

    Rated Aug 21 2007 33 reviews drawing, art, painting, illustration stellaimhultberg.com

    Ho ho! I'd seen one of these paintings on another SU site yesterday, but couldn't find the originating page. SaneAmy saves the day!
    Stella Im Hultberg
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  • Baghdads Blast Wall Murals - Video Library - The New York...

    Rated Aug 11 2007 1 review painting, middle east, iraq, art, video nytimes.com

    Dozens of artists have been painting murals upon the miles of vast concrete blast walls throughout Baghdad.
    Baghdads Blast Wall Murals - Video Library - The New York Times