Monday, November 25, 2013

Inspiration Lately: Jeff Gola

I somehow got myself on the Jersey Arts council email list.  It usually has nothing of much interest to me, but for some reason I took a look at the email this month and found some beautiful art!

The newsletter was promoting artist Jeff Gola whose work in on display in several places in New Jersey through the next month or two.

I really love his work, and the simplistic yet mythic quality he gives these very ordinary subjects.  I really captures how I feel when driving through the countryside and looking at the farm buildings, and reminds me of my grandparents' towns.




Day's End at Updike Farm
Prallsville Evening
I think this one is my favorite though:
Lane at the Nursery
Let me know if anyone wants to go see his art in Chelsea!

Monday, November 18, 2013

Progress Report: November

1.  Read Lean In, The Beauty Myth, Survival of the Prettiest, A Handmaid's Tale, and Gone Girl

I haven't made too much progress on this, but I have still got some pages of Survival read.  I think I'm going to focus on getting that one finished before the others.  I am still getting distracted by magazines and television!

2.  Finish reading Anna Karenina and Howards End.
I read the first 5 pages of Howards End, but I keep trying to read it while I am going to sleep.  So a couple pages in, I start to dose off and have to stop.

3.  Learn some basic sewing and alteration.
No progress.

4.  Since we are on the subject of sewing  . . . Go to a tailor.
Trying to figure out how to find a good tailor!  Does anyone know  good site to find services like this where there are reviews?

5.  Get new glasses.
I FINALLY decided to get a pair of frames I looked at in August.  Of course, they are not for sale anymore!  But I found a pair on ebay and bought them!  Now I just have to get the lenses made and put in!  Hopefully I can get that done this weekend.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Sketch: Billy Burke's face

I am always fascinated by the lines and contours of people's faces. One of my English professors had the most amazing lines and bone structure in her face, I remember spending a lot of time in class trying to sketch her face and capture how the different sections of her face fit together in my mind. (She also was a really good professor, it was one of my favorite college classes and she introduced me to Kate Chopin.)

Haha, this is sounding a little weird and kinda serial killery but I promise I like people's faces the way they are!

As an example of what I'm imagining here is a little sketch I did of Billy Burke's face from one of the many times he was being serious on Revolution. It is really hard get the eyes and his awesome frowny eyebows right so I skipped them on this attempt. His hair is also a bit inaccurate and was not as interesting to me. 


P.S. Yes, I watch Revolution.  No, I'm not proud and I am constantly on the verge of quitting it.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

A note on gender swapping (in threatre/literature)

I am frequently interested in gender swapping in the arts, especially in story telling.  I can't understate the number of hours I have spent imagining the gender-swapped production of Les Miserables that I will someday produce when I am rich and famous.  And I'm really excited to be going to see an all-female cast of Julius Caesar next month, and I'm exited to hear about a Manchester theatre company's reimagining of Hamlet where Hamlet is a woman.

I think reversing genders, especially in well-known stories, when done seriously, is a great way to open minds to new perspective and maybe expose just how ridiculous our assumptions about people/characters can be just because of the gender stereotypes we believe in.  For example this.

I've been thinking about this lately because I was randomly reading this blog post (pretty photos!) and thinking about the book Stargirl.  I read it a long time ago when my little sister was in middle school I think, because she had to read it for school, and I think the idea was that is was supposed to be inspirational to young girls and get them to talk about bullying or something.

I really really unimpressed with the book.  It's been a while since I've thought about it, and I definitely wasn't the target audience, so maybe I'm being unfair to it, but as far as I can remember I found the themes borderline vapid, and frankly Stargirl was ridiculous.

Maybe that is the point of the book, and I just didn't get it, but I guess what annoyed me the most about Stargirl's 'non-conformity' was that she was just doing extreme gender performance---- EXTREME niceness, singing to people on their birthdays, decorating her desk with a table cloth, integrating sunflowers into everything, donning different (female) costumes.  Through all of this, the male protagonist learn a lot about himself and becomes a better person.  I know it's blasé to cry manic pixie girl, but it's pretty hard not to in this case.

The above mentioned blog post quotes Stargirl.  The book's male protagonist (classmate and briefly boyfriend of Stargirl) describes Stargirl.  But when you take that description and flip the gender, the description becomes pretty silly and really begins to showcase this very thing that bugs me about Stargirl/Stargirl.
"A strange, otherworldly, yet beautiful creature of a boy who doesn’t quite belong in the world, yet here he is on earth. No one knows quite what to think of him because he’s different. He doesn’t walk, he floats, he doesn’t shine, he glows. He possesses a childlike innocence and naivety like no other; perhaps that’s what makes him different." (emphasis mine)
What ridiculous things to say!  If someone described me like that I would be so offended at the shallow, romanticized, infantilized representation.  It really just sounds like the narrator is describing a Disney princess.  How non-conformist is that in the end?

Monday, October 21, 2013

Progress Report: October

1.  Read Lean In, The Beauty Myth, Survival of the Prettiest, A Handmaid's Tale, and Gone Girl

I have definitely made progress in this area, in that I have started reading both The Beauty Myth and Survival of the Prettiest.  However since my Book Update from Oct 1, I haven't made it much further in either of these books (though I'm about a chapter further in Survival).  I need to get back on track.  I have been a bit distracted by magazines I'm trying to finish reading, my new biography of Jim Henson (!!!), and fall television.

2.  Finish reading Anna Karenina and Howards End.
I officially purchased a used copy of Howards End at the Princeton Public Library book sale for $2.

3.  Learn some basic sewing and alteration.
No progress.

4.  Since we are on the subject of sewing  . . . Go to a tailor.
Although I haven't made any real progress on this, I have thought about it a lot recently.  I was hoping a cousin of mine would be interested in doing some alterations for me, but that doesn't look like it is going to work out.  So I will be asking for tailor recommendations soon!

5.  Get new glasses.
No progress, but again, been thinking about it recently.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Super Clyde!

Thanks to a post by Nylon magazine I heard about this show called Super Clyde that starred Rupert Grint as a generous America twenty-something (with awful siblings and a sudden fortune!) and Stephen Fry as his butler.  Apparently, although the pilot is online, the show didn't get picked up by CBS.  But on the internet, there is always hope?

Check out the (~20 min) pilot episode here on CBS's site.  It is like a younger My Name is Earl with maybe a little touch of Bryan Fuller.