• Photos from the Paris uprising in 1848

    Actual photos from the 1848 uprising in Paris – barricades and all! See it on James’ site.

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  • Conceptual art project gone awry

    Beware of art majors whose conceptual projects go a little too far.

    The 21-year-old college student accused of putting pipe bombs in mailboxes in five states told authorities he was trying to make a “smiley face” on the map, a sheriff said today.

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  • Welcome, Gab

    My friend, the fabulously exuberant Gabriella, has joined this little blog world of ours.

    Welcome!

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  • Jonny McGovern

    Hmm… Should this be filed under culture or queer? It’s one of those high/low art kind of things.

    Last night we saw Jonny McGovern, Gay Pimp Daddy/International Gay Teen Pop Superstar, at PS122. We took James’s nephew Peter – the gay psychriatrist nephew – and his friend John. It was great fun, with Jonny and his backup dancers (including one Abercrombie and Fitch model), plus two fabulous draq queens. I think my favorite song was “Hey, Little Raver Boi”. The choreography, by Jonny, Kimmarie Lynch, and Christopher Campell, was hilarious — trashy queer boy band dancing. The costumes for “Raver Boi” included light sticks, visors, and bell bottoms of course.

    It lasts until May 12. Worth a visit I think. The crowd was an interesting mix, including straight boys and their girlfriends. The girls really screamed for the songs about Jonny seducing straight boys. This post-straight world is very interesting.

    We had dinner afterward at my favorite East Village restaurant, Raga — Indian fusion, not really Indian, one block east of the glitter of the 6th Street Little India.

    Side note. Abercrombie’s web site has a music page, including a streaming station? How’s this for an album description:

    Camber attacks with buzzing guitars desperately hung over a rock solid backbeat.

    I just love hung over guitars.

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  • Art Resources opening plus “Blue Surge”

    Last night we went to the opening for 3 shows at Art Resources Transfer — Jonathan Feldschuh, Merrill Wagner, and M. Sovan Kumar. Jonathan also has a show at Cynthia Broan right now. The pottery installation by Kuman is really beautiful, and I LOVED the Merill Wagner works. She rocks, as usual.

    After the opening we saw Blue Surge, by Rebecca Gilman, at the Public Theater. Info on the production in Chicago at the Goodman is available here and here. It seems to be mostly the same cast, and the same director as that production. She has a reputation for writing plays that are a bit didactic, and have their hearts in the right place, but don’t necessarily work as theatre. This is the first play of hers I’ve seen, and I have to agree.

    I think the direction by Robert Falls, and the cast, outshined the play. The cast was uniformly excellent. Rachel Miner was totally convincing as a young woman still in her teens who realizes that working in the local “massage parlor” makes more sense for her than working at Wendy’s. Joe Murphy plays a cop trying to “escape” his background and make something of himself, with Amy Landecker as his middle class artist girlfriend. The other two actors, Steve Key as a goofy, slacker cop, and Colleen Werthmann (member of Elevator Repair Service) as another hooker, are also awesome. We spoke to Key afterwards to tell him how much we enjoyed it.

    The play has its moments, I will admit. The scene between Beth (upwardly mobile) and her boyfriend Curt (who isn’t) is really strong. All of us that came from small, poor towns where most people have dead end jobs and drink too much would find a lot that’s familiar in that scene. He wonders if she stays with him to shock her artist friends, and she’s disappointed that he’s not more successful. After all, she says, anyone who is smart enough and tries hard enough can “make it” in America. I would like to think that, and I’m lucky to be where I am now compared to where I came from, but I don’t think that’s the way the world works for most people. I went to a high school where most people didn’t think of going to college, and thought it was frivolous to do so. I’m glad I escaped, but I can’t really say that I’m “better” than the people who are still there. I’m lucky.

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  • Amusing stuff from SatireWire

    POLICE MUST NOTIFY RESIDENTS WHEN
    CATHOLIC CHURCH MOVES INTO NEIGHBORHOOD
    Controversial “Egan’s Law” Expected to Gain Widespread Support

    See it at SatireWire.

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  • Dürer watercolor

    I was browsing Gombrich’s Story of Art and came across a Dürer watercolor called The Large Turf or “Great Piece of Turf”. It’s from 1502 or 1503.

    Take that, Richter!

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  • Further evidence of our depravity

    Found thanks to Flak:

    Look ma, no crusts.

    Sara Lee wants to take over a duty moms have carried out for kids for decades — slicing the crusts off white bread. The consumer goods giant is touting its new IronKids Crustless Bread as a fresh-from-the-oven idea, coming soon to a bakery shelf near you.

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  • NY Sun has already inspired critical sites

    This amuses me. As one of the people involved with the new paper The New York Sun used to write Smarter Times (which critiqued the NY Times), there are already two similar sites for the Sun: Smarter New York Sun, courtesy of Flak Magazine, and Like Father, Like Sun.

    The two critical sites are more interesting than the Sun. One of my favorite features of Smarter New York Sun is “Wire Watch” — in which they track the number of stories coming from the wire services. It appears that $20 million doesn’t buy much of a news-gathering operation these days.
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  • John Leo says “blogs are good”

    My goodness! John Leo, wacko right-wing columnist for the Daily News, says One vote here in favor of the blogging revolution. Thanks to Andy for the link.

    I didn’t know Tom Tomorrow had a blog! I love him, and read his cartoons (excuse the expression) religiously. James and I met him at a Ralph Nader fundraiser in 2000. That was a great event, at a private home, where we also met Patti Smith, Michael Moore, and Susan Sarandon. We talked with Susan about ACT UP demos we all attended.

    Leo also mentions The Daily Howler, which I will have to add to my list of daily blog viewings.

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