Thursday, May 28, 2009
A Tribute
To Gretchen, our wonderful friend and helper. She played with Orion and Carter so I could get some writing/research done on the days my other sitter had class. The boys were like kittens crawling over each other at first, and by the end they could babble coherently to each other and steal and give toys and share snacks. Good times. We'll miss them. Sad.
Sunday, May 24, 2009
What we've been up-do lately
One morning Orion woke up with a faux-hawk of sorts.
Developments: First drawing action
Dan: "stick 'em up!" Orion: "Be a tree!"
Madrigal-singing with old friends--something I wish I did more of...
Playing with a bouncy ball
Self-feeding (he wields a fork as well):
Begging to go outside, which he does all the time unless he's hungry:
My fellas cooking me dinner:
Orion engages in pretend play, warning us that what he's cooking is "hot."
Next post: either the "before" pictures of the garden or our midway aborted anniversary getaway...
Developments: First drawing action
Dan: "stick 'em up!" Orion: "Be a tree!"
Madrigal-singing with old friends--something I wish I did more of...
Playing with a bouncy ball
Self-feeding (he wields a fork as well):
Begging to go outside, which he does all the time unless he's hungry:
My fellas cooking me dinner:
Orion engages in pretend play, warning us that what he's cooking is "hot."
Next post: either the "before" pictures of the garden or our midway aborted anniversary getaway...
Friday, May 22, 2009
Monday, May 18, 2009
Which would you rather hear about for 20 minutes?
Hi friends and family. Here's what I've been working on lately. Both of my abstracts were accepted for the Renaissance Society of America's conference this year! I can only present one paper, though, so I'll have to choose. Vote for your favorite in the comments!
A Violent Intellectual Allegory: Jacopo de' Barbari's Battle of Men and Satyrs
The ironies of Pollaiuolo’s seminal Battle of the Nudes—colorless violence on paper, bloodless despite exposed skin, mythological tone yet mysterious subject—were taken up in a woodcut by the Venetian painter and printmaker Jacopo de' Barbari. His Battle of Men and Satyrs (1495-7) stages a classicizing battle in monumental scale and showcases a complex, multi-figure composition with the nude male in dramatic action. Perhaps responding to Venice’s wars against mainland enemies in the 1490s, yet set in remotest antiquity, the Battle must have appealed to Jacopo’s humanist audience. Analysis of the Battle alongside Jacopo's subsequent woodcut, The Triumph of Men Over Satyrs (1495-7), the first three-block print, reveals the Battle to be a Renaissance humanist allegory of the struggle between Reason and Lust, Apollonian and Dionysian values, and civilization over barbarity. This fantastic battle, and its resolution in triumph, allegorizes the scholar’s Apollonian ideals verses baser instincts through violence.
ABSTRACT: A Printed Journey to Ottoman Rome: Pieter Coecke van Aelst's Manners and Customs of the Turk
While Western Europeans increasingly traveled to Istanbul during the reign of Suleyman the Magnificent (r. 1520-1566), Pieter Coecke van Aelst’s (1502-1550) ten-block woodcut The Manners and Customs of the Turk (1553) visually documents his own trip in a novel way that shows a sympathetic and multivalent understanding of the Ottoman peoples. Prepared for publication by his widow, the artist Mayken Verhulst, the seven scenes of the print stretch four and a half meters--leading the viewer on a parallel journey--from a rough, treacherous landscape to the civilized grandeur of Constantinople. Moreover, the print offers an early ethnographic study of the daily life of Ottoman peddlers and soldiers, women and children, musicians and dancers, even a triumph-like procession of Suleyman himself, by an artist who had traveled intimately among them. By depicting Constantinople as a new Rome, this work complicates any simplistic broadsheet-influenced view of the Turk as a monolithic barbaric threat.
A Violent Intellectual Allegory: Jacopo de' Barbari's Battle of Men and Satyrs
The ironies of Pollaiuolo’s seminal Battle of the Nudes—colorless violence on paper, bloodless despite exposed skin, mythological tone yet mysterious subject—were taken up in a woodcut by the Venetian painter and printmaker Jacopo de' Barbari. His Battle of Men and Satyrs (1495-7) stages a classicizing battle in monumental scale and showcases a complex, multi-figure composition with the nude male in dramatic action. Perhaps responding to Venice’s wars against mainland enemies in the 1490s, yet set in remotest antiquity, the Battle must have appealed to Jacopo’s humanist audience. Analysis of the Battle alongside Jacopo's subsequent woodcut, The Triumph of Men Over Satyrs (1495-7), the first three-block print, reveals the Battle to be a Renaissance humanist allegory of the struggle between Reason and Lust, Apollonian and Dionysian values, and civilization over barbarity. This fantastic battle, and its resolution in triumph, allegorizes the scholar’s Apollonian ideals verses baser instincts through violence.
ABSTRACT: A Printed Journey to Ottoman Rome: Pieter Coecke van Aelst's Manners and Customs of the Turk
While Western Europeans increasingly traveled to Istanbul during the reign of Suleyman the Magnificent (r. 1520-1566), Pieter Coecke van Aelst’s (1502-1550) ten-block woodcut The Manners and Customs of the Turk (1553) visually documents his own trip in a novel way that shows a sympathetic and multivalent understanding of the Ottoman peoples. Prepared for publication by his widow, the artist Mayken Verhulst, the seven scenes of the print stretch four and a half meters--leading the viewer on a parallel journey--from a rough, treacherous landscape to the civilized grandeur of Constantinople. Moreover, the print offers an early ethnographic study of the daily life of Ottoman peddlers and soldiers, women and children, musicians and dancers, even a triumph-like procession of Suleyman himself, by an artist who had traveled intimately among them. By depicting Constantinople as a new Rome, this work complicates any simplistic broadsheet-influenced view of the Turk as a monolithic barbaric threat.
Friday, May 8, 2009
Mom, don't you think Orion looks like I did when I was his age? At least in this pic?
We dug up the garden for planting today. My friend and next door neighbor will be my garden-partner this year--she has a shady yard and I am so glad to share. I should have had my camera out to take a picture of Orion covered with dirt. He was a good helper, too.
Friday, May 1, 2009
Fifteen Months, or 1 1/4 years
Orion likes exploring--he especially requests to touch things "touch, touch"--and he especially loves to touch dogs.
And spaghetti is a big hit. Note that the blueberry fetish continua. (It was hot, and spaghetti is messy.)
Some clues as to his activities recently--he can carry books, and wayward shoes...
..kitchen utensils and other toys...
...nesting pots inside each other tenderly...
...and other kitchen flotsam...
These are the tracks of the wondrous one-and-a-quarter-year-old! Happy 1/4 birthday, little O!
We celebrated with pizza, too exhausted at the end of the week to cook. Orion loved the olives of the pizza especially.
Yay! = Be a tree! This is my exuberant little boy!
And spaghetti is a big hit. Note that the blueberry fetish continua. (It was hot, and spaghetti is messy.)
Some clues as to his activities recently--he can carry books, and wayward shoes...
..kitchen utensils and other toys...
...nesting pots inside each other tenderly...
...and other kitchen flotsam...
These are the tracks of the wondrous one-and-a-quarter-year-old! Happy 1/4 birthday, little O!
We celebrated with pizza, too exhausted at the end of the week to cook. Orion loved the olives of the pizza especially.
Yay! = Be a tree! This is my exuberant little boy!
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