Probably the most interesting and depressing fact about Francesca Woodman is that all of her work was created while she was an undergraduate. She killed herself at the age of 22.
Francesca Woodman has been called a modernist, a surrealist and, even, a gothic artist. Her work carries echoes of all three traditions, but it evades categorisation. As a young woman, she photographed herself obsessively but often she appears as a blur of movement or a half-hidden figure, someone constantly trying to escape or hide. The end result is not self-portraiture, but a series of stills from a continuous performance in which she plays with the notion of the self, disguising, transforming and defacing her own body.
At Victoria Miro, around 50 of Woodman's photographs – small, old-fashioned-looking prints that seem to belong to a much earlier time – pay testament to a short, but creatively productive life. It ended, while still in full flow, when she threw herself off a building in New York in January 1981, following a long bout of depression. She was just 22, but left an archive of some 800 images, many of which have still not been seen.
Like Sylvia Plath, Woodman is an artist whose death has often impinged on the various readings of her work, imbuing these already complex images with another layer of mystery and, in some cases, foreboding. In a series of photographs she made in the mid-70s, when she was a student of photography at Rhode Island School of Design, her blurred, shadowy self is spectral, ghost-like.
It seems unlikely, though, that Woodman was prefiguring her own death in her work, rather than playing with themes of identity and with the role that photography, and in particular portrait photography, can play in constructing a fixed – and therefore false – identity.
Sometimes she dresses up like the heroine of a Victorian novel – she collected vintage clothes long before it was fashionable – or as Alice about to disappear through the looking glass. In one famous image, she stands alongside two other naked women, each of them concealing their face behind a photograph of her face, while a different Francesca Woodman face, in a self-portrait pinned to the wall, gazes out at us too. As an exercise in undercutting the objectifying gaze of the camera, it is both provocative and playful. There is a mischievous imagination at work here, too, that has often been overlooked in critical studies of her work.
Seeing so many photographs of Woodman, mostly naked, often posing in empty rooms with peeling paint and fading wallpaper, is a slightly disconcerting experience, though. It's not just that she becomes more elusive the more photographs you see, it's more the tightrope walk she takes between an almost adolescent self-obsession and artistic self-exploration. There are echoes in her work of older photographic, as well as artistic, traditions. Her nudes often recall Bellocq's haunting Storyville portraits of New Orleans prostitutes. One startling photograph of her legs bound tightly in ribbon or tape, her hand holding a striped glove that rests between her legs, has traces of the disturbing doll photographers of the German surrealist photographer Hans Bellmer.
For all that, there is a consistency to Woodman's vision that is almost a signature of sorts, and, as such, rare in one so young. The handful of coloured prints made near the end of her life are beautiful in their own way – softer in tone and almost painterly in their use of colour – but they highlight the importance of black-and-white film in her work, how it makes her locations more mysterious and, yes, gothic, but also more intimate. The prints are small but that, too, adds to their atmosphere, their shadowy but powerful presence.
One cannot help but leave this show with a sense of regret for what might have been, though. The earliest photograph here was taken in Boulder, Colorado, in 1972. It is called simply Self-Portrait at Thirteen. In it, the young Woodman is fully clothed, her long hair entirely concealing her face, her left hand pressing a shutter lead that extends in a blur towards the camera – and us. It is as mysterious and elusive as any of her later nudes or performance photographs, and tells us that, even at 13, Woodman had found a way to hide in front of the camera, and, in doing so, had also found her abiding theme. Nearly 30 years after her death, she is still hiding from us in full view, as elusive and beguiling as ever.
BANG BANG
Monday, March 14, 2011
WORDS
Words is an absolutely amazing video that plays off of our mind in ways that I didn't know were possible. It finds paths within our mind and associations we make instantly and makes them literally constantly. I had to watch the video twice because I didn't understand what the point was at the start of my first round with it. Now I find it so clever and I love that it is so fast paced and still completely readable. The video clips themselves are not all spectacular but the concept behind the video is really what drives it. Illustrating the fact that it has to be a good idea first before any technical aspects come into play for a piece to be considered successful.
play
play
play play blow
blow
blow
break
blow up
break
brake
break up
split split
banana split
7-10 plait
run run seam
runny nose
running paint
running faucet
run read light
run away
Made by Everynone
play
play
play play blow
blow
blow
break
blow up
break
brake
break up
split split
banana split
7-10 plait
run run seam
runny nose
running paint
running faucet
run read light
run away
Made by Everynone
Grizzly Bear Music Video
I don't know if you have had the pleasure of seeing this music video before but it is absolutely amazing! I don't think clay has ever made me so uncomfortable and intrigued. The combination of still images in the opening and intermixed throughout the video gives a very un easy and ungrounded perspective that is only further developed when all of the characters morph and turn into things that are unpredictable. I can't take my eyes off of the blending colors and my mind wants, or even needs, to know what's going to happen next.
Grizzly Bears seems to always push the envelope when it comes to music videos which I think is wonderful. They always seem to have some refreshing perspective on a way to reiterate the tonality and content of their music. I love them as musicians but after seeing their music videos I respect them more as people.
Lyrics:
I’m gonna take a stab at this
Surely we’ll be alright
Make a decision with a kiss
Maybe I have frostbite
And when I shuffled on back home
I made sure all my tracks in the snow were gone
Tissue and bone it was a tryst
This isn’t a gunfight
Checking it off of my list
Unable to write
Five years, countless months and a loan
Hope I’m ready, able to make my own, good home
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did,
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did.
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did,
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did.
::vocalizing::
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did,
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did
Surely we’ll be alright
Make a decision with a kiss
Maybe I have frostbite
And when I shuffled on back home
I made sure all my tracks in the snow were gone
Tissue and bone it was a tryst
This isn’t a gunfight
Checking it off of my list
Unable to write
Five years, countless months and a loan
Hope I’m ready, able to make my own, good home
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did,
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did.
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did,
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did.
::vocalizing::
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did,
They go we go, I want you to know, what I did I did
Cough syrup? That's a dumb way to get loaded, Jack.
MORE Darjeeling Limited
Back to Anderson's take on the family dynamics I guess. In the Darjeerling Limited the story takes place on a train traveling through India centered on the journey of three brothers- Jack, Peter, and Francis. Francis has called the other two brothers to India for a spiritual healing experience to bring them closer as brothers. In the long run and thanks to circumstances out of their control this does happen but not in ways any of them intended. There is a sense of desperation for that typical and stereotyped family connection from Francis while the other brothers- Jack and Peter seem content living their own lives knowing that their family is dysfunctional. The last time the brothers were together was at the father's funeral which had a massive impact on them while their mother fled the entire situation and didn't even attend.
All of the brothers have quarks about them. Peter, played by Adrien Brody, has a pregnant wife at home that he has not yet faced the fact that he himself will become a father and run the risk of creating children with the same issues that he has. Jack is a hopeless romantic stuck in a destructive cycle.

While all these aspects of family seem depressing Anderson somehow makes them into perfect satirical moments that are relatable and incredibly entertaining. Greatttt movie.
P.S. Louis Vutton made the luggage especially for the film
I wonder if the three of us would've been friends in real life. Not as brothers, but as people.
Wes Anderson is most likely one of my favorite directors. The Darjeeling Limited is most likely one of my favorite movies. Here is why....
The movie opens with a 'mid sentence' romance between Jason Schwartzman and Natalie Portman. I love how Anderson shows a completely developed relationship that is so dysfunctional and relatable all at the same time. Plus Natalie Portman is a saucy mysterious woman that you can help but love and being set in Paris makes the entire scene timeless.
Then as the plot of the main story begins to unfold Anderson has a poetic style of introducing his characters as always. The scene opens with Bill Murray racing to a train station only to be left behind as Adrien Brody runs with his Louis Vutton matching luggage that was once his fathers. See the video here. Brody's character has only been on the screen maybe 30 seconds and hasn't said a word but still you know something about him as a person.
As always in Wes Anderson movies the films are driving by an amazing soundtrack and the study of family dynamics. The Darjeeling Limited is no exception with songs like Where Do You Go To by Peter Sarsted, This Time Tomorrow by the Kinks, and Play with Fire by the Rolling Stones.
...to be continued.
The movie opens with a 'mid sentence' romance between Jason Schwartzman and Natalie Portman. I love how Anderson shows a completely developed relationship that is so dysfunctional and relatable all at the same time. Plus Natalie Portman is a saucy mysterious woman that you can help but love and being set in Paris makes the entire scene timeless.
Then as the plot of the main story begins to unfold Anderson has a poetic style of introducing his characters as always. The scene opens with Bill Murray racing to a train station only to be left behind as Adrien Brody runs with his Louis Vutton matching luggage that was once his fathers. See the video here. Brody's character has only been on the screen maybe 30 seconds and hasn't said a word but still you know something about him as a person.
As always in Wes Anderson movies the films are driving by an amazing soundtrack and the study of family dynamics. The Darjeeling Limited is no exception with songs like Where Do You Go To by Peter Sarsted, This Time Tomorrow by the Kinks, and Play with Fire by the Rolling Stones.
...to be continued.
All warfare is based on deception.
Sun Tzu's "the Art of War" is an amazing manuscript that is a translation of a late 6th century B.C. Chinese generals military strategies. The book reads like a list and at a glance seems like it is strictly about literal warfare. However, after reading a few chapters you realize how you can apply this way of thinking to every aspect of your life. Relationships at work, home, and yes, even in today's military strategies.
When their substance is drained away, the peasantry will be afflicted by heavy exactions.
In war, then, let your great object be victory, not lengthy campaigns.
The rule is, not to besiege walled cities if it can possibly be avoided.
Therefore the skillful leader subdues the enemy's troops without any fighting; he captures their cities without laying siege to them; he overthrows their kingdom without lengthy operations in the field.
Hence the saying: If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat.
Hence the saying: One may KNOW how to conquer without being able to DO it.
Coudst thou let 'em know what they're in for Ain't good for you or me or them
Chris Thile is a world renowned mandolin player and composer. He started playing music when he was a small child and even caught the attention of one of the members of Led Zeppelin at a very young age.
He has always had a passion and a creative flair for putting his own style on everything he plays. Thile started out in a band called Nickel Creek with Sara and Sean Watkins (actually pictured above with Thile center playing the guitar) He has had a few side projects and always seems to be up for a collaboration with other artists. He has had the 'How to Grow a Band' project and he is currently very involved with the Punch Brothers.

Chris always pays respect to those who have paved the way in music. He frequently covers Bach pieces and is ABSOLUTELY AMAZING.
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