MEP Sunday Visit

Always inspired by the works I see for the first time here.
There are always at least several that stand out, unexpected, in the three floors of the museum divided usually into four themes/photographers.

BIASIUCCI / PALADINOCASA MADRE



 FERRANTE FERRANTI, "ITINERRANCES"





L’ŒIL D’UN COLLECTIONNEUR: SERGE ABOUKRAT, DU CLICHÉ-VERRE À PHILIPPE HALSMAN








COSTA-GAVRAS, CARNETS PHOTOGRAPHIQUES


"How Do You Say..."

The other day I was having a conversation with a friend, in France and in French. I noticed a little while into the conversation that I was struggling more than usual with my vocabulary. Am I tired? Is it the wine? But no, I realized we were talking about things that we had never really discussed before- and so I was being challenged to find words and put together ideas that were not in my current repertoire.

So this made me wonder two things. The first: do we always talk about the same things? Are we always going over the same subjects on different days as time goes on and on? (how boring)

And the second: when I’m having conversations with friends or family in English, my native language, do we also limit ourselves to certain subjects? Limiting our vocabulary and our education by sticking with the same subjects and formats and stories? This would be less noticeable because we don’t question our understanding of our native languages, but it is no less dismaying.

I think that both are probably true. After all, once we know each other there is less searching and wondering. We learn from each other at the beginning and then become part of each others worlds, thus absorbing their vocabulary and their subject matter. If the people in our lives are not very different from us, we don’t have to stretch our minds very far to meet them. If we encounter someone very different it can often be intimidating to have a conversation with them because we can’t participate at the beginning. We have to listen first, and learn.

So we can either stay in a comfort zone of similar people carrying on similar conversations, or we can seek out new people with different experiences and different vocabularies and different conversations. By doing the later, you learn and absorb and are enriched. But you have to be willing to ask questions, to not know everything, to be vulnerable.


But what you get from it is the gratification of a new friend, a new perspective, and new conversation to share with an old friend.

from emerson on transcendentalism
"A man's power to connect his thought with its proper symbol, and so to utter it, depends on the simplicity of his character, that is, upon his love of truth and his desire to communicate it without loss."

Kashmiri Boaters and a beautiful blog

The images from 'Search Kashmir' are so beautiful and rich- so emotional. The post compares the shots of Henri Cartier-Bresson and Brian Brake, a decade apart, and then Brian Braks with Steve McCurry, four decades apart.
I feel like a need to go there and see these bodies in motion.





change

Remember "Her Famed Good Looks"? (HFGL) video

I think they shut down the site a while ago for copyright issues- every editorial listed alphabetically by model, including all the way back to Jean Shrimpton and Penelope Tree.

this is the new home, as a tumbler blog: http://hfgl.tumblr.com/
The experience is very different, not as organized or as focused. You can still search by model if you go to the so-labeled tab at the top. graphically less nice. It's ok.

Maybe best to go way back in the archives. Ignore the Simpsons posts. Unless you like looking at Simpsons stills. But have a look.

Aspriational

I don't like celebrity, but some celebrities just have that thing. I started this collection of images that I love because they are just plain cool.
Starting with Bruce







Gyorgy Kepes

 Don't really know where to begin with this work. I picked up a book while randomly browsing the library at Beaubourg, Centre Pompidou. I trust this process, and patience pays off when you discover something so striking and inspiring. As suspected, I'm not the only one who loves his work so here are some images and sources for more information and examples of his work.
My favorite fact is that he founded and taught at MIT at the Center for Advanced Visual Studies. Not all art is fluff.
please also see this article from the NYTimes for further discussion into the scientific value of his work



follow up post on Moholy-Nagy to come

San Giovanni Battista by Mario Botta

I am really moved to go here:

Switzerland : Ticino Mogno village church San Giovanni Battista designed by Mario Botta




more great images here
and the architect Mario Botta's other funky work
including this: 
WELLNESS CENTRE “BERGOASE”, AROSA, SWITZERLAND 2003-2006
see some of his sketches here
I've also been dying to go to Lausanne. This is what the journey looks like by bicycle:

World Poetry Day


When are words enough? When do they suffice to express
the things inside the gut and inside the mind? Inside the heart.
When taking great care to select them, arrange them, and feel them
swirl around in your throat, slide across the tongue and
exit into the world.

The physical sensations in my body overlap with my emotions
like the boy's outstretched arms grasping at the hen whose explosive
wing pump of liberation cast a shadow monster
on the stucco wall in the bright sun of the southern hemisphere.

Conditional factors can't be hypothesized
we can only watch the bird being gathered back up into the boys retracting arms
or the feathers neaten into a linear vehicle of escape.

for their shadows to fall upon other encounters and
create monsters anew.