Month: July 2009
-
Annals of...
Light History
Before the Screwing
"Very impressive, Herr Tesla,
but let's not forget the
little man in the boat."
Courtesy of Wired.com:1895: Charles Proteus Steinmetz receives a patent for a "system of distribution by alternating currents." His engineering work makes it practical to build a widespread power grid for use in lighting and machinery alike.
- 7:59 am
- Comments Off
-
Midnight in the Garden continues...
In Memory of
Leonard ShlainFrom Shlain's website,
some news I had not
heard before: Shlain
died on May 11, 2009.
Also from that site:"A celebration of Leonard’s
life will be held on Friday,
May 15th, at 1:00 PM at
Sherith Israel Synagogue...
San Francisco...."In his memory, here is
a link from this journal
on the date, May 15,
of his memorial:
Log24, Jan. 1-15, 2006.See also the tribute film
"A Good Life," by
Tiffany Shlain.- 12:00 am
- Comments Off
-
Annals of...
Mathematics
and Poetry
Click on the image for
some background related
to yesterday's The Aleph
and its link to a 2003
entry, At Mt. Sinai.A related entry on Mt. Sinai
mentions the monumental
treatise by Leonard ShlainThe Alphabet Versus
the Goddess: The Conflict
Between Word and Image.- 8:00 am
- Comments Off
-
Midnight in the Garden continues...
An Aleph for Pynchon
Part I:
A California Sixties version
of Heaven's Gate:
Aleph Sanctuary, by Mati KlarweinPart II:
Log24 entries of April 29, 2009
(esp. the link to Anastasia Ashley)
Part III:
Inherent Vice,
a novel by Thomas Pynchon
to be published in August 2009- 12:00 am
- Comments Off
-
Mathematics and Narrative, continued:
- 11:07 pm
- Comments Off
-
A Memorial...
ReviewOn June 25
in this journal--A Word for AntiChristmas:
"... T. S. Eliot tried to recompose,
in Four Quartets, the fragments
he had grieved over
in The Waste Land."-- "Beauty and Desecration,"
Roger ScrutonToday's word
(thanks to Michael Jackson)--From Log24 on Nov. 12, 2005: "'Tikkun Olam, the fixing of the world,' she whispers. 'I've been gathering up the broken vessels to make things whole again.'"
-- Miriam in Bee Season"Tikkun Olam, the gathering of the divine fragments, is a religious activity.... How do we work for the repair of the world? If we live in a humpty dumpty world, how do we get it all put back together again?"-- A Sunday Sermon
for Yom Kippur
by the Rev. Joshua Snyder
on Oct. 5, 2003
[See also Log24 on that date.]
"... the tikkun can't start until everyone asks what happened-- not just the Jews but everybody. The strange thing is that Christ evidently saw this."-- Martha Cooley, The Archivist
- 10:10 pm
- Comments Off
-
Annals of Philosophy:
Art and FaithVirginia Woolf, The Waves, Harvest Books paperback, 1950, pp. 248-249:
"On the outskirts of every agony sits some observant fellow who points; who whispers as he whispered to me that summer morning in the house where the corn comes up to the window, 'The willow grows on the turf by the river. The gardeners sweep with great brooms and the lady sits writing.' Thus he directed me to that which is beyond and outside our own predicament; to that which is symbolic, and thus perhaps permanent, if there is any permanence in our sleeping, eating, breathing, so animal, so spiritual and tumultuous lives."
Up to the first semicolon, this is the Associated Press thought for today.
Related aesthetic philosophy from The Washington Post:
"Varnedoe's lectures were ultimately about faith, about his faith in the power of abstraction, and abstraction as a kind of anti-religious faith in itself, a church of American pragmatism that deals with the material stuff of experience in the history of art. To understand these lectures, which began promising an argument about how abstraction works and ended with an almost medieval allegory of how man confronts the void, one has to understand that Varnedoe views the history of abstraction as a pastor surveys the flock."
Some Observant Fellow:"He pointed at the football
on his desk. 'There it is.'"
-- The Eater of Souls- Kirk Varnedoe
as football coach
- Kirk Varnedoe
as art historian:
"There it is."
- 3:09 am
- Comments Off
- Kirk Varnedoe
-
ART WARS continued:
Sermon7/01
"He pointed at the football
on his desk. 'There it is.'"
-- Glory Road
See also
Hieron Grammaton
and
Epiphany 2007.- 9:00 am
- Comments Off
Recent Comments