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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Anna Karin

Art Appreciation

I came across Sweden born artist Anna Karin's work in a magazine a few weeks ago while visiting New Mexico. When I visited her website, http://annakaringallery.com, I knew why I appreciated her work.

What caught my attention was the realism in her paintings, such as the work I came across in the magazine called "Lace memory", a painting of a lace shirt on a hanger against a plastered wall.









Source: http://annakaringallery.comthe essential guide: Santa Fe & Taos, 2011 - 2012, 22 Edition.


Sunday, May 13, 2012

Scott Naismith

Art Appreciation

I stumbled upon Scottish landscape painter Scott Naismith's YouTube page a few weeks ago. Since then, I've been educated by his tutorial videos on color theory and sketch and painting demos.

The demos are time lapse with music, so it makes viewing more entertaining, such as this demo:


Friday, May 11, 2012

TIME Magazine asks: "Are you mom enough?"

Yesterday morning, an Austin radio station discussed this month's Time Magazine cover of a three-year-old suckling from his mom's breast with the headline question "Are you mom enough?" 

Attachment parenting, as coined by Dr. Bill Sears, which the article is about, argues the importance of setting that emotional bond between the mother and child to help in the socio-emotional development in life.

Dr. Bill followers practice breastfeeding beyond 1 year of age. But how long is too long? And even if the mother doesn't practice extended breastfeeding, does that make her less of a mom as the Time Magazine cover suggests?

The radio station received several calls regarding this cover. A pediatrician called in and shared his concerns regarding Dr. Bill's theory, and argued that there are no nutritional benefits on extended breastfeeding for the child.

Jamie Lynn Grumet, the cover model mom appeared on ABC NEWS defending her breastfeeding cover. You can watch the interview HERE.

Source: http://lightbox.time.com/2012/05/10/parenting/#1; http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2114427,00.html?pcd=pw-lb; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attachment_parenting; http://shine.yahoo.com/parenting/jamie-lynne-grumet-defends-her-time-magazine-breastfeeding-180300346.html

Sunday, May 6, 2012

The Cult - Love Removal Machine

Music Appreciation

Released 25 years ago and listed as a top 100 hard rock song of all time by VH1, we were introduced to Love Removal Machine.

With lyrics such as "Fall to the red room, Because she was there, A scarlet woman, She got me in fear," many were led to believe the song was about a prostitute. However, in a recent interview article with The Cult's lead singer, Ian Astbury, found that the song was more of a "metaphor for the music industry, corporate mentality, material mindset," the band was experiencing as rock stars early in their career.





Thursday, April 26, 2012

Henri Matisse - La Coiffeur

Art Appreciation

Henri Matisse: La Coiffeur, 1901
When I was doing an internship in Washington, D.C., I spent my Fridays visiting the various museums. One of my favorites, which I visited several times, was the National Gallery of Art.  There I fell in love with art.

I began to appreciate every artist's brush stroke. I looked for patterns. I pictured myself in their painting and tried to feel what they wanted to portray in their work.

I came across La Coiffeur by Henri Matisse. I couldn't take my eyes off of it. I pictured myself, a 21 year old kid from South Texas, in that room watching a beautiful woman fixing her hair in front of a vanity.

I soon became a fan of Henri Matisse and to this day look for his work when visiting other museums.

Born in Nord, France on December 31, 1869, Henri Matisse was a post-impressionist artist known for the dissonant colors in many of his paintings.

His wife, Amelie Noellie Parayre, appeared in a lot of his paintings. Given that they married in 1898, I would make a safe guess that the lady in the painting, La Coiffeur, is Amelie Noellie.


Source: http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/matisse_henri.html; http://www.arthistory-famousartists-paintings.com/HenriMatisse.html; Wikipedia

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Tenochtitlan

According to legend, Tenochtitlan was founded when an Aztec tribe saw the prophetic image of an eagle perched on a nopal cactus eating a snake. 

Located on an island in Lake Texcoco, Tenochtitlan became the capital of the Aztec empire. In the mid-1500s, Tenochtitlan was destroyed and leveled by Spanish conquestadors. 

Lake Texcoco was eventually filled. The Aztec temple dedicated to the principal deity Huitzilopochtli was destroyed. The stones were then used to build the Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary. 

Because of its massive size and due to the clay foundation and water table below, the cathedral is slowly sinking. Recently, while constructing an underground subway, city workers came across remains of Tenochtitlan. You can read another Aztec legend HERE.




Source: 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenochtitlan