In the small fishing town of Ísafjörður, Iceland, an exciting development in pedestrian crossing safety has just popped up – almost literally. A new kind of speed bumps has been painted that appears to be 3D by way of a cleverly-detailed optical illusion.
Not only does the innovative design give foot-travelers the feeling of walking on air, but the 3D painting also gets the attention of drivers, who will be sure to slow down their speed once they spot the seemingly floating ‘zebra stripes.’ Icelandic environmental commissioner Ralf Trylla called for its placement in Ísafjörður after seeing a similar project being carried out in New Delhi, India. With the help of street painting company Vegmálun GÍH, his vision of pedestrian crossing signs became a reality.
In 1960, the twenty-nine-year-old Alvin Ailey premièred his landmark work, “Revelations,” with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, the company he’d founded to showcase Black culture through dance. This marked the end of his apprenticeship as a young choreographer who’d grown up revering Katherine Dunham, Lester Horton, Martha Graham, and Jack Cole—American masters with an international perspective. It also launched him into critical purgatory.
From the start, the thirty-six-minute piece, which depicts Black resilience and Christian faith, and is set to various spirituals, was a hit with audiences, both because of Ailey’s preternatural talent for constructing graphic stage pictures and because it took us to church without our having to go to church. You do not need to have been raised in the South, as Ailey was, or to have attended Baptist services, as he did with his mother, in order to understand what he is doing here, particularly in the final section of the piece, set to the triumphant “Wade in the Water.” The dancers, clad in light colors, step high, their backs straight and heads held high, as they walk across baptismal waters toward their own glory. (Stretches of fluttering fabric simulate the water, an effect that Ailey, a magpie by nature, no doubt borrowed from Jerome Robbins, who did something similar to create a river in “The King and I,” in 1951.) But what you are watching is not just a parade of “vertical saints,” as James Baldwin described his churchgoing brethren, but the work of a choreographer who aims to show us how the metaphysical moves.
In “Revelations,” Ailey turns away from Martha Graham’s anxious world of men and women and myth, from George Balanchine’s plotless ballets, and from Merce Cunningham’s brilliant abstract explorations of the body. Here and in his subsequent work, Ailey tells a different story, one in which the music, the Black dancers’ inner lives, and the choreographer’s memories are the narrative. This shift was especially potent—vital—at a time when the Civil Rights Act was still four years away and activists and protesters were being beaten and burned to death. Without pandering to white tastes or shutting white people out, “Revelations” is resolute in its insistence on portraying Black life and community. The only stage performance from that time that is remotely analogous to “Revelations” is Lorraine Hansberry’s play “A Raisin in the Sun” (1959)—the story of a Black family that doesn’t give up, a story for all families.
After “Revelations,” Ailey continued working for almost three decades—until his death, in 1989—choreographing more than seventy dances. You can see some of them live or in archival footage or photographs, and in dialogue with art that Adrienne Edwards, the protean senior curator and director of curatorial programs at the Whitney Museum of American Art, has gathered, in “Edges of Ailey,” the largest and most comprehensive examination of Ailey’s life, work, influences, and inspirations ever assembled. On the museum’s eighteen-thousand-square-foot fifth floor are works by eighty-two artists, including Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, Lorna Simpson, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden, and Alma Thomas, which illustrate and intersect with Ailey’s themes. There are videos of historic performances, and live stagings by the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre and Ailey II in the third-floor theatre. It took Edwards six and a half years to put the show together, but, as she told me this summer, it was a lifetime in the making.
Every curator is a storyteller. And the story that Edwards aims to tell in “Edges of Ailey” is that of Ailey’s many permutations and trajectories—his desire to keep moving forward as a dancer, a choreographer, a teacher, a writer. In the process, she reveals him to have been more culturally important than he is generally given credit for being. Edwards relied greatly on Ailey’s voluminous notebooks and diaries to chart his story, which could not be recounted in a linear way. “What I could do,” she told me, “was relate to things that I found to be illuminating about him, trying to get into a headspace of what it would be like to be a gay man in the nineteen-forties and nineteen-fifties, especially during this moment in his life where you’re founding this thing and coming of age.” Edwards sees Ailey’s literary, theatrical, and intellectual loves as a form of company. In his notebooks, we see him planning and imagining possible projects: a ballet inspired by the life and work of Hart Crane, say, or an exploration of the genius of Federico García Lorca, or of Tennessee Williams—all queer artists who don’t directly appear in Ailey’s dances but who formed a kind of brotherhood in his mind. A lifelong autodidact, he had a deep admiration for writers who were able to speak of their queerness, at least through metaphor. The ultimate metaphor for Ailey was the body, and his work was the language with which to articulate it.
In Ailey’s career, “Revelations” was both a blessing and a curse: a blessing because it kept audiences coming back, and a curse because his subsequent attempts to push against the perimeters of dance—or, more specifically, Black dance—were often measured against that masterpiece and found wanting. Arlene Croce, in her review, in this magazine, of Ailey’s winter 1974 season at City Center—which included “Revelations” and “Masekela Langage” (1969), a work set to the music of the South African composer Hugh Masekela which addresses apartheid—expresses her frustration with Ailey, with his tendency, as she writes, to be “remarkably consistent in trying to capitalize on ‘Revelations’ as if it were a formula success.” She goes on:
The Ailey company is . . . loading up on religious and secular song suites, feeding its audience with a particular kind of material when all that matters is how that material—or any material—is assembled. With musicals slipping badly in recent years, the Ailey has been drawing a lot of people who think of it as a higher substitute for Broadway. They find what they are looking for in only one piece. It doesn’t take them long to discover that “Revelations” is the higher substitute for the Ailey.
Joan Acocella, also writing here, nearly forty years later, observed:
The dancers of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre are thrilling, and the dances they do are mostly sentimental and conventional. There are exceptions, notably the company’s signature work, “Revelations.” . . . This piece is relentlessly programmed by the Ailey troupe. During the present season . . . it closes nearly two-thirds of the performances. The spectators wouldn’t have it any other way. They clap along; they vocalize. At the end, they jump to their feet and shout, and demand an encore (which they get).
In both reviews, it’s the “they” that concerns me; there’s a whole lot of othering going on, like when white people ask why Black people talk to the screen so much during a movie. There’s also the assumption that a work this popular must be easy. Judith Jamison, Ailey’s great star, made this mistake, too. When she first saw the company rehearsing “Revelations,” in 1963, she said, “Oh, I can do that!” Later, as she writes in her autobiography, “Dancing Spirit,” she changed her tune: “Guess what? You try it sometime. The dancers made the movement look easy. It’s not. It takes unbelievable coordination. It takes passion, commitment, dedication, and love to know that every step you do should be infused with 100 percent of yourself.”
The dance world has always been a segregated place, divided as much by class as by European cultural history. Ailey was an uneven choreographer, for sure, but what he wanted to promote with his company was the idea that Black audiences—general Black audiences, like the folks Acocella probably saw applauding “Revelations”—should connect not only with their “ ’buked” and “scorned” selves onstage but with the feeling that performance can be a kind of balm, an embrace.
“Revelations” grew in part out of memories—of the people who made up Ailey’s community, and thus of Ailey himself. He was born in 1931. His birthplace: a little Texas town called Rogers, between Austin and Waco. This is the territory you’ll find in a Katherine Anne Porter story—“He” (1927), say, or “Noon Wine” (1937)—a world that consists of hard earth and mean poverty, a world where Jim Crow is a defining factor. And so is Jesus. Ailey’s parents, Alvin, Sr., and the beautiful and theatrical Lula, met in church and married when Lula was fourteen. Four years later, their only child was born, but the marriage wasn’t working. When Alvin was three months old, his father took off. Then he returned. He was feckless. “He just didn’t have the education to take care of a family,” Lula says in Jennifer Dunning’s rich biography “Alvin Ailey: A Life in Dance” (1996). When Lula expressed her discontent to her father, he told her to stay married; nevertheless, Lula used her sharecropper’s wages to buy train tickets that got her and her son about a hundred and fifty miles away, to Wharton, where Lula picked cotton for a time, accompanied, on occasion, by Alvin. These were years of closeness, of Lula sharing stories from books that she bought on the cheap, and Alvin showing her a house that he dreamed of living in. There was also violence. As Ailey recounts in his autobiography, “Revelations,” which was published posthumously, in 1995:
When I was about five years old, my mother was raped by four white men. She never admitted to me that it happened. She only recently found out that I knew about it. One night she didn’t come home until ten p.m. She usually came home at three or four in the afternoon. She probably had been working in some white people’s kitchen. That was the other kind of work, along with picking cotton, available to black people. It was very clear to me that my mother was crying. She had bruises all over her body. I don’t think she ever told anyone about it except maybe her sisters or friends from church.
Violence can beget violence. The rage that was burned into Lula’s skin—the rage of poverty and abuse—was sometimes turned on Alvin. He recalls in his book that when Lula drank she’d beat him. Alvin’s tears when that happened were evidence not only of physical hurt but of longing: a longing to express how it feels to be wounded, to be loveless. Lula did love him, though, and it showed in all the menial jobs and the small and big humiliations that she endured to support him.
In 1936, she saw a newspaper ad for a job preparing meals for a highway crew eighty miles away, in Navasota. While the five-year-old Alvin stayed with a relative in Wharton, she secured the job, and also found romance with Amos Alexander, a churchgoing Black businessman who was well respected by both Black and white townspeople. Eventually, Lula and Alvin went to live in Alexander’s house.
When Ailey writes, in his autobiography, about his gratitude for the stability of that home and his love for Alexander, who became like a father to him, he seems to rest in a kind of languid joy—the same emotion that one sees and feels at times when watching “Revelations,” which is presented partly from a child’s perspective, particularly in the last section, set on the Sabbath. A big Texas sun shines down on a congregation. Church ladies, sitting on stools in their Sunday best, wave their fans and nod in acknowledgment. These “correct” ladies are joined by their Christian brothers, gentlemen in smart vests, who are a willing, proud audience to the women as they get the spirit and cast off the trials and tribulations of the week. In “Revelations,” Ailey glorifies not only the female body, which most choreographers do, but also the male body, and, more specifically, the Black male dancer, who moves differently onstage than, say, a dancer like Baryshnikov (an Ailey admirer, who appeared in his 1976 piece “Pas de Duke” with Judith Jamison). You can feel that the spotlight is often on the men in Ailey’s work, and his early queer experiences clearly play a part in his artistic story.
In his book, Ailey talks about a twelve-year-old named Chauncey, his best friend when he was eight, and how, one summer afternoon, he and Chauncey were playing by a water tank behind Alexander’s house. It “must have been twenty feet deep,” Ailey writes, “and very slick at the edges.”
The journalism industry today looks strikingly different to the journalism industry of 70-odd years ago, when Billy Wilder’s 1951 masterpiece, Ace in the Hole, rolled into town. But if you think its messages might be outdated, au contraire: like Sidney Lumet’s Network (another vivisectional and scathingly cynical satire of media spectacle), the film remains strikingly relevant and scorchingly hot to the touch, told with cyclonic force and style.
A sensationally smug Kurt Douglas stars as Chuck Tatum, a hotshot city reporter who arrives in a small town hoping to land a story that’ll catapult him back to the big time. He marches into the news desk of a humble rag in Albuquerque, dripping bravado, bragging to the publisher about how he’s been fired from 11 newspapers. It’s clear this guy has burned every bridge, but we assume he’s good at his job.
These early moments establish the script’s cracking wit and wordplay, the film’s writers (Wilder, Walter Newman and Lesser Samuels) imbuing the dialogue with a sharp and salty tang which lays the foundation for some ripping lines and monologues to come. Take Tatum’s summary of his knack for his trade: “I know newspapers backwards, forwards and sideways,” he crows. “I can write ‘em, edit ‘em, print ‘em, wrap ‘em and sell ‘em. I can handle big news and little news. And if there’s no news, I’ll go out and bite a dog.”
Tatum is looking for “that big story to get me out of here”, and finds it when he learns that a local store owner, Leo Minosa (played by Richard Benedict) is trapped inside an old mining cave, pinned down by rocks. Tatum talks his way into the cave, befriends Leo and emerges with his story – an “ace in the hole” and “as big as they come”.
The script – inspired by the attempted rescue of real-life cave explorer Floyd Collins – simultaneously conveys the protagonist’s temperament and character motivations, wrapping them together like a double helix, delivering punchiness and brevity. Tatum thinks he needs a week to make his story a real page-turner, but there’s a problem: Leo might be rescued in 12 hours. Tatum convinces the sheriff to change plans and drill down into the cave from above, stretching out the rescue to around a week. The sheriff obliges, granting him exclusive access to the mine in exchange for favourable coverage; one hand washes the other.
Tatum’s journalistic instincts are bang-on: the story becomes a national sensation and he’s once again the man of the hour. The gathering of huge crowds outside the cave – transforming it into a carnival-like event replete with stalls and a ferris wheel – highlights the lecherous effects of capitalism; the spectacle-hungry public are complicit in whatever happens next. This is one of many evergreen elements of Ace in the Hole; that complicity can now be found in the people who buy trashy tabloids or scroll through race-to-the-bottom content on social media.
Ace in the Hole is sometimes discussed in the context of film noir, but it’s more noir adjacent, with an unforgiving plot trajectory tumbling towards tragic endings for both Leo and Tatum. There’s also the very noirish relationship between Tatum and Leo’s wife Lorraine, superbly played by Jan Sterling with a dangerous and weary energy; like Tatum, she’s lost and longing for an exit. Aesthetically, the film is noirish too, its chalky monochrome compositions emphasising sharpness and starkness.
Wilder brilliantly illustrates how stories can take on a life of their own, spiraling in uncontrollable directions, media industry mechanisms and various political factors exacerbating – even creating – tragedy. It’s in Tatum’s best interests to prolong and sensationalise the story: as he puts it, “Bad news sells best, because good news is no news.” Isn’t it funny how cynical films about the media are the ones that tend to stand the test of time and optimistic, rose-coloured takes on the fourth estate never really caught on?
Ace in the Hole is available to rent on Prime Video and Apple TV+ in Australia, US and UK.For more recommendations of what to stream in Australia, click here
Since 2013, Calico Wallpaper has presented the finest, most immersive wall murals on the market. Their new collection is in collaboration with Kindergarten teacher and Early Childhood Educator Janene Ping. Ping, who maintains a prolific natural dyeing practice, aims to highlight the balance and beauty of nature. Teaching at the Hawthorne Valley Waldorf School for thirty years has given her the insight and sensitivity needed to foster a love for the great outdoors in our little ones. This collaboration features two distinct collections, Alchemy and Enchantment.
Alchemy in Acacia
The Hawthorne Valley Waldorf School is committed to providing children with the tools they need to become aware citizens. During their time, they grow a personal relationship with the natural world, and learn to become an active participant in their local economy. Handcraft and artistry is paramount, essential for humans to truly connect with the earth. Ping, a natural dyer extraordinaire, creates fantastic silk tapestries for The Magical Puppet Tree Theater – which she founded in 1992. Through this joyful medium, she uplifts a collection of fanciful stories often untold.
Alchemy in Rosewood
Alchemy in Marigold
“The dying process reveals a journey in which the unforeseeable enchantment of color unfolds each time the fibers are lifted from the brewing vessel,” notes Ping. “The revelation of unexpected hues is the most rewarding. It’s been a wonderful opportunity and journey to explore my work on a greater scale. Seeing it come to life has been magical.”
Alchemy in Vetiver
Alchemy in Walnut
The Alchemy collection illustrates what the beauty of hand-dyeing does so well: transparent ripples of organic colors splash across the silk, which are then translated into these wall murals. The dye is saturated by different fibers at different rates, allowing for a blooming, watercolor effect. Alchemy is available in seven colorways – Vetiver, Woad, Turmeric, Marigold, Acacia, Walnut, and Rosewood.
Alchemy in Woad
Enchantment in Neem
Enchantment pulls upon the organic lulls and changes in tone that we find constantly in nature. One can almost make out delicate landscapes in the midst of the undulating hues, yielding softly to their neighbors. Enchantment is available in seven colorways as well – Logwood, Allium, Goldenrod, Bark, Neem, Rainbow, and Hawthorn.
Enchantment in Rainbow
Enchantment in Allium
Enchantment in Goldenrod
Enchantment in Bark
“I’m grateful for the hands-on education and experiential learning that The Hawthorne Valley Waldorf School has provided to my children and the other students within the community,” shares Rachel Cope, Creative Director of Calico Wallpaper. “This inspired us to work with Janene to develop Alchemy and Enchantment, offering us an opportunity to give back to the organization that continues to support our children.”
Enchantment in Logwood
Enchantment in Hawthorn
Calico Wallpaper was born out of the notion that art shouldn’t just live in a frame. Balancing background and foreground, texture, color, and finish is a task of endless possibility, ensuring there’s always some new discovery around the corner. Boundless and beautiful, the mesmerizing fullness of a wall mural can add incredible depth and luxury to any space, at any age.
To learn more about the Alchemy and Enchantment collections, visit calicowallpaper.com. To connect with the Hawthorne Valley Waldorf School, visit their website here.
Growing up in NYC has given Aria a unique perspective into art + design, constantly striving for new projects to get immersed in. An avid baker, crocheter, and pasta maker, handwork and personal touch is central to what she loves about the built environment. Outside of the city, she enjoys hiking, biking, and learning about space.
This new incarnation of Book-It will not be a producing company. They are not hiring a staff or planning a full season. You cannot buy a subscription. They’re starting with one show, a co-production running Oct. 10-20 at Vashon Repertory Theatre. After that? They’re not sure yet. – Seattle Times
Sea Beach by Ismail Ferdous, at Palazzo Palmieri, a 16th century palace, revisits the photographer’s childhood holidays and takes a humorous and modern look at Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar beach. PhEST, the international festival of photography and art, is at various venues in Monopoli, Italy, until 3 November
East African industrial metal, head-popping techno, walloping bassline, filthy jungle, improvised minimalism and experimental pop. With DJ sets, gigs, art installations and exhibitions stretched across Sheffield and Rotherham, this year’s No Bounds festival feels, and sounds, weightier than ever.
It begins in Sheffield Cathedral, where 10-piece Emergence Collective stir things to life with a beautifully subtle yet hypnotic performance of stripped back instrumental minimalism. Tara Clerkin Trio offer up an incredibly sparse, slightly woozy, yet quietly groove-locked set, with both acts thoughtfully leaning into the vast space, allowing silences and pauses to ring out.
Later, in the pounding darkness of Hope Works – the festival’s main hub in a former gun barrel factory in deepest industrial Sheffield – subtlety and restraint are of less interest to Kenyan techno-metaller Lord Spikeheart, whose set is an assault of guttural screams and pulverising beats, before Sheffield’s own grime MC Coco puts on a masterclass of dizzying flow.
The range of daytime activities is impressive, from projected artwork responding in real time to the River Don, to sonic experiments with lucid dreaming and musical archive explorations spanning pirate radio and the miners’ strikes. Back at Hope Works in the evening, re:ni delivers a slick yet ever-shifting set of bass-heavy club hitters before Batu riotously runs the gamut from searing techno to R&B at a volume so intense you have to check your organs are still intact once it’s over.
Now in its seventh edition, No Bounds already had the party element of the festival locked down, and it remains a buzzy, buoyant and characterful place to let rip until the sun comes up. But it feels like a festival that’s swiftly evolving: its ability to factor the physical environment into its programming – from DIY venues to African-Caribbean community centres via castles, cathedrals, chapels and galleries – combined with its mushrooming arts offerings and increasingly genre-fluid lineup results in its most varied and expansive offering to date.
In my latest novel, The Colony Club, I begin with one character, Daisy Harriman, in 1968, just her and a young reporter as she looks back over her life. She’s old, subdued but proud of her achievements. It’s an intimate scene, only two people in the spotlight.
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That scene cuts to a much more dynamic Daisy, a young woman, perturbed by being refused a room at the Waldorf unless her husband accompanies her. She enters her drawing room in a whirlwind of consternation, even her skirts are agitated, choreographed to enhance her entrance.
She confronts two seated, complacent men who are sympathetic but more interested in the evening newspaper. She moves against their static complacency, her chagrin changing to anticipation of a new plan in word, movement, and expression. She finishes center stage in an exuberant solo/recitative.
When I retired from dancing professionally and stumbled into a career as a writer, I soon began to make connections between these two worlds—one athletic with literal applause at the end of the night, and the other sedentary, solitary, and mostly lacking in standing ovations.
Dancers and writers understand communication, revel in the creative process, and although the external application of our creativity may be very different, beneath the surface they share much in common. For me, writing has become a perfect extension of a career that has moved from ephemeral performance to lasting portrayal.
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Community/ Corps de Ballet
One of the first times I became aware that my background in dance influenced my writing was in the choreography of groups of people in a scene. My background taught me that a community (corps de ballet) can enhance, not clutter, the story or the development of the main characters.
Dancers and writers understand communication, revel in the creative process, and although the external application of our creativity may be very different, beneath the surface they share much in common.
In fiction this is community, what is sometimes called the ordinary world, where characters are interacting in relative harmony. It “sets the stage” for what is to come.
On stage it’s very important for every “body” to be in the right space, in order not to bump in to each other or cause bottle necks or pile ups when dancers are on the move. There’s even a rule when lines are crossing each other, that the people on stage right always cross in front (downstage) of the people on stage left.
This avoids that back and forth skitter, often seen in Romcom “meet-cute” when the protagonists are trying to get through the door at the same time, which may be fine in literature, but can cause a nasty accident and injurious domino effects in a charging corps de ballet.
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There are times when dancers are placed in sightlines forming a symmetric or pleasing experience. Other times when they are used to create movement, or emotion; used in large groups to express strength, menace, or jubilation; broken up to represent chaos; or held in stasis to provide a neutral backdrop for the primary and secondary characters to perform before.
Protagonists and Principals
Like many dancers, I’m a visual learner. We watch, we imitate, we make it our own. We are sometimes the protagonist (principal), sometimes the secondary characters (soloists), or in the corps or chorus.
The principals, soloists, and chorus don’t all try to dance in the same space, at the same time, with the same amount of energy; neither should characters. Each deserve a place and a space, but they should exist where they can be most effective. They can be introduced in different orders, in different groups, but their roles need to be made clear. It takes more than a red tutu for the principal to command the stage.
Propelling a plot or interpreting a musical theme benefit from the same elements of construction. We introduce the characters/movements to the stage. Who are they?
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Sometimes the dance/fictional characters portray life characters; sometimes they portray ideas and modes in the abstract. Generally the protagonist/soloist are introduced in a way so that we know the story/dance is about them. They’re highlighted; the writer lets the readier spend time with them so that we recognize them as central to the event.
In writing the protagonists interacts with secondary characters, (friends, enemies, people she works with). In dance the principal is backed by soloists, sometimes interacting with them. Like secondary characters, they have a place in the story/dance.
Neither usurps the place of the protagonist/principal. Sometimes they interact; sometimes they serve as backup. They even have their own moments to develop while the protagonist is off stage.
Rhythm
Like the swells of music or the climaxes of a musical theme, stories rise and fall as they move closer to a satisfying end. In the same way dancers dance “with” the music, or sometimes in counterpoint, characters in a novel rise and fall with the rhythm as the story unfolds. They are often introduced living in harmony with their community.
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But continuous harmony does not make a choreographed story, or a written one. Characters will argue, love, stand up against their fellow characters, forge ahead, sometimes rejoining, sometimes rejecting them.
In a similar way, dancers use smooth movements or staccato disjointed actions to display different emotions, or in response to the music, building power when joining with supporting characters; other times singular and isolated, rebelling against the community. Whether in ensemble or solo, they are all the while moving toward a dynamic finish.
Emotion
On stage, emotion is immediate, physically interpretive. Arms outstretched can be joyful, beseeching. A curved torse can be sad, afraid, pained, secretive. Sometimes the movement is large, overdone, sometimes subtle, according to what is needed.
It’s the same in writing: page space, intensity of language, finding just the right amount of verbal expression to depict the scene with just the right amount of attention or communication. Getting to the gist of the scene without going too far and killing it.
When a scene isn’t quite right, when the balance seems off, or the focus doesn’t focus, I call on the skills I learned as dancer and choreographer.
When a scene isn’t quite right, when the balance seems off, or the focus doesn’t focus, I call on the skills I learned as dancer and choreographer. Whether it be a single character, huddled in the rain, or a mob of angry protesters outside a proposed women’s club, that training guides me to a different perspective, one which very often is the key that makes the combination of words, story and movement fall seamlessly into place.
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The Colony Clubby Shelley Noble is available via William Morrow.
Edifice Upstate is redefining sustainable living in the Western Catskills with its latest architectural venture, Hillcrest House. Specializing in the design and development of eco-conscious, solar-powered homes, Edifice Upstate merges modern design with cutting-edge green technology, offering residents a unique opportunity to live in harmony with nature. The company, led by Marc Thorpe, an award-winning architect, and Claire Pijoulat, co-founder of WantedDesign, aims to provide affordable, self-sufficient housing solutions for those looking to reduce their environmental footprint without sacrificing comfort or style.
The heart of Edifice Upstate’s vision is the belief in self-reliance and a lifestyle integrated with the environment. This ethos is embodied in Hillcrest House, a solar-powered home perched on a secluded hilltop, surrounded by forest while still being conveniently close to the upstate hamlet of North Branch. Designed with simplicity and balance in mind, the home, which is just two hours northwest of New York City, offers a tranquil escape, with modern conveniences and sustainable features seamlessly woven into its architecture.
Hillcrest House is powered by an impressive solar array, boasting sixteen panels that ensure the house operates independently of the grid. With a battery storage system that can sustain the home for up to five days, residents can rely entirely on solar energy without needing backup generators. This commitment to sustainability doesn’t stop at power generation – the home’s design incorporates efficient use of space, with features like polished concrete floors, high ceilings, and open-plan living areas that create a feeling of spaciousness within a modest footprint.
The property, which spans five acres, offers more than just a place to live – it provides a gateway to the surrounding natural beauty of the Catskills. From the expansive sundeck, residents can soak in the sweeping views of the forested landscape, or venture further into the wild to discover apple trees and a tranquil creek nearby. The home’s location serves as a perfect launchpad for outdoor activities like hiking, fishing, and biking, while remaining close to local dining, shopping, and cultural attractions.
The open interior is centered around a wood stove, which heats the entire home. Framed views of the lush trees can be seen whether sitting on the sofa in front of the fire or around the dining table during a meal. Just outside the series of sliding glass doors, a wraparound wooden deck extends the usable square footage during warmer months.
Polished concrete floors unify the interior, while select wood clad walls warm the mostly white space. A short hallway leads to three bedrooms, a full bathroom with walk-in shower, a powder room, and a pantry/storage space. A separate utility room holds the home’s utilities needed to keep it running, like the solar battery bank, water heater, electric panel, and pressure tank.
Caroline Williamson is Editor-in-Chief of Design Milk. She has a BFA in photography from SCAD and can usually be found searching for vintage wares, doing New York Times crossword puzzles in pen, or reworking playlists on Spotify.
Korean art has a place of honor in any museum’s Asian wing, but it may still struggle to free itself from the intoxicating presence of China and Japan. What can match their legacy in ceramics and ink—or in portraiture and landscape?
What can match their art’s restless hands and sensation of contemplation and rest? Would it help to include recent art, as a point of departure into the past? The Met does just that in its Korean gallery, as “Lineages,” through October 20. The result, though, says more about the present than its ancestry. It also confirms a disturbing trend in museums today. I also work this together with a recent report on Korean art at the Guggenheim as a longer review and my latest upload.
More, and more, museums of art history consider themselves homes to modern and contemporary art as well—and it can cost them, as the Met learned in leasing the Met Breuer. One can see the appeal. Collectors must like a confirmation of their tastes, and that can translate into donations and gifts. The public may like a change from that boring old stuff others call art, and that, a museum hopes, can translate into attendance. Still, it takes money, too, and it can positively detract from older art. The Met’s modest Korean gallery has room for just thirty-two works, and now half are contemporary.
Who knew that Korean and Korean American art so much as had a deep past? Such luminaries as Lee Ufan and Byron Kim have a more obvious debt to Minimalism. (Hmm, maybe artists do not have to be “original” after all in order to stand out, now or long ago. They need only be aware of their world.) The Guggenheim situates Korea of the 1970s in a drive toward youth and experiment. At the Met, Nam June Paik proclaims that Life Has No Rewind Button, and a pioneer of video art should know.
Yet they do have a past, more than you ever knew. Ufan’s abstraction appears right after Bamboo in the Wind by Yi Jeong from more than seven hundred years ago and Blood Bamboo by Yang Gi-hun in 1906. Their vertically descending stains become his descending blues. It is From Line at that, surely a call-out to those who have worked in ink. And then come ink and gouache on paper strips by Kwon Young-woo in 1984 and a wild web of ink lines by Suh Se Ok in 1988.
Kim, in turn, has two monochrome panels in deep green, as abstract as one can get. Yet its glazes echo the materials that convert white porcelain into the paler green of celadon. Older Korean art perfected both. Their polish contrasts with the endless invention of Japanese ceramics, on view out in a corridor overlooking the Met’s great hall. I have my doubts about Kim, but other contemporaries have been eyeing the serenity and symmetry of older “moon jars” for sure. Seung-taek Lee makes his own in 1979, with the illusion of a bit of rope on top to tie it up, while Kim Whanki paints one as far back as 1954, in yellow on a red pedestal against soft green.
Of course, a jar may be the subject of still-life or a thing in itself, and the Met dedicates the gallery’s four walls to line, persons, places, and things. (Well, that should cover it.) It sounds innocuous enough, although line can become landscape, and landscape can take one to freely imagined places. Park Soo-keun in 1962 lingers over women beneath a tree, in textured oil, at once people and places. The most prominent person, a woman scientist from Lee Yootae in 1944, owes more to mid-century realism and a growing appreciation for professional women than to tradition. And sure, jars become things, at the center of the room, with two by Lee Bul in 2000 as the foot and pelvis of a cyborg.
One can still value a golden age that lasted nearly a millennium, until Europe sailed right in. Indeed, one had better. Where Chinese art once admired those who gave up power to stand outside of place and time, Kim Hong-joo in 1993 creates a layered, divided landscape, which the Met sees as commentary on a divided Korean peninsula. I prefer to think that Hong-joo got it right, but the Met still gets it wrong. Does my resistance to the contemporary make more sense in Asian art, which so often provided a greater tranquility? I just hate to see the past crowded out and forgotten.
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Folk artist Julie Pace Hoff presents a delightful portfolio of classic paintings that celebrate family and tradition. See more on her website.
“Autumn American Farm” acrylic, 20″ x 30″
My paintings are about the American family. I portray the connection, love and enjoyment we have for each other by painting every day, and memorializing special events in America.
“Home Is Where The Flag Is” acrylic, 20″ x 30″
My style is described as Americana folk art. Simplistic, yet my paintings are complex in color theory, composition and a flattened perspective. I used the traditional color paint palette in my first years of painting.
“Contemplating Serration” acrylic, 20″ x 30″
Recently, I have started using seven fluorescent acrylic colors, plus black and white, to challenge myself in color theory. I am creating bright paintings in the Americana folk art style, new to the earthy colors of the traditional Americana folk art community.
“Landscape Farm In Snow” acrylic, 20″ x 24″
My painting technique incorporates impasto, stippling, and glazes. I like to see the painting’s textures, patterns, and drawing take the viewer’s eyes throughout the painting. The viewer’s eyes never have to stop.
“Searching Lighthouse” acrylic, 10″ x 15″
My goal is to have my paintings bring smiles to viewers’ faces. To evoke memories of past and present times with family and friends. I would also like viewers, for just a moment, to leave reality behind and escape to a fun, wholesome, idealistic, and imaginative place.
“Haunted Halloween Cookie Town” acrylic, 20″ x 24″
I’d like to stimulate conversations of happy times. I like to think that if you look closely at my paintings, you will see your family smiling back at you.
“Surf Shop” acrylic, 20″ x 30″
My artistic journey has prevailed over many decades. I’ve continued to learn many creative, spiritual and humanity lessons. I hope these lessons are reflected in my paintings.
“Santa’s New Sleigh” acrylic on wood, 24″ x 24″
I was very fortunate to be artistically trained at The Art Center College Of Design in Pasadena, California, where I graduated in January of 1983. Now I work with two online art galleries, Singulart in Paris and Saatchi in California. I also work with licensing agent Grateful Licensing, who licenses my painted images for products.
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Beaucoup de photos pour la plupart déjà vues sur le net ou dans les livres et magazines, photos auxquelles les graffeurs donnent force et vie. Une expo à voir comme une reconnaissance envers tous les photographes qui documentent l'histoire du graff.
Paradoxalement le plus intéressant de l'expo sont les installations simples et efficaces des Nawas et de Tripl / Furious, pour elles la visite s'impose.