It has been reported that Popley Group + Disney Consumer Products will be launching Disney fine jewelry across India.
Useful links:
www.popleys.com
www.disney.in
P.J.Joseph's Weblog On Colored Stones, Diamonds, Gem Identification, Synthetics, Treatments, Imitations, Pearls, Organic Gems, Gem And Jewelry Enterprises, Gem Markets, Watches, Gem History, Books, Comics, Cryptocurrency, Designs, Films, Flowers, Wine, Tea, Coffee, Chocolate, Graphic Novels, New Business Models, Technology, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, Energy, Education, Environment, Music, Art, Commodities, Travel, Photography, Antiques, Random Thoughts, and Things He Like.
Translate
Sunday, May 25, 2008
The Diamond Development Initiative
The Diamond Development Initiative (DDI) has released standards and guidelines for Sierra Leone's artisanal diamond mining sector @ http://www.ddiglobal.org/login/Upload/Standards%20&%20Guidelines.pdf
Useful link:
www.ddiglobal.org
I hope through proper education and dialogue with artisanal diamond miners and their communities, let diamonds become a catalyst for individual and national development.
Useful link:
www.ddiglobal.org
I hope through proper education and dialogue with artisanal diamond miners and their communities, let diamonds become a catalyst for individual and national development.
New Rough Diamond Regulations
New U.S. regulations governing the import and export of rough diamonds were published on May 21, 2008 in the Federal Register in an effort to strengthen the international Kimberley Process Certification Scheme.
Useful links:
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2008/may/105110.htm
www.state.gov/e/eeb/diamonds
http://www.jvclegal.org/index.php?categoryid=228
I hope the new regulations will improve international implementation of the Kimberley Process.
Useful links:
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2008/may/105110.htm
www.state.gov/e/eeb/diamonds
http://www.jvclegal.org/index.php?categoryid=228
I hope the new regulations will improve international implementation of the Kimberley Process.
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Grainger McKoy
Grainger McKoy's designs are striking and unique work of art. I liked it.
Useful link:
www.graingermckoy.com
Useful link:
www.graingermckoy.com
From Mines To Finger
I have always been intrigued by the convergence of technology and diamond quality identification + in my view the interesting thing about isee2 is its authenticity + the experience factor. Brilliant!
Useful link:
www.isee2.com
Useful link:
www.isee2.com
The Backpacker Company
The Backpacker Company is India's first backpacking company. The story @ http://www.livemint.com/2008/05/23001501/Alternate-Life--Snail-male.html was interesting and informative.
Useful link:
www.thebackpackerco.com
I liked it + when I am in India I will plan a trip for the experience.
Useful link:
www.thebackpackerco.com
I liked it + when I am in India I will plan a trip for the experience.
How To Be Useful
How to Be Useful: A Beginner's Guide to Not Hating Work by Megan Hustad is a wonderful book with interesting anecdotes from the contemporary workplace.
Useful link:
http://meganhustad.com
Useful link:
http://meganhustad.com
Che Guevara Movie
I think Steven Soderbergh's Guerrilla (2008), a movie about Che Guevara, one of the most fascinating lives in the last century + Benicio Del Toro as Che Guevara was a brilliant choice because he has the intensity to portray the revolutionary.
Useful links:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyqOByAB76k
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_g3BegC67w&feature=related
Useful links:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyqOByAB76k
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_g3BegC67w&feature=related
British Prints 1914-1939
Rhythms of Modern Life: British Prints 1914-1939 examines the impact of Futurism and Cubism on British Modernist printmaking from the beginning of World War I to the beginning of World War II. The fascinating exhibition is @ Torf Gallery, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, till June 1, 2008. A must-visit.
Useful link:
www.mfa.org
Useful link:
www.mfa.org
Truth And Justice – No Blackmail Or Extortion
Chaim Even Zohar has an interesting update on Julius Klein Diamonds (JKD) + John Stafford + 'Certifigate' information + other viewpoints @ http://www.idexonline.com/portal_FullEditorial.asp
Friday, May 23, 2008
Thomas Moran's Work Of Art
(via Wiki) Thomas Moran was an artist of the Hudson River School. Thomas Moran's vision of the Western landscape was critical to the creation of Yellowstone National Park. His pencil and watercolor field sketches and paintings captured the grandeur and documented the extraordinary terrain and natural features of the Yellowstone region. Moran's artwork was presented to members of Congress by park proponents. These powerful images of Yellowstone fired the imagination and helped inspire Congress to establish the National Park System in 1916. Mount Moran in the Grand Teton National Park is named for Moran.
Useful links:
http://www.nga.gov/feature/moran/moranhome.shtm
http://www.museumsyndicate.com/artist.php?artist=543
Thomas Moran’s 'Green River of Wyoming' was sold at Christie's in New York on May 21, 2008 for $17.7 million. www.christies.com
I think he is one of the finest artist of the mountains!
Useful links:
http://www.nga.gov/feature/moran/moranhome.shtm
http://www.museumsyndicate.com/artist.php?artist=543
Thomas Moran’s 'Green River of Wyoming' was sold at Christie's in New York on May 21, 2008 for $17.7 million. www.christies.com
I think he is one of the finest artist of the mountains!
The Chelsea Flower Show
The RHS Chelsea Flower Show is the ultimate event in the gardening year. It sets the latest gardening trends, features the newest and most desirable gardening products and creates an explosion of colours and scents.
Dates: May 20 - 24, 2008
Venue: Royal Hospital, Chelsea, London.
Useful link:
www.rhs.org.uk/chelsea
Don't miss it!
Dates: May 20 - 24, 2008
Venue: Royal Hospital, Chelsea, London.
Useful link:
www.rhs.org.uk/chelsea
Don't miss it!
Design Experience
(via businessweek) For unique consumer experience, visit @ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXzWeMCTUGo&eurl + http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/429573
Useful links:
http://adaptivepath.com
http://beta.criticalmass.com
I think's it's one of the best videos on design experience (s). I liked it.
Useful links:
http://adaptivepath.com
http://beta.criticalmass.com
I think's it's one of the best videos on design experience (s). I liked it.
Telectroscope
(via Wiki) From May-June 2008, artist Paul St George will exhibit two outdoor interactive video installations linking London and New York City in a simulated 'telectroscope'. Although St George claims that the device works using a transatlantic tunnel started by his great-grandfather, it is actually the product of two high definition cameras connected through a fiberoptic link.
Useful links:
www.paulstgeorge.com
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7415911.stm
It's incredible! I liked the concept.
Useful links:
www.paulstgeorge.com
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7415911.stm
It's incredible! I liked the concept.
Post-Doi Moi: Vietnamese Art After 1990
The Singapore Art Museum will be exhibiting, Post-Doi Moi: Vietnamese Art After 1990, until Sept. 28, 2008. It examines what happened to Vietnamese art when the Communist government opened up to a market economy with the Doi Moi, or 'renovation,' policies. A must-visit.
Useful link:
www.nhb.gov.sg/sam
(via Wiki) Hanoi University of Fine Arts is an art school in Hanoi, Vietnam. It was established under the French occupation in 1925. The university has trained many of Vietnam’s leading artists and each year it participates in many cultural exchanges with sister institutions overseas. The long and distinguished history of the Hanoi University of Fine Art may be traced back to the colonial École Supérieure des Beaux Arts de l’Indochine (1925-1945) (the Indochina College of Fine Arts) which trained successive generations of Vietnamese students in the western art tradition, laying the essential groundwork for the development of a distinctive Vietnamese style of modern art. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanoi_College_of_Fine_Arts
Useful link:
www.nhb.gov.sg/sam
(via Wiki) Hanoi University of Fine Arts is an art school in Hanoi, Vietnam. It was established under the French occupation in 1925. The university has trained many of Vietnam’s leading artists and each year it participates in many cultural exchanges with sister institutions overseas. The long and distinguished history of the Hanoi University of Fine Art may be traced back to the colonial École Supérieure des Beaux Arts de l’Indochine (1925-1945) (the Indochina College of Fine Arts) which trained successive generations of Vietnamese students in the western art tradition, laying the essential groundwork for the development of a distinctive Vietnamese style of modern art. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanoi_College_of_Fine_Arts
Luck: The Essential Guide
Luck: The Essential Guide by Deborah Aaronson + Kevin Kwan is an interesting book on luck, from historical tidbits to more practical tips.
Useful links:
www.societyforfortuitousevents.com
www.theluckguide.com
Useful links:
www.societyforfortuitousevents.com
www.theluckguide.com
Michael Specter
Michael Specter is an American journalist who has been a staff writer, focusing on science and technology, at The New Yorker since September 1998. Francesco Vezzoli talks with Michael Specter about cinema, kitsch, celebrity, and democracy @ http://www.newyorker.com/online/video/conference/2008/vezzoli
Useful links:
www.michaelspecter.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kKgbO-E_xss
I think Franceso Vezzoli was brilliant!
Useful links:
www.michaelspecter.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kKgbO-E_xss
I think Franceso Vezzoli was brilliant!
BIS Standards For Diamonds
The Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) has recently published details of the new Indian Standard (IS) for polished diamonds. The IS – 15766 code covers both classification and testing methods.
Useful link:
www.bis.org.in
I think regulation in the diamond grading sector in India is essential because those consumers in the smaller cities and towns have no knowledge or expertise recognizing international labs and their standards. I hope the BIS Hallmark will prevail.
Useful link:
www.bis.org.in
I think regulation in the diamond grading sector in India is essential because those consumers in the smaller cities and towns have no knowledge or expertise recognizing international labs and their standards. I hope the BIS Hallmark will prevail.
Prettified Labradorite
I always had my doubts about the new-find labradorite, and now David Federman explains the gemological facts in detail @ http://www.colored-stone.com/stories/may08/sunstone.cfm
A must-read. I think David Federman was spot on.
A must-read. I think David Federman was spot on.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Jewelers Row
Visit Bangkok, Bombay, Hong Kong, Singapore, New York, Tokyo, London, Paris, Antwerp, Amsterdam etc, it makes an interesting study in the economics of marketing to visit the collection of dozens of jeweler shops all crowded into a couple of blocks. Why?
Read this blog @ http://www.philadelphia-reflections.com/blog/1071.htm
It must be pretty boring to sit all day every day in a little shop that makes one or two sales a week, except at special holidays. One jeweler I know has a portable computer under the counter and spends a lot of time day-trading , which is buying stocks in the morning and selling them in the afternoon. Although competition in the district goes well beyond vigorous, there is an active fraternity of jewelers in the area, steering customers to each other when they don't have a requested item themselves, eating lunch at one of the local bistros, exchanging gossip of the trade, carefully observing the traffic up and down the sidewalks. And then, you can always have your wife, daughter or neighbor sit on a high stool in front of the counter. Trying on jewelry.
How true!
Read this blog @ http://www.philadelphia-reflections.com/blog/1071.htm
It must be pretty boring to sit all day every day in a little shop that makes one or two sales a week, except at special holidays. One jeweler I know has a portable computer under the counter and spends a lot of time day-trading , which is buying stocks in the morning and selling them in the afternoon. Although competition in the district goes well beyond vigorous, there is an active fraternity of jewelers in the area, steering customers to each other when they don't have a requested item themselves, eating lunch at one of the local bistros, exchanging gossip of the trade, carefully observing the traffic up and down the sidewalks. And then, you can always have your wife, daughter or neighbor sit on a high stool in front of the counter. Trying on jewelry.
How true!
Surrealist Manifesto
(via Wiki) Two Surrealist Manifestos were issued by the Surrealist movement, in 1924 and 1929, respectively. The first Surrealist manifesto was written by the French writer André Breton in 1924 and released to the public 1925.
The document defines Surrealism as:
Psychic automatism in its pure state, by which one proposes to express -- verbally, by means of the written word, or in any other manner -- the actual functioning of thought. Dictated by the thought, in the absence of any control exercised by reason, exempt from any aesthetic or moral concern.
The second manifesto written in 1929 Breton asked Surrealists to assess their 'degree of moral competence', and along with other theoretical refinements issued the Second manifeste du surréalisme.
Useful links:
http://www.screensite.org/courses/Jbutler/T340/SurManifesto/ManifestoOfSurrealism.htm
http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,,2281350,00.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surrealist_Manifesto
After intense bidding war @ Sotheby's Paris auction house, the nine manuscripts were eventually acquired by Gérard Lhéritier, a noted collector and the founder of the Museum of Letters and Manuscripts in Paris, for a total of €3.6m (£2.9m).
www.sothebys.com
The document defines Surrealism as:
Psychic automatism in its pure state, by which one proposes to express -- verbally, by means of the written word, or in any other manner -- the actual functioning of thought. Dictated by the thought, in the absence of any control exercised by reason, exempt from any aesthetic or moral concern.
The second manifesto written in 1929 Breton asked Surrealists to assess their 'degree of moral competence', and along with other theoretical refinements issued the Second manifeste du surréalisme.
Useful links:
http://www.screensite.org/courses/Jbutler/T340/SurManifesto/ManifestoOfSurrealism.htm
http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,,2281350,00.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surrealist_Manifesto
After intense bidding war @ Sotheby's Paris auction house, the nine manuscripts were eventually acquired by Gérard Lhéritier, a noted collector and the founder of the Museum of Letters and Manuscripts in Paris, for a total of €3.6m (£2.9m).
www.sothebys.com
Corporate Social Responsibility
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) started as an idea...today big firms are called upon to be good corporate citizens, and they all want to show that they are.....
http://www.economist.com/specialreports/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10491077
Useful links:
www.corporatephilanthropy.org
www.unglobalcompact.org
www.mckinseyquarterly.com
www.bcccc.net
http://www.economist.com/specialreports/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10491077
Useful links:
www.corporatephilanthropy.org
www.unglobalcompact.org
www.mckinseyquarterly.com
www.bcccc.net
Heard On The Street
Good people can set their own price tag, and they want jam tomorrow, not in five years.
The Alchemist
(via Newyorker) Harvey Weinstein will produce a movie version of the novel 'The Alchemist,' by Paulo Coelho, directed by and starring Laurence Fishburne. At a press conference at the Cannes Film Festival, Weinstein said that film adaptations of best-sellers—'pre-sold commodities'—were safer box-office bets.
Useful links:
www.weinsteinco.com
www.paulocoelho.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oaybo46kMC8
I liked the book. Paul Coelho is awesome. I love his work.
Useful links:
www.weinsteinco.com
www.paulocoelho.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oaybo46kMC8
I liked the book. Paul Coelho is awesome. I love his work.
Art + ASCII
Art and ASCII is intriguing, in fact, I liked it. Detailed review @
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/people/multimedia/2008/05/mf_hiroyuki_ss?
Useful links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII_art
www.2ch.net (thought to be the largest Internet forum in the world)
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/people/magazine/16-06/mf_usfans
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/people/multimedia/2008/05/mf_hiroyuki_ss?
Useful links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII_art
www.2ch.net (thought to be the largest Internet forum in the world)
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/people/magazine/16-06/mf_usfans
The Coffee Trader
The Coffee Trader by David Liss is a brilliant historical thriller. I found myself drinking more coffee than usual while reading this novel.
Useful link:
www.davidliss.com
Useful link:
www.davidliss.com
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Transparency In The Colored Gemstone Trade?
I found the article titled, Transparency In The Colored Gemstone Trade? interesting because the trade has been so different and secretive for so long, they abhor the thought of transparency and accountability. The colored stone market has no market control. The routes followed by colored stones to the marketplace are tortuous + far more individuals are involved, each with their own interests.
Useful links:
www.fairjewelry.org
www.madisondialogue.org
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2008/0804.frank.html
Useful links:
www.fairjewelry.org
www.madisondialogue.org
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2008/0804.frank.html
The Pixar Touch
The Pixar Touch: The Making of a Company by David A. Price is a story of technical innovation that revolutionized animation, transforming hand-drawn cel animation to computer-generated 3-D graphics. I think it's an excellent book on a successful entrepreneurial venture. A must-read.
Useful link:
www.pixar.com
Useful link:
www.pixar.com
Brainstorm Exchange
I found Brainstorm Exchange interesting + I saw it as a unique platform for ideas and solutions. I liked it.
Useful link:
www.brainstormexchange.com
Useful link:
www.brainstormexchange.com
Mobile Marketing Handbook
The Mobile Marketing Handbook: A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Dynamic Mobile Marketing Campaigns by Kim Dushinski is an interesting book on the new trend in business.
Useful links:
http://kimdushinski.com
www.mobilemarketingprofits.com
Useful links:
http://kimdushinski.com
www.mobilemarketingprofits.com
Eurovision
(via Wiki) The Eurovision Song Contest is an annual competition held among active member countries of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Each member country submits a song to be performed on live television and then casts votes for the other countries' songs to determine the most popular song in the competition. Each country participates via one of their national EBU-member television stations, whose task it is to select a singer and a song to represent their country in the international competition. The Contest has been broadcast every year since its inauguration in 1956 and is one of the longest-running television programmes in the world. It is also one of the most-watched non-sporting events in the world, with audience figures having been quoted in recent years as anything between 100 million and 600 million internationally.
Useful links:
www.eurovision.tv
www.ebu.ch
http://www.bbc.co.uk/eurovision
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurovision_Song_Contest
What interests me is the special skills performing artists display to sway audiences + their ability to read the house and tune their message to engage listeners. I am always amazed watching the magic combination.
Useful links:
www.eurovision.tv
www.ebu.ch
http://www.bbc.co.uk/eurovision
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurovision_Song_Contest
What interests me is the special skills performing artists display to sway audiences + their ability to read the house and tune their message to engage listeners. I am always amazed watching the magic combination.
Art + Architecture
David Adjaye is a British architect, who makes buildings as if they were conceptual artworks. There is a certain quality in his work that I like, it becomes an emotional incubator, morphs into new fusions.
Useful links:
www.adjaye.com
http://www.newyorker.com/online/video/conference/2008/adjaye
Useful links:
www.adjaye.com
http://www.newyorker.com/online/video/conference/2008/adjaye
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Business Leader = Performance Artist
The article titled, What Rock Stars Can Teach Leaders @ http://www.businessweek.com/managing/content/may2008/ca20080515_689576.htm was brilliant and insightful.
Useful link:
www.accenture.com
It's all about practising = rehearsing = performing, it's amazing, it works. I think listening deeply, testing for understanding, and inspiring others = ultimate goal.
Useful link:
www.accenture.com
It's all about practising = rehearsing = performing, it's amazing, it works. I think listening deeply, testing for understanding, and inspiring others = ultimate goal.
Gold Toothpick, Etc
Experts have found a tiny gold combined toothpick and earwax spoon, believed to be more than 385 years old, during the search for a shipwrecked Spanish galleon off the Florida Keys.
Useful links:
www.bluewaterventureskw.com
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080520/ap_on_sc/florida_artifacts
I think the thrill of discovery is always exciting + it's definitely underwater detetive work. Good story with a happy ending.
Useful links:
www.bluewaterventureskw.com
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080520/ap_on_sc/florida_artifacts
I think the thrill of discovery is always exciting + it's definitely underwater detetive work. Good story with a happy ending.
The Simpsons
(via Wiki) The Simpsons is an American animated sitcom created by Matt Groening for the Fox Broadcasting Company. It is a satirical parody of the middle class American lifestyle epitomized by its titular family, which consists of Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, and Maggie. The show is set in the fictional town of Springfield, and it lampoons many aspects of the human condition, as well as American culture, society as a whole, and television itself.
Useful links:
www.thesimpsons.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Simpsons
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096697
http://www.simpsonsmovie.com
I think The Simpsons is one of the greatest sitcom ever made because it does everything (playful, subversive, funny, intelligent, joyful, etc.), with animated characters. I love it.
Useful links:
www.thesimpsons.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Simpsons
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096697
http://www.simpsonsmovie.com
I think The Simpsons is one of the greatest sitcom ever made because it does everything (playful, subversive, funny, intelligent, joyful, etc.), with animated characters. I love it.
Hay Festival
Hay Festival is running a variety of green events from May 22 - June 1, 2008. Don't miss it!
Useful link:
www.hayfestival.com
Useful link:
www.hayfestival.com
Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art
(via Wiki) The Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, or mima, is a contemporary art gallery based in the centre of Middlesbrough, in the North East of England. The gallery was formally launched on Sunday 27th January 2007, although it was originally planned to open in late Summer 2006. It is one of three institutions run by the Middlesbrough Museums & Galleries Service, along with the Dorman Museum and Captain Cook Birthplace Museum.
Useful link:
www.visitmima.com
A must-visit. Jeffrey + Ruth Sherwin's art collections will be part of the three-month show @ mima (http://arts.guardian.co.uk/art/news/story/0,,2280883,00.html)
Useful link:
www.visitmima.com
A must-visit. Jeffrey + Ruth Sherwin's art collections will be part of the three-month show @ mima (http://arts.guardian.co.uk/art/news/story/0,,2280883,00.html)
Cellscope
CellScope = cell phone microscope
(via Wired) The cell phone microscope, called a CellScope, is designed to uncouple the need for a physician to be in the same place as a patient, allowing those who lack the benefits of health care to be properly diagnosed. A diagnosis is performed by putting a slide containing a blood or tissue sample on the Cell Scope. A ring of bright LEDs illuminates the sample, and if faint blue dots appear, the patient is positive for malaria. The image can then be transmitted to medical experts for analysis and recommendations.
Useful links:
http://fletchlab.berkeley.edu/research_cellscope.htm
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11367989
http://blumcenter.berkeley.edu/telemicroscopy-disease-diagnosis
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_44YIAGpf4
Brilliant! I think the technology is going to help millions, save lives. I am also thinking if cellscope could be modifed for gemological applications/precious metals testing.
(via Wired) The cell phone microscope, called a CellScope, is designed to uncouple the need for a physician to be in the same place as a patient, allowing those who lack the benefits of health care to be properly diagnosed. A diagnosis is performed by putting a slide containing a blood or tissue sample on the Cell Scope. A ring of bright LEDs illuminates the sample, and if faint blue dots appear, the patient is positive for malaria. The image can then be transmitted to medical experts for analysis and recommendations.
Useful links:
http://fletchlab.berkeley.edu/research_cellscope.htm
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11367989
http://blumcenter.berkeley.edu/telemicroscopy-disease-diagnosis
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_44YIAGpf4
Brilliant! I think the technology is going to help millions, save lives. I am also thinking if cellscope could be modifed for gemological applications/precious metals testing.
The Richest Of The Rich
The rest of the world may be feeling an economic pinch, but for the richest of the rich, the luxury spending spree goes. I found the article, Shining In The Gloom @ www.newsweek.com/id/137480 interesting.
I've been waiting for prices to come down ever since the financial crisis started, but it's not happening. It's bizarre. Logically it should all come falling down, but it isn't.
- Nicholas Berggruen, Berggruen Holdings
How true!
I've been waiting for prices to come down ever since the financial crisis started, but it's not happening. It's bizarre. Logically it should all come falling down, but it isn't.
- Nicholas Berggruen, Berggruen Holdings
How true!
Business Of Creativity
I found the article, Getting Down to the Business of Creativity @ http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/5902.html
educational and informative. At the end of the day innovation is a team sport.
educational and informative. At the end of the day innovation is a team sport.
Monday, May 19, 2008
Chandler Burr
Chandler Burr is an American journalist and author + he is the perfume critic for the New York Times. Look at this interview with Chandler Burr for the website parfumessence.
Useful link:
www.chandlerburr.com
The aesthetics of perfume have always intrigued me. A good perfume is a work of art.
Useful link:
www.chandlerburr.com
The aesthetics of perfume have always intrigued me. A good perfume is a work of art.
The CEO Sheik
I found the article titled, The CEO Sheik @ http://www.newsweek.com/id/32716/page/1 interesting and insightful.
Useful link:
www.sheikhmohammed.co.ae
If the cart is politics and the horse is the economy, then we have to put the horse before the cart and not the other way around.
- Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktum, the ruler of Dubai + the prime minister of the United Arab Emirates
What's good for the merchants is good for Dubai.
- The late Sheik Rashid
Brilliant! I think the story of Dubai is the story of good governance.
Useful link:
www.sheikhmohammed.co.ae
If the cart is politics and the horse is the economy, then we have to put the horse before the cart and not the other way around.
- Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktum, the ruler of Dubai + the prime minister of the United Arab Emirates
What's good for the merchants is good for Dubai.
- The late Sheik Rashid
Brilliant! I think the story of Dubai is the story of good governance.
Chester Beatty Library
(via Wiki) The Chester Beatty Library was established in Dublin, Ireland in 1950, to house the collections of mining magnate, Sir Alfred Chester Beatty. The present library, on the grounds of Dublin Castle, opened on February 7, 2000, the 125th anniversary of Sir Alfred's birth and was named European Museum of the Year in 2002. The Library's collections are displayed in two collections: "Sacred Traditions" and "Artistic Traditions". Both displays exhibit sacred texts, manuscripts, miniature paintings and art on paper from the world's great oriental and western religions as well as secular items. The Library is one of the premier sources for scholarship in both the Old and New Testaments and is home to one of the most significant collections of Islamic and Far Eastern artefacts. It includes the Gospel of Mani believed to be the last remaining artefact from Manichaeism.
Useful link:
www.cbl.ie
Chester Beatty Library in Dublin has probably the most beautiful collection of rhinoceros-horn carvings in the world. A must-visit!
Useful link:
www.cbl.ie
Chester Beatty Library in Dublin has probably the most beautiful collection of rhinoceros-horn carvings in the world. A must-visit!
Neurobotics
I found Yoky Matsuoka's presentation on Neurobotics @ http://www.newyorker.com/online/video/conference/2008/matsuoka educational and insightful.
Useful links:
http://neurobotics.cs.washington.edu
http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/yoky
Useful links:
http://neurobotics.cs.washington.edu
http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/yoky
Van Gogh Update
I found the article, Experts fall out over Van Gogh's 'last painting' @ http://arts.guardian.co.uk/art/news/story/0,,2280882,00.html interesting because anyone who claims to be holding Van Gogh painting (s) will be a target by the media/auction houses/collectors + the provenance issue (s) will have to be sorted out by the experts to weed out fakes + the price!
Useful link:
www.vangoghmuseum.nl
Useful link:
www.vangoghmuseum.nl
Diamond-encrusted Helmets
Here is what Mclaren's site says about the design:
Woking, United Kingdom, Friday 16th May 2008: In the build up to the 2008 Monaco Grand Prix, Vodafone McLaren Mercedes and Steinmetz, creators of the world’s finest diamonds, are proud to announce the continuation of their long-running partnership. This year Steinmetz has worked closely with the Vodafone McLaren Mercedes drivers, Lewis Hamilton and Heikki Kovalainen, in creating their own personalised race helmets, which both drivers will use throughout the Monaco Grand Prix weekend. Lewis and Heikki’s helmets have been custom-made to their tastes after working closely with Steinmetz’s in-house designers. Each helmet has the signature of the driver pavéd with a line of hundreds of Steinmetz’s handcrafted diamonds. This also marks the first time that the Steinmetz logo - or any other sponsor’s logo in Formula 1 history - has been incorporated into the design of the helmets through the application of diamonds. In celebrating Steinmetz’s unprecedented attributes of master craftsmanship and integrity, the Steinmetz logo has been pavéd using Forevermark diamonds. Forevermark diamonds are the world’s most preciously selected diamonds. "I really like what Steinmetz has done this year and am looking forward to the Monaco Grand Prix weekend," said Lewis. "As some people might know I am very particular about my helmet but it looks great and will add some extra sparkle to the event." "I’m always really excited about the Monaco Grand Prix - it really is the one that all drivers want to win," said Heikki. "To be able to race at this prestigious event with Steinmetz diamonds on my helmet will bring something special to the occasion." Lewis was presented with his helmet at the McLaren Technology Centre earlier this week whilst Heikki will receive his on Wednesday in Monaco. Steinmetz is renowned for cutting and polishing some of the most important diamonds throughout history. Amongst these are the De Beers Millennium Star, the Steinmetz Pink and The Blue Empress. Steinmetz has a deep-rooted presence in the African sub-continent with four modern factories in South Africa, Botswana and Namibia. Through the Forevermark initiative Steinmetz has raised the standard of diamond cutting and polishing to world-class levels, trained and created new talent, whilst embracing the latest technology, as well as providing jobs in these countries. Forevermark diamonds only come from mines, which, attain the highest standards; are beautifully crafted by a select group of diamantaires; and are exclusively available in only a few jewellers worldwide. With less than 1% of the world’s diamonds being eligible for Forevermark status, these diamonds really are precious.
Useful links:
www.mclaren.com
www.steinmetz-group.com
Brilliant! I liked it.
Woking, United Kingdom, Friday 16th May 2008: In the build up to the 2008 Monaco Grand Prix, Vodafone McLaren Mercedes and Steinmetz, creators of the world’s finest diamonds, are proud to announce the continuation of their long-running partnership. This year Steinmetz has worked closely with the Vodafone McLaren Mercedes drivers, Lewis Hamilton and Heikki Kovalainen, in creating their own personalised race helmets, which both drivers will use throughout the Monaco Grand Prix weekend. Lewis and Heikki’s helmets have been custom-made to their tastes after working closely with Steinmetz’s in-house designers. Each helmet has the signature of the driver pavéd with a line of hundreds of Steinmetz’s handcrafted diamonds. This also marks the first time that the Steinmetz logo - or any other sponsor’s logo in Formula 1 history - has been incorporated into the design of the helmets through the application of diamonds. In celebrating Steinmetz’s unprecedented attributes of master craftsmanship and integrity, the Steinmetz logo has been pavéd using Forevermark diamonds. Forevermark diamonds are the world’s most preciously selected diamonds. "I really like what Steinmetz has done this year and am looking forward to the Monaco Grand Prix weekend," said Lewis. "As some people might know I am very particular about my helmet but it looks great and will add some extra sparkle to the event." "I’m always really excited about the Monaco Grand Prix - it really is the one that all drivers want to win," said Heikki. "To be able to race at this prestigious event with Steinmetz diamonds on my helmet will bring something special to the occasion." Lewis was presented with his helmet at the McLaren Technology Centre earlier this week whilst Heikki will receive his on Wednesday in Monaco. Steinmetz is renowned for cutting and polishing some of the most important diamonds throughout history. Amongst these are the De Beers Millennium Star, the Steinmetz Pink and The Blue Empress. Steinmetz has a deep-rooted presence in the African sub-continent with four modern factories in South Africa, Botswana and Namibia. Through the Forevermark initiative Steinmetz has raised the standard of diamond cutting and polishing to world-class levels, trained and created new talent, whilst embracing the latest technology, as well as providing jobs in these countries. Forevermark diamonds only come from mines, which, attain the highest standards; are beautifully crafted by a select group of diamantaires; and are exclusively available in only a few jewellers worldwide. With less than 1% of the world’s diamonds being eligible for Forevermark status, these diamonds really are precious.
Useful links:
www.mclaren.com
www.steinmetz-group.com
Brilliant! I liked it.
Globality
Globality: Competing with Everyone from Everywhere for Everything by Hal Sirkin + Jim Hemerling + Arindam Bhattacharya is a fascinating book on new emerging market economies and the new rules of competition. The world of business is suddenly different/has changed. A must-read.
Useful link:
www.bcg.com
Useful link:
www.bcg.com
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Sketching User Experiences
Sketching User Experiences: Getting the Design Right and the Right Design by Bill Buxton is a great book on design + design thinking.
Useful link:
www.billbuxton.com
Like any secret society, the design community has its strange rituals and initiation procedures. Bill opens up the mysteries of the magical process of design, taking us through a land in which story telling, orange squeezers, the Wizard of oOz, I-pods, avalanche avoidance, bicycle suspension sketching, and faking it are all points on the design pilgrims journey. There are lots of ideas and techniques in this book to feed good design and transform the way we think about creating useful stuff.
- Peter Gabriel
Useful link:
www.billbuxton.com
Like any secret society, the design community has its strange rituals and initiation procedures. Bill opens up the mysteries of the magical process of design, taking us through a land in which story telling, orange squeezers, the Wizard of oOz, I-pods, avalanche avoidance, bicycle suspension sketching, and faking it are all points on the design pilgrims journey. There are lots of ideas and techniques in this book to feed good design and transform the way we think about creating useful stuff.
- Peter Gabriel
Shwedagon Pagoda
(via Wiki) The Shwedagon Pagoda, officially titled Shwedagon Zedi Daw, also known as the Golden Pagoda, is a 98-metre (approx. 321.5 feet) gilded stupa located in Yangon, Burma. The pagoda lies to the west of Kandawgyi Lake, on Singuttara Hill, thus dominating the skyline of the city. It is the most sacred Buddhist pagoda for the Burmese with relics of the past four Buddhas enshrined within, namely the staff of Kakusandha, the water filter of Konagamana, a piece of the robe of Kassapa and eight hairs of Gautama, the historical Buddha.
May, 2008. According to Reuters, the Shwedagon Pagoda was also hit by the cyclone's 120 mile-an-hour (190 kilometer-an-hour) winds, stripping gold leaves from the temple's giant 320-foot (98-meter) domed shrine + dislodging thousands of precious stones, including rubies, emeralds, and sapphires from the surface of the structure. I believe the complex is undergoing renovation.
May, 2008. According to Reuters, the Shwedagon Pagoda was also hit by the cyclone's 120 mile-an-hour (190 kilometer-an-hour) winds, stripping gold leaves from the temple's giant 320-foot (98-meter) domed shrine + dislodging thousands of precious stones, including rubies, emeralds, and sapphires from the surface of the structure. I believe the complex is undergoing renovation.
Spring Awakening
Spring Awakening is a Tony Award-winning rock musical with music by Duncan Sheik and book and lyrics by Steven Sater. I think it's great! It makes you think and feel!
Useful links:
www.springawakening.com
www.duncansheik.com
www.newyorker.com/online/video/conference/2008/sheik
Useful links:
www.springawakening.com
www.duncansheik.com
www.newyorker.com/online/video/conference/2008/sheik
Victoria & Albert (V&A) Museum's Jewelry Gallery
The Victoria & Albert Museum announces the opening of the William and Judith Bollinger Jewellery Gallery on May 24, 2008. Don't miss it!
Useful link:
www.vam.ac.uk/collections/fashion/jewel_archive/index.html
Useful link:
www.vam.ac.uk/collections/fashion/jewel_archive/index.html
The Powers To Lead
The Powers to Lead by Joseph S. Nye is an interesting book on the theory of leadership + the concept of hard + soft power = smart power. A must-read.
Useful links:
www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/joseph-nye
www.project-syndicate.org/contributor/422
Useful links:
www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/joseph-nye
www.project-syndicate.org/contributor/422
The Transforming Travel Industry
According to the UNWTO, international tourist arrivals grew by 6% last year, to 900m. The total has gone up by almost 100m in two years. Last year the Middle East welcomed 13% more international tourists, or 46m in all. Arrivals in Asia and the Pacific were up by 10%, to 185m—with much of the extra travel coming from elsewhere in the region. Africa saw an increase of 8%, to 44m. This year, the UNWTO predicts, growth of international tourism will be fastest in Asia and the Pacific.
http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?source=hptextfeature&story_id=11374574
Negative effects: political violence + environment.
Positive effects: emerging economies with more spending power will be unwilling to give up flying or driving.
The amazing thing is many in the emerging economies are more interested in growth than environmental issues. A few companies on the other hand with green conscience are trying to be proactive and I hope to see more companies joining hands to save the environment.
Useful links:
www.world-tourism.org
www.wttc.travel
www.travelport.com/CarbonTracker
www.carlson.com
www.thomascook.com
www.marriott.com
www.mckinsey.com
www.amadeus.com
http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?source=hptextfeature&story_id=11374574
Negative effects: political violence + environment.
Positive effects: emerging economies with more spending power will be unwilling to give up flying or driving.
The amazing thing is many in the emerging economies are more interested in growth than environmental issues. A few companies on the other hand with green conscience are trying to be proactive and I hope to see more companies joining hands to save the environment.
Useful links:
www.world-tourism.org
www.wttc.travel
www.travelport.com/CarbonTracker
www.carlson.com
www.thomascook.com
www.marriott.com
www.mckinsey.com
www.amadeus.com
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Climate Solutions
Climate Solutions: A Citizen's Guide by Peter Barnes is an interesting book on global warming + the impact + solutions.
Useful link:
www.capanddividend.org
I think it's a great reference book.
Useful link:
www.capanddividend.org
I think it's a great reference book.
Best Startups In North America For 2008
The best startups in North America for 2008 is listed @
http://www.redherring.com/Home/24253
http://www.redherring.com/Home/24253
Marche Du Film
The Marché du Film is the business counterpart of the Cannes Film Festival and the largest film market (estimated one billion euros) in the world, and Cannes is the place to go to learn the ropes of the trade.
Useful links:
www.marchedufilm.com
www.festival-cannes.fr
www.ifc.com
www.network18online.com
www.emaximmedia.com
Useful links:
www.marchedufilm.com
www.festival-cannes.fr
www.ifc.com
www.network18online.com
www.emaximmedia.com
Car Talk
Tom and Ray Magliozzi, the stars of public radio's Car Talk make their TV debut in a new cartoon series, Click & Clack's As The Wrench Turns, which debuts in primetime on PBS in July, 2008.
Useful links:
www.cartalk.com
www.pbs.org
Don't miss it!
Useful links:
www.cartalk.com
www.pbs.org
Don't miss it!
Blue Diamond Update
A 13.39-carat blue diamond was sold at Christie's Geneva on May 14, 2008 at a world-record price of $8.9 million.
Useful link:
www.christies.com
'This impressive result is due to the scarcity of colored diamonds on the market, and to the great demand from collectors around the world for exceptional artworks and jewels that is currently dominating the auction world.'
- Francois Curiel, Chairman, Christie's Europe
I think he is right.
Useful link:
www.christies.com
'This impressive result is due to the scarcity of colored diamonds on the market, and to the great demand from collectors around the world for exceptional artworks and jewels that is currently dominating the auction world.'
- Francois Curiel, Chairman, Christie's Europe
I think he is right.
Predictably Irrational
Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions by Dan Ariely is an excellent book that provides insights into our behavioral traits + the way we make (strange) decisions. I liked it.
Useful links:
www.predictablyirrational.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZ5baAOrxXY
Useful links:
www.predictablyirrational.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZ5baAOrxXY
Robert Mondavi
(via Wiki) Robert Gerald Mondavi was a leading American vineyard operator whose technical improvements and marketing strategies brought worldwide recognition for the wines of the Napa Valley in California. From an early period, Mondavi aggressively promoted labeling wines varietally rather than generically. This is now the standard for New World wines.
Useful link:
www.robertmondaviwinery.com
The pioneering vintner who helped put California wine country on the map, died at his Napa Valley home on May 16, 2008. He was 94. He was an enthusiastic ambassador for wine — especially California wine — promoting the health, cultural and social benefits of its moderate consumption.
Useful link:
www.robertmondaviwinery.com
The pioneering vintner who helped put California wine country on the map, died at his Napa Valley home on May 16, 2008. He was 94. He was an enthusiastic ambassador for wine — especially California wine — promoting the health, cultural and social benefits of its moderate consumption.
The Forevermark Brand Strategy: Empowering The Retailers
Chaim Even Zohar writes about the launch of the De Beers Forevermark brand + the De Beers Grading Report + the impact + other viewpoints @ http://www.idexonline.com/portal_FullEditorial.asp
I think the article was very useful and informative because of all the branding efforts, the diamond jewelry industry is still one of the most fragmented industries in the world. The world's largest diamond jewelry brand has a circa one percent market share. How true!
I think the article was very useful and informative because of all the branding efforts, the diamond jewelry industry is still one of the most fragmented industries in the world. The world's largest diamond jewelry brand has a circa one percent market share. How true!
Friday, May 16, 2008
Synthetic Quartz Update
The GEMLAB Laboratory based in the Principality of Liechtenstein has an interesting update on synthetic quartz @ http://www.gemlab.net/website/gemlab/fileadmin/user_upload/Research/Gemlab-Newsletter-05-2008.pdf
Useful link:
www.gemlab.net
Useful link:
www.gemlab.net
Uptake
(via budgettravel) UpTake is an interesting theme-based travel search engine with tons of useful information. I liked it.
Useful links:
www.uptake.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DxNqDCVvnJk
Useful links:
www.uptake.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DxNqDCVvnJk
Restoration Rocks
Restoration Rocks = One-of-a-kind fragments of Frank Lloyd Wright’s modern masterpiece—the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum—gathered during the 2007 restoration and presented in hand-crafted acrylic and sterling silver @ http://www.guggenheimstore.org/rero1.html
Virtual Painter
(via dowloand.com) Try Virtual Painter for Windows. Virtual Painter can create dramatic landscapes like the Renaissance greats + you can choose among 16 artistic styles, like oil, watercolor, and charcoal, and 20 canvases to give your photos a unique artistic look.
International Nitrogen Initiative
The article on reactive nitrogen + the impact on environment @ http://blog.wired.com/wiredscience/2008/05/reactive-nitrog.html was educational. I think it's time that we do something to prevent another 5,800 square mile dead zone.
Useful links:
www.initrogen.org
www.earth.columbia.edu
Useful links:
www.initrogen.org
www.earth.columbia.edu
Techno-Bedouins
I found the article, Nomads at last @ http://www.economist.com/specialreports/displayStory.cfm?story_id=10950394 brilliant and insightful + the most wonderful thing about mobile technology today is that consumers can increasingly forget about how it works and simply take advantage of it, it's the human connection that matters. How true!
Zero Carbon House
Here is an interesting zero-carbon house concept: Barratt's Green House is packed with the latest technology including solar panels, rain water harvesting and an air-source heat pump. Its new kind of concrete walls and floors, combined with super insulation and triple-glazed windows makes it airtight, meaning the requirement for heating is minimal. Fresh air entering the passes through a heat exchanger, which transfers the heat from the outgoing stale air and puts it back into the house. A rainwater harvesting system collects water for use in flushing toilets.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/may/15/greenbuilding.renewableenergy
Useful links:
www.barratthomes.co.uk
www.bre.co.uk
www.gauntfrancis.co.uk
It's a great idea, but in my view, success depends on affordability.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/may/15/greenbuilding.renewableenergy
Useful links:
www.barratthomes.co.uk
www.bre.co.uk
www.gauntfrancis.co.uk
It's a great idea, but in my view, success depends on affordability.
Vincent Cassel
Vincent Cassel is a French actor + he plays Jacques Mesrine, a true story of France's infamous public enemy during the 70s, the man of a thousand faces, as he was known, in Public Enemy Number One, director by Jean-François Richet.
Useful link:
www.vincentcassel.com
Useful link:
www.vincentcassel.com
Auction Update
Souren Melikian has an interesting update on contemporary art sales at Sotheby's + other viewpoints @ http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/05/15/arts/melik16.php
It's hard to figure out what drives the bidders to go over the roof, but I think the diversity in style may have inspired the bidders to go the extra mile paying shocking prices. Definitely the Sotheby's sale have taken the market to a new level. It looks like the bubble is still inflating.
It's hard to figure out what drives the bidders to go over the roof, but I think the diversity in style may have inspired the bidders to go the extra mile paying shocking prices. Definitely the Sotheby's sale have taken the market to a new level. It looks like the bubble is still inflating.
Who's Your City?
Who's Your City?: How the Creative Economy Is Making Where to Live the Most Important Decision of Your Life by Richard Florida is an interesting study of how the world is changing + the concept of human geography + the impact. A must-read.
Useful link:
http://creativeclass.com
Useful link:
http://creativeclass.com
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Comic Relief
I found the article Comic Relief: Comic Books Aren't Just for Entertainment @ http://www.edutopia.org/comic-relief educational and inspiring.
Useful links:
www.edutopia.org
http://www.edutopia.org/animating-dreams
Useful links:
www.edutopia.org
http://www.edutopia.org/animating-dreams
Old Habits Die Hard
(via BBC) The survey of 1,186 executives in 33 countries by Ernst & Young suggests that 18% had lost business to a competitor prepared to pay a bribe. Corrupt practices were perceived to be most prevalent in mining, with fewer instances in energy and banking.
Useful links:
www.ey.com
www.transparency.org
Old habits die hard
Old soldiers just fade away
Old habits die hard
Harder than November rain
Old habits die hard
Old soldiers just fade away
Old habits die hard
Hard enough to feel the pain
- Mick Jagger & Dave Stewart
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elutCfvhmzE
How true!
Useful links:
www.ey.com
www.transparency.org
Old habits die hard
Old soldiers just fade away
Old habits die hard
Harder than November rain
Old habits die hard
Old soldiers just fade away
Old habits die hard
Hard enough to feel the pain
- Mick Jagger & Dave Stewart
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elutCfvhmzE
How true!
Pearl Treatment Update
(via JNA) Colored Akoya Pearls: I found the new pearl treatment intriguing. According to Tomokazu Tanabe, President, Tanabe Pearl Farm, in Shima in Mie Prefecture, after considerable research, his company have found a unique technique to inject coloring liquid into nucleated akoya oysters, which then secreted colored nacre and produced pearls in a wide range of colors from pink to greenish, bluish and lavender. He claims that the pearls are different from dyed pearls, and the colors are unlikely to change in several years.
According to Ikuo Atsumi, Gem Science Academy of Gemology, Tokyo, pre-harvest color treated akoya pearls can be identified by UV-Vis-NIR spectrometer where the spectra of the color treated akoya pearls were very different from those of non-treated akoya pearls and ordinary akoya pearls due to reaction of the metallic compounds, including iron, injected into the oysters.
All treatments should be disclosed at all levels of the distribution chain. If you are doubtful, consult a reputed gem testing laboratory.
According to Ikuo Atsumi, Gem Science Academy of Gemology, Tokyo, pre-harvest color treated akoya pearls can be identified by UV-Vis-NIR spectrometer where the spectra of the color treated akoya pearls were very different from those of non-treated akoya pearls and ordinary akoya pearls due to reaction of the metallic compounds, including iron, injected into the oysters.
All treatments should be disclosed at all levels of the distribution chain. If you are doubtful, consult a reputed gem testing laboratory.
Conspicuous Consumption
I found the article on Conspicuous Consumption @ http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/1963.cfm interesting + insightful. I think it's status-conscious syndrome that's driving the trend.
Useful link:
www.bls.gov/cex
Useful link:
www.bls.gov/cex
Young People For Change
Footprintfriends.com is an interesting social networking site set up by young people to share a passion for protecting natural environment.
I think they are good role models. I liked it.
Useful links:
www.footprintfriends.com
www.bsi-global.com
I think they are good role models. I liked it.
Useful links:
www.footprintfriends.com
www.bsi-global.com
The Voice
I love Frank Sinatra's voice + his innate genius will be found in these songs:
- I Get Along Without You Very Well (Except Sometimes)
- I've Got You Under My Skin
- One For My Baby (And One More For the Road)
- You Make Me Feel So Young
- Theme From New York, New York
Useful links:
http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/music/2008/05/a_frank_exchange_of_views.html
Frank Sinatra gallery here.
It was once said that he sang not about himself but from himself. How true!
- I Get Along Without You Very Well (Except Sometimes)
- I've Got You Under My Skin
- One For My Baby (And One More For the Road)
- You Make Me Feel So Young
- Theme From New York, New York
Useful links:
http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/music/2008/05/a_frank_exchange_of_views.html
Frank Sinatra gallery here.
It was once said that he sang not about himself but from himself. How true!
Britain's Bling Capital
I found the article The rocks that Northampton got @ http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/money/2008/05/bling_blog.html very interesting + how many of us actually know how much the jewelry we are wearing is worth? A five carat question!
Heard On The Street
I have told several traders exactly what I do, some made money, some lost…but all of us had the same rules.
The Last Lecture
The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch + Jeffrey Zaslow is a great inspirational/insightful book. The lecture is available online.
Useful link:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=ji5_MqicxSo
Useful link:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=ji5_MqicxSo
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Imeem No.1
According to Compete.com , Imeem has becoming the No. 1 streaming music site in the United States via on-demand music from all four majors + indies + social networking + blogs + industry analysts believe that the most popular options for listening to music online are free.
Useful links:
www.imeem.com
www.compete.com
Useful links:
www.imeem.com
www.compete.com
WorldWide Telescope
(via BBC) Microsoft has launched WorldWide Telescope, a free tool that stitches together images from some of the best ground- and space-based telescopes. Collections include pictures from the Hubble and Spitzer telescopes, as well as the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. The web-based tool also allows users to pan and zoom around the planets, and trace their locations in the night sky.
Useful link:
www.worldwidetelescope.org
I think the pictures were beautiful.
Useful link:
www.worldwidetelescope.org
I think the pictures were beautiful.
Too Precious To Wear Campaign
I think SeaWeb’s Too Precious To Wear campaign to create demand for coral conservation is a brilliant idea + I also believe one way to help save it is to reduce coral in fashion.
Useful links:
www.tooprecioustowear.org
www.seaweb.org
www.tiffanyandcofoundation.org
www.coralreef.noaa.gov
www.cites.org
Useful links:
www.tooprecioustowear.org
www.seaweb.org
www.tiffanyandcofoundation.org
www.coralreef.noaa.gov
www.cites.org
Random Thoughts
Life is risk. Nothing we do that is of any importance carries with it a guarantee of success. Nothing we can do is absolutely sure to secure even our own personal safety or wellbeing from one hour to the next. Yet we are constantly faced with choices. Lots of decisions, no guarantees. We all, in some way or another, adopt strategies for living, ways of approaching the world, ways of making choices that aim at the attainment of what we consider good. These strategies are all, to some extent or another, calculated gambles. We have no compelling proofs that our strategies will work. None of them is a sure thing. But we are used to the risk. We are accustomed to living without many true certainties, to the extent that we ordinarily forget that life is risk.
- Blaise Pascal
- Blaise Pascal
Nike Art Project
(via Wired) Claudio Sinatti was commissioned to shoot Italian footballer Marco Materazzi for the Nike 'Art of Football' exhibition. He built a special frame to hang on the player to film from all angles + the mix of high and low tech behind the scenes were brilliant. I liked it.
Useful links:
www.nike.com/nikelab
www.claudiosinatti.com
http://blog.wired.com/gadgets/2008/05/nike-art-projec.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwFbQ3sKnsA
Useful links:
www.nike.com/nikelab
www.claudiosinatti.com
http://blog.wired.com/gadgets/2008/05/nike-art-projec.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwFbQ3sKnsA
Robert Rauschenberg
(via Wiki) Robert Rauschenberg was an American artist who came to prominence in the 1950s transition from Abstract Expressionism to Pop Art. Rauschenberg is perhaps most famous for his 'Combines' of the 1950s, in which non-traditional materials and objects were employed in innovative combinations. While the 'Combines' are both painting and sculpture, Rauschenberg has also worked with photography, printmaking, papermaking, and performance. Rauschenberg had a tendency to pick up the trash that interested him on the streets of New York City and bringing it back to his studio to use it in this works. He claimed he 'wanted something other than what I could make myself and I wanted to use the surprise and the collectiveness and the generosity of finding surprises. And if it wasn't a surprise at first, by the time I got through with it, it was. So the object itself was changed by its context and therefore it became a new thing.' In 1953, Rauschenberg stunned the art world by erasing a drawing by de Kooning. In 1964 Rauschenberg was the first American artist to win the Grand Prize at the Venice Biennale (Mark Tobey and James Whistler had previously won the Painting Prize). Since then he has enjoyed a rare degree of institutional support. Rauschenberg lived and worked in New York City and on Captiva Island, Florida until his death on May 12, 2008, from heart failure.
Useful links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Rauschenberg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpCWh3IFtDQ
I am a huge fan of Robert Rauschenberg + I think his life/art + experimentation/innovation will be an inspiration for next-generation artists worldwide. He will be remembered forever.
Useful links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Rauschenberg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpCWh3IFtDQ
I am a huge fan of Robert Rauschenberg + I think his life/art + experimentation/innovation will be an inspiration for next-generation artists worldwide. He will be remembered forever.
Benefits Supervisor Sleeping
Finally, the 1995 portrait, entitled Benefits Supervisor Sleeping, a life-sized Lucian Freud painting of a sleeping, naked woman was sold by auction house Christies in New York for $33.6 million (£17.2 million) setting a new world record price for a work by a living artist.
Useful link:
www.christies.com
Useful link:
www.christies.com
The Art Of Today
(via The Outline of Art) Frank Rutter writes:
The foundations of Mr Augustus John’s reputation were also laid in the drawings which he showed at the New English Art Club during the first decade of the present century. The exuberant flow of his line, his powerful modeling of form by subtleties of light and shade; the extraordinary vitality of his heads in chalks and sanguine—all seemed to suggest that in Augustus John was reincarnated the princely art of Rubens. One thing alone at that time limited his popularity. It was asked why did he draw such ‘ugly’ people. The truth was that Mr John, having an exceedingly original mind, found beauties in new types. A Welshman by birth and descent, John in his early days was a Borrow in paint, happiest and most at home among the Romanies. The apparent strangeness of his early drawings and paintings was largely due to his preference for gipsy types. While teaching at the Liverpool University School of Art, round about 1904, he would periodically disappear to go roving with the gipsies and then reappear, bringing with his pictures of the raggle-taggled life of the caravan. These pictures, bright and clear in color, incisive in line, and effective in composition, were a new thing in painting. As a painter John did not possess the precocious facility of Orpen, and his early work often shows a certain heaviness of handling when compared with his present day pictures, and in acquiring mastery of the brush John gradually evolved two distinct manners. Influenced to some extent by the modern French painters already mentioned in this Outline, he has shown a tendency to simplification which is most marked in his decorative work. In mural decorations, like ‘The Mumpers’ at the Tate Gallery, John deliberately sacrifices roundness of form for decorative effect. Like Pierre Puvis de Chavannes (1824-1898), the great painter of the Ste. Geneviève series in the Panthéon, Paris, John found that the qualities he aimed at necessitated a certain flatness of treatment. At the same time his color in these decorative works has become lighter and brighter. To this extent, in so far as it has tended to simplify rather than to complicate painting, the art of Augustus John may be said to illustrate a reaction from Impressionism. But while his decorative works often have primitive qualities, in his portraits he uses his full power of expressing form, and one of his most recent masterpieces ‘Madame Suggia’, proves that when this is his aim, John is second to no living man in realistic force and characterization. While infinitely various, there is an intense individuality in his draughtsmanship which unifies all his work and makes it recognizable as a ‘John’. His landscapes are closer to his decorative work than to his realistic portraiture. Finding his favorite subjects among the mountains and lakes of his native Wales, John has invented a new genre in landscape. Emphatic in their design, simplified in form, and brilliant but still in color, they strike a new note in British art.
Limitations of space prevent all but te briefest mention of another member of the New English Art Club, who has created a new type of landscape. Sir Charles John Holmes, the erudite Director of the National Gallery, was born in 1868. The son of a Cornish clergyman, he distinguished himself as a classical scholar at Eton and Oxford, and made a reputation as a writer on art before his watercolors and paintings became generally appreciated. Always a sytlist in design, simplicity is the outstanding quality in his work, and while he has painted many impressive landscapes of the grim, gaunt scenery of the Lake Country, it has been his peculiar distinction to invent ‘industrial landscape’, pictures in which factories and power stations of modern industrialism are powerfully presented with their surrounding landscapes. ‘The Burning Kiln’ is a fine example of the imaginative grandeur with which Sir C J Holmes invests these new subjects.
Another pupil of Professor Brown, Mr Walter W Russell (born 1867), added to the laurels of the New English Art Club by his brilliant portrait, ‘Mr Minney’, which was the picture of the year in the Academy of 1920.
In recent years the two most distinguished artists who have come from the Royal Academy Schools have been Mr Frederick Cayley Robinson (born 1862) whose poetic and decorative work shows a mingling of Pre-Raphaelite ideals with the noble simplicity of Puvis de Chavannes, and Mr Charles Sims (born 1873) who, after first attracting attention by the sheer beauty of his romantic idylls, astonished even his admirers by his exquisitely gracious and accomplished portrait ‘The Countess of Rocksavage and Son’, which was universally conceded to have won premier honors in the Academy of 1922.
Proverbially, art is long and talent today is so multitudinous that to attempt any adequate survey of present day achievements in Great Britain alone would be to embark on a voyage as lengthy as that which the reader has already traveled. Had space permitted it, it would have been gratifying to record successes in sculpture as well as in painting. Among the academic sculptors Sir George Frampton has acquired the widest popularity with his ‘Peter Pan’ in Kensington Gardens, while among the independent sculptors Mr Jacob Epstein’s bronze busts and Mr Eric Gill’s ‘Stations of the Cross’ in the Westminster Roman Catholic Cathedral are works which the present generation can leave with confidence to the judgment of posterity.
It is regretted that the scope of the present work has made it impossible to deal separately with etching, wood engraving, lithography, and other arts which are being practised today with skill and accomplishment. But all the pictorial and plastic arts are so intimately linked that the aims and ideals which animate them from generation to generation may to a great extent be deduced from a historical survey of painting. Without any pretence to be final or exhaustive, it is hoped that this work may contribute to a clearer understanding of the course followed by the main stream of European art from the thirteenth century to the present day.
The foundations of Mr Augustus John’s reputation were also laid in the drawings which he showed at the New English Art Club during the first decade of the present century. The exuberant flow of his line, his powerful modeling of form by subtleties of light and shade; the extraordinary vitality of his heads in chalks and sanguine—all seemed to suggest that in Augustus John was reincarnated the princely art of Rubens. One thing alone at that time limited his popularity. It was asked why did he draw such ‘ugly’ people. The truth was that Mr John, having an exceedingly original mind, found beauties in new types. A Welshman by birth and descent, John in his early days was a Borrow in paint, happiest and most at home among the Romanies. The apparent strangeness of his early drawings and paintings was largely due to his preference for gipsy types. While teaching at the Liverpool University School of Art, round about 1904, he would periodically disappear to go roving with the gipsies and then reappear, bringing with his pictures of the raggle-taggled life of the caravan. These pictures, bright and clear in color, incisive in line, and effective in composition, were a new thing in painting. As a painter John did not possess the precocious facility of Orpen, and his early work often shows a certain heaviness of handling when compared with his present day pictures, and in acquiring mastery of the brush John gradually evolved two distinct manners. Influenced to some extent by the modern French painters already mentioned in this Outline, he has shown a tendency to simplification which is most marked in his decorative work. In mural decorations, like ‘The Mumpers’ at the Tate Gallery, John deliberately sacrifices roundness of form for decorative effect. Like Pierre Puvis de Chavannes (1824-1898), the great painter of the Ste. Geneviève series in the Panthéon, Paris, John found that the qualities he aimed at necessitated a certain flatness of treatment. At the same time his color in these decorative works has become lighter and brighter. To this extent, in so far as it has tended to simplify rather than to complicate painting, the art of Augustus John may be said to illustrate a reaction from Impressionism. But while his decorative works often have primitive qualities, in his portraits he uses his full power of expressing form, and one of his most recent masterpieces ‘Madame Suggia’, proves that when this is his aim, John is second to no living man in realistic force and characterization. While infinitely various, there is an intense individuality in his draughtsmanship which unifies all his work and makes it recognizable as a ‘John’. His landscapes are closer to his decorative work than to his realistic portraiture. Finding his favorite subjects among the mountains and lakes of his native Wales, John has invented a new genre in landscape. Emphatic in their design, simplified in form, and brilliant but still in color, they strike a new note in British art.
Limitations of space prevent all but te briefest mention of another member of the New English Art Club, who has created a new type of landscape. Sir Charles John Holmes, the erudite Director of the National Gallery, was born in 1868. The son of a Cornish clergyman, he distinguished himself as a classical scholar at Eton and Oxford, and made a reputation as a writer on art before his watercolors and paintings became generally appreciated. Always a sytlist in design, simplicity is the outstanding quality in his work, and while he has painted many impressive landscapes of the grim, gaunt scenery of the Lake Country, it has been his peculiar distinction to invent ‘industrial landscape’, pictures in which factories and power stations of modern industrialism are powerfully presented with their surrounding landscapes. ‘The Burning Kiln’ is a fine example of the imaginative grandeur with which Sir C J Holmes invests these new subjects.
Another pupil of Professor Brown, Mr Walter W Russell (born 1867), added to the laurels of the New English Art Club by his brilliant portrait, ‘Mr Minney’, which was the picture of the year in the Academy of 1920.
In recent years the two most distinguished artists who have come from the Royal Academy Schools have been Mr Frederick Cayley Robinson (born 1862) whose poetic and decorative work shows a mingling of Pre-Raphaelite ideals with the noble simplicity of Puvis de Chavannes, and Mr Charles Sims (born 1873) who, after first attracting attention by the sheer beauty of his romantic idylls, astonished even his admirers by his exquisitely gracious and accomplished portrait ‘The Countess of Rocksavage and Son’, which was universally conceded to have won premier honors in the Academy of 1922.
Proverbially, art is long and talent today is so multitudinous that to attempt any adequate survey of present day achievements in Great Britain alone would be to embark on a voyage as lengthy as that which the reader has already traveled. Had space permitted it, it would have been gratifying to record successes in sculpture as well as in painting. Among the academic sculptors Sir George Frampton has acquired the widest popularity with his ‘Peter Pan’ in Kensington Gardens, while among the independent sculptors Mr Jacob Epstein’s bronze busts and Mr Eric Gill’s ‘Stations of the Cross’ in the Westminster Roman Catholic Cathedral are works which the present generation can leave with confidence to the judgment of posterity.
It is regretted that the scope of the present work has made it impossible to deal separately with etching, wood engraving, lithography, and other arts which are being practised today with skill and accomplishment. But all the pictorial and plastic arts are so intimately linked that the aims and ideals which animate them from generation to generation may to a great extent be deduced from a historical survey of painting. Without any pretence to be final or exhaustive, it is hoped that this work may contribute to a clearer understanding of the course followed by the main stream of European art from the thirteenth century to the present day.
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Eric Janszen
The Wired + Eric Janszen interview on clean technologies @ http://www.wired.com/science/planetearth/news/2008/03/cleantech_bubble was informative and useful.
Useful link:
www.itulip.com
Useful link:
www.itulip.com
Random Thoughts
He who works with his hands is a laborer. He who works with his hands and his head is a craftsman. He who works with his hands and his head and his heart is an artist.
- St. Francis of Assisi
- St. Francis of Assisi
Kolkata Museum Of Modern Art
First of its kind in Asia: Kolkata Museum of Modern Art (India), a joint venture with the West Bengal government and center, will be set up on 10 acres in New Town of Rajarhat, on the outskirts of Kolkata metropolis, with National Gallery + Western Galleries + Far-Eastern Galleries + Academic Wing, where a national collection of fine art ranging from the 19th century to the contemporary period will be exhibited + the project will be designed by Herzog & de Meuron, based in Basel, in Switzerland.
Useful link:
www.wbgov.com
Useful link:
www.wbgov.com
World Fair Trade Day 2008
I think World Fair Trade Day in 2008 was an exciting and challenging opportunity to raise consumer awareness = learning something new and different via sustainable earth-centered community = transformational experiences.
Useful links:
www.wftday.org
www.fairtraderesource.org
www.fairtradetownsusa.org
Useful links:
www.wftday.org
www.fairtraderesource.org
www.fairtradetownsusa.org
The San Francisco Earring Study
I found the report entitled 'Nickel release from earrings purchased in the United States: The San Francisco earring study," published online in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology via http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/080512/aqm093.html?.v=45 interesting + insightful.
Useful links:
www.eblue.org
www.aad.org
Look for jewelry labeled nickel-free.
Useful links:
www.eblue.org
www.aad.org
Look for jewelry labeled nickel-free.
The Great Debaters
(via Wiki) The Great Debaters is a 2007 film produced by Oprah Winfrey's Harpo Productions, based on an article about the Wiley College debate team by Tony Scherman written for American Legacy for its '97 Spring issue. It is directed by Denzel Washington who also stars in the film along with Forest Whitaker, Kimberly Elise, Denzel Whitaker, Nate Parker, Gina Ravera, and Jurnee Smollett. The screenplay was written by Suzan-Lori Parks and Robert Eisele. It was released on December 25, 2007.
Useful links:
www.thegreatdebatersmovie.com
www.imdb.com/title/tt0427309
I think it was a wonderful movie + those passionate and inspirational speeches beautifully delivered by the winning actors will be remembered forever.
Useful links:
www.thegreatdebatersmovie.com
www.imdb.com/title/tt0427309
I think it was a wonderful movie + those passionate and inspirational speeches beautifully delivered by the winning actors will be remembered forever.
Living It Up
Living It Up : America's Love Affair with Luxury by James B. Twitchell is a revealing and entertaining book on consumer culture.
The Art Of Today
(via The Outline of Art) Frank Rutter writes:
6
While the painters mentioned above are far from exhausting the list of distinguished artists who received their training directly from Legros, his successor, Professor Brown, may be said to have been fortunate in having still more brilliant pupils. Of these first attention must be given to William Orpen and Augustus John, who, by common consent, are the most richly gifted of the many ex-students of the Slade School who have attained eminence in their profession.
Now and again in the history of art there are happy individuals who seem to escape the student stage altogether and appear as masters from the first. Lawrence was one; Millais was another; Orpen is a third, and he bids fair to go farther than either of the other two. Born on the 27th November 1878, William Orpen attracted the attention of London connoisseurs while he was still a student at the Dublic Metropolitan School of Art. The writer can remember the sensation caused at South Kensington more than twenty years ago by a drawing from the life with which this young Irishman won the gold medal at the National Competition for works by students at schools of art all over the country. Never before or since has there been so much unanimity of opinion about a prize winner. Everybody was talking then about ‘young Orpen’s’ drawing, for while it satisfied the academic mind by its flawless perfection and anatomical correctness, it roused enthusiasm among more independent critics because it was not a dead thing—as so many prize drawings are—but a real human figure in which every line pulsated with life. It was clear that a great draughtsman had come to town, and when Orpen left Ireland and came to the Slade School his drawings and paintings soon became conspicuous in the exhibitions of the New English Art Club, then held at the old Dudley Gallery in the Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly. In the first decade of the twentieth century this youth in his twenties was already ranked, not with other students, but with artists, like Wilson Steer, who were recognized as masters. What distinguished Orpen at once from other able draughtsmen of his age was his precocious facility in the manipulation of paint. Most students have to learn slowly how to handle pigment; the first paintings Orpen exhibited proved that he had a mastery of the brush. A beautiful example of his early fluency is the picture in the Tate Gallery, entitled ‘The Mirror’, painted in 1900. Even at this period Orpen showed a wide range; he painted portraits, still life, nudes, and subject pictures, while perhaps the most characteristic of these early works were interiors with figures, pictures which seemed to have the fullness of content of a Van Eyck, though painted with the exuberance of a Hals.
In ‘The Mirror’ traces of the influence of Whistler may still be seen; in his later works Orpen’s style has become broader and more vigorous, his color has grown lighter and more brilliant, and in portraits his penetration into character has gained in profundity. But the characterisation was keen in several early portraits, notably the ‘Charles Wertheimer’, the first and only picture the artist exhibited at the Royal Academy prior to his election as Associate in 1910.
Since his entry into the Royal Academy the art of Sir William Orpen has steadily grown in power and public favor, but his phenomenal success has never warped his sincerity as an artist. While he has contributed a generous measure of portraits to the exhibitions of Burlington House, he has remained loyal to the New English Art Club, and there he has again and again shown those inimitable pictures which an artist paints for his own delight and pleasure. Among them may be mentioned some notable scenes of vagrant and peasant life in Ireland, and playful allegories, like ‘Sowing the Seed’, in which a true Irish sense of humor has been blended with pictorial and decorative charm. It is characteristic of Sir William’s independence as an artist that of all the hundreds of portraits which he painted in Paris during and after the Peace Conference, the very best of them should be, not one of the famous statesmen and soldiers who sat to him, but a man who was a nonentity till his portrait was exhibited. The now famous ‘Chef de I’Hôtel Chatham’ was not only the ‘picture of the year’ at the 1921 Academy, it is a picture for all time which has and will have the wide human appeal of Moroni’s ‘Portrait of a Tailor’. In this portrait of the Chef (Mr Chester) in his immaculate white cap and jacket, standing beside his grill, we have Orpen at his very best, using all his amazing facility and dexterity in the handling of paint for the purpose of putting on canvas the rich, full humanity of a living being.
Sir William’s two great Peace picture in the Academy of 1920, ‘Signing of Peace in the Hall of Mirrors, Versailles,’ and ‘A Peace Conference at the Quai d’Orsay,’ were an expansion of the delightful little interiors which he had sent in earlier days to the New English Art Club, and in a way his allegory ‘Sowing the Seed’ may be regarded as a prelude to the very different and far more serious painting, ‘To the Unknown Soldier’, which was the center of interest in the Academy of 1923. For both these paintings show high powers of imagination, and warn us that in marveling at the quickness of his eye and at the unerring skill of his hand, we must not forget that Sir William Orpen is also an artist with a keenly intelligent brain and with a warm imaginative heart, a man who can see both the humor and tragedy of life, who can feel deeply and can express his emotions either in genial satire or in a majestic allegory of epic grandeur.
The Art Of Today (continued)
6
While the painters mentioned above are far from exhausting the list of distinguished artists who received their training directly from Legros, his successor, Professor Brown, may be said to have been fortunate in having still more brilliant pupils. Of these first attention must be given to William Orpen and Augustus John, who, by common consent, are the most richly gifted of the many ex-students of the Slade School who have attained eminence in their profession.
Now and again in the history of art there are happy individuals who seem to escape the student stage altogether and appear as masters from the first. Lawrence was one; Millais was another; Orpen is a third, and he bids fair to go farther than either of the other two. Born on the 27th November 1878, William Orpen attracted the attention of London connoisseurs while he was still a student at the Dublic Metropolitan School of Art. The writer can remember the sensation caused at South Kensington more than twenty years ago by a drawing from the life with which this young Irishman won the gold medal at the National Competition for works by students at schools of art all over the country. Never before or since has there been so much unanimity of opinion about a prize winner. Everybody was talking then about ‘young Orpen’s’ drawing, for while it satisfied the academic mind by its flawless perfection and anatomical correctness, it roused enthusiasm among more independent critics because it was not a dead thing—as so many prize drawings are—but a real human figure in which every line pulsated with life. It was clear that a great draughtsman had come to town, and when Orpen left Ireland and came to the Slade School his drawings and paintings soon became conspicuous in the exhibitions of the New English Art Club, then held at the old Dudley Gallery in the Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly. In the first decade of the twentieth century this youth in his twenties was already ranked, not with other students, but with artists, like Wilson Steer, who were recognized as masters. What distinguished Orpen at once from other able draughtsmen of his age was his precocious facility in the manipulation of paint. Most students have to learn slowly how to handle pigment; the first paintings Orpen exhibited proved that he had a mastery of the brush. A beautiful example of his early fluency is the picture in the Tate Gallery, entitled ‘The Mirror’, painted in 1900. Even at this period Orpen showed a wide range; he painted portraits, still life, nudes, and subject pictures, while perhaps the most characteristic of these early works were interiors with figures, pictures which seemed to have the fullness of content of a Van Eyck, though painted with the exuberance of a Hals.
In ‘The Mirror’ traces of the influence of Whistler may still be seen; in his later works Orpen’s style has become broader and more vigorous, his color has grown lighter and more brilliant, and in portraits his penetration into character has gained in profundity. But the characterisation was keen in several early portraits, notably the ‘Charles Wertheimer’, the first and only picture the artist exhibited at the Royal Academy prior to his election as Associate in 1910.
Since his entry into the Royal Academy the art of Sir William Orpen has steadily grown in power and public favor, but his phenomenal success has never warped his sincerity as an artist. While he has contributed a generous measure of portraits to the exhibitions of Burlington House, he has remained loyal to the New English Art Club, and there he has again and again shown those inimitable pictures which an artist paints for his own delight and pleasure. Among them may be mentioned some notable scenes of vagrant and peasant life in Ireland, and playful allegories, like ‘Sowing the Seed’, in which a true Irish sense of humor has been blended with pictorial and decorative charm. It is characteristic of Sir William’s independence as an artist that of all the hundreds of portraits which he painted in Paris during and after the Peace Conference, the very best of them should be, not one of the famous statesmen and soldiers who sat to him, but a man who was a nonentity till his portrait was exhibited. The now famous ‘Chef de I’Hôtel Chatham’ was not only the ‘picture of the year’ at the 1921 Academy, it is a picture for all time which has and will have the wide human appeal of Moroni’s ‘Portrait of a Tailor’. In this portrait of the Chef (Mr Chester) in his immaculate white cap and jacket, standing beside his grill, we have Orpen at his very best, using all his amazing facility and dexterity in the handling of paint for the purpose of putting on canvas the rich, full humanity of a living being.
Sir William’s two great Peace picture in the Academy of 1920, ‘Signing of Peace in the Hall of Mirrors, Versailles,’ and ‘A Peace Conference at the Quai d’Orsay,’ were an expansion of the delightful little interiors which he had sent in earlier days to the New English Art Club, and in a way his allegory ‘Sowing the Seed’ may be regarded as a prelude to the very different and far more serious painting, ‘To the Unknown Soldier’, which was the center of interest in the Academy of 1923. For both these paintings show high powers of imagination, and warn us that in marveling at the quickness of his eye and at the unerring skill of his hand, we must not forget that Sir William Orpen is also an artist with a keenly intelligent brain and with a warm imaginative heart, a man who can see both the humor and tragedy of life, who can feel deeply and can express his emotions either in genial satire or in a majestic allegory of epic grandeur.
The Art Of Today (continued)
Monday, May 12, 2008
Remember Who You Are
Remember Who You Are: Life Stories That Inspire the Heart and Mind by Daisy Wademan + Kim Clark + Rosabeth Moss Kanter is a great inspirational book.
Greendex 2008
The National Geographic Society + international polling firm GlobeScan have unveiled Greendex 2008: Consumer Choice and the Environment—A Worldwide Tracking Survey to look at how consumers across the globe are behaving.
Useful link:
www.nationalgeographic.com
I think the survey will definitely impact individual consumer behavior.
Useful link:
www.nationalgeographic.com
I think the survey will definitely impact individual consumer behavior.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)