Friday, October 29, 2010

Fascinating: Frida Kahlo
I paint self-portraits because I am so often alone, because I am the person I know best.
-Frida Kahlo


With slim sable brushes, Frida Kahlo painstakingly rendered her bold unibrow and mustache in dozens of self-portraits. This same Frida also shaved three years off her age, claiming 1910 to be the year she was born in Coyoacán, Mexico, instead of 1907.Vanity? Hardly. Frida, always her own favorite model, was not about preserving youthful beauty so much as identifying herself with Mexico, her beloved homeland. Frida's "acquired birth year" just so happens to coincide with the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution (1910) and the overthrow of President Porfirio Diaz. If her glaring lie seems jarring and incongruous – disturbing, even, in the face of her usual unabashed candor – reflect for a moment on the juxtaposed images that characterize her paintings. Frida never allowed apparent facts – her own birth certificate, for instance – to get in the way of a higher truth; the truth in this case being that she and modern Mexico were inextricably bound in both revolution and renaissance. An understanding of Frida Kahlo, the person as well as the paintings, requires a setting aside of conventional thoughts – and dates, as the case may be. At the same time, paradoxically enough, it requires the context of history. She was a revolutionary artist born amidst political chaos in her homeland; born in the year of its own bloody rebirth, give or take a couple years. That image, according to the artist, is more truthful than fact itself. It would be quibbling to disagree.

No matter whether she was in Paris, New York or Coyoacán, she clothed herself elaborately in the Tehuana costumes of Indian maidens. As much as Frida's country defined her, so, too, did her husband, the celebrated muralist, Diego Rivera. If Mexico was her parent, then Rivera – 20 years her senior – was her "big-child." She often referred to him as her baby. She met him while still a schoolgirl and later, in 1929, became the third wife of a man who gaily accepted the diagnosis of his doctor that he was "unfit for monogamy."

Needless to say, theirs was an unconventional and problematic, if passionate, union that survived numerous affairs (on both their parts), separations and even a divorce in 1939 and subsequent remarriage in 1940. Their love proved hardy, like the roots in Frida's painting "The Love Embrace." But Frida's hold on Diego as a husband was tenuous. Marriage was hardly a salve for the suffering that had characterized Frida's young life – a horrific trolley car accident left her broken as a youth and debilitated throughout much of her adulthood. Diego's incorrigible philandering – once with Frida's own younger sister, Cristina – only exacerbated her pain. "I suffered two grave accidents in my life," she once said, "One in which a streetcar knocked me down … The other accident is Diego."

As a couple, the Riveras remained childless; this, as much as Diego's infidelities, was a source of great anguish for Frida for whom Diego was everything: "my child, my lover, my universe."

As individual artists, the pair was wildly productive. Each regarded the other as Mexico's greatest painter. Frida referred to Diego as the "architect of life." Each took a deep, proprietary pride in the other's creations, drastically different as they were in habit and style.

On a high scaffold in the outdoors, the driven Diego painted for days on end. He loved painting as obsessively as Frida loved him, rendering grand public murals with political themes. Frida, meanwhile, was often immobilized in a cast in her bed, or confined to a hospital room, either anticipating a surgery or recovering from one. She alternately languished and painted intensely personal works. About a third of her entire body of work – about 55 paintings – consists of self-portraits. In some, she stares out, willfully impassive, her face mask-like; in others, graphic depictions of her internal bodily organs reveal corresponding states of mind. She shied away from nothing, revealing – indeed, reveling in – the indignity of heartbreak, as well as the gut-wrenching pain of abortion and miscarriage.

Diego, a social realist, actually welled up with tears of pride when Picasso once admired the eyes in a painting of Frida's. And he wrote this glowing recommendation to a friend about an early exhibition of her work: "I recommend her to you, not as a husband but as an enthusiastic admirer of her work, acid and tender, hard as steel and delicate and fine as a butterfly's wing, loveable as a beautiful smile, and profound and cruel as the bitterness of life."

Although Frida's work, often fantastic and sometimes gory, has been described as surrealism, she once wrote that she never knew she was a surrealist "until André Breton came to Mexico and told me I was one." ("The art of Frida Kahlo is a ribbon about a bomb," Breton wrote, admiringly.) However, Frida eschewed labels. Diego argued that Frida was a realist. Her principal biographer, Hayden Herrera, seems to agree, writing that even in her most enigmatic and complex painting, "What the Water Gave Me," Frida is "down to earth," having depicted "real images in the most literal, straightforward way." Like much of Mexican art, Frida's paintings "interweave fact and fantasy as if the two were inseparable and equally real," Herrera adds. "

Really I do not know whether my paintings are surrealist or not, but I do know that they are the frankest expression of myself," Frida once wrote. "Since my subjects have always been my sensations, my states of mind and the profound reactions that life has been producing in me, I have frequently objectified all this in figures of myself, which were the most sincere and real thing that I could do in order to express what I felt inside and outside of myself."

Frida, the person and her art, defy easy definition. Rather, they lend themselves to ambiguous description. Often volatile and obsessive, Frida was alternately hopeful and despairing. She loved dancing and crowds and flirtation and seduction – and was often miserably lonely, begging friends and lovers to visit, not to "forget" her. She had a ferocious and often black sense of humor, as well as a sharp command of wit and metaphor. She took great pride in keeping a home for Diego and loved fussing over him, cooking for him and bathing him. She delighted in pets – mischievous spider monkeys and dogs – and adored children, who she treated as equals. She loved nonsense, gossip and dirty jokes. She abhorred pretension. She treated servants like family and students like esteemed colleagues. Frida Kahlo embodied alegría, – a lust for life. She valued honesty, especially to self.

She once wrote to a former lover (who allegedly had jilted her because of her physical infirmities), "you deserve the best, the very best, because you are one of the few people in this lousy world who are honest to themselves, and that is the only thing that really counts."

When Frida Kahlo died at the age of 47 on July 13, 1954, she left paintings, each of which corresponds to her evolving persona, as well as a collection of effusive letters to lovers and friends, and colorfully candid journal entries. All are irrefutable evidence that her life was nothing less than a quest to be honest to herself – 1910 birthday and all.

Source: http://www.pbs.org/weta/fridakahlo/life/index.html

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Pumpkin-Walnut Focaccia with Gruyère
Ingredients:

2 teaspoons rapid-rising dry yeast
3/4 cup hard cider (room tempature)
1/3 cup packed brown sugar
3 1/2 to 4 cups flour
1 tablespoon coarse salt
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 cup canned pumpkin
1/4 cup olive oil
Cornmeal, for dusting
3/4 cup (3 ounces) grated Gruyère cheese, divided
1/3 cup coarsely chopped walnuts
Directions:

In the bowl of a standing mixer fitted with a dough hook, proof the yeast by combining it with the warm cider and sugar. Stir gently to dissolve. Let stand 3 minutes until foam appears. Turn mixer on low and slowly add the flour to the bowl. Dissolve salt in 2 tablespoons of water and add it to the mixture. Pour in olive oil, half of cheese, pumpkin and nutmeg . When the dough starts to come together, increase the speed to medium. Stop the machine periodically to scrape the dough off the hook. Mix until the dough is smooth and elastic, about 10 minutes, adding flour as necessary.

Turn the dough out onto a work surface and fold over itself a few times. Form the dough into a round and place in an oiled bowl, turn to coat the entire ball with oil so it doesn't form a skin. Cover with plastic wrap or damp towel and let rise over a gas pilot light on the stovetop or other warm place until doubled in size, about 1 hour.

Coat a sheet pan with a little olive oil and corn meal. Once the dough is doubled and domed, turn it out onto the counter. Roll and stretch the dough out to an oblong shape about 1/2-inch thick. Sprinkle remaining cheese and nuts evenly over dough circles; press lightly to adhere. Lightly coat dough circles with cooking spray; Lay the flattened dough on the pan and cover with plastic wrap. Let rest for 15 minutes.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Uncover dough; bake at 400° for 20-30 minutes or until loaves are browned on the bottom and cheese melts (shield loaves with foil to prevent overbrowning, if necessary). Cool on a wire rack.

Travelers
I soon realized that no journey carries one far unless, as it extends into the world around us, it goes an equal distance into the world within. ~Lillian Smith

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Michael Kors Fall 2010 Ready to Wear






Simple, Classic and Beautiful.
Warm, Masculine, Minimal








Dream 10.26.10


I'm sitting in what I guess is a bus. A vessel of some sort made for transporting people. It's bumpy. I look around because I have no idea why I am here. It's crowded with too many people and luggage. People look distraught, like they left somewhere in a hurry. I'm sitting in a seat made for two with two other people. I think one is my friend. I'm practically falling off the edge of the seat. I look to my right and see a handsome man with dark messy hair sitting across from me. I smile. My heart flutters. One of "those" instant attractions which rarely ever happens. Sure, you can find plenty of people attractive. Most people are lovely in one way or another...until you get to know them better..or visa versa. But this is different than just attraction. Its when you look at someone and feel like you've always known them. Love at first sight as some say. I've felt this feeling 3 times in my life. Maybe they were past lovers in a different life. Maybe its just pheromones. It doesn't matter. Its unforgettable either way. The ride gets bumpier and I fall off my seat and slide forward. He reaches out and grabs my arm to pull me up. I look at him and ask if I can sit with him. There isn't enough room on the other seat I blush. He smiles. The seat is tight. There is a large duffel bag to his right which takes up a bit of the seats so We sit close. Normally too close for comfort if he had been a stranger. Which he is. But he doesn't feel like a stranger. I turn my head a little to my right and my lips are almost touching his neck because we are so close. In a single instant he looks at me and kisses me. I return. A short sweet kiss. We smile and laugh and hold on to each other like it was normal. Intimate. Comfortable. Something we do all the time. After all, we've always known each other haven't we? Somewhere. Sometime.


We are in a giant....store. I think it's a grocery store but it's the size of several warehouses...at least. It reminds me of Jungle Jim's. We are smiling and talking about what to get. I think we are supposed to be stocking up on food or supplies, but it's hardly what's on our mind. We pick up a few things. Namely a few ethnic foods and a bottle of wine. Were we supposed to be going somewhere?



Flash.



We are in the sky. We are in some kind of plane or maybe it's a space shuttle. It's definitely a space shuttle. Another vessel. Moving much faster than the other. I think we are leaving Earth. I'm scared and all of a sudden lonely. I decide I don't want to leave.



Flash.



I'm no longer in the plane but in a house. He's upstairs. Maybe he's in the shower. I call out for him but no one answers. Impending doom. I can feel it. I run outside and I'm looking at the sky. It's red. Something is coming. Something big. A bomb? Meteor maybe? It's close. I run inside and sit on the stairs. I pull my knees up to my chest and cover my head. Like it's going to help any, I think. It's almost here. I'm scared. I feel my entire body get warm and see a bright white flash of light. I can feel my insides burning. I open my eyes and the burning stops. Everything is so bright. I'm in the house still, but its all just forms made out of some kind of mist. Light gray and white. Cold. Wet. And then it hits me.



Wake up...

Monday, October 25, 2010

On Looking up by Chance at the Constellations
You'll wait a long, long time for anything much
To happen in heaven beyond the floats of cloud
And the Northern Lights that run like tingling nerves.
The sun and moon get crossed, but they never touch,
Nor strike out fire from each other nor crash out loud.
The planets seem to interfere in their curves
But nothing ever happens, no harm is done.
We may as well go patiently on with our life,
And look elsewhere than to stars and moon and sun
For the shocks and changes we need to keep us sane.
It is true the longest drouth will end in rain,
The longest peace in China will end in strife.
Still it wouldn't reward the watcher to stay awake
In hopes of seeing the calm of heaven break
On his particular time and personal sight.
That calm seems certainly safe to last to-night.

-Robert Frost

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Masculine, androgyny


Under the Greenwood Tree


Under the greenwood tree
Who loves to lie with me,
And turn his merry note
Unto the sweet bird's throat,
Come hither, come hither, come hither:
Here shall he see
No enemy
But winter and rough weather.
Who doth ambition shun,
And loves to live i' the sun,
Seeking the food he eats,
And pleas'd with what he gets,
Come hither, come hither, come hither:
Here shall he see
No enemy
But winter and rough weather.
-William Shakespeare

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Homemade Tamles



















Free


We are unlettered in that which is true beauty, hampered by hypnotic multi-media imagery, and blinded by sight - our most obtrusive sense. With passivity and unexplored ambivalence we accept ersatz interpretations of beauty, that have been spooned to us by various unnamable sponsors and organizations.

Saturday, October 02, 2010

Lost in inner space


"When the superficial wearies me, it wearies me so much that I need an abyss in order to rest." ~Antonio Porchia