Showing posts with label bubbles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bubbles. Show all posts

odds and ends / 6.13.2019













Ruth Clark, Simple Group Dances for Use in Schools, via The Second Shelf.

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Madeline Weinrib quilt, ca. 2012.

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William B. Closson, Butterflies, ca. 1887.
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Pimlico House kitchen designed by Rose Uniacke.

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The Corleck head, a three-faced stone carving. Ireland, 1st-2nd century A.D.

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She describes herself as a messy reader, and a messy thinker, and she is stylishly disheveled, with a preference for comfy, colorful clothing with pockets and Birkenstocks with socks.
As a procession of speeches and toasts lauded her life’s work, Dr. Uhlenbeck stood to the side of the lectern and listened, eyes mostly closed. When it finally came time to make her own remarks (unprepared), she began by simply agreeing: “From the perspective of my late seventies, I find myself as a young mathematician sort of impressive, too.”

She went on to note that, for lack of mathematical candidates, her role model had been the chef Julia Child. “She knew how to pick the turkey up off the floor and serve it,” Dr. Uhlenbeck said.

Siobhan Roberts, "In Bubbles, She Sees a Mathematical Universe." NYT, 4/8/2019. A profile of Karen Uhlenbeck, winner of the Abel Prize.

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Also: 'Astrophysicists have long postulated, if only symbolically, that galaxy clusters have a soapsuds structure.'

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'She weighed about ninety pounds without her jewels, and when I met her she was ninety years old.'

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The children's book coverage in the New Yorker's Page-Turner is a platter of delicious treats: Jia Tolentino on Ellen Raskin's The Westing GameRivka Galchen on Curious GeorgeSarah Blackwood on Amelia BedeliaRumaan Alam on William Steig.

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Lyz Lenz attends Mom 2.0: 'We are preparing ourselves to perform motherhood with a hashtag.'

Related: a 14-year-old on her mom and sister's social media accounts: 'For my generation, being anonymous is no longer an option. For many of us, the decisions about our online presence are made before we can even speak.'

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Once the queue nears baggage control, despondent submission to contemporary travel proceedings gives way to a fluster of semi-autonomous acts that demonstrate to the persons behind you in the queue the ability to stay calm while efficiently slinging your suitcase into the grey tray and stuffing your hand luggage in another, along with your coat, your cardigan, your shoes, your belt, your mobile phone, your earplugs, your tablet, your battery, your keys, your wallet, your external hard drive, your umbrella, your loose change and your passport – in short, all the belongings that make you you barring your inner organs, crammed into these plastic open caskets that roll into the X-ray machine as into a furnace, ready to be incinerated. Surely, to travel should not cause such fear of discovery?

Astrid Albin, 'Eighteen Seconds to Impact.' The Times Literary Supplement, 3/27/2019.

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Speaking of bags for travel: I saw some totes by Epperson Mountaineering at Seven Sisters in Portland, Oregon, and am now coveting their backpacks.

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Strawberry dumpling (easy and delicious).

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Ordinary sex.


odds and ends / 6.2.2017















Pictured:
Text found by stopping off place.
Milton Avery (1885-1965), Sitters by the Sea.
Julianne Swartz, Bubble Portrait (cloud swirl), 2005, found thanks to A Cup of Jo.
Dandelion discard pile by Studio Drift, found thanks to bonbon oiseau.
Photo of worm trails in silty mud I snapped a few weeks ago.

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It’s hard to imagine anyone consciously choosing to leave a legacy of impoverishment, economic disruption, increasingly bizarre weather, health impacts ranging from heat strokes to spread of diseases, rising sea levels and flooding — but that is just what the president has done.

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Walter Kirn, "You Can Run ..." Harpers April 2017.


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In news of ordinary life, we've been checking cookbooks out of the library; I'm testing out this and this. We made these yogurt biscuits this morning; as you might expect, not quite as good as a cream or buttermilk biscuit, but still passably biscuity when warm from the oven.

Recent reads I'd recommend: Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi; The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead, and The Emigrants by W.G. Sebald. This weekend is the Case Book Sale, and I'm looking forward to making a wholly-unrealistic summer reading list from whatever I find there.

Art-wise: looking forward to Brand-New and Terrific; hoping to see Gray Matters.

On TV: captivated by American Epic and Victorian Slum House.

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Toni Morrison on work: 'I have never considered the level of labor to be the measure of myself, and I have never placed the security of a job above the value of home.'

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'I wish I loved lawnmowers.'

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vegetation's juggler

The mushroom is the elf of plants
At evening it is not;
At morning in a truffled hut
It stops upon a spot

As if it tarried always;
And yet its whole career
Is shorter than a snake's delay,
And fleeter than a tare.

'T is vegetation's juggler,
The germ of alibi;
Doth like a bubble antedate,
And like a bubble hie.

I feel as if the grass were pleased
To have it intermit;
The surreptitious scion
Of summer's circumspect.

Had nature any outcast face,
Could she a son contemn,
Had nature an Iscariot,
That mushroom,—it is him.



this weekend


Things I am looking forward to:
And on Monday, book club. Happy weekend.

Image from Peter J. Cohen's collection of found photographs at MoMA. Via Old Faithful Shop/Old Chum.

toodles


Alvin Langdon Coburn: The Bubble, ca. 1908. The woman in the picture is Elsie 'Toodles' Thomas.

gum chewers


















Photos of gum chewers by Cornell Capa for a LIFE feature on Andrew J. Paris, bubble gum king. January 1947.

rainbows on their curves

Two bubbles found they had rainbows on their curves.
They flickered out saying:
"It was worth being a bubble, just to have held that rainbow thirty seconds."
Carl Sandberg.

Sam A Harris: Untitled (bubbles). 2012.

Via the white hotel.

mars hill


Rob Amberg (b. 1947): Photo from Mars Hill, N.C.

Discovered here.

Found here.

this weekend


Blowing up. Also:
Photo by Bob Landry from 1946 (found here). Happy weekend.

monday morning conversation

rachel.madewell: it's a beautiful day.

me: it is.

rachel.madewell: don't let it get away.

me: how should i catch it?

rachel.madewell: i don't know.
prob with bubbles.

me: hm. i will give it some thought.