Art, Crankypantsing

Two Picts to Bone

The season finale of CSI (the good one) was on last night. One of the story lines involved a Civil War re-enacter. A heavily corseted US Civil War re-enacter. According to the show, Victorian men favored a small waist, and would often corset themselves to achieve an exaggerated hourglass figure. Not exactly. While it is true that there was a period in which men commonly wore corsets, the extreme wasp-waist was fashionable between 1820-1835, which preceded both the Victorian period and the Civil War.

The second point I’d like to take issue with is the claim that folks in old photos were stiff looking because of the long exposure times required by early photographic processes. While that is true, by the time of the Civil War there were newer processes, like ambrotypes, that allowed a much shorter exposure time. Most of the Civil War era photos I’ve seen–and the example depicted in last night’s CSI–were the classic 1/8 plate ambrotypes. My guess is that the serious expressions common in photographs from the period were due more to artistic convention than to the limitations of the technology.

Uncategorized

Red Fox

I saw another fox this morning. A red one, this time. As I was driving down 17th street, between Fee and Jordan, he streaked across the road, right in front of my car. I think he must’ve been chasing a bunny, because he ended up in a field, running and pouncing and generally looking like he was having a lot of fun. It was early and there was very little traffic, so I stopped for a minute to watch him. Day-um, was he ever cute! His little white tail tip kept flicking around, making him look like a cat on the hunt.

A campus cop pulled out of a parking lot up the road from me. I decided it was best to move along, so I didn’t get to see whether or not Mr. Fox ever caught his breakfast.

Crankypantsing

Now I’ve Seen Everything

I just got back from heating up my lunch in the break room. A girl was in there, making Lipton bag tea in one of those sports type bottles with a filter in the cap. WTF? But wait, it gets better. After it was done steeping, she chucked in a couple of heaping tablespoons of International Coffee.

Whyever on earth would someone drink anything besides plain old water out of a filtered bottle? Much less something sweet and gooey, like International Coffee? And then there’s the question of combining tea and “coffee”…

Aieee!

Ladybusiness, News & Politics

On Press Bias

There was much frothing and agitation yesterday in response to a WaPo article on the CDC’s new recommendations for preconceptive health care.

Going by the WaPo article, it would appear as if Margaret Atwood’s worst nightmare might be blossoming before our eyes. Any woman capable of bearing children–whether or not she intends to become pregnant–should not drink or smoke or have contact with cat feces, should take folic acid and vitamin supplements, maintain a “healthy” weight, keep conditions like asthma and diabetes under control, etc. Basically, women should pretend that they might become pregnant at any moment.

If true, the recommendations would certainly be something to get uppity about. It’s one thing to tell women that X behaviors are good or bad their health. It’s quite another to focus on the potential health of a hypothetical fetus, as if the woman’s health, in and of itself, were unimportant. By all means, tell women that they ought to take care of their health, but that message should not be contingent on their fertility status. Thankfully, that’s not at all what the CDC was recommending, though. The CDC recommended that any woman who intends to become pregnant should follow their guidelines. That’s quite another kettle of fishes. It’s still a little troubling, because it ignores the impact of men’s health on fetuses, but it’s a long way from calling for all women to be treated like ambulatory incubators.

I don’t know what the hell WaPo was thinking, but this is a pretty good example of how the press can twist something around until it says almost the opposite of what the original source intended. News outlets are run by humans, and humans have agendas. It always pays to be skeptical, and to, whenever possible, consult original sources. If you cannot access the original source, then you should attempt to find a variety of view points on the subject. Otherwise, someone might try to sell you some prime swampland in Poughkeepsie.

Crankypantsing, Ladybusiness

If you can’t see my hands…

Since I’m on the subject of drivers, I figured this was as good a time as any to discuss Mr. DeWitt. He taught drivers’ ed., health, and, I believe, phys. ed. I had him for drivers’ ed. and health.

Mr. DeWitt was deeply bizarre. He was infamous for telling stories about his family. And retelling them. And retelling them. I think I might have stuck an ice pick in my eardrums if I’d had to sit through one more quarter with his stories. If it wasn’t the story about how his daughter got a nose job and now she was just as cute as a button, it was the story about getting shot at for stealing watermelons when he was a teenager. There was also the one about his alcoholic brother, or maybe it was his cousin the speed freak? I suspect he was making most of them up, hoping that adding a personal touch to the cautionary tales would lend them importance. The condom and banana routine that Andy mentioned in comments was an oldie but a goodie. He also brought in life-size anatomical models of male and female genitalia and passed them around. Probably not a bad idea in itself, but lordy, was he ever creepy about it.

Drivers’ ed. was a whole ‘nother kettle of fishes. I was so sick of his stories that I skipped class more often than not. Funnily enough, it didn’t affect my grade. In class, he told the same old stories and spewed the same old one-liners (“If you can’t see my hands, you gotta wonder what I’m doing!” being the most repeated.) On driving days, he was fond of taking us out onto the bypass, waiting until we’d gotten somewhat comfortable with the speed and traffic, then yelling “SHAZAAM!” in our ears. That did not go over very well with me. I pulled off the road and told him that if he ever did that again, I’d walk home, and he’d have to explain why he came back minus one student.

The first day my group actually drove, he took us to a cul-de-sac to practice. My one and only driving lesson at that point had been in an ancient VW squareback that not only was temperamental as all hell, but also had a broken driver’s seat. I had to sit on a couple of phone books, my feet barely touched the pedals, and I had to sit upright, because the back of the seat was permanently reclined. So, when I first tried to drive the drivers’ ed. car, I naturally gave it too much gas and hit the brakes too suddenly. Power brakes? WHAT FRESH HELL IS THIS? Mr. DeWitt’s response was that we should drive the car like we were having sex–nice and slow. Now, how the hell is that an appropriate thing to say to a car full of teenage girls?

He was also fond of grabbing the driver’s seat belt, ostensibly to make sure it was correctly adjusted. It was obvious, though, that he was just copping a feel. There is no reason on earth why he would need to put his hands between a girl’s breasts in order to determine whether or not the seat belt was adjusted properly. I’m just sayin’…

The best, though, was when we picked up our waivers. He made each of us come to his office to pick them up, instead handing them out in class. When I picked up mine, he told me all the girls had to give him a hug before he’d give them their waiver. I said, “Okaythenbye!” and turned around and left. No way in hell was I giving Mr. PervyPants a hug. He apparently thought better of it, and followed me down the hall and handed the waiver to me. Hrmph.

So, it’s no wonder I have an ambivalent attitude toward driving. I ended up spending all my drivers’ ed. time trying to think of ways to avoid the teacher, instead of actually learning how to, oh, I dunno, drive.

Crankypantsing

A Note to Illinois

Please, if you are going to send your drivers to southern Indiana, first make sure that they have at least a passing acquaintance with hills, curves, and narrow country roads. That goes double for anyone travelling to Owen County.

On my way home, a Ford Explorer with Illinois plates pulled out in front of me (from Rice’s Meats, for those playing along at home). As I followed Mr. Illinois up the next hill, I knew I was going to be in for an adventure. He was in the freaking middle of the road. Going up a hill. Hello?! All the way into Spencer, the driver remained in the center of the road, except for the few occasions when he drifted all the way over to the left shoulder. Aieee! Luckily, he was also going all of 20mph.  The speed limit there is technically 35mph, but most folks go 45mph.  Obviously, Mr. Illinois was not from around here.

It wasn’t long before there was a long line of cars behind me. None of us, I’m sure, was amused. I almost had to applaud, though, when Mr. Illinois won a game of chicken with not one, but two school buses. He continued down the center of the road, forcing both buses to pull off onto the grass to avoid hitting him. Considering how many times I’ve been run off the road by the local bus drivers, I couldn’t help but laugh.

By the time we’d reached River Hill Cemetery, I had finally simmered down enough that I figured it might actually be entertaining to watch the inevitable train wreck as Mr. Illinois attempted to navigate the switchback curve descending into town. I was not disappointed. The real train wreck nearly occurred in town, though, when Mr. Illinois actually stopped on the tracks on North street. Traffic was backed way up, so maybe he was confused, but actually stopping on the tracks defies common sense.

I ended up being stuck behind this guy all the way to the Patricksburg Road turn-off. When speed picked up west of town, he was all over the road. At that point, I couldn’t decide if he was drunk or if it was the first time he’d ever been behind the wheel of a car. Truly, it was the most amazing spectacle-on-wheels I’ve ever seen. And, living in Owen County, I’ve seen some ridiculous death wish driving!

Uncategorized

Pareidolia

Holy asparagus, Batman!

It appears that The Son of God has been potted. The owner of said visage reckons it’s better than Mother-Theresa-in-a-Bagel. I tend to agree.

My favorite, though, is the “artist’s impression of Jesus” included in the article. I mean, it’s good of them to point out that it–unlike the fifty brazillion other depictions of Christ–is only an artist’s interpretation, because otherwise, we might think it was photographic proof or something.

Boggle.

And, as if potting weren’t enough, the aforementioned Lamb o’ God shall also be cubed. Another artist’s impression of Jesus has twice lost his right hand to vandals. As a prophylactic measure, after the hand has regenerated, the statue will be placed in a Plexiglas cube. Personally, I think the cube should not be transparent. It could be a physics experiment, e.g. Schroedinger’s Christ. It would also force folks to take it on faith that Jesus was, indeed, in the box. And then there’s the endlessly entertaining gag: “What’s in the Booooooooox?!

Also, I have now added two more phrases to my Cursing for Jesus repertoire: Christ in a Pot and Christ in a Box.

Teh Enb.

Art, Collage

Amulet

Amulet
Amulet
collage (wood fan slat, rose petals, brass discs, Polaroid photo, and magazine clipping), gesso, India ink, Cray pas, metallic wax paste on black 90lb Stonehenge paper
5 3/4 x 5 3/4 inches

I’ve been trying to finish this stupid thing for weeks. I finally slathered a bunch of gesso over it this afternoon while watching something on PBS about Catherine the Great.

It’s kind of hard to believe it’s on black paper, isn’t it?

The Polariod is of a life-size bronze sculpture, Lawrence Tenney Stevens’ Alba, that was wrapped up and crated.  (You can kind of see what she looked like here.) She was on her way to the conservation lab. Because she looked like a mummy in a coffin, I thought it would be funny to photograph Baubo with her, as if Baubo were an amulet. It’s highly unethical to play with the art, but sometimes the temptation was just too much.

I pulled apart the Polaroid, only using the front plastic layer which contains the photo emulsion. I sanded the back side, rubbing the image completely away on the left-hand side. The jagged, dark form showing through the photo is actually a burned fragment of a magazine page.

The fan slat was covered with red oil pastel, then gone over with metallic gold paste wax. I love the combination, because it mimics traditional gold leaf over red bole.

Ladybusiness

Friend of the Fetus

Lyrics reposted from http://sniff.numachi.com/~rickheit/dtrad/pages/tiFRNDFETS.html

Friend of the Fetus
(Carol Rose Livingstone)

1. I am no friend of the fathers and mothers
I am no friend of the sisters and brothers
I am no friend to the weak and distressed
I am no friend to the poor and oppressed.

Chorus
But I am a friend of the fetus,
A friend of incomparable worth
I am a friend of the fetus,
Right up to the moment of birth.

2. Once it’s a baby I will not go near it,
I will not feed it and I will not rear it.
When it is crying I won’t even hear it
For I have no room in my heart for a human.

3. I will not weep for it, I won’t lose sleep for it,
I will not care for it, I won’t be there for it,
I’ll walk away from it, I won’t go grey for it
I will not pray for it and I won’t pay for it.

JB

Crankypantsing

Smells Like Pee

There is a law of nature which states that libraries must smell of pee. The main library at IU is no exception, though until today, I had thought the pee smell was limited to the 5th floor. Not so. I just got back from the break room, where I bought a PepsiCokesodapop, in hopes that some more caffeine might wake me up. The break room–the place where everyone eats and hangs out–suddenly reeks of urine.

O ick.