Art

Food for Thought

Art is an irreplaceable way of understanding and expressing the world–equal to but distinct from scientific and conceptual methods. Art addresses us in the fullness of our being–simultaneously speaking to our intellect, emotions, intuition, imagination, memory and physical senses. There are some truths about life that can be expressed only as stories or songs or images.
— Dana Gioia, National Endowment for the Arts Chair during Stanford University commencement address

I ran across this quote in a discussion of government sponsorship for the arts and thought it was nice and concise.

I also really like what Leo Tolstoy had to say about the necessity of art.

To evoke in oneself a feeling one has experienced, and having evoked it in oneself, then by means of movement, line, color, sounds or forms expressed in words, so to transmit that feeling that others experience the same feeling–this is the activity of art.

Art is a human activity consisting in this, that one man consciously, by means of certain external signs, hands on to others feelings he has lived through and that others are infected by these feelings and also experience them.

And then George Kubler, in The Shape of Time, points out we need to study form (science) every bit as much as we need to study function (art history).

Archaeological studies and the history of science are concerned with things only as technical products, while art history has been reduced to a discussion of the meaning of things without much attention to their technical and formal organization. The task of the present generation is to construct a history of things that will do justice both to meaning and being . . . expression and form are equivalent challenges to the historian; and that to neglect either meaning or being, either essence or existence, deforms our comprehension of both.

What all that gets at is the fact that art is necessary to human existence. It’s a primal form of communication. Art is neither form nor function, but a synthesis of both, and we need art in order to explain and explore our existence. Art is every bit as important as science and technology.

Uncategorized

Adventures in Cooking

I tried to make some roasted veggies a few nights ago. After about 15 minutes, I heard a loud pop from the oven. It sounded suspiciously like an element breaking (BTDT). The element looked intact, but it wasn’t working, so I turned on the broiler to heat up the oven, then turned it off. That provided enough heat to almost finish cooking the veggies. After another 15 minutes, I turned on the broiler again, and there was a giant flash of blue between the back of the stove and the wall.

Eeep!

I turned off the oven and flipped off the breaker. Electricity scares the hell out of me. I had to wait until this morning to call maintenance, though, so I spent the weekend without a stove. This, of course, means that everything in my house requires stove-type cooking.

Anyway, the maintenance guy showed up at a little after 4pm, with an extra element. I told him that I didn’t think the element was going to fix the problem. I don’t think he believed me (though I couldn’t swear to it, as I could only make out every 5th word he said[1]), but he did finally pull the stove out. Apparently, one of the wires had either come loose or hadn’t been properly attached, because it had burned through. That was the giant flash I saw. He went to get a replacement, and now my stove is working again.

Wheee!

———————————
1. I’m usually pretty good at deciphering the local patois, but lordy, was this guy’s speech unintelligible! I think he and Boomhauer must be long lost brothers.

Crankypantsing

Taxes

I didn’t use I-File last year, because there was some sort of glitch. First, it gave me a wildly inaccurate amount that I owed the state (I have never, ever owed the state, because I rent and take the renter’s deduction). No way did I owe anything, much less a couple of thousand dollars. And then, I-File got stuck in an endless loop when I tried to find the mistake. After having a giant panic attack, I ended up paying to file through H & R Block or some other service, which worked Just Fine.

Because of that, I was leery of trying I-File again. I did, though (cuz it’s FREE), and ended up getting a little more back this year than last year.

All in all, Operation Tax Filing 2008 was a success.

The next step in my plot for world domination: Operation Cracktop.

That is all. As you were, comrades!

Uncategorized

Lost

This time, not the show.

I got up this morning and couldn’t find my glasses anywhere. WTF?! I always put them on my bedside table. I have never misplaced them before. I spent about an hour tearing the house apart, looking for them (just call me Velma), before I gave up and put in my contacts. At which point I realized that it’s been so long since I’ve worn them that I have no idea where my contact solution is (and it’s likely out of date, even if I’d been able to find it). Hence the quick trip to Target.

I did end up finding my glasses. Somehow they’d fallen behind the headboard of my bed. Haven’t a clue how on earth that happened. My working theory is that the cat had something to do with it.

Crankypantsing

How Old Are You? Part II

Remember when Coworker A demonstrated her inability to gauge other people’s ages? At the time, she thought I was old enough to have parents in assisted living communities. Um, no, my mom is a few years younger than Coworker A.

Anyway, yesterday she launched into a tale of how it was her 31st wedding anniversary. I congratulated her. Then she asked me if I was 31 years old. How on earth did she get from Point A to Point B? Not to mention that A) it’s kind of rude to ask someone else how old they are, and B) she’s already asked me how old I am. Multiple times!

Miss Noseypants is both nosy and forgetful.

Photography

Water and Ice

100_5702

100_5699

100_5697
Ice on Windows

The condensation is back on the windows at work, only this time, because it’s been below zero, the windows that don’t have radiators beneath them are frozen. On some of the windows, there are frozen drips, and on others, pebbly ice crystals. It was very pretty, with the sun shining through the ice.

100_5706
Condensation on Window

100_5707
Ice on Window

These are the two windows in my cubicle. They are obviously adjacent to each other, but the left one has a radiator under it, so it didn’t freeze.

News & Politics

Next Week

The new season of Lost starts next Wednesday. There’s a recap show on tonight, with the fourth season finale following it. Eeep!

The other exciting event happening next week, obviously, will be finally saying goodbye to Bush and his merry henchmen. Just one day after celebrating the life of Martin Luther King, Jr., we’ll be inaugurating our first person of color to the country’s highest office. That’s pretty damned awesome.