Archive for the 'Photo diary' Category

Photo diary: South of France part 3 (Collioure)

October 8, 2015

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On our last full day with George and Laurene, we packed a lunch and took a drive down to Collioure, a beautiful seaside town, so we could at least dip our toes in the Mediterranean.

9-16 collioure beach9-16 collioure playground9-16 the bay in collioure9-16 aqua windows with birds9-16 seaside trio9-16 handiplage9-16 dipping toes into mediterranean

Photo diary: South of France, part 2 (Carcasonne)

October 6, 2015

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George and Laurene took us for a day trip to the nearby town of Carcasonne, whose name was familiar to me only because of the board game. Little did I know that this medieval walled town figured heavily in the Albigensian Heresy, a chapter in the history of the Roman Catholic Church that I’d vaguely heard of but knew much more about by the end of this trip. Our hosts turned us on to Stephen O’Shea’s excellent popular history The Perfect Heresy: The Revolutionary Life and Death of the Medieval Cathars. (Google “Cathars” or “Albigensian Crusade.” It’s a horrifying story of Christians persecuting other Christians to match any Sunni/Shiite conflict we know about today.)

9-14 carcasonne from a distance9-14 l'histoire9-14 turrets9-14 stained glass closeup9-14 cathedral stained glass9-14 river side of castle9-14 handsome frenchman9-14 castle fresco 19-14 george laurene andy carcasonne9-14 andy at castle
When we walked into the cathedral, an a cappella quartet (the Doros Choir of Moscow) was performing sacred music in close to ideal acoustics:

Photo diary: South of France, part 1 (Clermont L’Herault)

October 5, 2015

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Andy’s Uncle George and Aunt Laurene moved from California to the south of France several years ago, and we had the pleasure recently of visiting their lovely home for several days of excellent wining and dining, laughing and talking, toodling around in the car to a local winery and various historic sites, and a memorable if arduous 35 km bike ride through the vineyards of Languedoc.

9-15 happy hour9-14 house9-14 grapes on patio9-14 pool deck9-14 at home with george and grappa9-16 laurene laughing9-15 barrels at mas novi9-16 george in his studio9-15 bike ride thru wine country

Photo diary: a weekend in the Poconos

July 28, 2015

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Andy and I spent the weekend visiting his college chum Sari (below) at her family’s lakeside summer house along with her kiddo Samson, her mom Judy, and some other college friends, John and Kathleen, with their adorable offspring, Josie and Henry.

7-25 lake hostess
7-25 sari and samson7-25 josie7-26 boys and legos

There was swimming, fishing, boating, lounging, and encountering lakeside wildlife:

7-25 visiting duck7-28 resident frog

mysterious underwater glop

mysterious underwater glop

distinctive lawn ornaments

distinctive lawn ornaments

gnome with eagle poop: the painting Norman Rockwell forgot to paint

gnome with eagle poop: the painting Norman Rockwell forgot to paint

creature from the toybox

creature from the toybox

lakeside idyll: John and Josie in the hammock with Harry Potter

lakeside idyll: John and Josie in the hammock with Harry Potter

Culture Vulture/Photo Diary: medical artwork at the Rubin Museum

July 24, 2015

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Last Friday Andy and I went to the Rubin Museum of Art for the screening in their Cabaret Cinema series of Jim Henson’s 1986 film Labyrinth, starring David Bowie, a very young Jennifer Connelly, and a million puppets. While milling around with the Friday night K-2 Lounge cocktail crowd and waiting for the movie theater door to open, we took the time to check out the exhibition downstairs of tangkas (Tibetan paintings) related to medical treatment. They’re very beautiful, intricately drawn and inscribed, and frank enough in their depiction of bodily functions to conjure comic books inspired by Hieronymous Bosch.

Take, for instance, this display of “Herbal and Animal Medications”:

7-17 herbal and animal meds tangka7-17 herbal and animal meds detail 17-17 herbal and animal meds detail 2
Other paintings (the equivalent of those anatomical posters doctors display in their examining rooms) focus on “Urinalysis: Demonic Possession and Divination,” “The Lesser Elixir of Rejuvenation and the Causes of Virility and Fertility,” and “Indications of Physical Decay and Dream Prognosis,” any one of which would make a great album title, don’t you think?

7-17 elegant pooping7-17 dream images7-17 animal droppings7-17 menstrual woes7-17 kissing fucking naked
The art exhibit turned out to be more engrossing than the film, sadly. For some reason, Andy thought it was going to be introduced by the team that created High Maintenance, a web series that we like very much, but the more logical speakers before the screening were Henson puppet masters Rollie Krewson and Connie Peterson, who shared their recollections about the technical challenges the film entailed. The movie itself and Bowie’s performance in particular seemed quite silly to me, but it did lead us to the discovery — Googling at home — that Bowie’s juggling double for the scenes with the crystal balls was none other than the magnificent Michael Moschen.

While we’re on the subject of underwhelming films, I’ll mention that I was looking forward to seeing Noah Baumbach’s While We’re Young because some reviews mentioned that the characters take part in an ayahuasca ceremony and I was curious to see if it would be handled respectfully or if it would be treated as some sort of trendy spiritual fad. Any guesses? A couple in their thirties — Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts — are getting to the last possible moment of becoming parents. Watching their close friends — played by Maria Dizzia and Adam Horovitz — settle into baby-centered middle age freaks them out, and they find themselves befriending a couple in their twenties — Adam Driver and Amanda Seyfried — and suddenly doing things that the young folks do. It’s pretty predictable and ultimately pretty infuriating. But the casting is great; thanks to the amazing Doug Aibel, you get to see wonderful New York performers in small roles, including the playwright Annie Baker.