Thursday, October 6, 2011

Wall Street Demonstration

As many people know there have been demonstrations centered at Zuccotti Park against Wall Street.  Today, the day after the big demo, I don't like crowds, I went down to take a look and to take some photos.
 
Lots of people
The police were a strong presence and moving people along.  One Sergeant said to keep moving or "GET in the park!".  I left.
It was not possible to find recent figures but in 2005 the average CEO pay at an S&P 500 corporation was $11,358,445.  Average!  The ratio as of 2004 of CEO to Worker pay was 431 to 1.  The average American worker at that time earned $27,460.  One sign at the demo showed the ratios around the world.  Japan is 20 to 1.   I just kept walking and I found more cops.  Mariska Hargitay from Law and Order Special Victims was filming on the courthouse steps at Foley Square and Tom Selleck was filming something called True Bloods, between Police Plaza and the Municipal Building.
Is there a relationship between the number of police dramas in our culture and the passivity of many people to the inequities in that culture?

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Pastel Demonstration

Went to the National Arts Club on Gramercy park South to see a demonstration of drawing with pastels by this year's Hall of Fame Honoree Bill Creevy.  The demonstration involved copying a piece he had already completed and discussing the techniques he uses and some of the problems with pastels, all the different kinds of paper, the "dust", the difficulty in transporting the work because of the 'looseness' of the medium, more "dust".  He is also a very opinionated guy, which made the day even better.
What he said and did:
From Leonardo DeVinci: 'If you can make an oval you can draw anything'.
He begins with white paper, some use black or colored paper, and works with cooling colors because of the subject: browns, ochers, reds.  The subject is a building in a run down part of New Orleans.  He just keeps making circles of different colors corresponding to the scene until he covers the entire paper.
Degas is his idol; he talked a lot about him.  Degas' mother was American and Degas lived in New Orleans for awhile.  Bill Creevy is from New Orleans.
Then he used a brush and some liquid to bring form to the work.  He doesn't like calling it water coloring or painting.  He talked about the differences between the Brush and Pencil artists.  That some groups try to impose an hierarchy. 
One of the remarkable things about the pastel show was the variety in the works on display.  Many looked like oil paintings and some had a lighting effect that I wouldn't expect with pastels.  I have photos of some but the reflection of the flash and the reflection from the glass over the pastel affects the photo. 

Back to Bill.  He talked about his own work and how he tries for some mystical, spiritual effect.  Like the Hudson River School, whom he admires.  The views of  nature are more than 'a scene' for him and for me for that matter.  There is a timeless, other, deeper quality than what is shown.  Bill believes that what those painters had in the 19th Century and what was not uncommon among people of that time was a sense of pantheism.  He believes people today are cynics.
He has written a number of books on pastel drawing and oil painting.  His pastel book is 20 years old and still in print.  It costs $25 and for every sale he gets a $1.  He's learned about contracts since then.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

What I'm Reading ... The Weekend Times

I subscribe to the Weekend NY Times and get the daily Times on line.  This 'program' that the Times has created has helped make them more solvent.  They've paid off their mortgage early, which is great news, when so many Papers and Magazines are going under.  The front page on Saturday had an article on the deforestation of the planet.
In addition to the loss of the rain forest in Brazil by farming and the growing desert in Africa, the Australian forest and the American forest is under attack from pine beetles.  As the planet has warmed up the life expectancy of the pine beetle has lengthened.  They dine on our forests longer, so less forest.
Some good news.  China plants a great many trees to control flooding and the growth of the Gobi Desert.  Parts of America and Northern Europe, what we in America call the rust belt because of the loss of manufacturing through the rise of the global economy, is becoming greener.  Is it enough?
My friend Mara, a climate change expert with the European Union says it's too late.  Personally, I think we lost the planet when the world population hit 7 Billion.  Just about the time scientists created in vitro fertilization and cloning.  Does anyone else remember John Lennon and Yoko Ono on the Dick Cavett show in the early 70's talking about Zero Population Growth.  They said then that over-population was the single greatest threat to our future.  We're as ravenous as pine beetles. 
In other parts of the paper there's These articles.
Wall Street Demonstrators are being pepper sprayed and arrested.
Drones, small, unmanned, attack spacecraft, have killed Anwar al-Awlaki.  He is described as an American born jihadist.  The attack was carried out by the newest member of our military, the CIA, in our newest field of war, Yemen.
The magazine section had readers' questions for Michael Pollan, author of "The Omnivore's Dilemma" and Mark Bittman, author of "How to cook Everything" and How to Cook Everything Vegetarian; wrote the second one after his heart attack.
Michael Pollan likes frozen when the fresh isn't available and sometimes prefers it to the 'fresh' at the local supermarket, because the produce is often picked at its peak of quality.  Beware of greens wrapped in plastic, breeding ground for salmonella.  Best breakfasts: oatmeal, or fresh fruit with yogurt or 2 free range eggs on whole grain toast.  Won't eat, feedlot meat and tomatoes that have been refrigerated.
Bittman thinks Ratatouille is the best film made about food, I vote for Babette's Feast, Best novel about food 'The Belly of Paris' by Emile Zola.  I'll put that on my list. The fish you can eat quilt-free is sockeye salmon of Bristol Bay, Alaska.  However, since the flotsam and jetsam from the Fukushima nuclear reactor started washing up on the west coast, I eat Atlantic salmon.  

Monday, October 3, 2011

Opera Season Begins

Went to the Met last week to see Verdi's Nabucco.
It is Verdi's third opera of the 28 that he wrote and his first commercial success and is based on the biblical story of the Hebrews' exile in Babylon.  Nabucco is the Italian name of the historical figure we call in English, Nebuchadnezzar.  The opera is most famous for the piece "Va, pensiero" sung by the Chorus.  It is a prayer in which the Israelites express their longing for their homeland.  It was considered for many years as the unofficial anthem of Italy.  Arturo Toscanini conducted the piece at Verdi's State funeral in Milan.
The Met's chorus of about 80 voices did not disappoint.  You can see it on you tube from a 2002 Met production, but hearing it live in that wonderful space was extraordinary, impossible to duplicate on tape.  
The major performer for me was Maria Guleghina who sang the role of Abigaille.  The role is very difficult and has been the cause of the downfall of a number of singers.  Callas sang it 3x.  Sutherland and Leontyne Price refused to sing it.  Maria Guleghina sang it at the Met in 2002.  The roof lifted with the cheers from the audience when she took her bow.  We are off to a good start.  Thank you, Met.