Monday, March 15, 2010

Love Sex Aur Dhoka-Hindi Movie Preview

Love Sex Aur Dhoka is an upcoming Hindi movie by director Dibakar Banerjee with debut actor Anshuman Jha, Shruti, Raj Kumar Yadav, Neha Chauhan, Amit Sial, Arya, Herry Tangdi in the cast. Read the film preview at CalcuttaTube.
A digital film with a hidden camera playing a character by itself, ‘Love, Sex Aur Dhokha’ features a bunch of newcomers with no mainstream trappings to it, but sex and voyeurism constitute a major driving force of the narrative. The movie releases Friday.
After having earned critical acclaim for ‘Khosla Ka Ghosla’ and ‘Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye!’, director Dibakar Banerjee maps a new terrain with his bold film ‘Love, Sex Aur Dhokha’ (LSD), which highlights voyeurism in society.
‘Voyeurism is what the whole society finds itself trapped in and this is the reality that I wish to bring through my film,’ Banerjee had told IANS.
A co-production of Ekta Kapoor, Shobha Kapoor and Priya Sreedharan, it is a small-budget movie that will release across 350 screens in India. Unlike other Bollywood films, it won’t have an international release.
‘We are not releasing ‘Love Sex Aur Dhokha’ internationally because the recovery for small movies is not possible outside. We plan to take it to festivals instead,’ Sunny Khanna, senior vice president of Balaji Motion Pictures, told IANS.
‘Love, Sex Aur Dhokha’ takes a look into three stories unfolding across and weaving through each other.
The first story goes like this – in a second rate film institute in north India, a final year student gears up for his diploma film. In pristine tackiness, with an amateur small town cast, Rahul starts etching out the themes of star-studded Bollywood love in his magnum opus and then falls in love with his heroine.
Somewhere in the same city, Adarsh, a tech savvy security camera agency executive installs four security cameras in a 24-hour departmental store with the idea of making a porn clip.
He starts to woo Rashmi, a simple salesgirl, when suddenly a shootout happens in the store and she saves a life. For the first time, Adarsh notices a woman in her.
In another corner of the city, Prabhat, a sting journalist teeters on the brink of total meltdown. Going through a divorce and about to be fired from his job, he attempts a series of failed suicides. And then he meets Naina, who is also trying to commit suicide.
Naina had been promised a music video by a reigning Bhangra Hip Hop star who slept with her in exchange for the offer, but the video finally went to a Russian blonde.
Prabhat and Naina come closer over a series of attempts to seduce, blackmail and threaten the hip hop star. They plan the final sting to catch the star on tape admitting his follies.
Despite its bold subject, Banerjee is not worried about the reaction of audiences and critics.
‘If you don’t like the title and think that it may not have the content that would be appropriate for you, then don’t watch ‘Love, Sex Aur Dhokha’. I know there is an audience waiting for the film and it is that segment which wants to call a spade a spade. In any case, the film isn’t designed for those who wish to escape from the realities of life,’ he said.
The music track of the album has also sparked controversy for its crude lyrics.

Style guru shows his best picks at exhibit

FASHIONABLE MAN: Visesio Louis Thomsen is exhibiting a collection of his award-winning dresses.

One of Manukau's most celebrated fashion designers is holding his first exhibition.
Visesio Louis Thomsen says the exhibition's a collection of his "favourite pieces" and winning garments from various fashion shows.
Last year he won the eveningwear section at Westfield Style Pasifika and the Manukau Designer Award at Villa Maria Cult-Couture.
In 2008 he won the Villa Maria Cult-Couture Premier Award and the Matrimonial Bliss category.
In fact he has won an award at every Villa Maria Cult-Couture event since he graduated with his AUT University design degree in 2003.
Mr Thomsen designs, cuts and sews each garment, mixing traditional and modern processes and materials, including tapa, fine mat, silks and satins.
"I'm inspired by Samoan culture and the colourful flowers of the South Pacific and the white sandy beaches," he says.
Ideas for his creations come to him all the time, he says.
"Sometimes I have a dream about a garment – I wake up and I start sketching."
His love affair with fashion started when he was younger and watched and helped his mother sew.
He chose it as a career because "I love designing clothes and making people beautiful".
Working out of the garage in his Manurewa home, Mr Thomsen specialises in making dresses, particularly for weddings.
He has a long list of clients especially from the Samoan community.
Mangere Community Arts Outreach Service asked him if he could exhibit there because they liked his work.
Although he's nervous about the exhibition, Mr Thomsen says he's looking forward to "showing my talents to the community".
"Most people have heard about me but don't know what I'm doing."
Visesio Louis Thomsen's exhibition is on at the Mangere Community Arts Outreach Service in the Mangere town centre until April 3.

Lens of Impressionism at Dallas Museum of Art

With about 90 works including vintage prints, pastels, maps, and paintings, its easy to get lost in Europe art.

Dallas Museum of Art Gustave Courbet, “The Sea-Arch at Étretat” 1869

Gustave Courbet, “The 
Sea-Arch at Étretat” 1869 — I got a chance to visit the Lens of Impressionism exhibit at the Dallas Museum of Art this weekend and loved it. The exhibit explores impressionist painting’s response to early photography in the mid to late 1800s on the coast of Normandy. With about 90 works including vintage prints, pastels, maps, and paintings, it’s easy to get lost in the European art. Here are some of my personal favorite artists and pieces from the exhibit:
Eugène Boudin, “Bathing Time at Deauville” 1865 -- This oil painting is an example of the time in which it was painted. Women on the beach in full clothes and men wearing suits is much different from what you would find on any coast today. Boudin was one of the few artists who insisted on painting in the open air and painted directly from nature. He taught Claude Monet the importance of painting outside and Monet said that when Boudin painted this scene, suddenly a veil was torn from his eyes and his destiny as a painter opened up.
Gustave Courbet, “The Sea-Arch at Étretat” 1869 -- With this beautiful painting of the limestone cliffs off the coast of Normandy, the Étretat seems to be a peaceful destination. The texture of the painting gives you a sense of the eroded sea arch in the distance, as well as the rugged shore. This beach was a popular tourist attraction in the 1800s.
Claude Monet, “The Sea at the Havre” 1868 -- Pure white and mixed blues control this painting by Monet that illustrates the smooth turning of water. After experimenting with working outdoors, Monet learned that there was importance in the first immediate impression of a subject.
Gustave Le Gray, “The Brig Upon the Water” 1856 -- Photography was still in its early stages when Le Gray snapped this overexposed photo of the sea. For the first time, a photographer had captured the sky and the sea together over a negative print. It became a sensation and journalists of the time raved over the style that arrested movement and captured light. The natural blurring was properly balanced to evoke a particular mood. This photo left a lasting effect on impression painting.
Henri Le Secq, “Dieppe, Fishing Boats at Low Tide” 1854 -- The photo, along with its original paper negative, stands out among the others. The contrast between the negative and the modern salted print is amazing.
The exhibit also has an interactive audio tour to learn more about the art on display. And now for first time, you can use any smartphone to listen in on the smARTphone tour of the exhibit. The Lens of Impressionism continues until March 23. Click here to get tickets.

Photo Gallery: Windows Phone 7's Third-Party Apps


LAS VEGAS -- Microsoft on Monday showed off the first range of third-party apps for Windows Phone 7 and demonstrated how easy it is to write applications for its new phone platform, including writing two apps in 10 minutes each.
A range of big-name developers will be on board for the first apps, including game developers Electronic Arts and Glu Mobile, social networkers Seesmic and Foursquare, the AP, Pandora, Sling Media, and SPB Software.
The user interfaces of Windows Phone 7 apps tend to be similar, with a lot of big text to tap on, white writing on black backgrounds, and a touch "icon bar" along the bottom with small icons enclosed in circles.
Apps plug into various places on the new Windows Phone 7 platform. Photo editing apps can be accessed right from the photo viewer. Games connect to Xbox Live. Video apps such as Netflix are accessible right from the Music (aka Zune) menu.
During a presentation at the MIX conference here, Microsoft demonstrated many of these new apps. To check out the full array, see our in-depth photo gallery above.
Most third-party apps will be written with Microsoft's Silverlight platform, it seems.
Windows Phone 7's developer tools, including Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 Express, a Windows Phone 7 Series plug-in for Visual Studio 2010 RC, Microsoft Expression Blend 4.0 Preview, XNA Game Studio 4.0, and a Windows Phone 7 emulator, will be available for free today to everyone at live.visitmix.com.

Penn wants to write his name in UFC history

BJ Penn, the UFC lightweight champion. Sammy Dallal / The National
It has been more than a decade since BJ Penn, the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) lightweight champion, made his professional debut and in that time he has built up a reputation as fearsome as any in mixed martial arts.

The American, who will defend his lightweight title for the fourth time at Yas Island in Abu Dhabi next month at UFC 112: Invincible against Frankie “The Answer” Edgar, is only the second fighter after Randy Couture to hold UFC titles in two weight categories.

And having already successfully defended his title three times against formidable opponents Sean Sherk, Kenny Florian and Diego Sanchez, Edgar, 28, is likely to have a tough task ahead of him.

“I always have fighting inside my head and heart,” Penn says. “It is not constantly in my head that I am a champion or a UFC fighter. I forget about that. It is very important to other people, and I am glad to have the support, but fighting is my passion. It is what I like to do.”

Born to a father with English and Irish heritage, and a third generation Korean-American mother in December 1978 in Hilo, Hawaii, Penn is the youngest of four children, three of whom are called Jay Dee, while the fourth is named Reagan. It is his status as the youngest that resulted in the nickname “Baby Jay” or BJ.

 
Despite being the youngest of four boys he was, he insists, never much of a fighter.

“I guess growing up, it was pretty much a normal life, as I got older I used to get into some fights but nothing unusual,” he says. “My dad took us to a couple of karate classes when we were young but we didn’t really get into it. My dad had been a black belt in judo but I never really cared about martial arts.”

As Penn got older, however, he started experimenting with boxing.

“There were a bunch of kids in the neighbourhood who used to come over and we would spar. We had a couple of pairs of boxing gloves, it just used to be friends on friends,” says Penn, 31.

When he was 17, fresh out of high school and with no clear career path ahead of him, Tom Callos, a sixth-degree taekwondo black belt, moved into the neighbourhood. On his first day in Hilo he placed leaflets around the area looking for judo and wrestling partners. Penn’s father, also named Jay Dee, spotted one and called to say that his boys would be interested.

Sean Sherk is knocked down by BJ Penn in the third round of their UFC lightweight championship fight at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas in May 2008. Penn went on to win. Eric Jamison / AP
“Us kids would hang around the neighbourhood and he wanted some people to wrestle with,” Penn recalls. “Finally we went down. He checked me out and that’s when the bug started and I got addicted to jiu-jitsu.”

Callos, who had started learning jiu-jitsu 18 months earlier, began teaching what he knew to BJ, his brother Reagan, and their friends, a couple of times a week at the Waiakea Recreation Centre. A few months later Penn accompanied Callos to San Jose, California, “because he had some business to do” and was introduced to Ralph Gracie, Callos’s former instructor.

“He [Gracie] saw that I could get somewhere and told Tom that,” he says. “When I came home my father said, ‘If you are not going to school, or working, in a couple of months, you are going to San Jose’, and that time went by with me hanging around the house drinking beer.

“My dad sent me out and said I should get my life together and go and do jiu-jitsu.”

Penn moved near to Gracie’s gym in San Jose and two years later earned his black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ), a process that usually takes at least five years. He went on to win the 2000 World Jiu-Jitsu Championship.

“I thought it was cool but it was never going to be my life,” he adds. “I wasn’t born to be a UFC champion or a jiu-jitsu champion. If Tom had never moved to my neighbourhood it is hard to guess what I’d be doing.”

Penn met Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta, owners of the UFC, while they were BJJ students long before they took over the ailing brand.

This meeting would later lead to Penn’s entrance into the Octagon on May 24, 2001, as a lightweight at UFC 31, where he would finish Joey Gilbert four minutes into the first round with a technical knockout (TKO).

“They ended up buying UFC and I asked them to get me in,” Penn says. “They pulled some strings, I was just going to try it one time, but the rest has become history.”

Penn went on to knock out the lightweights Din Thomas and Caol Uno before losing a championship bout to the then lightweight champion Jens Pulver.

When Pulver later relinquished his title Penn fought Uno again for the vacant belt at UFC 41, a fight that ended in a draw and saw the lightweight division suspended.

In 2004 Penn moved up a weight division to beat Matt Hughes, the five-time defending UFC welterweight champion, who will also be on the card at Ferrari World on April 10.

Penn left the UFC but returned in March 2006 as a welterweight, losing to Georges St Pierre, the current UFC welterweight champion, by a split decision.

On January 19, 2008, Penn fought and beat the lightweight contender Joe Stevenson at UFC 80 to become the lightweight champion – a title he is still successfully defending.

“I didn’t know it would take me this far,” he says. “It keeps me in shape, I enjoy the training and I like the fact that there are so many moves to master, and they all go together a bit like a puzzle.”

Despite the UFC grossing more annual pay-per-view revenue than almost any other promotion, its fighters gracing the covers of umpteen magazines and live events selling out, Penn has shunned the celebrity lifestyle to stay in his hometown of Hilo surrounded by his friends and family.

“I don’t know if it is important to me to live in Hilo, it is just very natural to me,” he says. “That is where I feel safe or comfortable, I can let my guard down and know I will be safe.

“Hilo is a small town. Most of the people I see are the people I went to school with, or I saw growing up. I get stopped in certain places but I spend most of my time in Hilo going to the gym and the grocery store.”

His daily routine involves waking up, going to the gym for training and then “jumping in the water to cool off” before heading home, to watch television, “hang out and take it easy”.

“My life is very structured around training and when fighting is finished I have a few weeks to a month off and I like to take it easy and clear my head. I enjoy my life,” he says.

On October 25, 2008, Penn became a father to daughter Aeva Lili’u. Being a father, Penn says, has changed his perspective on fighting.

“At first being a father and a fighter was hard. I used to think that she is only one-and-a-half, maybe at first I didn’t want to get hurt. Imagine if I got hurt really bad,” he says. “My partner watches me fight but I would prefer for them to stay at home so I know the baby is safe and then I can concentrate.

“When it comes to the fight there is nothing else to do. It can be dangerous if you don’t focus 100 per cent on what you are planning to do.”

Penn says he intends to continue fighting as long as he is winning.

“If I am not winning and take too much abuse then maybe I would like to stop right there,” he adds. “But then I have thoughts of fighting until I am 40 years old many times. I still don’t know what I am going to do when I grow up.”

Top art heist rattles investigators 20 years on

In this Thursday, March 11, 2010 photo, the empty frame, center, from which thieves cut Rembrandt's "Storm on the Sea of Galilee" remains on display at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. The painting was one of more than a dozen works stolen from the museum in 1990 in what is considered the largest art theft in history.

BOSTON — It remains the most tantalizing art heist mystery in the world.
In the early hours of March 18, 1990, two thieves walked into Boston's elegant Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum disguised as police officers and bound and gagged two guards using handcuffs and duct tape. For the next 81 minutes, they sauntered around the ornate galleries, removing masterworks including those by Rembrandt, Vermeer, Degas and Manet, cutting some of the largest pieces from their frames.
By the time they disappeared, they would be credited with the largest art theft in history, making off with upward of a half-billion dollars in loot far too hot to sell.
Now, 20 years later, investigators are making a renewed push to recover the paintings. The FBI has resubmitted DNA samples for updated testing, the museum is publicizing its $5 million, no-questions-asked reward, and the U.S. attorney's office is offering immunity.
Two billboards on Interstates 93 and 495 are also advertising the reward.
"Our priority is to get the paintings back," U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz said. "If someone had information or had possession of the paintings, immunity from prosecution is negotiable."
Investigators say they've largely ruled out some of the more popular theories, from the specter of a recluse billionaire art collector to the hand of notorious Boston gangster Whitey Bulger.
More likely, investigators say, the two were homegrown thieves with knowledge of the museum's security system — including the absence of a "dead man's switch" that would have alerted police. They might have even underestimated the breathtaking scope of their crime.
"I picture the thieves waking up the next morning and looking in the papers and saying, 'We just pulled off the largest art theft in history,'" said Anthony Amore, the museum's security director.
The theft began around 1:24 a.m. when the two white men — one in his late 20s to mid-30s, the other in his early to mid-30s — overpowered the guards, according to an FBI report.
The two took their time. A full 24 minutes passed before they were first picked up on a motion detector entering the museum's second floor Dutch room, where the most valuable paintings were seized.
Investigators believe the first nabbed was Rembrandt's iconic "Storm on the Sea of Galilee," measuring about 5-by-4 feet and dating to 1633. The frame was laid on the floor where one of the thieves neatly sliced it from its frame.
Next was "Landscape with an Obelisk" by Govaert Flinck. Other stolen masterpieces included a second Rembrandt also cut from its frame, "A Lady and Gentleman in Black" from 1633.
The most valuable pieces was Vermeer's "The Concert," an oil painting measuring about 2 1/2-by-2 feet from 1660 — one of only 36 known works by the Dutch master and valued at more than $250 million, Amore said.
A Rembrandt self-portrait from 1629 — one of the museum's most valuable paintings — was removed from the wall, but then left untouched while one of the crooks patiently unscrewed and removed from its frame a tiny Rembrandt etching slightly larger than a postage stamp.
It was the first of many odd twists investigators have puzzled over as they mapped the route the thieves using motion detector records.
After the heavier works of art were removed from the walls, the thief in charge — possibly the older of the two — might have let the younger thief take what he wanted.
Amore believes the second thief found his way to a nearby gallery, lifting smaller Degas drawings of horses while passing up more valuable works of art including one by the Italian painter Botticelli.
The thieves also tried to remove a flag of Napoleon's First Regiment from its frame before giving up and making off with a bronze finial in the shape of an eagle from atop the flag — ignoring more valuable letters with Napoleon's signature.
Then came a final puzzle.
At some point the thieves found their way to a gallery on the first floor, again passing more valuable works of arts, to seize a "Chez Tortoni," a Manet painting of a man in a top hat and a departure from the Dutch paintings — all without triggering a motion detector.
"If we ever speak to the thieves, which is secondary, I would like to say, 'Why did you take that? Why did you pass by the Raphael?'" Amore said.
On their way out, the two thieves smashed their way into the security office and snatched the only visual record of their crime — a VHS tape.
In all, 13 works disappeared.
FBI agent Geoffrey Kelly, who has led the investigation for eight years, said it's unlikely the thieves destroyed the art.
"If it were any other kind of commodity, I might feel pessimistic about recovery, but with art it's not uncommon to stay missing for long periods of time," he said. "It's one of the most interesting novels you could write, except it's missing that last chapter."
For those drawn to what happened that March night, the lure of the theft won't fade.
Ulrich Boser, author of "The Gardner Heist" and a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, said he's convinced the paintings were taken by burglars involved in Boston's organized crime rackets in the 1980s. He said the thieves might have subsequently lost possession of the works.
"For the most part, thieves steal these works because it's easy to do and they're worth a lot of money, and then they become too hot," he said. "You can't sell them on eBay. You can't bring them into an auction house."
Amore said he won't stop until the paintings again fill the empty frames still hanging in the museum's galleries.
"I don't have any doubt we are going to recover them," he said. "There's nothing we're not doing."

A Potpourri of Cultures in Dubai

DUBAI - The only fringe art event of the Middle East, the Bastakiya Art Fair 2010, got underway in a simple yet powerful language of art on Monday. With the presence of over 200 budding as well as established local and international artists, BAF 2010 opening proved to be one big artistic jamboree it 
promised to be.
Held under the patronage of Dubai Culture and Arts Authority and organised by XVA gallery, BAF – now in its fourth year – is bigger and better than its three predecessors, hosting more artists, more galleries and more performances.
The fair also saw the opening of dozens of heritage houses in Bastakiya, which were otherwise closed to the public. The traditional architectural marvels coupled with all the artworks and creative installations that were placed around gave a quaint yet magical feeling, taking art-lovers to another world filled with emotions and subtle expressions. Like all art fairs, artists and galleries it always had, but one thing that stands out in this edition are the cozy national houses representing the culture, values and talent of various countries.
Though there are many vivid works from various artists that will probably stay with you for long, watch out for ‘They Welcomed Us With Flowers’ at Iraqi House, ‘Nishan’ at Emarati House and ‘Jadeed’ at Pakistani House to name a few. Also expect some tough treats at Nelda Gilliam’s installations as well as Algerian artist Sadek Rahim’s exhibition.
Rahim, who is doing his first show in Dubai, presented an energetic art performance at Bastakiya’s central plaza to open the fair. As an artist living in a troubled society, Rahim seems to be in a tug of war with his conscience every step of his life and his opening performance aptly displayed his feelings and struggles.
“My installation here represents my life and what I have gone through at various stages. It reflects aspects of my life in London, where I did my masters in art; in Lebanon where I have studied for four years and in Syria where I have spent some time with my diplomat father,” explained Rahim.
Apart from displaying his life, Rahim’s works primarily reflect the society he comes from and the struggles people undergo in everyday life. “In Algeria millions of people when they wake up in the morning they don’t know whether they will have anything to eat. People are struggling with poverty and I feel it and I want to reflect it in my work,” said the artist who calls himself humanist.
Rahim is one of the several lesser known but deserving artists, whose works BAF is trying to bring to the fore. And with five more days of performances, expert talks, luncheons, movie screenings and more the fun has just begun.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Miracle baby elephant makes public debut

The newborn male Asian elephant, 
nicknamed 'Mr Shuffles' by staff, seeks shelter under his mother 
'Porntip' during its first public appearance at Taronga Zoo in Sydney on
 March 14, 2010. The baby elephant was believed to have died during 
labour but was born alive on March 10, amazing its keepers and defying 
expert opinion that such an outcome would take a "miracle".

The newborn male Asian elephant, nicknamed 'Mr Shuffles' by staff, seeks shelter under his mother 'Porntip' during its first public appearance at Taronga Zoo in Sydney on March 14, 2010. The baby elephant was believed to have died during labour but was born alive on March 10, amazing its keepers and defying expert opinion that such an outcome would take a "miracle".


SYDNEY — A baby elephant thought to have died in the womb made its first public appearance at Sydney’s Taronga Zoo on Sunday, amid predictions it will make a full recovery from its arduous birth.
A 
newborn male Asian Elephant stands with its mother Porntip at Taronga 
Zoo in Sydney in this March 14, 2010 handout photo. Porntip gave birth 
to a calf at Sydney's main zoo on Wednesday, surprising vets and keepers
 who on March 8 declared the baby had died in the womb. Picture taken 
March 14, 2010.The male calf, nicknamed Mr Shuffles by zoo staff, wobbled out from a barn into the elephant enclosure with its mother, Porntip, four days after amazing keepers with its remarkable survival.
"He’s looking around and seeing the world," zoo elephant manager Gary Miller said of the 116 kilogram (255 pound) animal’s short foray before the public. "He’s just excited to be alive."
The 
newborn male Asian elephant, nicknamed 'Mr Shuffles' by staff, shelters 
under his mother 'Porntip' during his first public appearance at Taronga
 Zoo in Sydney on March 14, 2010. The baby elephant was believed to have
 died during labour but was born alive on March 10, amazing its keepers 
and defying expert opinion that such an outcome would take a 
"miracle".Miller said the indications were the elephant would have no permanent problems despite being stuck in a position in the womb which experts considered would result in death to both mother and calf in the wild.
"Because of his compromised position as he came out and was born, we didn’t know if he had brain damage from lack of oxygen from such a prolonged birth," he told reporters. "I’d say he’s going to be 100 percent."
The baby elephant arrived on Wednesday morning, two days after zoo officials said they believed it had died in the womb.
They later said the animal may have fallen into the coma during the marathon nine-day labour which meant its heartbeat was not detected.
The zoo, which has been flooded with notes of sympathy when the calf was thought to have died, has called on the public to choose a name for the Asian elephant, the second born at Taronga as part of a breeding programme.
A herd was brought to Australia from Thailand in 2006 in a bid to increase the numbers of the endangered animals, despite warnings from environmentalists that elephants should not be kept in enclosures.
In keeping with its Thai heritage, the zoo has put forward seven possible names to replace the nickname Mr Shuffles, with the final name to be decided by a public vote.
The names are: Pathi Harn (miracle), Tay Wan (boy in heaven), Ming Khwan (good internal strength, good attitude), Nam Chok (brings with him good fortune), Mongkon (auspicious), Boon Thung (merit has led to reaching this life) and Chok Dee (very good luck).

10 More Tips For Enjoying SXSW


I am on the fence about SXSW. It is eye candy, ear candy, brain candy, and it gives me a very big headache. It is the place to be, but you can’t really be anywhere because you are constantly worried about what — and who — you are missing. Stand and try to speak with someone, and you’ll see what I mean. Everyone’s eyes skip over your shoulders scanning the room because there just might be someone else walking in the door that they must meet.
Riffing off Dawn’s SXSW tips, here are mine:
  1. Go lobby. While there are some incredible sessions, there are also duds like any conference. The real learning and connecting doesn’t happen in the sessions. It happens in lobbies, in hallways, in nearby cafes. Yes, you paid to attend, however, you will get far more out of the non-session moments than the formal panels.
  2. Bring chargers. Dawn points out the dearth of power sources but so far I haven’t found power to be a problem. Just sit down in any hallway, and you’ll find outlets. But next year, think about bringing solar chargers, alkaline battery chargers, and any other options to make your charging more efficient.
  3. Manage your contact options. I’m using Twitter, Foursquare, and texting as my main methods of contacting and connecting, with email as a last ditch effort. One communications device or application will not be enough.
  4. Talk to strangers. No matter how shy you think you are, the person next to you may be even more shy. So be the one to break the ice, and just say hello. Start up conversations with the person in line behind you, with the person walking down the hall near you. Smile and make a comment about the long, long walks between sessions or the beautiful sunshine outside that everyone is missing. I met a guy from Belgium as I walked back to my hotel yesterday and got some wonderful insight into how others perceive our country and our conferences.
  5. Move to the center. Of the row, that is. Stop sitting on the end. If you are going to bother going to a session, don’t prepare to exit the room by sitting at the outside seats. Move in and let the rest of us have a chair. The only reason to sit on the end is if you have a bladder problem.
  6. Take photos. And upload them. There is something brilliant and beautiful about the photostreams on Flickr and Whrrl and the like emanating from SXSW. Tag the people you know. Share your experiences in pictures. Photos are great for those who are not here and for those of us who are here but missed that person, that scene, that moment. And of course, do an image vanity search when the week is over to make sure nobody caught that clothing failure when you were dancing and singing backup at TechKaraoke.
  7. Invite others. If you are going to lunch, invite others to join you, even if you don’t really know them. Invite them to invite others so you meet new people. Don’t go solo if you don’t have to, but if you go solo (and aren’t doing it to have some alone time), ask to join a group. Be generous and inclusive.
  8. Be the connector. I’m spending 99 percent of my time making sure that each person I’m with at the time meets all the other folks I know who come up to me to say hello. Why? Because there are connections to be made, and if you have a lot of contacts, be generous. And if I fail to introduce you to someone when you’re with me, introduce yourself because I probably have blanked on someone else’s name. Or yours.
  9. Wear comfy shoes. I was in my Merrills yesterday. I’m in sneakers today. To hell with fashion. You will walk for miles — literally — in the week, much of it indoors but a lot outdoors as well. Erica wore non-comfy shoes. Her feet hurt. Get your sneakers, Erica.
  10. Drink water. And plenty of it. I spike my water with Emergen-C, Airborne and 12 Salts, a natural remedy to boost wellbeing without the yucky crash of energy drinks. Don’t drink energy drinks. They dehydrate you. And if you end up having to go the the restroom a lot because you’re drinking a lot of water, use it as a moment to have some much-needed silence. Thank goodness for bathroom stalls far from the maddening crowds.
What are your off-the-wall tips for surviving and thriving at SXSW?

COCA-COLA ANNOUNCES "PICTURE YOUR FAMILY AT THE IDOL FINALE" SWEEPSTAKES WITH REGAL ENTERTAINMENT

Giant display of Coke cases spells out IDOL on both walls, has a 
makeshift ‘American Idol’ logotype, and has a hanged effigy with its 
pants down

With the purchase of a large fountain Coca-Cola® at a Regal theatre, moviegoers can win a trip to Hollywood to attend the American Idol Finale this May!

Coca-Cola North America has been an official sponsor of the number one-rated television program, American Idol, for all of its nine seasons on Tuesdays and Wednesdays on FOX. Coca-Cola has joined forces with Regal Entertainment Group (NYSE: RGC), a leading motion picture exhibitor owning and operating the nation's largest theatre circuit, to launch the "Picture Your Family at the Idol Finale" Sweepstakes.

Coca-Cola is the official sponsor of the Sweepstakes, which runs through April 1. Regal Crown Club members 18 years or older can enter for their chance to win the grand prize of a trip for four to attend the two-part American Idol Finale at the NOKIA Theatre L.A. Live. To enter, moviegoers can sign up or use their existing Regal Crown Club card when purchasing any large Coca-Cola fountain product. Fans can also enter for free by mailing a 3x5 card printed with the information described in the Official Rules in a business size (#10) envelope to: Regal Crown Club/Coca-Cola/American Idol Entries, 7132 Regal Lane, Knoxville, TN 37918. Mailed entries must be received by 4/1/2010. For Official Rules and complete details, visit www.REGmovies.com.

"Regal theatres continue to be a great partner of Coca-Cola. We are excited to jointly launch this customized American Idol sweepstakes that will reward one of Regal's loyal consumers with a trip to the American Idol Finale. We look forward to continue working with Regal to develop unique, value-added promotions that enhance the moviegoing experience for Regal consumers," said Stefanie Miller, Coca-Cola North America Vice President of Strategic Partnership Marketing.

"Through our partnership with Coca-Cola, Regal Crown Club members have a chance to see the Finale of this very popular show in person. Regal Entertainment Group is thrilled to give our most loyal moviegoers the opportunity to take their family to see these rising stars and to experience the excitement and glamour that is L.A. LIVE," stated Dick Westerling, Regal Entertainment Group Senior Vice President of Marketing and Advertising. "Coca-Cola is a premiere partner for Regal and we are honored to once again collaborate through this tremendous promotion."

With more than six million active members, Regal Crown Club is the number one theatre loyalty program in the country. The Regal Crown Club allows moviegoers to accumulate credits at the box office and concession stand to earn free popcorn, soft drinks and movies. Regal Crown Club membership is free and open to everyone 13 years of age and older. Membership is obtainable at any Regal Entertainment Group theatre or online at www.REGmovies.com. Full contest rules are also available online.

About Coca-Cola North America
Coca-Cola North America is a unit of The Coca-Cola Company, the world's largest beverage company, refreshing consumers with more than 500 sparkling and still brands. Together with Coca-Cola®, recognized as the world's most valuable brand, the Company's portfolio includes 14 billion dollar brands, including Diet

Fanta®, Sprite®, Coca-Cola Zero®, vitaminwater, POWERADE®, Minute Maid®, Simply® and Georgia® Coffee. Globally, we are the No. 1 provider of sparkling beverages, juices and juice drinks and ready-to-drink teas and coffees. Through the world's largest beverage distribution system, consumers in more than 200 countries enjoy the Company's beverages at a rate of 1.6 billion servings a day. With an enduring commitment to building sustainable communities, our Company is focused on initiatives that protect the environment, conserve resources and enhance the economic development of the communities where we operate. For more information about our For more information about our Company, please visit our website at www.thecoca-colacompany.com.

About Regal Entertainment Group
Regal Entertainment Group (NYSE: RGC) is the largest motion picture exhibitor in the United States. The Company's theatre circuit, comprising Regal Cinemas, United Artists Theatres and Edwards Theatres, operates 6,768 screens in 548 locations in 39 states and the District of Columbia. Regal operates theatres in all of the top 32 and 44 of the top 50 U.S. designated market areas. We believe that the size, reach and quality of the Company's theatre circuit not only provide its patrons with a convenient and enjoyable movie-going experience, but is also an exceptional platform to realize economies of scale in theatre operations. Additional information is available on the Company's Web site at

'Feed Your Brain' at the 2010 Youth Expo April 9 & 10 at the OC Fair & Event Center

The 2010 Youth Expo theme is "Feed Your Brain," which is what local students are encouraged to do at this annual fun-filled event. The two-day expo, which takes place April 9-10 at the OC Fair & Event Center, will feature the work and creativity of public, private, and home-schooled students in educational exhibits and activities that broaden their educational spectrum beyond the classroom.

Admission to the 2010 Youth Expo is free for everyone. Hours are Friday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday is School Field Trip Day and parking is free for school buses on this day only. General parking is $5.

This educational experience seeks to get students off of the couch and active in agricultural-focused activities, hands-on academic demonstrations, individual competitions and vocational exhibits.

Featured exhibitors and Centennial Farm-related activities include OC Beekeepers; a Vermiculture exhibit, where children can get their hands dirty in a worm farm; blacksmith demonstrations; milk a replica cow; make butter; make recyclable planting pots and plant a seed to take home; oxen demonstrations; baby chickens on display, and leather demonstrations where, for a small fee, children can make their own leather craft to take home.

New this year, the Ag Magic Show will offer children an entertaining and musical show that spotlights local and state commodities related to agriculture and farming. Also, Heavenly Ponies & Critters Petting Zoo will bring their petting zoo to Youth Expo for the enjoyment of attendees of all ages.

Returning Youth Expo events include Gale Webb's Extreme Sports & Air Show, which presents exciting demonstrations in BMX, skateboarding, in-line skating, and extreme scooter sports; Wild Science, 23 hands-on or visual science displays; and Prehistoric Pets, a live reptile display.

Local 4-H clubs will offer demonstrations on the Guide Dog Puppy Program, livestock demonstrations, arts and crafts and hands-on science workshops.

The 2010 Youth Expo will be held in conjunction with the Orange County Science & Engineering Fair (OCSEF) and the 21st annual Home Builders Council (HBC) Design/Building Competition. OCSEF challenges students in categories like electricity, electronics, chemistry, zoology, botany, physiology, behavioral sciences, social sciences, and product testing. Interested students can enter at www.ocsef.org. The Design/Build competition teaches high school, Regional Occupation Program, and community college students to design and build a structure that will be evaluated by city inspectors and engineering professionals.

The OC Fair & Event Center is located at 88 Fair Drive in Costa Mesa and is home to more than 100 events throughout the year including the annual OC Fair, Youth Expo and Centennial Farm activities. For more information visit ocfair.com or follow us on Twitter -

The Philippines is hailed as the cultural gateway to the ASEAN

MANILA, Philippines - Declared as the “cultural capital” for years 2010 and 2011 by the 10 member-countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the Philippines will be hosting the 4th Meeting of the ASEAN Ministers Responsible for Culture and Arts (AMCA) and the 6th Senior Officials Meeting for Culture and Arts (SOMCA) from March 22 to 26 in Clark, Angeles City, Pampanga. This was according to presidential assistant on culture and National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) executive director Cecile Guidote-Alvarez.

Along with the said meetings, the Philippines will also host the 4th ASEAN Festival of Arts (AFA), which is aimed at promoting the ASEAN’s common identity and cultural diversity, enhancing cultural heritage and tourism, and strengthening ties among members of the ASEAN. The successful projection of the ASEAN in the global culturescape through the Philippine Collective showcases the Philippines ’ rich tradition and talents.

With “The Best of the ASEAN: From Ancestral Roots to New Artistic Routes of Expression Mobilizing Cultural Diversity for the UN-MDGs” as its theme, the 4th AFA will highlight the creativity and foster the exchange of ideas among the best artists from ASEAN countries. Each ASEAN member-country will showcase one of its finest works in its chosen field of art (theatre, music, literature, film or dance).

Performances for the AFA will be held at the Centennial Amphitheater of the Nayong Pilipino sa Clark Expo (NPCE). Film showings, workshops, poetry readings, and book launchings will be conducted at NPCE’s dormitory, arcadia and library.

As one of its contributions to the said Festival, the Philippines will be restaging Baler sa Puso Ko, an original zarzuela, with libretto by Dr. Isagani Cruz and music by Lutgardo Labad that reflects the wealth of heritage and the 400-year history of the town of Baler in Quezon province.

For the Festival’s opening ceremony, it expects over 200 participants, including students from nearby schools and universities, choral groups, dance troupes, rondalla orchestras, drum and bugle corps, Aeta police scholars, lantern bearers, kite-flyers, athletes, Kaddang (walking on wooden sticks) tumblers, Angono papier-mache giants, and hot balloons.

Range of art, craft in new exhibitions

Glass works by acclaimed Auckland artist Ann Robinson go on show upstairs at Milford Galleries Queenstown, from Sunday, March 21.
Meanwhile, the Church Lane gallery presents new works by a number of national artists as part of the Royal Queenstown Easter Show on the ground floor from Saturday, March 20.
Gallery associate Jac Byron said Stephen Higginson, Dunedin-based gallery co-director and "leading authority on Ann's work", would be available by appointment during the private viewing day on the Saturday.
"Ann Robinson: Masterworks" will boast about 10 new and recent glass works.
They range in price from $25,000 to $40,000 and will be displayed until April 14.
Among her accolades, the 65-year-old artist was awarded the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2001 and the American Glass Society's Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2006.
She completed the baptismal font commission at the Parnell Cathedral in Auckland in 2009.
The Royal Queenstown Easter Show will see 13 artists present their latest pieces at the gallery until April 14.
The artists include figurative painter Nigel Brown, of Cosy Nook, bronze sculptor Terry Stringer, of Auckland, and beehive oil painter Michael Hight, of Auckland.

New-look art centre opens in Sharjah

Sheikh Sultan Bin Mohammed Bin Sultan Al Qasimi, Crown Prince and Deputy Ruler of Sharjah, inaugurated the newly-revived Maraya Art Centre at a ceremony held in the Al Qasba grounds.

Following the recent upgrades and expansions, the three-storeyed arts centre is set to be one of the UAE’s largest and most fashionable venues for contemporary visual arts.

Curators say that the new arts center will be a stage for creative experimentation and a testament to the region’s extraordinary artistic genius, hosting a panorama of the region’s finest compositions.

Commenting on Maraya launch, Marwan Jassim Al Sarkal, CEO of Al Qasba Development Authority, said that in an emirate already known for its cultural diversity, liveliness and vibrancy, Al Qasba challenged itself to build something truly unique within the art community.

“This collaboration involved people from a number of different social and academic backgrounds, and the result is a project that all of us take immense pride in sharing with the UAE society,” remarked Al Sarkal during a press conference prior to the opening.

Visitors are welcome to explore a new world of contemporary and traditional art, attend lectures led by featured artists, enroll in topic-specific workshops, and enjoy daily tours of the Centre’s three main levels, he said.

“The ultimate goal is to nourish young talent and sustain a local platform for established artists to flourish within the region,” he added.

Each of the Centre’s three levels has a unique theme tying the pieces together in custom-built exhibition spaces. The first level is known as “The Shelter”, a multimedia retreat for artists seeking to make an impact on the local scene and collaborate with others in the business.

Speaking at the press conference, Ahmed Bin Shabib, one of the founders of ’The Shelter’, said that having a world-class venue like Maraya Art Centre in Sharjah will be a significant connecting point where traditional culture meets with contemporary innovation.

“In the long run, this kind of interaction will add incredible value to Sharjah’s cultural development and create a new wave of creative thinking in the country,” added Shabib.

“Within a short period of time, The Shelter has changed the topography of the Dubai artistic community and encouraged the development of entrepreneurial thought,” said Rashed Bin Shabib, also a founder of ‘The Shelter’.

“Given Sharjah’s robust academic institutions, The Shelter will act as an idea lab for talented individuals to propel their ideas forward.”

With a strong commitment to showcasing works by artists from the Arab world, the second floor of Maraya features a permanent exhibition titled The House of Arab Art.

'In order to bring in the best work from across the Middle East, Maraya has collaborated with The Barjeel Art Foundation, which was conceived by Sultan Bin Sooud Al-Qassemi with the vision of creating a space where Arab artwork can be displayed in an interactive and communal setting.'

Sultan Sooud Al-Qassemi, whose Barjeel collection includes artwork from the Gulf region, Levant, Maghreb, Egypt, Iran and Iraq, is enthusiastic about the opening of Maraya.

'My ambition is to create a space where the public can experience, enjoy and discuss Arab artwork as it gains greater prominence around the world,” says Al-Qassemi. “Art of the Arab world is as nuanced as the nations that comprise the historically, politically, socially and geographically diverse region. It's very exciting to see it exhibited in one interactive and accessible space.”

The top floor of Maraya Art Centre is a Contemporary Art Gallery featuring dramatic and avant-garde pieces selected from some of the most promising names in the world of modern art with a global reach. For its inauguration, Maraya will showcase the extraordinary works of the first winners of the Abraaj Capital Art Prize from 2009.

Exhibit shines light on Victoria art

Down at the Legacy Gallery (and Café) a bold experiment is writing a new art history of Victoria. An exhibit titled Regarding Wealth is on show, based on 14 paintings from the Michael Williams Collection. The exhibit is the subject, and the result, of work by students of Carolyn Butler-Palmer's curatorial course in the Department of History in Art at the University of Victoria.
First, a bit about the Michael Williams Collection. Williams was an entrepreneur whose real estate holdings in Victoria included many artists' studios, as well as the popular Swans Hotel and Pub. He was passionate about art, in particular local art. He lived next door to the Fran Willis Gallery and was usually first in the door when a new show was hung. And in many cases he was able to drive a hard bargain with his tenants, choosing fresh work directly from the artists. He used the art he bought to decorate his business premises, effectively "buying it for 50-cent dollars."
In this way, he diligently gathered more than 1,100 sculptures and paintings, and displayed them constantly and publicly. After his death in 2000, Williams left them all -- and the business and real estate -- to the University of Victoria. At once, a new history of contemporary art in Victoria, parallel and distinctly different from that collected by the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, was created.
The university then created the Williams Legacy Chair in the History in Art department and in 2008 hired Carolyn Butler-Palmer to curate and interpret the Williams Collection. Trained in art history as well as folklore studies, she at once set her students to work on community-based research, with last year's Flaneurs show. This year they focused on the issues of social justice.
A preliminary list of 33 artworks was selected from the collection, which reflected Williams's humanitarian ideals and his interest in the homeless and "insecurely housed." Collecting art is usually seen as an activity of the wealthy, yet Williams's sympathies and support extended to the Apple Tree Gang, who had their headquarters under the Johnson Street Bridge. He was certainly aware that many artists are among the very poor. The final exhibit includes 14 paintings.

These include some from Victoria's previous generation -- Max Bates, Richard Ciccimarra and Jack Kidder -- and Vancouver's New Romantics of the 1980s -- Angela Grossman and Vicky Marshall. Williams's Chinatown protegés Glenn Howarth, Noah Becker and Michael Lewis are prominently featured, as is the unique genius of Norval Morrisseau. The compelling visionary portraits of Ken Flett might be the hit of the show.
Butler-Palmer's students were each asked to compile a research portfolio on one of the artworks, and the resulting dossiers are a vital part of the show. Normally, art history students can do their research about Monet or Da Vinci in the library or online. In this case, the students found they had to engage in original research, collecting oral histories from artists, dealers and people associated with the issues with which the paintings are concerned. "There's so little written on any of these artists," Butler-Palmer noted. That is about to change.
Each portfolio is a unique blend of biography and thematic engagement. The enthusiasm of the 20 students -- senior undergraduates and post-graduates -- for the task is obvious. It has already resulted in a valuable resource file on each artwork and has created an inspiring engagement for these future art historians. Nothing dry and theoretical here!

With the research behind them, the students broke into four groups to create the exhibit. One group was in charge of the installation. A second team created labels and text panels. A third took the public relations detail, making posters and invitations, and handling interviews in print and on television. They also conducted a free-form seminar, the "conversational café." This included some community spokespersons and took place last Sunday afternoon at the Legacy. The fourth group has created a web-based exhibit, which will be part of the legacy of this show at regardingwealth.uvic.ca (the site is not active yet, but keep checking).
Art historians too often overlook the creative manifestations of their own community. The details of the local history can be forgotten overnight and then evaporate like the morning dew. Thus, it is very satisfying to me to find that the University of Victoria, aided by the foresight of Michael Williams, is doing something positive to change this.
I encourage you to visit this show. Prepare to sit down in the café, pick up one of the research portfolios and learn a little about Victoria's history in art.
Regarding Wealth: Works from the Michael C. Williams Collection at the Legacy Art Gallery and Café, 630 Yates St. at Broad, 250-381-7670 or www.legacy gallery.ca, until May 2.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Dishtv premieres the latest blockbuster 'Ishqiya' for just Rs 25/-

Keeping with its commitment of constantly presenting the best and latest entertainment to its subscribers, Dishtv, India’s first and the largest direct-to-home service, today announced the Premiere of the most critically acclaimed Bollywood Blockbuster – Ishqiya over its movie on demand service at a special price of Rs. 25. Ishqiya is the most appreciated movie of the season, well crafted under the direction of debutant Abhishek Chaubey and produced by Vishal Bharadwaj and Raman Maroo. The smash hit music is composed by Vishal Bhardwaj and the lyrics are penned by eminent Gulzar.

Starring Naseeruddin Shah, Arshad Warsi, Vidya Balan among others, Ishqiya is a story about love arising in characters, portrayed uniquely according to their own personal traits. The situations in the plot lead the characters to experience the emotion creeping into their lives in the most unexpected manner. With its unconventional theme, the movie was a hit among the Indian masses and now dishtv viewers can catch this Blockbuster at any time of the day on a special price of Rs 25/-, as compared with the usual pricing of Rs 75-100.

Commenting on the initiative, Mr. Salil Kapoor, COO, Dishtv India said "Dishtv offers the largest number of movies on its movie on demand platform and it is our constant endeavor to offer the latest and best content to our subscribers. The premiere of Ishqiya on dishtv is yet another initiative to provide wholesome entertainment to our subscribers at an extremely competitive cost. Ishqiya is an outstanding film which has been acclaimed both by critics and the viewers and we’re happy to bring this blockbuster to our customer’s home."

Dishtv subscribers can order the movie through IVR/Phone, SMS, or by logging onto www.dishtv.in which authorizes them to view the movie - multiple times, at a time of his convenience within 24 hours. The subscribers can enjoy the movies ordered at their own convenience in the theatre like experience with true digital picture quality.

Leonardo da Vinci to become Hollywood hero in new film

He was an artist, inventor, scientist and visionary. Five hundred years after his death, Leonardo da Vinci can add another string to his bow: Hollywood action hero.
Flying machine designed by Leonardo da Vinci : Leonardo da Vinci 
to become Hollywood hero in new film
Flying machine designed by Leonardo da Vinci Photo: SCIENCE MUSEUM
In one of the most unlikely movie projects since Pride and Prejudice was earmarked for a zombie makeover, Warner Bros has announced plans to recast Leonardo as an Indiana Jones-style adventurer.
Leonardo da Vinci and the Soldiers of Forever will pit the Renaissance man against "supernatural enemies" in a swashbuckling tale involving Biblican demons, secret codes, lost civilisations and hidden fortresses, according to the Hollywood trade press.
If that sounds a bit like the Da Vinci Code, it is probably no coincidence, although the film is being touted as a cross between Raiders of the Lost Ark and Clash of the Titans. The Da Vinci Code may have been derided as hokum by film critics, but it took more than $750 million at the box office, which has not escaped the studio's notice.
Leonardo will deploy a fearsome arsenal of weaponry in the movie, based on his real-life inventions.
His 15th century designs for the helicopter, parachute, car and submarine may never have progressed further than the pages of his notebook, but they will be gloriously realised in the film.
The studio is searching for a scriptwriter to begin work on the project. The producer is Adrian Askarieh, whose previous credits include Hitman, a violent thriller based on a video game. One critic called it "numbingly unthrilling".
The Leonardo picture follows last week's announcement by Warner Bros of a "fantasy-adventure" about the 13th century travels f Marco Polo. It will take place "in the Orient of our imagination", according to writer Adam Cooper.
Executives at Warner Bros are keen to make more action-adventure films featuring historical figures after the success of its recent Sherlock Holmes update. Guy Ritchie, the director, reinvented Holmes as a "streetwise" martia arts expert and filled his scenes with explosions and CGI special effects.
Ritchie's next film for the studio is based on the legend of King Arthur. Other Hollywood films in the pipeline are a reinvention of Moby Dick and an all-action biopic of Moses.
Meanwhile, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, starring Natalie Portman, is set for release next year, offering a very different take on the Jane Austen classic.

Queen Victoria's treasures to go on show

This ornate ivory throne forms the focus for a new exhibition showcasing the love that Queen Victoria and Prince Albert shared for the arts.

 

Queen Victoria's costume for the Stuart Ball in 1851
Queen Victoria's costume for the Stuart Ball in 1851
She called the South India throne, which will go on display at The Queen's Gallery at Buckingham Palace next Friday, her "magnificent chair".
Bearing a jewelled Garter Star comprised of diamonds, rubies and emeralds, it was given to her in 1851 by the Maharaja of Travancore in modern day Kerala.
Victoria & Albert: Art & Love brings together over 400 items from the Royal Collection which date from Queen Victoria's rule.
Also on display will be a portrait commissioned by the monarch as a surprise gift for Prince Albert's 24th birthday, showing Queen Victoria as a beautiful young woman.
Painted by Franz Xaver Winterhalter, her favourite artist, she referred to it as her "secret painting" and said it was "my darling Albert's favourite".
There is also a ball gown made of moire silk and trimmed with lace and faux pearls, that she wore to the Stuart Ball of 1851.
A spokesman for the Royal Collection said: "It is the most sumptuous and glamorous of the Queen’s surviving clothes."
The exhibition opens on Friday March 19 and runs until October 31.

'Art of the Steal' Examines Fate of Charles Barnes's Coveted Art Collection


In the early part of the 20th century, one man amassed a personal collection of post-impressionistic art that is today valued at anywhere from $25 billion to priceless. The collection includes 181 paintings by Renoir, 59 by Matisse, 46 by Picasso, seven by Van Gogh, and "more Cezannes than are in the entire city of Paris." The Barnes Foundation has a higher concentration of art per master than the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York and the Louvre in Paris.

At first glance, one may think the story here lies in the rags-to-riches saga of Dr. Albert C. Barnes. The working class Philadelphia boy, boxing to pay university fees, escaped hardship through invention, cashed out before the Great Depression and became perhaps the greatest art collector of the 20th century. The documentary, "Art of the Steal," however, focuses mainly on the battle that Barnes and his posthumous disciples have fought against the commodification of the art world, and his art in particular.

To many people in Philadelphia, Barnes was seen as an eccentric, misanthropic figure. After the Philadelphia critical community trashed an art show he put on in 1923, showcasing works by Cezanne, Renoir and Matisse, Barnes distanced himself from the city's art community, saying things like: "Philadelphia is a depressing intellectual slum," and "The main function of the museum has been to serve as a pedestal upon which a clique of socialites pose as patrons of the arts."

Barnes set up his foundation in Merion, PA to house his art and serve as an educational institution, and the film works to polarize Merion and downtown Philadelphia. As opposed to the pastoral landscapes of Barnes's property, the city is represented with ominous long shots of the Museum of Art and hidden camera-esque interior shots of the sterile civic buildings.

Director Don Argott takes a fast-paced, in medias res approach to this richly informative film, often cutting to the middle of town hall meetings. The jumpy editing and pacing lends an espionage quality to the documentary. The film-like the rare art it contains-is visually stimulating, and the talking heads that appear set the stage with personality and excitement.

Argott's film functions in many ways as a heavily researched propaganda piece for a local political debate. While the repercussions of this debate are far-reaching in the art community, as the documentary progresses it becomes markedly tangled up in state budgets and IRS tax statuses. The film conveys a deep history of the Foundation, but it often does so through the mouths of friends and disciples-some of whom are shown later in the film angrily protesting outside of civic buildings.

The battle continues today between Barnes's goals for the collection and the aims of Philadelphia politicians to bring this tourist magnet to a more primary location. While the film purports to be the "other side of the story," one can't help but wonder whether making an equally biased response to the politicians' own propaganda was the best way to garner awareness.

At heart, the battle seems to be between people who actually appreciate art and people who might just be pretending to. Both of these categories, however, seem to miss the point. Regardless of critical ability, people who are interested should be able to see Cezanne's "The Card Players" in person, even if their doing so benefits so-called "culture industry" hacks. The only thing worse than the commodification of art is locking it away for "real" art appreciators. That's just pretentious.

Discovering the Natural History Museum

As a monumental BBC series goes behind the scenes at the Natural History Museum, Christopher Howse recounts the museum's chequered past and meets presenter Jimmy Doherty

 
The Natural History Museum was voted London's best free attraction
 last year
The Natural History Museum was voted London's best free attraction last year
David Attenborough summed up his impressions of the Natural History Museum for a six-part television series that starts this week: “The front door is pretty impressive stuff. You’re into something special.”
He’s right. If the three million visitors who pour through that threshold each year stop to look, they’ll see it framed by a bundle of tree trunks, reproduced in terracotta. Step back and the doorway appears as a weird take on a medieval arch, as the architect intended.
Inside, the visitor flips between a double vision: hundreds of animals, living and extinct, depicted in terracotta; and gigantic architecture framing a cathedral of natural history. This Museum of Life (as the BBC series is called) houses 70 million specimens.
“Beyond the public displays is really where the museum begins,” says series presenter Jimmy Doherty. Is that true? History suggests not. Its opening in 1881 fulfilled a life’s ambition for its founder, the palaeontologist Richard Owen: a museum with free entry for all, introducing the whole of the animal and plant kingdoms. And the building that tourists know today still expresses its original message.
From the outset it provoked fierce controversy. “A serious mistake has been made in the erection of a building with such elaborate and ornate internal decorations for museum purposes,” commented the journal Nature in 1881. The Field claimed that it was “ornamented – if so it may be termed – both externally and internally with incorrect and grotesque representations of animals”.
Yet it nearly failed to be built at all. When Richard Owen became superintendent of the natural history department of the British Museum in 1856, a jumble of items was crammed into old buildings in Bloomsbury: a stuffed bison, a marine iguana from Darwin’s voyage of the Beagle and a 17th-century “vegetable lamb from Tartary”.
The Natural History collection needed space, lots of it. What it nearly got was a second-hand monstrosity, for in 1862 “one of the ugliest public buildings that was ever raised in this country”, as The Builder called it, became vacant. It was a leviathan stretching 1,152 feet along Cromwell Road, on the site where the museum now stands.
This overpowering building housed the International Exhibition of 1862. Everyone knows about the Great Exhibition of 1851 in Crystal Palace. Its successor is as unknown, as no doubt the Millennium Dome will be in 150 years.
It was the fevered brainchild of one of those overheated Victorians who died young: Francis Fowke. This Captain in the Royal Engineers, aged 31, helped mount the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1855. He got to know Prince Albert, and just as importantly Henry Cole, the abrasive dynamo behind the founding of the Victoria and Albert Museum.
Fowke, with no architectural qualifications, got the big job for the 1862 exhibition because of his connections. The building went up at a dizzy speed. Its main feature was the biggest dome in the world, made of glass. Then Fowke decided to make it two domes. Their polyhedral shape looked lopsided, an enemy calling them “tumid bubbles, with a green and half–transparent tint of gooseberry”.
Such jibes might have convinced history that Fowke’s design was utterly despicable, had it not been for remarkable contemporary photographs by William England, of the huge space stuffed with exhibits and visitors.
Six million saw the show. Among them was Dostoevsky, who wrote that “a feeling of fear somehow creeps over you. It is a Biblical sight, something to do with Babylon, some prophecy out of the Apocalypse.”
Once it closed, this most elephantine of white elephants was earmarked as a home for Owen’s new Natural History Museum. But the government, having secured the site, failed to persuade Parliament to buy the building, too. Most of the materials were carted off to become part of Alexandra Palace. The stubborn remains were blown up with dynamite by Sapper friends of Fowke’s.
This farrago of waste and cultured disapproval reached a low when Fowke won a competition in 1864 to design a new building on the site for the Natural History Museum. Obligingly, from the viewpoint of history, he died of a burst blood vessel just before Christmas.
Enter Alfred Waterhouse. Still in his mid-thirties, he had recently secured the commission to build Strangeways Prison in Manchester. In changing Fowke’s plans he had to overcome opposition from Henry Cole and Queen Victoria herself. Richard Owen proved an ally of vision.
The wide, lofty central space – in which Museum of Life shows children open-mouthed at the 83ft dinosaur diplodocus – was intended by Owen as an “Index Museum”, introducing visitors to all categories of life from fleas to a stuffed whale.
Waterhouse, boldly dropping Fowke’s renaissance style, declared that south German Romanesque was better suited to the kind of ornamentation with “objects of natural history” that Owen wanted. No medieval cathedral ever looked like Waterhouse’s creation.
The whole thing is covered with fantastic terracotta animals and plants: extinct in the east wing; extant in the west. A gargoyle of a hoofed mammal, the Great Paleotherium, sits on the roofline. Flying fish play on the lightning conductors and dragonflies alight on the air vents. On the arches of the Central Hall climb 78 monkeys, all to Waterhouse’s design. More than 300 such sculptures were made from his drawings between 1875 and 1878.
Terracotta, which lent itself to mass production, was a hot potato at a time when a dominant authority in aesthetics was John Ruskin. He insisted on craftsmanship as a key to beauty and social responsibility. At Oxford, the recently completed University Museum of Natural History boasted stone ornamentation carved in situ by two Irish sculptors, John and James O’Shea. They cut animals on columns to their own fancy, even caricaturing university officials.
In his use of terracotta, Waterhouse managed to win approval of the Ruskinians while embodying the latest scientific discoveries. As a decorative skin, terracotta was to the Victorians what marble was to medieval Venetians. Before being baked it could be moulded by a craftsman to reproduce “the exact work of the artist”. Waterhouse first checked his sketches with a professor on the museum staff, then relied for the clay modelling on a certain Monsieur Dujardin. Not much is known about him, but Ruskin himself is thought to have praised the “charming details” he added to the moulding that visitors see today.
Common themes remain. Museum of Life shows current research in Mauritius into a cache of 7,500 bones of extinct giant tortoises and dodos. The dodo features prominently among Waterhouse’s panels. It looks for all the world like an illustration by Tenniel for Alice in Wonderland, and with good reason. Both Tenniel and Waterhouse drew the bird from a 17th-century depiction painted by Jan Savery before its extinction.
If the opening of the museum was the apotheosis of Waterhouse’s patron Richard Owen, Museum of Life shows Owen’s vision in retreat. Gone is his Index Museum. The BBC cameras show a statue of Darwin, whose theory of evolution Owen bitterly opposed, being hoisted into position on the grand flying staircase where his own effigy once stood.
- Museum of Life starts on BBC Two at 8.00pm on Thursday

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Lydia is just one of many tattooed ladies these days

The gender balance has shifted, and body art becomes the terrain of young and old
The 33-year-old Julie Larocque has more than 500 hours inked onto 
her body in 60 tattoos. Chris Mikula The 33-year-old Julie Larocque has more than 500 hours inked onto her body in 60 tattoos.
The first time a needle embedded ink into her skin, Julie Larocque felt like a more beautiful woman. The electric buzzing became harmonious, a lullaby that put her to sleep. Fifteen years later, 33-year-old Larocque has more than 500 hours inked onto her body. Each of her 60 tattoos -- which cover her arms, back, chest, neck, half of her feet and half of her leg -- tells a different story of struggle, strength, and courage.
Single mother to an autistic 11-year-old boy, Larocque has dedicated her life to his condition. She provides 24-hour care to her son, counsels other families living with autistic children, and has the autism ribbon permanently etched onto the back half of her leg.
"It's such a great feeling. I feel so at peace when I'm getting tattooed," said Larocque, whose body is now 60% tatted. "When you see a person with tattoos, you know where they've been and what they've been going through."
Tattoo artists are increasingly seeing a shift in the makeup of their clientele. Skin art is no longer exclusive to bikers, sailors, and jailbirds, but today can be found on just about anyone, from a favourite celebrity to the neighbourhood priest. After 20 years of working as a tattoo artist in downtown Ottawa, Darin Comley says about 70% of his clients are female, most between the ages of 28 and 45.
Since the art form shed its taboo reputation, women are taking over the once male-dominated industry. A 2003 Harris Poll in the United States determined that tattoo statistics for men and women are now nearly even, with 16% of men and 15%of women having at least one tattoo. About 9% of Canadian women have a tattoo, according to a 2002 Leger Marketing poll. Both nations' statistics have likely climbed since, especially with the advent and popularity growth of television shows like TLC's Miami Ink and A&E's Tattoo Highway.
And it's not just women in their 20s fuelling this statistical rise. Tattooists report women in their 30s, 40s, and 50s seeking to sport one or more designs.
"When I started tattooing a lot of women, I found they were recently single or divorced and they were looking for something they could do now that maybe their husbands didn't let them do before," said Comley, who has been Larocque's personal artist for more than 10 years.
"They get to the point where they are retired and comfortable in life, and they can do it because other people's ideals aren't really going to reflect on them anymore."
Margot Mifflin, author of Bodies of Subversion: A Secret History of Women and Tattoo, studies the art's sociological implications. She says female baby boomers, specifically, found themselves in uncharted waters and in response, have used tattooing to reflect their pioneering sense of individuality. In other words, more women are getting tattoos because they now have unprecedented freedom to do so.
"Middle-aged women have had to navigate an entirely new world of female possibility and social protocol in the wake of second wave feminism," Mifflin said.
"The gulf between them and their mothers is greater than between any mother-daughter generation, probably, since the Industrial Revolution, and it's caused women to have to find their own way when it comes to their social, professional, and family identities," said Mifflin, who directs the arts journalism program at City University of New York.
Mifflin also attributes the phenomenon to the media's coverage of more body issues, such as surrogate motherhood, breast cancer, cosmetic surgery, and eating disorders.
"Many of these women felt and continue to feel the desire to assert power over their own bodies, which tattoos have helped them express, for better or worse," said Mifflin.
Massage therapist Marnie Seguin, 38, is an adventurous spirit. She rocks out at concerts, takes last-minute road trips, and shoots the breeze with friends over afternoon pints, but had never found herself in a tattoo parlour's chair. That changed when her husband left three years ago.
"That was the hardest winter of my life -- rock bottom. But I chose to see it as an opportunity to clean my slate. Now I am the best I have ever been, and I want that reflected in art on my body," said Seguin.
The new-found confidence and self-pride drove Seguin to Ottawa's first tattoo exposition in October, where artists from across the country gathered to recruit new enthusiasts and provide on-site tattooing.
Running from vendor to vendor like a child at a toy store, Seguin was already envisioning her skin stamp.
"I think they're amazing. The art form is such a commitment," she said, standing next to her new fiance. "I want something that embodies my children, which I know is a common theme, but I just want something that will speak forever."
In six months, Seguin's back will be home to a bare but eloquent tree branch. Starting grey and shadowed, the branch will grow up her rib cage into a soft, mossy green plant where three flowers bloom to signify her three children.
"The strides women have made in society -- and I'm talking on a global scale -- have almost everything to do with the explosion of female body art of all forms," said Seguin.
"I want my tattoo to reflect my pride in how far I've grown and changed."
Women like Seguin and Larocque define their breed today: fearless, bold, and strong-spoken. Tattooing is an attractive vehicle for women to highlight their femininity. A red rose on a delicate ankle, a butterfly on the midriff, or a dolphin just above the buttocks are the most common requests in Comley's shop, especially among older women.
Although Larocque admits to one regrettable tattoo, she will never stop. She's addicted to the euphoria that emanates from each prick.
"It makes you feel good and makes you feel empowered," she said.
"It makes me feel that I'm not just a mom. I leave my job and everything behind, and I can be myself. This is my outlet to be myself.

Aspen exhibit: Woodrow Blagg captures the West like never before

Pennsylvania artist Woodrow Blagg has an exhibition of his drawings at Valley Fine Art. The exhibition opens with a reception at 5 p.m. Friday.
Pennsylvania artist Woodrow Blagg has an 
exhibition of his drawings at Valley Fine Art. The exhibition opens with
 a reception at 5 p.m. Friday. 
“Equinox,” graphite on paper is one of the works 
on display in Woodrow Blagg's latest exhibit, Anthem.
“Equinox,” graphite on paper is one of the works on display in Woodrow Blagg's latest exhibit, Anthem.

“Cowlloween,” graphite on paper, is part of the 
Woodrow Blagg exhibition, Anthem, opening Friday at Valley Fine Art.


“Cowlloween,” graphite on paper, is part of the Woodrow Blagg exhibition, Anthem, opening Friday at Valley Fine Art.

ASPEN — A conversation with Woodrow Blagg hits on numerous touchstones of art, architecture, cinema, and loads of literature, as he references Walt Whitman, Jack Kerouac, Thomas Merton and James Agee.

“I read a lot,” Blagg said, and it's clear that his survey of books runs deep. He brings up the Argentinean writer Macedonia Fernández, and confidently places him in historical context: “He was truly the father of 20th century Spanish literature. He was that powerful. Borges followed what he did,” Blagg said.

Blagg's interests have in common a heavyweight quality. You don't imagine page-turning thrillers on his bookstand, or romantic comedies on his Netflix list. In fact, you don't associate him with a Netflix list.

So it can seem incongruous that Blagg, an artist, is showing images of the American Southwest in an Aspen exhibition that opens Friday. And his work, opening at Valley Fine Art, with a 5 p.m. reception, doesn't give any immediately apparent intellectual reflections on the genre; the images are the age-old icons of the Southwest — horses and cowboys — found in one gallery after the next along Santa Fe's Canyon Road. It is a corner of the art world that Blagg isn't necessarily enthused to be a part of. “It's curious I've done this body of work,” Blagg said, noting that he wouldn't consider himself a devoted fan of Western art.

What sets the work apart — and what gives an indication of the distinctive character of the artist — is the method Blagg uses in his Western images. The current exhibition, titled Anthem, features works made of graphite and paper. The works are on a large scale — several feet in each dimension — and, considering that he is working in pencil, the detail of shading, contours and perspectives is extraordinary. The effort itself reflects the depth of the artist.

“It's grueling ... in a very interesting sort of fashion,” Blagg said. “You say, ‘Who does that?' Then, ‘Why not? Why not take it to a place that hasn't been done?'”

Blagg has lived in northeastern Pennsylvania for the last 15 years, and the Western-oriented work is hardly the extent of his output. But his Southwestern images come from a sense of place that is close to his being. Blagg, the oldest of 10 kids in his family, grew up in rural areas of Texas and Oklahoma. His father was in the army for 10 years before going to work on oil wells. Among Blagg's pleasures as a child were Western films, and the visual element was a strong influence

“‘High Noon,' ‘Red River' with John Wayne. These epic black-and-white Westerns were beautiful to watch, visually,” said Blagg, who has a twin brother who is a Baptist preacher, and a set of twin brothers who are both artists in Fort Worth. “And some of the imagery stays with me. ‘Hud,' with Paul Newman — the cinematographer [James Wong Howe, who earned an Oscar for the film], I think that was his high point. He did something in that film that makes it an American classic.”

The Anthem images, though, come more directly from his adult life. While living in Fort Worth, through most of the '80s, Blagg made numerous trips to Texas ranches. His habit was not to look quickly and find some eye-catching vistas to turn into appealing drawings and paintings, but to spend long stretches of time absorbing the ranching life. What he saw was hard physical labor in rough conditions, but also a satisfaction in the relationship that was built with the environment. Call it grueling, in an interesting fashion.

“The most impressive part of being in Texas was the connection for these ranchers. They'd been around 100, 150 years, and there was a monastic, enduring kind of appeal,” Blagg said. “It was kind of harsh at times. There's a ranch, the Quién Sabe, in the northwestern panhandle. There are no trees, it's flat, relatively high elevation so these huge winds. Bone-chilling cold. But there was something so grandly austere in the severity of sky and land. Very haunting. Learning, spending time there on horseback with the cowboys who have spent their lives there — that's a connecting experience.

“You go to those ranches, a massive area and space compared to an urban environment — and I'm there for a long time. It's very difficult to come back to Fort Worth after that. If I had stayed out another week longer I never would have come back to the city.”

Blagg has become disconnected from the ranches; he hasn't made a trip there in seven or eight years (though he is hoping to return within the year). Despite the physical distance, there remains a tangible closeness to the austerity of that existence. The 63-year-old Blagg lives in Eckley, a tiny place surrounded by other tiny places — McAdoo, Jim Thorpe, Frackville, Hazleton. Wilkes-Barre is 20 miles away. But it's more accurate to say that Blagg lives Eckley's Miner's Village, a mountain village owned entirely by the Pennsylvania Historical Commission. Blagg, who graduated from the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia, says his adopted home is “almost a ghost town,” with a population of seven.

“I feel like I'm living in a Knut Hamsun novel,” Blagg said, referring to the Pulitzer Prize-winning Norwegian who lived from the mid-19th century till the mid-20th century. “It's so out there, I've learned how to do so many things. I've become a carpenter, a plumber, an electrician. I've learned how to build my own computer. It's just part of the survival.”

Blagg's choice of materials may be a reflection of the facts of that existence. He has worked with oils and canvas — “I don't like to close the door on too much,” he said — but his preferred surface is paper, the thinner the better.

“These drawings, they're done on the thinnest paper made,” he said. “That was a deliberate attempt — I wanted them to have a hyper-real quality. But the image is tenuous. It's the transient nature of life itself. It's there but a few seconds.”

Describing the purpose of his work, Blagg brings up Whitman and Kerouac, Samuel Clemens and Winslow Homer — artists whose “obsessive interest come to an aesthetic coalition, if you will,” he said. He also brings up the more obscure Gordon Matta-Clark, who would take a saw to abandoned buildings to create light and shadow effects. “It was kind of an unprecedented performance, an architectural performance,” Blagg said. “His work to me was a tour de force, a remarkable original vision.”

“Basically what they were doing was something that meant something to them,” Blagg continued. “They were paying attention to their own vision. As opposed to doing work that was reminiscent of something that had already been done. When you do something for yourself, you can feel it inside. I feel like I'm walking with the angels. Not that I know that I am, but I can delude myself into feeling that way.”