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| I know this image is meant to educate (it's a chart of a section of the pons, which is part of the brain stem), but I think it's also just a really aesthetically pleasing illustration. |
October 31, 2011
Pons
October 30, 2011
October 25, 2011
October 21, 2011
Elizabeth Hartsig
Before I actually went to Sacred & Profane, the annual art gathering and general Whooping-it-Up Fest on Peaks Island, Maine, I was a little... hesitant about the whole thing. Actually, that's not the half of it: I kind of resembled the grumpy old Jim Hensen guys in my attitude: absurdly curmudgeonly and jaded about the whole idea of it. For no reason.
Anyway, this year I ended up going, and it was a blast. Everyone piles onto the afternoon ferry, all bright colors and scarfs and little satchels on our backs, everyone in incredibly high spirits. And the gathering continues from there, with great art, great people, music, food, and views. It was windy and cold, and everyone's hair was in a disarray and everyone had rosy cheeks and we drank whiskey and kombucha and raised a RUCKUS.
I had the pleasure of meeting Elizabeth Hartsig while out there. She's a fantastic photographer, and I've been following her work for a long time. Do check out her blog: it's a great place to get lost. Here is one of her pictures from the day; it totally captures what it feels like to wander through Battery Steele, looking at art, whispering to your friends, meeting strangers, feeling just the right amount of creepiness and awe and wide-eyed surprise.
Anyway, this year I ended up going, and it was a blast. Everyone piles onto the afternoon ferry, all bright colors and scarfs and little satchels on our backs, everyone in incredibly high spirits. And the gathering continues from there, with great art, great people, music, food, and views. It was windy and cold, and everyone's hair was in a disarray and everyone had rosy cheeks and we drank whiskey and kombucha and raised a RUCKUS.
I had the pleasure of meeting Elizabeth Hartsig while out there. She's a fantastic photographer, and I've been following her work for a long time. Do check out her blog: it's a great place to get lost. Here is one of her pictures from the day; it totally captures what it feels like to wander through Battery Steele, looking at art, whispering to your friends, meeting strangers, feeling just the right amount of creepiness and awe and wide-eyed surprise.
October 18, 2011
Hombres grandes y peludos
October 17, 2011
Kate De Para
This weekend I received the loveliest little package in the mail from the talented Kate De Para. Aren't her creations delightful? We decided to swap art: so fun! Let me know if you want to do an exchange too.
October 15, 2011
Interview: Martha Kearsley of Strong Arm Bindery
Martha
Kearsley is such a badass. She’s animated and articulate, a bookbinder who
makes playful and handsomely-crafted books, boxes, and stationery, as well as flower presses for drying flowers, Chump awards, and a huge variety of commissioned pieces. A long-time contractor at Harvard, Martha runs her own business—Strong Arm Bindery—from her studio in Portland, Maine, and also teaches at the North
Bennet Street School in Boston. I
caught up with her in her studio last month, and we talked about her latest
projects—which include camp logs whose plaid patterns are based on old
thermoses and “Dude Journals,” leather bound books
based on a form that dates back to the 3rd and 4th
century.
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| Left image via Swallowfield |
How’d you
get into bookbinding?
And
I moved back to Boston, and it turns out the premier bookbinding program
happens to be there: North Bennet Street.
And then I got hired to do conservation work at Harvard. And I did that for a
long time, even when I moved here and started my own business, I was traveling
down to Boston, and still working with as many people as I could, because
that’s how you realize, ‘oh, I don’t have to always do this the same way…’
Well,
[the camp logs are one thing; they're based on old
thermoses from the 1950s]. And then this, this has nothing to do with
Camp Logs anymore, we’ve moved on to Dude Journals. This is one variation on a
leather travel journal, and this is from the 1700s, it belonged to this guy,
this dude, who was a boot-maker. It’s
is called an occasional diary, a cash account while he’s moving around, making
appointments…and it’s a form that I am crazy for… the way it wraps is a really
old form—the earliest examples we have are from the third and fourth century .
It’s a Coptic form—the copts were a Christian sect in North Africa, in Egypt,
and they were famous for their monasteries. They would have a text block of
papyrus and then wrap it with whatever leather they had around. Isn’t that
nuts? And it was the fourth century so there were no rules, they were just
like, ‘Well, we need something to protect it, so they just make this crazy
band…’ and it works! It just totally got me going, I was so excited about it.
Labels:
Interviews
October 14, 2011
October 12, 2011
October 10, 2011
October 7, 2011
Osborn Desert Boots
October 6, 2011
October 3, 2011
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