Fun and Games with Art and Maps

Backdrop

Backdrop is a map based game which is somewhat similar to the very popular GeoGuessr game. However in Backdrop instead of Google Maps Street View images you have to identify the locations depicted in famous paintings by some of history’s greatest artists.

In GeoGuessr you can stroll around in Street View to pick-up clues as to the location that you have been dropped in. In Backdrop if you don’t immediately recognize the scene depicted in the painting there are only a couple of clues available to you. Usually the title of the painting is a huge clue as to the location that is depicted. If that doesn’t help then the name of the gallery might be a clue as to the location shown in the artwork (although it might also be a complete red herring).

Currently there are around 200 paintings from around the world in the Backdrop database. Each game of Backdrop involves identifying the locations of 5 paintings chosen at random. You win points based purely on how close you click to the correct location.

via 

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The Dwindleberry Zoo

I was today years old when I discovered THE DWINDLEBERRY ZOO by G.E. Farrow (London/Glasgow/Dublin/Bombay: Blackie, 1909) Illustrated by Gordon Browne.  It seems that G.E. Farrow was one of the masters of the Victorian fantasy genre. In this tale a boy eats a berry that reduces him in size, enabling him to have a number of encounters with various animals. The linked version was published in serial form in The Sunday Strand in 1902, and illustrated by Alan Wright.

source [serialized version with illos]

 

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Many years later, as he faced the firing squad…

Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.

I first read One Hundred Years of Solitude during my first year at university when I was supposed to be doing actual course work. While I cannot claim to have grasped the significance of Gabriel García Marquez’s masterpiece at the time, I did know that it would have a lasting impact on fiction. A trailer for Netflix’s One Hundred Years of Solitude has recently been released. The series adaptation of the groundbreaking novel launches on the streamer later this year.

The Spanish-language series was filmed in Colombia with support from the family of García Marquez, whose acclaimed novel has sold more than 50 million copies and been translated into 40 languages. Netflix released a brief teaser in 2022 to coincide with the 40th anniversary of García Marquez winning the Nobel Prize for Literature, but the new teaser reveals much more.

 

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Emulating Books

18th century Tea Caddy

I look forward to visiting the upcoming Emulating Books: Book Objects from the Lynn and Bruce Heckman Gift which is an intriguing new exhibition that features a wide range of items which look like books but aren’t. Running through July 16 in the Thomas J. Watson Library at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, it explores inventive book-like objects which have been made from stone, wood, and precious metal, and serving as lockets, lanterns, toys, and needlework accessories.

Folding lantern in book form 1861

The exhibition features examples from the Heckman collection, a gift to the Thomas J. Watson Library from Lynn Geringer Heckman who started collecting book-like objects – sometimes known as ‘blooks’ – with her late husband Bruce Heckman in 1989, putting together more than 1,000 items.

19th century travel souvenir

19th century inkwell

Highlights (all in book form) include domino and alphabet games, a folding stereoscopic viewer, a snake trick, a child’s paint box, a travelling inkwell, and an Agate book charm which is probably a watch fob.

Domino game

Graduated, three-tiered, footed box in book form

Book-like amusements, friendship gifts, love tokens, and miniatures have been made for many purposes in a wide range of designs and materials. People from many cultures, ages, and social and economic strata made and owned them, and whether useful or symbolic, many were kept over the generations and revered as personal treasures and family heirlooms. Anyone who enjoys games today may be familiar with bookshelf games and puzzle boxes but may not realize that games, toys, and other amusements, like the snake trick, book-shaped chess board, spelling game, and domino set shown, have such a long history. The tradition of making and giving jewelry, treasure boxes, and other personal book-shaped items as symbols of remembrance, love, and friendship is an old one too, as illustrated by the bone and silver charms, jewelry, monogramed toothpick case (for the person who has everything), and the other unusual tiny treasures in this case. Other love tokens and miniatures have been peppered throughout the exhibition.

 

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Books and Roses Day

Barcelona is all about roses, books and lovers on April 23rd each year. In Catalonia World Book Day also becomes an especially romantic festival. People celebrate the day of their patron saint, Sant Jordi (Saint George), with a curious tradition. On this day, it is customary for couples to exchange gifts: the men receive a book and the women receive a rose. However, this has developed over time, so both men and women can receive books and roses. Book and flower stalls are set up along the streets of Barcelona. The streets fill with people walking around stalls, looking for a gift for their beloved, and for their family and friends too. It’s also become a popular day for authors and bookshops to hold book signings and readings.

This is one of the most keenly anticipated and widely celebrated Catalan public holidays. According to the traditional tale, Sant Jordi killed the dragon that used to live in Montblanc where it terrorized the local population, thus saving the king’s daughter from certain death. Legend has it that a beautiful rose bush sprang up in the spot where the dragon’s blood was spilled. From the 18th century onward, the Sant Jordi festival became widely identified as a Catalan ‘fiesta’ which these days arouses great popular, civic and cultural passion.

 

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New Literary Genres

 

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Book Art/Art Books

Jannis Kounellis Untitled

Anouk Kruithof Enclosed Content Chatting Away in the Colour Invisibility

Rachel Whiteread Untitled (Black Books)

Adam Bateman Readings

Jannis Kounellis Untitled

Scholz & Friends Monument

Susan Hiller Lucidity & Intuition: Homage to Gertrude Stein

Dieter Roth Diary

Ricardo Brey Everyday Life is a Fire

Alexis Arnold

Henning M. Lederer Covers

 

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Waiting to Work

I was recently surprised to discover a glass enclosure about the size of a large shipping container with mummy-like figures peering out. The installation is situated in Philadelphia’s  Independence Historic National Park, at Market Street between 5th and 6th, near the National Constitution Center and outside the Visitor’s Center.

The 38 human-size figures made of stacked paper represent the number of states that do not have legislative policies expediting the expungement of criminal records, or clean slate laws. The stacks of paper symbolize the paperwork needed to get a criminal history erased.

Titled Waiting Workforce, the artwork, which will be up for the next few weeks, was commissioned by JPMorgan Chase and created by Australia-based arts collective The Glue Society. Its goal: to inspire people to fight for Clean Slate laws in their home state.

“This represents the mounds and mounds of paper that individuals have to go through in order to get those records expunged,” said Nan Gibson, executive director of the JPMorgan Chase PolicyCenter. “The figures are hunched over. It’s a graphic representation of the weight of those records.

“Waiting Workforce” made its debut in Philadelphia in part because Pennsylvania was the first of 12 states to pass clean slate laws. The laws make record expungement easier, in some cases even automatic, and require no paperwork at all. Recently, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro signed a third iteration of that policy into law.

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my hope is vertical

TODAY, MY HOPE IS VERTICAL

Jane Hirshfield

Today, my hope is vertical.
Tomorrow it will be horizontal.
The next day, cloudy.
My hope is like a Greek myth:
exchanging skin for bark,
bark for scales,
scales for the hollow bones of a bird.
In these ways my hope
attempts to escape its fate.
In myth, hope surely knows,
escape is useless.
Still, hope will try.
I, who will someday leave behind
this three-dimensioned puzzle,
pity my hope.
Poorling, I say to my hope,
even I cannot spare you,
even I cannot make you mortal.
Winged, rooted, finned,
roofed or roofless,
of all my shapes, only you, hope,
know nothing of irony,
only you cannot be cynical
or cloak yourself
in the objectivity of grammar.
Only you
cannot suffer suffering.
You exempt, you deny,
you protest with speech and with silence.
You forgive—helpless to not—
in speech and in silence.
I, citizen of perspective,
born into the tribe of time,
will vanish into its blurring distance.
But you—most intransigent,
most stubborn of all my parts—
will be forced to continue.
How tenderly, with two open hands,
you reach again today for hunger’s apple

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Conflict Cartography

I was recently bemoaning the fact that the main stream media in the United States can’t seem to focus on more than two serious conflicts at the same time, and even then, the coverage is sorely lacking. But I just discovered the excellent website from the Geneva Academy The Rule of Law in Armed Conflict Map that monitors and plots armed conflicts around the globe. The map currently shows the locations of  more than 110 armed conflicts, including the war between Israel and the Palestinian terrorist government in Gaza and the invasion and occupation of parts of Ukraine by Russia.

The Rule of Law in Armed Conflicts (RULAC) online portal has been mapped armed conflicts around the world since 2007. The map currently shows that at least “55 states and more than 70 armed non-State actors” are presently involved in armed conflicts.

If you click on the yellow country markers on the map you can discover which conflicts the selected country is currently involved in. For example if you click on the United States the map reveals that the US is presently involved in “airstrikes in Iraq and Syria” and is “also undertaking strikes against Islamist militants in Somalia, Pakistan, Libya and Yemen.”

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