When the Warming Comes…

Pablo Genovés is a Madrid and Berlin-based multi-media artist who uses found vintage postcards, prints and other ephemera to create magical, and disturbing, digital collages of European museums, palaces, performance spaces and theaters inundated by a rising tide of flood waters. I guess this is what we can expect when the warming comes. To see more of Pablo’s work and learn about the process please visit his site

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The Last Train to Urville

Urville is the little known capital city of a seaside province of France. It has a population of almost 12 million citizens and is the largest city in Europe. Starting to wonder why you’ve never heard of Urville ? That’s because it’s entirely the product of one man’s imagination.

Gilles Tréhin is a 38 year-old Frenchman from Nice with extraordinary talents in art, geography, mathematics and languages, and he’s also autistic. Since the age of 15, Gilles has been creating an alternate France where Urville is the economic and cultural capital of the nation. He’s made hundreds of detailed drawings of the varied neighborhoods and districts of Uville. Gilles also developed an amazing backstory for the city that reaches to the Middle Ages.

If you’d like to learn more about Gilles and his project, or if you’d like to purchase a copy of his book, which has 300 fabulous drawings, please visit his websiteUrville

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Lincoln in Books

The brand new Center for Education and Leadership at Washington DC’s Ford’s Theater Museum sports a ten meter-tall tower of 6,800 books all about President Abraham Lincoln. The books are all histories or biographies about the 16th President, along with books of quotations, quips and speeches, with a few volumes of historical fiction and children’s books mixed in.

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What’s a Rare Bookman

The exhibition “Ray Safford, Rare Bookman,”  which opened yesterday at the Grolier Club, New York City, offers a look into the famed New York firm of Charles Scribner’s Sons and the literary, publishing, and rare book worlds in turn-of-the-century New York. Ray Safford was a consummate bibliophile and book collector, whose entire career and life revolved around books and Scribner’s. 

Safford joined Scribner’s in the 1880s when the business was on Broadway, and became life-long close friends with two other young men there – Frank Nelson Doubleday, later the renowned publisher, and Edward W. Bok, the noted editor and author. Safford stayed with Scribner’s and by 1912 was in charge of the retail operation. Safford knew Scribner authors and illustrators including Eugene Field, Maxfield Parrish, Henry van Dyke, Oliver Herford, and Howard Pyle, all represented in the exhibit by letters or inscribed books. Through Doubleday and Bok he had contact with people such as Joseph Conrad and Rudyard Kipling. Ray Safford retired in 1928.

Over more than four decades, Ray Safford’s work in Scribner’s gave him unusual connections with people ranging from author Joseph Conrad and illustrator Arthur Burdett Frost to robber baron Henry Clay Frick, publisher Frank Nelson Doubleday, Mark Twain, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Lewis Carroll.

The exhibit presents letters, manuscripts, bookplates, photographs, inscribed books, and books with drawings added to them. Highlights include a letter to Safford from Arthur Burdett Frost (the illustrator of two Lewis Carroll books, but best known as the illustrator of Uncle Remus) describing his difficulties with Carroll (“the fussiest little man I ever met”); a pencil drawing of Brer Rabbit and the Tar Baby by Frost in a copy of Uncle Remus; a Mark Twain letter to his publisher James Osgood encouraging publication of a eulogy Twain found, describing it as “the finest thing American lips have uttered, except Mr. Lincoln’s Gettysburg speech”; a typescript of an unpublished Kipling poem with Safford’s notation about Kipling’s wish that the poem never be published; and May Safford’s charming story of their 1923 visit in England with the Conrads.

 “Ray Safford, Rare Bookman” will be on exhibit at the Grolier Club of New York, 47 East 60th Street, from February 16 through April 13, 2012. Gallery hours are Monday through Saturday, 10am to 5pm. Open to the public free of charge.

 

 

 

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Photographers: Know Your Rights

Actor/activist Joseph Gordon-Levitt, the Gregory Brothers and the ACLU have produced an entertaining and informative little video , with the assistance of the animated ghost of Benjamin Franklin, to inform photographers about their legal rights. This timely film applies to amateur and professional photographers, and American citizens in general. It also has an impact for bloggers and anyone taking photos while traveling around the US. You can learn more at the ACLU photograhers’ rights page.

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Travel Guidebook News

Well it was inevitable, the co-stars and co-creators of the sweet and wacky sketch comedy show Portlandia Carrie Brownstein and Fred Armisen have a book deal. Grand Central Publishing, a Hachette imprint, will release PORTLANDIA: A Guide for Visitors this November. The book will be structured just like a traditional travel guidebook and will lead readers through Portland’s landmarks, sites, attractions, shops, bars, clubs and restaurants. I’m sure a string of apps will follow.

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A Valentine’s Day Kiss

As today is Valentine’s Day , I thought it would be an appropriate time to bring you the story of Auguste Rodin’s erotically charged masterpiece, The Kiss.

The video below from the Tate museums,  explains how The Kiss was originally conceived as a detail in an early version of Rodin’s The Gates of Hell, a monumental work that preoccupied the artist for the last 37 years of his life. The Kiss depicts the fateful embrace of Francesca and Paolo, adulterous lovers from Dante’s Inferno.

Rodin developed the theme of The Kiss in plaster and terracotta before creating a marble version for the French government in 1888. That version is now on display at the Musée Rodin in Paris. The version featured in the Tate video was commissioned in 1900 by an American art collector living in England, and is now part of the permanent collection of the Tate Modern in London.

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Running Paris

The very clever folks at Le3 Paris created this terrific video of a running tiger on the streets of Paris at night. They claim that it was accomplished with absolutely no post-production trickery whatsoever. I don’t know if that’s entirely true, but it’s an amazing video anyway. Take a look:

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All the Books in the World

This heartwarming short story by Croatian author/illustrator Darko Macan and Tihomir Celanovic will bring a tear to the eye of any bibliophile. All the books in the world, except for one:

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Hot Bagels for Breakfast

English: Brooklyn Public Library at Grand Army...

Image via Wikipedia

Who doesn’t love a hot bagel? Never had a bagel? So sad for you. This wonderful short film is from the Brooklyn Public Library film archives. Filmed in the heart of Brooklyn, New York during the 1970s, the film is the story of how to make real bagels. It covers the entire process from making the dough, to baking and selling. The narrative offers a slice of life look at the changing nature of the bagel business and Brooklyn culture.

I’ll have a dozen everything.

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