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Musings and inspirations blah blah blah from the good people at NOHO Modern...
1 year ago
21 March 2012
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i12bent:

Josef Albers: D R a (in red), 1968 - color screen print (Annex Galleries)
1 year ago
21 March 2012
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i12bent:

Another Bauhaus Josef Albers gem, which I have coveted for a while…
1 year ago
21 March 2012
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vintageblackglamour:

Today, VBG hit 10,000 Facebook “likes” - thank you! To celebrate, I wanted to share the baddest picture I’ve seen all day. Found via Flickr and the Schomburg - Three Survivors of Reconstruction: M.W. Gibbs, a municipal judge in Arkansas, P.B.S. Pinchback, lieutenant governor of Louisiana and James Lewis, the collector of New Orleans port, circa 1922.
1 year ago
21 March 2012
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1 year ago
18 March 2012
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i12bent:

Tonight’s mini-spotlight on OF:
William H. Johnson (March 18, 1901 - 1970) is that rarest of phenomena - a great African-American artist who spent massive periods of time in Denmark and Norway in the 1930s.
Johnson married Danish textile artist Holcha Krake (April 6, 1885 - 1944, cancer) in 1930. They lived together in Denmark and Norway until they saw the writing on the wall offered by Nazism encroaching on the rest of Europe and the couple relocated to the US in 1938…
1 year ago
18 March 2012
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1 year ago
18 March 2012
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1 year ago
18 March 2012
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1 year ago
17 March 2012
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shapenoid:

Outside the Hallgrímskirkja, Reykjavik, Iceland. Photography by Matthew Johnson.

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1 year ago
17 March 2012
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manpodcast:

Richard Serra, Union of the Torus and the Sphere, 2001. Collection of the Dia Art Foundation, New York. Image via Flickr user Grufnik.
This week’s Modern Art Notes Podcast featuresRichard Serra, our greatest living sculptor. A retrospective of Serra’s drawings has just opened at its originating institution, The Menil Collection in Houston. It will be on view through June 10.
To download or subscribe to The Modern Art Notes Podcast via iTunes, click here. To download the program directly, click here (or click on the image). To subscribe to The MAN Podcast’s RSS feed, click here. You can stream the program and see more images of artworks discussed on the podcast here.

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1 year ago
12 March 2012
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1 year ago
12 March 2012
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1 year ago
12 March 2012
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1 year ago
12 March 2012
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1 year ago
8 March 2012
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thedailywhat:

On Kony 2012: I honestly wanted to stay as far away as possible from KONY 2012, the latest fauxtivist fad sweeping the web (remember “change your Facebook profile pic to stop child abuse”?), but you clearly won’t stop sending me that damn video until I say something about it, so here goes:
Stop sending me that video.
The organization behind Kony 2012 — Invisible Children Inc. — is an extremely shady nonprofit that has been called ”misleading,” “naive,” and “dangerous” by a Yale political science professor, and has been accused by Foreign Affairs of “manipulat[ing] facts for strategic purposes.” They have also been criticized by the Better Business Bureau for refusing to provide information necessary to determine if IC meets the Bureau’s standards.
Additionally, IC has a low two-star rating in accountability from Charity Navigator because they won’t let their financials be independently audited. That’s not a good thing. In fact, it’s a very bad thing, and should make you immediately pause and reflect on where the money you’re sending them is going.
By IC’s own admission, only 31% of all the funds they receive go toward actually helping anyone [pdf]. The rest go to line the pockets of the three people in charge of the organization, to pay for their travel expenses (over $1 million in the last year alone) and to fund their filmmaking business (also over a million) — which is quite an effective way to make more money, as clearly illustrated by the fact that so many can’t seem to stop forwarding their well-engineered emotional blackmail to everyone they’ve ever known.
And as far as what they do with that money:

The group is in favour of direct military intervention, and their money supports the Ugandan government’s army and various other military forces. Here’s a photo of the founders of Invisible Children posing with weapons and personnel of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army. Both the Ugandan army and Sudan People’s Liberation Army are riddled with accusations of rape and looting, but Invisible Children defends them, arguing that the Ugandan army is “better equipped than that of any of the other affected countries”, although Kony is no longer active in Uganda and hasn’t been since 2006 by their own admission. These books each refer to the rape and sexual assault that are perennial issues with the UPDF, the military group Invisible Children is defending.

Let’s not get our lines crossed: The Lord’s Resistance Army is bad news. And Joseph Kony is a very bad man, and needs to be stopped. But propping up Uganda’s decades-old dictatorship and its military arm, which has been accused by the UN of committing unspeakable atrocities and itself facilitated the recruitment of child soldiers, is not the way to go about it.
The United States is already plenty involved in helping rout Kony and his band of psycho sycophants. Kony is on the run, having been pushed out of Uganda, and it’s likely he will soon be caught, if he isn’t already dead. But killing Kony won’t fix anything, just as killing Osama bin Laden didn’t end terrorism. The LRA might collapse, but, as Foreign Affairs points out, it is “a relatively small player in all of this — as much a symptom as a cause of the endemic violence.”
Myopically placing the blame for all of central Africa’s woes on Kony — even as a starting point — will only imperil many more people than are already in danger.
Sending money to a nonprofit that wants to muck things up by dousing the flames with fuel is not helping. Want to help? Really want to help? Send your money to nonprofits that are putting more than 31% toward rebuilding the region’s medical and educational infrastructure, so that former child soldiers have something worth coming home to.
Here are just a few of those charities. They all have a sparkling four-star rating from Charity Navigator, and, more importantly, no interest in airdropping American troops armed to the teeth into the middle of a multi-nation tribal war to help one madman catch another.
The bottom line is, research your causes thoroughly. Don’t just forward a random video to a stranger because a mass murderer makes a five-year-old “sad.” Learn a little bit about the complexities of the region’s ongoing strife before advocating for direct military intervention.
There is no black and white in the world. And going about solving important problems like there is just serves to make all those equally troubling shades of gray invisible.
[kony2012.]


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