#Onthisday in 1452 was born #LeonardoDaVinci. Admire "The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne" : http://bit.ly/1NHx8YD
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Sunday, April 12, 2015
Saturday, April 11, 2015
Slow Art Day - April 11, 2015
by Gregg Chadwick
First, visit one of the galleries or museums listed on the Slow Art Day site. (Deep appreciation to the Slow Art Day site for the comprehensive guide.) Second, while at the art venue, look at five works deeply and slowly. Third, after viewing the work meet up with other participants and the volunteer host for a bite to eat and a time to discuss what you saw and how it made you feel.
Most of all - breathe and enjoy!
The 2010 ARTNews article, Slow Down You Look Too Fast, provides a nice overview of Slow Art Day. And noted art writer Peter Clothier has been leading participants in his Slow Looking (One Hour/One Painting) events for over fifteen years. Peter held one of these events in my studio a few years ago. I highly recommend attending one of Peter's Slow Looking events. As I write this (10 am Saturday, April 11, 2015) Peter is holding a Slow Looking session at the Craig Krull Gallery in Santa Monica with the richly evocative paintings by Astrid Preston.
Friday, April 10, 2015
President Obama Heroically Supports a Ban on Conversion Therapy for LGBTQ Youth (New Video)
by Gregg Chadwick
Today the White House released an historic video on its YouTube channel calling for a ban on conversion therapy for LGBTQ individuals. I am heartened by this important development that follows up on President Barack Obama's support for a ban on all forms of so-called "conversion" therapy for minors, also known as "reparative" or "ex-gay" therapy. These efforts by the White House to lovingly support LGBTQ folks are game changing. The White House provides a clear statement of intent on their video page:
"The overwhelming scientific evidence demonstrates that conversion therapy, especially when it is practiced on young people, is neither medically nor ethically appropriate and can cause substantial harm.
As part of our dedication to protecting America’s youth, the Obama administration supports efforts to ban the use of conversion therapy for minors."
The White House announcement was in response to a popular petition calling for the federal government to enact Leelah's Law, which would ban sexual orientation and gender identity change efforts nationally. Leelah's Law is named for Leelah Alcorn, a transgender teen who took her own life after being subjected to misguided attempts to get her to perform as a cisgendered male by her family and church.
President Barack Obama and his administration have moved America towards a positive, inclusive future. I cannot recall any other administration that has supported LGBTQ citizens so profoundly.
Thanks you President Obama.
Please watch this beautiful and inspiring message of love, support and hope.
photo by White House photographer Pete Souza of President Obama and rainbow
April 9, 2015 in Jamaica
April 9, 2015 in Jamaica
Today the White House released an historic video on its YouTube channel calling for a ban on conversion therapy for LGBTQ individuals. I am heartened by this important development that follows up on President Barack Obama's support for a ban on all forms of so-called "conversion" therapy for minors, also known as "reparative" or "ex-gay" therapy. These efforts by the White House to lovingly support LGBTQ folks are game changing. The White House provides a clear statement of intent on their video page:
"The overwhelming scientific evidence demonstrates that conversion therapy, especially when it is practiced on young people, is neither medically nor ethically appropriate and can cause substantial harm.
As part of our dedication to protecting America’s youth, the Obama administration supports efforts to ban the use of conversion therapy for minors."
The White House announcement was in response to a popular petition calling for the federal government to enact Leelah's Law, which would ban sexual orientation and gender identity change efforts nationally. Leelah's Law is named for Leelah Alcorn, a transgender teen who took her own life after being subjected to misguided attempts to get her to perform as a cisgendered male by her family and church.
President Barack Obama and his administration have moved America towards a positive, inclusive future. I cannot recall any other administration that has supported LGBTQ citizens so profoundly.
Thanks you President Obama.
Please watch this beautiful and inspiring message of love, support and hope.
photo by White House photographer Pete Souza of President Obama and rainbow
April 9, 2015 in Jamaica
Elephants Never Forget: MeBai and her Mother Reunited
Kidnapped elephant calf reunites with her mother after years apart http://thedo.do/1GhVjbU https://youtu.be/YslTuEvudfU
Thursday, April 09, 2015
Calling All Artists! Manifest Justice Exhibit
Calling all artists! Help us demand safety & justice in our communities @ManifestExhibit: http://bit.ly/1agM5yC
WHAT IS MANIFEST:JUSTICE?
Communities around the United States and worldwide are filled with good people living in fear. Our city, state and federal spending priorities are broken and institutional bias and racism has eroded trust, access and representation.
Enough is enough. We demand more empathy, more accountability, more economic opportunity, more compassion, more dignity, more power and more opportunity for all. We demand healthier communities, which means more from each other; more from our school systems and more from our judicial systems.
The time has come to illuminate our resilience and to take back our streets, our schools, our communities and our hope. Together we must lift our voices, assert our power, be resilient, identify solutions and work together to MANIFEST:JUSTICE. Together we will build a healthier and more just future.
MANIFEST:JUSTICE? THEMES
Tuesday, April 07, 2015
Must See Exhibition: Artists Respond to San Francisco’s Black Exodus
by Gregg Chadwick
Currently on display at the Thacher Gallery at USF is the powerful exhibition Hiraeth: The 3.9 Collective Searches for Home.
Abhi Singh on the KQED Arts page explains the origins of the exhibition:
"San Francisco’s Fillmore district was once a vibrant African American community, known as 'the Harlem of the West.' But in recent decades the Fillmore — like San Francisco as a whole — has witnessed a startling black exodus. A group of artists known as the 3.9 Art Collective are responding with work that both reminds us of San Francisco’s more diverse past and expresses their resistance to present trends. Their name comes from the percentage of African Americans that some predict will remain in the city by the time the next census takes place, in 2020.
The Welsh word Hiraeth roughly translates to a longing for a far-off home — one that may not even exist or has been changed by time or idealized by memory."
Corie Schwabenland in the San Francisco Foghorn writes:
"The collective started with a discussion between two East Coast-to-SF transplants, says 3.9 co-founder William Rhodes. When Rhodes, originally from Baltimore, and fellow artist Nancy Cato shared their perceptions about San Francisco after living in the city for a respective seven and twenty years, they came to a striking conclusion:
'We really just felt there was a huge disparity when it comes to wealth, and very few variations of African Americans: You see a lot of African Americans that are homeless; you do not see a lot of African Americans living in San Francisco that are middle class or working class,” says Rhodes. 'It became a concern for us, and we decided that, since we’re both artists, to try to figure out a way to talk about these issues through our art and form a collective.'”
The 3.9 Collective’s exhibition, Hiraeth: the 3.9 Collective Searches for Home is a must see exhibition that examines the issues of displacement, gentrification, wealth disparity and racial relations.
The 3.9 Collective’s exhibition, Hiraeth: the 3.9 Collective Searches for Home is on exhibit through April 21, 2015 at the University of San Francisco’s Thacher Gallery and will feature a closing event with Rodney Ewing from 5:30-7:30p.m. on April 21st in the Thacher Gallery.
For more information, contact jvgabrielle@usfca.edu or visit http://www.usfca.edu/library/thacher/
Artists in the 3.9 Collective are responding to San Francisco’s dramatic loss of African American citizens with work that both reminds us of the city’s vibrantly diverse past and expresses resistance to present trends.
Currently on display at the Thacher Gallery at USF is the powerful exhibition Hiraeth: The 3.9 Collective Searches for Home.
Abhi Singh on the KQED Arts page explains the origins of the exhibition:
"San Francisco’s Fillmore district was once a vibrant African American community, known as 'the Harlem of the West.' But in recent decades the Fillmore — like San Francisco as a whole — has witnessed a startling black exodus. A group of artists known as the 3.9 Art Collective are responding with work that both reminds us of San Francisco’s more diverse past and expresses their resistance to present trends. Their name comes from the percentage of African Americans that some predict will remain in the city by the time the next census takes place, in 2020.
The Welsh word Hiraeth roughly translates to a longing for a far-off home — one that may not even exist or has been changed by time or idealized by memory."
Corie Schwabenland in the San Francisco Foghorn writes:
"The collective started with a discussion between two East Coast-to-SF transplants, says 3.9 co-founder William Rhodes. When Rhodes, originally from Baltimore, and fellow artist Nancy Cato shared their perceptions about San Francisco after living in the city for a respective seven and twenty years, they came to a striking conclusion:
'We really just felt there was a huge disparity when it comes to wealth, and very few variations of African Americans: You see a lot of African Americans that are homeless; you do not see a lot of African Americans living in San Francisco that are middle class or working class,” says Rhodes. 'It became a concern for us, and we decided that, since we’re both artists, to try to figure out a way to talk about these issues through our art and form a collective.'”
The 3.9 Collective’s exhibition, Hiraeth: the 3.9 Collective Searches for Home is a must see exhibition that examines the issues of displacement, gentrification, wealth disparity and racial relations.
The 3.9 Collective’s exhibition, Hiraeth: the 3.9 Collective Searches for Home is on exhibit through April 21, 2015 at the University of San Francisco’s Thacher Gallery and will feature a closing event with Rodney Ewing from 5:30-7:30p.m. on April 21st in the Thacher Gallery.
For more information, contact jvgabrielle@usfca.edu or visit http://www.usfca.edu/library/thacher/
Artists in the 3.9 Collective are responding to San Francisco’s dramatic loss of African American citizens with work that both reminds us of the city’s vibrantly diverse past and expresses resistance to present trends.
Lady Sings the Blues: Billie Holiday's Centenary
by Gregg Chadwick
Billie Holiday would have turned 100 today.
John McDonough on NPR writes:
"Most artists belong to their times, but Billie Holiday, born 100 years ago Tuesday, fits in the present. In a way, she died before her time, just as the country was beginning to talk about race, drugs, feminism and misogyny — all of which converged in her life."
Many of the songs that Holiday co-wrote became jazz standards, notably God Bless the Child, Don’t Explain, Fine and Mellow, and Lady Sings the Blues. With her passionate interpretations, Holiday, arguably, turned the songs Easy Living, and Good Morning Heartache into her own material. Most of all, Strange Fruit, first recorded by Holiday in 1939, is inseparable from Holiday's artistic legacy.
William Gottlieb took what may well be the most reproduced image of Billie Holiday at a gig
in 1948. In his book, The Golden Age of Jazz, Gottlieb writes about Billie and his photo:
"In 1948, Billie Holiday was at her peak, musically and physically....Her incomparable voice, instead of having declined from lack of use, had retained its rich but bittersweet tone. If anything, it had become more wrenching than ever.
Unable to work nightclubs in New York City because of police restrictions on performers with criminal records, she marked time until some well-financed fans arranged a concert for her in Carnegie Hall (which was not subject to nightclub limitations). Her appearance was a sold-out triumph. Eventually, she was able to resume club dates. It was at one of them that I took a photograph often cited as the most widely used picture ever taken of a jazz person. Whether or not so, I believe it captured the beauty of her face and the anguish of her voice."
Billie Holiday would have turned 100 today.
John McDonough on NPR writes:
"Most artists belong to their times, but Billie Holiday, born 100 years ago Tuesday, fits in the present. In a way, she died before her time, just as the country was beginning to talk about race, drugs, feminism and misogyny — all of which converged in her life."
Still from 1957 CBS show The Sound of Jazz, Billie Holiday and Lester Young.
Photo courtesy the New York Public Library.
Billie Holiday changed jazz singing and popular vocals with her stylistic innovations and haunting sound. Holiday's vocal style pioneered new ways of manipulating phrasing and tempo. When asked to explain her singing style, Holiday said, "I don't think I'm singing. I feel like I'm playing a horn. I try to improvise like Les Young, like Louis Armstrong or someone else I admire. What comes out is what I feel. I hate straight singing. I have to change a tune to my own way of doing it. That's all I know." Geoffrey Smith writes in The Telegraph that "her vocal art was the sound of her life; both were unique. She transformed jazz singing with a style so natural and spontaneous that its effortless genius was a constant surprise. As her one-time employer, bandleader Artie Shaw, put it, 'When she sang something, it came alive. That’s what jazz is about.'”
Holiday's life story often threatens to overshadow her art. I encourage you on her centenary to listen deeply to her soulful cries for love, equality, and justice.
Billie Holiday
(1915 – 1959)
American jazz singer and songwriter
William Gottlieb/Getty Images
William Gottlieb took what may well be the most reproduced image of Billie Holiday at a gig
in 1948. In his book, The Golden Age of Jazz, Gottlieb writes about Billie and his photo:
"In 1948, Billie Holiday was at her peak, musically and physically....Her incomparable voice, instead of having declined from lack of use, had retained its rich but bittersweet tone. If anything, it had become more wrenching than ever.
Unable to work nightclubs in New York City because of police restrictions on performers with criminal records, she marked time until some well-financed fans arranged a concert for her in Carnegie Hall (which was not subject to nightclub limitations). Her appearance was a sold-out triumph. Eventually, she was able to resume club dates. It was at one of them that I took a photograph often cited as the most widely used picture ever taken of a jazz person. Whether or not so, I believe it captured the beauty of her face and the anguish of her voice."
Sunday, April 05, 2015
In Memory of Kurt Cobain - Nirvana MTV Unplugged REHEARSAL - Full
21 years on and so poignant. Depression is so misunderstood. It is my fervent hope that the stigma surrounding depression will recede in the near future. The National Institute of Health has an informative site -
"Most likely, depression is caused by a combination of genetic, biological, environmental, and psychological factors.
Depressive illnesses are disorders of the brain. Brain-imaging technologies, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), have shown that the brains of people who have depression look different than those of people without depression. The parts of the brain involved in mood, thinking, sleep, appetite, and behavior appear different. But these images do not reveal why the depression has occurred. They also cannot be used to diagnose depression.
Some types of depression tend to run in families. However, depression can occur in people without family histories of depression too. Scientists are studying certain genes that may make some people more prone to depression. Some genetics research indicates that risk for depression results from the influence of several genes acting together with environmental or other factors. In addition, trauma, loss of a loved one, a difficult relationship, or any stressful situation may trigger a depressive episode. Other depressive episodes may occur with or without an obvious trigger."
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