Sabtu, 16 Agustus 2014

Today's Inspiration- Family Times with Akhenaten and Nefertiti

Akhenaten is my favorite leader of all Egyptian history, and before I went into contemporary art, I thought I would study him for a living (it turns out then I would have to study all the boring, non-curvy pharaohs as well, hence moving on to feminist art). For whatever reason, I love a good historical figure with Marfan's.

What makes Akhenaten so interesting in comparison to his counterparts, beyond the pretty admirable hubris of moving the capital city, choosing a new God, and undermining hundreds of years of tradition, was that he was so thoughtful, specific, and original in how he portrayed himself, his body, and his family. I have talked about his body types before, but for the last day of anniversary-planning week, I thought we could revisit how this very public figure displayed his affection for his family. You won't see this anywhere else.

Below the Rays of Aton, from secure.flickr.com
In this piece, on display at the Louvre, we see a relatively traditional rendering of the couple. Most pharaohs have relief portraits like these, where they stand with their wives, looking (and stepping) forward. Very often they are either holding hands or the wife has her hand on her husbands arm (I like this little bit of affection and connection are par for the course. Their headdresses and the width of their hips are already starting to diverge from conventional Egyptian representations.

Akhenaten and Nefertiti Under the Rays of Aton from riseearth.com
By this later point, we see the Amarna style really underway (elongated limbs, embracing their abnormal heads and torsos) , but this also diverges from the norm in that it is basically a domestic scene. A couple sits with their children in their laps, facing each other and loving on their babies. This may seem kind of cold or conventional now, but you will not find many other surviving piece of Egyptian sculpture that embraces such intimacy between family members or couples.

The sweet strangeness of this work makes it one my favorites of all time, and I think it can be instructive to reflect on how couples, relationships, and families have been portrayed (by themselves and others) as loving each other over centuries. We get in these ruts where a loving and healthy couple deserves one very prescriptive look to the outside world, but you could look at so many other couples who used art to break out of this simplistic mold. 
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6 Things for the Last Two Days

1. The Birdcage- Man, Robin Williams and Nathan Lane, your son is kind of an asshole. What the hell is he and Callista's problem? Still, this movie is really funny, and Williams performance in it is warm, comforting, and quietly funny. I have been netflixing the crap out of him (me and everyone else I am sure), and I have been enjoying/ feeling very sad about how incredibly talented he was. Lots of comedians have very sad underbellies, that has been discussed at length the last few days. Not many comedians have the courage to tap into that sadness to act in dramas as well. Not to mention, this guy became famous for being crazy, zany, and loud, but he still had the courage to give quiet performances and to be the straight man.
Andrea Way, Nebular Hypothesis, 2004. from http://www.american.edu/cas/museum/gallery/andrea-way-retrospective.cfm
2. Andrea Way- My favorite find from genoming the last two days. I love discovering new artists (new to me at least) as a large part of this new job. I will keep passing a long cool things I am seeing as I go.
3. This article- I have been thinking a lot about early education after reading about the kindergarten problem on Curmudgucation. I also read on Washington Post this week that children in the US are actually less likely to be in pre-schools or early education problems than children in most other countries (I think the one they specifically compared us to was Mexico). I personally do not believe in homeschooling at all(I could talk plenty about this, it may be the only parenting issue that I feel really strongly about, but want to be respectful of friends who plan to do it), but I never thought much about the value of pre-school both in my own family life and on a more global scale. This is making me rethink the importance of preschool as an available option to everyone.
4. The Boy Working from Home- Yesterday, we got the electricity in our backyard worked out (bwahaha one more thing off the list!). I liked the electrician well enough, but I also love when every so often The Boy is here to deal with the newest dude spending the day in our house. This is the strangest side effect of moving/ homeowning that no one really mentions- you just have strangers in your space all the time for months.
5. Clementines- I love these tiny oranges, and that every time we buy them, there are different brands of them to choose from. I think the ones we have now are called sweethearts, so like sweeties, which were like cuties. They may actually be getting more serious? More Southern? What does the word sweetheart bring to mind?
6.My new keds! Continuing my lifelong quest to just become my Grammy. The Boy thinks she actually has the same pair of shoes. Anyway, I feel like I should be trying to take better care of my feet and ankles so they don't explode to much in the next few months, so this is the closest I will get to tennis shoes. I would walk the neighborhood barefoot, but we don't have sidewalks, just gravel, and that might be tough even on my Hobbit feet.

Can I also say, on a totally unrelated note, that the police chief in Ferguson seems like the shistiest shister ever? Trying to paint some picture where this very young man, Michael Brown, was robbing a store when he was approached for JAYWALKING? This kind of inflammatory nonsense, which tries to blame the victim and to take the focus away from his ridiculous force is just disgusting. The turn around in Ferguson, thanks to bringing an entirely different police force and leader in, can still only be temporary when this is the kind of information (and the total lack of accountability is shocking as well- how delusional is this man?) is all they are willing to give. It is time to make some concessions and some freaking apologies. What you and your officer did was incredibly racist and wrong. The police chief just seems to be the worst kind of man.
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Jumat, 15 Agustus 2014

Tips for Keeping a Family or Couple's Yearbook

One of my favorite parts of our anniversary is pulling out our photo books from previous years and reflecting on the year we have just had. I think we will always look at the one I made for our wedding on our wedding anniversary, but that whole week (our wedding anniversary is the 25th and our anniversary is the 29th), we pull out old books to reflect. A few weeks later, our new book will come in that orange shutterfly box  (I know other people use Blurb, but my Shutterfly loyalty currently runs pretty deep).



I started making us year books as an anniversary gift way back around year 4 of our relationship (I don't count it as a gift anymore, because it is as much for me as for the Boy). For me, these books are a huge part of maintaining our own little family culture and preserving our history in a way we can manage, much easier to navigate than the THOUSANDS of pictures I take every year.

 As I look at them lined up like that, it seems narcissistic, and honestly, maybe it is, but I think it will continue to transform as our immediate family grows, and I am glad the early years of our relationship are captured for us to remember. The books serve as a good reminder that the years or days don't always have to be the most exciting or eventful to be important to you. It just goes back to treating your life and your relationship like they are meaningful, and that attitude encourages more meaningful events. It's true!

I know people have the intention to do this kind of thing, but sometimes it can be hard to keep up with. After seven years of doing it, I have a few tips that may help:

-Take pictures! Not just with your phone! Though the convenience of camera phones certainly appeals, the problem is you end up with relatively low quality images that don't print that well. They drive me crazy when I have to use them for family calendars, because no matter how great they are, they have to be teeny tiny.

You don't have to have a massive camera, just keep a point and shoot with you when you go out and (maybe more important) out and available when you are home! It can be hard to make it part of your routine, but the more everyone gets on board with it, the more you will be glad you did.

-Steal other people's pictures of the memories you share with them- I have mostly stopped posting our personal pictures on facebook, but I still try to post our times with family in case family members want that picture as well. Stealing others pictures can give you a more full picture of holidays (and if you are like me, might be the only chance to prove you were actually there!) Repeat after me; Right click- Save Picture As- Put a Date as the title- Save.

- Organize your photographs (by Date and Subject) as you upload them- I don't have a good reputation for being organized (and rightly so) but I keep my photo archive meticulous. When I upload my pictures, I label them like this: "7-4-2014 Fourth of July" or "4-25-2014 Boring Week with Hats." Go through them right away and throw away anything that is blurry/ not great.

- Pick a start date that is meaningful to you.
January is actually a tough place to start because you have just established a bunch of new goals plus not much is going on. December is an even more difficult time to finish, because life is crazy around the holidays (not to mention, if you are like me, you have a bunch of other photo gifts to make that time of year).

 I love using our anniversary as a start and end date. I love it even more as our family starts to expand, because I don't want to forget that our relationship was the start and should remain one of the centers of our family. If you have kids, you could also do it around the school year. Or start it at the beginning of every summer? Don't feel tied to the calendar year.

-Pick your photos at least once a month- I make a new folder "Year # Book", and I put my favorite pictures from each event, the ones I would want in our book, into that folder. Even if I don't make the actual pages until weeks or months after the event, it is so much simpler than trying to make those choices and upload at the same time.





-And while you are at it, just make the book as you go- I love Shutterfly because you can save your projects on their website and just keep coming back to it. This can be a big project, but I think it is better to think of it as a long commitment. You put a little bit of time in a couple of times over 12 months rather than trying to organize your whole life once a year. Plus, if you do it as you go, you don't have trouble remembering why you took that picture.

I usually dig in to making pages after big events. I usually do the majority of the fall before Thanksgiving, because I know I will have a lot more pictures to go through after the holidays, and I tackle all of that later in January when things calm down. Doing it all at once would be a daunting task, but if you start putting things together as you go, it becomes a half hour- hour commitment every so often instead. 


-Pick a style that feels good at the time- The choices you make, no matter what they are, will be fine as long as you are telling your story. As you go, you will come up with strategies you like, and your style will change a lot (for us, the pages are more complex, and the book is both bigger and longer than when we started)! The first book is from 2009, and the second is 2013, so you can see how much I have changed. I think my books are getting better, but not really that much better, just different. I can't imagine how many styles we will go though by 20 years or 50!


-If you love the picture, make it big! Even if you don't have tons of pictures, you can still fill up a book with a few key pictures. Christmas can be a 2 page spread, or it can take up 10 pages. It doesn't even have to be chronological! No one makes the rules but you. Shutterfly standard books are 20 pages long, but you can add up to 90 pages. I usually use almost all of them, but you should pace it however makes sense for you.

-Remember to capture everyday life too- I saw this great idea on someone else's blog. Crown one day a "regular day" and capture it from start to finish, so you can give a more clear picture of what life looked like when it wasn't a holiday or special event. It can be easy to forget that low key times matter too, but sometimes the best moments happen when life is a little more laid back!


-Write some text to explain what is going on, what was said, what the joke is- I see lots of these books on pinterest that look really design-y and cool, but I just think that you may be forfeiting more than you realize. You don't think you will forget now, but you will. Write the stories. I use three fonts- a 30-60 size fonts for headings, a 20-30 size font for sub-headings, and usually something around 12 for captions (because I figure our eyes will get worse). Shutterfly and other stores have pre-set styles if you want to just pick one and keep it simple. But trust me, you want text.


-Pick your favorite moments- One of my favorite pages is the very last one I make, where the Boy and I talk about our favorite moments from the year. We just started doing this since we got married. We list 10-12 times that were especially meaningful or fun, and I think it will bring a lot of joy in the future to go just through those pages.

- Enjoy it- This is a task that should be fun, so don't agonize over it. After all, I think it is so fun and exciting to reflect. It's a great exercise in gratitude!

- Wait for sales! If you are going to use Shutterfly, know that they put everything on sale OFTEN, so you don't have to order it the second you finish it. Keep an eye out for a good sale on photobooks AND extra pages (if you are like me and end up using a ton), and order it once you find a price you like.

I hope this helps you feel like this is a totally achievable goal! If you have any advice or questions for me, feel free to ask!
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Today's Inspiration- A Throwback

from scontent-b-sea.xx.fbcdn.net
This is much less art historical than most of what I choose, but it was also the highlight of the Walt Disney Museum, which Paige and I visited way back in January (that feels so so long ago now). As I plan for our second anniversary, this is kind of the long term goal- to continue having fun together.
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Kamis, 14 Agustus 2014

6 Things I am Grateful for (But not Exactly Excited About) for the Last Two Days

1. When guys publicly claim feminism- Someone sent me this clip on Tuesday after we talked about my questions/ concerns/ excitement for raising a boy as a feminist. I am not saying that celebrity endorsements (or dismissals) of feminism should be mistaken for anything overly important, but I think it is valuable to have people we perceive as cool be non-chalant, yet smart about their personal stakes in feminism. And can I say, in the face of this truly awful summer where women have been treated as pawns by a number of radical conservative fronts (Isis, Boko Haram, even the increasingly violent radical pro-lifers), you have to ask, conservative or liberal, why you wouldn't be a feminist. I can't imagine anyone would disagree (clearly they do, but its hard to imagine it, especially from women) that women should be denied education or feel threatened with violence in public spaces. Really, if you aren't a feminist, why the hell not?

2. Debates around mental illness- Oh vey, it feels like a conversation we have now had too many times, but based on some of the reactions around Robin Williams's death, clearly it still need to be said. Mental illness is a disease, like cancer or parkinson's or arthritis; having a mental illness doesn't reflect your character or strength or selfishness. It's disappointing that these sorts of things need to be said, but it is encouraging that so many people are saying it.

3. Jezebel's finally getting rid of the comment rape gifs- I think it was 2 weeks ago that I saw the first of these genuinely horrible gifs on a Jezebel comment section (about Conor Oberst maybe?), and it ruined my day. I mean, I was so upset all day. I have never seen something like that, and I really never needed to. Online forums like Gawker media or Twitter (who has been forced to deal with this when nasty trolls were disgusting toward Zelda Williams, including putting fake images of her father's body on her responses) need to come up with better solutions to counter these responses. The internet has only become a more nasty space for both men and women (yeah, women might get it worse, but I can't imagine guys want to see this stuff either), and comment sections clearly need some sort of change. I have been avoiding the jezebel site (and especially their comments) since the incident, and I was shocked when I read that their primarily female writing staff is supposed to delete these gifs one by one, thereby having to look at them all. No one should have to do that, and there has to be a better way. So I hope they work it out, and the trolls can retreat to their bridges.

from www.artnexus.com

4. Chuck Ramirez Candy Tray Series- My favorite genoming subject this week are these large-scale, highly-detailed photographs of empty candy trays. They feel happily familiar and sad all at once, not unlike opening a candy box which is totally emptied out (or only has the weird ones left, and you have to debate whether it is worth it or not).

5. This bald, cancer-battling bride- Style me Pretty posted a blog earlier this week that has now gone viral of a bride who went totally bald (with a gorgeous lace cap) to her wedding, mid-cancer treatment. It made me cry, but basically anything that mentions cancer in any way makes me cry now. The honesty and beauty of this woman is also just really inspiring.

6. The power of "social media" in the face of nastiness- The Michael Brown story is devastating. An unarmed 18 year old was shot down by a (still unknown) police officer. The officer was pulled from the scene immediately to protect his identity, and the man's body was left out on the cement in August for over 4 hours. I feel the outrage there is well-justified, and people deserve answers about how and why this happened, not the threat of extensive and shocking violence. What seems even more shocking in this day and age is how much effort the Ferguson police seemingly put into removing media from the event, trying to keep it quiet, etc. Stories like these do make me glad to live in the time we do, where various live feeds have been up this week (though last I saw, they are mostly down right now) to make the situation much clearer. As horrible as the whole story is (I mean, no one looks great here, but the city's police look really really bad), it makes me grateful that people have so many tools available to make their voices heard, so the various sides of the story can all be publicly represented.
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Rabu, 13 Agustus 2014

Second Anniversary Ideas- Building a Fort!

Even though cotton makes for some super lame gift ideas, it has to have one of the most awesome decorating ideas front and center. People, we are building a tent out of sheets. I am thinking maybe we can even eat dinner in the tent if I can think of something that isn't too messy. No matter what, I am just pumped for this idea- have any grown-up readers made a tent or fort inside their house? Any tips for making it awesome?

from
 First of all, where is this? Is that church outside the tent? This one seems to have some real engineering behind it, but it does look really chic. I do like the ones using light colored sheets and with lots of lights, but I think we will probably build off of our bed, since we already have a frame there. This is my plan anyway. 

from
 I love this one. It looks like they live in it full time, which I support. I also love the hanging pictures, so I think I am going to get pictures printed from our second year to decorate inside the tents.

from
 This one is amazing. I cannot step to this, though I am slightly concerned about the closeness to the fire. I love the combinations of patterns and colors.

from
 The lights take everything to another level, so I bought these kind of cotton puff looking lights to hang with the white lights we have used for other things. I do like this one on the floor.

from
This one may be the closest to what ours will actually look like (though I wonder if we can build more tunnels into other rooms? I may be overestimating my engineering skills here). I will be sure to post pictures! Send me advice!
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Today's Inspiration- Frida and Diego

Frida Kahlo, Frida and Diego Rivera, 1933- from wikipaintings.org
You can't talk about famous art couples without reflecting on this pair. They had a strange and sometimes tumultuous relationship, but each also helped the other remain incredibly productive. Because Frida made so much highly autobiographical work, you can learn a lot about their relationship just by looking at her work.
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