Thursday, February 18, 2010

Poetry: Those Winter Sundays, by Robert Hayden




Robert Hayden's Those Winter Sundays stops me in my tracks very time I read it, and hearing Hayden himself recite the poem gives me chills. I often hear the last refrain echoing throughout the Midwestern winter.

I highly recommend listening to a short recording of Hayden reading Those Winter Sundays here, from the Library of Congress, through PBS' ArtBeat.

Those Winter Sundays

by Robert E. Hayden

Sundays too my father got up early
and put his clothes on in the blueblack cold,
then with cracked hands that ached
from labor in the weekday weather made
banked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him.

I’d wake and hear the cold splintering, breaking.
When the rooms were warm, he’d call,
and slowly I would rise and dress,
fearing the chronic angers of that house,

Speaking indifferently to him,
who had driven out the cold
and polished my good shoes as well.
What did I know, what did I know
of love’s austere and lonely offices?

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Ork and Newcity!

Chicago special edition, four-color screenprint, to view/ purchase go here. Image (c) Ork, Inc.
Matters of the Heart, two-color screenprint, to view/ purchase, go here. Image (c) Ork, Inc.
The Great Lakes, screenprint, to view/ purchase go here. Image (c) Ork, Inc.

Today was a beautiful, bountiful day! I started working part-time with the Chicago-based city neighborhood poster company, Ork Posters, and I'm already having a blast.

Also, my first piece for Chicago's cultural weekly newspaper, Newcity, came out today! Here it is, a Portrait of the Artist: Nathaniel Russell. With editorial help from Jason, I think it turned out quite well, and I'm happy to highlight a talented artist. Check out Nat Russell's new work, silly videos, and doodles on his blog here.
Rainbow Ride, ink on paper, Nat Russell, 2009.

Ellie Krieger cupcakes image via Flickr, from user Olian.

In other news... FOOD. I've made these Carrot Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting (a recipe by Ellie Krieger from the Food Network) a couple of times for birthday events recently, and WOW are they good! Very easy to make, basic ingredients, and everyone loves them!

Also, I've been getting into kale and collard greens in a big way lately, and tonight was a mouth-watering delight of an improvised dish: seared greens with portabella mushrooms, garlic, pepper, and fresh thyme. My taste buds are still reeling.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

"I Get Along Without You Very Well (Except Sometimes)"

[via Flickr]
Greeting Card
Halema & Chet Baker
California, 1955
Photo: William Claxton

This is such a lovely, blue song, written by Hoagy Carmichael in 1939, with lyrics from a poem by Jane Brown Thompson. Chet Baker has such a rich, beautiful voice. I'm pretty sure this was recorded in 1954, from the album Chet Baker Sings.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Louis Vuitton "Trash Bag", designed by Marc Jacobs



Hooo, baby! Street chic is so in? Perhaps it's only meant for rainy days and going incognito... James Bond can finally feel safe that when he has to go under cover, at least there will be Vuitton!

But where is the bag for recyclables?

I can't wait to see the knock-offs for this one.

[As seen on Designboom].

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Artist Spotlight: Jason Logan - NYT Op-Art Illustrator

A very charming Valentine's Day-related op-art piece from illustrator Jason Logan, for the New York Times. See the full page, in better detail, here.

His work for the New York Times has a lot to do with mapping the city in interesting ways. Here is an August 29th, 2009 interactive op-art piece, called Scents and the City, complete with a tiny nose for clicking on neighborhoods.


Jason also did a graphic for a March 29th, 2009 NYT op-art experimental project about people moving around on public transit, and normal people who are affected by public transit service cuts, called The Last Bus Home, with Miranda Purves.

Jason Logan is the author and illustrator of If We Ever Break Up, This Is My Book (2005), published by Simon Spotlight Entertainment, an imprint of Simon & Schuster. You can see excerpts from the book via Google Books here.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Aspara-geese Greetings on a Friday night


Julia V. Hendrickson, Hello. GREETINGS! from the Aspara-geese, pen and ink on light green paper (2010)

Here's new pen and ink drawing I've been playing around with.

Off for a real Chicago-kind of Friday night. Opening at Ebersmoore in the West Loop for artists Ryan Travis Christian and Jonathan Runcio. Indian food at Jaipur, and a long Halsted bus ride home. Details forthcoming.
----
Update:
A more in-depth review is forthcoming, but here's a tidbit...

Ebersmoore turns out to be a very cool little gallery in the West Loop. Oddly enough, I couldn't get over the wooden floors, which were a delicious, deep dark brown. I was extremely impressed with Ryan Travis Christian's work, and surprisingly so, because seeing images of his drawings online left me not expecting very much. The intricacy and detail of his drawings, and the way he plays with time and space, is fascinating.
Ryan Travis Christian, (title unknown), graphite on paper

Jonathan Runcio's paintings and sculpture were much as I expected from looking at his website-- no new realizations appeared after seeing his work in person. I am still quite drawn to his vibrant colors and color field layering over the linen, however.


Jonathan Runcio, Capital Zero: Works on Linen, Untitled (2009)
spraypaint on linen