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An Artist's Life
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- Written by: Rod Boyle
- Category: Books
- Hits: 1304
Almost done, which is to say less than 100 pages to go. Given that the only time I find to read is on the bus I could hope to be done sometime next week...
But it's enough, certainly, to review it. It is, as the title might indicate, simply the memoirs of a rather successful English Edwardian Artist, member and President of the Royal Academy. There are sentences and paragraphs and entire chapters about horses, the author (Sir Alfred Munnings) really liked horses and painting horses.
But that aside, it's a good portrait (albeit heavily privileged) of the times. At the age of 14, when his parents were wondering what was to be done with a child that showed a strong inclination towards Art (and little else) he was apprenticed out to a Lithographer and learned the trade, using what little free time he had to take further night classes. By the age of 20 he left and began his career as a painter; shortly after experiencing no little success selling his portraits and horsey scenes.
It's an interesting picture of another age. His writing of paintings that sold for 250 Guineas, when the first country house he bought cost him $1750 Guineas, (7 bedrooms with 2 cottages for servants) should give you an idea of his success. The wiki article linked above will confirm it. It's also worthwhile in that he mentions (and judges) his contemporaries - the plays of Somerset Maugham, the paintings of Paul Klee amongst others.
It as well very much underlines the training and apprenticeship, that along with his talent, contributed to his success as an artist.
Not a great book, but a good portrait of the times, and a practical approach both to living and art that's often lost when we picture "Artists".
Worthwhile.
Garage Sales 2010 - Week 10
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- Written by: Rod Boyle
- Category: Miscellany
- Hits: 1939
Choices, Choices.
The season is already drying up, and my enthusiasm is dampened, so I choose the "sure thing", an "Antiques and Collectibles" sale at Foothills United Church, 1 bus away, starts at 10:00 AM.
I'm first on the scene at 9:15 and sit down to read my book. Slowly the dealers arrive, trickling in...
You listen to them talking, one went to the Lakeview parade of garage sales, but gave up, "too many dealers" she said. She's a dealer too, but it doesn't stop her complaining.
Inside, a few scant tables, mostly littered with old Avon bottles, a couple of pieces of Medalta, some cool Uranium glass, with it's peculiar luminescence, but at $75.00 apiece I'm not tempted. There are as well folk-art styled "Antiques" from "Granny's Attic", wood trays stenciled with flowers and hearts and made to look old but really only succeed in being tacky. There's no jewelry or watches, no cigarette cases or lighters, lots of Toby mugs, loose plates, generally speaking a heap of rubbish.
From there across to the WIN in Bowness, no treasures today, then home, a dealer in conversation had dropped that there were no lottery winners and so I check my tickets, the cats dead, there's a Harley Davidson Rally on Memorial Drive, 100's of bikers with their police escort (because they need police protection?), and then back home.
This pretty much ends the worst season of garage sales ever. I put it down to my job and lack of car.
13 hour days
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- Written by: Rod Boyle
- Category: Miscellany
- Hits: 1870
A thirteen hour day, 15 hours if you count transport, with a brief moment to sprawl upon some chairs, limbs completely, utterly relaxed, shoes kicked off, behind you the constant gibbering in Italian, the banging of espresso handles and grinding of coffee, it's not much but it's the best I can do.
Father's Day, we're closed, so the weekend is hectic by way of compensation. Hectic with late tables that breeze in at 9:00, 9:30, hardly late for the restaurant industry but late when you're cleaning up, when you've been there 11 hours already and are dying to go home.
In the brief break this afternoon a couple of local garage sales, early starters, nothing at all which casts a taint over the whole weekend.
And dreams, nothing cohesive, loose bits, sexual but not at all, nude ex girlfriends, the shape of women, strange, always promising myself I'll make notes but always lying in that extra 2 minutes until all the memories are dissolved.
A mountain with a cave, green, following up the side along a path, there's a pagoda and hotel, Japanese style, somewhere near the top, and from the top I should be able to find the cave...but it's getting dark, and having found the inn am tempted to stay and enjoy it's hot tubs (red paper lanterns floating overhead); the hotel, the place, it's beautiful and I'm almost wanting to stay forever....
There are the links between dreams, the feeling that each dream is building on, drawing from another similar dream that I had, and I can never recall if the dream was one that I had before this one, or the memory of an older, recurring dream.
But the dreams, at the moment they're the only escape I have, and for 20 minutes I can hang off the chairs, arms, legs slack, unable to move while the restaurant bangs like a poltergeist all about me.
Guitar Hero & Other misuses of time
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- Written by: Rod Boyle
- Category: Technology
- Hits: 1863
Everyone's played it. Well, everyone but me, but I don't need to, they've told me how it's played.
But I wonder, for the time and effort spent mastering the game, wouldn't it be better to learn to play the guitar and become a REAL guitar hero?
Then you wouldn't be playing the game.....
Or - wait - maybe as part of the game package they could sell a filter - the cable from your electric guitar would run through the filter before running back to the console, and as you "passed" on various levels it would get progressively harder. The filter would convert and compare you're notes to those expected by the game. Same karaoke style, with images of your favorite band playing, chords along the bottom, but instead of learning how to do nothing on a plastic imitation guitar, you'd actually be learning how to play songs by the Beatles, Arrowsmith, whoever...
Now that would be a game. And you'd learn something. You'd have to provide your own guitar, but that's minor.
Or other games. Why are there no world-building games? Games where you learn to build bridges and buildings, high rises, and as part of the learning you need to know the properties of metals, materials, alloys, you need to learn remedial and then advanced physics, any gaming system now could handle it. It would be grooming a future generation of engineers and architects.
I suppose the point of this is, why must entertainment and education be separate? Why don't they integrate the two? Especially given how easy a tablet education is to take when you enjoy learning - and everyone (ahem) enjoys computer games, don't they? Why don't computer games teach skills that can be translated into THE REAL WORLD, I suppose is the point of this.
Just a thought.
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