I say yes, you say no, OR People are Strange

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Comments

  • Enjoyful
    Enjoyful Member Posts: 3,591
    edited December 2012

    That's the one, Athena. Such tension and emotion in static figures. Astonishing.



    Yes, I am taking my tax forms and magic decoder ring with me!

  • 1Athena1
    1Athena1 Member Posts: 6,696
    edited December 2012

    Best of luck, my friend!

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited December 2012

    Hi Julianna.....nice to meet you.  I think you'll like it here. 

    Enjoyful.....your are oh so funny.  I wouldn't mind being one of those Obamabots either.

    Jackie

  • juliaanna
    juliaanna Member Posts: 1,043
    edited December 2012

    Thank you for the  warm welcome.  The art discussion touches my heart as my youngest DD majored in history and minored in art history.  We've made regular visits to Portland and Seattle Art Museums since our girls were young (they are now 27 and 31).  We've always made it a priority to go to any art museum we can when we travel.  The girls have never been to Disneyland but never miss an opportunity to visit art.  Impressionists are the favorite, but we're open to all art.  I hope everyone is having a restful Sunday.

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited December 2012

    E, I need to check my DH's cochlear implant. Medicare paid for it and gosh knows what's in that chip!

  • pupmom
    pupmom Member Posts: 5,068
    edited December 2012

    Hi Julianna, glad you joined our semi-private club! 

    It just dawned on me, I think they're following we animal lovers through our pets' chips! That would be the perfect cover! Surprised

  • alexandria58
    alexandria58 Member Posts: 1,588
    edited December 2012

    I recommend a hat made of tinfold.  Keeps the government from monitoring brain waves.

    E- best of luck.

  • riley702
    riley702 Member Posts: 1,600
    edited December 2012

    LOL, you ladies are funny. I am enjoying the art discussions, too.

    Mary, they're ALL 600+ pages? Yikes. Are they worth plowing through?

  • River_Rat
    River_Rat Member Posts: 1,724
    edited December 2012

    Welcome Julianna, I'd love to hear more about the museums you've seen.

    I'm enjoying the art history lesson.  I have to admit that I've never gotten cubism.  Athena your definition is the best that I've read, but I still feel very unsettled, eyes don't know where to focus, a starting to feel nauseous kind of sensation - I guess cubism isn't for me.

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited December 2012

    It appears that corporate America (they're people, too) wants a single payer system.  Various corporations like Walmart are canceling health coverage for people who work less that 30 hours a week.  Employees who qualify can go on Medicaid or get insurance through exchanges.  The more people on Medicaid, the closer we get to a single payer system.  Eventually we will all be on a single payer just like Canada.  Good News.

  • pupmom
    pupmom Member Posts: 5,068
    edited December 2012

    I think that's right notself. It's only a matter of time. 

  • gardengumby
    gardengumby Member Posts: 7,305
    edited December 2012

    riley - I think there are 5 or 6 books in the series.  I read them a few years ago.  It was a really enjoyable series IMHO, and well worth the reading time.  As I recall the author id Diana Gabaldon (or something like that...  Laughing)

  • 1Athena1
    1Athena1 Member Posts: 6,696
    edited December 2012

    RR - In the 20th century, with all of its turmoils, art ceased to become something intended to reflect or to please. It became increasingly intellectul or else/and abstract. Finally, you reach conceptual art which requires so much explanation of artisitic intent that it can no longer stand on its own. One day when I have time I will present what, IMHO, is that particular hall of shame.

    Much of 20th century art is increasingly meant to engage thought and to reflect something beyond the immediate object represented on a canvas. The same is true of the literature, the music and at times the architecture. It is, expecially in the early twentieth century, meant to be jarring, shocking, atonal, etc... This is a result of the disillusionment brought by war, by the breakdown of traditional society and by the advent of mass media (I am not a Warhol fan).

    So your unsettling experience with cubism --like mine-- is very much intended by the artists.

  • Enjoyful
    Enjoyful Member Posts: 3,591
    edited December 2012

    LOVED the Outlander series!  Excellently written, great sense of humor, and endlessly fascinating story lines.

  • River_Rat
    River_Rat Member Posts: 1,724
    edited December 2012

    Athena, oh well then, I guess I get it!

  • YramAL
    YramAL Member Posts: 1,651
    edited December 2012

    Yes, I would say the Outlander series is worth it. I don't usually like romance very much, and I certainly don't like fantasy/kind of sci-fi but I'm liking these books a lot. I'm reading other books in between installments.

    Mary

  • YramAL
    YramAL Member Posts: 1,651
    edited December 2012

    Speaking of paintings and books, I just finished "Girl With a Pearl Earring". 

    Mary

  • riley702
    riley702 Member Posts: 1,600
    edited December 2012

    I really liked that book, Mary!

  • lassie11
    lassie11 Member Posts: 1,500
    edited December 2012

    If you finish the Outlander series written to date and still need a fix, Gabaldon has written some smaller books focussing on another character in the series, Lord John.  The series isn't finished yet, as I understand it.  If you like that series, there is another of similar ilk by Sara Donati.

    Darned boring universal health care! When I go to get my shoulder x-rayed and assessed by the orthopedic guy tomorrow, I just bring my health card and will pay not a cent. No special chips unless I am just too naive.

  • bluedahlia
    bluedahlia Member Posts: 6,944
    edited December 2012

    Lassie they implanted one in my brain.  Not even a tin foil hat will help!  I'm a fembot!

    I'm too tired right now and my zombie series is about to start, but tomorrow I will post some of those dirty art pitturs.

  • juliaanna
    juliaanna Member Posts: 1,043
    edited December 2012

    River Rat, My favorite art museums are the Institute of Art, Chicago and the National Gallery in London.  I've been there twice- daVinci's "The Virgin and Child" is mesmerizing.  Even though it is 600 years old, it still looks  so amazing.  There is a small museum in the Columbia Gorge called Maryhill.  They have Rodin sculptures which are amazing.  Boise, Idaho has a nice art museum, too. I am so grateful to forward-thinking people who established museums and for those who purchase art and then arrange for everyone to see it.  

  • Enjoyful
    Enjoyful Member Posts: 3,591
    edited December 2012

    My sister took me to a wonderful place in Jackson Hole - the National Museum of Wildlife Art. I fell in love with John Nieto's work and brought a few prints home with me.

  • Alyson
    Alyson Member Posts: 4,308
    edited December 2012

    Evening all, away for a few days at a wonderful history conference and come back to find pages of interesting things. Even in this part of the world we have some wonderful art and artists. Have a few pieces in the house traditional and local works. We have several pieces by a local artist Peter Siddell. Really enjoyed visiting the art galleries in Melbourne and Adelaide on our recent visit to Australia. Also our city gallery had the Degas to Dali exhibition earlier this year which I loved - it was made more interesting in the fact I had seen most of the works in the Scottish National Gallery. Must go and see the 'Little Miracles' collection which is religious art.

    It is getting late here but have a friend arriving soon so will head out to the airport to clooect her - we are going to have a quilt week trying to get some of my patchwork completed.

    Meant to say I loved the talk on the Tudors. That is actually the one period I have studied in depth. Have a thing about Elizabeth, who I think was an abused child especially in her early teens by Thomas Parr but also about James VI and I. Wrote thesis on him and the impact of his childhood on his life and by the way he wasn't gay.

  • jezza
    jezza Member Posts: 698
    edited December 2012

    Hi Alyson...yes its wonderful how art brings us all together. We are all so far apart (though you and I are almost neighbours!) We had a wonderful time a couple of years ago going to galleries in NYC, Paris and London.

    Our National Gallery here in Melbourne Aust. has a great permanent collection as well as lots of visiting exhibts including Picasso, the Guggenheim Collection, Rembrant and one which totally amazed me ...a collection of paintings, drawings. cinema and photography of Salvador Dali. I told my then 20 year old son about that one and he went and loved it too.

    I have read a couple of the Outlander Series...a real mixture of fantasy and history and romance too of course. Whilst I enjoyed them I didn't get "hooked'. I will probably get around to reading more one day...huge books.

    Girl With A Pearl Earing sounds good.

    Off to bed with a book for me now...a good Jodi Picoult...a bit dark but she gets me in every time...lol

    jezza

  • alexandria58
    alexandria58 Member Posts: 1,588
    edited December 2012

      I also am a fan of the Art Institute in Chicago, but it's been a lot of years. Also like MoMA in New York and the Philadelphia Museum of Art.   I'm going to the Barnes this week with my cousin, this discussion has been a nice prepartion for the trip.

    On a completely different topic - well, not completely since there's been some talk about books and you know writers, mostly interested in our own work - I'd entered a contest for thriller/mystery writers last summer with the book I'd tried to sell through an agent in 2006.  The winning prize was a publishing contract.  Well, I didn't win - didn't even place in top ten - but I did get notes from the readers back on Saturday.  The judges had some quibbles with a plot mechanism in the first chapter, which probably accounts for why I didn't win, but the other comments were pretty good.  Dialogue; very well done.  Plot: an intriguing premise.  Characters: well-drawn and likeable. Effective highlighting of suspense.  Pacing: exceptionally well-done.  Good voice, fluent writing.  Grammar and mechanics: exceptionally well done.   So, i would have preferred winning, but this certainly made my ego feel a lot better.  My DH suggested I self-publish, but the old novel's now become a prequel to the novel I'm currently furiously writing, so I'm holding off until I see what happens with the new one.  As I'm sure I've mentioned numerous times, my goal is to finish the current novel by mid-February.  I'm on page 101, so around a quarter done.

  • ananda8
    ananda8 Member Posts: 2,755
    edited December 2012

    alexandria58,

    This is wonderful news. Positive and negative feed back is always useful.  We all look forward to your books.

  • River_Rat
    River_Rat Member Posts: 1,724
    edited December 2012

    I'm another fan of the Art Institute of Chicago.  I saw the most wonderful Monet exhibit there decades ago.

    Alexandria58, it sounds like you got wonderful feedback on your novel.  It sounds like you're on track to finish the second one on schedule.  If it's difficult to get an agent or publish you might consider e-publishing the first novel to build a base for publishing the second.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited December 2012


    Stunning day here in the woods.  Going to be 75 degrees.  Of course,rain is in the forecast for late tonight...midnight or so.  Not that I'm in a super rush, as my kids will be traveling this week, but starting to wonder about snow.  We had only a light dusting twice last yr. I could learn to do without it, but I actually like it.  One of the biggest reasons I was so happy to leave California after 25 yrs. there was the fact that I would experience once again, very definite seasons.  Seems to be in question with the global warming that depending on who you are......we are or are not having.  Seem to be having plenty in my neck of the woods. 

    It is early yet.....maybe we will get snow later.  We could go back to Bermudas the next couple of days though I have put mine all away.  Hope you all have a marvelous Monday.

    Jackie

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited December 2012

    Forgot to say hi to Alyson and Alexandria....good points about the book.  I also like the fact of e-publishing as a base for your next book, and the next, and the next after that. 

    Jackie

  • AnneW
    AnneW Member Posts: 4,050
    edited December 2012

    I'll read anything you write, alexandra!! Good luck with the current novel!

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