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Entries Tagged as 'Philosophy'

Artist Astronauts, Artist Cosmonauts, Artists in Space

October 30th, 2007 by Trout · 1 Comment

I have all kinds of crazy dreams. I’ve had one of them for a long time, and I’ve never told anyone about it until now. Even for me it’s a nutty one. My secret dream was to be the first artist in space.
I had such a strong desire for this, I think, […]

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Tags: Art Life · Dance · Drawing and Illustration · Galleries · Government · Outer Space · Painting · Performance Art · Philosophy

How long does a Bohemian flower bloom?

October 12th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments

There are only certain places that blossom in that certain way that creates Bohemia. Crumbling and eroding but more glistening and alive than filmed dreams. Some generations there isn’t one, they grow slowly until them bloom, only one exists in the world every 30-50 years. New York in 1974 was the last […]

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Tags: Art Life · Germany · Philosophy

Freedom vs. violence

September 22nd, 2007 by Trout · No Comments

I’ve just finished reading an illustrated autobiography that I’ll write more about later.
But it has me thinking. There are many people and places I’d like to know more about. Many times this kind of cultural learning and exchange happens through art. But where is the exchange when people aren’t allowed to express […]

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Tags: Art Life · Censorship · Government · Philosophy

Getting a $4,500 paraglider vs. making one out of plastic bags

September 19th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments

After yesterday’s post (Getting the right tools vs. actually doing something) I read this story in Wired. Instead of waiting on a $4,500 paraglider that he could likely never afford, he built one out of plastic bags. He could have died using it, but instead he became a world renowned paraglider, one of […]

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Tags: Africa · Art Life · Philosophy · Sports

Getting the right tools vs. actually doing something

September 18th, 2007 by Trout · 1 Comment

I read a New Yorker story recently about the cult of Leica cameras. Some of the most famous photographs in history have been taken with Leica’s, and photographers love them. But at $4,000+ a pop, you’d better really love it, and you’d hope it takes a great photo.
…as the camera has […]

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Tags: Art Life · Cinema · Philosophy · Photography

Momus - “The Norwegian, the Scotsman and the Japanese”

September 12th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments

Inside Japan (a bit like Berlin), there aren’t really serious art collectors. Inside Japan, people like Murakami and Nara make their money by doing corporate identity (Vuitton, Roppongi Hills) or mass-producing souvenirs… Art is collapsed into the mass market. Galleries are often in department stores, and often show what we’d think of as commercial work; […]

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Tags: Art Life · Japan · Jewelry · Philosophy

Community Sponsored Agriculture (CSA), A model for artists

September 10th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments

On large farms, sometimes only one crop is grown. Many times these crops are corn or soy beans. These crops are more lucrative because they are used in many processed foods and may be subsidized.
Small farms, on the other hand, often have many crops that rotate and change over the course of a […]

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Tags: Art Life · Artforms · Food and Agriculture · Multidiscipline · Philosophy

If you get points, is it art?

September 3rd, 2007 by Trout · 2 Comments

I went to an afternoon of flat track roller derby, and even though it’s a sport, I could care less who won or lost. A lot of us were there to be entertained. Roller derby is dramatic and theatrical. Lots of players and whole teams have strong characters (whether real or mythical), […]

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Tags: Cinema · Dance · Music & Sounds · Painting · Performance · Philosophy · Photography · Sculpture · Sports · Television · Theatre

“Art’s Unending Concerns”

September 1st, 2007 by Trout · No Comments

Art has two constant, two unending concerns: It always meditates on death and thus always creates life. All great, genuine art resembles and continues the Revelation of St. John.
- Boris Pasternak, Russian author and Nobel Prize winner
A post I ran across on the blog Offscreen Space.

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Tags: Philosophy

David Lynch and the Big… White… Rubber… Clown Suit

August 17th, 2007 by Trout · 3 Comments

A common view of people involved in meditation of any kind is that they’re wimpy. They live in the clouds and forests among birds and silence, stay in big quiet stone buildings and don’t do much that actually affects the world. They’re just not realistic. “That’s nice and everything, you’re not hurting […]

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Tags: Cinema · Moving Pictures · Philosophy · Short Films · Television · United States