27 September 2007

Burma


Reuters

Riot policemen stopped a monk on Wednesday as he tried to enter a pagoda in Yangon.

Seth Mydans/NYTimes:

The violence of the past two days has answered the question of whether the military would fire on Buddhist monks, the highly revered moral core of Burmese society. For the past 10 days, the monks have led demonstrations that grew to as many as 100,000 before the crackdown began.

“The military is the one who proudly claims to preserve and protect Buddhism in the country, but now they are killing the monks,” said Aung Zaw, editor of The Irrawaddy, a magazine based in Thailand that has extensive contacts inside Myanmar.

Like others monitoring the crisis, which began on Aug. 19 with scattered protests against steep fuel price increases, he said it was difficult to learn the numbers of dead in a chaotic situation in which hospital sources are sometimes reluctant to talk. Mr. Aung Zaw said he had been told of one death today when soldiers attacked two columns of monks and other people.

“The military trucks, I was told, just drove in, and soldiers jumped out and started shooting,” he said, describing a scene that was reminiscent of the mass killings in 1988, when the current junta came to power after suppressing a similar peaceful public uprising. On Wednesday, the junta acknowledged the death of one man, but news agencies and exile groups put the number as high as seven.

Tuxedo Park, New York

Photo: Bruce Buck for The New York Times

26 September 2007

E. Vogel


www.vogelshoes.com.

Burma

via Sullivan: A Cambodian blogger writes:

I am aware that in Buddha's teaching, monks should be reserved and by all means shouldn't be involved in politics. However, if we think realistically, they are also one of the rightful citizens of the nation. Whatever happens to the country affects everyone — ordinary people and monks alike. We can use the Khmer Rouge time as an example. Thousands of monks were killed. For many reasons, I don’t think they should be silent at all. When society requires their intervention, it’s appropriate enough to hear their voice and initiatives.

25 September 2007

Fire

EcoSmart Fire, an Australian company that makes “green” fireplaces, recently introduced the Vision, a freestanding, see-through unit with a flueless burner (no chimney required), which uses environmentally friendly ethanol. The Domus Design Collection, one of the Vision’s American distributors, sells it in a standard white or black frame ($6,125), as well as in custom colors. And in an ultramodern take on the hearth, Domus has incorporated EcoSmart’s flueless burners into some of its cabinets and credenzas, like the Studimo ($18,230) and the Cube ($20,575), as well as custom-made one-of-a-kind pieces, like the one above (prices vary). Domus Design Collection, 181 Madison Avenue (34th Street), (212) 685-0800 or ddcnyc.com. STEPHEN MILIOTI

21 September 2007

My Boy Jack

Daniel Radcliffe from his upcoming film My Boy Jack. The television movie will air later this year on ITV in the UK and U.S. public television station PBS has bought the rights to air the movie via its Masterpiece Theatre series.

Reading

20 September 2007

Bourne Cool

Massachusetts

Photo:

Robert Spencer for The New York Times

Residents of Truro, Mass., are trying to protect the view from the Edward Hopper house.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/20/us/20truro.html

19 September 2007

Sunset and Vine

Renovation of a late-twentieth-century office tower.

18 September 2007

Ben Foster

14 September 2007

Torres-García


Composición Constructiva 16 (Constructive Composition 16): 1943: Joaquín Torres-García

Photo: Grey Art Gallery

13 September 2007

Jonathan Yeo


Bush 2007

Limited edition screenprint
Edition of 150

Published by Steve Lazarides
Printed by Coriander Press London

From The American Prospect:
Portrait of the President as a Skin Mag

Unveiled in August at the Lazarides Gallery in London, Yeo's unofficial presidential portrait is a photomontage of images snipped from pornographic magazines. It's not a painting, but it's definitely a portrait: at a distance, Bush's close-set, beady eyes and pursed frown are plainly visible. Up close, however, the image devolves into a collage of naked flesh, bodily emissions, and human orifices. An act of fellatio comprises most of Bush's right ear; where his left dimple should be is an image of a woman's face, locked in a moan of ecstasy. A detail of Bush's cheek finds Yeo depicting pores through explicit metaphor.

Sheik Abdul Sattar Buzaigh al-Rishawi



Photo: Christoph Bangert for The New York Times
NYTimes:

The leader of a group of local Sunni tribes cooperating with American and Iraqi forces in fighting extremist Sunni militants in Anbar Province was killed by a bomb today, Iraqi police officials said, in a blow to an effort President Bush has held up as a model of progress.

Mark Lynch writes:

There's no reason to assume that al-Qaeda killed him--I'd guess that one of the nationalist insurgency groups, the ones which current American rhetoric pretends don't exist, is a more likely suspect. Other tribes deeply resented him. The major nationalist insurgency groups had recently issued a series of statements denouncing people who would illegitimately seize the fruits of their victorious jihad - of whom he was the prime example. All those photographs which swamped the Arab media showing him shaking hands with President Bush made him even more a marked man than before.

His murder graphically demonstrates that the other groups threatened by the American Anbar strategy were never going to just sit back passively and allow it to succeed--an obvious strategic point which has always seemed to elude surge advocates. The Sunni strategy as presented by surge advocates has always rested not only on a whole series of dubious claims about Iraqi Sunni politics, but also relies on a whole series of best-case scenarios in which nothing could go wrong. In Iraq, something always goes wrong.

It's a major setback for the strategy, particularly at the symbolic level. Even if Abu Risha was a poor choice to "lead" the strategy, he was in fact elevated to that symbolic position by American propaganda and practice (that meeting with the President, for instance). His murder demonstrates that even America's closest friends are not untouchable - not even on the day of a Presidential address expected to rely heavily on progress in Anbar. The political fallout of the murder inside of Iraq may well exceed Abu Risha's actual role in Sunni politics.

Ramadan


Cairo, Egypt—A street scene during Ramadan, 1987.
© Harry Gruyaert / Magnum Photos

12 September 2007

Reveal


via NYTimes:
Reveal, a device that creates the illusion of light coming through a window that isn’t actually there, is the brainchild of Adam Frank, a Brooklyn designer. He calls it “a way to use images to alter our perception of space and architecture,” a complicated explanation for a simple idea: a small projector mounted on a wall or ceiling, casting an image that looks like the shadow of a mullioned window and a tree onto a nearby wall. Air blown through the projector ruffles dangling pieces of steel inside, making the tree appear to sway and compounding the trompe l’oeil effect. Produced in a limited run of 1,000, Reveal sells for $380. Information and orders: adamfrank.com.

Helvetica

via NYTimes:

The Life and Times of a Typeface
By MATT ZOLLER SEITZ
Published: September 12, 2007

“Helvetica,” a feature-length documentary about that typeface, promises too much information. Luckily, the filmmaker Gary Hustwit — who also directed the mesmerizing “Moog,” about the analog synthesizer — has a knack for finding a universe within a narrow topic.

Overlong but fascinating, Mr. Hustwit’s documentary posits Helvetica — a sans-serif typeface developed in 1957 at the Haas Foundry in Munchenstein, Switzerland — as an emblem of the machine age, a harbinger of globalization and an ally of modern art’s impulse toward innovation, simplicity and abstraction. Its versatility is showcased in shots of storefronts, street signs, public transportation systems, government forms, advertisements and newspaper vending boxes.

The film’s provocative, lively interviews with graphic designers and theorists — including Massimo Vignelli, who created directional signs for the New York City subway system, and David Carson, author of “The End of Print” — assess Helvetica’s impact on human life and thought. Some praise it as a conceptual breakthrough; others blast it as a lowest-common-denominator typeface whose use both reflects and perpetuates conformity.

Produced and directed by Gary Hustwit; director of photography, Luke Geissbuhler; edited by Shelby Siegel; released by Swiss Dots/Veer.

11 September 2007

09 September 2007

Baquba

Photo: Sectarian carnage in Baquba: Ali Yussef/AFP/Getty

A reader at Andrew Sullivan's blog writes:

I would like to point out that the statistics on sectarian killings should go down as the number of Iraqi refugees increases and as the country moves ever so closer to de facto partition. No one really seems to be bringing this into the equation.

If, what is it, 50,000 Iraqis are being displaced every month, one would assume that the bulk of this is movement out of mixed Sunni-Shia areas or neighborhoods. Again the bulk of sectarian killings are probably for the purpose of ethnically cleansing a neighborhood. So, over time, these killings will likely decrease. However, as should be obvious to anyone viewing the problem sensibly, this is not an indicator that things have somehow improved.

When someone starts counting the number of refugees returning to Iraq, or the number of Iraqis returning to their former homes, I'll then believe the surge is working. Not as long as people are on the run for their lives. I guess I will need to wait a very long time.

andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/th...sh/

Diorama


Eric Long/NMMC

A scene in an exhibition in the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Triangle, Va., showing Toktong Pass in Korea.

08 September 2007

Ben Foster

As Charlie Prince: 3:10 to Yuma

Foster played Russell, Claire's bisexual boyfriend, on HBO's Six Feet Under. His performance in Yuma is revelatory. The suede jacket and chaps shape him into a sleek, evil razor of a man. Prince's love for Russell Crowe's Ben Wade simmers beneath the character's leather carapace. A great performance; a terrific film.

07 September 2007

Reading

05 September 2007

Sullivan

Aaron and Andrew
via Daily Dish:

The (wedding photos) came today, and since many of you have asked to see a few, here are a handful. Seeing them again reminds me of the dreamy dusk and night that we chose - a full moon over the water, and family and friends-who-are-family sending the love right back at us. This was not - repeat not - a political event. But it took politics to get past politics, and to see this movement we are a part of as a human endeavor to bring love and civility and family into lives that have sometimes been denied all of the above. We were denied no love that night, and received so much support and kindness and affirmation that we're still a little giddy. It was more than I ever expected, in a place I love, with people who love both Aaron and me.

04 September 2007


Release date: 21 September
http://www.apple.com/trailers/wb/theassassinationofjessejames/

03 September 2007

Labor Day

Goodbye to summer.
Topanga Beach, California.