31 March 2008

Jordan Crane


http://www.reddingk.com/prints.html

28 March 2008

Tentacles


It Came From Beneath the Sea
1955: Columbia Pictures

Frédéric Bazille


Musée D'Orsay
The Improvised Field Hospital: 1865

Stop Loss


Photo: Frank Masi/Paramount Pictures
Ryan Phillippe and Channing Tatum

27 March 2008

Economy booster?

Sadr City, Baghdad


Photo: Joao Silva/NYTimes
Thousands in Baghdad Protest Basra Assault
NYTimes:
Thousands of supporters of the powerful Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr and his Mahdi Army militia took to the streets of Baghdad on Thursday to protest the Iraqi Army’s assault on the southern port city of Basra, as intense fighting continued there for a third day. The Iraqi Army’s offensive in Basra is an important political test for the government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki and for American strategy in Iraq. President Bush sought to portray the fighting in a positive light on Thursday, declaring the offensive by Mr. Maliki’s government a “bold decision.”

But if the army’s assault in Basra leads the Mahdi Army to break completely with its current cease-fire, which has helped to tamp down attacks in Iraq during the past year, there is a risk of escalating violence and of replaying 2004. That year, the militia fought intense battles with American forces that destabilized the entire country.

26 March 2008

Illustrator: Leif Parsons

25 March 2008

Baghdad


Photo: Thaler al-Sudnal/Reuters
Iraqi and US Forces Battle Shiite Militia
Supporters of Moktada al-Sadr protested in Baghdad's Amil district on Tuesday. The signs read: "No, No to governmental militias," "No, No, America," and "Yes, Yes, Iraq."
NYTimes:

Serious fighting broke out Tuesday in Basra and Baghdad, Iraq largest cities, between restive members of Iraq’s biggest Shiite militia and Iraqi Army forces backed by American troops. The scale and intensity of the clashes kept many residents home in Baghdad. Barrages of what appeared to be rockets hit the fortified Green Zone area for the second time in three days. In Basra, Iraq’s most important oil-exporting center, thousands of Iraqi government soldiers and police officers moved to drive out Shiite militia members who have taken over big swaths of that city.

24 March 2008

San Francisco

Sunrise


Easter weekend

21 March 2008

Rug


NYTimes:
Liora Manné’s two-tone Reflections acrylic rug is available in custom color combinations and sizes; $935 for a five-foot-square; rug (shown): (212) 989-2732 or lioramanne.com.

Dharamsala


Photo: Arka Datta/Reuters

NYTimes:
As far as visits by American politicians go, it would be hard to stage a warmer reception. Buddhist nuns waved American flags and the Dalai Lama ordered his followers to offer a standing ovation Friday morning as Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House of Representatives, came to Dharamsala, the emotionally charged headquarters of Tibetan exiles, and seized the opportunity to stick a finger in the eye of China.

19 March 2008

California


Topanga Canyon

March 2003


Photo: James Hill/NYTimes

Five years on.

Letter to the Editor of the NYTimes:

To the Editor:

Maureen Dowd wonders how it is possible that George W. Bush can continue to put a positive spin on various dismal facts associated with his administration.

The answer is simple: from the beginning of his tenure, he was, continues to be and always will be the most incompetent president in modern American history.

Alan A. Preti
Fort Washington, Pa., March 17, 2008

18 March 2008

1959



Cels and backgrounds from Disney's "Sleeping Beauty."

NYTimes: A Japanese university plans to return about 250 pieces of original animation art to the Walt Disney Company that were mislaid in storage after traveling to Japan nearly five decades ago.

17 March 2008

13 March 2008

Opening Ceremony


Photo: Robert Wright/NYTimes
Morgan Rehbock in suit by Opening Ceremony.

Christian Siriano

11 March 2008

Home


NYTimes: LA Closet Design's cloth hanger cover is filled with dried French lavender, which smells pleasant and repels moths; $42 from (310) 289-1311 or www.laclosetdesign.com.

Kenneth Noland


Following Sea: 1974
Photo: Ken Noland/Licensed by VAGA, New York, courtesy American Federation of Arts

10 March 2008

Where the Wild Things Are


Dir: Spike Jonze
Release date: October 2009

07 March 2008

Paranoid Park


Photo: Scott Green/IFC Films
Gabe Nevins as Alex
Dir: Gus Van Sant

05 March 2008

Mars


Photo: NASA, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and University of Arizona
NYTimes:
Mars is not really blue. But if they looked at realistically colored images, scientists would be trying to distinguish between red rocks and soil and not-quite-so-red rocks and soil. The false-color images, like this one of Ius Chasma in the western part of the Valles Marineris canyon system, stretch the color palate to accentuate details.


Illustration: Oliver Munday/NYTimes

03 March 2008

OMA


Office for Metropolitan Architecture
Rem Koolhaas’s vision for a development in Dubai mixes the bold and the nondescript.

NYTimes:
Designed for one of the biggest developers in the United Arab Emirates, Nakheel, [Rem] Koolhaas’s master plan for the proposed 1.5-billion-square-foot Waterfront City in Dubai would simulate the density of Manhattan on an artificial island just off the Persian Gulf. A mix of nondescript towers and occasional bold architectural statements, it would establish Dubai as a center of urban experimentation as well as one of the world’s fastest growing metropolises.

The mixed-use project, startling in scale, is a carefully considered critique not just of the generic city but of a potentially greater evil: the growing use of high-end architecture as a tool for self-promotion. To Mr. Koolhaas this strategy, which many architects refer to as the Bilbao syndrome, reduces cities to theme parks of architectural tchotchkes that mask an underlying homogeneity. His strategy is not to reject either trend outright but to locate each one’s hidden, untapped potential, or as he puts it, “to find optimism in the inevitable.”