Friday, October 09, 2020
Thursday, October 08, 2020
The Invention of the Ice Cream Cone (but not the hot dog)
A US postage stamp issued in 1998 commemorated the invention of the ice cream cone at the St.Louis World's Fair in 1904. The stamp is inspired by a photo of a St.Louis family visiting the fair. The photo is the only direct image from the fair showing this novel way to eat ice cream. Several ice cream vendors who had booths at the fair claimed this invention as their own; however, the fair operators' careful records of licensed vendors do not clearly prove who owns this glorious honor. Whatever else is said, the creation of a waffle bent into the shape of a cone and filled with a scoop of ice cream is indeed recognized as having started on the famous fairgrounds in St.Louis in 1904.
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On the cover: the same photo used for the stamp. |
Wednesday, October 07, 2020
Pumpkins, Falling Leaves, Election Signs, and Autumn Meals
Tuesday, October 06, 2020
Art Works I Can See
Raoul Wallenberg Plaza
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Leonard Baskin (1922-2000), "Memorial." |
Installation on the University of Michigan Museum of Art
We also walked around the campus art museum to see a very new installation by Ghanaian artist Ibrahim Mahama. He has wrapped the facade of the building in a huge fabric wall hanging titled “In-Between the World and Dreams.” The material for this installation is jute sacks, which were obtained in the markets of Ghana. With a team of workers there, Mahama designed and sewed the hangings, which were installed at the end of September.![]() |
What the building normally looks like (source). |
Monday, October 05, 2020
Beer Street and Gin Lane
In the mid-eighteenth century, England experienced a drug crisis. Gin, a cheap new beverage with a much higher alcohol content than previous popular drinks, became a threat to society. Poor people drank gin instead of working, instead of taking care of their children, and instead of behaving responsibly in any way. Gin-drinking was accused of every evil that we have associated with various drug problems in our society in the last 50 or 75 years. Pressure grew to create laws regulating the manufacturing and distribution of gin — which was completely unregulated at the time.
William Hogarth (1697-1764) was a successful artist, who issued large editions of his etchings at affordable prices. As the pressure grew for something to be done about the gin epidemic, he created a print called Gin Lane that caricatured and emphasized the social dangers of gin. The center of the print is a woman whose drunkenness is so severe that she is letting her infant fall out of her arms. Throughout the rest of the print are equally egregious examples of debauchery and dysfunction. For a detailed description of what each image means, see the article "Beer Street and Gin Lane" in Wikipedia.
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William Hogarth, Gin Lane. 1751. |
The companion print to Gin Lane is called Beer Street. Beer, a much lower-alcohol drink than the distilled gin, had been the choice of Britain's lower classes (and others) for centuries, especially because it was much safer to drink than any drinking water available at that time. Beer was considered a patriotic drink -- a native English product, while gin was a foreign introduction. While the people in Beer Street are prosperous-looking, and seemed to be hard workers, there's also quite a bit of satire in this print. According to the analysis in Wikipedia:
"On the simplest level, Hogarth portrays the inhabitants of Beer Street as happy and healthy, nourished by the native English ale, and those who live in Gin Lane as destroyed by their addiction to the foreign spirit of gin; but, as with so many of Hogarth's works, closer inspection uncovers other targets of his satire, and reveals that the poverty of Gin Lane and the prosperity of Beer Street are more intimately connected than they at first appear. Gin Lane shows shocking scenes of infanticide, starvation, madness, decay and suicide, while Beer Street depicts industry, health, bonhomie and thriving commerce, but there are contrasts and subtle details that some critics believe allude to the prosperity of Beer Street as the cause of the misery found in Gin Lane."
William Hogarth, Beer Street, 1751.
The satire and caricature in Hogarth's works, including many other than these two, has always appealed to my sense of humor and my interest in social problems in times past. The foibles of society always could be made into amusing and penetrating art works! I'm sharing this with Elizabeth at Altered Book Lover for the weekly blog event featuring drinks that she sponsors each Tuesday.
Blog post © 2020 mae sander, public domain prints taken from Wikipedia.
Sunday, October 04, 2020
The Treason of Images
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Life follows art. |
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"This is not a pipe" or "The Treason of Images" By René Magritte (1898-1967). LA County Museum of Art. |
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This is not the Mona Lisa. It is a Rice Krispie Treat. Source: "Reconsidering the Rice Krispie Treat." |
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"FIVE WORDS IN ORANGE NEON" by Joseph Kosuth, 1965. (source) |
Saturday, October 03, 2020
Sequels
Recently, I've been reading sequels from a variety of mystery authors. Writing a full review post of every sequel seems a bit redundant, but here's a quick report on some recent ones. As I often do, I'm notably interested in the way these authors use food to tell their stories.
The second in the Rei Shimura series is titled Zen Attitude (published in 1997). I enjoyed it very much, for its many Japanese scenes set in several Japanese cities. Rei Shimura, the amateur detective who just happens to be around when murderers are busy, has become an antique dealer, with customers whom she must handle with Japanese tact despite her American upbringing. There's plenty of suspenseful detecting and escapes from dangers, as one would expect.
"You drink mugi-cha, don’t you?” My hostess poured cool barley tea for me into a dark earthen-ware cup. (p. 41).
Or another occasion when she slept at a friend's house:
"She showed me a thermos of green tea and a tiered basket filled with pickled vegetables and onigiri, fresh rice balls stuffed with pickled plums that I loved. I must have smelled them when she walked in and woke me up." (p. 166).
If anything, I liked the second in the series better than the first one. I'm surely expecting to read more!
Cara Black's Aimee Leduc
Black's Murder in Belleville is the second detective tale in the Aimee Leduc series (published in 2000). It's every bit as over-the-top violent and exciting as the first in the series, maybe more so. By the end of the first chapter, Aimee has been a witness to a fatal car bombing, has picked up the survivor (a friend who had phoned her for help), stolen a moped, dragged her injured friend onto the moped, and avoided an unknown but clearly evil-intending pursuer. She rides the moped down the steps of a Metro station, with her friend somehow on her back, avoids the enemy, and gets away. That's just the first chapter. Oh, yes, she also is always dressed perfectly for every scene.
Not much more about this that I would want to say. Lots of bad guys! Really bad ones! Will I read another? Probably. Will I read all 20 of them? Probably not.
Tana French's Dublin Murder Detectives
"Becca digs her heels into the ground, stares at her beef casserole and refuses to get pulled in. If they want to act like idiots, that’s their problem; they can fix it themselves."(p. 427).
"A heavy girl with her back to me looked like she was lashing into her food, but over her shoulder I caught a full plate of chicken pie chopped into tiny perfect squares, getting tinier with each vicious cut." (pp. 232-233).
More Sequels
Friday, October 02, 2020
The Chauvet Cave in France
To preserve the pristine images throughout the cave, which was discovered in 1994, the French authorities allow very little access, and limit visitors to just a few scientists. As a result, the paintings have suffered little damage of the type that resulted from large numbers of people viewing most of the other known Paleolithic rock-art sites, and the footprints of people and animals, as well as the art works, are still unspoiled. The film shows us all this and more.
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The quality and realism of the art work is astounding. Just a few screen shots cannot show you how great these artists were. |
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Interviews with the scientists working in the cave are very fascinating. |
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Stalactites and stalagmites formed in the cave after a landslide sealed the original entrance, leaving the art in remarkable condition. |
Thursday, October 01, 2020
A Few Walks in Ann Arbor
In Mary Beth Doyle Park
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A Dragonfly with such beautiful transparent wings. |
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Mallett’s Creek, a waterway through Ann Arbor, has been routed through this former wasted area to control flooding by letting the water spread out and drop the silt before flowing downstream. |
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Shadow selfie |
Near home
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A frog in the gutter at night. |
Gallup Park
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After our last kayaking of the season. Only this one other kayaker was on the water. |
Walking Along the Argo Cascades
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Political graffiti: “Black Lives Matter” and “KKKops,” from the aftermath of the killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and others. |
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The cascades are an artificial canoeing and kayaking stream made from the old spillway of Argo Dam on the Huron River. |