Thursday, June 30, 2011

Music and Television: My Favorite Band is a Work of Fiction

The band I want to listen to everyday only exists in the fictional New Orleans of the HBO show ‘Treme.’ Antoine Batiste and His Soul Apostles bring the funk to every soul who craves it. When Ms. Wanda Rouzan, a goddess of New Orleans R&B joins the band, they cannot be touched by any band, even one in the real world.

Anotine Batiste and His Soul Apostles, Slip Away

Artist at Work: Mickalene Thomas

Mickalene Thomas is an artist who re-orients the perspective of the nude portrait.  In her work, the scene is depicted from the model’s point of view; she watches the viewer watching her. The model  is a dark skinned black woman. She exudes self –awareness. This is not the traditional nude. As Jon Berger notes in Ways of Seeing, “The nude is to be seen naked by others and yet not recognized for one ’s self. A nude has to be seen as an object in order to be a nude.”
Thomas also incorporate rhinestones in her portraits, a modern touch dramatizing the way women enhance themselves.

Watch Mickalene Thomas talk about her process.


More about Mickalene:
Mickalene Thomas
Lehmann Maupin Gallery: Mickalene Thomas
In the Studio: Mickalene Thomas


Sunday, June 19, 2011

Music: Vicente Fernandez

Vicente Fernandez is a disciple of love. He is consumed by its nuances and extremes. He sings of joyous exuberant love and of the torrent of pain and misery experienced by a lover betrayed. For those damned by jealousy or carrying the weight of unrequited love, Mr. Fernandez knows your heart. In his world love will prevail. There is no alternative.
 Here are three songs of love by Vicente Fernandez.
Volver, Volver



Miedo


El Ultimo Beso

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Frida and Josephine


This photograph is intriguing and inspirational. Does it document their first meeting? What did they talk about? Where was the picture taken? Mexico City? Paris? New York?
Josephine Baker and Frida Kahlo were uniquely 20th Century creations; artists and muses who were capable of taking advantage of the historical events of their time to be their true selves. The Great Migration and Paris between the world wars shaped Ms. Baker. Ms. Kahlo thrived in the freedoms provided to artists and middle class women by the Mexican Revolution.  
What can we make of ourselves today? Can we be as bold as Frida and Josephine?