Sep. 20th, 2019
Fully Awake Now
Sep. 20th, 2019 09:34 amSo, after waking up from sleeping in the chair, I read a little and then went to bed, and woke up a few minutes before nine.
Another fairly easy day. First I am off to town to sell some books at Past Sentence, and then over to Whitstable to do a small supermarket and a charity shop. Then I hope to get down to Hythe and New Romney for two more chazzers and that will be that. Or I might go in the opposite direction towards Maidstone and Chatham as I have a couple of sandwich shops to do which is more the likely direction.
We shall see.
At least it is another sunny day.
Another fairly easy day. First I am off to town to sell some books at Past Sentence, and then over to Whitstable to do a small supermarket and a charity shop. Then I hope to get down to Hythe and New Romney for two more chazzers and that will be that. Or I might go in the opposite direction towards Maidstone and Chatham as I have a couple of sandwich shops to do which is more the likely direction.
We shall see.
At least it is another sunny day.
The American Art Tapes
Sep. 20th, 2019 09:27 pmWell, in the end, I did three visits, two in Whitstable and one in Dover.
That was enough for the day.
I have just finished a deep crust filled pepperoni pizza washed own with that other bottle of vino from Tenterden.
I am currently listening to BBC Radio 4 - "The American Art Tapes" -
Whuch is a unique insight into the vibrant art scene of mid-1960s America from an archive of recordings made then and broadcast now for the very first time.
In 1965, the painter and teacher John Jones headed to the United States for a year, intending to record the most important and most influential artists he could find. His wife Gaby and their two young daughters went with him. One of those daughters, Nicolette Jones, is now a writer and critic, and she tells the story of how the family lodged in New York while her father grabbed interviews with Yoko Ono, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg and many more.
This was the moment of happenings, pop art and abstract expressionism, while the long shadow of dadaism and surrealism, represented on the tapes by Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray, reached forward to Louise Bourgeois.
Later, with nothing planned at all, the family set off on a three-month road trip in their old Ford station wagon, travelling across America from East to West Coast, turning up in little towns on the off chance of getting an interview with artists like Jasper Johns in Florida or a young Ed Ruscha in California.
The unique archive of over 100 recordings, gathered by John Jones, lay in boxes in the family home for decades, waiting for him to write a book based on the tapes. He wasn't able to do this and so the family offered the whole set of recordings to the Tate Archive, which acquired them in 2015.
In this programme, we hear a tantalising sample of this extraordinary material, airing a pivotal moment in 20th-century art and revealing John Jones to be on a par with some of the great audio collectors like Alan Lomax and Studs Terkel.
The programme evokes the mood of the time by interweaving the artists' reflections with a soundscape of mid-60s American music, TV and location sound. Art historian and artistic director of the Royal Academy Tim Marlow gives a powerful sense of the artists' achievement as Nicolette Jones conjures up the feeling of a great American road trip through the eyes of the child she was.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/live:bbc_radio_fourfm
That was enough for the day.
I have just finished a deep crust filled pepperoni pizza washed own with that other bottle of vino from Tenterden.
I am currently listening to BBC Radio 4 - "The American Art Tapes" -
Whuch is a unique insight into the vibrant art scene of mid-1960s America from an archive of recordings made then and broadcast now for the very first time.
In 1965, the painter and teacher John Jones headed to the United States for a year, intending to record the most important and most influential artists he could find. His wife Gaby and their two young daughters went with him. One of those daughters, Nicolette Jones, is now a writer and critic, and she tells the story of how the family lodged in New York while her father grabbed interviews with Yoko Ono, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg and many more.
This was the moment of happenings, pop art and abstract expressionism, while the long shadow of dadaism and surrealism, represented on the tapes by Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray, reached forward to Louise Bourgeois.
Later, with nothing planned at all, the family set off on a three-month road trip in their old Ford station wagon, travelling across America from East to West Coast, turning up in little towns on the off chance of getting an interview with artists like Jasper Johns in Florida or a young Ed Ruscha in California.
The unique archive of over 100 recordings, gathered by John Jones, lay in boxes in the family home for decades, waiting for him to write a book based on the tapes. He wasn't able to do this and so the family offered the whole set of recordings to the Tate Archive, which acquired them in 2015.
In this programme, we hear a tantalising sample of this extraordinary material, airing a pivotal moment in 20th-century art and revealing John Jones to be on a par with some of the great audio collectors like Alan Lomax and Studs Terkel.
The programme evokes the mood of the time by interweaving the artists' reflections with a soundscape of mid-60s American music, TV and location sound. Art historian and artistic director of the Royal Academy Tim Marlow gives a powerful sense of the artists' achievement as Nicolette Jones conjures up the feeling of a great American road trip through the eyes of the child she was.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/live:bbc_radio_fourfm
The Friday Five
Sep. 20th, 2019 11:48 pm1. Do you have the urge to do a Fall/Spring cleaning as soon as the weather turns?
2. What tells you that the season (a certain smell, a certain taste, that sort of thing) has changed?
3. What do you look forward to the most with the change of seasons?
4. What is something that you probably should accomplish but won’t this season?
5. What is the most enjoyable part of the oncoming season for you?
2. What tells you that the season (a certain smell, a certain taste, that sort of thing) has changed?
3. What do you look forward to the most with the change of seasons?
4. What is something that you probably should accomplish but won’t this season?
5. What is the most enjoyable part of the oncoming season for you?