TUMBLELOG

A scrapbook of stuff I'm reading / listening to / looking at on the net.

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Jul 02
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78-year-old Pablo Picasso and a young woman on the Riviera, 1960His drawings from his seventies often contrast himself as a buffoonish, wizened dwarf opposite a beautiful young woman.
Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers said it best: 

Well some people try to pick up girls
And get called assholes
This never happened to Pablo Picasso
He could walk down your street
And girls could not resist his stare and
So Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole
(…)
Well he was only 5’3”
But girls could not resist his stare
Pablo Picasso never got called an asshole
78-year-old Pablo Picasso and a young woman on the Riviera, 1960
His drawings from his seventies often contrast himself as a buffoonish, wizened dwarf opposite a beautiful young woman.

Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers said it best:

Well some people try to pick up girls
And get called assholes
This never happened to Pablo Picasso
He could walk down your street
And girls could not resist his stare and
So Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole

(…)

Well he was only 5’3”
But girls could not resist his stare
Pablo Picasso never got called an asshole

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Picasso: Drawing With Light - 1949 LIFE magazine
LIFE photographer Gjon Mili visited Picasso in 1949. Mili showed the artist some of his photographs of ice skaters with tiny lights affixed to their skates jumping in the dark—and Picasso’s mind began to race. The series of photographs that follows—Picasso’s light drawings—were made with a small flashlight in a dark room; the images vanished almost as soon as they were created.

Picasso: Drawing With Light - 1949 LIFE magazine

LIFE photographer Gjon Mili visited Picasso in 1949. Mili showed the artist some of his photographs of ice skaters with tiny lights affixed to their skates jumping in the dark—and Picasso’s mind began to race. The series of photographs that follows—Picasso’s light drawings—were made with a small flashlight in a dark room; the images vanished almost as soon as they were created.

Jul 01
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Frank O’Hara, “Poem (Lana Turner has collapsed!)”Next time you complain about not having time to write, read this, and slap yourself: O’Hara wrote this on his lunch break.
Frank O’Hara, “Poem (Lana Turner has collapsed!)”

Next time you complain about not having time to write, read this, and slap yourself: O’Hara wrote this on his lunch break.


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To fake a photograph, all you have to do is change the caption. To fake a painting, change the attribution.

Jun 30
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Anyone who says they’ve figured out how to make records sell more than 50 million copies is lying and smoking Koolaid. It doesn’t work like that. You just find a group of songs that touches you and gives you goosebumps. I go by my goosebumps.

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I’ve never planned anything. I haven’t had any career at all. I only have a life.

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Those things are like buckled belts.
Bill Callahan on the sentences of James Salter

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Jun 29
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Card Sorting: Designing Usable CategoriesThe basic process behind card sorting is straightforward: you create a set of cards that represent content to be organised and have a range of different people (either one-on-one or as a group) sort the cards into logical groups.
This is pretty much the same technique Meg and I used to edit my book.
Card Sorting: Designing Usable Categories
The basic process behind card sorting is straightforward: you create a set of cards that represent content to be organised and have a range of different people (either one-on-one or as a group) sort the cards into logical groups.

This is pretty much the same technique Meg and I used to edit my book.


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Remembering the Past is Like Imagining the FutureThat’s what Daniel Schacter at Harvard and his friends have discovered, by doing functional MRI studies of brains subjected to different kinds of cues. (Science News report, Nature review article, Charlie Rose interview.) Subjects are inserted gently into the giant magnetic field, then asked to either conjure up a memory or imagine a future scenario about some particular cue-word. What you see is that the same sites in the brain light up in both cases. The brain on the left in this image is remembering the past — on the right, it’s concocting an imaginary scenario about the future.
(via gerry)
Remembering the Past is Like Imagining the Future

That’s what Daniel Schacter at Harvard and his friends have discovered, by doing functional MRI studies of brains subjected to different kinds of cues. (Science News report, Nature review article, Charlie Rose interview.) Subjects are inserted gently into the giant magnetic field, then asked to either conjure up a memory or imagine a future scenario about some particular cue-word. What you see is that the same sites in the brain light up in both cases. The brain on the left in this image is remembering the past — on the right, it’s concocting an imaginary scenario about the future.

(via gerry)

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Tom Hart on Yoshida Sensha and the inspiration that he takes from Japanese manga that refuses to worry about “realism”:

You never believe you’re in the real world. In my own notes and sketches I always stay grounded, and I want lift off. Sensha lifts off. The imagination has to be the core.
So at some point I realized I need something to keep me UNgrounded. To keep me and the reader aware that this is imaginary…
Tom Hart on Yoshida Sensha and the inspiration that he takes from Japanese manga that refuses to worry about “realism”:

You never believe you’re in the real world. In my own notes and sketches I always stay grounded, and I want lift off. Sensha lifts off. The imagination has to be the core.

So at some point I realized I need something to keep me UNgrounded. To keep me and the reader aware that this is imaginary…

Jun 27
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I’m trying to figure out two very simple things: How to Live, and How To Die. Period. That’s all I’m trying to do, all day long. (And I’m also trying to have some meals, and have some snacks…)
— Maira Kalman, TED talk