Saturday, September 24, 2011

There are no boxes for us-- another PASSIONATE posting!

There are no boxes for us! Here's another PASSION entry to whet your palates and get you motivated to submit your own post to me! There is still plenty of time to enter-- deadline for entries is October 4th, so get crack-a-lackin!


Originally posted on Re-Make/Re-Model by my dear friend, Annie.

As inspired by my darling TheTsaritsaSez, who asked for a post about a life passion and what we've done in going after it...it may seem rather broad and cliched to say, but art in all its forms would be my answer. Music (with a jazz musician father, it's hard to ignore that influence); the visual arts (HELLO ART HISTORY MAJOR); film (c'mon, we're modern kids who all grew up with color TV and movies); literature too, but not *quite* as influential as the others to me.


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My CD collection. This is not including my ridiculous amount of mp3s and minimal vinyl. As I mentioned, my father is a jazz musician, so music was and is always played around the house - most likely while I was in the womb, my dad was playing Miles Davis and/or John Coltrane to my mom's belly through headphones. Growing up, my taste has ranged from '30s blues to Franz Ferdinand; "Singin' in the Rain" to the Sex Pistols; Kate Bush to Afrika Bambaataa - and everything in-between. I really appreciate well thought-out lyrics, probably because I am not a fabulous poet, and lyrics are poems set to music after all. Thus Bryan Ferry's lyrics always mean something to me, since I feel that IF I could write lyrics, his would be the sort I'd write: pop-culture-referencing, sentimental without being sappy, sometimes irreverent...and so when I met him, I was especially proud of myself that I didn't get speechless.

Speaking of Ferry, I mentioned to him that I'd read he had originally gone to art school for art history, the article I found right after being accepted for the Art History program at Temple. (He then exclaimed how much he loved the Philadelphia Museum of Art when I replied to his query about where I went to school. We're both Duchamp geeks, naturally.) When everyone started discussing what to go to school for, around 11th grade, I went into a slight panic since I had no idea what to do. Then I thought about what had always taken up brain space: the arts. Even in my 9th grade Honors course I had done a big project about Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel and loved researching about it. 6 1/2 years later, I was writing another big research paper about the actual painting process of the Sistine Chapel...and seeing it in person in Rome.


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Prints I currently have hanging up - top picture shows Klimt's "the Kiss", Duchamp's "Nude Descending a Staircase No. 2", and Warhol's famous "In the future everyone will be famous for 15 minutes" quote. The Man Ray print is a new purchase - I was drawn to it since the main figure seems to be inspired by those wooden figurine bendy models. Hmm, words don't like me today. One of these:


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My couple of main bookcases. Still making my way through all of these, since I get sidetracked by rereading the same ones again and again. (See Craig Ferguson's "Between the Bridge and the River", Norton Juster's "the Phantom Tollbooth" [it's not JUST a kid's book], Mikhail Bulgakov's "the Master & Margarita", Walter Tevis' "The Man Who Fell to Earth", and pretty much all the memoirs.)


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And film...where to start...I don't even know. Currently I'm watching a variety of things - between foreign films, gangster flicks, and camp classics mostly. But I'm so glad I found this poster for cheap online.


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Lastly, drawing. I don't do it everyday, but once in a while I find inspiration and this is my latest creation. Grace Jones is sort of one of my heroines now.

Job-wise, currently even while at my temp job I'm researching more artsy-based positions. Thinking about consulting (thanks to a random run-in on the street with someone who overheard me talking about grant-writing), but don't know how to break in; tomorrow I start more non-profit fundraising classes, so I'm interrogating the teacher about what to do. I'm applying for educational, art gallery/museum-oriented, advertising, and archival jobs almost daily - not giving up! If it becomes completely hopeless without further education, then I already know I want to study overseas for my MA. No matter what happens, I'm passionate about being somewhere(s) art-based.

Any of you particularly influenced by some form of art on a daily basis, or artistic yourselves?

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