Crisp winter light streaming in through the legs of Louise Bourgeois’s “The Nest” today 👌 (at SFMOMA Rooftop Sculpture Garden)
Posted on Thursday, December 20th 2012
Dave Brubeck’s teacher and mentor at Mills College told him, “Travel the world and keep your ears open”.
Love this.
Posted on Thursday, December 20th 2012
Reblogged from narangkar glover: studio progress
James Pomerantz on the dark side of being a photo researcher: “As I’ve scoured the Internet, I have seen things that, for better or worse, I cannot forget… With the hope of maintaining my sanity so I can research for another year, I’m unloading on all of you just a few of the many odd images I’ve encountered this past year, captioned as I found them.”
Click-through for more from Pomerantz, and a slide show of more weird photos:Â http://nyr.kr/REe4hM
Taking black and white photography to a whole new level…
Posted on Wednesday, December 19th 2012
Reblogged from The New Yorker
“May your holidays be full of sparkle magic.” - Erica Gangsei shares a unicorn triple whammy this week for Erica’s Visitor Postcard Picks.
Posted on Wednesday, December 19th 2012
Mark Bradford announcement card from 1999. - ds
Love this! Having Mark Bradford here last spring was really terrific. If you haven’t checked out his artwork before, this interactive site will blow you away.Â
Posted on Tuesday, December 18th 2012
Reblogged from The Museum of Modern Art Library
Go figure… Ann Hamilton and Annie Liebovitz are old chums.
Annie photographed Ann for a feature on her work that appeared in Vogue in March 1994. The portraits are telling and beautiful, and the story (by writer/curator Neville Wakefield) is worth a read too.
See for yourself here.
We HIGHLY recommend that you all click-through and check out those photos in Vogue— they’re beautiful!
Fun fact: back in 2007, Ann Hamilton installed Indigo Blue, another hugely provocative work, here at SFMOMA. You can see a fascinating time-lapse video of the installation here.
Posted on Tuesday, December 18th 2012
Reblogged from Park Avenue Armory
Artist Divya Mehra’s cheeky MTV Art Breaks video, On Tragedy (Did you hear the one about the Indian?), riffs on Richard Prince’s 1985 spoof of the ubiquitous American Express (…don’t leave home without it…) TV ads.
Both were filmed in front of the iconic Frank Lloyd Wright Guggenheim Museum building in New York.
Watch Divya Mehra’s here: http://bit.ly/11cCD64
Watch Richard Prince’s here: http://on.mtv.com/UEIrjJ
Posted on Monday, December 17th 2012
Reblogged from Creative Time on Tumblr
The End
Friday, December 21 marks the end of the Mayan long-count calendar. On this day, doomsayers believe the world will end.
For those of you that aren’t bothered by this prediction, here are some art events to enjoy this week.ÂPictured is Roy Lichtenstein’s 1967 work entitled Explosion.Â
Posted on Monday, December 17th 2012
Reblogged from artnet
Bruce Conner, assemblage—photographed for the cover of Philip Lamantia, Destroyed Works (San Francisco: Auerhahn Press, 1962)
Posted on Monday, December 17th 2012
Reblogged from grupa o.k.
Indiana Jones Mystery Package
We don’t really even know how to start this post. Yesterday we received a package addressed to “Henry Walton Jones, Jr.”. We sort-of shrugged it off and put it in our bin of mail for student workers to sort and deliver to the right faculty member— we get the wrong mail a lot.
Little did we know what we were looking at. When our student mail worker snapped out of his finals-tired haze and realized who Dr. Jones was, we were sort of in luck: this package wasn’t meant for a random professor in the Stat department. It is addressed to “Indiana” Jones.
What we know: The package contained an incredibly detailed replica of “University of Chicago Professor” Abner Ravenwood’s journal from Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark. It looks only sort of like this one, but almost exactly like this one, so much so that we thought it might have been the one that was for sale on Ebay had we not seen some telling inconsistencies in cover color and “Ex Libris” page (and distinct lack of sword). The book itself is a bit dusty, and the cover is teal fabric with a red velvet spine, with weathered inserts and many postcards/pictures of Marion Ravenwood (and some cool old replica money) included. It’s clear that it is mostly, but not completely handmade, as although the included paper is weathered all of the “handwriting” and calligraphy lacks the telltale pressure marks of actual handwriting.Â
What we don’t know: Why this came to us. The package does not actually have real stamps on it— the outside of the package was crinkly and dirty as if it came through the mail, but the stamps themselves are pasted on and look like they have been photocopied. There is no US postage on the package, but we did receive it in a bin of mail, and it is addressed to the physical address of our building, Rosenwald Hall, which has a distinctly different address from any other buildings where it might be appropriate to send it (Haskell Hall or the Oriental Institute Museum). However, although now home to the Econ department and College Admissions, Rosenwald Hall used to be the home to our departments of geology and geography.Â
If you’re an applicant and sent this to us: Why? How? Did you make it? Why so awesome? If you’re a member of the University community and this belongs to you or you’ve gotten one like it before, PLEASE tell us how you acquired it, and whether or not yours came with a description— or if we’re making a big deal out of the fact that you accidentally slipped a gift for a friend in to the inter-university mail system. If you are an Indiana Jones enthusiast and have any idea who may have sent this to us or who made it, let us know that, too.Â
We know this sounds like a joke/hoax… it’s not (at least, from our end).  Any hints, ideas, thoughts, or explanations are appreciated. We’ve been completely baffled as to why this was sent to us, in mostly a good way, but it’s clear this is a neat thing that either belongs somewhere else— or belongs in the halls of UChicago admissions history.
Internet: help us out. If you’re on Reddit (we’re not) or any other nerdly social media sites where we might get information about this, feel free to post far and wide and e-mail any answers, clues, ideas, thoughts, or musings to indianajonesjournal@uchicago.edu (yes, we did set up an email account just to deal with this thing).Â
**Update: we have heard from Lucasfilm (nerd sidebar: OMG SO COOL) that this is not some type of viral marketing package for any upcoming Indiana Jones films or events. We have narrowed the likely maker down to the most-accurate Ebay match (seller “Ravenbar”) but have not been able to get in touch with the seller, nor do we have any sense of why this would have made its way to our office. More photos of the journal can be found in the Chicago Red Eye here. We will be placing this in the University of Chicago library’s Special Collections once our mystery has been solved, so to those who have asked if it is for sale, sadly, the answer is no. Thanks to all who have sent tips or ideas (and to all of the news organizations that found this cool enough to pick it up)— please keep the ideas coming!**
How come nobody ever sends us any Indiana Jones mail? :)
Posted on Monday, December 17th 2012
Reblogged from UChicago College Admissions

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