Sunday, 29 June 2008
Saturday, 21 June 2008
Transformative
The Ashington Group were a bunch of Northumberland miners who in 1934 invited a lecturer to teach them about art. Wisely, he didn't just tell them about it but encouraged them to make it themselves. The result, over several decades, was a remarkable collection of paintings recording their way of life.
Here's a slideshow of some of their pictures; the group's own website is here; and this is Steve Platt's admirable personal response to the story.
Here's a slideshow of some of their pictures; the group's own website is here; and this is Steve Platt's admirable personal response to the story.
Monday, 16 June 2008
When people don't remember the Sixties…
…this is what they're trying to forget: the inexplicable Tiny Tim does whatever it is that he does on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (2½ minutes):
Underwhelmed by his fame
Franz Künstler, who has died at 107, was the last surviving member of the Austro-Hungarian forces in World War One.
Sunday, 15 June 2008
Poe's last mourner
Every year since 1949, a mysterious black-clad figure has drunk a toast at the grave of Edgar Allan Poe.
She, she herself, and only she
This way for the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, "the only art museum in the world dedicated to the work of a woman artist of international stature."
Thursday, 12 June 2008
Cheeky Monkey
In the first five minutes of his Oscar-winning performance, Joel Gray lures you into Cabaret:
Let him be accursed
Like Savonarola of old, Willie Lupin has come to us to castigate and anathematise the world, the flesh and the devil - or "Piers Morgan" as they're now collectively known.
Wednesday, 11 June 2008
Plus ça change
D W Griffith's The Birth of a Nation (1915) furnishes a video for Public Enemy's "Burn, Hollywood, Burn!" (3 minutes):
Against Age Banding
Philip Pullman, Terry Pratchett, the five Children's Laureates and 1,500 other authors, illustrators, teachers and librarians all say no to British publishing's latest well-meaning folly. More here.
"Carousing became a habit"
Bernard Crick's candid obituary of Angus Calder, historian, poet, essayist, first convenor of the Scottish Poetry Library and man-about-the-Old-Town.
Tuesday, 10 June 2008
Monday, 9 June 2008
Sunday, 8 June 2008
Bob Hoskins rapping
…or, more precisely, lipsynching to Jamie T's 'Sheila', with its nods to Betjeman and My Fair Lady (4 minutes):
Oldest and best
Afterwards
The suicide of Christopher Morgan, sometime religious affairs correspondent of the Sunday Times, was followed by the most heartfelt Times obit I've ever seen - and a storm over Andrew Brown's critique of him in the Church Times.
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