Silver, Salt, and Sunlight: Early Photography in Britain and France At The Boston MFA (PHOTOS)

see slideshows at the original link: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/22/early-photography-boston-mfa_n_1166632.html?ref=uk-arts

First Posted: 12/23/11 04:32 AM ET   Updated: 12/23/11 04:32 AM ET

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The simultaneous advent of photography in Britain and France in the 19th century makes for a fascinating study of the two countries’ early photographic explorations in a new exhibition at the Boston MFA titled ‘Silver, Salt, and Sunlight: Early Photography in Britain and France.’

During this period, artists slowly expanded on the visual language that painting and sculpture had established, first applying their new medium to landscapes and portraiture and then exploring the camera’s unique accuracy and instantaneous capabilities. Gustave Le Gray’s ‘Cloudy Sky–The Mediterranean with Mount Agde’ approaches the grandeur of a Turner landscape without the exaggerated colors, and Nadar’s ‘The Apostle Preacher Jean Journet’ is all the more breathtaking for proving that men like Zurbarán’s ‘St. Francis of Assisi’ really exist.

According to the museum, the exhibition «will feature some of the Museum’s great early rarities, as well as the debut of the MFA’s recent acquisition an 1873 photograph by Alice in Wonderland author Lewis Carroll.»

‘Silver, Salt, and Sunlight: Early Photography in Britain and France’ will be on display February 7–August 19, 2012 at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 465 Huntington Avenue, Boston MA 02115.

 

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Kim Jong Il’s Funeral Procession: My Thoughts on the Weirdness

Comedian, actor and recording artist

GET UPDATES FROM Margaret Cho

Posted: 12/30/11 02:54 AM ET

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/margaret-cho/kim-jong-il-funeral-procession_b_1175376.html

The photos from Kim Jong Il’s funeral look surreal and way old-timey. That this happened in our world in modern times is totally weird. In the photos, the people are crying, and it is snowing, and no one seems to be wearing hats or gloves except for members of the military, who also look a little off. The uniforms are slightly ill-fitting, collars pulling off the neck. You need to take the shoulders in and lift the whole silhouette up or you look like a clothes hanger. I see their loose outfits and immediately imagine pinning the back and folding up sleeves, doing the alterations in my mind. I am a seamstress to the fucking core. There’s a costume quality to their officials, like they are just pretending, like weekend military reenactors, or like extras from a straight-to-DVD action film, but they are real. I guess the fact that they don’t look real makes them more real. Everyone is really upset. I would be crying from the cold alone. I can’t stand the snow, and my ears want to break off just looking at their bare heads and wet eyes. I don’t get that kind of dictator worship. I don’t believe I have ever cried over the death of a political figure, with the exception of Harvey milk. And if anyone was deserving of this kind of grandeur, he was, but not Kim Jong Il, I don’t think. I would have been upset about JFK and Lincoln, but I wasn’t born yet. The big photo of Kim Jong Sigue leyendo «Kim Jong Il’s Funeral Procession: My Thoughts on the Weirdness»

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Life and Letters

LIFE AND LETTERS

by Roger Angell

JANUARY 2, 2012 by Roger Angell

JANUARY 2, 2012

COMMENT LIFE AND LETTERS

Christmas has flown, and mail at home this week will produce shiny bargain-sale notices, some bills and invitations, an early thank-you note for a gift, and a late Christmas card or two, but perhaps not an actual letter. There’s nothing new about this, but a bit of sadness, a pang, has remained since the Postal Service announced, last month, that it will soon drop any promises of next-day delivery for first-class letters. The post office is broke, and the forty per cent of the first-class mail that currently reaches us within a day will now arrive in two, or even three. Two hundred and fifty-two local post offices are being considered for elimination, and only congressional approval is delaying the termination of Saturday mail service. We’ve done this to ourselves, of course, and done it eagerly, with our tweets and texts, our Facebook chat, our flooding e-mails, and our pleasure in the pejorative “snail mail.” Well, yes, O.K., but where’s the damage? Why these blues? Sigue leyendo «Life and Letters»

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Va. Tech killer Cho’s calculator for sale, renewing debate on ‘murderabilia’

The Whasignton Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/va-tech-killer-chos-calculator-for-sale-renewing-debate-on-murderabilia/2011/12/26/gIQAGEfLPP_story.html

By T. Rees Shapiro, Published: December 30

According to the seller, the item is a Texas Instruments TI-83 Plus calculator, similar to thousands of others used in college-level math classes. It usually retails for about $99. This one is listed at $3,700.What makes it worth so much? It once belonged to the man who killed 32 people at Virginia Tech on April 16, 2007.

The listing on the crime memorabilia Web site Supernaught says it is “one of the few items that the Virginia killer Seung Hui Cho sold on eBay to raise money for the guns, clips and ammo utilized during the rampage.”

The calculator and hundreds of items like it — the personal effects, paintings, letters and even fingernails of killers — are being peddled to collectors by at least a half-dozen Web sites as “murderabilia.”Seung Hui Cho’s calculator is also a rarity. Experts and murderabilia collectors say it is the first item with a connection to the gunman to be available for purchase in more than four years — since the first 48 hours after his mass murder. It is the only item of his on the market, experts say, at a time when Virginia Tech is back in national news after the December shooting death of a police officer in Blacksburg. Sigue leyendo «Va. Tech killer Cho’s calculator for sale, renewing debate on ‘murderabilia’»
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