“I feel that we are living a very fragmented life…”

“I feel that we are living a very fragmented life; the whole world. So I perceive the world in fragments. It is somewhat like being on a very fast train and getting glimpses of things in strange scales as you pass by. A person can be very, very tiny. And a billboard can make a person very large. Somehow, in painting, I try to make some logic out of the world that has been given to me in chaos. I have a very pretentious idea that I want to make life, I want to make sense out of it. The fact that I am doomed to failure — that doesn’t deter me in the least.”
– Grace Hartigan (March 28, 1922 – Nov 15, 2008)

Photo: Grace Hartigan with a self-portrait, 1951.
Grace Hartigan Papers, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries.

One of the reasons why I love Lucy

One of the reasons why I love Lucy.

“The journey to get Star Trek: The Original Series on television was a long and arduous one, but series creator Gene Roddenberry had help from an unlikely heroine. Without the help of this woman and her studio, the franchise may have stalled and never seen the light of day.:

“Roddenberry came to Desilu with an idea for a pilot that would grow into Star Trek. Ball bought the series, even if she didn’t quite understand it; allegedly, she thought the title referred to a group of traveling USO performers during WWII.:

https://www.startrek.com/news/how-lucille-ball-helped-star-trek-become-a-cultural-icon

Ella was once jailed for singing to an integrated audience!

In October of 1955, jazz legends Ella Fitzgerald and Dizzy Gillespie and others were arrested in Houston, Texas, after performing before an integrated audience. The police’s vice squad claimed they did it because there was gambling in a backstage dressing room.

Saxophonist Jean-Baptiste Illinois Jacquet played that night. “I wanted Houston to see a hell of a concert, and they should see it like they were in Carnegie Hall,” he told the Houston Press. “I felt if I didn’t do anything about the segregation in my hometown, I would regret it. This was the time to do it. Segregation had to come to an end.”

The arrests made national headlines, and a year later, the legends played to an integrated audience. This time, there were no arrests.

– courtesy of Mississippi Today, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Nonprofit News publication

Richard and Eddie

“I spent my 30s fixing everything I broke in my 20s.”
– Eddie Murphy

“I was on the Today show and they were telling me how wonderful I was and I walk out into the reality of America and I can’t get a cab.”
– Richard Pryor

(they have said these words before but maybe not to each other) 🙂

“but I was so much older then…”

“Ah, but I was so much older then, I’m younger than that now.”
My Back Pages

Bobby Zimmerman, center, at Herzl Camp in 1957 flanked by Larry Kegan and Louie Kemp. Kegan was paralyzed at age 16 in a diving accident and died in 2001.
.Webster, Wisconsin 1957

https://www.startribune.com/from-summer-camp-to-stardom-his-friendship-with-bob-dylan-spanned-50-years/528519651/

Anne de Gaulle and Family

Charles de Gaulle and his daughter Anne. January 1,1933.
Source: https://www.parismatch.com

“For me, this child is a grace, she is my joy, she helps me to look beyond all the failures and honors, and always to look higher.” ~Charles de Gaulle

Anne de Gaulle (1928-1948), the daughter of French President Charles de Gaulle and his wife Yvonne, was born with Down syndrome. At a time when many families, especially famous ones, did not expose their special children and even hid them in institutions, the de Gaulles took a completely different approach to raising their daughter. They spent a lot of time with her and openly appeared with their daughter in public.

All special children were normally confined in poorly equipped institutions to care for them. Children who were institutionalized often led shortened lives.

The de Gaulles protected Anne from the institution, and she lived her entire life in the family home.

In October 1945, Yvonne de Gaulle raised sufficient funds to buy the Château de Vert-Cœur at Milon-la-Chapelle (Yvelines), where they installed a private hospital for intellectually handicapped and disabled young girls. The place was called the Fondation Anne de Gaulle.

The Foundation sought to apply new technologies to help the most vulnerable. Anne contributed to changing people’s perceptions of children born with disabilities. Today, the Foundation continues to serve.

information courtesy of www.pressenza.com

Duane Allman and King Curtis




Duane Allman with saxophonist King Curtis at Atlantic Studios in New York where they were doing sessions for Aretha Franklin’s “This Girl’s in Love with You.”

“I love being alive and I will be the best man I possibly can. I will take love wherever I find it and offer it to everyone who will take it. . . seek knowledge from those wiser and teach those who wish to learn from me.
– Duane Allman

King Curtis became Aretha Franklin’s bandleader, saxophonist, while still recording as a headliner as King Curtis and the Kingpins. He also mentored Duane Allman.


This may be one of the most important letters you’ll ever read

Posted by Yvonne Ator on Facebook

Kerri Grote

My friend Kerri Grote died this morning. While I am still processing, I wanted to share the words she left to be read upon her passing. Life is short. I hope they bring you perspective, inspiration and healing like they did for me. R.I.P Kerri. I love you.

“If you’re reading this, this fu$king brain cancer probably got me.

But let me be crystal clear while I’m able: I did not ”lose a battle” against cancer. This is a ridiculous, steamy pile of horse shit that society has dumped on cancer patients. Western medicine, and Western culture, especially, is so uncomfortable talking about death that instead it created this “battle” analogy that basically shames people who die from cancer.

News flash: None of us gets out alive from this rodeo called life.

There is no shame in dying from cancer – or any serious illness. And it doesn’t need to be a battle. It’s a transition that each of us will go through. I was asked by a shaman, whom I spoke to after my second brain surgery, “Are you running towards life or running away from death?”

Whoa! That got my attention.

There’s a BIG difference. I got it wrong more often than not.

Don’t let fear fuel your choices. Live fearlessly. Run TOWARDS life. Don’t worry about what people will think. Trust me, it doesn’t matter.

Focus on you. Be true to yourself. Be your own best friend. People who tell you you’re selfish are not your people. If the voice in your head says these unkind things, get a new voice. Honor your mental health and seek out a good therapist with the same vigor you’d search for a romantic partner.

Speaking of, be intentional about cultivating friendships that lift you up. As those friendships grow and change, don’t overlook them while you search for that “great love of your life.” (No, I’m not suggesting you sleep with your bestie. But you do you!)

Another unhelpful message that we get from society is that we need a “love of our life,” as a romantic partner.

Single and childless when I was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer, I looked around my life and came up sputtering and sobbing from the wave of grief washed over me. I thought I’d be doing this alone… no husband, no kids, no “great love.”

How wrong I was. At the first appointment with my neuro oncologists, one of the nurses diligently hauled in chair after chair for the great loves of my life who came with me that horrible day and many days after that.

I sat and listened while the doctor explained the 12-month treatment plan, focusing on my breathing, then looked around the room…. filled with great loves of my life: incredible women friends whom I had met at various stages of my life.

Surround yourself with people who contradict that unkind voice, people who see your light, and remind you who you are: an amazing soul.

Learn how to receive these reflections from your people. Because they are speaking the Truth.

Love yourself, no matter how weird and silly it might feel. Every morning, give yourself a hug before your feet hit the floor. Look deeply into your eyes in a mirror. Say to yourself, out loud, “I trust you.” That voice in your head might say you’re a dork. Ignore it.

As I prepare to leave this body and embark on this mysterious journey of my soul, I hope these observations from my deathbed are somehow useful.

What I know, deep in my bones, is that learning to love myself has led me to be able to say this: I’m so proud of how I lived.

May you, dear reader, feel the same when you head out on your soul journey, too. Until then, enjoy the ride. And always eat dessert first, especially if there’s pie!”

Magic Bus

Magic Bus (partial lyrics) by Pete Townshend

Every day I get in the queue (Too much, Magic Bus)
To get on the bus that takes me to you (Too much, Magic Bus)
I’m so nervous, I just sit and smile (Too much, Magic Bus)
Your house is only another mile (Too much, Magic Bus)

Thank you, driver, for getting me here (Too much, Magic Bus)
You’ll be an inspector, have no fear (Too much, Magic Bus)
I don’t want to cause no fuss (Too much, Magic Bus)
But can I buy your Magic Bus? (Too much, Magic Bus)

Photo: Promotion for Magic Bus
The Who with Eli, the baby elephant, Nicola Austine (left) and Toni Lee.
(Photo by PA Images)

The Who – The Magic Bus (1968)
https://youtu.be/wkTpZFq7b3c

“When I look over the photographs Stieglitz took of me…”

“When I look over the photographs Stieglitz took of me-some of them more than sixty years ago-I wonder who that person is. It is as if in my one life I have lived many lives. If the person in the photographs were living in this world today, she would be quite a different person but it doesn’t matter-Stieglitz photographed her then.”
Georgia O’Keefe

Georgia O’Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz, who was 24 years older, were married from 1924 until 1946 when he died.

All the below photos were taken in 1918.

Georgia O’Keeffe (1918)
Photo by Alfred Stieglitz

Georgia O’Keeffe (1918)
Photo by Alfred Stieglitz

Georgia O’Keeffe #2 (1918)
Photo by Alfred Stieglitz

Yayoi Kusama and Joseph Cornell

Despite presiding over orgies, Kusama had a fear of sex, perhaps because she had suffered from her father’s philandering, and remained abstinent throughout her life. So it was that when she met Joseph Cornell, an odd-duck loner 26 years her senior, who lived with his domineering mother in Flushing, Queens, the two struck up an intense, albeit platonic relationship.

Cornell became besotted by Kusama, flooding her mailbox with letters and personalized collages, and calling her on the phone constantly.

They became close, often spending time at Cornell’s mother’s home in Queens, passing the day sketching each other in the nude. Of course, his mother deeply disapproved of this, and apparently once poured a bucket of water over them as they sat kissing beneath the backyard quince tree.

After some time Kusama took a step back, feeling the situation had got claustrophobic, but the two isolated, driven, visionary misfits remained close until his death in 1972.

Kusama was deeply affected by Cornell’s death. She returned to Japan, and in 1977 checked herself into the Seiwa Hospital for the Mentally Ill, where she eventually took up permanent residence. She has been living at the hospital ever since, going to work in her studio only a short distance away. Cornell’s influence did not end with his death, however, since he had given her boxes of magazine cuttings and other materials which she subsequently used to make a series of luminous collages. These feature elements of his style including surrealist cutouts, layered with her signature pattern of polka dots and infinity nets.

courtesy of Letters from Athens

Yayoi Kusama with Joseph Cornell in New York, 1970
Courtesy Yayoi Kusama Studio, Inc.

Karel Teige Dec 13, 1900 – Oct 1, 1951)


“Artistic professionalism cannot survive anymore. If it is new art and that which we call POETISM (the art of life, the art of being alive and living life), it must ultimately be as self-evident, pleasurable and understandable as sport, love, wine and all other types of delicacies. It cannot be a mere occupation, or trade, but rather a common need. No individual life, if it is lived decently — that is, in laughter, happiness, love and contentment — can be without it. Professional art is a fallacy and, to a certain extent, an anomaly. The artistic work cannot be a product for business speculation nor should it be an object of dry, academic speculation. It is fundamentally a gift, or a game without obligations or consequences.“
KAREL TEIGE: THE POETIST MANIFESTO (EXCERPT), PRAGUE 1924

“The most beautiful paintings in existence today are the ones which were not painted by anyone.”


“For Teige, art was never in the service of the revolution, it was the revolution.”
– Louis Armand
https://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/betrayals-avantgarde-karel-teiges-cine-poetics-beyond/

Karel Teige was a leading Czech avant-garde artist and writer in the 1920s and 1930s. A member of the Devětsil (Butterbur) movement in the 1920s, Teige worked as an editor and graphic designer for the group’s monthly magazine Revue Devětsilu, which featured works by the likes of Le Corbusier, Man Ray, Paul Klee, Vladimir Mayakovsky, and Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius.

After welcoming the Soviet army as liberators, Teige was silenced by the Communist government in 1948, denounced as a “Trotskyist degenerate”. In 1951 he died in his native Prague of a heart attack. Out of added spite, the secret police destroyed his papers and banned his work.

Since the recovery of his work after the Velvet Revolution of 1989, his legacy has been revived not only in Prague, but also in Western Europe and the United States.

The Surreal Mashed-Up World of Art Revolutionary Karel Teige

Karel Teige – Collage 166. 1942

1945 – halftone collage

Karel Teige – Composition with Typographic Elements 1927

Untitled Poster

Landscape (1918)
mixed media (watercolor, pencil) on paper