Erykah Badu’s “Trill Friends” is named Best New Track

Love Begins

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Acquired Stardust
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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
almost home

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roma★

Andulka
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Three Goblin Art
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Stranger Things
Jules of Nature

if i look back, i am lost
Today's Document
Keni
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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Erykah Badu’s “Trill Friends” is named Best New Track
I think of those who died today. They held views on the matter, one way or the other, of our awful American problem. They watched the last event unfold and thought: More laws. More guns. Less violence. Less coverage. This, no, that, no, this, with more or less certainty or stridency. “This is the last straw.” “How can we be this way?” “It is our culture.” “Our right.” “Isn’t this the price of freedom?” “Isn’t this absurd, grotesque?” They are dead now. They and their various views on the matter, swallowed up suddenly by darkness, their loved ones maddened with grief, breaking things they’ve bought, pulling at their hair, all that undeliverable protest at the void. I think of others, alive today, soon to die, (who knows when or whom, maybe you, or me, or the him or her who’s more to you than you) who with more or less certainty hold views too that will vanish into the dark with them tomorrow, the week to come, by this time next year.
“Live Update” by Teju Cole
From the first movement of the live performance, there’s an obsessive, possessed, ecstatic mood to Coltrane’s playing, a sense of spiritual search and struggle. The jaunty second movement, “Resolution,” finds Coltrane playing with an exciting, keening ferocity, featuring growls and roars, shouts and shrieks of a fury unheard in the studio. Coltrane’s fast-tempo, wildly expressive solo in the concert performance of “Pursuit” is eight minutes long and includes a lengthy duet with Jones that, with its blend of unleashed energy and extraordinarily complex construction discovered on the wing, is one of most moving, most beautiful, most soul-searching moments that Coltrane ever recorded. The French performance of the final slow movement, “Psalm,” goes quickly off-text to get to the mood of the poem—augmented by the frenetic mood of the moment. There’s no need for overdubs because Coltrane was already playing in tongues, virtually multiplying himself in real time.
Richard Brody: Seeing Through “A Love Supreme” to Find John Coltrane
Archives aren’t just photos and letters. This recent acquisition is part of the Toni Morrison Papers. (Toni Morrison taught at Princeton 1989-2006.) Beloved drafts on 5 ¼-inch floppy disks have presented us with some challenges, but we managed to access the files.
in preparation for thanksgiving:
Nancy Holt, drawing for positioning holes in the Columbia constellation for Sun Tunnels, 1975
via: grupaok
Te amo I'll pretend you were the only one And we will go to sleep And we'll have such strange dreams
--Te Amo, Atlas Sound
Untitled Project: Robert Smithson Library & Book Club [Miller, David, The Great Salt Lake: Past and Present, 1949] Oil on carved wood, 2015
we received this work in the mail just last week. such a rad project, such a beautiful piece of art that we get to see every day now.
iwdrm:
“I haven’t lived. I’ve died a few times.”
Harold and Maude (1971)
Joan Miró, lithograph
conversationswiththelight
This is the privilege of whiteness: While a terrorist may be white, his violence is never based in his whiteness. A white terrorist has unique, complicated motives that we will never comprehend. He can be a disturbed loner or a monster. He is either mentally ill or pure evil. The white terrorist exists solely as a dyad of extremes: Either he is humanized to the point of sympathy or he is so monstrous that he almost becomes mythological. Either way, he is never indicative of anything larger about whiteness, nor is he ever a garden-variety racist. He represents nothing but himself. A white terrorist is anything that frames him as an anomaly and separates him from the long, storied history of white terrorism.
Brit Bennett, “White Terrorism is As Old As America”
It’s counterintuitive to think of the British Museum as a happening spot, but for a long time its reading room served as a premier gathering place for London’s brainy bohemians. In the 1880s, these included radicals like George Bernard Shaw, Henry Havelock Ellis, and Eleanor Marx, Karl Marx’s youngest daughter. They worked there, and they talked during smoke breaks and visits to Bloomsbury tea shops. They moved fluidly between politics and the arts, deploring factory conditions as fervently as they dissected Ibsen’s plays. The reading room was a vital seedbed for such Victorian-era social-reform causes as women’s rights and trade-union organizing. It was also a pickup scene.
KAREN OLSSON, “Revolutionary Road”
In 1964, Mark Rothko installed a series of murals at Harvard:
Rothko mixed his own paint and the murals were hung in a room full of light and bunch of people eating…
…so, of course, they deteriorated over time and things got so bad they just rolled them up and put them in...
via: austinkleon
Dan Graham
via: kingstitt
I’m interested in leveraging feminist thinking as a way to decenter whiteness, and to ensure that our work promotes diversity, inclusion and social justice – not just in terms of gender, but with attention to the intersecting axes of race, class, sexuality, ability and other forms of inequality, exclusion, and marginalization. I am motivated by a concern/fear is that we are so focused on collaboration as a rational and practical response to budget pressures and/or the very real need to free up shelf space that we rarely step back to look at collaborative ventures as opportunities to enact the values that matter to us.
Chris Bourg, “Feminism and The Collective Collection”
The Radical Art of Archiving Performance, as Practiced by Martha Wilson
via: hyperallergic