Slow Art host Smithsonian’s “Fill the Gap” Flickr program
The Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Luce Foundation Center, one of the hosts of Slow Art Day, is featured in a New York Times article published today about how museums are encouraging online users to participate and even collaborate. The article describes the Smithsonian’s Flickr group called “Fill the Gap.” Essentially the program allows online visitors to recommend paintings from the collection that should fill the gap – or bare wall space – that is created when objects are lent out. The article also describes the work of other museums including Make History, the Web site of the future National September 11 Museum and Memorial and the Museum of the History of Polish Jews.
– Slow Art Day
http://www.SlowArtDay.com
– Smithsonian’s Slow Art Day registration
http://slowartdc2010.eventbrite.com/
– Smithsonian’s Luce Foundation Flickr “Fill the Gap” group
http://www.flickr.com/photos/americanartmuseum/sets/7215761332886688
– Make History, web site of the future National Sept 11 Museum and Memorial
makehistory. national911memorial.org
– Museum of the History of Polish Jews
http://www.jewishmuseum.org.pl/index.php?lang=en
– New York Times article “Online, It’s the Mouse that Runs the Museum
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/20/arts/d<wbr> esign/20museum.html?ref=design
Podcast of Discussion, Odyssey Books 1-8, January 19, 2010
A very enjoyable call discussing Books 1-8 of Homer’s “Odyssey.” Looking forward to the next calls on February 9 and March 9.
Homer 2010 kicks off
The first 2010 section of Homer’s Odyssey kicks off tonight with Pat Wictor moderating.
Pat is a co-founder of the Reading Odyssey and an acclaimed singer-songwriter.
Pat’s website is here:
http://www.patwictor.com
Anyone can follow the progress of this reading group by checking this site periodically and clicking on “Homer” in the left navigation. Podcasts from the monthly discussion, reading questions and assignments and other notes are available free here on the site.
Phil
Holland Cotter on Slow Art
This essay by New York Times staff art critic, Holland Cotter, is a must-read for Slow Art fans. It’s an ode to the values of Slow Art, to the joy of “simply staying still” while viewing art and to “the universe you can inhabit, just by looking.”
Holland Cotter,”Time-Traveling With the Muses in Boston”, January 14, 2010.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/15/arts/design/15museums.html?ref=design
For more on Slow Art and Slow Art Day 2010 this April 17, 2010 visit our Facebook site:
http://www.SlowArtDay.com
Phil
Xenophon’s Hellenika – Book I List of Names
Athenian (mostly leaders, i.e. generals, admirals)
Thymocares
Alcibiades
Thrasyllos
Theramenes
Thrasyboulos
Eumachos
Konon
Diomedon
Aristokrates
Pericles
Erasinides
Protomachos
Lysias
Aristogenes
Archedamos (a city leader at Athens)
Timokrates
Kallixenos
Euryptolemos
Sparta (mostly generals & admirals unless otherwise noted)
Agesandridas (admiral)
Doreius (admiral)
Mindaros (admiral)
Pharnabazos (Persian satrap & ally)
Tissaphernes (Persian satrap & ally)
Hermokrates (Sicilian/Syracusan ally)
Eteonikos
Pasippidas
Kratesippidas
Agis (King of Sparta)
Klearchos
Stages (a Persian)
Hippokrates
Kallikratidas
Lysander
Xenophon’s Hellenika – Introductory Call audio recording
Here is the audio recording for Xenophon’s Hellenika January 2010 Introductory call (with special guest Robert Strassler). Listen online or download the mp3 file and listen to it as a podcast on your ipod.
22 cities for Slow Art 2010 – help with cities not yet on the list?
We have 22 cities already lined up for Slow Art Day April 17, 2010.
From Canberra, Australia to Copenhagen, Denmark and from Ashland, Oregon to Atlanta, Georgia from Sao Paulo, Brazil to Oceanside, California volunteers are hosting Slow Art.
To see all the cities and to register for free to join us for Slow Art day in one of them, click here:
http://www.facebook.com/SlowArt?v=app_10442206389
This is great success – and we want to reach so many more cities and museums around the world.
See the cities below? Do you know anyone who might want to volunteer to lead Slow Art in any one of these (or any other city in the world)?
Hosting Slow Art is very easy and a lot of fun.
Please direct interested possible hosts to our Facebook site – http://www.facebook.com/SlowArt – or to me: pterry at reading odyssey dot com
Thanks! Phil
Adis Abeba, Ethiopia
Alexandria, Egypt
Alger, Algeria
Almadabad, India
Amsterdam, Holland
Ankara, Turkey
Athina, Greece
Baghdãd, Iraq
Bangalore, India
Bangdung, Indonesia
Bangkok, Thailand
Barcelona, Spain
Beijing, China
Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Berlin, Germany
Bogotá, Colombia
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Cairo, Egypt
Calcutta, India
Cape Town, South Africa
Caracas, Venezuela
Casablanca, Morocco
Changchun, China
Chengdu, China
Chennai, India
Chongging, China
Dalian, China
Dallas, USA
Delhi, India
Detroit, USA
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Dusseldorf, Germany
Essen, Germany
Frankfurt, Germany
Guadalajara, Mexico
Guangzhou, China
Handan, China
Hangzhou, China
Hanoi, Vietnam
Harbin, China
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Hong Kong, China
Houston, USA
Hyderabad, India
Istanbul, Turkey
Jakarta, Indonesia
Jinan, China
Karachi, Pakistan
Katowice, Poland
Kinshasa, DRC
Koln, Germany
Lagos, Nigeria
Lahore, Pakistan
Lima, Peru
London, United Kingdom
Madrid, Spain
Manila, Philippines
Maputo, Mozambique
Medellin, Colombia
Melbourne, Australia
Mexico City, Mexico
Milano, Italy
Monterrey, Mexico
Montréal, Canada
Moscow, Russian Fed
Mumbai, India
Nagoya, Japan
Nanjing, China
Napoli, Italy
Õsaka, Japan
Paris, France
Philadelphia, USA
Porto Alegre, Brazil
Pune, India
Pusan, South Korea
Qingdao, China
Recife, Brazil
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Rome, Italy
Salvador, Brazil
San Francisco, USA
Santiago, Chile
Santo Domingo, Dom
Seóul, South Korea
Shanghai, China
Shenyang, China
Singapore, Singapore
St Petersburg, Russia
Sydney, Australia
Tehrãn, Iran
Tianjin, China
Tokyo, Japan
Toronto, Canada
Wuhan, China
Xi’an, China
Yangon, Myanmar (Burma)
Welcome to the Xenophon’s Hellenika reading group!
I am Andre Stipanovic and will be your moderator for the next 7 months as we discuss this great book, published in the Landmark series and edited by Robert Strassler. We are fortunate to have Robert Strassler himself join us on our first call scheduled for Monday January 11, 2010.
Here is the game plan for our first call.
I would like to start out by introducing you to information important to reading this key text of early 4th century Greek history. First, we will talk a little bit about how to get the most out of this particular edition of Hellenika. Please make sure to get a copy of the Landmark Xenophon edited by Robert Strassler if you haven’t already done so. Then read the Editor’s Preface (pp. lxvii-lxxiv) and Key to Maps (p. lxxxii) to help you get acquainted with the format of this very user-friendly book. I also suggest you briefly look over the Chronological Outline of Text (p. lxxix) and bookmark it for later reference as a handy ‘road map’ of how events unfold in later books. I will briefly comment on these sections before I take us through events leading up to Book I (pp. ix-xii) as well as Xenophon’s life (pp. xvii-xxi).
Then Robert Strassler will share his experience with this text, especially in terms of seeing Xenophon’s Hellenika with respect to other sources we have of events in Greece in the 4th century B.C. He will be explaining to us why comparing sources is critical in terms of understanding Xenophon’s intent and veracity. You can look over pp. xxvi-xxx and lix-lxii in the Introduction to get acquainted with these issues if you like before or after the call.
I would like to keep our calls as focused as possible on our reading, so as a way of getting to know each other before our first call, would you ‘reply to all’ on this email with a little bit about yourself: What motivates you to read books like Xenophon’s Hellenika? What other kinds of books do you enjoy reading and why?
Summary of passages (all taken from Introduction to Landmark Xenophon’s Hellenika) that will be referred to next call:
Editor’s Preface (pp. lxvii-lxxiv, strongly recommended)
Key to Maps (p. lxxxii, strongly recommended)
Chronological Outline of Text (p. lxxix, recommended)
Section 1, p. ix (strongly recommended)
Section 2, pp. ix-xii (strongly recommended)
Section 4, pp. xvii-xxi (recommended)
Section 7, pp. xxvi-xxx (optional)
Section 14, pp. lix-lxii (optional)
Xenophon 2010
Hellenika
– Conference Call Schedule
Call 1 – Monday January 11, 2010: Introductory call with Robert Strassler
Call 2 – Monday February 22, 2010: Books I-II.3.10
Call 3 – Monday March 22, 2010: Books II.3.11 – III
Call 4 – Monday May 10, 2010: Books IV & V
Call 5 – Monday June 7, 2010: Book VI
Call 6 – Monday July 12, 2010: Book VII
Your phone number is: 1-888-350-0075 or 201-793-9022*
Your passcode is: 1100494#
* If readers have unlimited long distance on their home phones and can call in from non-cell phones, then we ask they use the 201 number to help us save money, if possible.
The following commands may be used participants during the conference call:
*1 Play menu of features so you know what’s available
*2 Mute/Unmute your own line so other people can’t hear you talking.
Happy New Year from Emily Dickinson
The most triumphant Bird I ever knew or met
Embarked upon a twig today
And till Dominion set
I famish to behold so eminent a sight
And sang for nothing scrutable
But intimate Delight.
Retired, and resumed his transitive Estate–
To what delicious Accident
Does finest Glory fit!
– Emily Dickinson, 1894
Sent to me from Laurie Sheck, author of A Monster’s Notes and one of our featured speakers in 2009 for the Reading Odyssey.
Hear the podcast with Laurie here.
See the comments on my Facebook profile here (requires us to be friends on Facebook).
Happy new year.
Phil
Avatar is a biologist’s dream?
New York Times Science writer, Carol Kaesuk Yoon, argues in an essay in today’s New York Times Science Times that the blockbuster movie Avatar is a “biologist’s dream.”
She says:
I haven’t seen the movie yet so I can’t comment on her argument – though I’d like to believe that what she says is true. It sure would make me want to see the movie.
Here’s a link to her article:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/19/science/19essay.html
And here’s a link to the Reading Odyssey’s Darwin Facebook Project where I also posted the article:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=53320310123
Those of you who have seen Avatar and have some training in biology, what do you think?
Phil
19. January 2010 by Arrian
Categories: Commentary, Darwin | Tags: Avatar, Biology, Darwin, Darwin Facebook project, James Cameron, Science Times | Comments Off on Avatar is a biologist’s dream?