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Tag Archives: journalism
Shows and Prose
Along comes more NYTimes torqued and taut art talk of the sort that sweeps me up. … Several gorgeous self-portraits made toward the end of his life. Their precision is astonishing… It’s clear that what most interested Ellis about ink … Continue reading
Posted in Quotations
Tagged art, criticism, drawing, journalism, language, painting, rhetoric, style, writing
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‘A Fisherman Holds Up a Trout He Caught’
El hijo de su madre has stumbled upon an El Dorado of found poetry in the “Outdoors” fishing column of a local newspaper. Bink Grimes’s lavish rundown of the piscatory scene pulses with staccato verve, inside lingo, and riptide granularity. … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged journalism, language, miscellaneous, poetry, rhetoric, style, Texas, writing
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Messing With Space
Like a pig rooting for truffles I harvest luscious phrases from Roberta Smith’s art critiques. After “he jumped on the Color Field painting bandwagon,” Jules Olitski (1922 – 2007) created works that “mess with space and scale in a visceral, … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged art, criticism, journalism, Jules Olitski, language, painting, Roberta Smith, style
4 Comments
‘Gloopy Glory’
The paintings of 90-year-old Frank Auerbach, “last surviving member of a pathfinding generation of postwar British figurative painters,” are up my alley. Auerbach’s iterative pigment attacks are savage and astonishing, and Jason Farago is always good for a blue-streak of … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged art, drawings, Frank Auerbach, Jason Farago, journalism, language, painting, rhetoric, style, writing
2 Comments
How Are Posh Men Educated?
…The vanities of posh men… centre on an ancient system that trains a narrow caste of people to run our affairs…. Ever questing to penetrate British lingo, I wobble over “public” versus “private” education in the kingdom’s parlance. In my … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged Britain, conservatism, culture, jargon, journalism, language, lexicon, linguistics, miscellaneous, personal, semantics, society
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‘Miner of Difficult Truths’
I can study all day Alice Neel’s brushwork and modeling of flesh and features, how she gestures at her subjects’ surroundings with casual precision. Her “Carmen and Judy” has a frank, womanly exactness and searing intimacy that The New Yorker’s … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged Alice Neel, art, criticism, culture, journalism, language, painting, personal, style
2 Comments
Wide Load
Jason Farrago lavishes a container shipload of exegetical rumination on Julie Mehretu’s paintings. Lines accreted in an essentially radial configuration, with large arcs orbiting an absent central axis, and orthogonal spokes sprouting from the core. (The Mehretu black line is … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged art, criticism, drawing, galleries, journalism, language, painting, rhetoric, style
7 Comments
Shiny Objects and Hot Takes
When I re-read my EthicalDative posts at a later date they often seem overly arch or frivolous — less trenchant and cleansing than they felt at the moment of posting. “Stale” is the word to describe them, I suppose, with … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged blogging, journalism, language, personal, rhetoric, style, writing
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‘You Have No Authority Here, Jackie Weaver’
… I was momentarily stirred to hear there were some handbags between Boris Johnson and Keir Starmer in one of parliament’s corridors after prime minister’s questions on Wednesday… According to some reports, the Labour leader was “puce” and “rattled”… I … Continue reading
Exponential Obscurity Rectified*
*Scruple dictates that I confess to having added to the fog of blather by blatantly erring in my attempt to run the numbers in the original post. A bright lad has shown me the light, and the revised numbers do … Continue reading →