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Tag Archives: writing
Poetic Researches
Is the soul our dark matter — pervasive but undetectable by any instrument we possess? If there’s a part of me that isn’t glia, neurons, and enzymes, it has found a modicum of rest in the revelation that John Ashbery’s … Continue reading
Posted in Anthology, Commentary
Tagged John Ashbery, language, personal, poetry, reading, rhetoric, style, writing
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‘mee-HIGH CHEEK-sent-me-HIGH-ee
My title is how the NYTimes represents the pronunciation of the name of Hungarian-born psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, who died recently in Claremont, California. He coined and popularized the term “flow” to describe a state of focused contentment in which time … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged art, language, painting, personal, poetry, writing
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“I’m Trying to Overwhelm the Museum,” He Said
[Adam] Pendleton, 37, is best known as a painter of abstract canvases in a distinctive black-and-white style that challenge how we read language. Made using spray-paint, brush and silk-screen processes, they incorporate photocopied text, words unmoored from context, letters scrambled … Continue reading
‘A Way of Understanding Who You Are’
“Human beings have always been storytellers and you use that as a way of understanding who you are, and who the people around you are, and what’s going on,” he says. “If I look back, which I don’t very often, … Continue reading
Posted in Anthology, Commentary, Quotations
Tagged Branded Figments, humor, personal, satire, writing
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Jane Kaufman
The savory quotation that leaps from this obituary of artist Jane Kaufman (1938 – 2021) is from Holland Cotter’s review of a 2008 retrospective at the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, N.Y. “It’s funky, funny, fussy, perverse, obsessive, riotous, accumulative, … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged art, craft, criticism, journalism, language, painting, personal, rhetoric, style, writing
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Pausing to Remark
A former associate stumbled upon this blog recently and wrote to me. She had read some older posts in which I challenged certain language practice encountered in published articles. It’s true I experimented for a time with adopting the persona … Continue reading
Corn Fusion
“Poems should be written rarely and reluctantly, / under unbearable duress and only with the hope / that good spirits, not evil ones, choose us for their instrument.”(Czeslaw Milosz) I get Ian McEwan and EwanMcGregor mixedup why I askmyself is … Continue reading
Posted in Anthology
Tagged doggerel, English-Spanish, humor, language, miscellaneous, personal, translation, writing
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Slant-Wise Talk
Saying things that are graspably cockeyed is my kind of self-expression. Doing so skirts peekaboo obscurity and affectation constantly, but sometimes it feels like it’s working and those moments make me feel interesting. “Even your most serious problem,” [Stephen Dunn] … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged language, personal, poetry, rhetoric, style, writing
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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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‘Carmen Mola’ Is Three Men
¡Me cachis en diez! Nadie está en su sitio. “Hell and damn! No one is in his place”; that was my father-in-law’s take on the hanky panky of a popular soap opera in late-Franco Spain. In post-Franco Spain what’s to … Continue reading →