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Tag Archives: writing
‘Burden of Representation’
Roberta Smith writes of the Rothko painting that it “presents a glowing stack in brown, red and black on a red ground.” She describes the Church painting as “an expanse of shockingly deep red sky with a little sun peeping … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged art, criticism, language, painting, rhetoric, writing
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“That Was Now, This Is Then”
The very title of Vijay Sheshadri’s volume of poems, reviewed by David Orr, has the jewel-beam of poetic crystal to it. I keep rolling it on my tongue, as if it makes some kind of sense of the moment. Orr’s … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged English-Spanish, language, literary criticism, literature, poetry, rhetoric, style, translation, writing
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Pithy Gristle
David Orr reviews Vijay Sheshadri’s volume of poems “That Was Now, This Is Then” (Graywolf Press). Reviewers who are poets are especially equipped with spicy pronouncements. Poetry has a long, proud history of acting as if readers don’t exist. Often … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged English-Spanish, language, literary criticism, literature, poetry, rhetoric, style, translation, writing
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‘High-End’ Jinks in ‘Opulent’ Joints
Ninety-one people broke the state’s 50-person limit at an October wedding held at the North Fork Country Club in Cutchogue, NY. Afterwards, 30 tested positive for the virus and 156 wound up quarantined. In a second New York event in … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged coronavirus, journalism, language, rhetoric, society, style, writing
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‘Kate Is There in the Shadows’
Here is narrative from a 1960 American novel. A character ascends a staircase to the mezzanine of a house to join another person there: There comes to me in the ascent a brief annunciatory syllable in the throat stopped in … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged language, literature, reading, style, syntax, writing
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The ‘Tintanic’ Runs on Octopower
I have a fictitious acquaintance with the Chichester locale via Sir Alistair Chichester of Chichesterton-upon-Hogg. There’ll always be a Britain in my fancies. (c) 2020 JMN
Posted in Commentary
Tagged art, Britain, humor, humour, language, miscellaneous, personal, photography, writing
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‘Blurred Stupid Dulled’
Hilma af Klint inspires a certain perfervid evangelism which is diluted in this article by careless editing. The article cites a beautiful film by Halina Dyrschka about the visionary artist’s astonishing work. The beguiled film maker contracted [sic] MoMA to … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged art, grammar, journalism, language, painting, rhetoric, spirituality, style, writing
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Amy Sillman: The ‘Facticity’ of Paint
… [Amy Sillman] has helped lead the charge over the last decade for a reinvigorated mode of abstraction, alongside colleagues like Laura Owens, Julie Mehretu, Joanne Greenbaum or Jacqueline Humphries. These painters, mostly women, have reclaimed the potency of active … Continue reading
‘A Fond Infected Look’
A novelist’s prose can crowd poetry turf with an ineffability that thwarts paraphrase. Of his mother a protagonist says: “Ten minutes she will spend in the kitchen working with her swift cat-efficiency, then out and away with the children, surging … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged language, literature, poetry, reading, rhetoric, style, writing
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‘Not Objectionably Reasonable’
EthicalDative must have a focus to offset my wandering attention. I try with mixed results to blog about art and language, and respond elsewhere and otherwise to the rest. An October 6th article about an appalling event has stayed in … Continue reading →