Event announcement – Ansel Adams and Georgia O’Keefe

 

Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams: Natural Affinities

Monday, June 29  7:00 pm

Join us for an exciting SFMOMA museum presentation/slideshow on Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams — two of America’s best-known artists — are both revered for their ability to capture, in their own unique ways, the essence of natural beauty. The two met for the first time in 1929 while in Taos, New Mexico, and despite a 15-year age gap and differing personalities, they developed a lifelong friendship through their shared admiration of the natural world. O’Keeffe and Adams corresponded over the years, visited one another, and sometimes traveled together to sites that became subjects of their artwork. Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams: Natural Affinities brings together nearly 100 works from the painter and the photographer, revealing the parallels between their distinctive visions of the natural world. An introductory gallery provides a context for their art, with works by contemporaries such as Marsden Hartley, Alfred Stieglitz, and Edward Weston.

 
ATHERTON LIBRARY

2 Dinkelspiel Station Lane
Atherton Ca 94027

650-328-2422

Teenage brother and sister sing opera/Broadway

 

Please feel free to give them a listen and rate/leave comments. We here at Synchronized Chaos love to encourage people along the way to developing their talents…maybe some of the featured musicians from our past few issues would like to give them advice or drop them a note? 😉

Michael, 16, singing “Nessun Dorma” from Turandot (No One shall Sleep):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OFFUjBAu_qE&feature=channel_page

Megan, 15, performing “Memory” from Cats:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLcMrcR-0lg&feature=channel_page

Two articles: Art talk for beginners, and a piece on Grandma Lois’ simple mission of gentleness

 

Marie Claire article, some basic terms and a funny user-friendly guide to observing important features and striking up a conversation about visual art. It’s great to ask questions of artists and fellow patrons at galleries, and some vocabulary and idea of what to look for in artwork can help people formulate questions and make comments. Viva La Vida y El Arte!

You may not know your Lucian from your Sigmund, but you can still hold your own at the art museum with this conversation guide.

Portrait, Landscape or Still Life?
Are you looking at a person (portrait), place (landscape), or thing (still life)? Get off to a good start by using the correct term instead of calling the piece, “a picture.”

Form and Line
Shading and texture give an object form, and generally make a piece look realistic. Talking about line is another way to discuss the shaping of the objects in the piece. Are facial features well defined and detailed (if you’re discussing a portrait), or more subtle? Form and line also give an object movement or a sense of being static. Use your intuition. It’s unlikely that a bowl of fruit will have much movement.

Negative Space
When you’ve said everything you can say about what’s in the painting or sketch, talk about what’s not there — the negative space in the piece.

Read more here:
http://www.marieclaire.com/celebrity-lifestyle/how-to/life-advice/talk-about-art?link=emb&dom=yah_life&src=syn&con=blog_marieclaire&mag=mar

Now, the article on Grandma Lois’ gentle artistry of kindness and human touch, which neuroscientists are finding out is incredibly important for young children’s cognitive development.

By Debra Skodack of the Kansas City Star:

Jayda Norman fusses. She squirms and cries.

“It’s OK. You’re OK.”

Jayda’s dark brown eyes look up to where those hushed words are coming from.

Grandma Lois is here.

Jayda relaxes as she nestles her tiny body into Grandma Lois’ cradled left arm. Together, they rock. Back and forth. Back and forth. Jayda’s eyes slowly close.

Everything is all right. Grandma Lois is here.

Five days a week, Lois Lakey comes to Children Mercy Hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit.

The 73-year-old Kansas Citian has been volunteering here every weekday for a remarkable 12 years. Her job is powerfully simple: She is there to rock the babies.

“She brings a kind of warmth and a human feeling to the bedside,” says Howard Kilbride, the physician who is medical director of the unit.

Read more here:

http://www.kansascity.com/105/story/1188057.html

Ginosko Literary Journal open to submissions

Everyone, I am impressed and intrigued with the work of Ginosko Literary Magazine, and just received their new issue last night. They try to be classy and look for decent work that reflects craft and style. I submitted a few short stories awhile back myself, was not accepted but know that was in part because I could have done more work to perfect the pieces.

If anyone is interested I have pasted information and submission contacts into this post…and we can and will write notes of recommendation or provide publishing credits for Synchronized Chaos readers interested in sending work to Ginosko. You may peruse the webzine on their site also.

Accepting short fiction, poetry, creative non-fiction, and excerpts.  Length flexible. 

Receives simultaneous submissions & reprints, postal mail and email submissions prefer attachments in Microsoft Works Word Processor. Copyright reverts to author one time rights.

See downloads for tone & style.

Editorial lead time 1-2 months.

Selects material from ezine to be printed up in anthology.

Website traffic 500-700 / month; ezine mailing list 3300+.

Ginosko Literary Journal
PO Box 246
Fairfax, CA  94978
GinoskoEditor@aol.com

Book ads $60/6 months, $90/12 months.

GINOSKO LITERARY JOURNAL
Robert Paul Cesaretti
PO Box 246
Fairfax CA 94978

http://www.ginoskoliteraryjournal.com/submissions.htm

ginosko (ghin-oce-koe)
To perceive, understand,
realize, come to know;
knowledge that has an inception,
a progress, an attainment.
The recognition of truth by experience. .

 

 

Member CLMP, listed in Best of the Web 2008

“Arthur’s Harp” author David Cicerone’s solo visual art exhibit

 

David is leaving the country for an English teaching position in South Korea and would like to take this last opportunity for awhile to show his visual art within the United States. I encourage you to stop in to peruse the work of this young gentleman with a Beat-infused sensibility 😉  

From David Cicerone:

This exhibition is being put on by the local art collective Heart of Chaos and will feature about twenty or so of my works. If you would like to come out and view or possibly buy some works, please do.
 
The exhibit will run from May 4 to May 30th. The opening reception will be on the second Friday of the month, May 8th, from 6-8 PM.
 
Here is the address:
Gardner Community Center
520 W Virginia Street, San Jose, California 95125
Cost: FREE

Benefit opportunity May 14th for musicians of all shapes and styles in San Francisco

Thursday, May 14, 2009
Time:
2:00pm – 6:00pm
Location:
United Nations Plaza>> Fountain Side
Street:
1150 Market St
Email:

Musicians of all types sought to play a free community benefit concert…public San Francisco location, great chance for exposure.

Event hosted by San Francisco community groups, including Food not Bombs/Curry without Worry, which seek to promote sustainable solutions to hunger. Taking place alongside San Francisco State’s Human Rights Summit to support the goals of that event…and sponsored by organizer Krystal Blue (find her on Facebook or via the email above.)
The purpose of the Never Ending Peace And Love (NEPAL) community event is to gather those passing by, students, workers, city employees, and all people to bring out a sense of community to the UN Plaza.

I would like to have the event in conjunction with San Francisco State University’s 6th Annual Human Rights Summit, in order to raise awareness of justices, injustices, and most of all, the humanity we all share.

Human Rights include the right to food, education, health, and well being. It is my goal to include all aspects of true Human Rights within the day’s festivities.

On this day: music, street theatre, open mic- poetry slam, interactive art, the craft fair, Curry Without Worry, Food Not bombs will be the basis to invite our willingness to human rights and Never Ending Peace And Love.

Global Affairs – Spain-based international relations journal seeks article submissions for June issue

 

Global Affairs International Newsmagazine (a Spanish journal of international relations for academics and other interested people) seeks well-written, well-documented and researched articles on any topics having to do with world current affairs. I’ve reposted their call to submissions and the topics in which they are most interested this month in this post…please feel free to email with any questions and to check out www.globalaffairs.es (English translation available onsite.) They’re great people, very professional and friendly.

 

Dear members,

For next Issue of Global Affairs (Issue 15) we are particularly interested in the following topics:

– Moldavia: closer to the EU, far from Communism?
– North Korea and nuclear weapons
– Cuba and the USA: improving relations?
– Thailand protests and the government action
– Hamas and situation in Gaza
– Iran and its political future
– Afghanistan and the control of the area
– Elections in South Africa
– Pakistan, the border and nuclear weapons
– Elections in Lebanon
– USA-Iran relations

Please if you are interested in writing an article regarding the topics send an email to eva.diez@globalaffairs.es

If you are interested in proposing another topic please let me know to eva.diez@globalaffairs.es

Best Regards,

Eva Diez