Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Sacrifice, disconnection and other themes in film
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Appaloosa & Other Fun Things
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Things I'm lovin' right now
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Three books in December
The first book is Divisadero by Michael Ondaatje.
Ondaatje has been a favorite author of mine since my undergrad (thanks, John Belshaw). I read In the Skin of a Lion for a history class on the Working Class in early 20th Century Canada. The novel was stunning. After, I sought out The English Patient and Anil's Ghost. Each novel was filled with this flowing, melodious prose that moves with perfect rhythm throughout the lines and pages. I was totally hooked. In particular, I have loved what Ondaatje himself represents for the Canadian Literature Canon. Born in Sri Lanka, Ondaatje immigrated to England and then to Canada in the 1960s. He studied in Canada and has written his entire body of published literature as a Canadian. His work, though often dealing with themes or ideas that many other Canadian authors have dealt with, has a distinct timbre that I have yet to find in the works of Canadians of white, European descent. While I must admit that my knowledge of the modern American Canon is quite limited, I have found that the well-known voices of modern American literature tend to have been born on U.S. soil, while the Canadian Canon seems to have a wider array of 'other' voices that are incorporated and lauded by our literary community. I have heard of these voices being present in the U.S. through my readings, but many have yet to break into the mainstream.
Divisadero is a maturation of Ondaatje's style. His prose is still poetic, but not as long-winded as it has been in previous novels. He has mastered the weaving style of his mysteries; they draw you in quickly and then demand patience as the story unfolds before you. Although my current stack of books to read remains quite tall, I plan to add Coming Through Slaughter to it. I can't seem to get enough of Ondaatje and would love to go back and see where it all started.
I next read Islands in the Stream by Ernest Hemingway.
I started reading this one back in May on a trip to Cuba. At the time I figured if I was going to visit some old haunts of Hemingway's, I may as well get a sense of the man. As it turned out, other reading took precedence during my visit and I didn't start the book until my last day there. I quickly became engrossed in the first part of the book, the story of the protagonist Thomas Hudson, during a summer at his home in the Bahamas. His three sons and a family friend come for a holiday visit and partake in fishing, swimming, drinking and a variety of other beach activities. Although there is nothing shocking or spectacular about the plot line, Hemingway manages to completely enthrall you with his terse descriptions of things and his pointed dialogues. During that trip to Cuba, I only managed to finish Part 1 of the story; I set aside the rest of the book for a later time. I'm actually glad that I did, as Part 2 and 3 are much darker and have a tragic tone overall. I finished up the book during my Christmas holidays, not the best time for sadness but appropriate for the darker season. Going from Ondaatje to Hemingway is truly day and night, if you'll excuse the cliche. Where Ondaatje is flowing and melodic, Hemingway is clipped and clinical. Yet, despite the shortness present in his prose, he still manages to paint a clear picture of the scene, the characters and, surprisingly, the emotions that teem under the surface of the story. I've never read anything of this type that drove me along in my reading. Usually, this type of writing and story would make me snore, but I couldn't put it down.
Finally, in a turn away from fiction, I read Hugo Chavez: Oil, Politics and the Challenge to the United States by Nikolas Kozloff.
I had been dying for more information on Latin American politics. With the current world political climate (dominated heavily in our hemisphere by the U.S., no surprise) I had been finding that media coverage of Latin America has been lacking. As in, non-existant. The only mention of Latin America that I've heard in the mainstream media in the last 12 months has been Barack Obama's condemnation of Columbia during the American Presidential Election campaign. So I was very pleased to pick up this great biography of current Venezualan president, Hugo Chavez. The author, Nikolas Kozloff, is a prolific academic writer who has spent many years in South America and writing about the politics of the region. The book discusses Chavez's influence as a power-broker, using oil as his main diplomatic tool in building a strong, left-leaning coalition of Latin American leaders. Kozloff is very damning of U.S. President Bush and his foreign policy team in their dealings with Chavez. It's not surprising: Bush seems to absolutely hate Chavez and most of their interactions have been extremely hostile. Kozloff's main thesis, though, is that the U.S. government, though they may be loath to do so, really does need to pay attention to Chavez and what is happening in Latin America. At the time it was published, the book stated that there was only one American air base in all of Latin America (located in Ecuador, it is the take-off point for American coca-field eradication efforts in Columbia). If the current political climate stays as it is, it will close this year, leaving the American military with no foot-hold in Latin America. Whoa!! While writing this, I came across a new article by Kozloff written this past May about the redeploying of the American Navy's 4th fleet into the Caribbean. If you don't have time to pick up Kozloff's books (yes, there is another one that I will likely add to my shelf soon), I recommend you click here. In some ways, I hope that Latin America stays off the mainstream media's radar - they never get anything right anyway. I also hope that Obama reaches out to Latin America because there are some amazing things happening there now, and most of us up here in North America don't have a clue what they are!
Friday, January 2, 2009
Art in the Desert
The first was a collection of Maynard Dixon's paintings and sketches from the Hays collection. Dixon's work is breathtaking to look at. He was a visionary when it came to capturing the American West in all it's glory. Wide vistas, rolling plains, big skies, Native American villages, cowboys at work - all of these elements can be found in Dixon's work. American author Thomas McGuane describes Dixon's art: "The great mood of his work is solitude, the effect of land and space on people. While his work stands perfectly well on its claims to beauty, it offers a spiritual view of the West indispensable to anyone who would understand it." Originally, Dixon sketched cartoons for a variety of newspapers depicting the American West in caricature. He eventually grew jaded with the fake representation of his subject and began painting the West as he truly saw it: unlimited, uninhibted, open, free. Of further personal interest to me was Dixon's 15 year marriage to WPA photographer Dorothea Lange. Having studies Lange and other WPA photographers in my undergrad gave me another frame of reference for Dixon's work.
The second exhibit that caught my eye was by Enrique Chagoya, titled Borderlandia. Chagoya was born in 1953 in Mexico City and studied art in Mexico and the U.S. His work is a great mix of humour and serious political commentary. Borderlandia is a collection of prints, sketches and collage pieces that comment on current U.S. immigration and foreign policy. One of the details that attracted me to Chagoya's work is that he 'updates' other artists' work, that is he takes political art from other artists and modernizes it in relation to the modern political climate. The other aspect of Chagoya's art that makes it quite approachable is that he uses familiar pop images in his work. For me, seeing familiar images that have been reworked gave me multiple points of reference for observing and internalizing Chagoya's art. From the various biographies I have seen, it would appear that the majority of Chagoya's work is in various American and a few Mexican collections. I would love to see Chagoya do a show here in Canada; I think it would be quite eye-opening for many Canadians who don't understand the implications of U.S. immigration policy on the huge population of Latin American immigrants.
Thursday, January 1, 2009
Resolutions galore!
What have I decided on this year? What do I resolve to do? Jesse and I discussed this last night over dinner, as I started spinning off the various things I want to do this year. Jesse stopped me. 'Resolutions are things that your resolve to do, as in, you say you'll do them and then you do them. They're not whims!' he explained. I beg to differ. For me, the New Year is always an opportunity to dream about all those projects or goals or desires I wish to fulfill. If it doesn't happen, I'm usually not overly disappointed. Plus, by not making them formal RESOLUTIONS, I don't feel the pressure to complete them. It's the perfect solution, really.
So, what do I want to do this year?
- take a Korean class
- read more classic literature
- learn more about world politics (Jesse gave me a skeptical look when I said this... 'Don't you already know enough about that stuff?')
- swim
- do yoga once a week
- cook one new amazing dish each month
- explore new restaurants
- try new things in my hometown: go to more shows, visit more galleries, stroll through more parks
- take lots of pictures
- BLOG!
This last one kind of explains this little experiment. I explained to Jesse that what I'm really looking for is somewhere to dish on all my obsessions of the moment, and to rail about politics, and to share great ideas/songs/movies/books/food/etc. that I discover. This seems like the perfect place, non?
So, current obsession du jour: my love of itunes. Yes, I know, so last year (ha!). But really, I'm in love with the whole concept of itunes and the opportunity I have to discover more great music. It's pretty fantastic. My latest discovery is Jon Holden. Fab new UK artist bringing forward mellow DJ sets that are great for that Downtown feel cocktail party you want to plan. A little bit ambient, a little bit drum and bass. I discovered his music through a great little podcast called indiefeed. Check out the electronica player below. I love finding new artists through this podcast!
Fab stuff. Enjoy your first day of the New Year!