Tucked away in a drawer for the better part of five decades, a family in Edinburgh has learned that their treasured heirloom conversation piece is one of the five legendary missing pieces from the Lewis Chessmen (previously), a medieval set from the twelfth century unearthed on the Isle of Lewis in northern Scotland in 1831. A shrewd antiques dealer got the artefact for a bargain of £5 and it has been appraised at over a million pounds—hopefully auctioned off to join its team mates.
Tuesday, 4 June 2019
♚
catagories: ♞, ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ณ๓ ฃ๓ ด๓ ฟ, ๐บ
the thirty-fifth of may
This movement, fomenting the revolutions of the autumn in Eastern Europe but abortive domestically, had originally sought the platform of a visit earlier in May by Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev to normalise Sino-Soviet relations but was not picked up by the international press and failed to garner the desired attention and draw attention to their plight. Though subsequent rallies received heavy coverage, famously the unknown protester called Tank Man who faced down an approaching column once the People’s Army was activated, the movement was suppressed, heavily censored, revised, rewritten and ultimately crushed.
Monday, 3 June 2019
looky loo
Via the ever-interesting Everlasting Blört, we are treated to a rather insightful peek into the dirty and idle differences of gender public-private expression as revealed through an ethnographic look into the graffiti scrawled in restroom stalls.
Clinical and behind a sanitary screen, this study comes complete with evidence and methodologies and illustrates a stark difference between men and women (in a segregated environment) when it comes to messaging, content and audience. One wonders what other factors, biological accommodations, etc come into play and how these differences are magnified or muted in other venues.
6x6
someday my prince will come: life lessons gleaned at the Princess Academy
decolonise this place: a collection of maps presented from an aboriginal perspective, via Nag on the Lake
bathyscope: a ten-hour montage of mesmerising ocean footage
if you just smiled more: an epic discussion thread uses classical paintings to illustrate everyday sexism
the master and margarita: a compelling reading recommendation for Mikhail Bulgakov’s Soviet satire
ะฑะตััะทะบะฐ: the floating step of a ballet ensemble founded by choreographer Nadezhda Nadezhdina
performance triad
Goals and milestones are important and something to focus our efforts but sometimes marketing or marketing ennobled as a rule of thumb can establish norms that make the underlying mission of well-being more opaque—rather than a positive and progressive marker.
One such metric is the adage of getting in one’s ten-thousand steps daily—something that I ascribe to and challenge myself to surpass, but it turns out that the origins of the idea go back to a 1965 campaign by a Japanese pedometer manufacturer (see also), capitalising on the fact that the ideogram, character for ten-thousand (pronounced man or ichi-man) resembles a person taking a stride: ๆน.
Sunday, 2 June 2019
googie
Curbed’s Los Angeles bureau introduces us to the Chinese-American architect that helped establish and inform the Atomic Age style of vernacular architecture that originated in Southern California and manifested itself as Streamline Moderne and populuxe elsewhere in the pioneering personality Helen Liu Fong (*1927 – †2005).
Iconic works including Norms restaurants, Pann’s coffee shops and Bob’s Big Boy among other roadside attractions, many casualties of progress, Fong’s most celebrated and culturally significant project, helping a community on its recovery from internment and ostracizing treatment was the Holiday Bowl in the diverse Crenshaw neighbourhood of the segregated city, the lanes serving as a civic anchor for four decades. Much more to explore at the link above.
catagories: ๐บ๐ธ, ๐ณ, ๐, architecture