Having its theatrical release on this day in 1970 after premiering at Cannes Film Festival earlier in May, expertly introduced and summarised here by Poseidon’s Underworld, the Otto Preminger film, story and screenplay by author Marjorie Kellogg, starring Liza Minnelli as the titular protagonist who was seriously disfigured on one side of her face by a vicious battery acid attack by her jealous boyfriend and is afterwards institutionalised. There Minelli’s character meets Warren, a gay paraplegic confined to a wheelchair and an epileptic named Arthur, who decide to leave the half-way house and rent a cottage from an eccentric landlady (played by Kay Thompson) together to help each other heal and live their best lives. Desultory and tepidly received though not universally panned, this movie seemed to me to have its heart in the right place. Find nearly a scene-by-scene synopsis and storyboard at the link above.
Thursday, 1 July 2021
Wednesday, 30 June 2021
stock character
Previously we’ve explored how the business and technology of the printed word leaves linguistic fossils but we found ourselves rather dumb-struck over this bit of etymology and extended sense in the rather non-intuitive term stereotype, which like its French equivalent clichรฉ, is derived from the trade and describes dabbed printing from a duplicate plate instead of the original. Both words quickly moved from specialist jargon to common parlance as a way to express platitude, generalisation and bias. The ฯฯฮตฯฮตฯฯ incidentally does not convey in its original sense anything two-channelled, binocular or immersive but rather something firm or solid and three-dimensional whereas a stereotypical person if pretty one-dimensional.
saut de seconde
8x8
billboards and hoardings: the evolution of outdoor advertising
ptychography: a high resolution imaging of atoms—see previously
the village: lovely Mid-Century Modern accommodations in Portmeirion—where The Prisoner was filmed
vqgan+clip: Picasso’s Persistence of Memory with Lisa Frank filter applied—via Waxy
ems: composer and sampling pioneer Peter Zinovieff has passed away, aged eight-eight—via Things Magazine
pulp tarot: a divining deck (previously) informed by Mid-Century illustrations from Todd Alcott
siss-boom-bah: a Japanese pyrotechnics catalogue (see also) from the 1880s
indexing: a look at how the adoption of vertical filing helped ushering the Information Age—see also here and here
Tuesday, 29 June 2021
le pont de trinquetaille
Seeing that on this day in 1987, a Van Gogh (previously here and here) of a bridge scene in Arles fetched a then record twenty million dollars at auction made me reflect on a recent podcast episode about the individual responsible for the artist’s posthumous and compelling fame promoted out of necessity and circumstance, Johanna van Gogh-Bonger (*1862 - †1925), widow of theretofore Van Gogh’s greatest champion, his brother Theo, and sister-in-law who had acquired a great deal of the then worthless works and against the advice of friends and family brought them back to their native Holland from Paris after losing her husband. In order to provide for herself and her child, Van Gogh-Bonger collected and edited an epistolary exchange and between the brothers and family biography, helping to establish her brother-in-law’s fame and reputation, as well as arranging exhibitions, helping to define not only Vincent as a celebrity but the attendant marketplace of the art world as well.
t. hee
Monday, 28 June 2021
heavy-line geometric abugida
catagories: ๐ฃ, ๐, libraries and museums
spokes model
A source for pageantry of the bizarre variety, we were loving how Weird Universe is following up on these niche industrial and sometimes agricultural beauty contests (see also here and here) and limning the winners as more than a promising pretty face with as full of a biography as possible. The champion for the state of Illinois, Miss Trudy Germi only managed to come in third overall in the national competition for Miss Continuous Towel held in Atlantic City in 1949—however she did realise her aspirations for musical comedy in a production of South Pacific. These rolling washroom installations—for hygienic reasons—are not very popular these days but can still be occasionally found. Germi went on to marry a naval captain who was given the task of retrieving the crew of Apollo 11 after splash-down and was present aboard the rescue vessel to greet the astronauts. Much more to explore with Weird Universe at the link up top.