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Category Archives: Miscellaneous

MotownPhillyRodin

09 Monday Oct 2017

Posted by jml78 in Art, Miscellaneous, Uncategorized

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food, Philadelphia, Rodin, Title IX

I spent some time in Philadelphia this week in order to think about gender equity in a time of uncertainty and regulatory change. I learned a lot, and left energized by conversations with brilliant colleagues who use their skills as educators and advocates to help make a better world.

The conference reminded me that this moment is an opportunity for all of us to demonstrate commitment to creating a welcome environment for people of all genders and to ending violence and harassment on our campuses.

The experience also helped me realize that the hard working folks in my field need to shift our focus from training models designed to help people understand policy and procedure (message: obey!) to a learning one where we help people learn about healthy relationships (with scaffolding strategies) and persuade people who aren’t inclined to care about our work or listen to us. It was a timely reminder that compliance isn’t enough – we have to get up off the floor and reach for the ceiling.

When I wasn’t doing that work (or dong other work), I used the time as an opportunity to sample some of the amazing cuisine and art in Philadelphia.

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The food was uniformly delicious – from Bridgid’s delectable trout to the oyster po’ boy at Beck’s Cajun Cafe and the bialy and lox at Hershel’s East Side – but the highlight of the trip was a lunchtime visit to the Rodin Museum in the Fairmount neighborhood. The museum is on Benjamin Franklin Parkway, on the path to the Philadelphia Art Museum.
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A replica of Rodin’s Thinker welcomes visitors and passersby at the entrance. I’m familiar with the famous sculpture, but I never spent much time thinking about it, except as a symbol/shorthand for deep contemplation. I marveled at Rodin’s ability to capture such a fundamentally internal process in a statue, but didn’t think about it as a representation of the human figure. When I stood in front of the statue, I found myself focusing on its physical characteristics – the knuckles, the tendons, the obliques, the body language.

The museum is located in a building that evokes ancient Greece. The museum’s website helpfully shares that it’s a Beaux Arts style building, a style of architecture from the 19th and early 20th century derived from France that blended ancient Greek and Roman designs with ones from the Renaissance and Baroque era. There’s usually a sense of grandness with buildings in this style, but the museum feels quiet and intimate. The garden and reflecting pool immediately outside the museum complements this effect – once you pass the two columns at the front of the museum, you feel like you’ve entered a different world.

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The museum features over 140 pieces of Rodin’s work scattered throughout the building and in the garden area, with samples from every phase of his career. I found myself drawn to Rodin’s hands and faces. I love the way that he depicts emotional extremes, from the anguish of the Burghers of Calais walking towards their death and the gates of hell to the passion captured in I Am Beautiful and the exuberance of Youth Triumphant.

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Rodin’s hands are expressive and beautifully rendered. They add layers of meaning to his sculptures. The hands of the burghers – both in the Burghers statues and in the Clenched Hand (an early study for the former) – complement the sense of hopelessness that one gets from Rodin’s faces.

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His Cathedral suggests an intimacy between lovers that is a quieter counterpart to the more demonstrative I Am Beautiful or the powerfully passionate the Damned Women.

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I was also struck by Rodin’s efforts to grapple with the ineffable through his Hand of God and Gates of Hell sculptures. The Hand of God draws a parallel between human and divine acts of creation, with God as divine sculptor, shaping humanity from a barren rock. The contrast between the hyper-real sculpture of a human hand emerging from a block of marble and the impossible image of the partially formed figures materializing from the rock is striking, almost magical. It’s a beautiful metaphor for the creative process.

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The Gates of Hell are a powerful monument to the human experience. It contains figures in agony and ecstatic abandon, along with images suggesting compassion and love (both sexual and maternal).

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The Thinker is perched near the top of the gates, surrounded by figures in all manner of embraces (some of which look passionate, others of which almost look torturous).

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As with the Hand of God, the title of the piece suggests a straightforward religious interpretation, but the sculpture feels like a tangible representation of a doorway to the human mind, complete with chaotic and contradictory emotions and experiences.

The statues are impressive in photographs and art books but gain a magical quality when viewed in person. The interplay of light and shadow over the curves of the statues spark the imagination and add layers of mystery and meaning.

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The hand in the Hand of God felt majestic and awe inspiring upon first view, but after looking at it for a few minutes in the midday light, it almost looked tender.

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New Haven Road Race 2015-17

05 Tuesday Sep 2017

Posted by jml78 in Miscellaneous

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running

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One of the first things I did when I moved to New Haven in the fall of 2014 was to sign up for races. I enjoy running, but due to time constraints, I usually do so in the early morning on nearly empty roads. Races are an opportunity to run with enthusiasts of all genders, ages and sizes. They are also a great way of learning the geography of a new town.

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This is my third year running the New Haven Road Race. The first time I ran, I was following the crowd and hoping that I wouldn’t get lost. By the second, not only did I know where I was going, I knew the best place to get a post-run breakfast (the Pantry on Mechanic Street). Today, I ran through my neighborhood.

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I’ve also become a better runner, which is pretty gratifying. I’ve made some real improvements to my time over the last three years (and have run progressively longer distances when running alone).

Faxon Law New Haven Road Race 
Year Overall Overall w/in age group (30-39) Time  Time (net) Time per mile 
2015 292/3062 29/179 22:00 22:29 7:15
2016 256/2655 26/154 21:33 21:55 7:04
2017 156/2736 15/150 21:00 20:42 6:46

Next Year: 20K!

August 2017 Runs 

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East Rock

02 Wednesday Aug 2017

Posted by jml78 in Miscellaneous

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img_0195For the last two months, I’ve lived in the East Rock neighborhood of New Haven. It’s a leafy area filled with one and two family houses that looks like a blend of a stereotypical college town and Park Slope in the early aughts. Lots of turn of the century homes, quirky coffee shops, artisanal ice stands, and earnest young people having the kind of earnest conversations that only young people can have.

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East Rock has a reputation for being a Yale neighborhood. You can find people from the extended Yale community everywhere in New Haven, but some Yalies are slightly more conspicuous in East Rock. There are slightly more grad students working on their papers at coffee shops or blowing off steam with a beer on their front porch, more bleary eyed residents stumbling home from overnight shifts.

Other members of the community are slightly less present. Students may be Yale’s key (and most visible) stakeholder group, but the University also employs thousands of New Haven residents as faculty, administrators, technicians, custodians, health care providers, cooks and in a wide range of other academic and support roles. When I lived in Wooster Square (a historic middle income area in New Haven), I became accustomed to seeing my colleagues from all levels of the university walking to and from school and work. I was as likely to run into a custodian or accountant walking home as I would a law student or young assistant professor.

I haven’t had that experience in East Rock, but I have encountered people with a wide range of backgrounds from all walks of life. There is some truth to the neighborhood’s reputation as a community dominated by Yale (it’s the residential neighborhood best served by Yale’s shuttle system), but there are plenty of non-Yale folk here who’ve lived in the area for generations.

The best thing about East Rock is that it’s a neighborhood of runners. I don’t think that I’ve ever walked a block in East Rock without passing a person jogging, running, or engaged in some purposeful brisk walking. Some look like they’re training for a race, while others are just having some fun exercise with a loved one or a dog.

The second best thing about East Rock is the East Rock itself, a trap rock ridge at the far end of the neighborhood (and about five blocks from my house). It’s about 1.4 miles long and 366 feet high and a nice occasional addition to my jogging route. It’s surrounded by a 425 acre park filled with trails and playgrounds and partially bounded by a local river.

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The relaxed vibe of the area is contagious. I find myself taking aimless relaxing walks through East Rock to clear my head at the end of a hard day, listening to a worrying podcast about politics or the playlist linked below. Sometimes I take those walks in the morning to prepare myself for a challenging day ahead. I’m probably not going to live in East Rock forever, but for now it feels like home. It’s a nice feeling.

 

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Cell Therapy (Or am i born to lose or is this just a lesson?)

22 Thursday Dec 2016

Posted by jml78 in Miscellaneous

≈ 1 Comment

Hello world. Happy end of 2016.

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The last year has been busy, so no time for blogging (most nights, I have a few minutes to write before I get too tired). The last month has been challenging, but it’s critical to focus on what can be done to mitigate harm and preserve rights for the most vulnerable among us over the coming years.

It’s easy to say and write that, but man, is it hard to follow that advice in practice. The period between the election and the inauguration has felt like a dramatic pause in a horror movie. We have solved the Lament Configuration. We opened it and they came.

We will have to be our own Kristie.

Continue reading →

Avenging the Week: Keep Your Head Up

02 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by jml78 in Miscellaneous

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  • Rattlesnake – St. Vincent
  • Another Young G – Anti-Lilly
  • Keep It Real – Mobb Deep
  • Livin For You – Al Green
  • Far Away – Marsha Ambrosius
  • Be Better Than Me – T.I.
  • Hold the Fuck Up – Duke Da God ft. Juelz Santana + DJ Clue
  • Nao/Now – Kev Brown
  • The Bottle – Cookin’ Soul X Gil-Scott Heron
  • Wholy Holy – The Roots ft. John Legend
  • Comics Quote of the Week

    [W]e need to … stop looking at the comics market as the “big two” or the “big three.”

    There are only two kinds of comics that matter: good comics and bad comics.

    Everything else should be irrelevant.

    So stop letting publishers lie to you and deceive you and your readers so they can prop up their position in this industry in their craven attempts to appease shareholders.

    That may help them in the short-term, and maybe it puts an extra couple coins in your change purse at the end of the week, but the reality of the situation is they have literally everything BUT your best interests at heart.

    -Eric Stephenson, publisher of Image Comics. From his comments at ComicsPRO, the comics retailer trade association. via ComicsBeat.

    Great speech. For some reason, I imagined this in Killa Mike’s voice (from the introduction to his I Pledge Allegiance to the Grind II mixtape). There’s a temptation to focus on his critiques of Marvel and DC, but I’m most interested by his comments on licensed properties. Although I think that original properties native to comics should be the ideal, I’m not entirely sure that it’s fair to characterize licensed comics as ‘lesser’ versions of the original. Sure, there are some blatant cash grabs, but there are some amazing, sublime books – like Christos Gage and Antonio Fuso’s GI Joe: Cobra series or Max Brooks, Howard Chaykin and Antonio Fuso’s GI Joe: Hearts and Minds series – both of which were far superior to the original animated series.

    A few more thoughts:

    • These speeches about the state of the American comics industry remind me that Marvel and DC aren’t in the same business as other publishers. they’re units of larger cultural conglomerates that are primarily interested in maximizing the income from their legacy characters in multiple media. Retailers should always be aware that the long term health of the industry and the art form aren’t the priority of either ‘publisher’.
    • I’ve always thought that the music industry’s problems were related to its failure to fulfill the desire of listeners for disaggregated inexpensive content and it’s overestimation of consumer willingness to keep repurchasing music in different formats. Yeah, the relentless strip mining of the past was a problem (and a poor investment of resources), but I’m not sure that it drove fans away.
    • It’s good to hear a straightforward defense of the direct market that’s not entirely rooted in sentiment or nostalgia. I complain a lot about comics retailers, but there’s no denying that they have a critically important role to play in the future of the American comics industry. I’m a huge fan of digital comics, but it’s hard to ignore the high barriers to entry for less affluent or younger readers who don’t have access to tablets or smart phones.
    • I never completely understood why Saga receives near-universal, almost rapturous praise from its supporters. Saga is a interesting, well made book, but it never struck me as particularly brilliant or transcendent. After reading Stephenson’s comments, I think I get it. Saga’s commercial and critical success helps us imagine a post- Big Two Direct Market that holds on to a non-trivial percentage of exclusively Marvel/DC readers. There have been a number of incredibly successful and widely popular non-superhero comic books not published by Marvel or DC over the last few decades, but Saga is one of the few that captures the visceral thrill of reading superhero comics without referencing the genre at all (Kirkman’s Walking Dead is another notable example). It doesn’t hurt that Brian Vaughan and Fiona Staples have maintained the high quality of the book while adhering to a regular schedule, or that they seem to have the ideal partnership between writer and artist. There’s always been some tension between those who argue that there is a silent majority of fans hungry for mainstream books that are not Marvel/DC superhero books and those (especially risk-conscious retailers) who are reluctant to alienate the fans who comprise the bulk of their customer base. Saga suggests a positive sum solution – a story that appeals to non-traditional audiences while providing the high stakes serialized action and melodrama that superhero readers love.

    Images of the Week

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    -Wes Craig, color art by Lee Loughridge, Deadly Class #2. Story by Rick Remender. I love Craig’s use of the panel borders to direct the reader.

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    -Fiona Staples, Saga #18. Words by Brian Vaughan. Staples’ art is even more impressive when you focus on a single page. You can get lost in every detail.

    Recipe of the Week

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    A mediocre picture of a delicious dinner – salmon pastrami on rye with red cabbage and green apple slaw, via Blue Apron. Not pictured: a side of Nathan’s french fries. I was given a free week of Blue Apron as a gift from a friend during my parental leave and soon became addicted. Every week, the company sends the ingredients and recipes for three interesting meals for two people. My life felt impossible to manage during the first few months of parenthood, and it was nice to not have to think about what I was going to have for dinner for a few days a week. Other than the salmon pastrami on rye (which turned out great even though it didn’t really evoke the tastes I associate with ‘pastrami’), some highlights have included the roast beef with horseradish sour cream and heirloom carrots, the Moroccan Beef Tagine with dates and honey, Seared Cod with Kaffir Lime Juice, and Chicken Supremes & Broccolini
    with Forbidden Rice, Pepitas, & Mustard Sauce
    . I have a few quibbles with Blue Apron – it’s pasta recipes tend to be underwhelming for cooks with pasta experience and they don’t offer customers who select the ‘omnivore’ option an opportunity to opt out of pork dishes – but it’s typically worthwhile.

    Music Video of the Week

    The password to this Nicki Minaj looking ass ni***a mashup is: selfhate from pierre bennu on Vimeo.

    -Pierre Bennu. Inspired by (and featuring music from) Nicki Minaj’s Lookin’ Ass Nigga. The password is “selfhate”. via egotrip. I didn’t find the original video (or Nicki’s appropriation of the image we associate with Malcolm X) particularly offensive (I grew up listening to the first wave of gangsta rap in the late 80’s/early ’90’s after all), but I love Bennu’s response. We can play with offensive, taboo language and imagery all we want, but we should never forget what they actually mean.

    Podcast of the Week

    David Brothers continues his excellent Inkstuds Spotlight series with interviews of Spike Trotman, Jay Potts and LeSean Thomas (the last one is great for those curious about a career in animation). Check it out.

    See you next week.

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