29 December 2018 |
Thursday, December 29, 2022
Thursday, December 22, 2022
Wednesday, December 21, 2022
Making The Holiday Rounds
Monday, December 19, 2022
Saturday, December 17, 2022
Monday, December 12, 2022
Wednesday, December 7, 2022
Saturday, December 3, 2022
Monday, November 28, 2022
A Cityscape Transformed by the Unveiling of a Mountainscape
Saturday, November 19, 2022
Wednesday, November 16, 2022
What's At the Rialto Market These Days
Sunday, November 13, 2022
Late Night Reflections of Ca'D'Oro
Thursday, November 10, 2022
Sore Thumb Beside the Rialto Bridge, Designed By Rem Koolhaas's OMA Studio
The Fondaco dei Tedeschi, the second largest historical building in Venice, and most recently the city's central post office, was re-opened on October 1, 2016 as a large duty-free shop oriented toward Asian tourists after a significant re-design by the architect and theorist Rem Koolhaas and his OMA Studio that opened up some interesting perspectives within the old structure (see above). Unfrequented by Venetians, however, and despite its central location right beside the Rialto Bridge, this large building, with its foundations in the 13th century, sticks out (as they say) like a store thumb in what subsists of local life. (photo: 10 November 2016) |
Sunday, November 6, 2022
Wednesday, November 2, 2022
Monday, October 31, 2022
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
Sunday, October 23, 2022
Wednesday, October 19, 2022
Friday, October 14, 2022
Tuesday, October 11, 2022
Friday, October 7, 2022
Monday, October 3, 2022
Friday, September 30, 2022
Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta, With Swans (Torcello)
29 September 2019 |
The qualities of the colors in this image (to the extent that they can even be suggested by a photo, which can serve, after all and at best, only as an analogy of the actual scene--as even the finest recording of music offers but a kind of "parallel" and reductive version of actual living music), the chalky or almost pastel look of them as they appear in the autumnal late-afternoon marine light of the lagoon, is one of the things I miss most about Venice. As the old Venetian painters well knew, it's an atmosphere in which color takes precedence, seems more substantial than form, and the interplay of tones is everything. Let the Tuscans worry about drawing, about delineating forms in space and mathematical perspective--in the lagoon it's all a wash.
Wednesday, September 28, 2022
Saturday, September 24, 2022
Tuesday, September 20, 2022
Saturday, September 17, 2022
Tuesday, September 13, 2022
Thursday, September 8, 2022
Sunday, September 4, 2022
Head Over Heels in the South Lagoon
Tuesday, August 30, 2022
Friday, August 26, 2022
Tuesday, August 23, 2022
Friday, August 19, 2022
Tuesday, August 16, 2022
Saturday, August 13, 2022
Tuesday, August 9, 2022
Giudecca's Eye View
Saturday, August 6, 2022
Tuesday, August 2, 2022
Summer Storm Clearing Over the Grand Canal
Monday, July 25, 2022
Friday, July 22, 2022
Tuesday, July 19, 2022
Saturday, July 16, 2022
Friday, July 15, 2022
Tuesday, July 12, 2022
Saturday, July 9, 2022
Monday, July 4, 2022
Monday, June 27, 2022
Thursday, June 23, 2022
Dark Reflections at Dusk on Riva Dei Sette Martiri
21 June 2015 |
During each Biennale the line of yachts anchored along the Riva dei Sette Martiri a short distance from the traditional seat of the exhibition in the Giardini tends to represent a rogues gallery of international oligarchs: mobsters from around the world, like Russia's Roman Abramovich, who've made a killing (quite literally: see Russia's "Aluminum Wars" of the 1990s) in the kleptocratic privatization of their home country's assets, or monopolists like Microsoft co-fonder Paul Allen.
The yacht above belongs to the billionaire Les Wexner, founder of the clothing chain The Limited, whose holdings would eventually expand to include Victoria's Secret, Abercrombie & Fitch, and Bath & Body Works. But Wexner is now most notorious as the man who in the 1980s developed a very close personal relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, becoming the "main client" of the money management firm of the college drop out, and staking him with the means that would allow the latter to forge ties with American presidents, British royals, and other prominent international power brokers in the construction of what was Epstein's real business: sex trafficking.
What Epstein was selling to men rich enough to buy whatever they wanted with impunity, was indeed the idea of life without any limits, a life lived well beyond the reach of national or international law.
It also seemed to me at the time I took this image to be one of the primary strains of American thought: this fantasy--decidedly infantile in nature--of a world without any kind of constraints, or restraint. You know the words and the associated myth: "liberty," "freedom," so vague as to be meaningless, and often used as justification for all kinds of abuses and violence. At the very least, with a kind of sociopathic selfishness.
In the summer of 2015 the grotesque embodiment of this infantile, sociopathological strain in American thought was running for president. He was not an anomaly then, he is not one now. Nor are his followers, nor the party which he heads, which is now overtly fascist, with its threats of violence, its openly anti-democratic aspirations, its aim to destroy all sense and reason in public discourse, its substitution of histrionic self-pitying displays of grievance for any actual policy proposals or interest in governance, its aim of destroying the state with its admittedly imperfect checks and balances with a one-party rule of limitless power...
Limitless corruption, limitless oppression, limitless exploitation: this is the promise of those who are euphemistically called "nationalists" or "populists" (though they are inevitably in the pocket of corporate interests and promoting a ruling party whose rules are essentially written by corporations).
There's an irony in seeing nations such as England and the US once accused of the crimes of colonialism turning the brutal practices of colonialism upon their own citizens in their home countries: for example, one no longer needs to live in the Niger Delta to be subjected to a poisoned water supply, it's common throughout the US, and one need not live in a Native American reservation to be subjected to sub-par schools, medical access, and infrastructure.
The limitless, unbounded proliferation of cells in the body is known as cancer. In the body politic the fantasy of limitlessness is no less cancerous and no less deadly.