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Ross Lee Finney: Harmonic Innovator | Composer & Arranger Biography
Born in Wells, Minnesota, Finney received his early training at Carleton College and the University of Minnesota and also studied with Nadia Boulanger, Edward Burlingame Hill, Alban Berg and Roger Sessions . In 1928 he spent a year at Harvard University and then joined the faculty at Smith College, where he founded the Smith College Archives and conducted the Northampton Chamber Orchestra. In 1935, his setting of poems by Archibald MacLeish won the Connecticut Valley Prize, and in 1937, his First String Quartet received a Pulitzer Scholarship Award. A Guggenheim Fellowship funded travel in Europe in 1937. During World War II, Finney served in the Office of Strategic Services, and received a Purple Heart and a Certificate of Merit.
In 1948, following a second Guggenheim Fellowship, Finney j...
published: 31 Dec 2023
-
Philipp Meyer Interview: On Facing the Blank Page
“The goal always is to write.” American Philipp Meyer – author of the bestselling novel ‘The Son’ – reveals why he doesn’t believe that a ‘writer’s block’ exists, and how starting a novel is a matter of drowning out your inner critic.
To put words down – whether that be on a computer screen or a piece of paper – is the whole point of being a writer: “Anything that gets in the way of that goal is bad.” When you’re having difficulties writing, you can chiefly blame yourself: “It’s basically insecurity. It’s your own internal critic turned up to a higher level than it’s supposed to be at that moment,” says Meyer. When you’re starting a new book and facing a blank page “your critic has to be turned down to zero.” Only when writing without considering other voices than your own, can the story ...
published: 28 Aug 2015
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Celebs Who Vanished And Were Never Found
When you're famous, just how easy is it to pull off a disappearing act? While wealth can allow someone more mobility than the average absconder, the disappearance of a well-known celebrity is relatively uncommon, and when it happens, it's big news.
Whether they've disappeared accidentally or on purpose, most of these cases remain completely mysterious, with little evidence to come to any definite conclusions. Disappearances happen in broad daylight in Central Park, or leave footprints leading into a desert, or maybe someone just drives off into the sunset to start a new life. Here are a few celebs who vanished and were never found.
#Celebs #Missing #Mystery
Richey Edwards (Vanished: 1995) | 0:12
Connie Converse (Vanished: 1974) | 1:35
Jim Sullivan (Vanished: 1975) | 2:45
Barbara Newhal...
published: 01 Sep 2021
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Deborah Kahn | New York Studio School
Evening Lecture Series, Spring 2020 Season: Deborah Kahn "On Her Work," recorded on February 11, 2020.
Deborah Kahn received her BFA from the Kansas City ArtInstitute in 1974 and her MFA in painting from Yale University in 1978. Kahn is an Associate Professor Emerita of Art, American University, Washington, D.C. In 2004, she was a recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship. Kahn exhibits her work at the Bowery Gallery in New YorkCity, Gross McCleaf Gallery, Philadelphia, PA and Les Yeux DuMonde Gallery, Charlottesville, VA.
Please consider making a gift to the Evening Lecture Series. Your donation will support the Series ongoing twice-weekly discussions of contemporary art and art history, which are free and open to all.
https://nyss.org/support/donate/
The NYSS...
published: 27 Feb 2020
-
Philipp Meyer Interview: Art is an Animal Inside Me
Acclaimed American novelist Philipp Meyer has had many failed attempts at writing, but feels lucky that he got to discover his literary voice in private. He here shares why he writes and what keeps him going: “It’s an animal drive to write or make art.”
“There is one goal. Only one thing that actually matters, and that is that you keep on writing. Whatever it takes to keep on writing. You lie to yourself in small ways. You lie to yourself in big ways.” Meyer worked in an investment bank for a couple of years, but soon started calling in sick so he could stay at home and write. Realizing that writing books was the only thing that really made him happy, he quit the bank, moved back to his parent’s place and did assorted part-time jobs – from driving an ambulance to remodelling houses – in ...
published: 09 Jul 2015
-
List of Stuyvesant High School people
This article lists notable people associated with Stuyvesant High School in New York City, New York, organized into rough professional areas and listed in order by their graduating class.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Stuyvesant_High_School_people
Created with WikipediaReaderReborn (c) WikipediaReader
published: 06 Nov 2021
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Barbara Crane
A legendary artist to emerge from the Institute of Design, Barbara Crane is a forerunner in experimental and abstract photography and has conceptually explored many photographic processes throughout her career. She creates photographs that are vivid descriptions and interpretations of both city and woodlands that allude to her intellectual and emotional experiences. Crane will present an overview of her work and life as a pioneering photographic artist, and she will share the creative vision that has carried her through more than 60 years as an artist.
As one of the America's leading photographic artists, Barbara Crane's work can be found in numerous public and private collections throughout the United States and abroad. She is the recipient of two grants from National Endowment for the ...
published: 12 Apr 2013
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Annenberg Research Seminar - Michael Schudson
Feb. 2, 2009: Annenberg Research Seminar - Michael Schudson, UCSD
Join students and faculty for a presentation by Michael Schudson, professor of communication at the University of California at San Diego. His topic: Toward a cultural history of public disclosure, 1950s-present. From Dr. Schudson: "In the past half century, new practices of governmental and institutional accountability, new investigative capacities of the news media, new watchdog organizations in and out of government, and new norms of frankness in professional, personal, and governmental relations have emerged. What are they? Where did they come from? What does this mean for the moral history of modernity?"
published: 26 Mar 2009
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Susan Ervin M Tripp and her work
Susan Ervin M Tripp and her work
Dr. Om Prakash
School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Gautam Buddha University, Greater Noida,
UP-201312
published: 11 Oct 2022
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Lewis Baltz and The New Topographics
In this episode of The Crit House Masters, we look at Lewis Baltz and his place in photographic history.
Lewis Baltz was a master of capturing the essence of manufactured structures and landscapes in stark black-and-white images. In the early 1970s, his austere and monochrome pictures of suburban development helped redefine American landscape photography. Baltz was part of the New Topographics movement, sharing an aesthetic that drew on contemporary art and rejected the romanticism of traditional landscape photography.
We are honored to have two prominent photographers and educators on The Crit House to discuss Baltz's work, Michael Hintlian and Neal Rantoul.
Neal Rantoul is an artist and educator. He was the head of the Photo Program at Northeastern University for 30 years. He tau...
published: 04 Jun 2023
5:48
Ross Lee Finney: Harmonic Innovator | Composer & Arranger Biography
Born in Wells, Minnesota, Finney received his early training at Carleton College and the University of Minnesota and also studied with Nadia Boulanger, Edward B...
Born in Wells, Minnesota, Finney received his early training at Carleton College and the University of Minnesota and also studied with Nadia Boulanger, Edward Burlingame Hill, Alban Berg and Roger Sessions . In 1928 he spent a year at Harvard University and then joined the faculty at Smith College, where he founded the Smith College Archives and conducted the Northampton Chamber Orchestra. In 1935, his setting of poems by Archibald MacLeish won the Connecticut Valley Prize, and in 1937, his First String Quartet received a Pulitzer Scholarship Award. A Guggenheim Fellowship funded travel in Europe in 1937. During World War II, Finney served in the Office of Strategic Services, and received a Purple Heart and a Certificate of Merit.
In 1948, following a second Guggenheim Fellowship, Finney joined the University of Michigan faculty. There he was the founder of the University of Michigan Electronic Music Studio in 1965 and composed the score for the sesquicentennial celebration of the University of Michigan in 1967. He retired in 1974.
Finney's works were presented at the 1965 Congregation of the Arts at the Hopkins Center of Dartmouth College, at the University of Kansas, the University of Southern California, and for the 1966 Festival of Contemporary Music at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Finney collected many honors, including membership in the National Institute of Arts and Letters, honorary membership in Phi Beta Kappa and an honorary doctorate from Carleton College. His "Second Symphony" represented the United States at the 1963 Rostrum of International Composers at UNESCO headquarters at Paris.
According to the notes for the Composers Recordings, Inc. recording of Finney's Cello Sonata No. 2 , Chromatic Fantasy In E for solo cello and Piano Trio No. 2 , he received the Rome Prize in 1960 and the Brandeis Medal in 1968. He is quoted in those notes as having begun writing serial music from time to time beginning in 1950 with his String Quartet No. 6 , his next composition after the sonata.
For his students See: List of music students by teacher: C to F#Ross Lee Finney.
Finney died on February 4, 1997, at his home in Carmel, California. He was 90.
#RossLeeFinney #biography #composer #VIS #VISMUSIC #music
41d4
https://wn.com/Ross_Lee_Finney_Harmonic_Innovator_|_Composer_Arranger_Biography
Born in Wells, Minnesota, Finney received his early training at Carleton College and the University of Minnesota and also studied with Nadia Boulanger, Edward Burlingame Hill, Alban Berg and Roger Sessions . In 1928 he spent a year at Harvard University and then joined the faculty at Smith College, where he founded the Smith College Archives and conducted the Northampton Chamber Orchestra. In 1935, his setting of poems by Archibald MacLeish won the Connecticut Valley Prize, and in 1937, his First String Quartet received a Pulitzer Scholarship Award. A Guggenheim Fellowship funded travel in Europe in 1937. During World War II, Finney served in the Office of Strategic Services, and received a Purple Heart and a Certificate of Merit.
In 1948, following a second Guggenheim Fellowship, Finney joined the University of Michigan faculty. There he was the founder of the University of Michigan Electronic Music Studio in 1965 and composed the score for the sesquicentennial celebration of the University of Michigan in 1967. He retired in 1974.
Finney's works were presented at the 1965 Congregation of the Arts at the Hopkins Center of Dartmouth College, at the University of Kansas, the University of Southern California, and for the 1966 Festival of Contemporary Music at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Finney collected many honors, including membership in the National Institute of Arts and Letters, honorary membership in Phi Beta Kappa and an honorary doctorate from Carleton College. His "Second Symphony" represented the United States at the 1963 Rostrum of International Composers at UNESCO headquarters at Paris.
According to the notes for the Composers Recordings, Inc. recording of Finney's Cello Sonata No. 2 , Chromatic Fantasy In E for solo cello and Piano Trio No. 2 , he received the Rome Prize in 1960 and the Brandeis Medal in 1968. He is quoted in those notes as having begun writing serial music from time to time beginning in 1950 with his String Quartet No. 6 , his next composition after the sonata.
For his students See: List of music students by teacher: C to F#Ross Lee Finney.
Finney died on February 4, 1997, at his home in Carmel, California. He was 90.
#RossLeeFinney #biography #composer #VIS #VISMUSIC #music
41d4
- published: 31 Dec 2023
- views: 34
2:38
Philipp Meyer Interview: On Facing the Blank Page
“The goal always is to write.” American Philipp Meyer – author of the bestselling novel ‘The Son’ – reveals why he doesn’t believe that a ‘writer’s block’ exist...
“The goal always is to write.” American Philipp Meyer – author of the bestselling novel ‘The Son’ – reveals why he doesn’t believe that a ‘writer’s block’ exists, and how starting a novel is a matter of drowning out your inner critic.
To put words down – whether that be on a computer screen or a piece of paper – is the whole point of being a writer: “Anything that gets in the way of that goal is bad.” When you’re having difficulties writing, you can chiefly blame yourself: “It’s basically insecurity. It’s your own internal critic turned up to a higher level than it’s supposed to be at that moment,” says Meyer. When you’re starting a new book and facing a blank page “your critic has to be turned down to zero.” Only when writing without considering other voices than your own, can the story and its characters truly form.
Philipp Meyer (b. 1974) is an American novelist. Meyer’s first novel, ‘American Rust’ (2009), won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and his second novel, ‘The Son’ (2013), was runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize in Literature and has been on the bestseller list in several countries. Meyer is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship (2010), a Doie Paisano Fellowship (2010) and in the same year he was named one of The New Yorker’s 20 best writers under 40. He lives in Austin, Texas. Find out more about him here: http://www.philippmeyer.net/
Philipp Meyer was interviewed by Tonny Vorm in connection to the Louisiana Literature festival at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark in August 2014.
Camera: Mathias Nyholm, Nikolaj Jungersen and Klaus Elmer
Produced and edited by: Kasper Bech Dyg
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015
Supported by Nordea-fonden
https://wn.com/Philipp_Meyer_Interview_On_Facing_The_Blank_Page
“The goal always is to write.” American Philipp Meyer – author of the bestselling novel ‘The Son’ – reveals why he doesn’t believe that a ‘writer’s block’ exists, and how starting a novel is a matter of drowning out your inner critic.
To put words down – whether that be on a computer screen or a piece of paper – is the whole point of being a writer: “Anything that gets in the way of that goal is bad.” When you’re having difficulties writing, you can chiefly blame yourself: “It’s basically insecurity. It’s your own internal critic turned up to a higher level than it’s supposed to be at that moment,” says Meyer. When you’re starting a new book and facing a blank page “your critic has to be turned down to zero.” Only when writing without considering other voices than your own, can the story and its characters truly form.
Philipp Meyer (b. 1974) is an American novelist. Meyer’s first novel, ‘American Rust’ (2009), won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and his second novel, ‘The Son’ (2013), was runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize in Literature and has been on the bestseller list in several countries. Meyer is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship (2010), a Doie Paisano Fellowship (2010) and in the same year he was named one of The New Yorker’s 20 best writers under 40. He lives in Austin, Texas. Find out more about him here: http://www.philippmeyer.net/
Philipp Meyer was interviewed by Tonny Vorm in connection to the Louisiana Literature festival at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark in August 2014.
Camera: Mathias Nyholm, Nikolaj Jungersen and Klaus Elmer
Produced and edited by: Kasper Bech Dyg
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015
Supported by Nordea-fonden
- published: 28 Aug 2015
- views: 2283
21:33
Celebs Who Vanished And Were Never Found
When you're famous, just how easy is it to pull off a disappearing act? While wealth can allow someone more mobility than the average absconder, the disappearan...
When you're famous, just how easy is it to pull off a disappearing act? While wealth can allow someone more mobility than the average absconder, the disappearance of a well-known celebrity is relatively uncommon, and when it happens, it's big news.
Whether they've disappeared accidentally or on purpose, most of these cases remain completely mysterious, with little evidence to come to any definite conclusions. Disappearances happen in broad daylight in Central Park, or leave footprints leading into a desert, or maybe someone just drives off into the sunset to start a new life. Here are a few celebs who vanished and were never found.
#Celebs #Missing #Mystery
Richey Edwards (Vanished: 1995) | 0:12
Connie Converse (Vanished: 1974) | 1:35
Jim Sullivan (Vanished: 1975) | 2:45
Barbara Newhall Follett (Vanished: 1939) | 3:59
Rico Harris (Vanished: 2014) | 5:02
Scott Smith (Vanished: 2000) | 6:18
Antoine de Saint-Exupery (Vanished: 1944) | 7:19
Theodosia Burr Alston (Vanished: 1813) | 8:41
Glenn Miller (Vanished: 1944) | 10:00
Jimmy Hoffa (Vanished: 1975) | 10:51
Licorice McKechnie (Vanished: 1987) | 11:56
Ylenia Carrisi (Vanished: 1994) | 12:46
Forrest Schab (Vanished: 2010) | 13:38
Zelim Bakaev (Vanished: 2017) | 14:20
John Brisker (Vanished: 1978) | 15:30
Slim Wintermute (Vanished: 1977) | 16:17
Amelia Earhart (Vanished: 1937) | 17:03
Hart Crane (Vanished: 1932) | 18:19
Joe Pichler (Vanished: 2006) | 19:17
Dorothy Arnold (Vanished: 1910) | 20:11
Read Full Article: https://www.grunge.com/87149/celebs-still-missing-today/
https://wn.com/Celebs_Who_Vanished_And_Were_Never_Found
When you're famous, just how easy is it to pull off a disappearing act? While wealth can allow someone more mobility than the average absconder, the disappearance of a well-known celebrity is relatively uncommon, and when it happens, it's big news.
Whether they've disappeared accidentally or on purpose, most of these cases remain completely mysterious, with little evidence to come to any definite conclusions. Disappearances happen in broad daylight in Central Park, or leave footprints leading into a desert, or maybe someone just drives off into the sunset to start a new life. Here are a few celebs who vanished and were never found.
#Celebs #Missing #Mystery
Richey Edwards (Vanished: 1995) | 0:12
Connie Converse (Vanished: 1974) | 1:35
Jim Sullivan (Vanished: 1975) | 2:45
Barbara Newhall Follett (Vanished: 1939) | 3:59
Rico Harris (Vanished: 2014) | 5:02
Scott Smith (Vanished: 2000) | 6:18
Antoine de Saint-Exupery (Vanished: 1944) | 7:19
Theodosia Burr Alston (Vanished: 1813) | 8:41
Glenn Miller (Vanished: 1944) | 10:00
Jimmy Hoffa (Vanished: 1975) | 10:51
Licorice McKechnie (Vanished: 1987) | 11:56
Ylenia Carrisi (Vanished: 1994) | 12:46
Forrest Schab (Vanished: 2010) | 13:38
Zelim Bakaev (Vanished: 2017) | 14:20
John Brisker (Vanished: 1978) | 15:30
Slim Wintermute (Vanished: 1977) | 16:17
Amelia Earhart (Vanished: 1937) | 17:03
Hart Crane (Vanished: 1932) | 18:19
Joe Pichler (Vanished: 2006) | 19:17
Dorothy Arnold (Vanished: 1910) | 20:11
Read Full Article: https://www.grunge.com/87149/celebs-still-missing-today/
- published: 01 Sep 2021
- views: 999970
35:58
Deborah Kahn | New York Studio School
Evening Lecture Series, Spring 2020 Season: Deborah Kahn "On Her Work," recorded on February 11, 2020.
Deborah Kahn received her BFA from the Kansas City ArtIn...
Evening Lecture Series, Spring 2020 Season: Deborah Kahn "On Her Work," recorded on February 11, 2020.
Deborah Kahn received her BFA from the Kansas City ArtInstitute in 1974 and her MFA in painting from Yale University in 1978. Kahn is an Associate Professor Emerita of Art, American University, Washington, D.C. In 2004, she was a recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship. Kahn exhibits her work at the Bowery Gallery in New YorkCity, Gross McCleaf Gallery, Philadelphia, PA and Les Yeux DuMonde Gallery, Charlottesville, VA.
Please consider making a gift to the Evening Lecture Series. Your donation will support the Series ongoing twice-weekly discussions of contemporary art and art history, which are free and open to all.
https://nyss.org/support/donate/
The NYSS Evening Lecture Series is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. This online archive is funded in part by the Joan Hohlt and Roger Wich Foundation, and additional support is generously provided by the Robert Lehman Foundation and many individual contributors. NYSS is deeply grateful for the support of its programs.
https://wn.com/Deborah_Kahn_|_New_York_Studio_School
Evening Lecture Series, Spring 2020 Season: Deborah Kahn "On Her Work," recorded on February 11, 2020.
Deborah Kahn received her BFA from the Kansas City ArtInstitute in 1974 and her MFA in painting from Yale University in 1978. Kahn is an Associate Professor Emerita of Art, American University, Washington, D.C. In 2004, she was a recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship. Kahn exhibits her work at the Bowery Gallery in New YorkCity, Gross McCleaf Gallery, Philadelphia, PA and Les Yeux DuMonde Gallery, Charlottesville, VA.
Please consider making a gift to the Evening Lecture Series. Your donation will support the Series ongoing twice-weekly discussions of contemporary art and art history, which are free and open to all.
https://nyss.org/support/donate/
The NYSS Evening Lecture Series is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. This online archive is funded in part by the Joan Hohlt and Roger Wich Foundation, and additional support is generously provided by the Robert Lehman Foundation and many individual contributors. NYSS is deeply grateful for the support of its programs.
- published: 27 Feb 2020
- views: 274
26:14
Philipp Meyer Interview: Art is an Animal Inside Me
Acclaimed American novelist Philipp Meyer has had many failed attempts at writing, but feels lucky that he got to discover his literary voice in private. He her...
Acclaimed American novelist Philipp Meyer has had many failed attempts at writing, but feels lucky that he got to discover his literary voice in private. He here shares why he writes and what keeps him going: “It’s an animal drive to write or make art.”
“There is one goal. Only one thing that actually matters, and that is that you keep on writing. Whatever it takes to keep on writing. You lie to yourself in small ways. You lie to yourself in big ways.” Meyer worked in an investment bank for a couple of years, but soon started calling in sick so he could stay at home and write. Realizing that writing books was the only thing that really made him happy, he quit the bank, moved back to his parent’s place and did assorted part-time jobs – from driving an ambulance to remodelling houses – in order to have time to write. It took ten years of taking himself seriously as a writer before he found his voice: “The first book was terrible and the second mediocre.”
Meyer grew up in a rough run-down neighbourhood in Baltimore. His bohemian intellectual parents always struggled financially – his mother was an artist and his father a perpetual graduate student. This background inspired his first novel ‘American Rust’ (2009), which is set in an economically devastated Pennsylvania steel town, where desperation and the lost American dream flourishes: “That wasn’t quite my childhood, but it was the childhood of all my neighbours.”
Ignoring everyone else’s opinion of his work is key to Meyer: “Your ego has to be bulletproof,” he feels, quoting legendary musician and poet Leonard Cohen. Furthermore, praise and comparison to other writers can be as damaging artistically as someone saying you’re horrible, because it interferes with your own unique voice: “When you’re worried about what other people think, you’re done. You’re completely screwed.”
Philipp Meyer (b. 1974) is an American novelist. Meyer’s first novel, ‘American Rust’ (2009), won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and his second novel, ‘The Son’ (2013), was runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize in Literature and has been on the bestseller list in several countries. Meyer is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship (2010), a Doie Paisano Fellowship (2010) and in the same year he was named one of The New Yorker’s 20 best writers under 40. He lives in Austin, Texas. Find out more about him here: http://www.philippmeyer.net/
Philipp Meyer was interviewed by Tonny Vorm at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark in August 2014.
Camera: Mathias Nyholm, Nikolaj Jungersen and Klaus Elmer
Edited by: Sonja Strange
Produced by: Marc-Christoph Wagner
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015
Supported by Nordea-fonden
https://wn.com/Philipp_Meyer_Interview_Art_Is_An_Animal_Inside_Me
Acclaimed American novelist Philipp Meyer has had many failed attempts at writing, but feels lucky that he got to discover his literary voice in private. He here shares why he writes and what keeps him going: “It’s an animal drive to write or make art.”
“There is one goal. Only one thing that actually matters, and that is that you keep on writing. Whatever it takes to keep on writing. You lie to yourself in small ways. You lie to yourself in big ways.” Meyer worked in an investment bank for a couple of years, but soon started calling in sick so he could stay at home and write. Realizing that writing books was the only thing that really made him happy, he quit the bank, moved back to his parent’s place and did assorted part-time jobs – from driving an ambulance to remodelling houses – in order to have time to write. It took ten years of taking himself seriously as a writer before he found his voice: “The first book was terrible and the second mediocre.”
Meyer grew up in a rough run-down neighbourhood in Baltimore. His bohemian intellectual parents always struggled financially – his mother was an artist and his father a perpetual graduate student. This background inspired his first novel ‘American Rust’ (2009), which is set in an economically devastated Pennsylvania steel town, where desperation and the lost American dream flourishes: “That wasn’t quite my childhood, but it was the childhood of all my neighbours.”
Ignoring everyone else’s opinion of his work is key to Meyer: “Your ego has to be bulletproof,” he feels, quoting legendary musician and poet Leonard Cohen. Furthermore, praise and comparison to other writers can be as damaging artistically as someone saying you’re horrible, because it interferes with your own unique voice: “When you’re worried about what other people think, you’re done. You’re completely screwed.”
Philipp Meyer (b. 1974) is an American novelist. Meyer’s first novel, ‘American Rust’ (2009), won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and his second novel, ‘The Son’ (2013), was runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize in Literature and has been on the bestseller list in several countries. Meyer is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship (2010), a Doie Paisano Fellowship (2010) and in the same year he was named one of The New Yorker’s 20 best writers under 40. He lives in Austin, Texas. Find out more about him here: http://www.philippmeyer.net/
Philipp Meyer was interviewed by Tonny Vorm at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark in August 2014.
Camera: Mathias Nyholm, Nikolaj Jungersen and Klaus Elmer
Edited by: Sonja Strange
Produced by: Marc-Christoph Wagner
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015
Supported by Nordea-fonden
- published: 09 Jul 2015
- views: 4933
30:12
List of Stuyvesant High School people
This article lists notable people associated with Stuyvesant High School in New York City, New York, organized into rough professional areas and listed in order...
This article lists notable people associated with Stuyvesant High School in New York City, New York, organized into rough professional areas and listed in order by their graduating class.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Stuyvesant_High_School_people
Created with WikipediaReaderReborn (c) WikipediaReader
https://wn.com/List_Of_Stuyvesant_High_School_People
This article lists notable people associated with Stuyvesant High School in New York City, New York, organized into rough professional areas and listed in order by their graduating class.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Stuyvesant_High_School_people
Created with WikipediaReaderReborn (c) WikipediaReader
- published: 06 Nov 2021
- views: 32
1:16:42
Barbara Crane
A legendary artist to emerge from the Institute of Design, Barbara Crane is a forerunner in experimental and abstract photography and has conceptually explored ...
A legendary artist to emerge from the Institute of Design, Barbara Crane is a forerunner in experimental and abstract photography and has conceptually explored many photographic processes throughout her career. She creates photographs that are vivid descriptions and interpretations of both city and woodlands that allude to her intellectual and emotional experiences. Crane will present an overview of her work and life as a pioneering photographic artist, and she will share the creative vision that has carried her through more than 60 years as an artist.
As one of the America's leading photographic artists, Barbara Crane's work can be found in numerous public and private collections throughout the United States and abroad. She is the recipient of two grants from National Endowment for the Arts, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and an Illinois Arts Council Artists Fellowship Award. She received the YWCA Outstanding Achievement Award in the Arts and was awarded the first Ruth Horwich Award to a Famous Chicago Artist by the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs. She is Professor Emeritus at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she taught for 28 years.
https://wn.com/Barbara_Crane
A legendary artist to emerge from the Institute of Design, Barbara Crane is a forerunner in experimental and abstract photography and has conceptually explored many photographic processes throughout her career. She creates photographs that are vivid descriptions and interpretations of both city and woodlands that allude to her intellectual and emotional experiences. Crane will present an overview of her work and life as a pioneering photographic artist, and she will share the creative vision that has carried her through more than 60 years as an artist.
As one of the America's leading photographic artists, Barbara Crane's work can be found in numerous public and private collections throughout the United States and abroad. She is the recipient of two grants from National Endowment for the Arts, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, and an Illinois Arts Council Artists Fellowship Award. She received the YWCA Outstanding Achievement Award in the Arts and was awarded the first Ruth Horwich Award to a Famous Chicago Artist by the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs. She is Professor Emeritus at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she taught for 28 years.
- published: 12 Apr 2013
- views: 573
1:08:16
Annenberg Research Seminar - Michael Schudson
Feb. 2, 2009: Annenberg Research Seminar - Michael Schudson, UCSD
Join students and faculty for a presentation by Michael Schudson, professor of communicatio...
Feb. 2, 2009: Annenberg Research Seminar - Michael Schudson, UCSD
Join students and faculty for a presentation by Michael Schudson, professor of communication at the University of California at San Diego. His topic: Toward a cultural history of public disclosure, 1950s-present. From Dr. Schudson: "In the past half century, new practices of governmental and institutional accountability, new investigative capacities of the news media, new watchdog organizations in and out of government, and new norms of frankness in professional, personal, and governmental relations have emerged. What are they? Where did they come from? What does this mean for the moral history of modernity?"
https://wn.com/Annenberg_Research_Seminar_Michael_Schudson
Feb. 2, 2009: Annenberg Research Seminar - Michael Schudson, UCSD
Join students and faculty for a presentation by Michael Schudson, professor of communication at the University of California at San Diego. His topic: Toward a cultural history of public disclosure, 1950s-present. From Dr. Schudson: "In the past half century, new practices of governmental and institutional accountability, new investigative capacities of the news media, new watchdog organizations in and out of government, and new norms of frankness in professional, personal, and governmental relations have emerged. What are they? Where did they come from? What does this mean for the moral history of modernity?"
- published: 26 Mar 2009
- views: 684
24:09
Susan Ervin M Tripp and her work
Susan Ervin M Tripp and her work
Dr. Om Prakash
School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Gautam Buddha University, Greater Noida,
UP-201312
Susan Ervin M Tripp and her work
Dr. Om Prakash
School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Gautam Buddha University, Greater Noida,
UP-201312
https://wn.com/Susan_Ervin_M_Tripp_And_Her_Work
Susan Ervin M Tripp and her work
Dr. Om Prakash
School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Gautam Buddha University, Greater Noida,
UP-201312
- published: 11 Oct 2022
- views: 196
51:04
Lewis Baltz and The New Topographics
In this episode of The Crit House Masters, we look at Lewis Baltz and his place in photographic history.
Lewis Baltz was a master of capturing the essence of...
In this episode of The Crit House Masters, we look at Lewis Baltz and his place in photographic history.
Lewis Baltz was a master of capturing the essence of manufactured structures and landscapes in stark black-and-white images. In the early 1970s, his austere and monochrome pictures of suburban development helped redefine American landscape photography. Baltz was part of the New Topographics movement, sharing an aesthetic that drew on contemporary art and rejected the romanticism of traditional landscape photography.
We are honored to have two prominent photographers and educators on The Crit House to discuss Baltz's work, Michael Hintlian and Neal Rantoul.
Neal Rantoul is an artist and educator. He was the head of the Photo Program at Northeastern University for 30 years. He taught at Harvard University. He now focuses on doing new work and bringing earlier work to a national and international audience.
https://www.nealrantoul.com
IG - @nealrantoulstudio
Michael Hintlian is a photographer educated at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts. He has taught at The School of the Museum of Fine Arts, the New England School of Photography, The New School for Social Research, and the Parsons School of Design. His work has appeared in publications internationally and is widely exhibited and collected. His book is Digging: The Workers of Boston's Big Dig.
https://www.hintlian.com/index
IG - @hintlian_1
https://wn.com/Lewis_Baltz_And_The_New_Topographics
In this episode of The Crit House Masters, we look at Lewis Baltz and his place in photographic history.
Lewis Baltz was a master of capturing the essence of manufactured structures and landscapes in stark black-and-white images. In the early 1970s, his austere and monochrome pictures of suburban development helped redefine American landscape photography. Baltz was part of the New Topographics movement, sharing an aesthetic that drew on contemporary art and rejected the romanticism of traditional landscape photography.
We are honored to have two prominent photographers and educators on The Crit House to discuss Baltz's work, Michael Hintlian and Neal Rantoul.
Neal Rantoul is an artist and educator. He was the head of the Photo Program at Northeastern University for 30 years. He taught at Harvard University. He now focuses on doing new work and bringing earlier work to a national and international audience.
https://www.nealrantoul.com
IG - @nealrantoulstudio
Michael Hintlian is a photographer educated at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts. He has taught at The School of the Museum of Fine Arts, the New England School of Photography, The New School for Social Research, and the Parsons School of Design. His work has appeared in publications internationally and is widely exhibited and collected. His book is Digging: The Workers of Boston's Big Dig.
https://www.hintlian.com/index
IG - @hintlian_1
- published: 04 Jun 2023
- views: 9662