Archive for October, 2011

this is something you can do. don’t feel powerless against banks take action

October 20, 2011

More pictures of the OCCUPY WALL STREET demonstrations 10/18/11, Jene Youtt

last night mary came over and we when down to photo salon to see various photographers portfolios and she asked had i read her blog post ‘Fix it or toss it out’ which i quote the beginning here

Fix it or toss it out!

I guess what I am really trying to say is some times something is so broken that it is beyond fixing and you are just throwing good money after bad and that is what the government did when they thought that we had to bail out banks and financial corporations and keeping these executives in power – i.e. –  greed continues to pay off and campaign funds flow in by the millions.  That’s the way I feel about our Financial Banking System and our government.

We are so lucky to have the freedoms of speech and I love that the people are standing up and fighting back.  We are 99% and I think soon some politicians are going to take us seriously.  We have witnessed uprisings in Africa, Egypt and France’s workforce, etc and there is something to be said for standing together and not backing down.  Anyone in office will get voted out by me because I don’t like the way they handled things.  An anybody running for election better have a plan in mind.  Stop the back stabbing, name calling, mudslinging crap and tell us how you think we can turn this around.  Cutting spending and raises the taxes of poor and middle class people is NOT the answer.  Jobs – Fine any corporation who lays off workers intentially to cut the bottom line and show a profit instead of cutting their own salaries and eliminating their 6 figure bonuses.  They are the ones that got us in this mess in the first place and all they care about is staying in business – not for the greater good of the masses but for their own good.  How much money does it take to make you happy?  How many homes do you need to own?  Excess and greed leads to destruction.  Just look at history. Read the rest of the post here  NYmetro.

while i  am spending another day at ‘Occupy Wall Street’ demonstration she’s actually thinking of something very positive to effect change.

me i just take pictures. each one of us adds to the whole .

at Liberty Plaza everyday is different while remaining the same. just the people change and that’s not always true. the more i go down there, the more i meet people who are different and others i’ve seen before. it’s really a learning experience for me. the first thing is i’ve never considered myself a street ‘tog but maybe i am learning how to, maybe not. i do know this is taking a lot of my time and who knows if anyone is appreciating it?

but we do as this couple is doing, the only thing we know how to, ‘show up’. while we may look like strange bed fellows at first as long as we have tolerance and an open heart we can all get along.

seeing this sign made me chuckle and think ‘have i ever paid for empathy?’  i’ve paid for a lot of things in my life but empathy? have i learned how to give it? it’s not an easy thing empathy for me to give i’ve had to spend hours learning  how to and i am not perfect at it now. i do try and catch myself by being mindful as repeating a few Metta phrases.

we can all get along here, well maybe not the bankers right now but maybe they will come around if the ever shed the blinders of greed. as robert fulghum says  Share everything. Play Fair. Don’t hit people. Put things back where you found them. Clean up your own mess. Don’t take things that aren’t yours. Say you’re sorry when you hurt somebody.

this fellow knows how to draw a crowd along with a tog feeding frenzy, “watch out for the plants”

   what plants?

while others   some sit peacefully holding their signs

     while others march some write booklets

             some signs          i talked with this mother while the children played, the children drew as children do

why are we all here? can we really do something, Stop the machine? he did

maybe we can all find peace of mind and a few

 

have a good day, remember it’s our world.  something i learned in the 60’s during the anti-war demonstrations

WE CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE.

jene

photo day at ‘Occupy Wall Street’ & other musings

October 17, 2011

i know this has been a photography and art blog and i am further from a real reporter/news photographer than you’ll ever know, but i am here in new york city where there is a real live story going on and it’s something one can’t ignore all though the mainstream news media are doing a pretty good job at that.

i am struggling with my typing- wordpress photo editing layouts and thought process. i want to walk away from the keyboard because my own lack of expertise in these aforementioned matters frustrate me. but i’ll prode on in the hope i’ll see the light at the end of the tunnel and it won’t be a train.

Saturday afternoon i went down to Zuccotti Park where the demonstration Occupy Wall Street rally is being held. it’s quite a small area, 33,000 square feet,  originally created in 1968 by us steel in return for a height bonus for their headquarters being built close by, then known as Liberty Plaza Park. now owned by brookfield office properties the park is named after company chairman john zuccotti, a politically connected business man and former deputy mayor under abe beame. the building is now renamed One Liberty Plaza.

Liberty plaza is one of the few open spaces with trees and benches located in the downtown area. renovated as part of the lower manhattan rebuilding efforts, the park was regraded, trees were planted, and the tables and seating restored with private money, and served as a staging area for world trade center recovery efforts and memorial ceremonies.

the significant thing  i missed took place further uptown at citibank, 555 La Guardia Place where some of the demonstrators where arrested attempting to close their accounts. can you imagine the panic in the banking community if hundreds of people started closing their accounts. at least not using your credit and debit cards.

did you ever think you could be arrested for closing your bank account. we now know who the nypd is working for and it aint us. you would think nypd would be grateful for all the overtime the demonstration is creating.

If you want to express your opinion about this type of customer service to senior management at Citibank, you can call Citibank President Vikram Pandit. He told Business Week magazine he’d be happy to talk to Occupy Wall Street! His direct office line is (212) 793-1201, and his email address is vikram.pandit@citi.com

but now it’s become famous for something completely different under the watchful eye of the nypd eye in the sky and other secret forces

eye in the sky

this reminds me of the movie war of the worlds where i invaders had huge machines wandering around killing people. of course these can’t walk, yet…..hey don’t give then any ideas. but here are the people, ideas and sights

marchers

the energy i felt from the crowd was pretty incredible  which i am sure changes from

day to day maybe even by the hour. i talked to a few people but a lot of them have agenda. there was a guy preaching the bible of course, they always come out for a crowd. what is amazing about the crowd is everyone seems to have a different view point and no one is in charge.

  

     

then there is this fellow reading the us constitution to no one and everyone

then the media: tv cameras, microphones, notebooks, still cameras

 

  the happiest people seemed to be these guys

    a variety of food along with free food supplied by donors of the movement. so much food and supplies are being sent to the movement a problem arose where to store it. the The American Federation of Teachers Local 1839 had office space near the site so they offered storage space. donations of money  via the internet to the tune of $300,00 are flooding in to the movement from all over.

  so this a mix of americans which is pretty cool, on the weekends everyone can come down and be a part of

  if you’re interested in learning what some of the media has to say check out mother jones has to say on the origins of this movement. even the NY Times paul krugman had something to say today about how wall street financial services have helped the american people or did they?

 

everyone had a job to do, some just being there, some making signs, some silk screening t shirts

so at the end of the elephants parade comes the sweeper

remember who has created this financial mess and who has benefited from it. are you better off now than you were six years ago? if you want to find out whats going on down at Liberty Plaza do peruse the Occupy Wall Street web site

jene

George Braque @ Acquavella gallery

October 17, 2011

The Acquavella Galleries’ splendid Georges Braque exhibition is a 42-gun salute to this pioneering French Modernist. The first large Braque survey to be staged in New York in more than 20 years, it musters a vigorous if compressed account of more than five decades of art making, with 42 paintings and collages, almost all top-notch. More than half have been borrowed from American and European museums; the rest come from private collections and in several cases have not been on public display in quite some time.

Organized by Dieter Buchhart, an Austrian critic, art historian and independent curator, the Acquavella show rarely lets down its guard. In nearly every effort Braque is at his most elaborate and ambitious, from his slightly over-heated Fauvist efforts of 1906-7 to his opulent still lifes of the 1930s and ’40s and his crowded and shadowy studio interiors of the 1950s. In the show’s middle portion, of course, we see Braque the Cubist.

says the new york times review

Acquavella Galleries located at 18 East 79th Street
New York, NY 10075-0188  (212) 734-6300

an interesting web page here GEORGES BRAQUE his quotes on painting, collage art, still life and portrait by the Cubist painter artist Braque who started Cubism with Picasso in Paris; + biography facts

jene

Cheerleaders Banned from wearing Breast Cancer T shirts

October 14, 2011

Lately it’s almost a everday occurance that i wonder why i ever served in this countries armed forces to protect the american way of life if these types of things go on.

ABC News’ Carrie Gann reports:

Cheerleaders at Gilbert High School in Gilbert, Ariz., can’t wear the pink t-shirts they bought to raise money for breast cancer research because the school’s administrators claim the slogan they bear is inappropriate.

According to a Thursday report in the Arizona Republic, the squad’s shirts say “Feel for lumps, save your bumps,” and the team planned to wear them during the school’s football games during their cheers on the field and while collecting money from the crowd.

Gaylee Skowronek, the cheer booster club president, told the Arizona Republic the administration approved the squad’s plan to raise money, but the school’s principal, J. Charles Santa Cruz, objected to the slogan on the shirts and banned the cheerleaders from wearing them.

“We thought the shirt was age-appropriate,” Skowronek said. “I think it’s hypocritical they would approve a fundraiser for breast-cancer research but they won’t approve a shirt to bring awareness to breast cancer.”

“All we want to do is support the cause and raise money for breast-cancer research,” said Ashlee, 16, a member of the squad.

This is not the first time breast cancer awareness campaigns have caused a stir for edgy messages. The Keep a Breast Foundation makes bracelets and t-shirts that say “I [heart] Boobies” and distributes them to young people with the goal of raising their breast cancer awareness. The bracelets have been banned by several school districts across the U.S., but in April, a federal judge in Pennsylvania upheld public school students’ rights to wear them.

Other breast cancer organizations are more cautious when it comes to supporting campaigns with these kinds of messages.

“While Komen for the Cure tends to stick with more mainstream language about breasts, we do understand that young people talk differently than adults,” said Andrea Rader, the director of marketing communications of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, a network of breast cancer survivors and activists based in Dallas. “We generally support efforts to educate and engage young people, especially young women, about this disease.”

this is a crazy city : N.Y. artist can paint nude models only after dark

October 13, 2011

NEW YORK (Reuters) – An artist arrested for applying body paint to a nude model in New York’s Times Square will have charges against him dropped if his models strip naked only after dark, according to a court agreement reached on Thursday.

Police arrested Andy Golub, 45, in July and charged him with violating public exposure and lewdness laws. He has been painting nude models for about three years.

Golub’s lawyer, Ronald Kuby, argued that New York laws do not prohibit public nudity in the name of art, and a compromise was reached that was the basis of the court ruling.

Under the agreement, “he is permitted to paint bare breasts any time, anywhere, but the G-strings have to stay on until daylight goes out,” Kuby said after a hearing in Manhattan criminal court.

State laws against public exposure exempt “any person entertaining or performing in a play, exhibition, show or entertainment,” Kuby said. Municipalities are allowed to devise their own restrictions, but New York City generally does not do so, Kuby said.

Golub, of Nyack, New York, said he likes to paint nude models because their bodies have energy and dynamism that he finds lacking in canvas.

“I feel that when I do live body painting it’s a good thing, a positive thing,” he said.

Charges against Golub will be dropped in six months if he abides by the terms of the agreement and is not arrested again. Charges against Karla Storie, a model from Texas arrested with him, will be dismissed if she too is not arrested again in the next six months.

Golub said he was planning to return to criminal court on Friday and paint a nude model in a park near the courthouse.

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Jerry Norton)

JPG Magazine Breast Cancer Photo contest

October 13, 2011

Breasts… They Need Your Support!

With National Breast Cancer Month (October) upon us (http://www.nbcam.org/), we want to throw our support behind some great organizations that are helping those patients, survivors, families and others that have been affected by this disease.

This Shoot Out photo contest is intended, mirroring the goal of NBCAM, to increase awareness of the disease and to raise funds for research into its cause, prevention, diagnosis, treatment and cure.

Enter your images that promote breast cancer awareness and/or celebrate the beauty, strength, spirit and nurture threatened by the disease. Enter your images that tell a story of inspiration, of strength, of survival. Enter your images that are touching, humorous, sensual, perceptive… real.

We want to really make a splash. We’ve got lofty goals for this contest and would love to see the total raised get OVER $100,000. To do this, WE NEED YOUR HELP! We need everyone to get the word out… share this on Facebook, Twitter, via email. Tell your friends, your neighbors, your clients, your kids’ friends… everyone.

The ‘starting pot’ will be $100 in total, but we want to see a truly inspiring number here. So help us get these numbers growing! Help us demonstrate the power of images to help raise awareness and money to make a difference!

We’ll be updating the prizing as the entries come in, so check back… and enter as often as you can! You’re supporting a great cause!

Remember, a portion of the proceeds from your entry fees will be donated to these fine charities to help in the ongoing battle against this disease:

Susan G. Komen for the Cure, Breastcancer.org, and Standup2cancer (su2c) – you can also visit these links directly to learn more and/or donate.

Once the contest has closed and winners have been announced, the cash prizes will be awarded and the donations paid to the 3 charities.

Enter now~!       JPG Blog

P.S. To do more to advance the discussion, awareness and overall message of breast cancer awareness, prevention, detection, treatment and support check out:

Cafe Express

Zazzle

 

 

 

 

 

The Keep A Breast Foundation

 

 

Check them out. Be aware.

To help spread the word on your site or blog, check out these slogan buttons (and others from Blogaholicdesigns):

Show Your Support- Grab A Badge

good luck all log in or sign up for JPG Community

Art party November 12th, 2011* 6pm- November 13, 2011* 10pm

October 12, 2011

an artist we’ve met, Penelope Fox at Hoboken open studios, is having an art party next month at Hudson Terrace, 621 west 46th Street,, NYC, NY

Terrace-Art-Splatters-Event

this should be an interesting event, so if you’re in town why not drop by and see for yourself what’s going on. am i showing any of my art? i haven’t been invited so i am just passing along this information.

jene

In memory of Ruth Currier 1926 – 2011, Limon Dancer

October 7, 2011

Ruth Currier

A former director of the José Limón Dance Company and a primary disciple of Doris Humphrey, died on October 4, 2011 at the age of 85.

I had toured as the Technical Director/ Lighting Supervisor for the company for Jennifer Tipton while Ruth Currier was the artistic director of the company. In my opinion she was a wonderful lady and it was a pleasure to have had the opportunity to know and work with her. She knew what she wanted and wasn’t afraid to ask for it from me or her dancers. I’ve had the privilege to see her dance in archival films with the original Limon company while we were on tour. The only references I can find to Ruth  in the New York City Public Library, Jerome Robbins Dance Division are taped interviews. Pity as she danced beautifully, the films do live in some college somewhere.

Ruth Currier was born in Ohio as Ruth Miller, she was raised in Durham, North Carolina and attended Black Mountain College where she studied piano with Fritz Cohen and danced with Elsa Kahl. She moved to New York to continue her piano studies and study dance with Doris Humphrey and José Limón. She joined Limón’s company in 1949, and soon began appearing in leading roles and participating in the creation of new works. Her first new dance was Humphrey’s Invention, a trio in which she appeared with Limón and Betty Jones.

Ruth Currier, Jose Limon

Ruth Currier was a prominent performer with Limón for nearly two decades, creating roles in some of his most important and enduring works, such as There is a Time and Missa Brevis. She also created roles in Humphrey classics such as Night Spell and Ruins and Visions.

Currier became increasingly involved in the creation of Humphrey’s works, officially serving as creative assistant throughout the final decade of Humphrey’s life. Humphrey had sketched out her final work, Brandenburg Concerto No. 4, but only managed to complete the first movement before her death in 1958, asking Currier to complete the choreography. It was my pleasure and honor to light the first performance of this dance for the company. Currier’s choreographic apprenticeship coincided with her own growing reputation as a dancemaker, having made an auspicious debut with a 1955 duet, The Antagonists, in which she appeared with Betty Jones. She would go on to create more than fifty works, including Quartet and Toccanta for the Limón Company and the Ruth Currier Dance Company, which she formed in 1958.The Limón Company survives the founders death, Jose, with the help of Ruth Currier…

After five years as artist-in-residence at Ohio State, she returned to New York to direct the Limón Company, having been invited by the dancers to lead them after Limón’s death in 1972. Her five years as director helped make the case that the Limón Company could continue, in itself a formidable achievement at a time when conventional wisdom held that a modern dance company could not survive its founder. A 1975 New York Times article dubbed her “something of a miracle worker”. One of Ruth Currier’s notable achievements as a director of the Limón Company was broadening the repertory well beyond the scope of Limón and Humphrey works. One particularly ambitious acquisition in 1977 was Kurt Jooss’s The Green Table – a work with special personal significance since its composer, Fritz Cohen, had been Currier’s piano teacher at Black Mountain College more than thirty years earlier.

Ruth Currier

Currier resigned from the directorship of the Limón Company in 1978, devoting her efforts for the next twenty years to teaching at the Ruth Currier Dance Studio and at the Limón Institute. Teaching had long been a central focus, with assignments over the years at Julliard, Bennington, Sarah Lawrence, and residencies throughout the world.

Ruth Currier defined the principles of Humphrey and Limón, and established a formal base for using the principles to teach contemporary technique. See her Bio and tribute to Ruth’s teachings on adriaan kas web page.

Steve Jobs, Focus and Simplicity, Mantra rooted in Buddhist

October 6, 2011

Long before Steve Jobs became the CEO of Apple and one of the most recognizable figures on the planet, he took a unconventional route to find himself — a spiritual journey that influenced every step of an unconventional career.

Jobs, who died Wednesday at the age of 56 of pancreatic cancer, was the biological child of two unmarried academics who only consented to signing the papers if the adoptive parents sent him to college.

His adoptive parents sent a young Jobs off to Reed College, an expensive liberal arts school in Oregon, but he dropped out and went to India in the 1973 in search of enlightenment.

Jobs and his college friend Daniel Kottke, who later worked for him at Apple, visited Neem Karoli Baba at his Kainchi Ashram. He returned home to California a Buddhist, complete with a shaved head and traditional Indian clothing and a philosophy that may have shaped much of his corporate values.

Later, he was often seen walking barefoot in his trademark blue jeans around the office and reportedly often said that those around him didn’t fully understand his way of thinking.

“I wouldn’t say Steve Jobs was a practicing Buddhist,” said Robert Thurman, a professor of Buddhist studies at Columbia University, who met Jobs and his “Tibetan buddies” in the 1980s in San Francisco.

“But he was just as creative and generous and went outside the box in the way that he looked to Eastern mental discipline and the Zen vision, which is a compelling one.”

“He was a real explorer and very much to be mourned and too young at 56,” said Thurman. “We will remember the design simplicity of his products. That simplicity is a Zen idea.”

Thurman met Jobs in San Francisco in the 1980s with Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart and actor Richard Gere. The discussion was about Tibet.

“It was before the Dalai Lama, and he was very sympathetic and had advice for the Tibetans,” he said. “But he was into his own thing and didn’t become a major player.”

Jobs used Dalai Lama in one of Apple’s most famous ad campaigns: “Think Different.”

“He put them up all over Hong Kong,” Thurman said of the computer ads. “But then the Chinese communists squawked very violently and as my son says, ‘He had to think again.'”

Zen Buddhist monk Kobun Chino Otogawa married Jobs and his now widow, Laurene Powell, in 1991.

Jobs could have just as easily taken his philosophy from the hippie movement of the 1960s. The Whole Earth Catalogue was his bible, with founder Stewart Brand’s cry, “We are as gods.”

The catalogue offered an integrated and complex world view with a leftist political calling. Jobs later adopted the catalogue’s mantra: “Stay hungry. Stay foolish.”

Buddhism a Wake-Up Call for Steve Jobs?

The catalogue also delved into spirituality. In one 1974 article, author Rick Fields wrote that Buddhism is “a tool, like an alarm-clock for waking up.”

That may have been the case for Jobs. He said in his now-famous 2005 Commencement speech at Stanford that he lived each day as if it were his last, admonishing graduates not to “live someone else’s life.”

“Don’t be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people’s thinking,” Jobs said. “Don’t let the noise of other’s opinions drown out your own inner voice.”

In that speech he told students to relish the time to follow their passions, recounting the time after he dropped out, but continued to audit non-credit classes like calligraphy. The elegant typefaces — serif and sans serif — were later introduced for the first time in the Macintosh.

“I didn’t have a dorm room, so I slept on the floor in friends’ rooms, I returned coke bottles for the 5 cent deposits to buy food with, and I would walk the seven miles across town every Sunday night to get one good meal a week at the Hare Krishna temple,” he said. “I loved it.”

Jobs was also influenced by Richard Baker, who was head of the Zen Center in San Francisco from 1971 until 1984, when Baker resigned after a scandalous affair with a wife of one of the center’s benefactors. But Baker helped the center grow to one of the most successful in the United States.

Jobs was receptive to Baker’s message of change, “helping the environment and empowering the individual.”

Jobs admitted to experimenting with the hallucinogenic drug LSD, which he has said was “one of the two or three most important things” in his life.

In an unauthorized biography by Alan Deutschman, a college friend said that Jobs had even been a lover of folk singer Joan Baez, who was 41 at the time, and the attraction was largely because she had also been intimate with another ’60s icon, Bob Dylan.

He was a fan of the Beatles, who also embraced spirituality and made a similar pilgrimage to India. Jobs told television’s “60 Minutes” he modeled his own business after the rock group.

“They were four guys that kept each other’s negative tendencies in check; they balanced each other,” he said. “And the total was greater than the sum of the parts. Great things in business are not done by one person, they are done by a team of people.”

Jobs said that “focus and simplicity” were the foundation of Apple’s ethic.

“Simple can be harder than complex: You have to work hard to get your thinking clean to make it simple,” he told Businessweek in 1998. “But it’s worth it in the end because once you get there, you can move mountains.”

Even the minimalist design of his products — from the first Macintosh to the sleek iPad have a “aesthetic simplicity and keenness of line” that smacks of Japanese Zen, according to Columbia’s Thurman.

Former Pepsico President John Sculley, who eventually fired Jobs, said walking into Jobs’ apartment had the same design feel.

“I remember going into Steve’s house, and he had almost no furniture in it,” Sculley said in a 2010 interview with Businessweek.”He just had a picture of Einstein, whom he admired greatly, and he had a Tiffany lamp and a chair and a bed. He just didn’t believe in having lots of things around, but he was incredibly careful in what he selected.”

Jobs reportedly convinced Sculley to work for Apple when he asked, “Do you want to spend the rest of your life selling sugared water, or do you want a chance to change the world?”

Jobs Gave People Computer Power

Thurman contends Jobs’ greatest success was not necessarily financial.

“It was his initial role in making the PC available to individuals to give them computer power,” said Thurman. “He was democratizing computer power. It was his own inspiration of things and not accepting the status quo and breaking through the power of the people.”

Though Jobs may not have been a devout practitioner of Buddhism, his personal and corporate vision certainly struck the same tone — “wisdom and compassion,” he said.

“Zen vision is that human beings can understand reality if they focus their mind on it and develop wisdom,” said Thurman. “When you do, you have the greater capacity to arrange the nature of things and to help people.”

But the irony of Jobs’ spirituality was that as much as it reflected the most beautiful aspects of the products he made, those very “machines” have in some ways enslaved a generation of users, according to John Lardas Modern, a professor of religious studies at Franklin and Marshall College in Pennsylvania.

Jobs made computers and hand held devices that have allowed people to become “disembodied” on a certain level — “to escape and transcend the mundane reality of bodily existence,” according to Modern.

Such spirituality begs for freedom from the trappings of tradition, he said, but they have a down side.

“These machines are amazing,” said Modern. “For the last 12 hours, I have been seeing people on Facebook and Twitter in praise of how the devices he made allow ease and convenience and empowerment.”

“I love my iPad, precisely because it feels like an extension of my mind and I can’t live without it,” said Modern. “The irony is, these products ground us in a chair behind a desk, behind a computer and in a sense they have pushed us inward?and you don’t have physical connections with others.”

“It cuts both ways,” he said.

originally posted ABC News & Yahoo News

SEE Los Angeles Times story on “Steve Jobs’ virtual DNA to be fostered in Apple University

Jene Youtt