Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Wabi-sabi - a philosophy.

I recently read this book by Leonard Koren after annekata mentioned it.


















A small, unassuming book, printed simply, with a few black and white photographs ...
Leaf decomposing on sidewalk - Leonard Koren












 ... short enough to read through in one sitting. It has kept my mind occupied for over a week now. So, not the kind of book that you read and promptly forget when you close it.

It sets out Koren's idea of what wabi-sabi entails, and starts out like this:
"Wabi-sabi is a beauty of things imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete.
It is a beauty of things modest and humble.
It is a beauty of things unconventional."

He goes on to describe the links with Zen Buddhism, attempts to explain the subtle differences between wabi and sabi, compares wabi-sabi with Modernism, and then sets out what he considers to be the wabi-sabi universe - its metaphysical basis, spiritual values, the state of mind it fosters, its moral precepts, and material qualities.

I think the Ngoni stool I purchased recently embodies some of the elements of wabi-sabi. Unadorned, sturdy, rustic, imperfect. Used. Although wabi-sabi is not necessarily about functionality, I like the fact that my stool can be used (and has been used) as a neck rest, a stool for meditation, a cutting board, and to hold tea lights.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Zines on my Mind

Zines are still very much on my mind. (I am contemplating mine ... and planning to execute it before February 2010). In the meantime I ordered Anthony Zinonos's Le Dot zine - it arrived on Monday. It is perfect.





How cool is that? See more of Anthony's work here.

Monday, September 7, 2009

The Journal as Art

I ordered Drawing From Life - The Journal as Art (compiled by Jennifer New) a while ago and today it arrived. Featuring the journals of more than 30 creative souls, it is absolutely beautiful. I cannot stop paging through it.

Page below by Idelle Weber. I have something similar in mind for my third box insert. (See here and here for previous two inserts.)

This page by Lyle Owerko. I like the combination of black script and photographs.

And now I am off to work on my art journal! (No, actually I am off to have supper and watch a dvd. And then I will work on my art journal.)

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

I Spy


For no particular reason I seem to be on a kind of spy-streak at the moment. I have just finished watching the BBC series (1979) of John le Carre's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. Before that it was The State Within and before that State of Play (also BBC productions). A while ago I discovered the Ashenden short stories by Somerset Maugham, and at the moment I am reading Steve Coll's excellent Ghost Wars for which he won the Pulitzer. It gives a riveting account of the CIA's involvement in Afghanistan, and the origins of al-Qaeda. Fascinating reading. Scary for many reasons. Why would anyone choose to be a spy? I have no idea.

(Two quick doodles in my moleskine. Yes, I know my perspective is all cock-eyed and what is meant to be the pavement looks like light falling from the wrong direction and what is meant to be the light looks like weird raindrops. Let's just leave it at that.)

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Happy #4

Books make me happy.

This is the bookcase in my study. (How do I remove a book? Carefully, very carefully.) It is one of seven bookcases in our house - all stuffed full of books. The overflow is now on the bedroom floor - four towers, steadily getting higher.

I just love books - old books, new books, library books, pristine books, books with scribbles in them. Every thing about them - the front cover and spine designs, the smell, the typography, turning the leaves, the anticipation of a great story, and of course, actually reading them! Through them I live adventurous and glamorous and sometimes tragic lives. I get to know people I wouldn't normally meet and travel to places that I will probably never see in real life.

I have just finished Trollope's The Warden, am currently reading JG Ballard's Super-Cannes, and waiting on my bedside table are Paul Auster's Travels in the Scriptorium and England, England (Julian Barnes).

We popped into Coffee & Books today - a lovely little second-hand bookshop in Fish Hoek, where you can browse the books, have a coffee while paging through them, chat to owner Bruce Clemence, and at certain times, also have a curry or a roti. And came away with three books, amongst them Alan Hollinghurst's The Folding Star.

The towers are growing.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Zines!

A while ago I discovered Gracia & Louise, and ordered three of their marvellous zines. And today I received my wonderfully clever zines all the way from Australia! Tweak, Tweaked, Tweet - with ten bird illustrations; A Vagary of Impediments - a collection of collective nouns; and A Single Thought, with thoughts that I can quite relate to, such as "Will there be any post for me when I get home?"

I already have one of tiny red's amazing zines - and recently acquired one by a young South African artist, Michael Tymbios, called "there is a flaw in eternity", so I think I now officially have A Collection! If you have produced a zine, and are selling, please let me know! Or if you have any recommendations, please point me in the right direction.
(PS I have not forgotten about my own zine project - but I think that I have to fine-tune my concept, maybe coming up with something new in the process; and I do have to look at many more zines before I create my own.)

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Toast

This post is for my friend kendalee who loves toast (and who is exploring her amazing alter egos on her blog at the moment), and also for all others who have a special affinity for it.
"Toasted bread for this man of norms and principles is almost a vice and truly a manifestation of uncontrollable greed, wherein enter multiple sensations, both of vision and touch, as well as of smell and taste, beginning with that gleaming chrome-plated toaster, then the knife cutting slices of bread, the aroma of toasted bread, the butter melting, and finally that mouth-watering taste, so difficult to describe, in one's mouth, on one's palate, tongue and teeth, to which that ineffable dark pellicle sticks, browned yet soft, and once more that aroma, now deep down, the person who invented such a delicacy deserves to be in heaven."
(from The History of the Siege of Lisbon, by José Saramago, translated by Giovanni Pontiero)

Here's to toast.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Movies, Books, Art - what more could I want?

I had a perfect day - went to see this movie ...

(There are two kinds of people - those who love Woody Allen movies, and those who don't, and I fall into the first category.)

Then visited the Book Lounge in Roeland Street (this view is from its side door), and it was indeed delicious - to the last drop ... I got a (signed - whoo hoo!) copy of Jesse's graphic short story collection - I Don't Like Chocolate (which in my case could not be further from the truth!)

It was quite hot, so we crossed the street to the Kimberley Hotel's bar. I've always wanted to go - it is a slightly seedy old-fashioned kind of bar - remember the days when females were not allowed in bars? I must say that I got a few looks when I entered, and I did not think they were the complimentary, approving kind. Suffice it to say that I was the only female customer ...

...so I kept my gaze firmly trained on the beautiful pressed ceiling as I drank my cider ...

Then off to the Goodman Gallery Cape to see the William Kentridge exhibition - (REPEAT) from the beginning - oh, oh, oh!! Magnificent, I was blown away!
It perfectly complemented his 8 film fragment installation (i am not me, the horse is not mine) which I saw a few weeks ago at the National Gallery.

And then back home where a water pipe had broken - once again ....
But what do I care? Movies, books, art - I have it all ...

Monday, September 1, 2008

On Having a Dream

I have immense admiration for people who have A Dream and who then do something to make it come true. Even when they are not successful, I admire them for trying anyway. This is a man who had A Dream - a Weird and Wacky & Wonderful Dream - which started in 1968 in a dentist's waitingroom, and he made it come true in August 1974.

The Start of the Dream - an article in a French newspaper about the proposed building of the Twin Towers (incorrectly labelled the Trade World Centre in the French paper).
And 6 years later, Philippe Petit walked & danced for a glorious hour in the sky above New York ...






Images above all from To Reach The Clouds (Philippe Petit) a 2nd-hand book I picked up at a charity book sale the day after I read the movie review of Man on Wire in the NYT - how is that for synchronicity!

What I find even more fantastic is that the planning & execution of this feat happened secretly (and illegally!) with the help of only a few friends. The Ultimate Guerilla Performance Art! (Now I'm looking for two high buildings in Cape Town. Oh, and I have to take some tightrope walking classes ...)
Read review of the documentary 'Man on Wire' here. (Image above from the movie).

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Altering Books ...

I first saw the work of Nicholas Jones in an interview on The Design Files, and absolutely loved it. His work is beautiful, do yourself a favour and check it out on his website.
(Photo from the Nicholas Jones website).
I love doing things with paper, so this weekend I decided to spend some time transforming two books myself. I would probably never be able to use a 'good' book for this, but really, some books are just not worth keeping. These are two that I got at a carboot sale for about R2 each. (Not that the price of a book determines its value, but that is another issue.) One I bought because it had a nice hard cover, and I intended using it for a journal. The second, a paperback, was bought for light reading, it was supposed to be a thriller, but not very thrilling (actually, it was quite bad), so I never finished it.

Some pics of my final products:






I quite like his statement that this type of book art is as much about the process as it is about the form. I found folding the pages very meditative, in a "fold-top, fold-bottom, turn; fold-top, fold-bottom, turn" kind of way. Do a couple of hundred of these mindfully, and you're meditating, baby! So I placed them with my buddha sculptures ...

And apart from altering books, I read some too. Finished Niall Williams's Four Letters of Love, and The Ice Queen by Alice Hoffman. Both really beautiful. Now those I could never use for the above!

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

The Day of the Triffids

I meant to make a demure little woollen flower brooch, I swear. I don't know, something like a cream-coloured camellia, perhaps. What possessed me then to use purple wool, crochet huge pointy leaves, and adorn the result with black sequins?


I wore my purple flower yesterday, pinned to my ankle-length grey coat. Old ladies staggered away, moaning feebly, little children ran screaming to their parents. Shall I wear it again? Oh, I think so, I definitely think so .... I will call it The Revenge of the Triffid ...

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Bottle or tap?


I have never understood the H2O-crazies, those people who walk around with a water-bottle permanently clutched in their sweaty palms and who have panic-attacks when these are misplaced. Water has never been my beverage of choice, but when I have to, I drink tapwater. See this review of Elizabeth Royte's Bottlemania - How Water Went on Sale and Why We Bought it. It made me think. (Then I poured a glass .... of chardonnay). BTW, don't you just love the photograph above? It is the work of macromaniac - have a look at her marvellous images at Flickr, which is where I found this one.

Monday, June 16, 2008

For the love of books

We travelled in to Cape Town to visit the Cape Town Book Fair at the Convention Centre yesterday - oh bliss ....!

The highlight for me was Alexander McCall Smith's talk - what an engaging, charming and extremely witty man! If you haven't read any of his books yet, do yourself a favour, darling. His books are gentle & funny - a perfect antidote to the sometimes harsh and horrible world we have to deal with. My current favourites are the 44 Scotland Street books; but there is a new Ladies No 1 Detective Agency one out - The Miracle at Speedy Motors - I will just have to get it . Soon!

What I did get at the Book Fair was a lovely book of one of my favourite artists - Robert Hodgins. (Images below are from the ArtPrintSA website).
Art and books - oh bliss, bliss, bliss .... !!

Sunday, June 15, 2008

What the Dickens ....?

Yesterday was a Dickens day - quite unintentionally!
Visiting our local library's Saturday Book Sale - a treasure trove of used books - I found this lovely old copy of Dickens' s Little Nell - as retold by Alice F. Jackson for Boys and Girls & beautifully illustrated by F.M.B. Blaikie.

Later that evening I realised that the 2002 movie version of Nicholas Nickleby was on telly - is this synchronicity or what? Apparently Miranda Richardson declined the role of the Mrs Squeers character to allow her to concentrate on Spider (with Ralph Fiennes).
I thought that Juliet Stevenson did an excellent job of portraying the very hideous Mrs Squeers though! I even had a little Mrs Squeers nightmare last night .....