Showing posts with label nyt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nyt. Show all posts

15 December 2010

Sorry, Your Religious Commercial is Getting in the Way of Our Scientific History

A truly excellent, thoughtful review from Edward Rothstein of the “1001 Inventions” on view through April 24 at the New York Hall of Science, Queens:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/10/arts/design/10museum.html

There aren’t 1,001 inventions on display, but those that are, along with the ideas described, are meant to show that the Western Dark Ages really were a Golden Age of Islam: a thousand years, in the show’s reckoning, that lasted into the 17th century. During that era, the exhibition asserts, Muslim scientists and inventors, living in empires reaching from Spain to China, anticipated the innovations of the modern world

[...]

[...]As it turns out, though, the account requires extensive qualification. Had we learned more about scientific principles, had we been given sober assessments of, say, how 10th-century science developed, had a scholarly perspective been more evident — had we, in other words, been ushered into this world in a way once expected from science museums — the show could have been far more powerful.Instead, it is as manipulative as it is illuminating. “1001 Inventions,” we are told in the literature, “is a nonreligious and non-political project.” But it actually is a little bit religious and considerably political.It is less a typical science exhibition than a typical “identity” exhibition. It was created by the Foundation for Science, Technology and Civilization in London, whose goal is “to popularize, spread and promote an accurate account of Muslim Heritage and its contribution.” The show also tries to “instill confidence” and provide positive “role models” for young Muslims, as Mr. Hassani puts it in the book. And it is part of a “global educational initiative” that includes extensive classroom materials.The promotional goal is evident in every display. The repeated suggestion is that Muslim scientists made discoveries later attributed to Westerners and that many Western institutions were shaped by Muslim contributions.

Yes, this is the sort of Anthropological Advocacy that Corrupts by Flattery. Instead of presenting interesting information and exhibits, its primary purpose is Boosterism. 

Of course this is why no one takes Religious Histories written by the religions themselves (or their adherants) seriously, because the result isn't going to be filled with self-reflection, but self-glorying Hagiography. 

Religious affiliation actually seems far more important here than is acknowledged, keeping some figures out and ushering others in.

[...]

And finally we never learn much about the role of Islam itself. Universities, we read, were affiliated with mosques. Did that affect scientific inquiry or the status of non-Muslim scientists? Did the religious regime have any impact on the ultimate failure of the transmission and expansion of scientific knowledge? And given the high cost of any golden age, isn’t it necessary to give some account of this civilization’s extensive slave trade?

Instead of expanding the perspective, the exhibition reduces it to caricature, showing Muslim culture rising out of a shadowy past to attain glories later misappropriated by Western epigones. Left unexplored too is how this tradition ended, leading to a long eclipse of science in Muslim lands. There is only a recurring hint of injustices done.The paradox is that this narrative is not only questionable but also unnecessary. An exhibition about scientific achievements during the Abbasid Caliphate could be remarkable if approached with curatorial perspective. Why then, the indulgence here?

Perhaps because one tendency in the West, particularly after 9/11, has been to answer Muslim accusations of injustice (and even real attacks) with an exaggerated declaration of regard. It is guiltily offered as if in embarrassed compensation, inspired by a desire not to appear to tar Islam with the fervent claims made by its most violent adherents.

In this case the issue is Islam and its history, but the broader problem of "exaggerated regard" is how America and its public institutions kow-tow to religion, and religious people.

14 December 2010

Compromise, But Not on Human Rights, Not on the Constitution

A very interesting historical find, with urgent modern relevance:

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/12/13/how-lincoln-undid-the-union/

On Dec. 11, 1860, with South Carolina’s secession looming, President-elect Abraham Lincoln wrote a letter to Illinois Rep. William Kellogg, a fellow Republican. Publicly, Lincoln was keeping silent on the emerging crisis. But his letter was designed to achieve one objective: to sabotage a sectional compromise to save the Union.

Marked “Private & confidential,” the letter instructed Kellogg to “entertain no proposition for a compromise in regard to the extension of slavery. The instant you do, they have us under again; all our labor is lost, and sooner or later must be done over. … Have none of it. The tug has to come & better now than later.”

A political cartoon from late 1860 depicts the Crittenden Compromise as a cure for Republican intransigence on slavery.Library of CongressA political cartoon from late 1860 depicts the Crittenden Compromise as a cure for Republican intransigence on slavery.

Lincoln was not speaking abstractly. The Capitol was buzzing with talk of a Union-saving deal. Indeed, on Dec. 18, Sen. John J. Crittenden of Kentucky proposed a plan to preserve the Union through a series of actions to protect the institution of slavery. In other words, at the precise moment that a compromise to rescue the country seemed at hand, the incoming president worked aggressively to block it. Lincoln, whom historians often portray as being more interested in saving the Union than opposing slavery, chose to do the opposite.

There are genuine and compelling arguments to be made about Taxes, School Uniforms, and Arts Funding, by which any number of happy and unhappy compromises can be made by honest people. When you start dealing in Execution by Executive Order, Warrantless Wiretapping, and State Censorship of News is when the Genuinely Principled stand up.

06 December 2010

Please, Please, Please Don't Let Them Start Poetry Slams Again... Please

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/06/books/06figment.html

Figment.com will be unveiled on Monday as an experiment in online literature, a free platform for young people to read and write fiction, both on their computers and on their cellphones. Users are invited to write novels, short stories and poems, collaborate with other writers and give and receive feedback on the work posted on the site.

Honestly, isn't this the sort of thing the U.S. Government should be censoring? Or is the idea to get all of these "Poets" together in one place, so they can be more easily identified and done away with?

Hopefully that's the plan for Minecraft, as well.

An Obituary Played on 88 Keys

(Might a Whimsical Photo-Suggestion be Made, Regarding the Internment?)

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/06/arts/design/06diebboll.html

John Diebboll, an architect who discovered a second career as an artist when he began designing fantasy pianos that resembled the Brooklyn Bridge, a diner or a Murphy bed, died on Nov. 23 at his home in Beacon, N.Y. He was 54.

“Etude No. 12 (Guggenheim)” called for a grand piano with an exterior modeled on the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. “Etude No. 32 (Sail)” redesigned the piano lid as a red-and-white-striped sail, while “Etude No. 30 (Murphy)” showed a grand piano that could be flipped upward and concealed in a piano-shaped recess in an apartment wall.

Over the years, Mr. Diebboll produced hundreds of drawings and prints. None of his designs were actually built, but his artwork was exhibited in galleries and museums and published in “The Art of the Piano” (David R. Godine, 2000).

“We’re crossing the fine line between what is a musical instrument and what is a work of art,” Mr. Diebboll told The Baltimore Sun in 1997. “To me these are musical instruments that are meant to be played.”

As sad as it is to hear of Mr Diebboll's untimely passing, No, we never did cross "the fine line between what is a musical instrument and what is a work of art." The fine line between whimsical illustration and artistic pretension, Yes, certainly, that line was crossed some time ago.

Why Must Art Be So Boring? Add More Special Effects!

Peter Greenaway is a fellow who has often had genuine Ideas; they're not always good, or pleasant to sit through, but they have challenged his viewers (stomachs and patience, mostly), and that's something. His films, while not particularly good cinema, (and very sodden philosophy) are made by an excited, painterly eye, determined to find rich texture and lusciousness.

He is intelligent, complex, and explores his themes for artistic surprises, not simply provocation.

But, c'mon... he's using Mouret's "Rondeau"? That should tell you everything you need to know about the dearth of ideas in his new show, “Leonardo’s Last Supper: A Vision by Peter Greenaway,” at the Park Avenue Armory until 06 January.

From Holland Cotter's thoroughly unimpressed review in the New York Times

Special effects kick in. Images projected onto the replicated painting make figures look three-dimensional. The light in the depicted scene changes; sometimes seeming to come from above, sometimes from a mysterious background source. One group of apostles is momentarily spotlighted as the others fade into darkness; another group is set off with diagrammatic outlines. At regular intervals the whole scene goes dim except for the figure of Jesus, which radiates beams like a searchlight.

Meanwhile, on the surrounding scrims, details of the painting appear, some filmed so close up as to look like aerial views of landscapes. At times the all-white table glows orange or red like a lamp or a “Star Trek” prop. Religious music plays throughout.

All of this goes on for a half-hour or so.

03 December 2010

Predicting the Future, a Little Bit at a Time

Some days ago This Endeavor made mention of the particularly stupid belief that seems to exist among some government officials and legislators that if they will deal a death blow to websites they disapprove of if they can only rid the Internet of their domain names. Of course this is about as effective as some addled Anarchists believing that the world could finally be rid of Banking, if only they go about the financial districts and steal all the street signs.

 In a statement on its Web site, EveryDNS.net said it terminated WikiLeaks’ domain name at around 10 p.m., Eastern time for violating its terms of service. WikiLeaks.org “has become the target of multiple distributed denial of service (DDOS) attacks,” the company said. Such attacks usually involve bombarding a Web site with requests for access, effectively blocking legitimate users, and are designed to make a targeted Web site unavailable. When questioned about similar cyberattacks on Sunday against WikiLeaks, American officials vigorously denied any involvement.

And still business goes on, imagine that. Among its other workarounds, Wikileaks can be reached at the IP address http://213.251.145.96 entered into the URL bar of your browser. For deeply mysterious reasons, those who would like the Wikileaks site made unreachable have the persistent belief that the sort of person who craves reading memos presented in single-spaced Courier will be unable to type or copy-and-paste this number.

The actual hosting of the site is more problematic, however:

Earlier this week, Amazon — which rents server space to companies in addition to its online retail business — canceled its relationship with WikiLeaks after inquiries from an aide to Senator Joseph I. Lieberman. The company said the organization was violating the terms of service for the program.

“When companies or people go about securing and storing large quantities of data that isn’t rightfully theirs, and publishing this data without ensuring it won’t injure others, it’s a violation of our terms of service, and folks need to go operate elsewhere,” the company said.

It is nearly impossible to believe that anyone, anywhere, took a threat from Senator Lieberman (or his office) seriously (despite Glenn Greenwald's assertions), so Amazon's craven actions are entirely their own. A company of that size, with that utter domination of its market, has the luxury of making decisions that might be unpopular, but serve a broader principle that stands at the core of its work (distributing information).

02 December 2010

John Singer Sargent is a Well-Known Name in the Art World

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/01/arts/design/01sargent.html

John Singer Sargent, who's probably not anyone's favorite painter (at least since Norman Rockwell's been dead), was friends with Monet, and thought he'd try his hand at a little Impressionism.

As the gallery that goes with the NYT review demonstrates, the results ranged from quite achingly bad to the above, which is curious, at least, and sort of startling in its use of all that ominous black. It does appear as though an enraged Grape Ape and his friends were on their way to avenge themselves on the gang of lazy bicycle messengers-- but maybe we all read something different into it. 

There have certainly been worse paintings. But these aren't good.

“Sargent and Impressionism” ends Dec. 18 at Adelson Galleries, 19 East 82nd Street, Manhattan.