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понедельник, 25 февраля 2013 г.

Starcrossed. Summary II

After so many encounters with the Delos family, Helen thought there had to be one more fight. When she met Lucas and Hector near her house, she tried to ran away and hide, but, because of some strange circumstances, she descovered that she could fly and that  she somehow was rescued by Lucas when she was falling from the sky down to the beach. They got serious injures and were discovered by Lucas's family who helped them to recover. While she was being treated, Helen had to live in the Delos's house. They realized that they didn't see the Furies and hate each other anymore. Helen was told about four bloodlines of the descendants of Greek demigods, but nobody knew which House she beloged to. Also Helen got to know that she was chased by some women from the feuding House. Since that time she began to be friends with Lucas. 

суббота, 23 февраля 2013 г.

Rendering 2

The headline of the article is What She Did For Love: Tracey Emin Hearts Times Square,  which was published on http://www.artnews.com by Robin Cembalest. The article deals with unique digital art. Firstly, the author writes that every night next month, at the stroke of 11:57, Tracey Emin will restore neon and romance to Times Square. On more than 40 screens large and small, for a span of three minutes, her six messages of love will spell themselves out, digitally animated to appear as if being written by a giant unseen hand. For example, such phrases as I Can’t Believe How Much I Loved You, When I Hold You I Hold Your Heart, etc. 




Secondly, Robin Cembalest points out that at precisely midnight, the screens return to their normal duties as space for clients of the Times Square Advertising Coalition, which last May began lending three minutes a day to the Times Square Alliance for late-night public-art projects. Curated by Times Square Arts, this “Midnight Moment” has featured works ranging from Yoko Ono’s Imagine Peace signs to video paintings by emerging artists Taxiplasm and Jonathan Henry.


Thirtdly, the author gives a reader the information that other love neons are currently on view at White Cube in São Paolo and at Lorcan O’Neill in Rome; others were shown by the artist’s New York gallery, Lehmann Maupin, at the last Art Basel Miami Beach.

Then Robin Cembalest tells us a bit about the artist's opinion, about these digital pictures. For example," The artist, who grew up surrounded by neon signs in Margate, likes the idea that her high-tech animations will instill a retro feeling in Times Square, evoking the neon lights of the past.“I wonder if people will stand underneath them and kiss and have their photos taken,” she says."


The author stresses the idea that while the messages can be seen as a valentine to New York, they can also be considered a calling card for an increased presence on this side of the Atlantic.

Finally, Robi Cembalest writes that  last year the Queen appointed her Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE) for her contributions in visual arts, an honor that sparked a small media frenzy. And quotes the artist: “If I was to do it in Piccadilly Circus it would cause a big fuss in the U.K.,” she comments. “I wonder how it will be in Times Square."


I like this article very much, because we get to know about new artistic genre, such as digital art and, moreover that this art serves for the sake of love.



воскресенье, 17 февраля 2013 г.

Rendering I

The title of the article is Girl with a Hoop Earring: Fun with Vermeer which was published on http://www.artnews.com by Robin Cembalest. The article deals with different interpetations of Vermeer's pictures. Firstly, Robin Cembalest writes about The Girl with a Pearl Earring, which has famously inspired art, fiction, product design, a Barbie, a Jonathan Richman song, and a whole lot of Flickr photos. For example, Awol Erizku created Girl with a Bamboo Earring Hendrik Kerstens created Paper Roll. Secondly, the author describes remakes of Woman in Blue Reading a Letter, such as Dalí painted the mysterious Apparition of the Figure of Vermeer in the Face of Abraham Lincoln and The Ghost of Vermeer of Delft Which Can Be Used as a Table and photoes by Tom Hunter and Cindy Sherman. Thirdly, Robin Cembalest mentions A Maid Asleep, which was reflected in the works of Tom Hunter and The Music Lesson, for which  Hiroshi Sugimoto photographed a wax tableau of the original painting installed in Madame Tussauds in Amsterdam. Finally, we are given the information about web resources, where we can find more information about Vermeer's paintings. I like this article, because the author gives us a chance to plunge into the world of Vermeer's pictures and see the ways people follow his ideas and dreams in their own vision.




Starcrossed. Summary I

A sixteen-year old girl Helen Hamilton lived only with her dad, because her mother abandoned them. She helped him in his shop, which he co-owned with a nice young woman Kate. When it was the first day of her study, she felt ill and irritated, that's why she quarrelled with her best friend Claire. That night she saw a nightmare, the main heroines of which were three strange women, who wept blood while murmuring lots of names. She ran away from them through thorny bushes and when she woke up she noticed real scrathes on her legs and blood on her sheets. Meanwhile, their whole town bagan to talk about the Dalos family, who were going to settle in Nantucket. When the girl saw Lucas Delos the first time, she immediately got furied and tried to kill him. That time she saw the weeping women from her dream. Later, when Helen returned with Kate home from work, some strange woman attacked Kate with some blue luminous thing and tried to attack her, but she was saved by Lucas. When the girl somehow reached Delos's territory, she met him again and again saw those weeping women and tried to kill the guy. Then he explained that those misterious women were Furies, female chthonic deities of vengeance, but Helen didn't realise why she was chased by them.


среда, 13 февраля 2013 г.

My Pleasure Reading

Year I Term I - "Mort" by Terry Pratchett
Year I Term II - "Dandelion Wine" by Ray Bradbury
Year II Term III - Brave New World" by Aldous Huxley
Year II Term IV - "Catching Fire" by Suzanne Collins
Year III Term V - "Thirteen Reasons Why" by Jay Asher
Year III Term VI - "The Moonstone" by Wilkie Collins