26.3.08

a rumbo perdido

in florida for the week, enjoying the sun's warm rays, my mom's home cooking, & the slow-paced dynamics inherent to orlando.  just takin' 'er easy...

went to the salvador dalí museum in st.petersburg earlier in the week - it was awesome.  the collection is actually one of the most extensive in the world.  plus, the museum usually has other works on loan and also houses temporary exhibits - currently on dalí & film (which -ironically - opened at the london tate modern).  here's what i learned:

1. dalí & walt disney collaborated on a surreal, animated film called destino, which was abandoned midway through & lay dormant for 57 years until disney's nephew ordered it to be completed. i loved it. like fantasia, the images morph into one another to create crosses between reality and fantasy.  also, right around that time, dalí was designing a dream sequence for alfred hithcock's film spellbound - a freudian scene in which an amnesic (gregory peck) narrates a recurring dream to his psychoanalyst (ingrid bergman) in an attempt to decode his subconsciousness. 

2. in the 70's, dalí released a hallucinogenic tv documentary called impressions of upper mongolia.  he was inspired in great part by patterns obtained staining the brass band of a pen. here's the catch - he would regularly urinate on it to "improve the patination" ... !

on to other things.
here's otros aires, a neo-tango group founded in barcelona in 2003 by miguel di genova.  they sound good!  click here to listen to sin rumbo on their own website - or check out another of their songs, below.  enjoy!

milonga sentimental - otros aires


and a bit more of a classic, by one of the masters.
libertango - ástor piazzolla - performed by yo-yo ma 

besos.

9.3.08

Starving Hysterical Naked

This weekend has changed my life. Why? Well, I'll tell you. But, first... you might want to sit down.

Imagine that the simplest, most fundamental assumptions on which you rested your life, the very facts that drove your every move, your every decision - were suddenly violently ripped from beneath your feet, throwing you into a state of chaos, disorientation, imbalance! Well, what I learned this weekend did just that. Except - worse, because what I experienced in reaction to this radical, far-reaching fact were 2 somewhat opposing feelings, leaving my soul in a state of perhaps eternal conflict. (I should note - this was all courtesy of the Sleeping and Dreaming exhibition at the Wellcome Trust).

Apparently, the "fact" that we need 8 hours of sleep - is a MYTH! It was popularized during the time of King Henry VIII when Sir Thomas More wrote Utopia - and in his "perfect world," the inhabitants slept 8 hours!

My immediate reaction was one of relief. To someone with insomniac tendencies, knowing that we are each "unique" and that there is no real number of hours that the human body requires - or rather, that there is variation among us - is alleviating.

But, on the other hand, to someone who has planned her life around 8 hours of sleep - that is, constantly set, reset and modified her alarm during sleepless nights in order to assure the valued 8 hours of sleep - to someone who has missed meetings, classes, exams, & outings in pursuit of the heavenly 8 hours of sleep - this piece of news is quite troubling!

What was soothing - apparently many great inventors, discoverers, and thinkers have stumbled upon their creations in their dreams, literally. Among them, Paul McCartney. He woke up from a dream listening to the tune of Yesterday playing in his head & wondered how nobody had ever written down the melody to such a beautiful song. Enjoy!

Paul McCartney - Yesterday

Besos.

5.3.08

I'd like to invite you over for a duck dinner...

You bring the ducks! (J. Wellington Wimpy)

Popeye the Sailor Song
(Jeje... note J. Wellington Wimpy's hamburger cooking skills!)


Max Fleischer, one of my childhood heroes.
If the name doesn't sound too familiar, think animation.
Creator of Betty Boop.
Responsible for Popeye the Sailor.
Brought Superman to the screen.
Inventor of Rotoscoping. (In fact, check out this 1936 article published in Popular Science.)

Considering the cartoons debuted in the 1930's, the animation effects are pretty sick!

Popeye the Sailor - Rotograph


On an entirely different note - check out this month's issue of National Geographic, if you can. There's an article on Bhutan that utterly made my jaw drop. The headline reads:

Bhutan's Enlightened Experiment
Guided by a novel idea, the tiny Buddhist kingdom tries to join the modern world without losing its soul.

I just didn't realize places like this still existed.
Besos.