Friday, December 7, 2012

A VULNERABLE WONDER


 Edwin Land at the moment he revealed his invention to the world, February 21, 1947

 

He is looking at his photo.

I wonder what he is wondering

I wonder if he feels vulnerable, as he shows himself to the world, not only in the picture but also through his invention

 I wonder if he cared what other might think
or cared about what they might say about this vulnerable invention

I wonder what he did say when people cared
Or if he said anything at all

I wonder what it might have be like for him to experience his invention working for the very first time

 How wondrous, I wonder

I wonder what he was thinking in this very moment

I wonder if he knew the great impact he might have on us

I wonder

 

 

Thursday, December 6, 2012

MUSIC IS THE PLEASURE THE HUMAN MIND..


"Music is the pleasure the human mind experiences from counting without being aware that it is counting" - Gottfried Leibniz

The polymath Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716) proposed that the mind is a melding of accessible and inaccessible parts. As a young man, Leibniz composed three hundred Latin hexameters in one morning. He then went on to invent calculus, the binary number system, several new schools of philosophy, political theories, geological hypotheses, the basis of information technology*, an equation for kinetic energy, and the first seeds of the idea for software and hardware separation.

The above biographical description is from the excellent Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain (2011) by David Eagleman

MOLE CATCHER

YOUR BRAIN ON ART

Monday, December 3, 2012

THE LAMB'S CLUB

The Lambs Club -
Before becoming The Chatwal New York and The Lambs Club Restaurant and Bar, this iconic Stanford White-designed building was the epicenter of American for the 20th century. The building originally opened in 1905 as home to the prestigious Lambs, America's first professional theatrical club. Organized in 1874 by a group of actors and enthusiasts, The Lambs occupied a series of rented quarters before settling at 44th Street. The American club took their name from a similar group in London, which flourished from 1869-1879, in the name of drama critic and essayist Charles Lamb.

Stanford White, a partner at prominent architectural firm McKim, Mead, and White, was the original architect of The Lambs clubhouse. His design principles embodied the "American Renaissance," as seen in his work on summer homes for the Astor and Vanderbilt families and such formidable structures as The Washington Square Arch, Madison Square Garden and the New York Herald Building. For The Lambs, he designed a six-story, neo-Georgian brick building featuring a facade ornamented with ram heads. A boisterous grill room and billiard room were on the first floor, a banquet hall on the second floor and a theater on the third floor. The top floors provided space for offices and sleeping quarters, often utilized by members traveling to The Great White Way from Hollywood. The size of the building was doubled in 1915 when an addition was constructed on the west end of the building, a virtual copy of the original. In 1974, the building was designated a landmark by the New York City Landmarks and Preservation Commission.

Since the club's founding, there have been more than 6,000 Lambs, with an elite roster reading like a Who's Who of American theater and film: Maurice, Lionel and John Barrymore, Irving Berlin, Cecil B. DeMille, David Belasco, Charlie Chaplin, George M. Cohan, Douglas Fairbanks, John Wayne, Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II, Spencer Tracy and Fred Astaire, who was famously quoted as stating, "When I was made a Lamb, I felt I had been knighted."