Stephen Fry is a quintessential “new modern.” He is comfortable in conversation with figures from the past, even as he embraces the latest modes of discussion. An actor, author, and public figure, Fry speaks in this interview about his literary and philosophical inspirations…
Author: Andrew Hazlett
Music video: “Little Dolls” by Indochine
Best extant pop song dramatization of the 20th century… Indochine’s “Little Dolls”
“Nuit Blanche” A romantic surrealist short film?
This short video captures, in a striking fashion, a fleeting moment between two strangers…
Links on Art and Design: A digest of short items from Twitter and other sources
Some interesting links and short items on Art and Design from The New Modern twitter stream and other sources.
Architecture
- President Obama’s new budget would end Save America’s Treasures and Preserve America for lack of “metrics.” [read]
- Unhappy Hipsters: A new blog invents amusing captions for stark Dwell mag photos [view] via @KateC
- Mies masterpiece Farnsworth house revisited. A nice series of photos from @DesignApplause of a wonder of modern world architecture, now managed by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. [view]
Design
- Hollywood’s computers: NPR looks at the computer screens shown in films that tell a story in a flash of computer animation. [read/listen]
- A blog entirely dedicated to the beauty of ampersands [view] via @swissmiss
- Beautiful, historic, and/or interesting letterheads enshrined Letterheady [view] via @walterolson
- Why did the modernists love sans serif typefaces? [read] via @thinkaboutart & @ColinPeters
Visual Art
- How art affects the brain, a study/exhibition at the Walters Museum [read] via @davetroy
- Niagara Falls… to American art what portraits of kings are to European art? [read]
- A typically lovely illustration by the legendary Arthur Rackham [view] via @ThinkAboutArt & @EricOrchard
A sparkling blue “alien” in our own seas
Vivid blue creatures with sparkling bioluminescence… not just the province of expensive special effects in sci-fi movies. Here in earth’s own oceans you can find the lovely Corynactis viridis:
You can read more about this intriguing little organism (and see other beautiful videos of sea creatures) at the blog of Morphologic Studios – a “scientific art endeavor.”
[via @Vimeo]
How a carefully disguised corpse helped win World War II
On April 30, 1943, the body of Glyndwr Michael, disguised as Major William Martin of the Royal Marines, was dropped into the sea off Huelva on the Spanish coast. In his briefcase were letters, meticulously faked by British intelligence officers to give the impression that the Allies intended to attack Greece, and not Sicily.
So begins the remarkable story of “Operation Mincemeat” – an amazingly complicated and surprisingly successful operation by MI5. After finding a suitable”volunteer” from the among the vagrants’ corpses in a London morgue, operatives created a detailed back story and a convincing set of personal effects and letters. A submarine deposited “Major Martin” a mile from shore with his attache case. Many twists and turns followed, even after the Germans took the bait. Here’s a thorough-seeming Wikipedia page on the operation.
The operation is detailed in a new book by Ben Macintyre which will be released in the U.S. in May 2010. The Times [UK] has been publishing lengthy and fascinating excerpts [part I; part II].
Dr. Ralph Stanley: A Legend of Bluegrass
Civil War ghosts haunt Sally Mann’s photography
This segment from a documentary film about photographer Sally Mann focuses on her use of 19th Century technology to capture haunting images of Civil War battlefields. Appropriately spooky.
But Mann’s comments about photographic technique inspire greater respect for Matthew Brady and other period practitioners… they struggled mightily to avoid the “imperfections” Mann regard as stylish postmodern flourishes.
* Welcome new readers from Instapundit and elsewhere! The New Modern will be launching in earnest soon, so please consider subscribing to our mailing list or our RSS feed (or following us on Twitter or Facebook) to see more along the lines of this post as we get rolling. Thanks. –Andrew Hazlett
[Via @GreatDismal and @Charlie_Athanas]
This video clip is from What Remains – a 2005 documentary about Sally Mann’s work and family. Her book of photographs of the same title is available from Amazon.
Arcade Fire’s song for Haiti
“Haiti” by Arcade Fire – A passionate 2007 performance at Rock En Seine in Paris.
Some Haiti earthquake relief donation links:
A beautiful Chinese folksong from Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Project
From Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Project, a performance of “Yanzi (Swallow Song)” – a Chinese folk song, Kazakh in origin… “Please do not forget your promise and change your heart.”