Art

Stuck on Pogo

January 10, 2012
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Stuck on Pogo

Stefan Kanfer has warmed my heart with an affectionate article on the cartoonist Walt Kelly, and his comic strip, Pogo, over at City Journal. I share Mr. Kanfer’s enthusiasm. Although Kelly was generally known as a lefty (though not an admirer of the Soviet Union, as Kanfer points out), the charm and sheer achievement of Pogo transcended politics. When I was a kid, vaguely hoping to grow up to be a cartoonist, I pored over his daily strips, and despaired of ever achieving anything like that masterful inking and character modeling, to say nothing of the preposterous, nonsensical humor. Imagine Bill Watterson (Calvin and Hobbes) collaborating with Robin Williams—while being possessed by the spirit of Lewis Carroll. This furry, scaled, quilled, feathered, and shelled quintet was backed by a supporting cast of Dickensian proportions—more than 600 players, all told. They included Beauregard Bugleboy, a doggerel-loving canine; Miz Mam’selle Hepzibah, a flirtatious skunk; and Deacon Mushrat, a hypocritical mammal of the cloth who spoke in elaborately lettered Gothic script. (When an editor complained that such effusions were hard to read, Kelly replied, “Mighty hard to letter, too.”) There were also Molester Mole, a paranoid sneak; Seminole Sam, a fox who specialized

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Book Review: ‘Voyage of the Mind Carriers’

July 20, 2011
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Book Review: ‘Voyage of the Mind Carriers’

By Mike Gray Voyage of the Mind Carriers — By Gary Wolf — iUniverse — 2011 — Philosophical science fiction novel — Trade paperback: xv + map + 189 pages — ISBN: 978-1-4620-0433-1. Gary Wolf doesn’t write conventional fiction, and more so for his science fiction. He may occasionally use a common SF trope, but you can bet he’ll put his own unique spin on it. You almost never know where his stories will go. Wolf’s science fiction trenchantly explores the same territory that many “crime fiction” and SF authors only rarely and tangentially venture into with their works: the contested battleground of culture, the professed — and often hypocritical — acceptance of certain norms, and the cognitive dissonances that result from these clashes. In short, Gary Wolf could be unique in specializing in what might be termed “cultural science fiction.” In Voyage of the Mind Carriers, the main character is a police detective (who once spent some time in a sanitarium) trying to solve a murder (and another one later on) while dealing with his adolescent daughter’s teen angst; he’s fallen in love with one of his best suspects; and he’s come to seriously doubt his own place in

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“Aggressive Desecration”: Are There Links Between Materialism, Darwinism, and “The Impoverishment of Beauty”?

June 16, 2011
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“Aggressive Desecration”: Are There Links Between Materialism, Darwinism, and “The Impoverishment of Beauty”?

By Mike Gray For now, of course, we all live under a suffocating blanket of materialism. Many fight to breathe fresh air. Others seem strangely content and smug about being able to endure it and even urge us to give up the struggle and join those brave New Atheists as they revel in the foul, close atmosphere, boasting of its superiority to any alternative. This condition of our culture probably explains the pervasive ugliness of modern media life . . . . — David Klinghoffer To commit art is a human act. Much of today’s art celebrates the ugliness of the world and, by implication, the hideous human psyche. But Klinghoffer thinks Intelligent Design (ID) has the potential to rehabilitate the artistic endeavor: If art can make a case for ID, it’s equally true that art itself points to a design transcending our natural world and would be devastatingly blunted in a world where materialism and Darwinism had driven out the sense of life’s enchantment. This, at any rate, is the argument of some philosophers who you might not otherwise think of as ID advocates. The threatened impoverishment of beauty deserves consideration as being at stake in the cultural struggle

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Patriotism on Display in Stanley Cup Finals

June 13, 2011
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Patriotism on Display in Stanley Cup Finals

The battle for Lord Stanley’s Cup looks like it will go for 7 games. Two periods into Game 6 and the Boston Bruins lead the Vancouver Canucks by the score of 4 to 0.  In the midst of this classic battle between the Canucks and Bruins, one man stands in the goal crease wearing some very pro-American artwork. Boston Bruins goalie, Tim Thomas’ mask is emblazoned with images that would inspire any Tea Party Patriot. The mask’s back-piece includes the stars and stripes sporting the iconic Gadsden flag rattlesnake and phrase “Don’t Tread On Me,” along with his children’s initials: K.I.T., K.A.T, and K.O.T. The mask’s front is emblazoned with an American Eagle and “In God We Trust”: Such love for his family and unashamed patriotism is nice to see amidst hockey’s premier event.

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Pets’ Antics Provide a Path to the Divine

May 24, 2011
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Pets’ Antics Provide a Path to the Divine

By Daniel P. Crandall G.K. Chesterton wrote, “If anybody chooses to say that I have founded all my social philosophy on the antics of a baby, I am quite satisfied to bow and smile.” The God Dog Connection is Marti Healy’s “bow and smile” as she shares numerous tales about how her pets’ antics enrich her life and deepen her faith. I met Marti Healy one afternoon while exploring downtown Aiken, a town near the Savannah River in South Carolina. I happened upon the Aiken Visitor Center, which on that particular day hosted the author. As I sat chatting with Ms. Healy about reading, writing, and living in the South, I noticed a book, on the table between us, with “Dog” in the title. Upon first glance, I thought it read “Good Dog Connection.” After looking more closely, I chuckled to myself at how I had misread the title. Perhaps it was a case of seeing what I wanted to see, for I certainly believe God is good. In a similar fashion, when I think about past pets’ behavior, it may be that I only saw what I wanted to, never going beyond the surface antics. Marti Healy’s stories provide

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Prose & Poetry Update

May 24, 2011
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Prose & Poetry Update

This week’s issue begins and ends with G.K. Chesterton. Up first, the “Prophet of Common Sense” on Art, Literature and accepting the status quo: “The beautification of the world is not a work of nature, but a work of art, then it involves an artist.” – Illustrated London News, 9-18-09 “By a curious confusion, many modern critics have passed from the proposition that a masterpiece may be unpopular to the other proposition that unless it is unpopular it cannot be a masterpiece.” – On Detective Novels, Generally Speaking “And all over the world, the old literature, the popular literature, is the same. It consists of very dignified sorrow and very undignified fun. Its sad tales are of broken hearts; its happy tales are of broken heads.” – Charles Dickens “The aim of good prose words is to mean what they say. The aim of good poetical words is to mean what they do not say.” – Daily News, 4-22-05 “A dead thing can go with the stream, but only a living thing can go against it.” – The Everlasting Man, 1925 Short Fiction The Disadvantage of Having Two Heads written & illustrated by G.K. Chesterton “A little boy once looked

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Pratt Falls—Art Institute Finds Art Offensive

March 1, 2011
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Pratt Falls—Art Institute Finds Art Offensive

By Warren Moore Steve DeQuattro is a fifth-year drawing major at New York’s Pratt Institute, an institution that takes considerable (and historically deserved) pride in its century-plus of training artists in a variety of media. However, The New Criterion reports that DeQuattro’s work has been excluded from the school’s show of the works of graduating students. In fact, although his faculty advisor supports him, Pratt’s work was removed from the show following the protests of his peers—the classmates who would be sharing show space with him. They claimed DeQuattro’s art was offensive, and his department chair stepped in and dropped him from the show. What horror has he perpetrated? What offense is so dire that college-educated artists fear the contamination of their own work merely from proximity to his? Well, as the article notes: Mr. DeQuattro is a political artist. He uses his background in graphic design to illustrate the dominant political culture of his world. At Pratt, this means creating work that addresses, as he wrote to me, the “growing bureaucracy, higher tuition, new buildings for administration, new offices, and departments, and left-wing bias, all at the expense of the students.” . . . He has developed a piece

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Author/Philosopher Denis Dutton Dies

December 28, 2010
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Dennis Dutton, an American author and philosopher who moved to New Zealand and served as a professor of philosophy, has died. Dutton was the founder of the excellent website Arts and Letters Daily. Story here.

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Can Culture Generate Spontaneous Order?

December 12, 2010
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Can Culture Generate Spontaneous Order?

By Bruce Edward Walker Review of Literature & the Economics of Liberty: Spontaneous Order in Culture, ed. Paul Cantor and Stephen Cox (Auburn, AL: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 2010). In recent decades, literary criticism has championed several schools that disavow common-sense economics in favor of more private and personal agendas. The “personal is political” formulation long ago crept into English Departments, at the expense of more traditional understandings of the warp and weave of Western Civilization. Beginning in the mid- to late-twentieth century, students were subjected to successive waves of New Criticism, Marxist Theory, Queer Theory, Feminist Theory and Deconstructionism – all guilty of squeezing square pegs into round holes in order to further individual reputations and engineer social change rather than increase knowledge of the human condition through the arts. The human condition is, no matter how much theorists would prefer to believe otherwise, economic as well as spiritual, sexual and political. After all, even atheist transsexual Marxists need to trade something for food, clothing and shelter, do they not? A valid question for the creators and critics: What provides the best economic model to ensure the happiness of the seven billion inhabitants of this earth? And what of

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Moral Art and the Immoral Artist

November 27, 2010
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Moral Art and the Immoral Artist

“Here is the conclusion of the matter: Wagner, other artists and history have taught us that an immoral person can create good art. Indeed, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but if that eye is jaded or opaque, then is it good art that the critic sees, or a perversion? If God is the creator of every beautiful thing (including creating man to create good art), then isn’t it true that the degree man is loyal to God is the degree any genius in his art becomes transcendent?” — “Socrates” Ellis Washington convenes another symposium, this one comprised of Socrates; Richard Wagner, German Romantic composer; Leni Riefenstahl, Hitler’s filmmaker; Wimsatt & Beardsley, The New Criticism School; Ezra Pound, American expatriate poet; Publius, pupil of Socrates and conflicted lover of Wagner’s music. Socrates states their aim: “We are gathered here today at my Symposium to discuss the venerated discipline of aesthetics and to seek to answer this question of the ages – Can immoral art be good? Or more pointedly, can an immoral person create good art?” Washington’s article — “Symposium: Art, music and the Wagnerian dilemma” — is available on WND. Wimsatt & Beardsley’s The Verbal Icon, in

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Education as a Lifelong Process – An Academic Who Gets It

November 8, 2010
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Education as a Lifelong Process – An Academic Who Gets It

By Daniel Crandall I’m sure you’ve picked up a book or magazine article, started reading, and thought, ‘Wow, this guy gets it.’ I had that experience while reading Angelo Codevilla’s American Spectator article, “America’s Ruling Class — And the Perils of Revolution,” which he’s subsequently expanded into a book, The Ruling Class, and which S.T. Karnick insightfully explored at American Thinker. Recently, I had the pleasure of attending the Catholic Medical Association’s Education Conference, “Restoring the Integrity of Medicine: The Imperative for a Christian Anthropology,” where I picked up Stratford Caldecott’s Beauty for Truth’s Sake: On the Re-enchantment of Education. I began reading and quickly discovered the following in the Introduction, wherein Prof. Caldecott presents education as a life-long process that integrates faith and reason: Education is our path to true humanity and wisdom. By this I do not mean simply what goes on in school and university — which all to often turns out to be a path in another direction entirely away from both humanity and reason. I mean the broader process that engages us all through life. To be alive is be a learner. Much of the learning we do takes place at home, in the family,

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How Did Hollywood Ever Get by Before Computers?

August 20, 2010
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How Did Hollywood Ever Get by Before Computers?

by Mike Gray In an article on Pajamas Media, Ed Driscoll discusses special effects (FX) that really were special. A commonly employed camera trick he discusses is the “matte painting,” a small image superimposed over a background containing a set and the actors. The undisputed master of the matte shot was Albert Whitlock. It was a money-saving device commonly used in Hollywood until the late 1970s, when George Lucas and his crew almost single-handedly reinvented movie FX by coupling the camera to a computer. Unfortunately, an indefinable “something” was lost in the transition, Driscoll notes: . . . the aesthetics of old Hollywood also helped to sell matte paintings. From Gone with the Wind in 1939, to the great MGM musicals of the 1950s, films made during Hollywood’s golden era typically had a softer, more painterly look in general. Contrast this more aesthetically pleasing look to the harsh gritty films that became the vogue in the 1970s after Old Hollywood collapsed. It wasn’t just the aesthetics that changed, Driscoll notes. He says politics have become a determining factor in the look and intent of the New Hollywood’s product. He quotes from a 2005 article by Brian Anderson: There’s a simple

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"Culture is the expression of the guiding philosophy of the day."—Murray Rothbard

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