Affichage des articles dont le libellé est books. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est books. Afficher tous les articles

jeudi 25 avril 2013

last spring


I love my iPhone because it is the most extensive photo diary. Seeing as I almost always have my phone with me and feel slightly less conspicuous pulling it out when something catches my eye, a lot more gets captured. This has meant thousands of pictures and an external hard drive—plus a lot of memories. Here is a (very small) collage from spring 2012 (mostly June). Puppies!, sunbeams through tree leaves, overcast skies, fluffy peonies and pink-frosted tulips, library books, ballet schools, blue hydrangeas, lilacs falling over brick walls, old ivied academic buildings . . .

vendredi 19 avril 2013

sketchbook


This is where my mind has been lately. I am fortunate enough that all of the writers illustrated above have been on my reading syllabus this year and studying them hardly feels like ‘work’ at all.

jeudi 11 avril 2013

literary Paris in the 1920s and ballet



Lubov Egorova


(Isn’t F. Scott Fitzgerald’s handwriting the most beautiful handwriting you’ve ever seen?)

I went on this tangent because of this artricle by Joan Acocella for The New Yorker—I’ve been fascinated by Zelda Fitzgerald since I read Save Me The Waltz last year, and I didn’t realise how many parallels there were between here life and Lucia Joyce’s (well, parallels meaning Swiss sanitariums and ballet lessons from Lubov Egorova, schizophrenia, Paris, want of artistic expression, and famous writer males—husband in Zelda’s case, father in Lucia’s—but that’s enough overlap to make you wonder, right?)

Also, The Great Gatsby was published eighty-eight years ago yesterday.

Two things to listen to:
James Joyce reading from Finnegan’s Wake
F. Scott Fitzgerald reading Shakespeare

“5 April: Wild spring. Scudding clouds. O life! Dark stream of swirling bogwater on which appletrees have cast down their delicate flowers. Eyes of girls among the leaves. Girls demure and romping. All fair or auburn: no dark ones. They blush better.” – James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

lundi 31 décembre 2012

2012



some highlights of 2012;
New York City!, 25 February to 10 March 2012
starting classes at a new ballet studio that I love, 21 March 2012
seeing the Bolshoi Ballet perform Don Quixote, 26 May 2012
picking up my yellow Labrador Retriever puppy Lexington and bringing her home, 8 June 2012
camping with Mum and the pup, 30 July to 1 August
seeing The Nutcracker from the best seats I’ve ever had, 5 December 2012

favourite reads (or re-reads) of 2012;
1. Save Me The Waltz by Zelda Fitzgerald
2. Nine Stories by J. D. Salinger
3. Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald
4. The Crack-Up by F. Scott Fitzgerald
5. Speak, Memory by Vladimir Nabokov
6. The Waves by Virginia Woolf
7. The Casual Vacancy by J. K. Rowling
8. Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction by J. D. Salinger
9. A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway
10. Everything Is Illuminated by Jonathan Safran Foer
11. A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett
12. Dracula by Bram Stoker
13. Dear Scott, Dearest Zelda: The Love Letters of Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald
14. The History of Love by Nicole Krauss
15. Bunheads by Sophie Flack

lundi 17 décembre 2012

monday mood-board #3


Shout out to WNYC Radio and @WNYCArchives - as part of their Hurricane Sandy coverage, they posted historic photos of famous NYC super storms, including the 1947 blizzard, which dropped 26.4 inches of snow on Central Park. They found this pic of our landmark 42nd Street Library (and poor, stoic Patience and Fortitude) in the aftermath of that storm, and we thought - considering that NYC is shut down and recovering after Frankenstorm - that it was appropriate to share. Remember, NYPL is closed on Oct. 30; stay tuned for the latest on reopenings. Meanwhile, New Yorkers and beyond, if you want to donate to the Red Cross so they can provide shelter, food, emotional support and more to those affected by Sandy, text the word REDCROSS to 90999, call 1-800-RED-CROSS or go to their website.



I am currently in the middle of Nabokov’s Speak, Memory and adoring every word; here are a few quotes . . .

“I would leave the upper floor, where we children dwelt, and slowly slide along the balustrade down to the second story, where my parents’ rooms were situated. As often as not, they used to be out at that time, and in the gathering dusk the place acted upon my young senses in a curiously teleological way, as if this accumulation of familiar things in the dark were doing its utmost to form the definite and permanent image that repeated exposure did finally leave in my mind. The sepia gloom of an arctic afternoon in midwinter invaded the rooms and was deepening into an oppressive black. A bronze angle, a surface of glass or polished mahogany here and there in the darkness, reflected the odds and ends of light from the street, where the globes of tall street lamps along its middle line were already diffusing their lunar glow. Gauzy shadows moved on the ceiling. In the stillness, the dry sound of a chrysanthemum petal falling upon the marble of a table made one’s nerves twang. My mother’s boudoir had a convenient oriel for looking out on the Morskaya in the direction of the Maria Square. With lips pressed against the thin fabric that veiled the windowpane I would gradually taste the cold of the glass through the gauze.”

“I can visualize her, by proxy, as she stands in the middle of the station platform, where she has just alighted, and vainly my ghostly envoy offers her an arm that she cannot see. (“There I was, abandoned by all, comme la Comtesse Karenine,” she later complained, eloquently, if not quite correctly.) The door of the waiting room opens with a shuddering whine peculiar to nights of intense frost; a cloud of hot air rushes out, almost as profuse as the steam from the panting engine [...] For one moment, thanks to the sudden radiance of a lone lamp where the station square ends, a grossly exaggerated shadow, also holding a muff, races beside the sleigh, climbs a billow of snow, and is gone, leaving Mademoiselle to be swallowed up by what she will later allude to, with awe and gusto, as “le steppe.” There, in the limitless gloom, the changeable twinkle of remote village lights seem to her to be the yellow eyes of wolves [...] And let me not leave out the moon—for surely there must be a moon, the full, incredibly clear disc that goes so well with Russian lusty frosts. So there it comes, steering out of a flock of small dappled clouds, which it tinges with a vague iridescence; and, as it sails higher, it glazes the runner tracks left on the road, where every sparkling lump of snow is emphasized by a swollen shadow.”

“I confess I do not believe in time. I like to fold my magic carpet, after use, in such a way as to superimpose one part of the pattern upon another. Let visitors trip. And the highest enjoyment of timelessness—in a landscape selected at random—is when I stand among rare butterflies and their food plants. This is ecstasy, and behind the ecstasy is something else, which is hard to explain. It is like a momentary vacuum into which rushes all that I love. A sense of oneness with sun and stone. A thrill of gratitude to whom it may concern—to the contrapuntal genius of human fate or to tender ghosts humoring a lucky mortal.”

mardi 23 octobre 2012

more black & white ballet photography!

Left to right: Stanislava Belinskaya as Clara, Lydia Rubtsova as Marianna and Vassily Stukolkin as Fritz, in the original production of The Nutcracker. Imperial Mariinsky Theatre, St. Petersburg, Russia, 1892.

Alfred Eisenstaedt, Ballerinas in Rehearsal for Swan Lake, Paris, 1930.

Sylvie Guillem as a student at the Paris Opera Ballet School.
Sylvie Guillem as a student at the Paris Opera Ballet School

Beautiful photos by Arthur Elgort...





And Paul B. Goode...

Backstage at Kirov



Willie Berman’s class at Steps on Broadway (Wendy Whelan!)

American Ballet Theater, Susan Jaffe 

Vaganova Academy

And because I am obsessed with Zelda Fitzgerald, here is a photo of Ballets Russes’ 1927 performance of “La Chatte”, which is the ballet that Zelda mentions in Save Me The Waltz as having inspired her to take ballet class...


“I have been to the Russian ballet,” Alabama tried to explain herself, “and it seemed to me—Oh, I don’t know! As if it held all the things I’ve always tried to find in everything else.” 

 “What have you seen?” 


 “La Chatte, Madame, I must do that some day!”

jeudi 31 mai 2012

end of May



As May comes to an end, all I can think of is ballet, puppies, and Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald. I had my last ballet class of the spring term yesterday and I don’t go back until July, and while normally the whole month of June would have seemed like too long a wait, I will be too busy in June to notice because I am getting a puppy! I am out of my mind with anticipation. And just when I thought life couldn’t be any better, I was given a ticket to see the Bolshoi Ballet this past weekend! It was surreal—my favourite scene was, of course, the Dryads, and I was especially in love with Vladislav Lantratov, who was dancing the role of Basilio in the performance I saw.

IMG_3255.jpg

All I have read this month has been F. Scott Fitzgerald—at the end of April I read Zelda Fitzgerald’s Save Me The Waltz, which is what sparked my Fitzgerald obsession is now one of my very favourite books—I keep rereading passages of it, and have renewed my copy at the library several times until I can find one to buy. In May I read Dear Scott, Dearest Zelda: The Love Letters of Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald, followed by F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tender Is The Night, then I reread The Great Gatsby and loved it even more this time around, and I am just finishing reading Babylon Revisited and Other Stories, as well as skimming through more of his short stories here, my favourites of which have been Two Wrongs and The Sensible Thing.

Here are two watercolours I attempted, one of Zelda and Scottie Fitzgerald, the other of F. Scott’s gorgeous signature (I have an obsession with handwriting, and his is especially beautiful)—


One of my other obsessions is the Paris Opera Ballet—here is an adorable documentary about the Paris Opera Ballet School and les petits rats; (the playlist to which it is attached is wonderful too).

jeudi 24 mai 2012

April, May, June

my obsessions this spring;
♥ Zelda Fitzgerald’s Save Me The Waltz
♥ Impressionist paintings of Paris
♥ piano solos
♥ Marie Antoinette soundtrack
♥ green foliage, golden sun—springtime, generally (in Nabokov’s words, “apple-green light”)
♥ Sofia Coppola (The Virgin Suicides is my quintessential inspiration for spring)
♥ natural light and all its variations, especially l’heure bleue and the golden hour (of course)
♥ Paris Opera Ballet
♥ Bolshoi Ballet
♥ Edgar Degas’ ballet paintings and sculptures, always
♥ tulips, especially pink-tipped, white, lemon-yellow, or apricot
♥ F. Scott & Zelda Fitzgerald
♥ J. D. Salinger
♥ the Glass family
♥ Margot Tenenbaum
♥ the Pacific Northwest
♥ Nabokov’s Lolita, specifically Part Two/Lo’s days at Beardsley
♥ Chanel Le Vernis
♥ my ballet classes and the studio they are in
♥ crisp, sudden spring breezes
♥ yellow Labrador retriever puppies (I am taking one home in June!)
♥ grey, overcast weather
♥ New York, London, and Paris
♥ Carey Mulligan (looking forward to this, and always loving An Education & Never Let Me Go)
♥ carnations and their resemblance to ballet skirts
♥ Paris rooftops and window light
♥ the Lula Issue 14 editorial,  “That Was My Veil”
♥ Moleskine watercolour notebooks, Windsor & Newton watercolours + gouache
♥ Alfred Eisenstadt’s photos of the Paris Opera Ballet dancers
♥ the reemergence of jelly sandals, one of my favourite things as a child

Boulevard Montmartre, printemps by Camille Pissarro

Degas, Dancer at the Photographers: 1875

Save Me the WaltzDear Scott, Dearest Zelda: The Love Letters of F. Scott and Zelda FitzgeraldTender Is the Night (With Author's Final Revisions)
(I read these in sequence and highly recommend it)

mercredi 14 décembre 2011

Notebooks of F. Scott Fitzgerald

(B) Bright clippings

23 Egyptian Proverb: The worst things:
To be in bed and sleep not,
To want for one who comes not,
To try to please and please not.

(C) Conversation and Things Overheard

39 “You believe in something,” he said, after a long time.
“I don’t know yet what it is. You’re lucky to believe in something.”
“I believe in nothing.”
“Yes, you do. You believe that’s crouching in this room very near you now—something that you tried to do without and couldn’t do without. And now it’s gradually taking form again and you’re afraid.”

59 You hate people, don’t you?
Yes, and you do too.
I hate them like hell.
What are you going to do about it?
I don’t know. But not that anyhow. If I’m cold I’m not going to always use it to learn their secrets by finding them off guard and vulnerable. And I’m not going around saying I’m fond of people when I mean I’m so damned used to their reactions to my personal charm that I can’t do without it. Getting emptier and emptier. Love is shy. I thought from the first that no one who thought about it like you did ever had it.

67 I’m in a hurry
I’m in a hurry. I’m in a hurry
What are you in a hurry about?
I can’t explain I’m in a hurry

74 Feel wide awake—no but at least I feel born, which is more than I did the first time I woke up.

76 In utter weariness he asked her once in different words, “Then where do you go from here—where do you turn?”
“Toward life,” she said “Toward life,” and turned toward him.

(D) Description of Things and Atmosphere

143 Days of this February were white and magical, the nights were starry and crystalline. The town lay under a cold glory.

162 The first lights of the evening were springing into pale existence. The Ferris wheel, pricked out now in lights, revolved leisurely through the dusk; a few empty cars of the roller coaster rattled overhead.

188 The blurred world seen from a merry-go-round settled into place; the merry-go-round suddenly stopped.

202 Drawing away from the little valley, past pink pines and fresh, diamond-strewn snow.

206 Cannes in the season—he was filling the cafe, the light which blazed against the white poplar bark and green leaves with sprightlier motes of his own creation—he saw it vivid with dresses just down from Paris and giving off a sweet pungent odor of flowers and chartreuse and fresh black coffee and cigarettes, and mingled with these another scent, the mysterious thrilling scent of love. Hands touched jeweled hands over the white tables; the vivid gowns and the shirt fronts swayed together and matches were held, trembling a little, for slow lighting cigarettes.

246 Out the window, the snow on the pine trees had gone lilac in the early dusk.

295 They all went to the porch, where the children silhouetted themselves in silent balance on the railing and unrecognizable people called greeting as they passed along the dark dusty street.

296 The first lights of the evening were springing into pale existence

301 Is there anything more soothing than the quiet whir of a lawnmower on a summer afternoon?

303 This restaurant with a haunted corner.

1753 The mechanical sound of pingpong balls on a rainy afternoon.

(E) Epigrams, Wise Cracks and Jokes

326 One of those tragic efforts like repainting your half of a delapidated double house.

404 Grown up, and that is a terribly hard thing to do. It is much easier to skip it and go from one childhood to another.

413 Vitality shows in not only the ability to persist but the ability to start over.

(F) Feelings & Emotions (without girls)

451 “I feel as if I had a cannon ball in my stomach.”

464 She wanted to crawl into his pocket and be safe forever.

(G) Descriptions of Girls

472 She was not more than eighteen—a dark little beauty with the fine crystal gloss over her that, in brunettes, takes the place of a blond’s bright glow.

477 An exquisite, romanticized little ballerina.

492 She was the girl from foreign places; she was so asleep that you could see the dream of those places in the faint lift of her forehead. He struck the inevitable creaky strip and promptly the map of wonderland written on the surface of women’s eyebrows creased into invisibility.

513 She was a thin, a thin burning flame, colorless yet fresh. Her smile came first slowly, shy and bold, as if all the life of that little body had gathered for a moment around her mouth and the rest of her was a wisp that the least wind would blow away. She was a changeling whose lips were the only point of contact with reality.

520 A girl who could send tear-stained telegrams.

523 Sat a gold-and-ivory little beauty with dark eyes and a moving childish smile that was like all the lost youth in the world.

530 Passing within the radius of the girl’s perfume.

537 Emily, who was twenty-five and carried space around with her into which he could step and be alone with their two selves.

542 A woman’s laughter when it’s like a child—just one syllables, eager and approving, a crow and a cry of delight.

546 Always a glisten of cold cream under her eyes, of wet rouge on her lips.

566 Women are fragile that way. You do something to them at certain times and literally nothing can ever change what you’ve done.

592 Bright, unused beauty still plagued her in the mirror.

1740 For she has a good forgetting apparatus. That’s why she’s so popular, why she can have a heart like a hotel. If she couldn’t forget, there wouldn’t be any room.

1744 She’ll never meet a stranger.

(H) Descriptions of Humanity (Physical)

618 Photographed through gauze.

622 His heart made a dizzy tour of his chest.

636 She did not plan; she merely let herself go, and the overwhelming life in her did the rest. It is only when youth is gone and experience has given us a sort of cheap courage that most of us realize how simple such things are.

683 She reminds me of a record with a blank on the other side.

687 Family like the last candies left in dish

688 She was so thin that she was no longer a girl, scarcely a human being—so she had to be treated like a grand dame

(I) Ideas

720 Girl and giraffe

733 The Dancer Who Found She Could Fly

787 Shooting at the Moon (play idea).

839 That September 1924, I knew something had happened that could never be repaired.

843 My idea about depth in three dimension pictures about submarines.

1761 Story—A hole or bag in which someone finds all the things he’s ever lost.

(L) Literary

1024 Resent the attempt of the boys and girls who tried to bury me before I was dead.

1037 There never was a good biography of a good novelist. There couldn’t be. He is too many people if he’s any good.

(O) Observations

1247 Young people do not perceive at once that the giver of wounds is the enemy and the quoted tattle merely the arrow.

1261 Family quarrels are bitter things. They don’t go according to any rules. They’re not like aches or wounds; they’re more like splits in the skin that won’t heal because there’s not enough material.

1268 Dispairingly and miserably, to what purpose neither knew, as people in fire save things they don’t want and have long disliked.

1285 Francis says he’s tired of a life like a full glass of water, relations with people a series of charades, you never do the whole world.

1295 It seemed to her that the dance was woman’s interpretation of music; instead of strong fingers, one had limbs with which to render Tschaikovsky and Stravinski; and feet could be as eloquent in Chopiniana as voices in The Ring. At the bottom it was something sandwiched in between the acrobats and the trained seals; at the top it was Pavlova and art.

1297 They would like to have been her, but not to have paid the price in self-control.

1325 Zelda’s idea: the bad things are the same in everyone; only the good are different

1355 The luxuriance of your emotions under the strict discipline, which you habitually impose on them, makes that tensity in you that is the secret of all charm—when you let that balance become disturbed, don’t you become just another victim of self-indulgence?—breaking down the solid things around you and, moreover making yourself terribly vulnerable.

1363 There’s quite a case for self-pity—save for that, I’d long ago have died of pitying you.

1757 One man only felt suffering as with his fingers felt its rough shape. Another seemed to hold it against his cheek.

(S) Scenes and Situations

1407 She stood there in the middle of an enormous quiet. The pursuing feet that had thundered in her dream had stopped. There was a steady, singing silence.

1412 The realization came to her that the tracks of life would never lead anywhere and were like tracks of the airplane; that of their plan no one knew it; if they were tracked with no particular Daniel Boone to hack trees; that the world had to go on and that it wasn’t going to be inside her, there still had to be these tracks. It was an awful lonesome journey.

1535 She had never done anything for love before. She didn’t know what it meant. When her hand struck the bulb she still didn’t know it, nor while the shattered glass made a nuisance by the bedside.

1538 NOSTALGIA OR THE FLIGHT OF THE HEART

(U) Unclassified

1599 LIVES OF THE DANCERS (A Ballet Synopsis) by F. Scott Fitzgerald
SUMMARY
I Some Russians and the dance, before the war. Heartburn in a village.
II The dancing characters are moved by fate to post-war Paris.

(Appendix) Loose Notes

1851 A feeling of having had life pass virtually and endlessly before their eyes like a motion picture reel and give it that much attention.

1878 You’re all the songs