Julia. Tree.

Jan 17

Long time… No Post.

If anyone is out there, and anyone out there can spare a minute, could you please tell me what your understanding/ definition of architecture is? Please please please! And a few thanks you’s as well! 

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/N239ZHS

Thanks internet friends!!! 

Oct 01

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Collages Take II.1

Light: 

Movement: 

Collages Take I

Light: 

Movement: 

Sep 07

Would You Look At That Floor!

Arch Daily posted this recently. Trees, yes. Okay. I like trees. But I like the fact that there is art ON these trees much more than I like these trees themselves. 

It’s great! I love any kind of art incorporated into nature. Seeing how the two can blend and create a harmony and a rhythm that play wonderfully off of one another is refreshing and inspiring. This installation is in Sweden, a place that I’ve noticed really cares about nature incorporating art. While I was there I was lucky enough to visit Millesgarden another great example of art in landscape (though, much more formally than the art installation pictured above).  

This was the overall site of the garden. We were free to wander around and experience both the sculptures inside the buildings as well as situated around and incorporated into the landscape. Overall, the sculptures outside seemed much more successful, and much more comfortable in the elements. 

As for a little more close to home, one of my favorite places in Boston would be Forest Hills Cemetery. In general it is just a wonderful place, but I also enjoy seeing all of the outside sculpture tucked into the landscape. It literally plays hide and seek (a game, as I’ve mentioned a few times now, I adore). I’ve been there at least three times since Sophomore year. And now that I’m making this post, I’d like to go back just to take some pictures of the art installations that I love so much. Here are some examples of my favorites (click on the image for more info): 

Another place that I’ve been wanting to visit is the Storm King Art Center in New York. It’s another sculpture garden of sorts. It’s absolutely absurd that I haven’t been there. I live less than an hour away. Talk about get with the program. Laaaaaame. Maybe I can stow away sometime this fall for an educational little trip (the ideal world). Anyway, I’d really like to see it there. I’ll add it to my “To Do” List along with picking apples. 

Sep 06

Landlocked, y’know?

Fair trade just got fair-er. 

I’m so excited about this project! 

Some brilliant person discovered that you can roast coffee beans AT HOME. In an air popcorn popper! I can’t wait to try this experiment! 

The instructions for this project state that home roasting is an activity best left for outside, so, it looks as though I’m not going to be able to try this until I go to my New York home. 

Any cooking / do it yourself project is RIGHT up my alley (in fact, I would go so far to say that this “alley” is actually a 6 lane highway), so this is exactly the kind of project that I want to try, pronto. 

I am also excited about this because it means that I can buy green coffee beans, fair trade. Meaning, skip out the roaster in the already small procession between the farmer and my coffee mug. Oh. Oh. I am so very excited about trying this at home. 

Home roasting is also a lot less money. Yes, I am willing to spend a little more per pound on fair trade coffee. No doubt about it, but this cuts the cost by roughly $4 less per pound! That’s nuts.

It’s also convenient that my house comes equipped with a positively archaic air popcorn popper in the closet of my dining room. Score. 

“It looks like a wet weed!”

I love tea pots. It’s a grandma thing. She loves tea cups and tea pots, and I always grew up having tea parties with her friends. 

Now they’re just a comforting thing. They are cozy, functional, classic yet whimsical, and reminds me of gram. Oh, and Beauty and the Beast. There is no wrong. 

I love this idea of reuse. 

Sep 05

Artist: Melanie Bonajo

Artist: Dominique Appia

Entre les Trous de la Memoire

(Source: appia-d.ch)

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Goodnight Frank.

M*A*S*H is one of my all time favorite shows. It’s old, and most of the people I know who are my age can’t stand it, but overall the series was pretty amazing. It wouldn’t have been on for 11 years if it wasn’t. 

Alan Alda was more or less the start of the show for all 11 of those years, and if it weren’t for him the show would have been nothing. One of my favorite quotes from him (and, good. grief. there are thousands of good ones. I promise you) is this: 

“…I’ll carry your books, I’ll carry a torch, I’ll carry a tune, I’ll cary on, carry over, carry forward, Cary Grand, cash and carry, carry me back to Old virginia, I’ll even ‘hari-kari’ if you show me how, but i will not carry a gun.” 

I guess it would be helpful to explain that the show is set in an army hospital in Korea during the Korean War. 

Anyway, Alan Alda has always been one of my favorite actors, in the show he plays a very noble, honest, moral, goofball, and in real life I’ve realized that he’s very similar to that same personality (The best actors often act exactly like themselves *in* their respected roles, I’ve found…). 

He’s very much an older man at this point, but he is still very active. He’s written two books in the last few years. I’ve read them both, the first I thought was okay. The second however, was amazing. Positively, amazing. 

I would recommend this book to anyone. It might help if you knew who Alan Alda was before reading the book, but it’s not necessary either. The entire book is centered around the many times over the course of his career that he’s been asked to speak. In each chapter he explains some learning experience, and how that experience prepared him to give that speech, then he includes that speech in the chapter as well. 

Maybe it’s because I’m at that “graduation” age where speeches are a “thing” in my life. Maybe it’s because I could relate to a lot of the speeches (though not all of them, they’re all very different). I don’t know. 

What I do know is that it is the best book that I’ve read in a long time. I enjoyed it immensely, and it was an extremely easy and quick read. 

So… Go read it! 
I’ll leaven let you borrow it from me.  

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