Friday, February 20, 2009

Photo of the Year

http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1738458_1585589,00.html

i found this commentary pretty interesting, wanted to share...miss you
friday nite. good day with mom. still a little wrecked from the whole J thing. hope u r well
xo
Lauren

The winners of perhaps the most visible and prestigious photojournalism award were announced today. World Press Photo has named this image by Anthony Suau as the 2008 Photo of the Year.

The World Press Photo site offers this description and analysis from the jurors:

The picture shows an armed officer of the Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Department moving through a home in Cleveland, Ohio, following eviction as a result of mortgage foreclosure. Officers have to ensure that the house is clear of weapons, and that the residents have moved out. The winning photograph, taken in March 2008, is part of a story commissioned by Time magazine. The story as a whole won Second Prize in the Daily Life category of the contest.

Jury chair MaryAnne Golon said: "The strength of the picture is in its opposites. It's a double entendre. It looks like a classic conflict photograph, but it is simply the eviction of people from a house following foreclosure. Now war in its classic sense is coming into people's houses because they can't pay their mortgages.

Fellow juror Akinbode Akinbiyi commented: "It is a very ambiguous image. You have to go into it to find out what it is. Then all over the world people will be thinking ‘this is what is happening to all of us'."

Juror Ayperi Ecer said: "We have something here which visually is both clear and complex...It's not about issues - 2008 is the year of the end of a dominant economic system. We need a new language, to learn how to illustrate our lives."

Thursday, February 19, 2009

j'ai finished

just broke up with J. 2:19am
on to bigger and better things

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

David LaChapelle a la Monnaie de Paris

really cool exhibition. took my mom. in a beautiful old old building.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2009/feb/06/david-lachapelle-retrospective-review

there is a PDF of all the photos that were chosen for the retrospective. Just click, in blue, "Janvier 2009 Exposition Retrospective..."

http://www.monnaiedeparis.fr/presse/index.htm



reminds me .... you end of shooting head shots again?

xo
Lauren

Sunday, February 15, 2009

The Lord's Day

a.k.a. Sunday, or Dimanche.

update: V-day was strange not in a bad way. mom came yesterday. so far so good. i bought a marquis de sade book b/c French people like to discuss it. Until I came here I totally never thought about how the S&M dude was French. I haven't even read the book yet (I bought it today with my mom. No, i picked it she paid for it. wierd?) that makes so much sense to me. It's SUCH a different approach here to "it," for one thing, it's not as referred to abstractly as "it." Rather it's a man with an extremely intense history and philosophy, and impacted modern day thought, a lot (Freud, Marx).
So yea. I'm really excited to read the book and "learn" about it; it's cool bc it sort of gives a structure to thinking about things that I think about while simultaneously having a complex and not thinking things, not "letting my mind go there," or even understanding what "there" is. I feel like I am on a sexual journey. Haha. Maybe that's what life is. But anyway, learning about myself. Learning how to connect the mind/body. I mean for me, that's what a lot of S Factor was about. And is about. I stuck with it even though it was hard and I didn't "know" why. I just went with it.

Anywho. What do you think? Let's talk about sex!
Oh and yea I've been having some. Could you tell? And all with the same person which feels the best it ever has. It means more to me now. Not that this person is the love of my life, bc I refuse to believe that, but I'm learning. Hell yes, sexually liberated countries!
Love is a whole other issue. My next inner hurdle is conquering my belief (meaning, I can't help it. I try not to think this) that there is so much for me to know, learn in the world. How could I, now, be able to recognize true love? I have not in the passed, maybe I always knew. But I guess I dont believe in it. It's hard to believe its true that it even exists.
I desperately want it, but I dont know what it is. Its sort of what makes me go on, gives fuel to the artistic fire. Passion. If I didnt believe in it, it would be hard to care about anything. Wouldn't it? Or no? I really mean that as a question.

OH! I made the coolest painting/collage thing, and I had this idea that I wanted to duplicate the texture of the main image (a breast; hmm i see a theme here,) and the first thing that came to mind was the pattern of a fishnet stocking. So i stretched it over the canvas. It looks rad. Still a little more work to go.
Ill take a photo.

Hope your weekend was good. I want to hear about the boys! I was actually referring to your nephews, which feels creepy considering the context of this letter, I have to admit.

Hope to hear from you soon
xo
LHS

Thursday, February 12, 2009

FB cracks me up!!/is like crack??

Facebook is lame sometimes, but I have to admit there are moments when it cracks me up/astounds/excites me.

For example today, when I received a FB email in Italian, 2 of them. Which I thought was cool. But also the fact that its from Mr. Italian Riviera! (Good code name, yea?). He had also sent me a message with a "special kiss" and telling me the new hotel he was working at.

I was dreading looking at his pictures, because I had this hunch/I knew that he would be and look older than how I remember him. And voila. I can only laugh at myself and give myself a little credit for having the best time. If HE has facebook, then everyone has facebook, I am sure of it.

Had to share.

xo
Lauren

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Journey Modification/Addition

I will now be staying until May 16th so I can spend time with my poetry teacher and mentor doing THIS:

Paris Poetry Workshop
May 10 - 15, 2009

For the seventh year, the Paris Poetry Workshop will offer English-speaking poets from the U.S. and Europe the opportunity to come together for a week of intensive workshops, talks and readings. This is a chance to see and experience a side of Paris not readily accessible to the average tourist, and an opportunity to spend time in Paris as a poet among poets. Participants generate new work, hone their craft, offer feedback and support on one another's creative endeavors, make new friends and expand their literary horizons.

This year's
Paris Poetry Workshop will once again kick off with a festive poetry potluck dinner in a private apartment in Paris's 19th arrondissment belonging to Marilyn Smith. Chez Marilyn will also serve as our headquarters throughout the week. The 19th is a vibrant, diverse and very friendly quartiere near the picturesque Canal St. Martin and the Bassin de la Villette, a few steps from the metro stop "Laumiere."

I'll lead the daily workshop sessions from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. every day, with a
break midmorning for coffee and croissants. If weather permits, we'll wander down to the waterfront or to the beautiful nearby Buttes de Chaumont to do some writing together. We'll spend workshop time both generating new work and offering close critique of work-in-progress, so you should plan to bring with you some poems you're working on, and also plan to do lots of writing while you're in Paris.

We'll break for lunch at 1 p.m. -- there are wonderful and reasonably priced cafes right in the neighborhood, or it's always nice (and cheap!) to buy a baguette sandwich at a boulangerie and take it to the park ... Our afternoon break will be long enough to give everyone some time to write and relax, as well. There will be late afternoon sessions with poets and writers who live and work in Paris. Most evenings, there will be poetry readings and informal gatherings. Mid-week, we'll make an excursion to Roigny and spend a day there with Jeffrey Greene. The week will culminate with a public reading by workshop participants and then a gala farewell dinner.


The workshop is limited to 10 participants ...

In order to provide intimacy and intensity as well as attention to each person's writing, the workshop will be strictly limited to 10 participants.


Cost

The full fee will be the same as last year's:
$895, with a $500 deposit due by March 15 and full payment due by April 1. The fee will cover all workshop activities, midmorning refreshments, and afternoon and evening lectures. It does not include meals, local transportation, air fare or lodging.

The fee in euros is 700 eu.


Travel & Lodging Arrangements

Many participants found wonderful apartments to rent (and share) last year in the immediate neighborhood of chez Marilyn. There are numerous websites that offer short-term apartment rentals in Paris. Marilyn has also informed me that
there's a new complex just across the canal that has both a Holiday Inn and a youth hostel. Several of her friends have stayed at the Holiday Inn and she's seen the rooms. She says they're VERY nice, and only 99 Euros per night if booked in advance. Here are the links to both (both in separate wings of the same building):

Hotel: http://www.ichotelsgroup.com/h/d/6c/350/fr/hd/parlv?countryId=0350&_requestid=449486&cm_mmc=mdpr-_-googlemaps-_-ex-_-parlv&_requestid=449486

Hostel: http://www.hostelworld.com/hosteldetails.php/StChristophersParis-Paris-19865


I hope that's enough info to whet your appetite! Paris is always gorgeous and exciting, but especially so in May. Please feel free to contact me with questions, and let me know soon if you can join us in Paris this spring ~

Cecilia Woloch
CeciWo@AOL.com
http://www.ceciliawoloch.com








To love. To be loved. To never forget your own insignificance. To never get used to the unspeakable violence and the vulgar disparity of life around you. To seek joy in the saddest places. To pursue beauty to its lair. To never simplify what is complicated or complicate what is simple. To understand. To never look away. And never, never to forget. -Arundhati Roy

Thursday, February 5, 2009