Showing posts with label butterflies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label butterflies. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Marvin Gaye in Ostend, Belgium and other things

There are certain songs one remembers the moment one heard. In 1973, lying in the bath in London, I heard Walk On the Wild Side by Lou Reed on my boyfriend's pea green transistor radio. Indelible moment. The same goes for Marvin Gaye's Sexual Healing, which I heard in 1983 on a fashion designer's mixtape in New Delhi, while working on a clothing collection. Boom, it got me me right in the hormones. What a song! Still thrills me, decades later. 

Sexual Healing


Marvin Gaye's singing has been a part of my life since my teens with his marvelous Heard It Through the Grapevine.

A couple of months ago I learned a little about Marvin Gaye's really hard life. Read a bit of his biography online. What suffering he went through! 

At the lowest point in his life until then, he took an unlikely refuge in a small seaside town on the Belgian Coast, called Ostend. 


"By the early 80s, like soul itself, Marvin Gaye had fractured into a million pieces. He was washed up, drugged out, underselling, overweight, mid-divorce and promoting an album Motown hadn’t even bothered to let him finish. Belgian concert promoter Freddy Cousaert met Gaye in London, a bloated wreck, and took it upon himself to improve the lot of the fallen star. Gaye would later say he “didn’t even know where Belgium was”, but that he “left it to the hand of God”. The hand of God, it seems, fancied a waffle. Gaye boarded the Southampton Ferry in the spring of 1981 with his son Frankie, heading to the sleepy fishing town of Ostend to be guests of Cousaert, staying in his house, and joining his family."



Richard Olivier's Marvin Gaye: Transit Ostend, a documentary made of Gaye's time there shows him soberly revelling in the incongruity of his surroundings, staring out over the grey waters as if they were an aquatic mirror of his melancholy, strolling along the King Albert I promenade where he took an apartment, singing the Lord's Prayer inside a church, even visiting a fisherman's bar (long since torn down) and attempting to play darts with the locals. Gaye talked of Ostend in terms of a retreat, a penance - two years earlier, he had attempted suicide by cocaine overdose in Hawaii. In Ostend, however, he professed to be living a cleaner, even monastic life, purging his past sins with plenty of jogging, sea air and even forsaking sex.

Remember Marvin from Daniel Elbel on Vimeo.

Barely 18 months after quitting Ostend, Gaye, stricken by cocaine-induced paranoia, tormented by the push and pull between his good faith and bad habits, was shot dead by his bible-bashing father, in a probable act of subconscious suicide. Although it's assumed he always intended to return to the fatal dazzle of LA, the truth is, he was in two minds - just weeks before leaving, he bought a 21-room manor outside the city. Ostend could have been his salvation.
















Magical Rings With Secret Compartments Inspired By Famous Novels by the lord of the rings, Theo Fennell



Every couple of months I need to see this video of the Georgian National Ballet rehearsal. The troupe is called Sukhishvilli. 
It's one of the most exciting dance performances I've seen, ever. 

A FaceBook video of some marvelous mechanical kites, made by a Chinese artisan, Zhang. A KickStarter video about the same man, whose kites are not just charming but marvelous works of art and ingenuity.


Ooh, such an intriguing title, The Flight of the Shadow. 

A few lovely book covers.


An animated chart of 42 North American butterflies


Selene by Albert Aublet

 (French, 1851–1938)
An addictively fun game, Line Square Dot. Try to get the dot into the box by making the dot bounce off lines

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Free channel for international music from the last 110 years, Picasso's first painting etc, early Spring

After days of grimly gray skies and rain, it's lovely to see the sunshine again.
























Fantastic! This website lets you explore music from almost any country in any decade since 1900.

So many obscure treasures from far flung corners of the planet.

Radiooooo.com is so fun! You can add songs too. 








One of my favorite romantic films, love song sung by Julie Delpy


Picasso died today in 1973. Here's his first painting, at age 8:

my inner teenager wants this









             Painting of koi fish by Terry Gilecki

 Painting of koi fish by Terry Gilecki


Painting of koi fish by Terry Gilecki




                                     Folk Art Papercuts by Suzy Taylor

Illustration by Artuš Scheiner for Hoffmann's The Nutcracker and the Mouse King (1924

               Illustration by Artuš Scheiner for Under Command Of Magic by J. Š. Kubín (1920s)

                              Illustration by Artuš Scheiner for Hoffmann's The Nutcracker and the Mouse King (1924)


                 Illustration by Artuš Scheiner for Under Command Of Magic by J. Š. Kubín (1920s)


                            Illustration by Artuš Scheiner for Hoffmann's The Nutcracker and the Mouse King (1924)

                 Cover illustration by Artuš Scheiner for Božená Němcová's Disobedient Kids


Map of the stars by Andreas Cellarius 


Portrait Of Young K.M By Nikolaos Lytras

 May there be more peace in the world. 

Illustration by Gyo Fujikawa

Thursday, August 6, 2015

A happy assortment, Thursday, August 6th 2015

A real treat, a large archive of Old Time Radio.
There are shows, advertisements, songs, talks, comedy, talks, historic speeches, all free.

Wonderful for doing housework, company while one does chores or goes to sleep. Fun listening. A few examples:























Ida Rentoul Outhwaite (Australian illustrator, 1888-1960) ~ 'Anne Rides on a Nautlis Shell'
A Fairy and a Bird Embracing- Ida Rentoul Outhwaite (Australian illustrator, 1888-1960)






































If you like butterflies, this is important to know.

Butterfly Bushes Aren’t Good for Butterflies













The ecologically correct thing to do, to help butterflies thrive, is to find plants native to your area and plant them. Here is a website to find plants native to your area in the USA.
Find Native Plants

Useful to know.

The language of lying


Zip Lookup. What your zip code says about you.


Crazy about this Colombian salsa dancing. Wow, his body is electric! Knees on fire!
SALSA CALEÑA


And Colombian salsa as it looks danced with couples in a club, sizzling
Colombian Style Salsa at a Club in Cali, Colombia


Love this vintage Indian filmi song in Telegu, her joyous plumpness, the passion
AADAVE MAYURI, the famous old rare master piece song of K Viswanath's creation


Another old Telegu romantic song that makes my heart flutter with tenderness

Nannu Dochu Kunduvate


Japanese doll making. Gentle and beautiful.
鳴子系こけし/こけしの岡仁 from dmp on Vimeo.


Online police auctions. Interesting browsing.

Gifts from Mexico: corn, potatoes, beans, tobacco, chocolate, cotton, tomatoes, peanuts, avocados, chilies, pineapples, prickly pear, limes, soursop, sweet potatoes, chiclet (gum), papayas, chilies, chokecherries, tomatillos, chayote and jicama. 


Saul Steinberg's Country Noises
NASA's planned missions through 2030
Via CookSmarts.com

Friday, August 30, 2013

Wandering around the Museum of Natural History's rare book images online



Wandering around the Museum of Natural History images
I came across this lovely old book of fern illustrations. Isn't
that a beautiful cover? Love the deep blue and gold.

When I was a child in Jamaica, West Indies, there were ferns with a silvery white, powdery underside that one could place against one's skin, slap the fern and it would leave a temporary tattoo of the fern's shape.













More images from the Museum of Natural History collection.

From the marvelous Brain Pickings.
Natural Histories: Extraordinary Rare Book Selections from the American Museum of Natural History Library (public library) brings together an extraordinary collection of works from the Rare Book Room and Rare Book Collections of the American Museum of Natural History’s Research Library, spanning five centuries of anthropology, astronomy, earth science, paleontology, and zoology representing all seven continents. Each highlighted work is accompanied by a short essay exploring its significance, what makes it rare — scarcity, uniqueness, age, binding type, size, value, or nature of the illustrations — and its place in natural history.



Awww, look at that coy look. A coquette of hippos.

Great horn owl, barn owl, meadow mouse, red bat, small headed flycatcher, and hawk owl from Wilson's American orinthology [sic]
An alluring old science book by Louis Figuier. The Ocean - the Sea and Some of its Inhabitants with some great illustrations





Gloriously happy images of sea life from some of Louis Renard's (c.1678-1746) exquisitely illustrated book, such as this one.

Fishes, crayfishes, and crabs

Louis Renard's natural history of the rarest curiosities of the seas of the Indies.