Monthly Archives: April 2006

A picture is worth thousand words: a morality tale.

If you wander down one of the corridors in the Metropolitan Museum of Art devoted to eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British art, you will come across a full length portrait of one George Harley Drummond, by Sir Henry Raeburn. George Harley … Continue reading

Posted in Art | Tagged | Leave a comment

The Prado Moment.

I still say it was the fault of that damn painting. I had flown to Madrid from the West Coast — six hours across country, with the obligatory four hour layover at JFK, then seven hours over the Atlantic — … Continue reading

Posted in Art | Tagged | 5 Comments

Time out from our current discussion on art — Terry Karney has written perhaps not a manifesto but a mission statement on being a liberal. Go Terry!

Posted in Politics | Leave a comment

The girl I love.

She’s not a Hollywood Beauty. She would be classified as being on the large side — she’s normal by most standards, but not for show business. Her face shows a gentle intelligence, but would never launch a thousand ships. Her … Continue reading

Posted in Art, Who I am | Tagged | 1 Comment

On Seeing Art.

You may well wonder at the vehemence in my last post; I did a bit myself. It boils down to this: Art matters to me. Art matters not in an abstract, “Gee, isn’t that pretty” way, but in a visceral, … Continue reading

Posted in Art, Who I am | Tagged | Leave a comment

Ars Gratia Artis

While rummaging around the blogosphere — or at least the small corner of it I forage in — I ran across a link (via Julia over at Sisyphus Shrugged) to Libertas, a conservative art blog. At the beginning of a … Continue reading

Posted in Art | Tagged | Leave a comment

Just call me "Iron Chef Comfort Food"

One of my current popcorn shows is “Be The Next Food Network Star.” Like all reality shows, it has the attraction of watching people drive themselves crazy doing things I would never do, in this case for something (my own … Continue reading

Posted in Food | Tagged | 1 Comment