Sunday, 6 July 2014

Beauty to brighten up a rainy Sunday

We had very unfriendly weather last night, with thunder, lightning and heavy rain. It's still quite yucky out there, black clouds threatening another downpour and very high winds. These two pictures should cheer me up every time I go to the blog today...



Thursday, 3 July 2014

Signs, signs and more signs

Mrsgunka sent us a very large collection of funny signs. Here's a selection for your enjoyment. The last one is MrsG's favourite. Thank you, Mrsgunka.
















Wednesday, 2 July 2014

Tuesday, 1 July 2014

Amazing art

Amy sent us the first video, showing some incredible sculptures. I went to youtube to get the embed code for the video and came across the second one, where some of the artist's techniques are shown. It also had a long article about how he started making the sculptures. It's absolutely fascinating. Thank you, Amy.





The line of pure white busts sitting amongst the dust in Li Hongbo's Beijing studio could be found in any art classroom around the world.

That is until the 38-year-old Chinese artist places his hands on one, lifts gently, and what had seemed like solid plaster transforms into a live, amorphous mass.

A roman soldier stretches like elastic, a pretty English maid suddenly rises like a terrible phantasm. They are neither plaster nor clay, but concertinas of thousands of fine pieces of paper."At the beginning, I discovered the flexible nature of paper through Chinese paper toys and paper lanterns. Later, I used this to make a gun. A gun is solid, used for killing, but I turned it into a tool for play or for decoration. In this way, it lost both the form of a gun, and the culture inherent to a gun. It became a game," he said.

To make his sculptures Li uses a stencil to paste glue in narrow strips across large pieces of paper that he then sticks together to form blocks of 500. He stacks the blocks to the desired height -- an average bust is over ten blocks or 5,000 sheets of paper high -- then cuts, chisels and sands the large block just as if it were a piece of soft stone.

Born into a simple farming family, Li said he has always loved paper, first invented in ancient China. He has spent six years producing a collection of books recording more than 1,000 years of Buddhist art on paper.

In his recent works, Li has consciously produced only perfect replicas of classical busts and shapes he used to sketch at university. The denatured human forms may make some people squirm, but Li says he uses the archetypal figures to make audiences concentrate on the material, not to shock.

'Strange' and 'unsettling' are just adjectives used by some individuals. In fact, people have a fixed understanding of what a human is, and think that a human cannot be physically manipulated, so when you transform a person, people will reconsider the nature of objects and the motivation behind the creation. This is what I care about," he said. His exhibition 'Tools of Study' at the Klein Sun gallery in New York has earned him plenty of attention across the Pacific since it opened on January 9th.

Gallery assistants pull the twenty pieces around on their plinths for visitors, but not being allowed to touch pieces themselves leaves some feeling unfulfilled.

"You know, when you can open it, there's movement, there's mobility, it becomes a dynamic thing versus a very static thing. You know, but it's like, of course, as an observer, it's like, I can only enjoy that momentum or that movement of the object if someone opens it for me. It's so funny, because it's like, enticing. You kind of want to play with it but you can't," said one visitor, Lydia Chrisman, on Tuesday (January 21).

Li is aware of this irony, and at a show in Sydney provided small models for the audience to play with. But it could be for the best. Though he refused to disclose prices, growing demand for his works means the cost of a real one would probably stretch your wallet.

Monday, 30 June 2014

Sunday, 29 June 2014

Do I smell birthday cake?


Yes you do, Belle. It's your mom's birthday! Happy birthday, Shapeshifterbelly!

Our friend SSB likes the hummingbirds that visit her garden:


She grows her own veggies:




And she wouldn't say no to a glass of good wine:

Cheers, SSB!


Saturday, 28 June 2014

Where are your glasses???

GrannyJ sent us this wicked joke. Thanks, GJ.



Yesterday my daughter e-mailed me again, asking why I didn't do something useful with my time.

“Like sitting around the pool and drinking wine is not a good thing?” I asked.

Lately, talking about my "doing-something-useful" seems to be her favorite topic of conversation.

She was "only thinking of me", she said and suggested that I go down to the Senior Center and hang out with the guys.

I did this and when I got home last night, I decided to play a prank on her.

I e-mailed her and told her that I had joined a Parachute Club.

She replied,  "Are you nuts?  You are 82 years old and now you're going to start jumping out of airplanes?"

I told her that I even got a Membership Card and e-mailed a copy to her.

She immediately telephoned me and yelled, "Good grief, Mom, where are your glasses??? This is a Membership to a Prostitute Club, not a Parachute Club."

"Oh man, I'm in trouble again,” I said, “I really don't know what to do. I signed up for five jumps a week!!"

The line went quiet. I think she fainted.


Friday, 27 June 2014

Monkey business

This short compilation was put together by a Spanish speaking person and text was added, but even if you don't understand it, it doesn't detract from the enjoyment of the video itself...

Thursday, 26 June 2014

Boys meet girls

GrannyJ sent me some pictures of these "boy" flowers:


Then I saw these "girl" flowers on Facebook:


They go really well together, don't you think?

[Thank you, GJ!]

Wednesday, 25 June 2014

Tuesday, 24 June 2014

Time to party!

We have three birthdays today: Sleuth, Queen of Sheeba and Maria T.

Happy birthday!