OMWC

I make no secret of my deep deep love for the art of Grant Wood, maybe for the same reason I love jazz and bluegrass and Stephen Vincent Benet: it’s so… American. SP and I even took a Grant Wood tour through Iowa a couple years ago. Although American Gothic isn’t Wood’s greatest painting, it certainly is a great painting and is absolutely and unquestionably iconic. In “American Gothic: A Life of America’s Most Famous Painting,” author Steven Biel begins by outlining some of the history, biography, and context that led Wood to create this work and won him attention in all the “right” circles in the art world. Of course, even then, the painting was interpreted in hilariously deep and divergent ways- even funnier in that it’s possible that the painting was really created as a design and compositional experiment. Certainly Wood shows off a lot of tricks and nuances that appear in his later art.

From there the book traces the proliferation of the image and the inevitable variations on a theme, commercial appropriation, and parodies. Quite fun for me.

Nan Wood and her dentist

 

SP

I read a lot of mindless brain candy this month due to not feeling great and stress. Nothing worth mentioning here, really.

BUT I also read the most amazing Choose Your Adventure Story EVER.

🙂

SugarFree

I know I’ve talked about him a lot, but getting so many of you into Neal Asher, I started a full re-read, starting with the Polity short stories, going through the Agent Cormac series, the Prador Moon and Shadow of the Scorpion prequels, The Technician and the Penny Royal Transformations trilogy.

I’ve read them as they came out, but never in internal chronological order. Despite a few things, he has been remarkably good about maintaining continuity over 20 years of novels and short stories.