Sunday, September 29, 2024

Sanzo Wada's Sketches of Occupations in the Showa Era

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Sanzo Wada was a 20th century Japanese artist. He was a painter (I previously featured his painting South Wind as the second image in the series of Sailor paintings), worked on color theory, and was an educator. After the war he eventually also did set and costume design, winning an Academy Award for his work on the film Gates of Hell.

He is best known for his Showa Shokugyo E-zukushi (Sketches of Occupations in the Showa Era), a series of wood block prints which show both modern and traditional occupations. These images are from that series.

Sanzo Wada

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Small garage restaurant

This is a small restaurant in Japan that is ran by a single woman. Apparently, they have a lot of small shops like this. It reminded me of my youth; I grew up in an Eastern European immigrant neighborhood and there were a lot of these sort of places. However, instead of using the garage, it would be the first-floor front room of a two-story house. I have fond memories of them.

  

Sunday, September 22, 2024

Visions of the Garden of Eden

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The story of the Garden of Eden is a well-known tale and so it has appeared in art. When God created the world, he then created Adam, the first man. He decided Adam needed a companion, so he created all of the animals, but none were suitable companions for Adam. God then yanked a bone out of Adam and created Eve, the first woman, to be his companion. 

They moved into the Garden of Eden which was a veritable paradise on Earth. The only rule was that they couldn't eat fruit from the Tree of Knowledge or the Tree of Life. However, one day a snake approached Eve and told her, I guess snakes could talk back then, that if she ate the fruit from the Tree of Knowledge that she would attain God-like wisdom. She then nagged (I assume it was the first historical example of wifey nagging) Adam into munching on the fruit as well.

Well, it turns out that didn't go according to plan because the knowledge they got was the knowledge of misery and death. Plus, their breaking of the rules pissed God off and he booted them out of the Garden and consigned them to a life of toil, hardship and death. Thanks a lot Eve, who knew that listening to a snake instead of the Creator would be a bad decision.

However, I'm a glass half full sort of a fellow and so, aside from the disease and poverty that Eve's snack unleashed, I'll try to highlight the positives from it. For example, in perusing the pictures of the Garden of Eden I noticed that all of the animals, hunter and hunted alike, frolicked about with each other implying that, as well as being paradise on earth, the Garden was also a hellhole of veganism. So, we can thank Eve for steaks, fried chicken and bacon. Bacon alone excuses a lot, right? 

Thursday, September 19, 2024

Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Creole cookout in Tobago

This is a tour in Tobago which is an island laying of the northern coast of South America. It starts with breakfast and moves through the day, featuring several local chefs and dishes common to the island. 

  

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Pyramids

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This is a collection of paintings of pyramids. They are mostly Egyptian, but some Mesoamerican pyramids are mixed in. Because a lot of mystical mumbo-jumbo surrounds pyramids they were harder to collect than I thought. There were an awful lot of images with UFOs hovering about, energy beams shooting out of them, and so forth. I ignored those.

Friday, September 13, 2024

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

September 11

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I was working in Tower 2 for Chuo Trust and Bank in 1993 during the first World Trade Center bombing; my one thought that day was “thank God, Dad is safe”. He worked in Tower 1 until a couple weeks before that bombing and fortunately was on the other side on lower Manhattan. It took me over 3 hours to walk down the stairs. 

Fast forward 8 years, and Dad was back at Cantor Fitzgerald in Tower 1. I knew he was dead and had to tell my family. There simply was not enough time for him to get to safety.

I was pregnant with my daughter and my father was over the moon to be a grandfather. Life was good, then it wasn’t. In the few moments after hearing the first plane hit the World Trade Center, I knew my life, my mother’s life, my siblings’ lives and my unborn child’s life had changed. Dad was gone. A 56 year young, father of 4, married to his college sweetheart and future grandfather was annihilated from Earth. Just gone in a few moments. – Kristen

 

Sunday, September 08, 2024

Sailors

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These are paintings of merchant and military sailors. That is, working sailors rather than pleasure sailors. They are from different eras and nations.

Wednesday, September 04, 2024

Audio illusions

This is a discussion of how hearing works in certain situations. I was particularly interested in how the ear shape and placement assists in the determination of the direction of a sound.

 

Monday, September 02, 2024

Happy Lazy Worker Bee Day

The typical human, being an abnormally lazy creature, will counter intuitively not work on Labor Day. Instead they will take the day off, activate their BBQ grill, and cook various types of cow muscles on it. Hahaha... how stupid can you get? And no, I don't mean ordering the cow muscle to be cooked 'well done' instead of 'medium rare', rather I mean the name of the holiday is LABOR Day after all, and so why in the world would you think that means you take the day off instead of working? - The Robotolizer

  

Sunday, September 01, 2024

Albert Guillaume paintings

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Albert Guillaume was a late 19th century/early 20th century French artist. He was primarily known for his posters, but he painted as well. The topic of his paintings was upper-class society nightlife. He was a caricaturist and many of the details in his paintings are amusing.    

Albert Guillaume

Friday, August 30, 2024

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Plan properly to avoid unforseen complications

Lupino Lane from Be My King
(click image to enlarge)

Always start out with a larger pot than what you think you need.
― Julia Child ―

 

Sunday, August 25, 2024

Fishing boats

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It is the summer, and a lot of people want to get out on a boat and get a hook wet. So here are some paintings of fishing boats, both personal and commercial, from hither and yon in both space and time.

Friday, August 23, 2024

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

A road trip in Laos

This is a bit of a different 'walking in cities' video. An Australian expat, at least I'm guessing his accent is Australian, is driving through the interior of Laos to his home with his wife and adopted daughter. He seems quite affable and at ease as a resident of Laos. I have no idea what he does to make a living. 

The video starts with them on the road, passing villages and encountering a lot of trucks. Eventually they stop in the small city of Phou Khoun where they intend to spend the night. He shows us their room in the guest house, and later they go out to eat in a local restaurant and to visit old friends where he hears some sad news.   

 

Sunday, August 18, 2024

People working

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These are paintings of people working. I tried to weed out communist propaganda, child labor, labor movement and other types of purely political works. Of course, I also weed out AI generated art when I find it. 

Friday, August 16, 2024

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

More than they bargained for

Cobalt-60 is a radioactive material used in hospital radiotherapy machines. Due to its half-life it eventually weakens and needs to be replaced. However, even the less radioactive cobalt-60 that remains is still extremely dangerous. It needs to be transported in a shielded container to a storage facility that can safely handle it.

In 2013 such material was being transported from a hospital in Tiajuana to a storge facility in central Mexico. When the drivers stopped at a gas station some armed men hijacked the truck and the container with the cobalt-60. There was fear at the time that it would be used for a dirty bomb, but the hijackers were simply after the truck and had no idea what its cargo was. They, after exposing themselves to a high dose of radiation, discarded the cobalt pellets in a field. 

The above video discusses that incident, and details the steps taken to find and recover the cobalt-60 pellets.

 

Sunday, August 11, 2024

Preston Dickinson's paintings

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Preston Dickinson was an early 20th century artist who belonged to the Modernist school. He moved extensively, living at times in New York, Paris, Quebec, Nebraska and Spain. Although he had a good reputation in his day, he suffered from money problems, poor health and alcoholism. He died at the age of 41 after a bout of pneumonia in Spain.

Preston Dickinson

Thursday, August 08, 2024

Kilimanjaro

Get ready for a 'whatever-the-heck-this-is' weekend
with Javed Ali and Chinmay.

 

Wednesday, August 07, 2024

Riding to heaven on the backs of turtles

 (Note: this was first posted on November 17, 2009. I'm reposting it today for yesterday's anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing)

A few years ago I happened to visited Hiroshima on August 7th, one day after the 63rd anniversary of the atomic bombing of the city.

When you get off the streetcar from the train station the first thing you see is the ruin of the Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall. The atomic bomb detonated almost directly overhead of the building. With its few still standing walls, and its dome stripped and leaving only its framework, it is the iconic ruin of Hiroshima.

When you stand at that building, if you turn in a circle you realize your standing in a bowl surrounded by hills. Most of the rest of the buildings in that bowl were reduced to rubble by the bomb blast and resulting fires.

When they cleared the rubble they set aside several blocks of the old city as the Peace Memorial Park. You walk south along the river to get to the entrance to the monuments. At the entrance card tables are set up where there are petitions for peace that can be signed. You can buy peace t-shirts and listen to folk musicians strumming guitars and singing about peace. It is a fitting sentiment for this place.

The most visited monument is the Children's Monument for Peace. A young girl named Sadako Sasaki contracted leukemia after the bombing. As she sickened in the hospital she remembered an old Japanese saying that if one folds a thousand paper cranes one is granted a wish. She spent the rest of her short life folding paper cranes, but died before she reached one thousand. The Children's Monument for Peace was built in her memory, and in memory of all the children who died from the bombing. It is covered with paper cranes that school children have folded and sent to the park.

As touching as he Children's monument was, I most wanted to see a different monument. The monument pictured with this post. The Monument in Memory of the Korean Victims of the A-bomb.

There were tens of thousands of Koreans in the city when it was bombed. Most were forced laborers who had been brought to the city, housed in barracks and worked in the munitions plants of Hiroshima. Some 40,000 were killed, and a another 30,000 injured in the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Most of the Koreans in Hiroshima were from Hapcheon, South Korea, and so sadly two cities ended up bearing the brunt of the attack (Atomic bomb survivors in South Korea still feel the wounds).

The Korean Monument was built in 1970 by South Koreans living in Japan and sited across the river and outside of the Peace Park. The Japanese authorities would not allow it to be placed in the Peace Park. It took until 1999 for permission to be granted to move it onto the Park's grounds.

As I stood in front of that Monument I could not help but reflect that all the paper cranes in the world would not have helped the dead honored by this memorial. That the peace petitions, while a fine sentiment, were no more substantial than Chamberlain's umbrella.

The Germans dressed prisoners up in Polish uniforms and shot them to justify their invasion that started the wider war in Europe. The Japanese used bayonets to stage their low-tech version of Hiroshima in Shangai as they spread ever deeper into China. The allies pounded cities with high explosives and incendiaries from the air. All across the globe men died in combat and civilians died behind the fronts. 

A few days after Hiroshima's destruction Nagasaki was bombed. Hirohito then taped his surrender speech. That night a cadre of Japanese officers ransacked the palace seeking to destroy the recording and postpone Japan's surrender. How do paper cranes and petitions solve that sort of madness?

In the end, to me at least, this small place in the Park was less about the bomb and more about Korean farmers taken from their villages and used as forced labor. A life spent at the whim of masters. Another tragedy of the war. 

My family and I were the only people at the monument when we visited it. The insciption on it reads, "Souls of the dead ride to heaven on the backs of turtles." At its base are small stones with Korean characters painted on them (pictured). The guidebook said you should leave a gift for the slain worker's ghosts. All I had were a couple of cigarettes. I supposed the ghosts might like to relax with a smoke and so I left them. It was all that I could do.
 
 

Test firing a homemade rifle

In this video the gunsmith and YouTuber AK Custom test fires his latest project. It doesn't go well for him, failing when a full charge is fired. This post, highlighting a failure, isn't really fair to him. At his channel you can see a lot of the successful guns he's built.

 

Sunday, August 04, 2024

Paintings of cooks

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Generally, if you're going to eat somebody needs to cook the food first. These are painting of cooks, both domestic and commercial, in action. Enjoy.

Friday, August 02, 2024

Fever

Get ready for a duplexing weekend with Irvin Sax & Jazz Ensemble with Curipaya.

 

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Taste testing bananas

Prior to the 1950s the strain of banana you would have bought in a store was the Gros Michel. Disease greatly impacted the Gros Michels, and cultivation switched to the Cavendish, the strain of banana that is currently the most sold type. Cavendish crops are currently being affected by disease as well, and unless a solution is found we may need to move to a new strain of banana. A likely replacement is the Gold Finger banana.