April 19, 2009

it’s all about the body

Susie Orbach’s Bodies

below the clouds

Sally Fallon’s Nourishing Traditions

December 20, 2008

It’s  snowing across the entire US (well–not true, but might as well be)  and you’re on Christmas break which means you spend your days eating, watching LOST in bed, and avoiding taking that next step towards whatever vague post-grad plans you have. But you’re on vacation! You don’t need to do shit!!  So take the procrastination a step further and take a look at  the top 100 blogs in the world! I’m particularly privvy to #97… Architecture, yeah!

now and then

August 5, 2008

Larry Sass shotgun house

Larry Sass' shotgun house, designed for the MoMA

A traditional shotgun house

A traditional shotgun house

check it twice

July 7, 2008

A wise man once said that it’s never too early to start your Christmas list. AMEN.

overlookThe Center for Land Use Interpretation is a research-based educational organization that produces public programs about the built landscape of the United States from its sites in Los Angeles, Utah and the Mojave desert, with an upstate New York location opening in 2006. The Center’s aim is to increase and diffuse information about how the nation’s lands are apportioned, utilized and perceived. Recent examples of their work include a two-day Tour of the Monuments of the Great American Void by bus and the exhibit Immersed Remains: Towns Submerged in America. This book takes readers on a tour through the strangely unfamiliar land that Americans live in, demonstrating that we can understand ourselves and the nation by examining the clues on display all around us, often clearly visible but ignored. Each chapter explores a different topic, from an in-depth look at Ohio (“the most all-American state”); through scale shifts in model landscapes, exemplified in the three largest hydraulic models in the world; and law-enforcement training environments that simulate public space. Readers can dive into the hidden and enchanting world of show caves, where America is on display underground; and come up into the Great Basin, a zone covering most of Nevada, and portions of Utah, California, Oregon, Idaho and Mexico, whose network of watersheds has no outlet to the ocean. Following lines and edges, through cities, suburbs, small towns and wide-open spaces, the Center guides us upstream, toward the heart of another America—the same, but different.”