return of a comrade
Feb. 26th, 2017 06:15 pm21 days until the vernal equinox
It feels colder than it really is because we just had record-breaking warmth for February.
I hope my point in my last entry got across to you even though I wasn't actively trying to make it: anachronistic order only makes sense to people named Billy Pilgrim. I can't imagine how people with 500 friends on Facebook keep up with everything.
I spent an hour and a half talking to Chantel. It didn't feel like an hour and a half and it's a small gallery. She looks a lot like Emma, I've realized, though she lacks a nose ring, and her jewelry is different, green nacreous leaf earrings. They both have round faces and big dreamy eyes. Her voice has a similar tone to it. I never really consciously connected the two in my mind. She hasn't changed much in the eight years since I've seen her.
Indiana Jones the cat is alive and kicking Nazi ass and so is Tara's pet painted turtle. At least, she thinks Harrison Ford is a painted. I read something somewhere about how you know when you're a writer or a Condemner or I don't know what, and one of the things was how you'll always remember those little quirks and details about people even if you can't remember their birthdays (I know she's a Corrupt but that's it).
She told me of a time maybe two years ago there were motion-activated kinetic sculptures by someone who's name she's forgotten and I thought she was talking about Arthur Ganson, but they were actually by David Lang.
I did my best to update her on the last 8 years in my life. She thinks the barred owl and the fox and the raccoon and the bunny are aww. The other woman at the desk was telling me about the time she saw bald eagles. She laughed at the Fast Supper and OMG Zombies.
Her favorite photograph is the same as mine: this one. She says one looks like snow to her, she likes the zebra against the night sky. I can't find those, but then again, I only have so much patience.
I like this one too.
There is a painting of Gustav Mahler by Jack Coughlin. There's Seljuk pottery and Qajar metalwork.

This is a rare religious painting by Sargent that juxtaposes objects from different time periods and from different faiths.

Marcia Ballou - Hide Out
Mixed media

Nancy Carroll - Run Herring Run

Stephanie Roberts-Camello - Woodland Tooth Fungi
Encaustic on 10x10 wood panels.
I wish I knew about things like Naturetech at the Fitchburg Art Museum. Also, that we had an atomos to link everything up with tunnels.
I posted the things that both caught my eye and could be found with a cursory glance at Google. Other things, like the Acoustic Piano, Shaman's Transformation, Embers, 186 Minnows, and The Face Of A Billion People, I can't find. There is a thing for kids in which they find the letters of the Latin alphabet in the artworks and they get some kind of bauble from the Mystery Box.
Since it's a juried show, it's probably totally a coincidence.
I said I wouldn't weigh in on the Yiannopocalypse until I've talked to Ashley.
burning question: What's the real reason why kids love Cinnamon Toast Crunch, and can we weaponize it?
It feels colder than it really is because we just had record-breaking warmth for February.
I hope my point in my last entry got across to you even though I wasn't actively trying to make it: anachronistic order only makes sense to people named Billy Pilgrim. I can't imagine how people with 500 friends on Facebook keep up with everything.
I spent an hour and a half talking to Chantel. It didn't feel like an hour and a half and it's a small gallery. She looks a lot like Emma, I've realized, though she lacks a nose ring, and her jewelry is different, green nacreous leaf earrings. They both have round faces and big dreamy eyes. Her voice has a similar tone to it. I never really consciously connected the two in my mind. She hasn't changed much in the eight years since I've seen her.
Indiana Jones the cat is alive and kicking Nazi ass and so is Tara's pet painted turtle. At least, she thinks Harrison Ford is a painted. I read something somewhere about how you know when you're a writer or a Condemner or I don't know what, and one of the things was how you'll always remember those little quirks and details about people even if you can't remember their birthdays (I know she's a Corrupt but that's it).
She told me of a time maybe two years ago there were motion-activated kinetic sculptures by someone who's name she's forgotten and I thought she was talking about Arthur Ganson, but they were actually by David Lang.
I did my best to update her on the last 8 years in my life. She thinks the barred owl and the fox and the raccoon and the bunny are aww. The other woman at the desk was telling me about the time she saw bald eagles. She laughed at the Fast Supper and OMG Zombies.
Her favorite photograph is the same as mine: this one. She says one looks like snow to her, she likes the zebra against the night sky. I can't find those, but then again, I only have so much patience.
I like this one too.
There is a painting of Gustav Mahler by Jack Coughlin. There's Seljuk pottery and Qajar metalwork.

This is a rare religious painting by Sargent that juxtaposes objects from different time periods and from different faiths.

Marcia Ballou - Hide Out
Mixed media

Nancy Carroll - Run Herring Run

Stephanie Roberts-Camello - Woodland Tooth Fungi
Encaustic on 10x10 wood panels.
I wish I knew about things like Naturetech at the Fitchburg Art Museum. Also, that we had an atomos to link everything up with tunnels.
I posted the things that both caught my eye and could be found with a cursory glance at Google. Other things, like the Acoustic Piano, Shaman's Transformation, Embers, 186 Minnows, and The Face Of A Billion People, I can't find. There is a thing for kids in which they find the letters of the Latin alphabet in the artworks and they get some kind of bauble from the Mystery Box.
Since it's a juried show, it's probably totally a coincidence.
I said I wouldn't weigh in on the Yiannopocalypse until I've talked to Ashley.
burning question: What's the real reason why kids love Cinnamon Toast Crunch, and can we weaponize it?