Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Spooky sculptures

I like these aged rusty homemade sculptures sitting in front yard of artist's house, presumably.  A Southwestern theme no doubt.
 
 



 
 
 

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

My favorite crazy video

A video with Cave Dwellers' song "Meditation" is pretty hypnotic.


Monday, September 28, 2009

Warming up to Kindle?

I notice some college has started an experiment with putting the reading list of a few courses on Kindle and enabling all the students to obtain a device.  I was wondering how long it would take someone to do that and see what happens.  In this case, many of the students seem to be negative about the experience. 

I purchased a Kindle2 mainly to download book collections, especially from Mobi which has inexpensive collected works of famous authors.  I'm not interested in reading newspapers or blogs for a fee on Kindle.

So far I have downloaded enough to last a couple lifetimes.  Some of the collected works have 30 to 100 books and stories in them.  That does not mean they are really the complete works of that author, for example, the Hawthorne collection has only selections from his Italian, French, British and American Notebooks.  I guess they got bored with Nathaniel's detailed observations and psychological analysis of his children's antics around the house found in the American Notebooks.

So this is my fairyland of literature and history caught inside a white carapace:

Thousand and One Nights -- Richard Burton translation
Complete Wizard of Oz books
Complete William Shakespeare
Diary of Samuel Pepys
Discourses of Epictetus
Divine Comedy - Dante, English and Italian
Emerson's Essays
Essential H. G. Wells
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire - Gibbons
History of the Pelopennesian Wars - Thucydides
Illiad and Odyssey - Homer
King James Bible
Lectures and Interviews - Robert G. Ingersoll
The Prince - Machiavelli
Varney the Vampire - Thomas Preskett
Works of: Dumas; Dickens; Defoe; Poe; Chaucer; Maupassant; Melville; Balzac; Conrad; Verne; Lewis Carroll; Twain; Hawthorne; Robert Lewis Stevenson; Kipling, Sir Walter Scott; and last but not least, H.P. Lovecraft.

So far I have resisted the temptation to reread the works of Jane Austin, Dostoevsky, or Friedrich Nietzsche, or to wade into the ocean of prose created by Tolstoy or Henry James, with whom I am less familiar.  I am beginning to wonder how much space could be left on my machine, since each work takes up many times the space of the average novel.

Buddhist statues

Some more locally made Buddhist statues, for art show, did not pay attention to the program describing them, unfortunately. But all nicely made, about 6 or 7 inches tall like the Padma Sambhava one I have.  When I see such religious objects made by local practitioners, it reminds me of the many wall frescoes found in the Tarim Basin of the old Silk Route, in what is now western China.

This Silk Road connected the Roman Empire to India and China for a while.  I recall one commentator about these caves and crumbled monastic ruins in the desolate desert of the Tarim Basin, who mocked the monks who went to such efforts to create long-lasting religious establishments that were overcome by time and hostile religions.  As if the Buddhists who created these works of art were not aware of the law of transience which is one of the central doctrines of their creed!  What a jerk.  What these works of art did help accomplish was the transfer of Buddhist iconography and doctrine from one great civilization (India) where it was doomed to Hindu and Muslim extermination, to another (China, and hence Korea and Japan), where it survives to this day.

Maybe someday a few hundred or thousand years hence a religious scholar will unearth these statues and have to rewrite the history of American religious art to explain their significance. First one is Vajrasattva, then Yeshe Tsogyal, White Chenrezig and last White Tara.









Sunday, September 27, 2009

Little yellow teacup

Saw this for sale at my favorite Chinese restaurant and could not resist it.  The dragon has a red ball with lines coming out from it, apparently this symbolizes a flaming pearl which represents good luck and wealth.  The dragon in Tibetan lore is called Druk; Trungpa Rinpoche is known to his students, for example, as the Druk Sakyong or Dragon Earth Protector.  The dragon in Chinese lore is a symbol of imperial authority, as well as the ruler of water and weather.




Below is a closeup of said red ball.
 


Padma Sambhava

A statue made by a local Buddhist practitioner...Padma Sambhava or Guru Rinpoche is revered in Tibet as culture hero and founder of Tibetan Buddhism.  His story could be a great movie, I wonder if anyone has attempted it.  Along with Yeshe Tsogyal, his consort, he had quite an extraordinary life filled with adventures and dangers, as he vied with the established Bon shamanistic religion for the favor of the king.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Fierce Guard Dog

Polar Bear the warehouse guard dog, fangs and all, so ugly he is beautiful.  Ready to run down trespassers and corner them for the police to catch, but lovable to those he knows.  He had a mate for a while but she ran away when her owner left town.  Not much of a tail so he wags his whole butt when happy.  Nice enough so far not to bother my caged parrots I carry into work everyday. 

Sunday, September 06, 2009

Van Jones Out

It is wonderful how how Associated Press can "report" the resignation of Van Jones, a self-declared Communist and Marxist, without mentioning those two words. If Jones had not resigned they would undoubtedly have continued to bury the controversy he aroused, as one after another of his past statements was uncovered. Obviously AP is still acting as Obama's watchdog, under-reporting his flaws and over-reporting his virtues. Even Wikipedia froze editing of their Van Jones article last night, and refused to allow anyone to describe Jones as a Communist.

Of course liberals don't think we should be afraid of Communists in our government anymore...but the obvious response to that is the fundamental hostility of Marxism to a limited concept of government as embodied in our Constitution. Marxist theory presupposes the supremacy of government in all phases of life, until a perfect state of communism arises of course, when society becomes classless and stateless. Of course, until that utopia comes, the iron hand of of the state must be wielded with harsh discipline to obliterate the parasitic bourgeoisie.

One cannot but suspect liberals don't care about the Constitution either, every day they are inventing new "rights" government bureaucrats must insure...the right to force others to provide people with anything that pops into their heads, food, shelter, health care, a job, dignity and so on. As if people were so guileless they had no idea how to go about providing these things for themselves. The only real rights we have are those that do not coerce others into taking care of us, such as the right to free speech and press, bear arms, life, liberty, property, due process and so on. All these other so-called rights are just an excuse to create a super Nanny state run by omnipotent bureaucrats. All powers not granted to the federal government are supposed to be reserved to the citizenry.