This is the list of the books that listeners to this radio series of interviews are currently reading. Please use the comment box below to add your book(s) or comment if you wish on all these great suggestions!
Home Reading
This is the list of the books that listeners to this radio series of interviews are currently reading. Please use the comment box below to add your book(s) or comment if you wish on all these great suggestions!
I am reading Austin ‘s books “Steal Like an Artist” and “Blackout Poem” &”Show Your Work”
A Sense of the Mysterious by Alan Lightman.
Some Memories of Drawings
–Edited by Doris Bry, Curator, Whitney Museum of American Art in colaboration with Georgia O’Keefe
A collection of Georgia O’Keefe’s drawings in various media with each drawing accompanied by the artist’s comments on how, why, when, and/or where she made each drawing.
Excerpt:
“Drawing No. 13. 1915. Charcoal. 24 3/4 x 18 7/8 inches
This is a drawing of something I never saw except in the drawing. When one begins to wander around in one’s own thoughts and half-thoughts what one sees is often surprising.”
Soledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson
Street Fighting Years; An Autobiography of the Sixties by Tariq Ali
Well written and engaging story of Ali’s progress growing up as a Marxist in the fledgling country of Pakistan and then becoming a key player in the politics of revolution in Britain during the 1960s and his activism during the Vietnam War. Tells the less publicised side of that struggle.
The Book of Joy: Lasting Happiness in a Changing World (a conversation between the Dalai Lama and the Archbishop Desmond Tutu). Deep, wise, quite humorous at times.
La femme du Blanc by Muriel Diallo
Im reading
Anne of Green Gables
by L.M. Montgomery
My first time reading this classic. Anne has now become my favorite charachter in literature.
“I would very much love to be good at something astonishing”
Anne Shirley
TRUE LOVE IS MY COUNTRY
by Insa Rose Vermeeren, self imposed exile from democracy
A story of transition between declining democracy and a new world.
I keep coming back to this one, so perhaps it will be intersting to others. Beauty: A Very Short Introduction by Roger Scruton
I’m reading:
Leonardo Da Vinci
-by Walter Isaacson
I am reading The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry
Have also been reading the Memoirs of Casanova. Super long, but parts are very interesting. To understand Casanova’s beginning as a young priest turned over sexed libertine is worth the one or two dollars in the kindle shop. Also anything by Mary Carr
Reading “Single, Gay, and Christian.” An interesting take and look into what it means to live in these worlds simultaneously, while maintaining your identity in such a way that makes the majority of each group uncomfortable.
In Indian Mexico
A Narrative of Travel and Labor
Frederick Starr
Published in 1908
The book relates the travels by Frederick Starr visiting the Mexican natives of The Southern part of Mexico. His work was to study the physical type of south Mexican indians but it also relates his adventures , the customs of the people and the friendship he enjoyed with some of them.
The Ravenous Raven by Midji Stephenson, illustration by Steve Gray. While preparing for Women As Birds show in January and working on first ever graphic novel, I needed something energetic and fun. The story is a romp through gluttony featuring a smart bird with a big appetite.
Sounds like s fun read. I’ll have to check that out
“James Wright:A Life in Poetry” by Jonathan Blunk This is a striking biography of Wright, his life, his creative trajectory, and his passionate commitment to his craft. Anyone working in a creative discipline will find deep veins of rich material about living, creating, and devotion to “the work” in these pages. I highly recommend!
My Favorite Thing Is Monsters by Emil Ferris
I love that book too!
The Word, The Book and The Spaces They Inhabit
This is a first of a series of short books by story-teller and intellectual lawyer Mari Shaw on “The Noble Art of Collecting”.
The Rebirth of Painting in the Late Twentieth Century
by Donald Kuspit
Kuspit is an art critic who “examines the continued validity and variety of painting in the postmodern era…”
Eckhart Tolle: “New Earth” and Lynne McTaggart “The Field”
Eckhart Tolle: “New Earth”
The Red Tent
–by Anita Diamant
I missed this book when it came out 20 years ago but after recently reading Diamant’s “Day After Night,” I wanted more. While not literary fiction, it is lush and full in its poetic use of all the senses–the sounds, sights, touch, tastes, and scents inherent in ancient nomadic desert life–which is enriching my work in the studio each day.
Generosity by Richard Powers
Day After Night
–by Anita Diamant
I am reading “Leaves of Grass” by Walt Whitman, “The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know is Possible” by Charles Eisenstein,” and re-reading “Teach Like Your Hair’s on Fire” by Rafe Esquith. Also memorizing “The Man Who Forgot Ray Bradbury” by Neil Gaiman (which involves reading and rereading a lot :-D).
The Hole In The Universe:
How Scientists Peered Over the Edge of Emptiness and Found Everything
–K.C. Cole
Currently reading Freedom, the end of the human condition by Jeremy Griffith.
The Hidden Life of Trees:
What They Feel, How They Communicate
–by Peter Wohlleben
My Current list:
Great book for old masters recipes in all media. I am intrigued by the process behind the paint. Esp the making of the pigments.
The Materials of the Artist and Their Use in Painting: With Notes on the Techniques of the Old Masters, by Doerner, Max
I also am reading this book, to see what I can do myself with materials from my own land.
The Organic Artist: Make Your Own Paint, Paper, Pigments, Prints and More from Nature
Neddo, Nick
Art from my yard is my current focus, and so a book about birch bark plaiting has led the way to some experiments with vessels.
Plaited Basketry with Birch Bark
Yarish, Vladimir
In seeking to understand more about Matriarch vs Patriarch culture and the art that comes from both I am reading this book
The Language of the Goddess: Unearthing the Hidden Symbols of Western Civilization
Gimbutas, Marija Alseikaite
Finally and most intriguing is the study of Object oriented Ontology, with thanks to Bjork and Tim Morton
Ecology without Nature: Rethinking Environmental Aesthetics
by Timothy Morton
For me, I am currently looking at all processes of creating art and any and all avenues to deliver that expression. My main body of concern is the intuitive process in creation, not allowing so much my thinking mind to control, but to let the right brain be free to stumble upon what ever it is that it wants to say. I am always surprised.
I am at one time reading many different books on many subjects, primarily non fiction, nature, animals, history, plants, herbs, healing. This is one that I think is quite interesting at the moment.
A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future
Written by: Daniel H. Pink
Julie ,
is Gimbautus by M. Alseikaite in Lithuanian or English?
4321 by Paul Auster
&
Art of the Haiku by Stephen Addis
(& watching TV for letting my shadow slip through)
I’m reading The Emmigrants by W G Sebald.
I’m currently promoting a fantasy love story – “Silent Love”
Available on Amazon.
I have six books that I have had published. “Cowboy Cartoons by Daryl Talbot”, “Cowboy Cartoons #2”, “Cowboy Cartoons #3”. “Oklahoma Cowboy Cartoons”, “Laughing in Cadence” and “Laughing in Rank and File”. Available at Amazon.
I’m enjoying “The Silent History”, a story about a new way of communicating, and being, by Eli Horowitz, et al.
I am leaving the book I wrote, Public Private Relationships and the New Owners of the Means of Production,
The foundation research for this book is years of studying the economic development statutes put into place in Maine since the Longley Doctrine was institutionalized in the late seventies. My book tells many stories of Maine communities ruthlessly exploited by this doctrine which is stated in a nutshell as ” Centrally managing the economy is an essential government function which must be done by public private relationships”
Most of my current reading is a continuation of this research, not exactly books- reading statutes and ordinances, and following through with expanded research into articles, written by others. That takes up a lot of time.
On Tyranny, Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century – Timothy Snyder
A must read!
Living Beautifully with Uncertainty and Change by Pema Chodron
Hold Still by Sally Mann
Theft By Finding
David Sedaris
A House by the Sea, journal of May Sarton
Dessert Solitaire by Edward Abbey.
Currently reading “Georgia, a novel of Georgia O’Keefe” by Dawn Tripp and
“The Dream Colony, A Life in Art”, be Walter Hopps with Deborah Treisman and Anne Doran
Lillian de Jong, Janet Benton
WWWj.janetbentonauthor.com
True literature and an unforgettable character, deepening your understanding of the mother-child bond and a punishing society whose roots have still not gone away. Enlightening and superbly written.
Cabinet Magazine has a series, Twenty-Four-Hour Book,in ” which an author or artist is “incarcerated in its gallery space to complete a project from start to finish within twenty-four hours.”In this latest, Jeff Dolvin was given a source-text to use one day before-hand:the 1986 catalogue for Braintree Scientific, a company that provides lab equipment for experiments on rats and mice. What resulted is the indelible “Take Take.”
I am also reading Sharon Cameron’s brilliant meditation on creators such as Robert Bresson and Dostoevsky whose orientation challenges and stands apart from the false constrictures of categorization, “The Bond of the Furthest Apart”.
And I’m re-reading Bruno Schulz’s “Sanitorium Under the Sign of the Hourglass.”
All 3 are amazing books.
disn
The Cardturner by Louis Sachar
I’m reading ‘Alias Grace’ by Margaret Atwood.
But What if We’re Wrong? By Chuck Klosterman. ” …speculates on the likelihood that many universally accepted, deeply ingrained cultural and scientific beliefs will someday seem absurd. Covering a spectrum of objective and subjective topics, the book attempts to visualize present-day society the way it will be viewed in a distant future.” Fascinating, really puts into perspective what is remembered and left out of History
sounds awesome. I might have to look into this one
I am presently reading “YOUTH: Without Barrier” just doing another revision. Is a collection of 12 stories involving young people struggling in life. They all made the difference in their life.
The Spell of the Sensuous — David Abrams
I am reading – letters of Van Goch.
I love this book! My copy includes his sketches …oh man … so mychbto learn from this hard working man. Artist.
Three Degrees of Latitude: A Curious Guide to the Natural History of the Pehuén (Yes it’s written by my sister Jane Coffey and it’s terrific!
Losing Helen by Carol Becker, (meditations on her mothers passing, sad, funny and wise.)
Empress Dowager Cixi by Jung Chang (It’s a page turner, about an amazing time and person in China’s history)
Men in Dark Times, Hannah Arendt (What can one say, it illuminates in this time)
Olive Kitteridge, Elizabeth Strout
The Return by Hisham Matar (elegiac, a loving portrait of his lost father, country and time)
The Sellout, by Paul Beatty (!!!)
Delacroix’ Journals (somewhat dull but we can ask does the art world really change)
The Hills of Hebron by Sylvia Wynter
(brilliant, wonderful vivid novel ,just read it)
Sven Beckert’s Empire of Cotton: A Global History is one of the most revelatory books I’ve ever read, truly epic.
“Cotton is so ubiquitous as to be almost invisible, yet understanding its history is key to understanding the origins of modern capitalism. Sven Beckert’s rich, fascinating book tells the story of how, in a remarkably brief period, European entrepreneurs and powerful statesmen recast the world’s most significant manufacturing industry, combining imperial expansion and slave labor with new machines and wage workers to change the world.” Cotton manufacturing was the basis for Western industrialization. Much of the foundation of all our wealth today was the capital generated by unpaid labor of slaves.
I recently read the “Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks”, by Rebecca Skloot, the true and unjust story of a young black woman whose cells were taken without permission or knowledge for medical research. This book is an incredible account of what happened to Henrietta and her family. It is important to remember her legacy and and recognize the history of her immortal cells..
Currently reading “Real Artists Don’t Starve” by Jeff Goins.
Reading “Art Objects: Essays on Ecstasy and Effrontery” by Jeanette Winterson. Must reading for anyone trying to approach and understand art of any type.
Quote: “If the obvious direct emotional response is to have any meaning, the question ‘Do I like this?’ will have to be the opening question and not the final judgement. An examination of our own feelings will have to give way to an examination of the piece of work. This is fair to the work and it will help to clarify the nature of our own feelings; … It is right to trust our feelings but right to test them too. … But here we come to the first hurdle of art, and it is a high one; it shows us up.”
Right now I am reading Heartsnatcher by Boris Vian, a character in a French New Wave film was reading it during a scene in a coffee shop; and so I thought to myself, I should probably check that out.
Currently reading “The Theatre of the Occult Revival Alternative Spiritual Performance from 1875 to the Present” by Edmund B. Lingan
“Salt: A World History” by Mark Kurlansky
and
“Rothko” by Jacob Baal-Teshuva
“The Alchemist” by Paulo Coelho
“The present” by Spenser Johnson
Currently reading “Rabid: A Cultural History of the World’s Most Diabolical Virus” by Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy. Enjoying it immensely, but then, I do love the intersection of disease and culture.
Just finished RED: The Art and Science of a Colour by Bucklow Spike; COLLECTED STORIES by Gabriel Garcia Marquez; THE HANDLESS MAIDEN by Mary Elizabeth Perry. Looking forward to THE RIDDLE OF THE IMAGE also by Spike. Not a fan of fiction but Marques was important so when I heard of his passing, I ordered all of his works and so will make them my summer reading….dark choice.
Finishing ‘The Mind Parasites’ by Colin Wilson. Interesting read (even though I am not a usual fan of the genre this one seems to ‘grasp beyond usual’ if that makes sense)
I am enjoying and I recommend Restoration and Merivel by Rose Tremain.
The Voices Within,
the History & Science of How We Talk to Ourselves
By Charles Fern hough
I find my inner thoughts to be important. And yes, I talk to myself. This book is insightful as Fern hough is a Psychologist and and author. He understands creative voices.
Essential reading for artists today! Incredibly inspiring. — Artists Against War and Fascism: Papers of the First American Artists’ Congress.
Also reading New Vocabularies in Film Semiotics
James Baldwin: Notes of a Native Son. A Grace Paley Reader. Short Stories by William Faulkner. The entire Sherlock Holmes canon. Jane Eyre for the 10th time
Just finished reading TRIBE on Homecoming and Belonging by Sebastian Junger
My Bible for the next few weeks is “Walk through walls” by Marina Abramovic.
I am reading:
The Cool School, writings from america’s hip underground
edited by (the late) Glenn O’brien
Being of the Sun, (companion volume to Living on the Earth)
By Alicia Bay Laurel
I am reading Max Frisch, Homo Faber, a fantastic book about rational thinking of powerful humans and destiny
Lilli de Yong, Janet Benton
Janet Benton’s brilliant debut novel, Lilli de Jong about a late 1800’s Quaker Woman
Its true, I’m Janet Benton’s mother.
The Sympathizer by Viet Nguyen
I’m reading The Art Of Rivalry by Sebastian Smee. Great first chapter. Jury is out on the rest. Art and Fear is as book I strongly recommend
“Selling Contemporary Art: How to Navigate the Evolving Market” by Edward Winkleman 2015
One of my goals as an artist is to secure commercial gallery representation. Now that I’ve had my first solo show at a commercial gallery, I am working to find another, then another. This involves talking to many gallery owners, and I find that having an understanding of the challenges faced by modern gallery owners puts me in a better position to understand THEIR goals and discuss how my work would benefit their program.
Illness as Metaphor by Susan Sontag
Javier Marias- A Heart So White
While reading this book you can feel a dance somewhere. There are moments when i was sure Marias is dancing with me, with my mind. Mostly, I think he is just dancing while writing. Writing is his dance and he is a hell of a dancer. I am grateful to witness this beautiful dynamic.
American Gods Neil Gaiman
“Unspeakable”, by, Chris Hedges (cultural critic and author who was a foreign correspondent for nearly two decades for the New York Times). With noble compassion Hedges slays dragons of lies about the political, economic, and psychological ‘terroir’ contemporary artists the world over are steeped in. The truth is daunting but ironically it brings a little relief as you realize that you are not exclusively to blame for your plight. Want a clearer understanding of what you’re in the middle of? Read this book.
https://www.amazon.com/Tex-Molly-Afterlife-Richard-Grant/dp/0380807068
The Marriage of Opposites. Fantastic book about many things but a great read about the life of Camile Pissaro.
Confabulations. by John Berger. (2016)
nb: ‘Language is a body, a living creature…..and this creature’s home is the inarticulate as well as the articulate’.
Cezanne, a life
By Alex Danchev
Wonderful book
Full of information and well written
Body of Glass (1991) by Marge Piercy is an amazingly astute vision into the future, where the planet is divided by corporations not continents or countries!
Yes, sounds familiar doesn’t it?
The Vanishing Velazquez by Laura Cumming and What I Loved by Siri Hustvedt are two recent reads that I found engaging. Also, Hold Still by Sally Mann.
I’m reading “Red: The Art and Science of a Colour” by Spike Bucklow
I came across this book near the tail end of producing a series of paintings utilizing primarily the color red. It has been wonderful and interesting to delve into a color and learn of its historical,
scientific and cultural ramifications.
I’m reading The Cross of Redemption which is a compendium of articles, essays and interviews with James Baldwin that for a number of reasons hadn’t already appeared in book form. It was pulled together by Randall Kenon and published a few years ago, 25 years after Baldwin’s death. This powerful voice formed in the crucible of the Civil Rights movement is as poignantly on point today as it was then. It was particularly good for me to read a few interviews from 1980 when I had spent a lot of time with Baldwin in France– it brought his voice and concerns from that year to life again, as surely as if he were sitting across the table, long cigarette dangling from one hand, glass of Johnny Walker and ice waving in the other.
“The Cradle of Real Life” — Jean Valentine
oops, “The Cradle of the Real Life”
Hugo von Hofmannsthal, der Brief des Lord Chandos, This is an excellent book that should be considered and added in your radio series.
In the realm of hungry ghosts
Gabor Maté
David Sax
The Revenge of Analog: Real Things and Why They Matter
Ask More, by Frank Sesno
Just Mercy, by Bryan Stevenson (up close and personal insight into racism and the death penalty)
Walking through Walls by Philip Smith – so good!
“Just Kids” by Patti Smith, WONDERFUL!
Heidegger: the origin of the work of art
The Gospel According to Matthew
Confabulations
By John Berger
anything by Hito Steyerl about the image and of course Camille Paglia and I am enjoying your list very much.
Currently reading Brian Rutenberg’s Clear Seeing Place. Wonderfully written journey of a contemporary painter.
Narcisa, Jonathan Shaw.
“Gonzo Bukowski”
My music is called ‘ Songs And Witty Stories From The Heart Museum!’
My favorite read is Power VS Force by Dr. DAVID HAWKINS.
“The ZERO Marginal Cost Society” by Jeremy Rifkin.
This book opens with the premise that the traditional aims and practices of “free market” capitalism and consumerism contain the seeds of its own obsolescence and uses current familiar examples to demonstrate the inexorable movement toward zero marginal costs in energy, transportation, communication, education, and production.
Rifkin points to the Internet of Things, 3-D printing, MOOCS, robotics, as game-changing agents driving us toward a collaborative, open-source revival of the Medieval “Commons” on a globally networked democratized scale…a practical, but optimistic, and inspiring look at a creative future.
“The Three Body Problem” by Liu Cixin. Get ready for the rearrangement of your brain cells. (!)
“The Wall of Storms” by Ken Liu. The second of his Dandelion Dynasty novels, this book measures swashbuckling with intrigue.
Thank you for this book list!!!
“Courage to Create” By Rollo May. Re-Read it while deconstructing the book to collage pages and text on mixed-media paintings for upcoming exhibit – “Navigating the Soul’s Journey”. It definitely gave me the “courage to create” thru the artistic process, personal challenges, hurricane Matthew (I live in St. Augustine, Fl), and daily deluge of despairing news of our troubled world( that I finally limited to very small doses so I could stay spiritually connected in the studo.). FYI. If you have an old copy it may be valuable. I saw one listed for $2000. Mine may have been worth that much. Lol. Now it is a valuable addition under layers of other collage elements, paint, and other media!
The Rise by Sarah Lewis
“Creativity, the gift of failure and the search for mastery.”
A great book for creatives who (as we all do) lose our mojo from time to time.
Abstract City – http://www.christophniemann.com/books/abstractcity/
I just consumed: Notes from a Minor Key: a memoir of music, love and healing, by Dawn Bailiff. This accomplished, passionate and generous musician, composer, writer offers a generous account of her remarkable life. A surprisingly quick and lush read!
“At a Journal Workshop” writing to access the Power of the Unconscious and to Evoke Creative Ability” by Ira Progoff, PH.D.
“Serenity” A Companion for Twelve Step recovery, Complete with New Testament Psalms & Proverbs.
“The Rainbow Book” (Meaning of Color both physically and metaphysically, an encyclopedia from ancient to modern times)
“Everybody’s fool,” by Richard Russo. Folks living in a upstate NY town. Incredible exploration of their interwoven lives along with a dog and a man with the same name as well as police chief who hears voices. Hella good reading
The adventures of Pánfila: The fly-bee Kindle EditionThe Adventures of Panfila is a story that leads to reflection. The book recounts the experiences of immigrants arriving to distant countries who must adapt to new customs and different cultural backgrounds.
Language, beliefs, food, clothing, physical features, the color of skin and eyes, are aspects that identify “the others” in their new environment. In some cases, there are circumstances or elements that lead to the transformation and at the same time, they are essential tools for survival.
You have to read this book, full of hope for those who in one way or another have had to leave our countries.The book in Spanish, French and English are available
Rereading THE ART SPIRIT by Robert Henri
Just finished THE STRANGER IN THE WOODS by Michael Finkel
“Out of your mind” from Alan Watts
I’m currently reading “Ways of Seeing” by John Berger and “The Female Malady” by Elaine Showalter.
The book I’ve read before those was Henry Marsh’s “Do No Harm” – stories of Life, death, and brain surgery.
I can recommend the correspondence between Susan Taubes and Jacob Taubes, 1952. A book by Wilhelm Fink, which gives a great insight as to how it feels to live in the shadow of a successful person. I also love going back to Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s “Letters & Papers from Prison”, which teaches about the simple things one should be grateful for. One of my other favorite books is Nicole Krauss’ “The History of Love”. It’s just beautifully written and shows the importance of love as a driving force.
I also once in a while go back to my own book ‘Women and Art” (2013), which didn’t turn out so well for various reasons, but try to see the good in the bad. Failing is part of life and a learning experience and if the reader can take that with him or her, I’m still happy.
thank you, and this is your book, correct? http://a.co/85Qqz0w
Stern Men, by Elizabeth Gilbert
Running the Rift, by Naomi Benson
’24/7′ by Jonathan Crary
Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tales
The Murmuring of the Artistic Multitude, Global Art, memory and Post Fordism.
Pascal Gielen. [posted by Nancy Hart]
“Down and Out in Paris and London” by George Orwell.
Lots of good books on this list!
I’m presently reading two Books-
‘The Szasz Quotationary’ editor Leonard Roy Frank.
The book is a sort of compendium of Szasz’s Stand on ‘mental health & illness’ and
the reality tunnels created by psychiatrists, priests, politicians.
He is very much for personal autonomy and libertine philosophy.
The other book I’m reading is
‘The Dawning Moon of the Mind-Unlocking the Pyramid Texts’ by Susan Brind Morrow.
It’ a Brilliant explortion of metaphor, language, poetry and of course the pyramid texts.
The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen
The Arcades Project by Walter Benjamin
Please read my book
A Girls Courage
By Mary Ellen Snclair
This Lamentable City, Poems of Polina Barskova
–Translated by Ilya Kaminsky
A book that resonates so deeply for me. I keep it by my spot at the table to read a few pages while I eat breakfast or lunch these days…helps to ground me and give solace;
“Braiding Sweetgrass” by Robin Wall Kimmerer
Another, because I have aging parents and I want more understanding;
“Being Mortal” by Atul Gawande
I’m re-reading Kandinsky’s “Concerning the Spiritual in Art.” I read as an art student many years ago, and am discovering it fresh with new eyes after years as a working, commited artist.
Also reading again “Special Orders” poems by Edward Hirsch which I won in a poetry competition in John Skoyle’s workshop at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown. Reading this collection once was not enough. Stunning poems.
I read an incredible book recently. “The Art of Rivalry” by, Sebastian Smee. I recommend it to any artist who wants to more clearly understand how deeply artists effect one another. It is an historical analysis and truly brilliant.
Eye of the Sixties: Richard Bellamy and the Transformation of Modern Art by Judith F. Stein
–an incredibly well-researched book on this important era and figure.
The Sympathizer by Viet Thinh Nguyen
I’m currently reading:
Lee Krasner, A biography by Gail Levin
This Way Madness Lies by Mike Jay
Charles Demuth Watercolors by Barbara Haskell
Daniel Garber, Romantic Realist by Lance Humphries
Women Artists by Margaret Barlow
Thinking Fast and Slow
A Gesture Life
Narmeen Naser
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress by Dai Sijie
The Unknown Rilke: Expanded Edition
–Translated by Franz Wright
Franz was a brilliant poet and translator, my mentor and dear friend, sorely missed. In Franz’s introduction in which he discusses Rilke’s artistic vision, he says, “I think his behavior and statements on artistic practice can be summed up by the words necessity, love, and self-discipline…”
A very interesting book called Manuitius Covenant, The Life and Death of Planet Earth. by Tim Hildebrandt, Randy Handley and Robert price. A realistic fantasy about a possible future that might be preferable to our own.
1984-
George Orwell
“The View From the Studio Door: How Artists Find Their Way In An Uncertain World” by Ted Orland.
Great list!
I am reading Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, Donna Tartt’s The Gold Finch, and Behringer’s Witches and Witch Hunts.
I’m reading “The Consolations Of Philosophy” by Alain de Botton
RA Material: The Law of One
Learn the true history of truth and history. This is the definitive source on channeling and ancient metaphysical knowledge. There is nothing more paradigm shifting than discovering the RA Material.
Tao Te Ching
This ancient eastern philosophy is the secret to life—it is the manual to all living things. Mysterious as it is beautifully poetic, it has become the guiding manual for all artists even before they have even heard of it. So powerful as it is soft, it’s able to explain everything by saying nothing. You can go your entire life without finding the secret, or read/listen to the Tao while you’re young and realize what you’ve been missing all along.
Amazing
I’m reading My Stroke of Insight by Jill Bolte Taylor
The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
Author: Florence Wiliams
A must read, great insight to current publications made in the sciences to get us closer to nature by documenting hard evidence of the positive benefits on the human body.
I’m reading :
What Painting Is
–by James Elkins
and
Song
–by Brigit Pegeen Kelly
I also love the introduction by Margaret Lamb to Charlotte Bronte’s early books.
1) The Professor by Charlotte Bronte.
2) Shirley by Charlotte Bronte.
Currently reading “No More Excuses” by Sam Bennett.
1. Art and Fear: Observations On the Perils (and Rewards) of Artmaking, Bayles and Orland
2. The Re-Enchantment of Everyday Life, Thomas Moore
3. Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life, Gregg Levoy
I am reading:
Bitch Planet Vol. 1, graphic novel, written by Deconnick De Landro
Of Intercourse and Intracourse: Sexuality, Biomodification and thr Techno-Social Sphere, monochrom’s Arse Elektronika Anthology
Edited by Johannes Grenzfurthner, Guenther Friesinger, Daniel Fabry
Currently reading:
1. Completed poems and selected letters of Michelangelo
Translated by Creighton Gilbert
Loving yourself
Sherrie Campbell, PHD
The Entitlement of the Soul
Palma Mingozzi
The Currently reading:
1. Completed poems and selected letters of Michelangelo
Translated by Creighton Gilbert
Loving yourself
Sherrie Campbell, PHD
The Entitlement of the Soul
Palma Mingozzi
The
The Art Spirit
by Robert Henri
Benjamin Patterson
“Living Fluxus”
I am currently reading Extreme Screenwriting by Barb Doyon
I am reading Ascension John Coltrane and His Quest, and just finished a wonderful story Pretty Paper by Willie Nelson.
I’m reading
Vivid Awareness – A Mind Instruction of Khenpo Gangshar
by Khenchen Thrangu
I took one year to read The Life of The Mind, Thinking, Willing – Hannah Arendt
I will take another year to come back to my notes creating a Carnet with notes and drawings.
Now, I read Le langage de la déesse de Marija Gimbutas
and
Lascaux ou la naissance de l’art de Georges Bataille
Rabih Alameddine:
An Unnecessary Woman (NY: Corsair, 2014)
A wonderful novel about reading, the (obsessive) art of translation, and the way it may fill and define one’s life.
Very nice!
I am reading “The Dark Valley: a panorama of the 1930s”
Why? I read a lot of things but, with the advent of Trumpian Policy I thought it would be good to understand how the world fell to Fascism in the 1930. Unreal the similarities to today. Learn from your errors. Don’t repeat the past.
not a real cheery read, but interesting.
PRISON BABY: A Memoir
When prison is home
My recent and helpful reads:
The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls
The First Bad Man by Miranda July
And My Side of the Mountian by Jean George
arts changes everything again too
Please, read and share!
www. awayrunning.com
“Away Running” by David Wright & Luc Bouchard
Is a very important, timely story that everyone should read.!
I’m reading–
Tao Te Ching
Translated by Stephen Mitchell
The Rumi Collection
An Anthology of Translations of
Mevlana Jalaluddin Rumi
Enjoying: ¨Andrea Fraser – from Institutional Critique to the Institution of Critique ¨ by Zona Crítica (in Spanish)
Since you ask what we are reading…
“The Blazing World” by Sri Hustvedt,
a fascinating satire/novel about the NY art scene.
A middle aged conceptual artist thinks she would have had success if she were a man.
She tries to prove it by having 3 men present 3 of her works as their own.
The results are not what she expects.
But besides the interesting plot, the story is constructed like a collage.
She challenges the reader to see many viewpoints.
It took me a while to catch on, but then it was a blast.
The characters are terrific.
Not an easy read, but worth it.
Happy New Year,
Stephanie Marcus
I love Siri Hustvedt. I’m reading her collection of essays ‘ A woman looking at men looking at women’. So insightful and poignant. 🙂
Funny. I had an idea for a screenplay years ago with a similar plot.
I just finished Man in a Blue Scarf, by Martin Gayford, an account of sitting for a portrait by Lucian Freud.
Nothing Is True and Everything Is Possible – Peter Pomerantsev
Secondhand Time – Svetlana Alexievich
These sound really good when read together
Thanks for these useful thoughts! This is another quality post from you.
Books I’m reading:
“Waking Up” by Sam Harris – fascinating
“How to fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big (Kind of the story of my life)” by Scott Adams
Books: The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry
Strange Tools by Alva Noe
The Alchemy of Air by Thomas Hager
And my all-time fave: Sensitive Chaos by Theodore Schlenk
Masquerade and Other Stories, Robert Walser (1878 – 1956), John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore and London, 1990
Here are two quotes:
“You can’t want to understand and appreciate an art. Art wants to snuggle up to us. She’s so terribly pure and self-satisfied a creature that she takes offence when someone tries to win her over. She punishes anyone who approaches with the intention of laying hold of her. Artists soon find this out. They see it as their profession to deal with her, the one who won’t let anyone touch her.”
and
“Aimlessness leads to the aim, while firm intentions often miss. When we strive too zealously, it may happen that our strivings harm us. I would advise speedy slowness or slow rapidity. Still, advice can’t be more than advice. Be patient, everyone, both with yourselves and with others. Bustling about doesn’t bring any great reward. This much is certain: he who never sets out need never return. Think twice before you get energetic.”
just starting to dip into Cy Twombly, Late Paintings 2003-2011 by Nela Pavlouskova.
Deep into the catalogue from the recent Agnes Martin retrospective.
In my backpack is Louise Bourgeois, the Secret of the Cells, revised and expanded for waiting
and How to be an Explorer of the World, a Portable Art/Life Museum for walks with my husband who has early onset AIDS/HIV Dementia
I am kinda theme reading : TheTales of the Otori-just finished book one: Across the Nightingale Floor (Everyone is an Artist in swordsman, painter, calligraphy on the side of what goes on in their life’s in this story set in Japan. The idea of The Nightingale Floor is a floor that sings when walked upon (creaking wood to sound like birdsong) The story is of the assassin who must walk upon it without making it sing. Stuff of hero films. Also reading some background PDfs on Miyamoto Musashi and Hokusai and Hiroshige: Great Japanese Prints from the James A. Michener Collection As well as watching tons of documentaries and reading some of the primary document source materials given
I Just finished reading or re-reading
1. Seeing with the Mind’s Eye
Samuels & Samuels
I am currently reading or re-reading
2. Man and his symbols
-Carl Jung
3. The Power of Intention
-Wayne Dyer
4. Living Buddha, living Christ
– Thich Nhat Hahn
Reading:
“refractions” a journey of faith, art, and culture Makoto Fujimure essays
THE MOVEMENT (culture care) help connect creatives from different fields so they may design generative collaborations. To continue this emphasis on cooperation, rather than competition, within the creative community.
I am reading, over and over : LAS Ciudades Invisibles ” form Italo Calvino
currently reading:
“SOS” (2014) by Amiri Baraka
“Thought in the Act” (2014) by Erin Manning and Brian Massumi
“The New Arab Wars” (2016) by Marc Lynch
“Vision Anew” (2015) ed. Adam Bell & Charles H. Traub
“Gilgamesh” (2012) by Stuart Kendall
“Time Slips Right Before Your Eyes” (rev. 2015) by Erica Hunt
“What Thoughts” (2015) by John Most
“Hanan al-cinema” (2015) by Laura U. Marks
ways of curating hans ulrich obrist
deep south paul theroux
Books I am Reading:
1.”The Shape of Time”, Remarks on the History of Things, by George Kubler
2.” Idols Behind Altars”, Modern Mexican Art and Its Cultural Roots by Anita Brenner.
Just finished a brilliant page turner novel “The Last Painting of Sara de Vos” by Dominic Smith
Now reading “Telling Stories”, Philip Guston’s Later Works, by David Kaufmann. So Very Good.
I liked SaraDe Vos too
I enjoyed SaraDe Vos too. Loved the interweaving of time
FifthAvenueArtistSociety. Joy Wilkerson Callaway’s first novel historic fiction romance
Current reading:
+ Seiobo There Below, László Krasznahorkai
+ Ethics, Baruch Spinoza
+ Through the Eye of a Needle: Wealth, the Fall of Rome, and the Making of Christianity in the West, Peter Brown
I am reading
The elements of color by Johannes Itten
Essays and poems by Thoreau
Titian by Jean Babylon, in French
1 No Logo Naomi Klein (Author)
2 Sofie Tolstoy’s diary (Author)
3 A Man Ariana Fallaci (Author)
The Story of My Teeth
by Valeria Luiselli
I have just finished ‘The Sick Bag’ by Nick Cave and ‘The Perpetual Guest’ by Barry Schwabsky.
‘Blind Field’, poems by George Szirtes is next to my bed.
Michel Faber’s, ‘The Book of Strange New Things’ awaits my attention.
Currently reading:
HUNGER, by Argentinian journalist MARTIN CAPARROS.
Antwerp à la carte. On food and the city, is our new MAS exhibition. This book is interestingly related to the exhibition concept, and it is extremely relevant.
Heirs to Forgotten Kingdoms , Journeys into the Disappearing Religions of the Middle East by Gerard Russell foreword by Rory Stewart.
The Spiritual Universe: One physicist’s vision of spirit, soul, matter, and self
by Fred Alan Wolf, Ph.D
“White Noise” by Don DeLillo
Interesting how few books are on the list twice
Three Guineas by Virginia Wolf
How to live,
by author Sarah Bakewell
is a must read on Michel de Montaigne.
Just reread it and founit d so rich and captivating once again.
Currently reading:
The Blue Flowers by Raymond Queneau
And,
The Foundation of the Unconscious: Schelling, Freud and the Birth of the Modern Psyche by Matt Ffytche
hi Yale University Radio reading list forum
I try to concentrate on / (not so easy)
Henri Bergson
1. Materie und Gedächtnis
2. Zeit und Freiheit
but while Brainard has sent me the email on 4th of June / I had a blind date with some juxtapositions
as blind selection of 5 x 2 books from my shelf of different times, geographies and of content.
1. Bocaccio: Decameron
versus
Gen Doy: Picturing The Self / Changing views of the subject in visual culture
2. B. Traven: Das Totenschiff
versus
Alan Cunningham: Count from Zero to One Hundred
3. Antonio Lobo Antunes: Die Leidenschaften der Seele
versus
Jonathan Safran Foer: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
4. Thomas Pynchon: Gegen den Tag
versus
Michel Foucault: Die Heterotopien
5. Charles De Coster: Thyl Ulenspiegel
versus
Francis Garcia Lorca: Poet In New York
Brava, Susan Kleinberg, #224. What a great idea! My stack is clavicle high!?!
The Cantos-Ezra Pound
Une Saison en Enfer & Le Bateau Ivre A Season in Hell and The Drunken Boat-Arthur Rimbaud
Other Arthur Rimbaud poems
The Wasteland and the Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock-T.S. Eliot
Ovid
I am reading two books.
I Shall Not Hate: A Gaza Doctor’s Journey By Izzeldin Abuelaish.
The Unfinished Canadian by Andrew Cohen
I am in the midst of »la pelle« (the skin) by malaparte, just started »anna viebrock« published by S AM, and skimming for fun »planetary healer manual« – from 1975
Journey to Mount Tamalpais by Etel Adnan
greetings! Marcos
I’m currently reading:
The Woman Who Says No: Françoise Gilot on Her Life With and Without Picasso – Rebel, Muse, Artist
and
Wonderland: The Zen of Alice
Pure joy reading the list! Remembering and discovering… Thank you for putting this together.
Adding one more book:
Genes, poems by Zhivka Baltadzhieva (in Spanish)
1.” Frank Auerbach: Speaking and Painting” by Catherine Lampert
2. “Portraits: John Berger on Artists” by John Berger
a. Interlock: Art, Conspiracy, and the Shadow Worlds of Mark Lombardi. Patricia Goldstone.
b. “Liberty’s Torch: The Great Adventure to build The Statue of Liberty”
Elizabeth Mitchell
(again…) Brave New World.
Aldous Huxley.
I am reading:
1. “Soul on Ice” by Eldridge Cleaver and
2. “Similacra and Simulation” by Jean Baudrillard.
Always a win:
Workin’ on the Chain Gang: Shaking Off the Dead Hand of History by Walter Mosley
Konstantin Adamopoulos