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What Exactly Is Folk Art? A Primer On The Genre That's Felt With The Heart

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Most fine art genres have defining aesthetic characteristics that identify themselves as such -- Realism is realistic, Cubism has cubes, Pop art pops. Even those that aren't quite so clear -- Surrealism, Impressionism, Modernism, Op Art -- can be explained with a specific intention, influence, era or methodology.

And then there is folk art. The umbrella term applies as much to a textile made in 17th century Africa as a DIY ceramic piece for sale on Etsy. The dominant identifying factor of folk art is probably its distance from the academic mainstream. However, other (similarly murky) categories such as self-taught art and outsider art share such a classification too. The description of "not academic" certainly fails to describe and encompass the wide and wild range of folk art possibilities.

To settle this dilemma, we reached out to Stephanie Knappe and Catherine Futter, both curators at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri. The two curated the current exhibition,was "A Shared Legacy: Folk Art in America," a show culled from the collection of Barbara L. Gordon. We asked the curators to elaborate on the still nebulous artistic genre.

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Unidentified artist. Still Life with Basket of Fruit, 1830–50. Oil on canvas. 24 1/4 x 29 1/2 in. Courtesy of the Barbara L. Gordon Collection.


"It might not be the answer you're looking for, but it's the answer we've been giving ever since we started the project," Knappe said. "Folk art really is something that's in the eye of the beholder, or in Barbara Gordon's case, the eye or the heart of the collector."

Barbara Gordon is a collector who lives outside of Washington, D.C. She accumulated her art collection over the course of 25 years. The process started with shopping at flea markets and estate sales. Eventually, Gordon sold her first lot of works and started over from scratch, this time with an additional dose of discipline, determined to hone a truly cohesive, refined and museum-worthy collection.

"For Barbara Gordon's collection," Futter added, "almost everything she has is based in either tradition or community. So that separates folk art from outsider art. Outsider art tends to be not necessarily part of community, not necessarily part of tradition."

Both curators emphasized that "Shared Legacy" presents Gordon's vision of what folk art is, and is not necessarily representative of a general consensus. "There are no quilts, no coverlets, no textiles of any kind," said Futter. "There are things that might not fit anyone else's definition of folk art, because they are made by artisans who received training. You can see this is a very personal collection for her, based on the things that fall just a little bit outside the definition."

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Attributed to John Scholl (1827–1916). The Wedding of the Turtle Doves, 1907–15. White pine, wire and paint. 37 x 24 x 17 in. Courtesy of the Barbara L. Gordon Collection.


We've previously spoken about American folk art with Paul D’Ambrosio, curator at the Worcester Art Museum in Massachusetts, on an exhibition titled "Folk Art, Lovingly Collected." In this conversation, D'Ambrosio identified some of the unifying factors driving 18th- and 19th-century American folk art as the rise of the middle class as well as advancements in industrial technology.

"They didn't have an industrial technique but they had an understanding of mass production and that's an idea that came along with the industrial revolution," he explained. "In 1800, artists imitated the mechanical means with their hands' work."

Knappe and Futter agreed with the sentiment behind D’Ambrosio's reading, and expanded it. "Many of the artworks come from before the rise of the middle class, before the rise of mechanization," said Knappe. "It really is about carrying on and carrying through tradition during a time of great change. There is a stability to be found in traditions and keeping the past alive."

The works on view in "A Shared Legacy" show just how many forms such a yearning for stability can take. John Scholl's "The Wedding of the Turtle Doves" is a white pine and wire sculpture, a bizarre totem that's at once elegant and kitsch. Then there's an anonymous board game made around 1880, whose bright colors and winding shapes resemble some sort of abstract mandala.

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Unidentified artist. Gameboard, ca. 1880–1900. Wood, paint and iron. 18 ½ x 16 ¾ x 1 ½ in. Courtesy of the Barbara L. Gordon Collection.


"These were artists who were aware of themselves as artists, as makers and creators," said Knappe. "They were aware of their talent, I believe."

"But I don't think they were thinking about being in museums," Futter clarified. "Firstly because museums came later than many of these artists. And also, a lot of these were functional objects -- the chests of drawers, even the paintings had functions in conveying information, they had political messages and social messages. They weren't seen as museum objects but they did see themselves as participating in entertainment."

But the objects had a value outside of their utility, Knappe asserts. She points out a trio of Lamb family portraits. "We know Mr. and Mrs. Lamb had daguerrotypes made prior to the making of this portrait so there is something in the decision to sit for a portraitist that shows the value of the painted portrait beyond capturing a likeness," she said. "These were all are very conscious decisions."

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Attributed to Joseph H. Davis (1811-1865). Dr. Nathaniel Grant Family, 1835-36. Watercolor and graphite on wove paper. 15 ½ x 22 ¼ in. Courtesy of the Barbara L. Gordon Collection.


As you can see, folk art is a difficult genre to pin down. This particular exhibition is made all the cloudier due to the fact that around half of the artists on view remain unidentified. "We know the makers of the carousel figures but we don't know who carved them," said Futter. "Or, we don't know who made some of the painted chests but you can identify which communities they came from."

Both curators admitted they were surprised by the high number of unidentified artists on the roster.

In 2013, Roberta Smith submitted a modest proposal of her own, challenging the art world establishment to loosen up its rigid boundaries separating folk art from the domain of so-called serious art. "Why don’t you, as Diana Vreeland might have asked, mix folk art in with the more realistic, academically correct kind that has so dominated museums since the 19th century?" She implored curators and academics to bid farewell to the nebulous folk-academic division once and for all.

Although this clearly hasn't happened in full, Knappe and Futter said the process for appraising folk art is not all that different from the valuation of any fine artwork. "I would say most art is held to the same standards in terms of: Do you know who made it? Do you know where it was made? Do you know when it was made? Do you know the condition? Who owned it?" explained Futter.

Knappe added: "And then those undefinable qualities that elevate art above and beyond." It seems, beyond all the jargon, the appeal of folk art and fine art both stem back to similar ineffable features -- originality, vitality, virtuosity, to name a few. "There is this re-interest in folk art and putting it in the context of academically trained artists, and seeing that those things aren't so disparate, and that they can live harmoniously together," Futter said.

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Daniel McDowell (1809–1880). Still Life with Watermelon, 1860–80. Oil on canvas. 20 ½ x 27 ¾ in. Courtesy of the Barbara L. Gordon Collection.


If a folk art exhibition, rare as they may be, isn't currently showing in your vicinity, a trip to the local flea market or even Etsy can do the trick. The recent resurgence of the DIY movement -- and, yes, the Internet's most creative online marketplace -- has allowed for spaces where contemporary folk art lives and thrives.

Folk art was part of the Nelson-Atkins Museum's original collection when it opened in 1933. Thus, it seemed a natural move for Knappe and Futter to bring the Kansas City museum back to its roots, at a time when folk art is gaining momentum around the world. Not to mention, the unpretentious, locally grown spirit of folk art bodes well for a museum located outside the oft listed art destinations of the world, or even the United States.

"We want to communicate that places that are not major urban centers or centers of creativity, that were based in traditions, can continue," explained Futter. "Those still are vibrant. You can look at these different folk art forms and see how they relate to academically trained artists, but they also have a connection on a more human scale, that's part of our experience. When we go and look at the Mona Lisa, for instance, how much can we really relate to her? I think that awakening of 'Oh! This is art too!' is part of what we wanted to do."

"And expanding the breadth of creative expression," Knappe added. "We have these really important and engaging moments happening not just in the art academies, not just in the big cities. Expanding the definition of what art is and what art is worth attention."

"A Shared Legacy: Folk Art in America" runs until July 5, 2015, at The Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, Missouri.





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Georgia O'Keeffe's 'White Calla Lily' Heads To The Auction Block In New York

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NEW YORK (AP) — A Georgia O'Keeffe flower painting that the artist kept for herself is among the highlights of an upcoming auction of American art.

Sotheby's says "White Calla Lily" is estimated to bring $8 million to $12 million at the May 20 sale in New York. O'Keeffe created the work in 1927 and held on to it until her death in 1986.

The auctioneer says the back has a star motif, a device O'Keeffe used to mark her favorite pieces.

The current owner has owned the painting for more than two decades.

O'Keeffe's "Jimson Weed/White Flower No. 1" holds the record for the artist. It sold for $44.4 million at Sotheby's last year.

The sale also will include works by Childe Hassam, Martin Johnson Heade, Milton Avery and John Singer Sargent.

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J.K. Rowling Has Incredible Message For Anyone Who 'Wants To Finally Give Up'

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“Happiness can be found even in the darkest of times, when one only remembers to turn on the light.”

Yes, Dumbledore says that in one of the Harry Potter films and not books, but J.K. Rowling probably still would agree with her famed wizard's sentiments.

Rowling took to Twitter on Monday to help answer a big question posed by one of her fans, who asked how she would respond to someone who has "failed to find meaning."




The author's multi-tweet reply was magical.













During an interview with a student journalist in 2008, the author revealed she dealt with suicidal thoughts while she was a single mother struggling to get her work published.

"Mid-20s life circumstances were poor and I really plummeted," she said at the time. "We're talking suicidal thoughts here, we're not talking 'I'm a little bit miserable.'"

"I have never been remotely ashamed of having been depressed. Never," Rowling said in the interview. "What's to be ashamed of? I went through a really rough time and I am quite proud that I got out of that."

The Huffington Post has reached out to the original poster for comment. Shortly after Rowling's words of encouragement, the tweeter sent thanks to the author for her support.




Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

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The 22 Best F-Bombs From Female Authors

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Sometimes you just need a great fuck.

From Erica Jong's "zipless fuck" to Cheryl Strayed's plea that we all "tackle the motherfucking shit out of" life, women writers know the power of a well-placed f-bomb.

After all, the word is a powerful and versatile one. You can get fucked, be fucked up, be a fuck-up, fuck someone over, ask what the fuck is up, give a fuck and fucking do something about it. And when the "fuck" is coming out of the mouth (or the proverbial pen) of a woman, it's also a not-so-subtle f-you to traditionally restrictive mores of femininity.

In celebration of well-placed written fucks, we've rounded up 22 of our favorite from female authors.





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'Kurt Cobain: Montage Of Heck' Sets A New Gold Standard For Rock Documentaries

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Now that HBO has conquered prestige drama, it seems the network has its sights set on becoming the primo destination for documentaries. This year alone, "Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief" became HBO's most popular doc in nine years, "Citizenfour" debuted the night after it won the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature, and "Tales of the Grim Sleeper," the latest from Nick Broomfield ("Biggie & Tupac," "Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer"), tackled some of the same racial tension that's permeating our national culture.

If HBO's intent is to showcase shocking documentaries, the three aforementioned titles fit the criteria -- and so does "Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck," which airs Monday night following a rapturous premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January and a limited theatrical release last month. Directed by Brett Morgen ("The Kid Stays in the Picture," "Crossfire Hurricane"), the movie offers a window into the life of the Nirvana frontman that's unlike any of the countless books and retrospectives attempting to unpack its turbulence. That's largely due to the access Morgen achieved: Courtney Love and Frances Bean Cobain turned over the keys to Kurt's archives, which house the extensive diary entries, music demos and personal artifacts that form the cornerstone of "Montage of Heck." Some of those diary excerpts are narrated in Cobain's own grunge-bro lilt, atop animation inspired by the drawings that Morgen incorporates into the story.

In fact, everything in "Montage of Heck" is as visual as possible. In a similar way that Morgen's "The Kid Stays in the Picture" used the aesthetics of Robert Evans' home to tell his life story in a way that sometimes resembles fiction, "Montage of Heck" seeks answers about Cobain's descent into anger and self-debasement through childhood home movies and evidence of his lifelong penchant for creating art. The movie, therefore, becomes more intimate than an average pop-culture biopic, because Morgen uses this coveted footage to raise questions (some answerable, some not) that journalists and rock historians and even Cobain's family cannot.

Still, enough of his coterie is on hand to offer insight into where the seemingly happy young Kurt went wrong. His parents, stepmother, a former girlfriend, Krist Novoselic (but not Dave Grohl) and Courtney Love appear briefly as talking heads, but they often seem as dazed as the rest of us when it comes to diagnosing Cobain's distress. And therein lies the theme of "Montage of Heck": Every interpretation we find only begs more questions about the man who wrestled with a simultaneous desire for fame and solitude. That push -- Cobain became a grunge icon to so many who mistakenly viewed him as an anarchist -- and pull -- rejecting his own welfare in favor of heroin benders -- is at the heart of the film, which strips its subject of the mythology that categorizes fame as the sole harbinger of his death. That lore is what exposes the light and dark sides of Cobain, and it's what convinces us that there may have been enlightenment awaiting had he escaped the demons that ultimately destroyed him at 27 years old.

Cobain wanted people around him to be confused about who he was. In "Montage of Heck," his ex-girlfriend recalls two notes the singer once left her. One said, "Don't read my diary when I’m gone," while the other read, "When you wake up, please read my diary. Look through my things, and figure me out." The latter defines what all of us have tried to do. "Montage of Heck" exists in the space wherein too many spectators have patched up holes in the Cobain biography with their own analyses. Instead, allow the unanswerable to remain as such. Come to "Montage" for your stunned reactions to the intimacy of Kurt and Courtney's home movies, which feature the duo nestling in bed together and a stoned Kurt nodding off while Courtney cuts infant Frances' hair. Stay for all the quandaries the documentary refuses to illuminate, seemingly saying what we've known all along: With the lights out, it's less dangerous.



"Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck" premieres May 4 at 9:00 p.m. ET on HBO.

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Beyoncé Gives Three Teen Singers Offers Of A Lifetime

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Beyoncé just became a fairy godmother for some talented teens.

The “Drunk in Love” singer is on her way to making three aspiring singers’ dreams come true after her Parkwood Entertainment management company offered them multiyear contracts, the New York Daily News reports.

The contract for sisters Chloe Bailey, 17, and Halle Bailey, 15, comes after Beyoncé shared their cover of “Pretty Hurts” on her Facebook page back in 2014. The video now has more than 8 million views.



The other teen singer is 16-year-old Sophie Beem from New York, who finished in the top 40 on “The X Factor” in 2012. Parkwood Entertainment went with a recording option for Sophie since executives don't think she is “ready to begin recording music.”

Judges must approve the contracts as the three are minors. If signed, the deals could one day make the young singers millionaires.

Who run the world? (Teen) girls.

H/T MTV News

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Best Military Photos From April 2015

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Check out this month's best images from the U.S. military. The images were compiled from the Flickr feeds of the U.S. Army, Air Force, Navy, Marines, and Coast Guard.


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Joni Mitchell May Be Released From Hospital Soon, Says Lawyer

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Folk singer Joni Mitchell may be released from the hospital soon but still cannot confer with doctors about her medical care or long-term treatment, an attorney told a judge on Monday.


The assessment by attorney Alan Watenmaker compelled a judge to place the singer-songwriter's longtime friend in charge of health care decisions for Mitchell.


Superior Court Judge David S. Cunningham III appointed Leslie Morris, Mitchell's friend for more than 40 years, as the singer's conservator during a brief hearing Monday. Morris will now be able to confer with doctors and make decisions about Mitchell's treatment and lifestyle when she leaves a Los Angeles hospital.


An attorney appointed to represent Mitchell's interests agreed that Morris should receive emergency conservatorship authority.


"I believe that it is very necessary," Mitchell's court-appointed attorney Rebecca Thyne told Cunningham.


Mitchell, 71, has been hospitalized since March 31 for undisclosed reasons. No further information about Mitchell's health or prognosis was discussed during Monday's hearing, and Watenmaker declined comment after the proceedings.


The eight-time Grammy winner has no relatives who can serve as her conservator, which led to Morris filing a petition last week stating that her friend was unconscious and unable to make decisions about her care. A message posted on Mitchell's official website, however, stated that the singer was alert and is expected to make a full recovery.


The conflicting information was not addressed at Monday's court hearing.


Morris will not have any control over Mitchell's finances.


In addition to winning multiple Grammy Awards, Mitchell was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997.


She started her career in her native Canada before moving to Southern California, where she became part of the flourishing folk scene in the late 1960s. Her second album, "Clouds," was a breakthrough with such songs as "Both Sides Now" and "Chelsea Morning," winning Mitchell the Grammy for best folk performance.


Her 1970 album, "Ladies of the Canyon," featured the hit single "Big Yellow Taxi" and the era-defining "Woodstock." The following year, she released "Blue," which ranks 30th on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time."


Her musical style integrates folk and jazz elements, and she counts jazz giants Charles Mingus and Pat Metheny among her collaborators.


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Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

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Photos Show Remarkable Nepali Temple City Before The Quake

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Bhaktapur is an ancient city, full of decayed splendor and cultural treasures from Buddhist and Hindu worshippers who settled as early as the 13th century. Now it lies savaged by the earthquake that struck Nepal last week.

The quake and its multiple aftershocks "destroyed many magnificent religious structures here, killed at least 270 people and left entire residential districts of the graceful hillside city in ruins," Washington Post foreign correspondent Pamela Constable reported Saturday. "With mountains of rubble and roofs gaping open everywhere in the sprawling town of more than 100,000, it was hard to believe that the death toll was so low. But even among those whose families had survived, the psychic toll of collective loss and havoc was palpable."

I traveled to Bhaktapur and the Kathmandu Valley in 2012, an experience for which I've felt especially grateful during the past week. Below are some photographs that I took. Hopefully the town's beauty, so resilient and striking, shines through.

Lend a hand: here are 13 charities delivering critical support to Nepal earthquake victims.

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Lend a hand: here are 13 charities delivering critical support to Nepal earthquake victims.

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Adorable Brand Sells Empowering Superhero Capes For Kids

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Designer mom Lane Huerta knows how to make kids feel like superheroes. The brains behind home goods brand and online store, lovelane designs, released an empowering children's wear collection called #PlayHard last spring.

#PlayHard is a line of handmade superhero capes, hats and wrist cuffs for girls and boys with big imaginations. From stars and stripes to tigers, unicorns and pirates, these whimsical designs help kids bring their make-believe adventures to life.

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Huerta says her 3-year-old daughter Clementine inspired her new designs for kids. "We love dressing up, reading books and using our imagination as a family," she said. "When I was a child, my mother didn't allow much TV time. I was out building forts or crafting costumes from bed sheets and cardboard. When I had Clementine, I vowed we would do the same."

Seeing Clementine's love for "flying" especially influenced Huerta's colorful, airy cape designs. "My husband flies her around and we make up our own super heroes with funny and unique powers," she said.

"Kids have wild imaginations. It amazes me everyday how my daughter sees the world," the mom continued. "Our capes and hats simply help tell and elaborate on their story with a splash of color and pizazz."

Huerta hopes that her designs will inspire parents to "turn off the TV or hide the iPad for awhile" and let their children explore the depths of their imaginations and make up their own stories. "You never know, today's play session might be tomorrow's next great novel. What can we achieve if we allow ourselves to dream big?"

#PlayHard continues to expand, as Huerta adds new story lines to the collection. Scroll down and visit lovelane design's website, Etsy shop, and Facebook page for a look at the whimsical collection.





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Adorable Hand-Drawn Flip-Book Documents Couple's Long-Distance Love Story

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As far as wedding gifts go, this one is pretty flippin' sweet.

Wayne Brandes of Virginia tied the knot with his wife Rachel in January. As a belated wedding present, he gave her an adorable custom flip-book that illustrated their love story, which began online and then turned into a long-distance relationship for three years.

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Courtesy of The Flippist

When they met in 2010, they lived 70 miles apart in two different states.

"We hit it off immediately online and when we later met in person," Brandes told The Huffington Post. "During the [long-distance] portion [of our relationship], we met mostly just on weekends. I think it was lonely for both of us during the weeks."

A year ago, the couple finally moved in together in Virginia. They tied the knot in January at the same Irish pub in Alexandria, Virginia where they had their first date (and which appears in the flip-book!).

Artist Ben Zurawski -- a.k.a. The Flippist -- was the man behind the hand-drawn book. You can see his other work here -- including this adorable marriage proposal.

"I think it is perfect," Brandes said of the finished product. "Ben obviously put a lot of effort into making it special. Rachel loves it. She cried when I gave it to her."

See it in action above.

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Courtesy of the couple

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Michael Blake Dead At 69, Oscar-Winning Writer Of 'Dances With Wolves'

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TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Michael Blake, the writer whose novel "Dances With Wolves" became a major hit movie and earned him an Academy Award for the screenplay, has died.

Blake, 69, died Saturday in Tucson, Arizona, after a long battle with cancer, his business partner, Daniel Ostroff, said. Blake, who wrote several novels, is best known for "Dances With Wolves," which he wrote while broke at the urging of his longtime friend, the actor Kevin Costner. The novel was fairly unsuccessful, but it became a film after Costner asked Blake to adapt it into a movie. The book went on to sell 3.5 million copies after the success of the movie.

"Dances With Wolves," a Civil War epic about Army lieutenant who befriends a Native American tribe, won seven Academy Awards, including one for Blake for best adapted screenplay.

Despite his success, Blake was a humble man who passionately advocated for many causes, including literacy, Native American history and the disappearing of wild horses in the West, said his wife, Marianne Mortensen Blake.

"Well, he was probably one of the most generous people I've ever met. He was definitely one of the toughest guys I've ever met," Mortensen Blake said.

The couple met through the actor Viggo Mortensen, a close friend of Blake's and Mortensen Blake's cousin. They married in 1993 and have three teenage children, all named after Native Americans that the couple admires. Blake is also survived by his brother, Daniel Webb.

Mortensen Blake described her husband as a loving father who dedicated his life to helping others.

Blake was born in North Carolina and lived with his family in Texas before settling in southern California. He attended the University of New Mexico, but he left before graduating. The university now has an archive of his work at the student newspaper and other writings, Ostroff said.

Ostroff met Blake in 1988 and has worked with him on several occasions. He and Mortensen Blake are now bringing to life the sequel to "Dances With Wolves," a novel Blake wrote called "The Holy Road."

"In my experience, great visionary writers like Michael are often ahead of Hollywood and ahead of the audience by a generation. I think the best Michael Blake film adaptations are yet to come," Ostroff said.

Blake spent several years living out his car and on friends' couches while he wrote the "Dances With Wolves" novel.

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The Bottom Line: Maggie Nelson's 'The Argonauts'

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As a poet, Maggie Nelson is concerned with the sufficiency of words -- their ability to accurately convey how we feel, and who we are. As a visual artist, her partner Harry Dodge is less convinced. So when the two met and fell in love, a life event that her new memoir, The Argonauts, centers on, Nelson began to question her allegiance to language. "Words," she notes, "change depending on who speaks them; there is no cure."

Most of the words she examines, positing their inadequacy along the way, are used to describe sex or gender, directly or indirectly. She's saddened by Harry's inability to publicly convey a gender-fluid identity -- born Wendy Malone, the artist has undergone a handful of name changes. When The New York Times ran a profile of Harry's work, the publication asked that a choice be made between "Ms." and "Mr." "Mr." was settled on, but begrudgingly. Though our current set of pronouns doesn't come close to representing the spectrum that is gender, Nelson says, "The answer isn't just to introduce new words and then set out to reify their meanings [...] One must also become alert to the possible uses, possible contexts, the wings with which each word can fly."

The strictures of written thought have never come naturally to Nelson, who says that as a woman, her language is riddled with "tics of uncertainty." Adverbs are peppers throughout her sentences, verbal hedges are tacked onto her proclamations, and unnecessary apologies are affixed to her emails, before she edits them into bolder versions. Tackling writing this way is tiresome, she says, as are the rest of the gendered habits she's been working to unlearn.

One such norm, which she confronts with grace, is our collective tendency to view the child-rearing choice as the gap in an impassable rift between the intellectually ambitious and the painfully dull, guided only by their boring biological wants.

Using her own transition from baby-phobic naysayer to proud mother to frame her argument, Nelson is indignant about how polar the choice has become. She examines both journalists’ and historians’ tendency to call art about motherhood banal, arriving at the conclusion that everyday actions get a bad rap in the creative community -- so, she claims, does plain-old happiness. Pages of her slim, undulating memoir are devoted to an exhibit called “Puppies and Babies,” offhand snapshots of artist A.L. Steiner’s friends interacting playfully and intimately with said subjects. The exhibit, as Nelson tells it, celebrates the sometimes purely pleasurable experience of raising a child.

The joy and pleasure Nelson takes in raising her son Iggy is shown throughout the book, too, as she vividly brings to life the small games they play as a family. These scenes are punctuated with theory -- she enjoys 20th century psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott in particular -- demonstrating her belief that ambition and a joyful home life shouldn’t be characterized as at-odds. According to Nelson -- who, it’s worth noting, is upfront about her privilege -- you can have it all.

Although her story drifts pleasantly between ideas, implying that concrete boundaries have little value to her, she occasionally slips up, revealing a stubbornness that seems counter to her claims to openness. When discussing a photo exhibit, she cringes that the artist’s husband’s name is Dick -- “heterosexuality always embarrasses me,” she writes. Still, she doesn’t ever claim to be consistent, so if an argument seems half-baked, it may be that a firm commitment to a viewpoint just isn’t Nelson’s style.

“I am interested in offering up my experience and performing my particular manner of thinking,” she writes, “for whatever they are worth.”

The Bottom Line:
Nelson's writing is fluid -- to read her story is to drift dreamily among her thoughts. And, although some of her assertions are problematic, she masterfully analyzes the way we talk about sex and gender.

Who wrote it?:
Maggie Nelson is a poet and nonfiction writer. Her 2005 book Jane: A Murder chronicled her aunt's untimely death, and her personal response to it. She lives in Los Angeles.

Who will read it?:
Those interested in narratives that combine the personal and the theoretical, and thoughtful memoirs about gender, feminism, and sexuality.

Opening lines:
"October, 2007. The Santa Ana winds are shredding the bark of the eucalyptus trees in long white stripes."

Notable passage:
"But whatever I am, or have since become, I know now that slipperiness isn't all of it. I know now that a studied evasiveness has its own limitations, its own ways of inhibiting certain forms of happiness and pleasure. The pleasure of abiding. The pleasure of insistence, persistence. The pleasure of obligation, the pleasure of dependancy."

The Argonauts
by Maggie Nelson
Graywolf Press, $23.00
Published May 5, 2015

The Bottom Line is a weekly review combining plot description and analysis with fun tidbits about the book.

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Here's Proof Creativity Is Useful, No Matter What Type Of Job You Have

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This one goes out to all of those people who feel like they're just not "creative types." You don't need to be an artist or an art director to use your imagination. Creativity is crucial to all workplaces, whether it helps with problem solving or having a leg up on the competition.

Happify, a website dedicated to helping people build skills for happiness through science-based activities and games, created an infographic on how to tap into your expressive side. The graphic also dives into some of the ways creativity can benefit your health. Take a look below and discover your new muse. And hey, if that doesn't work, we hear jumping into the shower is always an option. Time to get creating!

--Lindsay Holmes

creativity and happiness

More from Happify:
Science-Based Activities To Help You Find Your Calling
5 Reasons Why You're More Creative Than You Think
Confidence-Boosting Secrets From Science

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Artist Explores The Unexpected Beauty Of Menstrual Blood Using Macrophotography

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Jen Lewis' rather unorthodox email signature reads "Conceptual Artist & Menstrual Designer." It seems that a menstrual designer is pretty much what it sounds like -- one who is inspired to explore and share the aesthetic merits of a usually reviled and quickly discarded material. For example, Lewis' macrophotography project "Beauty in Blood" asks viewers to take a moment to revel in the vibrant color and whirling momentum of the bodily substance, which so often remains unspoken and quickly flushed away.

burst

"The catalyst for the creation of 'Beauty in Blood' was actually when I switched from tampons and pads to a menstrual cup at the recommendation of my physician," Lewis explained in an email to The Huffington Post. "The cup is a much more 'hands-on' approach to menstruation management so my relationship with my body began changing immediately following the first use. One day, when I had some blood on my fingers after emptying my cup, I started to wonder about why society framed up menstruation as something disgusting."

Lewis began to notice the gratuitous blood visualized in film, television and photography when violence and gore were involved, taking issue with the fact that menstruation still remained "scrubbed from the visual landscape." So she started "Beauty in Blood" in 2012 while she was working as an administrative assistant at the University of Michigan in the Division of Infectious Diseases. The medical images that lined the research buildings' walls -- the magnified anatomical renderings showing bones, blood cells, neurons, tumors and disease progression -- ended up influencing her work.

"I wanted to do that with menstrual blood," Lewis recounted. "Get real close and look at something in a whole new way." The images that followed resemble everything from jellyfish to cotton candy, reminiscent of photographer Alberto Seveso's ink portraits.

cotton

Lewis collaborated on the series with her husband Rob Lewis; he manned the camera -- a Canon 5D Mark II with a 100mm 2.8/fL macro lens -- while she monitored the blood. When the project began, they worked while Lewis was actively menstruating. "Those evenings after work, I would remove my cup, leave the bathroom and Rob would set up the lights and camera. I would pour the blood into an empty toilet bowl to emphasize the abstract elements I saw at play: the color contrast of bright red against stark white porcelain, the organic way the blood moved in the water, how different the blood was from day-to-day. Every pour looked different."

After about a year, the couple discovered a better method for photographing water and adjusted their technique accordingly. They moved from the bathroom to a small aquarium, filled with both salt and fresh water to maximize the blood movement. "I also work with more tools than just the cup now," Lewis added. "I like to experiment with different blood delivery systems, i.e. pipette (awesome), turkey baster (terrible), chopsticks (excellent), travel shampoo bottle (also excellent)."

cell

The main goal of Lewis' project is fairly obvious: to eliminate the taboo and grotesque associations so often attached to menstrual blood. (Remember when Instagram censored an unassuming photo of artist Rupi Kaur lying on a bed in sweatpants, with a period stain visible through her clothing?) She also hopes to raise awareness of human rights issues related to the menstruating body.

As Lewis explains: "It’s rare to think about all the ways menstruation touches the lives of those around us, from homeless menstruators to Nepal earthquake victims to schoolgirls in South America to working women in Bangladesh to the carbon footprint of disposable pads and tampons on the planet. Once you start connecting these dots out-loud, it’s hard to stop."

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Since embarking on the project, Lewis has connected with many other artists pursuing a like-minded vision. She subsequently curated an exhibition centered around the menstrual cycle and reproductive justice called "Widening the Cycle." It will be installed at the Menstrual Health and Reproductive Justice Conference at Suffolk University Law School in Boston from June 4 to June 6, 2015.

Inspired by feminist artists including Judy Chicago, Carolee Schneemann and Ana Mendieta, as well as art-meets-science pioneer Bernice Abbott, Lewis is breaking through the invisibility surrounding a natural bodily reality. "Beyond communicating a singular message, my hope is to stimulate these conversations and get people speaking openly about all the issues related to menstruation ... I hope 'Beauty in Blood' communicates that menstruation is nothing to be ashamed of or fear."





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Artist Christo To Cover Italian Lake In 70,000 Square Meters Of Gold Fabric

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"The work of art is a scream of freedom," artist Christo famously said. For the first time in 10 years, the artist will scream once again, embarking on a colossal ephemeral artwork that's as ambitious in scale as it is in imagination.

The Bulgarian creator is known for his monumental and enchanting site-specific artworks, collaborations with his late wife and partner Jeanne-Claude. The two bewitched the world with their gargantuan-scale projects, such as wrapping the coast of Australia's Little Bay in 95,600 square meters of synthetic fabric, or surrounding eleven islands in Miami's Biscayne Bay with 603,850 square meters of pink polypropylene floating fabric.

christo and jeanneclaude

The pair's most recent completed work is "The Gates," a $21 million dollar project which was fully realized over the course of 30 years, finally finished in 2005. With the help of 750 employees, the artists achieved their grand vision of installing 7,503 gates of saffron-colored fabric in New York City's Central Park, turning the iconic destination into a vision from a dream. Four years after "The Gates," Jeanne-Claude passed away at 74 years old, after suffering complications following a brain aneurysm.

brid

Christo, 80, has announced plans for his first new large-scale project since his wife's death, and, as we'd hoped, it's a doozy. The artist plans to connect Italy's Lake Iseo with a 3-kilometer long floating pier which visitors can walk on and feel the movement of the waves beneath them. The pier will be made of 70,000 square meters of shimmering yellow fabric covering a floating dock system, and will lead visitors from Sulzano to Monte Isola, as well as to the island of San Paolo.

The piece, aptly titled "The Floating Piers," will only exist for 16 days before being de-installed. The work is set to be constructed in June of 2016.

Christo and Jeanne-Claude always resisted digging for a deeper meaning in their artworks, insisting that magic resided in the visual experience of seeing what seems impossible. In 2005, The New York Times' Michael Kimmelman praised "The Gates" as "a work of pure joy, a vast populist spectacle of good will and simple eloquence, the first great public art event of the 21st century."





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'Idiot Box' Is Out To Prove How Important TV Is To American Art

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please and thank you
Please and Thank You by Jason Liwag


The poppiest of Pop art has finally arrived -- though not for the first time -- at Gallery1988. "Idiot Box 2," the Los Angeles gallery's second exhibit of that name, once again spotlights art created about TV shows.

At a time when "flatscreen TV" sounds redundant and prestige TV shows are studied in college seminars, "the idiot box" no longer holds much currency as a pejorative for the television. Most of us have heard it at one point, however, from a stern grandmother who wished we'd just go outside and play, or a snobby hipster roommate who read Baruch Spinoza instead of watching "Seinfeld."

For Jensen Karp, the co-owner and curator of Gallery1988, the grumbler was his third-grade teacher. "She'd yell at us if we didn't do our homework, accusing us of watching 'the idiot box' all night," he told The Huffington Post. "She was right."

broad city
Broad City by Nan Lawson


But the idiot box isn't looking so dumb these days, and Karp thinks it's about time artistic tastemakers took notice. "[TV] is clearly becoming one of the strongest forms of American art around," he said. By showcasing art that turns television into subject matter, he's hoping "we can show the connection between these two art forms and sort of break down any preconceived notion that one is more important than the other."

better call saul
Better Call Saul by Robert Bruno


The pieces, from different artists, show different takes on how TV shows infiltrate our culture and acquire outsize significance. Saul, from "Better Call Saul," takes the quotidian form of a real attorney, drumming up business through one of those omnipresent magazine ads. Rust Cohle, from "True Detective," looms imposingly, a bruised, be-antlered god. Abbi and Ilana of "Broad City," two apple-cheeked, pink-nosed cherubs, peer in opposite directions, but their transparent bodies and hair overlap like a Venn diagram.

"We want it to ... show that everyone could be watching the same exact TV and get something totally different out of it," explained Karp. "That's really the beauty of art, isn't it?"

"Idiot Box 2" is on view at Gallery1988 West until May 16, 2015.

my heart just pooped its pants
My Heart Just Pooped Its Pants by Castlepop


hehehehehe
HeHeHeHeHe by Hoang Tran


the watchers from space
The Watchers From Space by Stephen Andrande


rust
Rust by Wendy Ortiz


meet phil miller
Meet Phil Miller by 100% Soft

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All The Stars Who Broke The Social Media Ban At The 2015 Met Gala

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The 2015 Met Gala red carpet was spectacular -- and we savored every last second of it, since this year organizers banned the use of social media once all attendees were inside the star-studded event.

But it was a surprise to no one that the rule was boldly broken. Kim Kardashian West, Kanye West, Lady Gaga, Kerry Washington and Madonna were just a few of the A-listers who rebelled and shared awesome moments from the annual event with their followers on Instagram.

C'mon, did you really think that Kimye could resist taking some selfies? We didn't think so.

Here's a look at all the celebs who fearlessly broke the "no social media" rule at the Met Gala.

And one more before leaving.... Off to sleep!

A photo posted by Marc Jacobs (@themarcjacobs) on




I just love this girl @ladygaga

A photo posted by Kim Kardashian West (@kimkardashian) on




This is everything #METgala

A photo posted by Behati Prinsloo Levine (@behatiprinsloo) on




(via @shots)

A photo posted by Justin Bieber (@justinbieber) on




#MetBall

A photo posted by Kerry Washington (@kerrywashington) on




From the inside looking out! .......,❤️#unapolgeticbitches

A photo posted by Madonna (@madonna) on




Some undercover Angels at tonight's #MetGala...hanging with my girls @angelcandices @lilyaldridge @ed_razek

A photo posted by Adriana Lima (@adrianalima) on




dropping our single tomorrow #stolethispicfromM #MONSTERCATREBELHEARTS

A photo posted by KATY PERRY (@katyperry) on




@ritaora fucking bubzyyyyy

A photo posted by Miley Cyrus (@mileycyrus) on




Check out all the red carpet looks from the night in the slideshow below-- and don't forget to tell us which ones are your favorites in the comments section!


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Andy Warhol Made A Mistake That Resulted In Some Of His Best Paintings

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What we make of the Rorschach test's blotchy black ink supposedly says a lot about us.

Created in the early 1920s by a surprisingly attractive Swiss man named Hermann Rorschach, the set of 10 cards gained widespread popularity with clinical psychologists by the 1940s, becoming as synonymous with the field as leather sofas and bespectacled white guys in sweater vests. (Yes, the over 90-year-old set of blots is still in use, although there's a lot of debate over its accuracy.)

Then, in the early 1980s, notorious pop artist Andy Warhol created a series called "Rorschach." In liquid monochromes, Warhol crafted his own "ink blots" on massive canvases (so that they'd cost more, probably). But he got one crucial thing wrong about his subject matter.

warhol rorschach

He thought that patients were actually supposed to create ink blots for psychologists to decode -- not the other way around. He even thought about paying someone to decode his own blots, but never got around to it.

“I thought that when you went to places like hospitals, they tell you to draw and make the Rorschach tests. I wish I’d known there was a set," Warhol later explained.

But it was an unintentionally genius move. The paintings put an egalitarian spin on stuffy abstract painting, critic Mia Fineman argues in a post on artnet.com. In line with Warhol's special ability to blur highbrow and lowbrow, the series asks each viewer to play the psychologist, analyzing each splotch of symmetrically swirling paint.

warhol rorschach

Critic Rosalind E. Krauss goes a step further, suggesting Warhol's Rorschach blobs parody abstract art. Rotating the ink blots vertically makes us see a lot more, um, private areas of the human body on the canvas, reminding us "there is no form so 'innocent' (or abstract) that it can ever avoid the corruption of a pejorative interpretation," Krauss wrote in an essay titled "Carnal Knowledge."

So, go ahead and interpret as you please -- is it a pair of antlers? A vagina? A mermaid jumping over a bear? Viewers, it's all up to you.

warhol rorschach

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Original 'War Of The World' Drawings Expected To Fetch Huge Sum At Auction

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What would it be like if bloodthirsty Martians came to Earth and laid waste to everyone and everything in their path?

If the drawings created for the 1906 edition of H.G. Wells' iconic science-fiction novel "The War of the Worlds" are any indication, it would be really, really bad. Just scroll down for a look.

The originals of the illustrations, created by Brazilian artist Henrique Alvim Corrêa, are to be auctioned off in Beverly Hills, Calif. on May 14. But if you're interested in bidding, get set for some sticker shock; the entire collection, which includes 31 pencil and ink drawings plus a vintage poster and a postcard from Wells to Corrêa, is expected to fetch a staggering $500,000, according to a spokesman for the auction house.

First published in book form in 1898, The War of the Worlds is one of the earliest stories to depict war between earthlings and aliens. It spawned numerous adaptations, including a 1953 motion picture and another movie, starring Tom Cruise, released in 2005.

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