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Janitors Mistakenly Throw Out Champagne Bottle Art Installation

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The museum's director, Letizia Ragaglia, told Italian newspaper Alto Adigethat the cleaning staff had been warned not to disturb the artwork. "We told them just to clean the foyer because that's where the event on Friday night had been. Evidently, they mistook the installation for the foyer," she lamented, as translated by Local It.


Fortunately, the janitorial staff had conscientiously sorted the artwork into glass and paper for recycling, and the museum expects to be able to salvage and reinstall it. According to the Museion Facebook page, a sign posted at the museum assures visitors "The work will be restored soon."



"The Museion has been supportive of Goldschmied & Chiari for many years and so I'm sure they will do a great job at re-installing the work," galleristKristen Lorello, who represents the artists in New York, told artnet News in an e-mail. "The re-installation should be happening today."


This isn't the first time such a mistake has been made, of course. This summer, a Connecticut maintenance worker dismantled and trashed a wood and tile sculpture by New York-based artist Jim Osman, and a $3.71 million Cui Ruzhuo painting was thrown out by hotel cleaning staff in Hong Kong this past spring. There's also the 26-foot-tall Forever Marilyn (a J. Seward Johnson knock-off) that mysteriously wound up in a Chinese dump.



Of course, there's another side to the coin: Just as artists' work is sometimes mistaken for garbage, artists can also turn to the trash for inspiration. Environmentally-minded artworks sometimes use garbage as a medium, such as plastic ocean waste turned into aquatic sculpture at at the San Francisco Zoo, or the month's worth of trash collected fromScience Museum visitors in London by British artist Joshua Sofaer.


 


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This Powerful Photo Campaign Puts A Face To Men's Depression

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Depression is often viewed as some sort of flaw or frailty, but a new campaign is working to change that outlook one photograph at a time.


The project, led by the Canadian mental health organization HeadsUpGuys, features visuals submitted by men on how depression feels and what it means to "feel better." The goal is to help men realize they're not isolated in their experience, according to the project's coordinator, Joshua Beharry. 


"The more you talk about depression, the more the stigma surrounding the illness erodes away," he told The Huffington Post. "Depression needs to be tackled head on ... You wouldn't try to tackle heart disease or diabetes on your own. It shouldn't be any different for depression."



The photos not only bring awareness to depression, but are a much-needed representation of a highly stigmatized group of individuals who suffer from the disorder. Research shows that men are less likely than women to seek treatment.


"I think society places an emphasis on the need for men to be considered 'strong,' and a person with a mental illness is often considered to be 'weak,'" said Robby Cavanaugh, who submitted photos. "For this reason, men suffering from mental illness bottle their feelings up, and I believe this is a contributing factor as to why the suicide rate for men is so much higher than it is for women. They need encouragement to feel free to express their emotions and ask for help, without fear of ridicule. "



Approximately 11 percent of Canadian men will experience major depression at some point in their lives, according to Canada's public health agency. The condition also affects approximately 6 million American men each year. Around the globe, nearly 350 million people suffer from depression. 


Although the condition is fairly common, the conversation is still fairly quiet among men -- and that's exactly why Nathan Milner says he decided to get involved by submitting images. As someone who has experienced mental health issues since he was a teen, he wanted to raise awareness about something that felt incredibly personal to him.


"I want everyone to know that men's depression is real. It takes lives and we all need to realize this," he said.


Milner also hopes the campaign encourages others to seek treatment if they feel like they may be battling the same issues.


"As hard as it is, asking for help is the first step to recovery," he said. "Being able to speak aloud about what you are going through only helps with self acceptance. There is never anything to feel ashamed of."

 

Check out the images below for more from HeadsUpGuys' photo project.


This post is part of ShameOver: It's Time To Talk About Men's Mental HealthHuffPost Healthy Living editorial initiative that aims reclaim what it means to "be strong" by addressing the stigma men face in disclosing and seeking support for mental health issues. Each week we'll share features and personal stories about men and their caregivers as it relates to suicide, mental illness and emotional well-being. If you have a story you'd like to share, email us at strongertogether@huffingtonpost.com.


 


If you -- or someone you know -- need help, please call  1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. If you are outside of the U.S., please visit the International Association for Suicide Prevention for a database of international resources.



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25 Of The Most Beautiful Staircases That Have Ever Existed

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What is it about stairs that draws us to photograph them? People have always had a fascination with steps not only because they are functionally necessary to our daily lives, but also for the unintelligible draw they have on our psyche.


Songs like "Stairway To Heaven" by Led Zeppelin have been written about them, stories have been told about them and many, many photos have been taken of them.


Check out some of the most beautiful steps the world has to offer from the newly built to the impossibly old. Each staircase tells a story of mankind and the inescapable quest to climb to heights unknown.



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9 Items For Your Closet That Come Straight From The Ballet Studio

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It's not entirely childish to be in love with ballerinas. They're so elegant and poised -- and don't even get us started on their ballet buns and leg warmers. While we may never be able to dance quite like them, that doesn't mean we can't look like them, right? 




If you're like us, and your dance career ended at the ripe age of five, all is not lost. You can still dress like a ballerina without looking like you've got a few screws loose. Dance stores like Capezio, Danskin and Repetto offer items that work not only in the dance studio, but also in real life. You can easily throw on a leotard with a pair of jeans or wear a sweater with a simple skirt. 


Herewith, nine items that will leave you looking like you just stepped off stage. 



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28 Signs Someone Lived Through The '60s

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1. They still remember the words to "I Want To Hold Your Hand."


The fab four, as the Beatles were known, took the world by storm. Their first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show on Feb. 9, 1964 was the highest rated show in TV history at the time. It's also been claimed that not a single crime was reported during the time of their performance.


 



2. They get the joke when someone says "what kind of world do we want to leave for Keith Richards?"


Yes Kitten, he's always looked like this.







 


3. They remember not just Tina, but also Ike. And they especially remember singing "Proud Mary" along with them.


 







4. They made out to Rod Stewart singing "Maggie May."







5. And hearing him sing "Gasoline Alley" still makes them cry, especially this acapella version.





6. This was the only perfume they ever wore as a teenager.



7. And their first boyfriend wore British Sterling.


8. They only owned one pair of jeans and this is what they looked like, but dirtier.


 



9. Like everyone else in 1969, they remember the significance of being born on Sept. 14.


It meant you were likely to be drafted into the military. The draft was conducted by lottery based on birthdays. All registrants with Sept. 14 birthdays were assigned lottery number 1.


10. They know how to spot a real ticket stub from the 1969 Woodstock Art and Music Festival.


 



It would probably sport mud and rain stains, otherwise neither you nor the ticket were likely there.  You can now find them on eBay.


11. This could have been their prom picture if they had gone, but they didn't.



12. They remember the advice Benjamin got in "The Graduate." (Invest in plastics.) But mostly they remember Mrs. Robinson.







13. They developed an older-man crush on Peter O'Toole after watching "Lawrence of Arabia" in 1962.







14. But would have to Google to see if he's still alive because they can't remember anymore.


He died two years ago at age 81.


15. They decorated their teen bedroom with posters like this.



16. They had one of these.



17. And one of these.



18. And watched one of three stations on this when they were kids.



19. They would know who this was ...



20. ... if we said her boots were "made for walking."


Nancy Sinatra, daughter of Frank Sinatra, is now 75.



21. They remember the early Vietnam War protests that looked like this.


 



22. And then spread and began looking more like this.


 



23. By 1969, they lived through the Days of Rage.



24. And probably remember where they were during the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago.


 



25. Abbie Hoffman was their hero in the Chicago 7 trial that followed.


 



As he once famously said, "I was probably the only revolutionary referred to as cute." He also said, "You measure a democracy by the freedom it gives its dissidents, not the freedom it gives its assimilated conformists."


26. They watched men's hair grow longer.


 


 



27. And women's skirts grow shorter.

28. And they thought Twiggy was the skinniest thing they had ever seen.



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Photos Of Cats Are Good. Photos Of Cats Uncomfortably Shaking Are Better.

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Photographer Carli Davidson has spent over seven years of her life working in animal care -- training at zoos, rescue centers and nature preserves; fostering medically or behaviorally needy pets; serving as an animal rights activist. With such an impressive resume, it's not surprising that she's turned her lens to one of the more unpredictable, ornery yet unceasingly photogenic members of the animal kingdom: domesticated cats.


In her new book, SHAKE CATS, Davidson not only snaps portraits of some of the most handsome felines around, she photographs them shaking their pristine bodies, sometimes feverishly and other times lazily, in what amounts to a laughably captivating photo series fit for Lil Bub. (No, really, she's in the series.) The point of the project? To emphasize the importance of pet rescue, of course.


The "SHAKE CATS" project began back in 2011, the same year Davidson shot her first "SHAKE" series comprised of lovably spastic dogs. Nearly all of her 60 cat models are rescues from Portland, Oregon, who tolerated a team of professional animal care technicians goading them into shaking before the camera (a Nikon D4S for those interested).


Davidson and her assistants Amanda Giese and Tanya Paul conducted nail trimmings and ear cleanings to get the cats to shake, followed by what Davidson assures the critical reader was a whole lot of "treats and cat cuddles." Along with the shaking photos, she also snapped headshots of the cats for their respective rescue center website. Most cats, Davidson says, were adopted almost immediately after the photo shoots. 


Davidson has loved cats since she was five years old, when she returned home from a local animal shelter with a large yellow tabby named Hulk Hogan. She hopes that her photos advocate for the importance of pet adoptions, as well as underscore the positive impact of cat-related humor online and elsewhere.


"I believe that animal rescue is a revolutionary act of love, and I want that energy reflected in my work," she explained in a press statement, reiterating the importance of adopting older pets particularly. "When you rescue you are creating space and empathizing with another being that needs the same things we all need to feel safe, shelter, food, affection, and patience. Simply put you save a life, you are that animal’s hero."


See a preview of SHAKE CATS below.






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12 Women Artists Who Revolutionized Print-Making

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Two women lock eyes and smile plainly. They’re embracing, showing their kinship openly and emotionally. It’s the sort of exchange you’d expect between close friends -- the only indication that they might ever have been enemies is that one of them daintily grips an olive branch. It’s a centuries-old etching titled “Allegory for Peace,” and it’s as cryptic as it is alluring.


In the mid-1700s, which is around the time the work was created, women weren’t typically the ones solving diplomatic troubles (unless said women were the warring Goddesses of Greek mythology). But the female creator of this etching, Marie Anne Papillon, imagined a different sort of approach to peace-making.


According to the New York Public Library, which arranged a display of works like this one, there’s not a lot of historical information about Marie Anne Papillon. Unlike most women able to pursue the craft of designing prints, she wasn’t an aristocrat. But, her husband did write the first how-to book on engraving.


In fact, many of the women in the NYPL’s exhibit “Printing Women” were related in some way to fello, male printers, who might have enjoyed more of the spotlight during their lives. Even Queen Victoria, an amateur etcher, was introduced to the craft by her husband, Prince Albert. See her work and the work of other female etchers below, to learn about some of the historically overlooked artists who paved the way for printers today.


All images and captions provided by the NYPL.



Angelica Kauffman


Angelica Kauffman cleverly used the medium of print to promote herself. This etching does not reproduce a painting, but is a complete work in its own right. Offering a surprisingly disheveled picture of Angelica, who in paintings usually appears calm and immaculate, the print conveys ideas about the source of her intellect. With her hair wrapped in an elaborate scarf, leaning her head on a book, she presents herself both as a sort of sibyl and as a figure subject to melancholy humors, considered the source of artistic genius.



Thérèse Holbein


A descendant of the illustrious 16th-century court painter Hans Holbein, Thérèse Holbein painted and etched with great accomplishment. She was German but lived in Graz, Austria, where she produced a small number of etchings, mostly landscapes, very few of which ever circulated. Though many of her compositions are inspired by the work of other well-known artists, including Rembrandt, this view of the castle at Limburg, from a suite of six, shows the artist sketching en plein air.



Anna Maria van Schurman


The first female student at the University of Utrecht, Anna Maria van Schurman was a well-known 17th-century scholar and visual artist. Among her many accomplishments, she published an essay in which she stated that women should be educated in all matters, so long as their studies did not interfere with their domestic duties. A master of self-presentation, van Schurman made several self-portraits throughout her life. Here she appears in an austere dress ornamented with lace. Executed when she was 33 years old, the print’s inscription reads, “See my likeness portrayed in this portrait / May your favor perfect the work where art has failed.”



Maria Strick


The art of calligraphy flourished in the Netherlands from the late 16th to the mid-17th century, resulting in the production of a large number of superb works of penmanship and printed copybooks. Maria Strick was the only Dutch woman to work in the genre, though it was widely practiced by women in other countries, including Esther Inglis in Britain and Susanna Maria von Sandrart in Germany, both of whom have works shown nearby. Active in Delft and Rotterdam between 1593 and about 1630, Strick created four books of calligraphy. Her husband, a shoemaker, learned to engrave precisely so that he could render his wife’s designs in print.



Anne Allen


As a painter and decorative artist, Jean Baptiste Pillement beautified a broad range of objects, including ceramics, textiles and other household ornaments, and he employed a number of printmakers to disseminate his designs. It was Anne Allen, however, who most captivated the artist and became his primary printmaker beginning in the 1770s. These etchings were printed à la poupée, a method in which multiple colors are daubed onto the plate one by one with a fabric-covered stick. An instance of the French Rococo appreciation for whimsy and artifice, Pillement’s set, as its title indicates, was also influenced by Chinese woodblock prints.



Louise de Montigny Le Daulceur


Sister of the geographer Étienne Mignot de Montigny, Louise Le Daulceur was an amateur printmaker who specialized in the so-called ex libris, a type of bookplate used to indicate the ownership or source of a book. She worked closely with artists like Edme Bouchardon to produce ornamental and decorative prints. This etching, however, reproduces a work in the collection of the famous antiquary Anne Claude, comte de Caylus, and was finished in engraving by Augustin de Saint-Aubin, suggesting that it, too, was destined for a wider market. 



Queen Victoria


Queen Victoria’s husband, Prince Albert, introduced her to etching soon after their marriage on Feb. 10, 1840, and over the next four years she created around 60 examples of her own. Her charming views offered intimate glimpses into her and Albert’s domestic life, and she recognized their usefulness as gifts for friends and family. This print shows Victoria as a young princess dressed in the same costume that her aunt Princess Charlotte wore in a famous portrait by Benjamin West in 1778.



Madame André


Daughter of Lord and Lady Lucan, Lavinia Spencer became a countess after marrying the second Earl Spencer in 1781. Her sisters-in-law, the Duchess of Devonshire and the Viscountess of Duncannon, were, like her, amateurs. Though the countess created a few of her own etchings, this one was executed by a printmaker who signed herself “Madame André,” and about whom nothing further is known. Published with a French title, the work was likely produced in France.



Princess Sophie of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld


Aunt of Queen Victoria, Princess Sophie of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld created these charming but inexpert etchings at the age of 17. Reading like a sort of printed sampler, the first etching shows the fledgling artist struggling to write in reverse but managing to compose her name, the beginning of the alphabet, the words “la jeune maman” (the young mother), and a monogram. These scribbles appear next to compositions showing a full-length figure of a young woman as well as several heads of young men and fashionable women. Ideas of love and courtship, and possibly even childbearing, seem central to its design.



Jeanne Antoinette Poisson, Madame de Pompadour


The marquise Jeanne Antoinette Poisson, better known as Madame de Pompadour, was the official chief mistress of King Louis XV from 1745 to her death in 1764. An intelligent and refined woman who counted Voltaire among her close friends, she received instruction in art from the court painter François Boucher and produced around 80 etchings. Her example led many other women of her class to try their own hand at making prints. Part of a suite of three prints after drawings by Boucher, this etching shows a seated child blowing bubbles, a common vanitas or “vanity” subject and a comment on the fleeting nature of earthly delights.



Maria Louisa Catherine Cecilia Cosway


Maria Cosway was not only a painter and printmaker but also a composer of music. Here, she reproduced a design by her husband, Richard Cosway, to illustrate the cover of her Songs and Duets. The image of Cupid fondling a lion made a suggestive gift to Thomas Jefferson, with whom she had developed an intimate relationship while the American diplomat was in Europe. A love letter Jefferson wrote to Maria in 1788 may, in fact, riff on this very work.



Marie Anne Papillon


Little is known about Marie Anne Papillon, second wife of the wood engraver Jean-Michel Papillon, who is best known for writing, in 1766, the first how-to book on wood cutting and engraving. Marie Anne herself helped illustrate the treatise. Both her proficiency as an etcher and her powers of invention are astonishing, for the present design appears to be an original. 


 


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13 Spooky Halloween Movies That WON'T Give You Nightmares

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Halloween, for the fearful and squeamish, can prove a challenging holiday. The date on the calendar doesn’t transform me and my cowardly compatriots into horror buffs or slasher fans. If we submit to the cultural expectation of masochistic fright infliction, the effects may linger; I still have nightmares I’m convinced stem from a slumber party viewing of “The Ring” over a decade ago.


Yet it feels wrong to spend Halloween dressed as a fairy princess and watching “When Harry Met Sally,” pretending the holiday is something it’s not. How can we get into the spirit of the season without causing semi-permanent psychological and/or emotional damage to ourselves?


Never fear (really, don’t), my fellow scaredy cats: I’ve rounded up some of the least gory, least horrifying movies that are capable of giving you a few chills or at least getting you in the Halloween spirit. Whether it’s a murderous dark comedy or a low-violence suspense flick, these unsettling films will give you a delicious tingle up your spine without provoking months of nightmares.


Suspenseful


“Cruel Intentions”





Reese Witherspoon, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Ryan Phillippe -- the perfect cast for a lightly violent, lightly suspenseful, super tragic drama that somehow feels like it’s YA-inspired despite being rated R. The aura of impending doom hangs over the film from the beginning, as we watch scheming stepsibs, and lovers, Sebastian and Kathryn plot to destroy those around them, even as Sebastian begins to fall for one of their targets, innocent and virginal Annette. There’s romance; there’s intrigue; there’s just enough shock and horror to make it unsettling.


“Vertigo”





Hitchcock knew his stuff. And not just the in-your-face terror of “Psycho,” but more manageable psychological suspense, like “Vertigo.” This film won’t leave you terrified of taking showers, or anything really, but it will give you the serious creeps, at least while the movie’s on. Scottie, a detective who suffers from vertigo, is enlisted by a friend to follow his young wife, who’s been acting erratic. But there are many more layers to the mystery than Scottie understands -- until it’s too late.


“Memento”





I’m not gonna lie to you: This movie is sorta violent. But the unconventional reversed structure of the film, and the focus on the protagonist’s psychological unraveling, keeps “Memento” from devolving into a slashfest. The existential horror at the heart of the story will leave you reeling.


“Rebecca” 





The 1940 film adaptation of Daphne du Maurier’s novel will strike terror into your heart. It stars Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine flexing their old-school Hollywood acting chops, and the plot itself produces the kind of creeping unease that will make you question everything around you. And yet, it’s never exactly violent -- it’s even a bit hopeful. Watch with your sweetheart and periodically pause the movie to grill him or her about the dark secrets you will come to believe he or she is keeping from you!


“Gone Girl”





Keep the fun going with another movie bound to undermine your once-trusting relationship without subjecting you to too much gore. If you haven’t seen this blockbuster yet, you’re probably living under a rock, or, like myself, unwilling to risk being trapped in a theater watching potentially gruesome scenes. That said, reports indicate the horrific violence is limited to just a scene or two, with most of the movie, like the book, relying on the tension of the unreliable narrators and the unsettling mystery at its core for suspense. Consider this one for Halloween movie night with the gals or guys after a particularly brutal breakup.  


"Zodiac"





So, you really want to get into the Halloween spirit? Would a mysterious serial killer do it for you? “Zodiac” takes on the all-too-true story of a murderer who preyed on San Francisco in the ‘60s and ‘70s, and was never caught. In the hands of David Fincher, it’s less gore and more psychological intrigue -- just the right amount of chills.


 


Funny


“Drop Dead Gorgeous”





A beauty pageant movie starring Kirsten Dunst as a cheery Minnesota ingenue, “Drop Dead Gorgeous” seems all wrong for Halloween. But the “drop dead” part of the title isn’t figurative. Dunst works at a funeral home after school, giving makeovers to corpses, a job that’s mined for morbid humor. When she becomes competitive in the local pageant, other girls start dying in mysterious accidents -- and it seems like she might be next. Blackly funny rather than bloodily horrifying, this movie is a comedy buff’s alternative to a grim, grotesque slasher.


“Penelope”





OK, OK, “Penelope” is more rom-com than creepfest. Still, the fantasy flick features witchcraft, a curse, a girl with a pig snout for a nose, and a romantic climax set at a Halloween party. If you prefer your Oct. 31 to be whimsical and uplifting, this love story between the cursed Christina Ricci and handsomely scruffy James McAvoy fits the bill.


“Witches of Eastwick”





Based on the John Updike novel of the same title, this film will always be known for uniting Cher, Michelle Pfeiffer and Susan Sarandon on an absurd magical journey that’s heavier on silliness than scariness. Three single women in a small town, unaware they’re actually witches, accidentally form a weekly coven. The bizarre events that follow, featuring Jack Nicholson as a devilish suitor, could only be due to the dark workings of magic.


"Hocus Pocus"





There's just something about three witches uniting their powers that makes for a hilariously spooky time. This time, it's Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker and Kathy Najimy as three sisters who were executed for witchcraft in Salem -- only to return on Halloween three centuries later to wreak some comic magic.  


“Sharknado”





Listen, "Jaws" is scary. You may never go swimming again after that one. Go for the kitsch alternative and listen to the screams of utterly unconvincing actors as "tornados" full of "sharks" spin through Los Angeles, wreaking havoc on the lives of Tara Reid and Ian Ziering, who find that they're gonna need a bigger chopper. It’s the perfect accompaniment to a night of binging on sour gummy worms and bright orange jello shots with your other easily frightened buddies.


 


Family-Friendly


"Big Fish"





In this bittersweet, lush film about the pains of father-son relationships, magic may be more a narrative device than anything. And yet, the supernatural seems not just enrapturing but somehow possible in the movie, as journalist William Bloom tries to come to terms with the fantastical tales his father has always told him, which come to seem more truthful than he'd ever imagined.  


“Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events”





After treasuring each volume in this series, and adoring the movie, I hoped for more films in the series that never came. Apparently not everyone appreciated this adaptation. But if you’re into the light steampunk aesthetic, unfortunate situations that are pleasurably frightening but never lurid, and movies you can enjoy with impressionable kids, this is the ideal Halloween night entertainment.


AND A BONUS:


The "Harry Potter" movies





Anything magical is appropriate on All Hallows Eve. If you have the whole Saturday to get spooky, these make for a great marathon. Duh.


 


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One Man's Stark Photo Collection Reveals The 'Geography Of Poverty' In America

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It's a concept as simple as it is harrowing: put poverty-stricken U.S. towns where everyone can see them. Through a series of black-and-white images, captured in sharp detail what numbers and statistics cannot, the embodied realness of a place, as it appears to those who live there.


Photographer Matt Black does just this in his ongoing series "The Geography of Poverty," an ever-expanding index of the places in our country that are most often overlooked, despite being the most in need. Until Oct. 31, 2015, Black's striking photos will be on view at Anastasia Photo in New York. 


According to the Census Bureau’s measure of poverty, the poverty line for a single person falls around $11,770 in annual income. For a family of four, it's $24,250. As of now, over 45 million people fall below the poverty line in the U.S., the largest number on record for the country. "That's serious poverty with lifelong implications across the board," Black said in an interview with KCET.



Black began his project approximately 20 years ago in California's Central Valley, the area where he grew up. Each of his stark photographs captures a single moment -- be it a row of birds on an electric wire, a lone fence post, or a vision of burning tire smoke cascading into the sky. The captions provide context: Brooks County has a population of 7,223 and 38.3 percent live below the poverty level. Alpaugh is a town in Tulare County, California. The population is 1,026 and 55.4 percent live below the poverty level. The facts and figures are daunting on their own, but when coupled with a glimpse at a split moment in time, they cling to your memory with a tighter grip.


"It's a very simple thing to say, 'Look, this is where it is,'" Black explained, "but I think it connects things in a way that sometimes photography can struggle with, because photography is all about abstracting things and condensing things and making a very distinct visual statement, but sometimes that gets de-connected from reality."


After capturing various towns throughout the Central Valley, Black expanded his mission, embarking on an 18,000-mile road trip throughout the country. For three months, the photographer documented over 70 cities, towns and rural communities, all of which had over 20 percent of their populations falling below the poverty line. 



Black competed the journey via a single continuous route, revealing that rampant poverty is not an outlier but a contiguous thread. "What really dawned on me is how connected these places are," Black told Time Magazine. "I’ve driven all the way across the country, but in a lot of ways I feel I still haven’t left the Central Valley. It feels like one place. Uniting them in this kind of visual document is challenging but immensely satisfying because it feels like I’m making a statement that needs to be made."


The seemingly endless stream of drought-plagued, job-hungry and crime-laden locales offers a jarring contrast to the bountiful America so often projected in mainstream culture, and thus emblazoned in our imagination. As Anastasia Photo expresses in a statement accompanying the exhibition: "Black questions what kind of America are we to be -- a land of opportunity, or pockets of plenty amidst a landscape of disparity and despair?"


Black posts his photos to Instagram, captioning each image with figures representing the region, geotagging them to put each destination in context. At first Black was worried about how his work would be digested on a platform like Instagram, typically associated with brunch pictures, selfies and inspirational quotes. Black now has 187k followers, and Time declared him to be their Instagram photographer of the year in 2014.


"It says something to me about humanity that people are willing to engage with this stuff in that way," Black said. "Serious issues do have a future in this digital space we're creating."


See the thirsty landscapes, tired hands and opaque skies that bind so many cities across America in the images below. To view the works in more brutal detail than your iPhone screen can convey, visit Anastasia Photo in New York, where Black's work is on view until Oct. 31, 2015. 



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Feminist Mix 'N' Match Coloring Book Celebrates The Complex Lives Of Women

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Throughout a single day women of all ages, located all over the world, perform an incredible, supernatural feat. They shapeshift, constantly and seamlessly, inhabiting diverse and vibrant roles, sometimes simultaneously, like the most stealthy superheroine imaginable. From daughter to skater to friend to lover to fairy to robot to fighter to chef to mermaid and back again. 


At least, according to the mix 'n' match coloring book, Coloring Her.


Coloring Her honors the infinite complexity housed inside a woman's body, whether in mythical times or modern day. Like the flip books you loved when you were a kid, the feminist pièce de résistance, made by artists Iris Glaser and Katrin Leblond, invites ladies of all ages to create a composite muse from a variety of feminist inspirations, a hybrid broad that speaks to the multidimensionality of women everywhere. 



As Glaser and Leblond so aptly put it: "Can't decide if you're a farm girl or a burlesque showgirl? 
Ever feel like a modern-day, multi-tasking warrior goddess? Fantasize about sporting a skateboard and/or a mermaid tail? Be them all in this coloring book." Model your ideal woman off her many colorful roles, none of which contradict the other but only inflect and enhance. 


Pay tribute to divine divas like Frida Kahlo and lady Medusa while getting your zen on and putting crayon to paper. We've long waxed poetic about the benefits of coloring to reduce stress, but there's no harm in rehashing. In the words of coloring book guru Johanna Basford:



Some time spent with the simple task of adding color to the page and creating something beautiful really seems to appeal to people. There’s also the nostalgia factor. Chances are last time you spent an hour or so coloring in you didn’t have a mortgage and you weren’t worried about a nagging boss or the financial crisis! Coloring in seems to help people think about a time when life was simpler and more carefree.



On that note, enjoy the remixed Über-Women below, courtesy of Color Her. Purchase a book for yourself on Amazon or Etsy, or just visit the website.



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'Monsters Holding B***hes' Highlights The Misogyny Behind Horror Tropes

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Monsters just love holding typically unconscious women. The trope is so frequently reproduced in films and cartoons, naked ladies may as well be required accessories for all fictional beasts.


The device has been around for centuries. Before "King Kong" and all the porny, cartoonish versions of monsters holding women that followed, the monster cradle was present in historical depictions -- like the rape of the Sabine women (in which Roman men straight up abducted Sabine women to be their wives). The motif also mirrors the tradition of grooms carrying their new brides, albeit a more gruesome variant of that patriarchal visual, in which the man/monster has physical ownership over the woman/victim.


Thanks to the @monstersholdingbitches Instagram, you can check out every iteration of the trope you could ever possibly need to see, from rabid primates holding women hostage to aquatic creatures holding women hostage to, erm, alien lifeforms holding women hostage. The takeaway: misogynistic men (and women) are figuratively monsters.


































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There's A Coven Of Witches In Brooklyn And We Want To Be Their Friends

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"What is the definition of a witch? If it's just a person who is trying to find this cognizance between themselves and the earth and their role in the universe, yeah, we're witches."


And so Witches of Bushwick founder Christine Tran invites us into her occult lady den, at least digitally. Vice's Broadly recently went under coven with some of the leading Witches, exploring how a Brooklyn party circuit transformed into a hotbed for creativity and female empowerment. Prepare to have a million girl crushes. 


"The name Witches came about from the herstorical context of women coming together empowering each other," Tran says in the video above. "The idea of celebrating the other. I'm a non-white, queer female. So I'm very much the other."


So long, pointy hats and broomsticks. Hello incense, long nails, tattoos and lots of feminist art. "Witches is basically just a celebration and a visibility for people outside of the mainstream," fashion designer and Witch Becca McCharen explains. "All the people who might have been persecuted for who they were in the historical sense of witches at the time."


There you have it. Witches have gone from throwing rad parties to potentially changing the world, or at least the art world. In conclusion, can I join? Can we hang out?



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Bette Midler Jokes 'Hocus Pocus' Sequel Is Delayed Due To 'Trouble Finding A Virgin'

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If for some reason you're not following Bette Midler on social media (why not?), now is the time to start


Midler, who starred in the now classic supernatural flick "Hocus Pocus," took to Twitter to deliver some "breaking news" to her 760,000 followers about why the much-discussed potential sequel has hit a production snag:






Midler is of course referencing the central plot point of the 1993 film. The trio of youth-obsessed witches played by Midler, Kathy Najimy and Sarah Jessica Parker are only able to return to earth once a virgin lights the Black Flame Candle.


Najimy responded to the news with a tweet of her own, pulling famed composer Marc Shaiman, who arranged Midler's famous "I Put A Spell On You" number, into the conversation. 






The last time we heard about "Hocus Pocus 2," Midler expressed her support for the sequel during a Reddit AMA last year. "You have to go to send in your cards to the Walt Disney company," she said. "The ball's in their court." 


Maybe the excitement from the "Gilmore Girls" revival is going to our heads, but could a "Hocus Pocus" sequel actually happen?!


 


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Proof That One Man's Creepy Face Changes A Book's Entire Meaning

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While it's still true you should never judge a book by its cover, sometimes the book can be dramatically altered when my creepy, goofy face is also in the picture. Observe ...



 


Wanna be in my book club? Great. Right now it's just me ... and you.


 


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Sol Lewitt's Advice To Eva Hesse Is What Every Creative Person Needs To Hear

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In the summer of 1964, the German-American sculptor Eva Hesse began experiencing a solid case of creative block. She, like many artists before and after her, was in a slump. "One should be content with the process [of making art] as well as the result," she wrote at the time. "I am not."


In an effort to overcome her sudden lack of confidence in herself and her work, she reached out to fellow artist Sol Lewitt. In the spring and summer of 1965, Lewitt, famous for his conceptual murals, sent Hesse the following advice:


"Stop worrying about big deep things," he wrote in a letter. "You must practice being stupid, dumb, unthinking, empty. Then youʼll be able to DO."


Their correspondence continued:



Dear Sol,
I want to thank you for your letter. I finished one more. They are good. Iʼm working a third one. Much difficulties, but at least Iʼm pushing, and I will be. I swear it.


 


Dear Eva,
Just stop thinking, worrying, looking over your shoulder, wondering doubting, fearing, hurting, hoping for some easy way out, struggling, grasping, confusing, itching, scratching, mumbling, bumbling, grumbling, humbling, stumbling, rumbling, rambling, gambling, tumbling, scumbling, scrambling, hitching, hatching, bitching, moaning, groaning, honing, boning, horse shitting, hair splitting, nit picking, piss­trickling, nose sticking ass­gouging, eye­ball poking, finger pointing, alley­way sneaking, long waiting, small stepping, evil eyeing, back­scratching, searching, perching, besmirching, grinding, grinding, grinding, grinding away at yourself.

Stop it and just do!



The letters between Hesse and Lewitt surfaced as part of a four-year research endeavor, conducted by director and producer Marcie Begleiter and her team. What began as a week spent reading the postminimalist artist's unpublished writing at Allen Memorial Art Museum in Ohio has resulted in "Eva Hesse," a completed, feature-length documentary, set to hit theaters in the U.S. in April of 2016. 





The film, produced by Karen Shapiro, tells the story of Hesse, one of the few women recognized as key to the New York art scene in the 1960s, boasting a schedule of over 20 group exhibitions in 1970 alone. Sadly, Hesse died of a brain tumor that year at the age of 34, leaving behind a trove of latex, fiberglass and plastic sculpture that would wind its way to institutions like the Guggenheim, the Tate, the Museum of Modern Art and the Pompidou following her death.


"Eva Hesse," which is currently raising distribution funds on Kickstarter, aims to shed light on Hesse's role in NYC's creative downtown community in particular, linking together her childhood in 1930s Germany with her burgeoning feminist artwork in America. Begleiter interviewed art giants like Richard Serra and Nancy Holt, splicing this footage with archival material from the '60s. Selma Blair provides the narration, comprised primarily of Hesse's own words excerpted from her journals.


"Eva Hesse explores the universal challenge of living an engaged life; a life of courage, discipline and joy even when the world is telling you that you have little chance of success," the Kickstarter campaign explains. "It is a story about art and about life; and how the two combine to create one of the most universal of life’s experiences."


You can read more about the film over on Kickstarter. Check out a preview of the letters between Sol Lewitt and Eva Hesse below.


Note: The above are excepts from their correspondence in the Spring/­Summer of 1965. They have been edited in the documentary to reflect the conversational nature of the back­-and-­forth.



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'WhoisDSharp' Injects Some Viral Vine Violin Into HuffPost 6x60

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When given the chance to do band, art or the string orchestra in the sixth grade, musician, DJ and artist DSharp (aka Derryck Gleaton) fell in love with the viola. Since then, he says, it's been all "downhill from there."


Watch the Vine star perform in Washington Square Park while chatting with 6x60 host Chaz Smith. And to DSharp's parents, childhood confession coming in 3, 2, 1 ...





Visit WhoisDSharp at all his earthly Internet homes:


Vine:WhoisDSharp
Twitter:@whoisDSharp
Instagram:@whoisDSharp
Snapchat:whoisDSharp
YouTube:iAmDSharp


 


Music produced by Above Avrage Productions. HuffPost 6x60 is hosted by Chaz Smith, a 20-year-old from New Jersey majoring in Cinema Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. You can follow him on Vine, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat (simplyputchaz) and YouTube. 


 


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This Woman’s Tumblr Post Shows The Painful Side Of Breast Cancer Awareness

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Jenn Alter said she was sick of people sexualizing breast cancer. So she posted some photographs showing just how painful breast cancer treatments can be.  


(Some images below may be considered graphic.)


Alter, 36, recently shared images on her Tumblr showing what her body looked like after she underwent 35 days of radiation treatments for her breast cancer in 2013.



Alter's photos show the painful burns and broken skin she experienced after her treatment. 


"Breast cancer isn’t sexy," Alter wrote in the caption when she shared the photos. "It’s not about saving the boobies. It’s not about no bra day, which is really just an excuse for women to post sexy pics of their nipples pressing through their clothes. It’s scars, nausea, pain, bald heads, burnt skin and broken hearts."



Alter, who is now in remission, told The Huffington Post that she wanted to show people that breast cancer is about more than cute T-shirts and sexy phrases. 


"October is hard for breast cancer survivors as it is breast cancer awareness month," Alter said. "I have a problem with 'awareness' of this issue being sexual in nature. Memes like 'save the boobies' or 'no bra day' can be offensive and demeaning to survivors, many of whom have lost their breasts during cancer treatment. We aren't trying to save breasts. We are trying to save our lives."


See the full post on Alter's Tumblr here.


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We Added The Kardashians To Syrian Refugee Photos So People Will Give A S**t

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There's a Syrian refugee crisis, which you may have heard something about. Millions have fled the violence of a Syrian civil war to make the long journey to Europe.


The Huffington Post's Sophia Jones followed these Syrian refugees for three weeks through Turkey, Greece, Macedonia, Serbia, Hungary, Austria and Germany to observe the devastating hardships these unfortunate ...


Wait, where are you going, aren't you interested in this? No, it's not in your backyard, but ... still. OK, OK, what if I spice it up a little, maybe throw a little Kardashian action in the mix?


 


About 4 million Syrians have fled their homeland as a result of the country's brutal civil war.



Since the start of the conflict in 2011, over 2 million Syrians have fled to Turkey. More than a million Syrians have sought refuge in Lebanon. More than 620,000 have left for Jordan.



The Syrian refugees are among hundreds of thousands of people making the death-defying trip across the Mediterranean this year, hoping to reach Europe.



They face many challenges along the way. Human Rights Watch reports that some refugees crossing the border from Greece to Macedonia have been physically beaten by law enforcement.



While crossing into Hungary from Serbia, when they aren't being attacked by Hungary's journalists, many Syrian refugees have been forced to sleep in the cold, muddy fields.



71 refugees suffocated to death while being transported through Austria in a refrigerated truck. Included were at least a dozen Syrian travel documents.



As winter approaches, and without help, they could freeze to death crossing the Balkans, an area that can reach minus 15° C.



Even if refugees get to Germany, the preferred destination of many Syrians, some don't make it alive. A Syrian woman who drowned crossing the Mediterranean was laid to rest in Berlin on June 16.A second coffin, empty, represented her son, who was also lost at sea but never found.



 ...


"Keeping Up With The Kardashians" returns to television Sunday, Nov. 15! 


...


In the meantime, check out Sophia Jones' amazing piece, and consider donating to one of the many organizations currently helping Syrian refugees.


(Big thanks to HuffPost Senior World Editor Eline Gordts for all her help and expertise on the subject.)


 


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'Supergirl' Is The Feminist Superhero We've Been Waiting For

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"Supergirl" has all the elements of a mainstream superhero show: a kickass dreamy lead with a daffy alter-ego, capable and funny sidekicks, a potential love interest, a power-hungry villain and plenty of action. It also happens to have a distinctly feminist bent. (This post contains some light spoilers about the first episode.)


As someone who grew up watching re-runs of the 1960s live-action "Batman" (or as I called it, "na na na na, na na na na, Batman!"), and more recently easily got into "Arrow" and "The Flash," I was excited to see what "Supergirl" might bring to the dude-dominated superhero landscape. Of course, being on CBS and aiming to appeal to a wide audience, "Supergirl" isn't some radical feminist piece of art. But it is entertaining, empowering and totally unapologetic about its protagonist Kara Zor-El's gender.


We meet Kara (played by Melissa Benoist) as she's being sent to earth to protect her cousin, the future Superman, only she gets delayed and arrives on earth years after him. Her adopted family knows about her powers, which she eventually decides to suppress in order to fit in. She watches from afar as her cousin becomes a famous superhero. Kara grows up and gets a sensible job working for boss lady and media mogul Cat Grant, played by Calista Flockhart. She's leading a "normal" life by all accounts -- that is, until she rescues a plane.


The casting alone makes "Supergirl" exciting. Sadly, having a mainstream superhero show featuring four lead female characters -- Kara, Kara's sister Alex, Cat and villain Astra -- and two men of color in regular supporting roles, makes it somewhat of an anomaly. (We're still waiting on women of color to show up, though.) As writer Rebecca Eisenberg tweeted during the premiere:






And the dialogue manages to model female empowerment without being preachy. The characters even internally address the external debate over whether labelling Kara Supergirl instead of Superwoman is demeaning to her abilities.  


"Shouldn't she be called Superwoman?," Kara asks Cat, wondering if it's anti-feminist to dub a fully capable superhero a "girl."


Cat responds: "What do you think is so bad about 'girl'? I'm a girl and your boss and powerful and rich and hot and smart. So if you perceive Supergirl as anything less than excellent, isn't the real problem you?" 


The beauty is, both characters make valid points, and it's up to viewers to ultimately decide what they think. 





Actress Laura Benanti, who plays both Kara's mother and (spoiler alert!) her mother's twin sister, the show's major villain, had the following empowering interpretation of Supergirl's trajectory: "I could be completely off the mark here, but for me, Kara's stifling her superpowers provides a metaphor for what so many women do; hide their light and strength in order to seem 'nicer' or 'less threatening,'" she told The Huffington Post. "The unbridled joy on her face when she steps into her own power is a thing of beauty, and I hope it inspires many girls and women to step into theirs."


And if there were fears about whether a female-led, feminist TV show could bring in mainstream ratings, hopefully "Supergirl's" premiere quelled them. The first episode brought in 12.9 million viewers, many of those in the coveted 18-49 age group.


As Benoist said on "The Late Show" to Stephen Colbert: "What's feminist about it is that it's for everyone. She has all the same powers he [Superman] does."


Girl or woman or whatever you call her, the important thing is that she's Super.




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26 Photos That Show The Beautiful Ways Moms Feed Their Babies

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Staci Caspers and Justine Temke, who are moms, doulas and lactation consultants, created a photo project that they hope will help break down the stigma and judgment in debate around formula feeding versus breastfeeding.


"Fed Is Best" is a calendar that features intimate photos of moms nourishing their babies however they see fit for their families -- from nursing to pumping breastmilk to formula feeding. The project is part of a movement called "Judge Less," which aims to put an end to "the so-called Mommy Wars," Temke told The Huffington Post.


"We constantly face [the Mommy Wars'] negative impact," she continued. "It seems that everything is up for judgment. No matter the topic, no matter how you choose to do things, at some point, someone will tell you that you are doing it wrong and that you should do this or that."



The Minnesota moms provide support to families in their community through their business, Midwest Doulas. "We make a point to empower our families, helping them stand up for their choices and inform the naysayers that their lives, their family, and their parenthood is nobody’s business," Temke said. "Unless you ask for advice, you do not need anyone’s passive-aggressive guilt!"


Both women said they've felt shamed and judged as a result of their decisions regarding breastfeeding. Caspers faced backlash for breastfeeding her two children and also for weaning her oldest at two and half years old. Temke had a "painful, discouraging experience breastfeeding," which was worsened by her interactions with fellow nursing moms who were "extremely judgmental and opinionated about the 'f' word (formula)."


"I held on for three and a half months, with cracked, sore nipples; constant massive engorgement, a screaming babe and the feeling of being a complete loser." When she decided to stop breastfeeding, Temke said she was shamed for feeding her baby with "poison." She also faced disheartening comments like, “You must have not tried enough,” and “I would never forgive myself if I was formula feeding my son.”



As Certified Lactation Counselors, Caspers and Temke strongly support breastfeeding advocacy and resources for nursing moms, but they believe that shouldn't come at the expense of mothers who nourish their babies in other ways. "We believe in the absolute awesomeness of breastmilk, but we are not about to judge anyone for the way they feed their babes," Temke said. "We do not know the struggles, the history, or the trauma another mother might have lived through. Fed Is Best, not because the alternative is to starve your babe, but because feeding your baby, to the best of your abilities, with the support, knowledge, and education you have, so that you are happy and baby is healthy, is best."


"Breastfeeding advocacy and formula shamers aren't and shouldn't be the same people," she continued. "You can support breastfeeding without taking away the freedom of choice of a mother."


To empower all moms, however they feed their children, Temke and Caspers teamed up with photographer and mom of three Ashley Rick from St. Paul Photo Co. to create the Judge Less: Fed Is Best calendar, which is filled with intimate photos of moms feeding their babies.


Proceeds from calendar sales will go to a nonprofit called Babies Need Boxes, which provides teen mothers and moms in need with a box filled with supplies for a baby's first year of life -- inspired by Finland's famous maternity packages. Each year, the doulas hope to create a new Judge Less calendar, centered on a different parenting theme.


Keep scrolling for a sample of the stunning photos of moms feeding their babies and visit Midwest Doulas online to purchase the Fed Is Best calendar.



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