Rhapsodies

A comic strip about life, love, accounting, progressive bookstores and the divine power of jazz!
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Posts

Friday Sketches

by wpmorse on September 16, 2011 at 10:12 am
Posted In: Art

I thought I’d take a brief break from the Museum stuff and share another exercise with you. That is when watching your favorite DVD always remember that the pause button is your friend.  Once you remember this every single DVD becomes a useful visual reference often giving you ideas for composition and camera angles that might not have occurred to you going about it the normal way. I like drawing character actors the best. After doing this for awhile you’ll find yourself coming to the conclusion that “Star Quality” translates to bland and featureless.

As an example of this, as I’ve mentioned in previous posts, I’ve recently discovered and fallen in love with HBO’s The Wire. It provides wonderful opportunity to discover a seemingly endless list of fantastic actors that I’d never heard of before watching. As just one example for today Gbenga Akinnagbe as Chris Partlow has one of those utterly fantastic faces you just can’t draw enough times.

└ Tags: Chris Partlow, DVD, Gbenga Akinnagbe, HBO, Sketches, Television, The Wire
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Deliverence…Indian Style

by wpmorse on September 14, 2011 at 7:22 am
Posted In: Test

I’m becoming more and more a fan of Bill Bailey so I just had to share this:

└ Tags: Bill Bailey, Deliverence., Humor, Indian Music, Music
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Tuesday Rhapsodies

by wpmorse on September 13, 2011 at 6:17 am
Posted In: Test

For this week’s selection we are doing the first of George Enescu‘s Romanian Rhapsodies performed by the Cernauti Symphony Orchestra  conducted by Liviu Buiuc.

└ Tags: Classical Music, George Enescu, Liviu Buiuc, Music, Rhapsody
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X-Men: First Class

by wpmorse on September 12, 2011 at 9:11 am
Posted In: Test

Well with the DVD release this weekend I finally got around to seeing X-Men: First Class.  I don’t know why I didn’t bother with it in the theater. Probably a combination of having been burned by X-Men 3 and Wolverine: Origins along with an unwillingness to reward bad behavior in my favorite genres… and by the time I heard it was actually good it was all a matter of inertia.

So now that I’ve seen it I’m happy to say that I liked it a lot. I thought the X-Men worked very well in the period setting (Not surprising as the comic originally came out in 1963.) Of course the downside of this is that a lot of the anachronisms were glaring to the point of being distracting. I’m not just talking the small mistakes in fashion and military ordinance, more obsessive history fans then I have already pointed those out. I’m talking about the way it felt that every actor was acting like someone from now. Apparently this is an alternate universe where Jim Crow never happened. While there was sexism it was the dumb frat-boy variety, not the borderline religion of the time. So taken for granted that even the victims believe it, (and none of the female characters acted like they had lived through this.)  Due to my personal prejudices, I suppose I can forgive nobody smoking, but that was pretty obvious too.

Otherwise I enjoyed it a lot. Hardly a masterpiece, but well acted with a tight script that made it feel like there was far more going on than just the main plot while not being loaded down with all of the badges that most superhero films focusing on an origin story have to deal with. The effects were good and convincing but happily, due to the character driven script, for once this was not important.

└ Tags: Movies, Superheroes, X-Men
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Friday Museum Sketches

by wpmorse on September 9, 2011 at 10:32 am
Posted In: Art

Origin of Cornucopia

 

Today’s sketch is another from Seattle Art Museum’s European gallery. This one is a Flemish Baroque painting by Abraham Janssens, the Origin of Cornucopia. Technically it’s a beautiful done piece but sometimes I have to wonder about just how many female models artists had access to in this period. I mean seriously has anybody noticed the number of nudes in Renaissance and Baroque art that look like post operation transsexuals?Origin of Cornucopia

└ Tags: Abraham Janssens, Baroque, Flemish Art, Paintings
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Tuesday Rhapsodies

by wpmorse on September 6, 2011 at 8:52 am
Posted In: Test

Today we return to one of my favorites, Maksim Mrvica performing Rachmaninov‘s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini (18th Variation)

└ Tags: Maskim Mrvica, Music, Niccolò Paganini, Rhapsody, Sergei Rachmaninoff
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