Category Archive Art

ByGD

Heavy Ethics

Marduk was a familiar name to me, but I never really listened to them before I saw Marduk at Eistnaflug in 2016. I enjoyed the set, but the presence of meaty rams’ heads on stage as props gave me pause. As a vegetarian, how did I feel about the aesthetic use of animal parts for entertainment? A vegan friend who was also there didn’t even notice them, and was much more enthusiastic about the music than I was.

After a discussion of ethics in heavy metal, we decided it was okay. They eat a lot of mutton in Iceland, and whole sheep’s heads are a holiday special there like whole turkeys in the U.S. It’s not like they actually killed animals for the show. And it did look cool if you didn’t think about it too hard.

Only later did we discover that they also have songs celebrating the courage of Nazi military units, and have refused to distance themselves from white supremacy. I did a bit more research, and it doesn’t seem like Marduk are actually Nazis. It sounds more like an example of white privilege trying to be edgy. But if you prioritize an edgelord aesthetic or obscure mystique of your band over the safety and welfare of actual people, I have better things to do than listen to your music.

It turns out that when something pricks your conscience, there’s usually a reason. Even if it looks really cool.

ByGD

Sleep of Reason

I got this poster of Goya’s famous print at a Seattle Art Museum exhibition on the invention of cartooning. “El sueño de la razón produce monstruos” (The sleep of reason produces monsters”) has hung on my wall ever since, and for the past few years has felt so much more timely than anything produced in the late 1700s should. I hope to be able to look at it with a little more distance in the future.

ByGD

How to Appreciate Public Art

This giant block of ice was placed in Occidental Park as part of a public art project several years ago. You might question whether a block of ice counts as art. But it was midsummer, so every time you walked by it looked a little different. It was so unusual to see a giant block of ice that everyone stopped to look and wondered if they could touch it. Complete strangers struck up conversations about it trying to decide if they liked it or hated it. Even the dogs were intrigued, and had kind of the same response. Is it something to lick or something to pee on?

ByGD

Romeo et Juliette From PNB at Home

If true love is the one that makes you throw away your own rules, it must hold true for art as well as relationships. Story ballets are supposed to be the easy one to get into, but to be honest, they’ve never really been my thing. And yet, Jean-Christophe Maillot’s Romeo et Juliette is one of my favorite ballets and one of my favorite adaptations of the Bard’s much misunderstood tragedy.

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ByGD

Nesting

When my youngest child was in kindergarten, her school decided to expand the science fair to all grades. They gave the youngest students choices, and my child chose to make a bird nest, because that was the most artsy option. Somewhere between science, sculpture, and ikebana, this was her project.