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Katherine Eastland

40 articles 2007–2011

Penguin Suit

Katherine Eastland · April 26, 2011

Who doesn’t love an animal logo? Allen Lane knew that, in 1935, when he published the first 10 Penguin books in London. The six pence paperbacks arrived in bookshops sporting the avian logo and no other graphics, just broad bands of color at the top and bottom. General fiction had orange bands;…

True Type

Katherine Eastland · April 17, 2011

Apple is all about sleek design and minimalist beauty, but if a writer were to pose with his MacAir or iPad for a photo portrait, he’d be hard-pressed to look like he’s dripping with writerly intrigue. Besides, no one looks good in the eerie blue of computer screen light. 

Vision and Revision

Katherine Eastland · October 12, 2010

Twentieth and twentyfirst-century art do not always age well. Consider this Oldenberg. Or this Rauschenberg. Or, horrible visu, this shark suspended in formaldehyde. It rotted not even 15 years after it was tossed into its vitrine coffin-tank, and had to be entirely refashioned.

Miss O'Connor Turns 85

Katherine Eastland · March 25, 2010

Today marks the 85th birthday of the novelist and peafowl-enthusiast Flannery O’Connor. To properly celebrate the occasion, the mayor of Milledgeville, Georgia, along with others of the town’s dignitaries just proclaimed March 25th “Flannery O’Connor Day.” (A few decades ago, however, when O'Connor…

Engendered in Beauty

Katherine Eastland · March 17, 2010

Via Matthew Milliner's terrific post yesterday, I came across a seven-part series about the relationship between beauty and conservatism, Art and Beauty Against the Politicized Aesthetic, by the young scholar and poet James Matthew Wilson. He studied under the late Thomist scholar Ralph McInerny,…

Electronic Inferno

Katherine Eastland · February 11, 2010

If life is like a box of chocolates, then the televised Super Bowl is like an Oreo. The chocolate wafers are the game itself, and the ads are the cream filling. If you watched those ads, you probably saw this one, heralding that Electronic Arts is bringing to an Xbox 360 and/or PlayStation 3 near…

Portrait of Collector

Katherine Eastland · February 3, 2010

Let us now praise famous art—and the moneyed men and women who buy it. Or so the National Gallery of Art would encourage us to do in its latest show, “From Impressionism to Modernism: The Chester Dale Collection,” which opened last weekend in snowy Washington.

Happy Birthday, Dubliner

Katherine Eastland · February 2, 2010

While regular calendars note February 2 as Groundhog Day, it’s worth recalling that, on the literary calendar, today is the birthday of Dublin-born novelist James Joyce. On on this day in 1922, age at 40, he published Ulysses (which he pronounced “Oolissays”). February 2 was a lucky date in his…

Attempted Art Heist In Cyprus

Katherine Eastland · January 26, 2010

Yesterday in Cyprus, police authorities arrested "the largest ever smuggling ring" in the island, including ten Cypriots (most likely Greek), one Syrian, and four others still unknown. They will face charges for "illegally possessing and trading in antiquities," as Menelaos Hadjicostis reported…

A New Lawsuit against Turkey

Katherine Eastland · October 19, 2009

A Washington law firm has just issued a press release on its multi-billion dollar class action lawsuit against Turkey regarding domestic property issues in the northern third of Cyprus (aka Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, or TRNC), which Turkey seized by military force in 1974 and has…

The Eyes of Texas

Katherine Eastland · September 28, 2009

My grandmother Eastland liked to talk, and she considered it her duty to share family history with me, her only grandchild. So whenever we visited her down in Hillsboro, Texas, she and I would sit at her kitchen table in chairs stiff as pews, and she'd speak late into the night.

Body Art

Katherine Eastland · September 3, 2009

Willem de Kooning, the Dutch-American painter of lurid, owl-eyed women, declared in 1950 that "flesh was the reason oil paint was invented." Using that famous sentence as its cornerstone, "Paint Made Flesh" gathers 43 figurative paintings by artists from the last 50 years, including de Kooning,…

Still in Peril

Katherine Eastland · July 29, 2009

Last week in Washington, D.C., more pressure was exerted on Turkey to recognize the widespread depredation and pillage of religious sites and objects in the northern third of Cyprus. This third, otherwise known as the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus--an illegal, unilaterally declared state…

Soundscapes in a Exhibition

Katherine Eastland · July 28, 2009

On Sunday I popped out of the heat and into the cool of the National Gallery to see two exhibitions on Spanish art: "Luis Melendez, Master of the Spanish Still Life" (warmly reviewed for TWS here) and "The Art of Power: Royal Armor and Portraits from Imperial Spain." In the latter I found one of…

Buses Speak Out

Katherine Eastland · February 10, 2009

Remember those buses last December that were side-slapped with slogans like "Why believe in god? Just be good for goodness sake"? Well, the British Humanist Association has decided to start something similar across the pond. The new ad campaign, funded by the association, has won the support of…

Mr. Ubiquitous

Katherine Eastland · January 7, 2009

The Washington Post reports that the original red-and-blue Obama "HOPE" collage by Shephard Fairey is headed to the National Portrait Gallery. It's a grand, and domineering, 60 by 44 inch artwork. The iconic collage is a gift from Tony and Heather Podesta, superlobbyists in Washington whose late…

Painted Indian

Katherine Eastland · December 9, 2008

George de Forest Brush (1855-1941) is far from being a household name, but his early paintings of Indians garnered him the attention, admiration, and purse of the 19th-century art world. Little of this work has been seen in public, however, since private collectors bought the paintings as soon as…

Christ and Culture, Again

Katherine Eastland · December 8, 2008

So Obama didn't make the cover of Newsweek today. Instead, a traditional-looking Bible with a rainbow ribbon bookmark did. The attendant story, penned by Lisa Miller, makes "the religious case for gay marriage" and is called "Our Mutual Joy." Here's the first graph: Let's try for a minute to take…

The Other Pianist

Katherine Eastland · November 7, 2008

Last month the North Korean pianist Kim Cheol Woong gave two special performances in Washington, D.C. He first played at the State Department and then, near nightfall, in the dim, chandeliered rooms of the Polish Embassy. His purpose wasn't to win laurels or make a name for himself. There weren't…

For the Love of LOL

Katherine Eastland · October 24, 2008

A few years ago, the LOL cat was born. Yes, that's right, as in "Laugh Out Loud" cat. In case you don't know what a LOL cat is, check out this website. It's chock full of oddball photos of cats--fat cats, fluffy cats, scary cats, behatted cats--paired with oddball pidgin-English phrases. You either…

Pomp across the Pond

Katherine Eastland · October 17, 2008

Exit the hullabaloo of American politics for five skinny minutes. Why? Well, to see history happen: Across the pond, Queen Elizabeth II just posted her first YouTube video at Google's British headquarters in London. And, of course, someone YouTubed her majesty YouTube-ing. Check it out here. You…

Latin for McCainiacs

Katherine Eastland · October 8, 2008

When McCain cut his gaze over at Obama last night and gruffly called him "that one," I had one wish: that Latin was still with us. You see, there's a silver dollar Latin word McCain could have pulled out of his pocket: the great demonstrative pronoun, iste. It's my favorite word in Latin, second…

Little Shop of Moolah

Katherine Eastland · September 25, 2008

If you've been reading the Arts section of any newspaper, you've probably read about Damien Hirst's auction at Sotheby's, (in)famous for bypassing galleries and dealers and for racking in so many pounds-111.5 million, to be exact. Hirst named the show "Beautiful Inside My Head Forever," but Lee…

Al Qaeda's 'Warrior Poet'-in-Chief

Katherine Eastland · September 24, 2008

Recordings of bin Laden reciting his penwork were found on some of the 1,500 cassettes discovered in Kandahar, Afghanistan following the 9/11 attacks. Flagg Miller, an assistant professor at University of California, Davis, has been studying them and will publish his findings next week in the…

'This is Not Us'

Katherine Eastland · September 15, 2008

Photini Philippidou reports that there's a Pakistani protest song "Ye Hum Naheen", Urdu for "This Is Not Us", seeking to redefine Islam as anti-terrorist. The song has stirred 62.8 million Pakistanis to sign a petition, either by name or thumbprint, saying that true Muslims don't support terrorism.…

Kirchner's Hollow Women

Katherine Eastland · September 10, 2008

DEBORAH WYE, CHIEF CURATOR of prints and illustrations at the Museum of Modern Art, laments that German expressionist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880-1938) is still "not so well known in the States as he should be." And so she has organized a show devoted to a single chapter of his work: the Berlin…

Forget About Wax Museums...

Katherine Eastland · August 29, 2008

In case there isn't enough talk about celebrity in America, here's some extra fare from England. And it¹s not about Obama, or Paris, or Britney. It's about Kate Moss. Today the British Museum announced that 'Siren,' a nearly $2.8 million, 110-pound solid gold statue of Kate will grace the Greek…

Obama's Composer in Chief

Katherine Eastland · August 22, 2008

We've already heard from the major newspapers that Kayne West, Fergie, and friends are going to make the pilgrimage to Denver for the upcoming Democratic National Convention. But only Bloomberg has reported that the convention has chosen a "composer in residence." Amram, 77, has collaborated with…

The Great Firewall

Katherine Eastland · August 21, 2008

The iTunes store just died in China. And it's all because the U.S.-based Art of Peace Foundation compiled an album for Olympians to download, for free, in the name of "compassion and non-violence ... overcom[ing] intolerance and oppression." The album is called Songs for Tibet and features songs by…

Holiday Travel

Katherine Eastland · July 20, 2007

INSIDE THE NATIONAL GALLERY'S WEST BUILDING, a banner proclaims: "Fabulous Journeys and Faraway Places: Travel on Paper 1450-1700." Perhaps some might skip this invitation in search of something more contemporary. But that would be a mistake.