Easter will land on April Fool’s Day next year, but we’re hoping these new chocolate bunnies are no joke.
R.M. Palmer (the creator of the famous chocolate bunnies you grew up loving) recently announced they will be adding another—dare we say more self-absorbed?—bunny to their lineup for 2018. The “Selfie Bunny” looks like it has come to life and features the adorable creature posing for a photo using its very own cell phone. One even has her hand on her hip while snapping a pic. Another version features a bunny in a blue shirt wearing a backpack,...
R.M. Palmer (the creator of the famous chocolate bunnies you grew up loving) recently announced they will be adding another—dare we say more self-absorbed?—bunny to their lineup for 2018. The “Selfie Bunny” looks like it has come to life and features the adorable creature posing for a photo using its very own cell phone. One even has her hand on her hip while snapping a pic. Another version features a bunny in a blue shirt wearing a backpack,...
- 10/13/2017
- by Jessica Fecteau
- PEOPLE.com
Head, a new exhibition at Bosi Contemporary, orbits eccentrically around the notion of the human head as an avatar for the human condition. Curators D. Dominick Lombardi and Robert Curcio have gathered 36 idiosyncratic examples of the head as social signifier, troubled mask, and dream-like presence. The eleven artists represented here unsettle us with their evocations of head as the repository of the psyche which demands to make itself known.
The spirit of the show is embodied in Nina Levy's hyper-realist sculpture of a standing woman in a little black dress, one hand clutched across her body, the other thoughtfully cradling her chin. "Spectator" is the perfect gallery goer, except for a monstrously large head which covers her own – the self-conscious ego worn like the costume of a team mascot.
The head as a mask worn for public display is tellingly present in "Blind Nation" by Ronald L. Hall. This intense,...
The spirit of the show is embodied in Nina Levy's hyper-realist sculpture of a standing woman in a little black dress, one hand clutched across her body, the other thoughtfully cradling her chin. "Spectator" is the perfect gallery goer, except for a monstrously large head which covers her own – the self-conscious ego worn like the costume of a team mascot.
The head as a mask worn for public display is tellingly present in "Blind Nation" by Ronald L. Hall. This intense,...
- 7/14/2013
- by John Mendelsohn
- www.culturecatch.com
It's Sunday afternoon — your last chance to read all that stuff you were too distracted to read last week before Monday brings a new deluge of things you will want to read. Below, some of our recommendations: Mourning James Gandolfini: Like Vulture's Matt Zoller Seitz and Margaret Lyons, many people wrote great remembrances of Gandolfini and Tony Soprano, including Grantland's Alex Pappademas, Slate's Jessica Winter, and The New Republic's Marc Tracy. GQ also ran an excerpt from Brett Martin's forthcoming book Difficult Men about Gandolfini's work on The Sopranos. "The Gripping, Mind-Blowing, Thrilling Evolution of the Movie Trailer" by Jason Kehe and Katie M. Palmer (Wired): An illustrated history of coming attractions. "Paradise Regained" by Betsy Riley (Atlanta Magazine): Restoring the artist and Baptist minister Howard Finster's 46,991-piece Georgia art garden. "Shutter Madness" by Jacob Mikanowski (The Awl) On street photographer Garry Winogrand and the half-a-million exposures he left behind.
- 6/23/2013
- by Caroline Bankoff
- Vulture
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
“Mythmaking is the first art. Written with a unity of vision largely forgotten by contemporary poetry, G.M. Palmer’s With Rough Gods grazes the foundations of Greek mythology, endowing gods and legends with a numinous humanity often unseen in traditional compilations of lore. Complete with a glossary of its characters, With Rough Gods embodies our human experience as only mythology can.”
‘With Rough Gods’ is a short collection of sonnets by poet and ancient world enthusiast, George Michael Palmer. It is a look into the ancient world and it’s tales through the eyes of Gods and Heroes alike, exploring both the dark and light side of classic myths.
The opening poem, ‘Homer & Calliope,’ sets the stage for the literary feast that we’re about to devour, with arguably the most famous writer of poems that the world has ever seen, addressing the muse of his craft,...
“Mythmaking is the first art. Written with a unity of vision largely forgotten by contemporary poetry, G.M. Palmer’s With Rough Gods grazes the foundations of Greek mythology, endowing gods and legends with a numinous humanity often unseen in traditional compilations of lore. Complete with a glossary of its characters, With Rough Gods embodies our human experience as only mythology can.”
‘With Rough Gods’ is a short collection of sonnets by poet and ancient world enthusiast, George Michael Palmer. It is a look into the ancient world and it’s tales through the eyes of Gods and Heroes alike, exploring both the dark and light side of classic myths.
The opening poem, ‘Homer & Calliope,’ sets the stage for the literary feast that we’re about to devour, with arguably the most famous writer of poems that the world has ever seen, addressing the muse of his craft,...
- 2/10/2013
- by Adam Kenneth Dean
- Obsessed with Film
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