Friday, January 11, 2013

Audio Books

I was always curious to know if audio books were really as effective as reading. I've only actually used an audio book once and I sort of felt like it was cheating. Some people enjoy audio books when they can't physically hold a book for example, if they were driving or working out. However others believe that they can't retain as much by just listening to a book. Turns out that reading and listening are extremely similar in the cognitive processes. In 1985 a study found that listening comprehension had a lot to do with reading. Basically it found that if people read books often they will also be able to listen to them well. In addition, in 1977 a group of college students wanted to see if audio books were really the same as reading. Half of the group read a short story and the other half listened to it and both sides were equally able to summarize the text. So at the end of the day audio books aren't to bad. So as long as you're reading in anyway, it's a good thing.



Source:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/olgakhazan/2011/09/12/is-listening-to-audio-books-really-the-same-as-reading/2/

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Artist Creates Amazing 25-Foot-Tall Ice Castles

Roger Blakey Photography

  Artist Brent Christensen, 50, of Alpine, Utah has spent the last four years making the craft of intertwining icicles into solid, 20 to 25-foot-tall structures he calls ice castles absolutly perfect. His little hobby started in 2000 when his family moved from california to the cold, cold utah. He was looking for some fun activities to do in the winter, and thats when he came across doing this. "We started doing winter stuff in the yard, playing around with the kids, making igloos and ice forts and slides and stuff," Christensen told ABCNews.com. "And it just evolved. One year I stumbled upon the concept of doing icicles by spraying water.

  once he got really good at the art he went to nearby resorts to see if they would be interested in if they would want him to create these beautiful art peices infront of their buildings to display to their guests. and of course, there was no takers and Brent was about to give up, but then heard from a spa and resort weeks later whom was interested.

  since then Brent has become famous for his intertwining icicles. he  currently has two ice castles on display this year, one in Steamboat Springs, Colo., as well as a larger, more grandiose one he created in the parking lot of Mall of America near Minneapolis-St. Paul.

  "People come and they pay an admission and spend about a half an hour usually taking pictures and exploring," he said. "The ice castle itself is probably about an acre and a half."

  he and his group of men work and work doing these 20 to 25-feet-tall sculptures and have a goal of being able to do 40 feet and high one day.

Monday, January 7, 2013

The best art of 2012

Top Ten Best Art Of 2012 (in no particular order) 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2012/dec/15/best-art-2012-laura-cumming)

1. Bronze Royal Academy 


2. Lucian Freud: Portraits National Portrait Gallery


3. Edvard Munch Tate Modern


4. Tino Sehgal Tate Modern (no picture)

5. Philip Guston: Late Paintings Inverleith House, Edinburgh


6. Mark Wallinger: Site Baltic, Gateshead


7. Art of Change: New Directions from China Hayward Gallery


8.Presence: The Art of Portrait Sculpture Holburne Museum, Bath


9. David Shrigley: Brain Activity Hayward


10. The Tanks: Art in Action Tate Modern

Christmas Break

Front Cover            So for christmas I got a brand new book called Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl. This book is being turned into a major motion picture and comes to theaters Feburary 13th. So, what I got from the back of the book and the movie preview is that it's about a boy named Ethan who longs to leave his small southern town when he meets a girl named Lena. Together they uncover secrets about their towns history, their families and their history. From the movie preview it looks like it has to do with witches and things of that nature but I think it's safe to say this one isn't about vampires. I'm going to start reading it this week and hopefully I'll have great things to say about it later.

Friday, December 21, 2012

Steampunk Artist Transforms Ocean Trash

  
 
  Artist Claudio Garzón found himself picking up plastic debris gathered from walks along the Los Angeles River and creating beautiful sculptures out of the debris. 
 
He began teaching art students how to make their own with the intention that they’d learn about ocean conservation at the same time.
 
The L.A. River stretches almost 50 miles from the San Fernando Valley to Long Beach. Claudio Garzón lives several blocks from the river, not far from the area where it meets the Pacific. A net there is supposed to catch ocean-bound debris, but small plastic particles still get through, Garzón said.
 
Garzón co-founded a nonprofit called Save Oceans and Seas, or SOS for short to bring attention to local debris accumulation. In addition, he’s collaborated with several ocean advocacy groups, including Heal the Bay in Santa Monica and the San Francisco-based organization Sea Stewards to support awareness campaigns.
 
“The awareness and attention these pieces have received has been overwhelming,” he said.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

christmas calander for the kids.

advent calendarAdvent Calander 
 
what you'll need:
ordinary grocery-store matchboxes 
hot-glue            
wrapping paper      
number stamps
candy   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

    
  1. hot-glue the tops of the matchboxes (empty) on to one another to form rows. ( nine boxes for the bas and decrease by two until you have a single box.)
  2. cut wrapping paper to cover the matchboxes (so they look pretty )
  3. secure with hot-glue
  4. Next, hot-glue the rows in a pyramid shape
  5. use number stamps the stamp the ends of the matchboxes. (1-25)
  6. then fill the boxes with candy. (or whatever you'd like)



Monday, December 17, 2012

Macbeth Curse?

                  Apparently there is a curse on the play Macbeth by William Shakespeare. There are two superstition that float around Macbeth. The first is it's bad luck to even say "Macbeth" unless you're rehearsing or performing the play. Instead you should call it “the Scottish play” or “Mackers” or perhaps “the Scottish business” or “the Glamis comedy.” Some say that the rule only applies if you're in a theather, so that it makes it ok to say it in a classroom setting. The second superstition is that the play itself brings bad luck to the cast and crew. The supposed story for this curse is that because there are fake witches chanting in the play real witches got mad and set a curse on the play, condemning it for all time. If ledgends are true the bad fortune with the production of Macbeth have started from the very first production.

  • On the first production, on August 7, 1606, the boy playing lady Macbeth got very sick and died backstage. The story is that Shakespeare himself had to take his spot.
  • In 1672 in Amsterdam the actor playing Macbeth used a real dagger instead of a fake one and killed the actor playing Duncan right in front of the audience.
  • In  1703 on opening day of London they were hit with one of the most violent storms in history.
  •   In 1775, Sarah Siddons was nearly attacked by an angry audience. In 1926, Sybil Thorndike was almost strangled by a fellow actor. And in 1948, Diana Wynyard decided to play the sleepwalking scene with her eyes closed and sleepwalked right off the stage, falling 15 feet. After her fall she continued her performance.
  • On April 9, 1865 Abraham Lincoln was reading a section of the play to his friends. A week later is when his assassination.
  • A more recent performance gone wrong was in 2001, a production by the Cambridge Shakespeare Company, Macduff injured his back, Lady Macbeth bumped her head, Ross broke a toe, and two cedar trees from Birnam Wood topped over, destroying the set.

Do you think the curse is real or is it simply coincidence?






Source: http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2267/whats-the-story-on-the-curse-of-em-macbeth-em