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Sir Salman, the Enchantress and جلال الدین محمد اکبر



Akbar and Tansen visit Haridas

I heard Sir Salman Rushdie speak recently ("Public Events, Private Lives: Literature and Politics in the Modern World") and after reading The Enchantress of Florence- it all fascinates me. The author, the book, the history.

Rushdie began by saying- why assume a writer can speak? Rushdie CAN speak: his topic rarely strayed- but he spoke just as he writes in a multifaceted and complex context.

"One of the extraordinary things about human events is that the unthinkable becomes thinkable." SR

"A book is a version of the world. If you do not like it, ignore it; or offer your own version in return." SR

"It is very, very easy not to be offended by a book. You just have to shut it."SR

"Writers and politicians are natural rivals. Both groups try to make the world in their own images; they fight for the same territory." SR

Sir Salman Rushdie

The Enchantress of Florence, its story - imagined by Rushdie, is interwoven into several stories, each story lapping and undulating into one another. The novel is poetry and storytelling. Though Rushdie barely touched on the novel in a sense the lecture covered one of the novel's topic- Power.

ITS' TRUTH: The story is set in the court of Akbar, third Mughal ruler, from 1556 to 1605. He is
generally considered the true founder of the Mughal empire.

The Characters- They really lived:

Akbar

Akbar holds a religious assembly in the Ibadat Khana (House of Worship) in Fatehpur Sikri; the men dressed in black are the Jesuit missionaries Rodolfo Acquaviva and Francisco Henriques illustration to the Akbarnama, miniature painting by Nar Singh.

Akbar as a boy

Birbal was a courtier in the Mughal court. Akbar's confidant and one of the navaratnas (Sanskrit-nine jewels) who constituted Akbar's inner committee of advisors. His wit and wisdom made him a close friend to Akbar.

Machiavelli

Simonetta Vespucci

Lorenzo Medici

Giovanni Medici


review of "the Enchantress of Florence" Trying to describe a Salman Rushdie novel is like trying to describe music to someone who has never heard it--you can fumble with a plot summary but you won't be able to convey the wonder of his dazzling prose or the imaginative complexity of his vision. At its heart, The Enchantress of Florence is about the power of story--whether it is the imagined life of a Mughal queen, or the devastating secret held by a silver-tongued Florentine. Make no mistake, it is Rushdie who is the true "enchanter" of this story, conjuring readers into his gilded fairy tale from the very first sentence: "In the day's last light the glowing lake below the palace-city looked like a sea of molten gold." At once bawdy, gorgeous, gory, and hilarious, The Enchantress of Florence is a study in contradiction, highlighted in its barbarian philosopher-king who detests his bloodthirsty heritage even while he carries it out. Full of rich sentences running nearly the length of a page, Rushdie's 10th novel blends fact and fable into a challenging but satisfying read. --Daphne Durham (Amazon Review)

TRUTH: THE 16th century Hamzanama Manuscript Illustrations made during the Mughal period (1526-1858) is an epic fantasy commissioned by the progressive and eclectic Akbar. A remarkable set of 1400 paintings-today only 200 survive. The manuscript and illustration tell the story of Hamza, an uncle of the Prophet, who traveled the world spreading the teachings of Islam. The stories are the likes of the magical Arabian Nights, fantastical stories of love, conquest, celebration and deception.

a spy scaling the fort of Qimar using a lasso

The architecture in the Hamzanama was based on the palaces that Akbar built during his reign

Fatehpur Sikri

Fatehpur Sikri, meticulously carved in pink stone-the glorious capital of the Indian Emperor Akbar. Built by Akbar in 1570, as his administrative seat.(Photograph by Charmian Smith)

Akbar's palace-Agra

Akbar's Royal Bathing Chamber


The art of the Hamzanama produced a flowering of Mogul art. It is said William Morris studied the illustrations and found inspiration in them for his textile and wallpaper design. Morris the “Father of Arts
and Crafts.”(1834-1896) was an architect, artist, poet and social critic.

Patterns designed by Morris with decided influences from Mogul art:


CRAY- designed by 1884

Willow Bough, designed 1887


morris tiles

Illustrations from the Hamzanama:










Enchantress? the Enchantress in Rushdie's novel is illusive-but as the story unfolds in the later half of the book it is clear she does exist in the flesh. Padma Lakshmi could be that Enchantress. She is the author's former and fourth wife. There is a passage in the novel where the Enchantress tells one of her lover's that he has had great fame and her star is just rising-she must follow her destiny. Perhaps again the author's own Enchantress- Padma Lakshmi is the model for this central character— she was so in Rushdie's novel,
FURY
, (a novel dedicated to her as well). Lakshmi is a model, actress, chef and host of the Food Network's TOP CHEF.

Padma Lakshmi


BEST of ALL- Rushdie said-and I am paraphrasing: No one owns History or THE Story-Each person has something to add to it- most appropriate for those that daily slog at the blog.

little signs

narcissus, dafs, buttercups- what have you -in a delft tulipiere. I cut them from the borders-or I should say the yet to be borders-but I just couldn't wait. My grandmother Naomi had long wide borders of them and never CUT.
Not my philosophy. Never a huge fan of yellow flowers- I can't deny the spring yellows are glorious, forsythia and daffodils. Perhaps it is their yellow burst of sunshine that casts away the bleak winter ground that makes Yellow so perfect for these blooms.

dafs and delft


I know this doesn't look like much-but these pale pink camellias are cherished-Every One. The tall camellia was my grandmother's-Yes, one and the same as the uncut daf borders. When Naomi died my father moved this camellia and the Hope of its continued bounty. When my parents left their home-I too-moved said camellia and same Hope. Well- as if that wasn't enough trauma to the dear thing- it was moved back to my hometown along with ME 4 years ago. Now you can see why these fine little pink petals and every one thereafter- is Beloved. Family. Hope.

family. hope.


the pretty pink hyacinths are a gift from a dear- dearest friend. a lovely surprise when I last stopped by her house. I love the soft fine blades of grass planted with the hyacinths. Cherished for its flowery cluster, that unbending stalk is a perfect accompaniment to the delicate stars that bear up against the last inevitable surprise snow of winter. This pink one cherished because it was a gift from a friend.

hyacinths and friendship

polygon window - surfing on sine waves


polygon window - surfing on sine waves
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ambient-acid techno landmark recorded by richard james aka aphex twin in the early nineties.
intuitive, dissonant, the minimal-psychedelic visions of a rare talent who possesses real creative foresight and a mozartian inclination for melodies seemingly written on nature's own treble clef. techno is alive, it breathes, it hypnotizes and terrorizes.
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the experiment does not care about you. experimental media is not interested in entertainment. it does not concern itself with repeating back to you the world as you believe you understand it. electronic music attracts those with an experimental temperment, because technology invites tinkering. a world of technology is governed by exploration, by blind discovery. It's a world of complete control, but also a complete lack of control. Increased technology means increased mastery over the manipulation of sensible information, like sounds and images, but it also means the possibility of withdrawing control, of finding new ways to allow the processes of manipulation to act upon and transfigure the world. 

it's often said that techno music is future music. the simple way to appreciate this is to hear techno sounds as being direct indices of future existence, soundtracks to digital life, with cyborgs and jet packs. the more nuanced way to appreciate this is to understand the future not as a pre-planned fate, the stuff of fifties flying-car advertisements, but a world that can never take place. 
The future as such can never happen. But concentrated slivers of it can explode into the grey calm of the present. Techno is not the future, but through its most experimental moments, it can point to the future. Its experimental instances, like 'surfing on sine waves,' point to the future by incarnating a new musical possibility. When a new possibility is incarnated, it repeats forms and elements that are already familiar, yet at the same time it projects an utterly strange and foreign sensibility. 'surfing on sine waves' sounds like early nineties acid techno on Warp records, but at the same time it sounds like nothing else. James is the quintessential mad-scientist of techno, a onetime engineering student whose machine obsession has long since mutated into an exploratory drive for the inner cosmos of electronic sounds, a haunting, unsettling realm, an inverted mirror world, a phantom space of black-box circuitry and artificial intelligence.

Thinking of PINKING



.
the Baroness in question




John Fowler Thinking of Pinking
Pure Silk Taffeta Triangles on
Behalf of Pauline de Rothschild

In an Albany apartment, or set as it is
rather idiosyncratically known, Fowler
found himself working for a client with
very individual ideas about lifestyle.
-Chester Jones, Colefax & Fowler,
The Best in English Interior Decoration


To the Trade

It stiffens always French, your Anglaisness,
She'd laughed. I just must say "Marie Antoinette!"
The decorator's need is to suggest ... ,
She'd winked. Suggestive or suggestible.
What you don't know of curtains can't be known.
And "Curtains!" is American for doom.
Silk is, you are, all I'll have of death, Monsieur.
Can Englishness stiffen American?
Should she have said Frenchly? Frenchily? Stiffens?
It always stiffens Frenchly, Englishness?
Did I not take her meaning properly?
Hers was improper usage, wasn't it?
And not a compliment. No, not a bit.
French is made difficult by Englishness?
A dog worries a bone to good effect.
My way with worry's all repulsiveness.
It's some repellent quality of mine
That comes out in a Francophiliac
Spasm. I don't care what you meant, Madame.
I'm awed that you said syllables to me
In our two languages; no, in our three.
Whatever things we said were Albanese.
Lord Byron lived here; now our poetries:
For throw rugs, pelts, whelps of a warm, nude floor;
The spaciousness let be; the walls made putty;
A window's oyster baste of taffeta ....
I'd kill to be there now, your Albany,
Our work undone, Madame, our work undone.
I'm not at odds with what I have become.
I don't use tradesman's entrances nowadays,
Not Lady Colefax's, not anyone's;
Don't eat alone in Petworth's nursery.
I'm not the thing "That Nancy" sent abroad.
Victoria: I board a night Pullman:
Voila, Paris for breakfast: pain, et man coeur.
Let's muse you triangles for ... valances,
Sheer hundreds, pinked, so no unraveling.
I dream my man cuts out the draperies;
One pattern pair in cotton, two in silk:
He hesitates once with his pinking shears;
The fall is harmed! Fresh goods, and go again!
One cannot be faint-hearted with a blade.
Knowledge of you, such as I have, translates
Abjection lit a la polonaise, creating
Our spare design as violence we succeed:
Your bed is all alone in your rare space.
It's brutally singular, wit-canopied.
Its placement lets me hail hope perfectly,
My spirit hard upon pure reason, freed.

S.X. ROSENSTOCK

I came across this poem years ago and being a de Rothschild devotee- fell in love with it. The poet S.X. Rosenstock writes about the infamous curtains in de Rothschild's London apartments.



The de Rothschild "curtains" yards and yards of "Pinking"





"Pinking" detail from a robe a la francaise (1765-75) the Met's Dangerous Liaisons, photographed by Joseph Coscia, Jr.



"Pinking" detail of 2006 Rodarte cashmere coat designed by sisters Kate and Laura Mulleavy



.

endless grift: real live show



endless grift - thief at your window 
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endless grift performs at death by audio this friday, feb 27th. we are joined by our good friends grandma's boy and many others. show begins at 8pm. endless grift is alex & billy & now also heather (au revoir simone). it is a haunting and bombastic sabbathine stomp with a krautrock heart. you will hear furious organ grind and sinister melodies girded by drums of thunder, an elegant whirlwind of doom and psychedelic churn that conjures omens, hallucinations, ghost world visitations.  

hope to see you there!

PINK is it-


young boys in Pushkar, India purifying themselves with pink- photograph by Paul Beinssen



Juicy Couture advert



a favorite Kitchen I filed back years ago- PINK & GREEN without the "pink and green"

PINK WINS!

and the winner is....

best dressed at the OSCARS

Natalie Portman in Rodarte

Oscar worthy

With Oscar here- take a look at two Iconic gowns from the movies GIGI and SABRINA.


Gigi
- Leslie Caron, gown designed by Cecil Beaton (My Fair Lady)





Sabrina-Audrey Hepburn~ gown by Hubert de Givenchy



Audrey Hepburn~ gown by Hubert de Givenchy


Oscar Nominations for GIGI
What you might not know: Gigi is adapted from 1944 novella by French author Colette. The film has long been compared to My Fair Lady- Audrey Hepburn was offered the role but declined.


Leslie Caron and Louis Jordan in Gigi




What you might not know: All of Audrey Hepburn's costumes for SABRINA were designed by Hubert de Givenchy and selected by Hepburn. Though Edith Head accepted the Oscar she refused to give credit to or share the award with Givenchy. Edith Head refused to be shown alongside Givenchy in the credits, so she was given credit for the costumes, although the Academy's votes were obviously for Hepburn's attire.

OH Edith- Shame on You!

Audrey Hepburn and William Holden in Sabrina


Audrey Hepburn and Mel Ferrer - a beautiful photograph with Hepburn and her husband in a candid moment wearing Givenchy.



It is always fascinating to see fashion that takes its inspiration from movies. I can't say Marchesa was directly inspired by Sabrina or Beaton's Gigi, but the influences are there.

Marchesa gown from the 2009 Spring collection



Georgina Chapman wearing her own design (Town and Country March 2009)
photograph by Joshua Jordan


detail of the Marchesa gown


Photograph by Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images North America




Photograph by Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images North America




Photograph by Marcio Madeira






Keren Craig and Georgina Chapman, the designers at Marchesa ( photograph William Mebane)




Marchesa inspiration collage ( photo by William Mebane for The New York Times)



Georgina Chapman in Marchesa- photographed by Joshua Jordan for T&C



"The Very PINK of PERFECTION." (Oliver Goldsmith)

Cameron Diaz believes in it, especially for the Red Carpet.

Diaz in Chanel at the 2009 Golden Globes


Chanel dress detail (image socialitelife.com)



Diaz in PINK Dior



Dior