The arts calendar has once more swung around with the 17th Biennale of Sydney running from 12 May to the 1st of August 2010. Like many contemporary art festivals increasingly it's the main platform for new media using film, photographic images, computer graphics and modern sculpture to constitute the bulk of mainly large installation works. For the 17th Biennale, 'spectacle' is often a better description than 'art' for the what the general public discover at the various sites. Spread across Cockatoo Island, MCA, the Art Gallery of NSW, Pier 2/3 and Artspace the Biennale offers a variety of spaces as well as works to view. Some visually impacting works by Russian consortium AES+F, Cai Guo-Qiang, Dale Frank, Shen Shaomin contrast with some truly odd films by Amal Kenawy and Katarzyna Kozyra to name a few.
What can one say about it all ? Its free so that's a blessing in itself.
Thursday, 20 May 2010
Monday, 5 April 2010
The Easter Bunny hops again in 2010
Easter once again has come around for those with pious religious conviction who celebarate the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The New Testament teaches that the resurrection of Jesus, is a foundation of the Christian faith. For most others, Easter represents chocolate Easter eggs and a multitude of chocolate bunnies.
And where did Eggs come from? Apparently as a symbol of the rebirth of the earth in celebrations of spring, the eggs were adopted by early Christians as a symbol of the resurrection of Jesus. According to academic literature, the oldest tradition is to use dyed or painted chicken eggs (which is still the case with many Orthodox Christian Churches), but a modern custom is to substitute chocolate eggs, or plastic eggs filled with confectionery such as jelly beans. For children, these eggs are often hidden, allegedly by the Easter Bunny, to be found on Easter morning (which is Easter Sunday).
The Easter Bunny is actually not originally an Easter symbol but has origins in Alsace and the Upper Rhineland, both then in the Holy Roman Empire, and southwestern Germany, where the practice was first recorded in a German publication in the early 1600s. The first edible Easter Eggs were made in Germany during the early 1800s and were made of pastry and sugar. So there is nothing particularly religious about the Easter bunny which in most respects has taken on a wholly commercial identity in the modern world.
And where did Eggs come from? Apparently as a symbol of the rebirth of the earth in celebrations of spring, the eggs were adopted by early Christians as a symbol of the resurrection of Jesus. According to academic literature, the oldest tradition is to use dyed or painted chicken eggs (which is still the case with many Orthodox Christian Churches), but a modern custom is to substitute chocolate eggs, or plastic eggs filled with confectionery such as jelly beans. For children, these eggs are often hidden, allegedly by the Easter Bunny, to be found on Easter morning (which is Easter Sunday).
The Easter Bunny is actually not originally an Easter symbol but has origins in Alsace and the Upper Rhineland, both then in the Holy Roman Empire, and southwestern Germany, where the practice was first recorded in a German publication in the early 1600s. The first edible Easter Eggs were made in Germany during the early 1800s and were made of pastry and sugar. So there is nothing particularly religious about the Easter bunny which in most respects has taken on a wholly commercial identity in the modern world.
Sunday, 14 March 2010
Carbon Emissions - one problem among many
The debate on climate change often focuses on the level of Carbon Emissions (CO2) and global warming but the overall complexity of the earth's environment means there are several other possible serious factors to consider. Some of these are listed below -
Acid Oceans: the amount of carbonic acid in the oceans and the loss of aragonite,
Ozone Depletion: this was the environmental issue of the 1970s and remains a current concern as trapping warmer air closer to the surface of the planet means a colder stratosphere and hence ozone comes under threat again from those chemicals still is use which deplete it.
Fresh Water: Water is becoming so scarce in many parts of the planet, despite unseasonal periodic flooding that underground aquifers are being pumped out and cannot be replenished,
Biodiversity: continued mass extinction of species has considerable impact on ecosystems and on human habitation - the current rate of change has far exceeded levels of adapatability,
Nitrogen and Phospherus cycles: agriculture and fertilisers, burning fossil fuels/timber/crops and human sewage have contributed nitrogen in such quantities that dead zones and algae blooms are now more frequent in the oceans,
Aerosol Loading: dust, sulphates and other particles created by human activity continue to affect air quality and hence have a negative impact on agricultural crops and human health,
Chemical pollution: There are almost 100,000 different human made chemicals now in use on the planet among these are toxic heavy metals (such as lead) and persistent organic pollutants (such as DDT, PCBs and dioxins). These have strong detrimental effects on humans.
Many of these factors are causally linked to each other and only a comprehensive strategy on climate change togther with a wider linkage to other aspects of pollution has any hope of succeeding.
Thursday, 4 March 2010
Up in the Air - George Clooney hits home again
George Clooney's latest film directed/written by Jason Reitman (and based on the novel by Walter Kirn) is another clever subtle and ultimately ironically funny observation on the usually sad spectre of corporate restructures. Clooney's character is corporate downsizing expert Ryan Bingham, whose specialty is to help ease the transition of long-term employees to unemployment. Clooney's character takes his job very seriously and loves the 290 days spent travelling away from home. His only problem is the 70 days at home in his rented empty apartment. His professional world is up-ended when a young Ivy League graduate comes to the company and threatens to ground the downsizing consultants by the innovative and cost cutting idea of firing people via the internet.
Ryan Bingham is not standing for a change in life, nor the chance of missing the goal of reaching total airline miles to gain lifetime status recognition ("Let's just say I have a number and I haven't hit it yet"). His mission becomes one of proving how personal his job really is and how important a face to face meeting can be to talk down an emotionally unstable person facing unemployment.
Thursday, 25 February 2010
Earth Hour 2010
Sunday, 24 January 2010
Turning Wall Street ?
US President Barack Obama has unveiled a sweeping series of measures aimed at checking the behaviour of banks and creating pressures against high risk financial transactions and deals. The proposals which are touted as the biggest regulatory crackdown on banks since the 1930s, include limitations on the size of institutions and barring the most cavalier trading practices.
According to media reports, Obama stated “We should no longer allow banks to stray too far from their central mission of serving their customers,” “My resolve to reform the system is only strengthened when I see record profits at some of the very firms claiming that they cannot lend more to small business, cannot keep credit card rates low and cannot refund taxpayers for the bailout. If these folks want a fight, it’s a fight I’m ready to have. Never again will the American taxpayer be held hostage by a bank that is too big to fail.”
Obama stated that Wall Street banks must: halt “proprietary trading”, where banks risk huge sums predicting the outcome of future moves in the price of commodities such as oil; operate more cautiously and have more available funds; not become too large by limiting the amount of ordinary banking business they can undertake.
Wall Street has certainly demonstrated the degree of risk for the global community when an unfettered market is allowed to trade with unfettered greed, however Obama faces considerable barriers to effecting change needed in the World's largest capital markets. Risky deals and large executive remuneration has been the practice for many years and turning around such a culture, which also influences the rest of the international finance community, is a mammoth almost impossible task.
According to media reports, Obama stated “We should no longer allow banks to stray too far from their central mission of serving their customers,” “My resolve to reform the system is only strengthened when I see record profits at some of the very firms claiming that they cannot lend more to small business, cannot keep credit card rates low and cannot refund taxpayers for the bailout. If these folks want a fight, it’s a fight I’m ready to have. Never again will the American taxpayer be held hostage by a bank that is too big to fail.”
Obama stated that Wall Street banks must: halt “proprietary trading”, where banks risk huge sums predicting the outcome of future moves in the price of commodities such as oil; operate more cautiously and have more available funds; not become too large by limiting the amount of ordinary banking business they can undertake.
Wall Street has certainly demonstrated the degree of risk for the global community when an unfettered market is allowed to trade with unfettered greed, however Obama faces considerable barriers to effecting change needed in the World's largest capital markets. Risky deals and large executive remuneration has been the practice for many years and turning around such a culture, which also influences the rest of the international finance community, is a mammoth almost impossible task.
Saturday, 2 January 2010
A War without End - the Taliban and Afghanistan
The war in Afghanistan shows little sign of resolution and the strike by the Taliban through a bombing against a CIA operation highlights the capacity of the group to strike back at will. The loss of seven CIA agents who were killed in the attack in Khost province has brought into the focus the clandestine and difficult war being fought by America’s intelligence agencies against the Taliban and al-Qaeda in the wild border regions of Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Operating bases such as Forward Operating Base Chapman, are the main edge of American military and intelligence counter-terrorism operations in the tribal belt and have the objective of hunting down senior figures in al-Qaeda and their allies, the Taliban, and eliminating them. While the CIA’s main strike weapons are the remote drones which fly high over the border areas 24 hours a day, watching and listening to telephone networks, human intelligence is far harder to acquire yet absolutely essential for effective strikes. But gaining such vital and prized information among remote communities is diffcult and dangerous given these commmunities are suspicious of any outsider and particualrly foreigners. The potential for inflitration and counter-strikes is very high which was demonstrated all too effectively this week.
Operating bases such as Forward Operating Base Chapman, are the main edge of American military and intelligence counter-terrorism operations in the tribal belt and have the objective of hunting down senior figures in al-Qaeda and their allies, the Taliban, and eliminating them. While the CIA’s main strike weapons are the remote drones which fly high over the border areas 24 hours a day, watching and listening to telephone networks, human intelligence is far harder to acquire yet absolutely essential for effective strikes. But gaining such vital and prized information among remote communities is diffcult and dangerous given these commmunities are suspicious of any outsider and particualrly foreigners. The potential for inflitration and counter-strikes is very high which was demonstrated all too effectively this week.
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