Author: Michael Janairo

  • 2016 Year in Review with Photos

    2016 Year in Review with Photos

    Wall of Masks hanging at a store called Nim Po't in Antingua, Guatemala
    Masks at Nim Po’t, Antigua, Guatemala
    Fuego Volcano erupts near Antigua, Guatemala, with clouds turning black with ash and red with fire
    Fuego Volcano erupting, Antigua, Guatemala
    Deborah Zlotsky and Crit Streed at La Tortilla Cooking School in Antigua, Guatemala
    Learning to cook, Antigua, Guatemala
    Michael and Deborah in front of Robert Indiana's "Love" sculpture at Sixth Avenue and 55th Street in Manhattan
    Valentine’s Day, New York City
    Signs on a hike for Snow and Wolf Jaws trails, and Deer Brook Trail, and the High Water Route
    Hike near Lake Placid
    Michael and Deborah in Lake Placid
    Lake Placid
    Deborah and Max swap their faces in an image using the Snapchat app
    Deb and Max play with Snapchat
    In a subway car in Seoul, nearly everyone is one a mobile device, except for one man who is reading a Bible
    Subway, Seoul, South Korea
    Deborah Zlotsky speaks to a group of Samsung Art and Design Institute students in the shade of a tree, Seonyudo Park, Seoul, South Korea
    Samsung Art and Design Institute students, Seonyudo Park, Seoul, South Korea
    A tour guide in traditional clothes and straw hat leads visitors toward the Main gate of Changdeokgung Palace
    Changdeokgung Palace, Seoul, South Korea
    Lily pads in a pond amid traditional buildings in the Secret Garden, Seoul, South Korea, of the Changdeokgung Palace
    Secret Garden, Seoul, South Korea
    A wall of screens at the Samsung D-light Store, Seoul, South Korea, shows names and faces of visitors, including Deborah and Michael
    Samsung d’Light, Seoul, South Korea
    Two young women in traditional costume visit the traditional Hanok Village in Jeonju, South Korea, and take selfies with a selfie stick
    Young visitors to the traditional Hanok Village in Jeonju, South Korea
    Vesta, Deb and Michael on the rocky coast of Maine
    Maine
    Deborah Zlotsky wears white coveralls before picking poison ivy
    Poison Ivy eradication prep
    Low water and worn rock at Buttermilk Falls, Ithaca, New York
    Buttermilk Falls hike, Ithaca, NY
    Max Seiler, Michael Janairo, Deborah Zlotsky post outside voting site in Delmar, New York
    Election Day 2016
    Glasses raised in a toast with Janairo family at Mitchell's Fish Market at the Galleria in Mount Lebanon, Pennsylvania
    Thanksgiving Dinner
  • 2016 Year in Review

    2016 Year in Review

    Fifty-six blog posts published so far this year

    Number one, most-read blog post: Review of Justin Cronin’s “City of Mirrors”

    Number one, most-watched videos: Sun Yuan and Peng Yu’s “Can’t Help Myself” from the Guggenheim Museum

    Two poems published: “That Day in Assisi” and “For Your Own Safety”

    One short story published: “Auntie Lovely Says Goodbye”

    Two countries visited: Guatemala, South Korea

    Twenty-four books read

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    Twenty-one seconds: Best completion time of the NYTimes mini puzzle

    2016-06-11-23-02-12

    Patronus: Fox

    2016-09-23-00-45-35

     

    Participation Award: La Tortilla Cooking School, Antigua, Guatemala

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  • A crime

    lost-bumpermagnet

    In this photo of the back of our car, you can see the outlines of where a car magnet had once been. That magnet was political. It said, “Hillary ’16.” The reason you don’t see it there is because someone in the parking lot of our hotel in Pittsburgh thought it’d be a good idea to remove the magnet.

    At first we thought it was stolen. We felt victimized — doubly so, considering who won. Being back in western Pennsylvania, though, it seemed likely that some Tr*mp supporter feeling embolden but also a coward thought he or she would just rip off someone else’s property. We later did find the magnet face-down in the rain-soaked parking lot, as if it had been flung away from our car.

    In the grand scheme of things, I know it isn’t that big of a deal. But still, come on.

  • I’m thankful for Obama’s Medal of Freedom selections

    I’m thankful for this last group of Presidential Medal of Freedom winners, spanning so many endeavors and achievements of excellence. I’m also thankful for President Obama for making these selections, and making possible a bright ray of hope for these times.

     

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  • Video: Sun Yuan and Peng Yu’s “Can’t Help Myself”

    Video: Sun Yuan and Peng Yu’s “Can’t Help Myself”

    In Sun Yuan and Peng Yu’s “Can’t Help Myself,” an industrial robot works away inside a glass box at the Guggenheim Museum.

    What’s it made of? Kuka industrial robot, stainless steel and rubber, cellulose ether in colored water, lighting grid with Cognex visual-recognition sensors, and polycarbonate wall with aluminum frame.

    Is it making art? Is it commenting on how art is made? As a robot uses a giant brush to push liquid around, are we watching a creative act or a programmed act? What determines these actions? Where does this leave viewers? In awe of a machine in motion?

    Check out one of the Guggenheim’s newest additions to its collection:

     

  • Paul Klee + Gertrude Stein + Nederlands Dans Theater

    Paul Klee + Gertrude Stein + Nederlands Dans Theater

    On the fifth floor of the Met Breuer, in an exhibition called “Humor and Fantasy — The Berggruen Paul Klee Collection,” is this untitled Paul Klee watercolor painting from 1914:

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    A dance program called Shutters Shut was performed among the Paul Klee work by two dancers from the Nederlands Dans Theater who danced in time to Gertrude Stein’s voice reciting her poem “If I Told Him: A Completed Portrait of Picasso.”

    The dance looked like this: