Friday, March 31, 2023

La Vie Parisienne Magazine Covers


La Vie Parisienne (the Parisian life) was a French weekly magazine founded in Paris in 1863 and was published without interruption until 1970. It was popular at the start of the 20th century. Originally it covered novels, sports, theater, music and the arts. In 1905 the magazine changed hands and the new editor Charles Saglio changed its format to suit the modern reader. It soon evolved into a mildly risquΓ© erotic publication. During World War I, General Pershing personally warned American servicemen against purchasing the magazine, which boosted its popularity in the United States (from Wikipedia).
 
I picked twelve La Vie Parisienne covers for today's post. In most cases it was not possible to retrieve the names of the designers, so here they are without any further comment. The image above was made at the Photofunia site, which has no copyright issues. 


July 1919


October 1920


October 1922










August 1923



November 1923
 
 
June 1925

 
August 1925
 

May 1926


December 1927


December 1927


June 1929


July 1929


Copyright statement: posting lower quality magazine covers is deemed fair use.

Monday, March 27, 2023

DeepAI: Text to image


There are more sites offering this type of AI (you type some words, and the AI generates an image), but DeepAI (link) is one of the best and easiest to use. The free version comes with over a dozen pre-set style options to play with. As an illustration, I have taken my favourite pop/rock album as text input ("hounds of love") and let the AI generate twelve images with different style buttons. Not all of them are great, but still, many results are, and offer me more options for illustrations in this blog the coming months.The image above by the way is what the AI generated for "Kate Bush" in Fantasy World mode.


Default setting


Fantasy World 
 

Cyberpunk


Old Drawing


Renaissance Painting

Abstract Painting


Impressionist Painting


Surreal Graphics


3D Objects


Fantasy Portrait


Comics Portrait


Cyberpunk Portrait



Copyright statement: AI generated images are in public domain.

Thursday, March 23, 2023

The strange magic of..... Kate Bush


A new topic under the tag "Pop and Rock Music": I'll highlight some of my favourite artists and bands, presenting my three favourite albums, three favourite well-known songs with videos, three less known gems, and three special articles or videos (live recordings, interviews etc). Kicking off with Kate Bush. 

Kate Bush (1958) is a British singer/songwriter, who in 1978 topped the UK Singles Chart for four weeks with her debut single Wuthering heights. Many hits (singles and albums) followed. She is generally seen as one of the greatest influences on a generation of female pop/rock artists who came after her. 

Three favourite albums


Hounds of Love (1985)
  1. Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)
  2. Hounds Of Love
  3. The Big Sky
  4. Mother Stands For Comfort
  5. Cloudbusting
  6. The Ninth Wave:
    • And Dream Of Sheep
    • Under Ice
    • Waking The Witch
    • Watching You Without Me
    • Jig Of Life
    • Hello Earth
    • The Morning Fog
Hounds of Love is the fifth studio album by English singer-songwriter and musician Kate Bush. It is the album where everything came together. What can I say? It has been my favourite pop/rock album for over 35 years now, every single song is brilliant, from the hits (great videos to boot by the way) to the amazing suite The Ninth Wave, which is on the B-side of the LP album. The remastered CD with bonuses is even better because you get the original song The Big Sky (amazing, but still the least impressive track on the album) in a phenomenal remix to enjoy this album even more.  It is considered by many fans and music critics to be Bush's best album, and has been regularly voted one of the greatest albums of all time.


The Sensual World (1989)
  1. The Sensual World
  2. Love And Anger
  3. The Fog
  4. Reaching Out
  5. Heads We're Dancing
  6. Deeper Understanding
  7. Between A Man And A Woman
  8. Never Be Mine
  9. Rocket's Tail (For Rocket)
  10. This Woman's Work
  11. Walk Straight Down The Middle (CD bonus track)
The Sensual World is the sixth studio album by the English singer-songwriter Kate Bush. It took her three years to finish and release this follow-up of Hounds of love, my favourite album of all time. Perhaps not surprisingly, it does not reach the level of that masterpiece, but it is still an outstanding art rock album, with more classical influences than before (Nigel Kennedy playing violin and viola, Michael Nyman and the Balanescu Quartet). My absolute favourite is The Fog, but some other songs worth noting are Love And AngerReaching OutRocket's Tail (For Rocket), and This Woman's Work.


Aerial (2005)

A Sea Of Honey
  1. King Of The Mountain
  2. Ο€
  3. Bertie
  4. Mrs. Bartolozzi
  5. How To Be Invisible
  6. Joanni
  7. A Coral Room
A Sky Of Honey
  1. Prelude
  2. Prologue
  3. An Architect's Dream
  4. The Painter's Link
  5. Sunset
  6. Aerial Tal
  7. Somewhere In Between
  8. Nocturn
  9. Aerial
Aerial is the eighth studio album by the English singer-songwriter and musician Kate Bush. It was a twelve years wait, but it was worth it: for me this is her best album since Hounds of Love. Although the total run time is just under 80 minutes, the lay-out is in two CD's, each with a separate title. The first CD has seven separate songs in typical Kate Bush mode - the very long break from recording did not really affect her style. The best songs for me are King Of The Mountain, the unlikely Ο€, the weird Mrs. Bartolozzi, and especially one of her most gorgeous songs: A Coral Room. The second CD is basically one long suite, a romantic meditation on the passing of a day, and should really be experienced from start to finish: it is 42 minutes of exquisite beauty.


Three favourite well-known songs and videos


The man with the child in his eyes

The deceptively simple ballad The man with the child in his eyes is the real gem of her 1978 debut album The kick inside. Her voice, so immature in the big hit Wuthering heights (in fact, she decided to re-record it for a greatest hits compilation), has just the right character in this peculiar love song, which she wrote at the ripe old age of fourteen - the mind boggles! A fan once aptly described it as "a song so perfect you could stick a nail in it and hang it on the wall." It was a surprising choice for the second single, but did well in its own right, reaching the UK top 10.


Running up that hill (A deal with God)

Running up that hill (A deal with God) was the lead-off single of the 1985 album Hounds of love. It is one of the ultimate eighties' songs, with its heartbeat like rhythm - the All Music Guide hails it as one of the most sensual songs ever made. It was to be her biggest hit since the overwhelming debut single Wuthering Heights, reaching #3 in the UK, and her only outing to the USA top 40.


Cloudbusting

Cloudbusting was the second single drawn from the amazing 1985 album Hounds of love. It will always be linked to the fantastic video clip featuring Donald Sutherland as her father and Kate in a short-haired wig as a little boy. Musically, it is a well-rounded masterpiece, with original instrumentation (cellos rhythmically dominating), a beautiful melody and great lyrics telling the tale of father and son from the child's perspective ("just saying it can even make it happen"). Kate was inspired by Peter Reich's A Book of Dreams which told of his relationship with his father Wilhelm. The video and song actually tell the true tale of Wilhelm eventually being arrested by the government and imprisoned for his ideas. He died behind bars. 


Three less known gems


Mother stands for comfort

With so many fantastic songs on the album Hounds of Love, it is very easy to neglect the beautiful masterpiece which is Mother stands for comfort. It is a slightly mournful ballad telling the tale of a murderer who suspects his mother "knows that I've been doing something wrong", but "she won't mind me lying". In some ways the most conventional track of this unconventional album but a great one nevertheless.


The Fog

The fog is a track from the 1989 album The sensual world. This track continues the mood of  the previous album's The ninth wave, with interspersed text samples from her father and a truly amazing violin solo by classical music's superstar Nigel Kennedy. 


A Coral Room

A coral room is a track from her 2005 double album Aerial. It is a beautiful solo piano accompanied ballad of the type that she should have a patent on, a very personal sharing of her feelings upon the death of her mother. 


Three special articles or videos


Efteling Special

On 12 May 1978, the Dutch broadcaster TROS broadcast a 20 minute Kate Bush television special, recorded at the Dutch amusement park Efteling. On 10 May 1978, Efteling was ready to open the Haunted Castle, the most expensive attraction it had ever constructed, and they wanted to promote it as much as they could. Ton van der Ven, who designed the castle, appeared in a popular talk show and in April a documentary featuring the Haunted Castle was made by filmmaker Rien van Wijk, who was eager to shoot in the latest attraction before it officially opened. Kate, who just had a big hit with Wuthering Heights, was approached for a television special that would promote both Efteling and her songs. The special was filmed in April, a month before the official opening of the castle. Text taken from the video information.


Christmas Special

The complete 1979 Kate Bush Christmas Special (from BBC Four's rebroadcast in 2009), with Peter Gabriel as special guest star. That's 44 minutes of pure bliss. 


The Sensual World Interview

One of the best interviews with Kate Bush - after her 1989 album, "The Sensual World".


Copyright statement: The first image is reported to be in the public domain (link). Posting lower quality album covers is deemed fair use. The same holds for screen shots from videos. Images under the third item were made with the on-line AI programme DeepAI.

Sunday, March 19, 2023

Links [2]

 
Before the blog restart in January 2022, one of the regular topics was “Links” - recently encountered articles or sites that have a link with the blog’s subjects, but would not result in blog posts. I have decided to re-introduce such a subject with a twist.  The links are distributed over twelve subjects, there will be some more text than in the past to describe what the link is about, and I will post them to the blog when each of the twelve subjects has at least one entry. If necessary I will throw in a few of my favourite links encountered in the past as well. The image above was taken by myself (copyright Hennie Schaper).
 
 
Paint, Painters and Paintings

This will mostly be about more obscure artists, more recent artists (where copyright restrictions would hamper a dedicated blog post), or the subject of paints itself. Image used is in the public domain.
 
Edward Hopper’s Views of Isolation
He was interested in a kind of realism, inseparable from the cold structures and isolated people that populate his compositions. An extensive art-icle on Hyperallergic.

 
Photographers and Photography

Given that photography is a relatively recent art, complete blog posts would usually run into copyright issues. This topic will be both on the photographs themselves (like contests or special series), photographers, theory (like composition), and hardware. Image used is in public domain.
 
The Wildlife Photographer Of The Year People’s Choice Award 2022 
This year, just like every year, the London Natural History Museum has selected 25 wildlife photographs, from which they ask the public to choose the recipient of the People's Choice Award 2022. They are amazing!

National Geographic Picture of the Year 
A collection of stunning photographs, including the winner 'Dance of the Eagles'.
 
Vintage Posters

Vintage is of course a flexible word, but anything interesting about artistic posters would be found under this heading. Image used is a compilation of thumbnails and deemed fair use.

Dutch Tobacco Posters
A two part overview in the excellent blog Art and Artists.



Classical Music
 
Basically, any classical music subject that I do not think is suitable for a separate blog post. Image used is in the public domain.
 

Hyperion now part of Universal
Universal Music has acquired the famous classical music label Hyperion, renowned for their projects that are not commercial. Worrying.
 
The Rediscovery of Florence Price
Being an Afro-American woman, Florence Price in the American South in the early 20th century, Price did not have a chance to become recognized as a composer. That is slowly changing. A facinting article in the New York Times.

 
Non-Classical Music
 
The same as above, but now for any music that does not fall under the classical umbrella - from new age via pop and rock to jazz. Image used is in the public domain.

The Dark Side of the Moon at 50
An interesting article about "how Marx, trauma and compassion all influenced Pink Floyd’s masterpiece".
 
 
Album Covers
 
A place for any links that have something to do with album covers. Image used is a compilation of thumbnails and deemed fair use.

LEGO versions of popular album covers
Seventeen creative renditions of album covers in Lego, from Beatles to Blur.
 
Magazine Covers and Illustrations
 
A place for links that have anything to do with magazine covers or illustrations. Image used is in the public domain.
 
The Long Lost Asia Magazine
Some Exquisite Covers and a Short History of the magazine (which also featured in the blog).

 
Movies and TV
 
Any link that has to do with the more artistic sides of movies and television programs, be it posters or something else. Image used is in the public domain.
 
Death in Paradise Wiki
A wiki style site dedicated to one of my favourite TV shows of this century.
 
Ar(t)chitecture
 
This used to be a separate topic of the blog, and occasionally pops up in the Anything Goes topic. Look specifically for the artistic site of architecture under this heading. Image used is in the public domain.
 
A Hundred Times Architects Really Outdid Themselves
... and Created These Beautiful Buildings, to finish the complete title of the linked Bored Panda contribution. An interesting mixture of styles, periods, and sizes.

From Amazing To Downright Scary
Fifty cold war design and architecture decisions  that are far from boring, as collected by the Bureau for Art and Urban Research (BACU).

Special Designs
 
This used to be a separate topic within the blog, but it is difficult to post given copyright constraints. Links can now be posted here. Image used is by myself (copyright Hennie Schaper).

MΓΆbius Bookcase
The MΓΆbius Bookcase concept was designed by talented architect with passion for creative furniture Deniz Aktay. Books are placed on the inside of the loop, making a visually striking display. I want one!
 

Anything Goes

Articles and links on other interesting subjects, advertising, book covers, whatever. Image used is from an old poster, deemed fair use.

The World Has One Less Jeff Koons “Balloon Dog”
An art collector accidentally shattered a $42,000 “Balloon Dog” by Koons at an art fair in Miami.

 
Just for Fun

Anything funny, as long as it has some connection to the theme of the blog. A bit like the Potpourri blog I used to run in parallel. Image is in the public domain.
 
Cat Hats For Every Occasion
This Artist crochets hats for cats - watch her best (and funniest) work in the link.


Copyright statement: see under each image used.