Friday, June 8, 2012

1395 Days Without Red

Read about this film in The Irish Times and it sounds really interesting. It's on in NCH in the Real Tennis Court building in Earlsfort Terrace. It makes a fine cinema space, admission is free, until July 15.
A still from 1395 Days Without Red, which is set during the siege of Sarajevofrom http://www.imma.ie/

Film project inspired by Siege of Sarajevo part of IMMA’s inaugural programme at NCH

A striking film work inspired by the siege of Sarajevo will go on show as part of the Irish Museum of Modern Art’s inaugural programme in its temporary exhibition spaces at the National Concert Hall in Earlsfort Terrace on Thursday 31 May 2012. 1395 Days Without Red, by Albanian artist Anri Sala and American composer Ari Benjamin Meyers, will occupy the Annex at the NCH. The film takes as its subject the siege of Sarajevo, one of the most emblematic events of the violent breakup of the former Yugoslavia. The siege began 20 years ago this year, in 1992, and lasted for 1,395 days making it the longest siege in modern warfare.
During the siege thousands of citizens had to cross streets threatened by snipers everyday: to go to work, to buy food, to visit a relative. The citizens wore dark colours, for fear of alerting the snipers watching from the hills to their movements. In Sala’s film an elegant young woman makes her way through an empty city. At every crossing she stops, looks and listens. Should she wait or should she run? Should she wait for others or take the risk on her own? The city is Sarajevo, and the route the woman takes became known as Sniper Alley. Played by Spanish actress Maribel Verdú, she relives the trauma experienced by the citizens over almost four years. The 43-minute film is her individual journey through the collective memory of the city.
Throughout the siege, the Sarajevo Symphony Orchestra continued to play. In Sala's film, the orchestra rehearses Tchaikovsky's Sixth Symphony, the Pathétique. The musicians stop and start, repeating different sections of the symphony, just as the woman stops and starts in her journey across the city. Hearing the music in her head, she finds the courage to carry on.
An exhibition guide accompanies the exhibition.
1395 Days Without Red, 2011, continues until 15 July 2012. Admission is free.
The exhibition is supported by the Conrad Hotel Dublin and Feast Catering.
Opening hours at the NCH:
Tuesday: 10.00am – 5.30pm
Wednesday: 10.30am - 5.30pm
Thursday: 10.00am – 7.00pm
Friday and Saturday: 10.00am – 5.30pm
Sunday and Bank Holidays: 12noon – 5.30pm
Monday: Closed

Shane Langan

Good interview with Shane Langan.writer/performer with Dublin comedy team Diet of Worms in Q&A form by Una Mullally in today's Irish Times- includes some good music and comedy recommendations.(edited)

What are you reading?
I’m the slowest reader in the history of slow readers, so I’m embarrassed to say what I’m currently reading, just in case someone I know sees this and remembers me talking about reading this book ages and ages ago. But yes, I am still reading The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon. Kavalier & Clay is a truly incredible book though and so, if it does indeed end up being the book that I slowly read between now and the day that I die, it wouldn’t be that bad. I have made moves to counteract this problem in recent years though – to evolve. I’ve taken to listening to audiobooks, which allows me to consume books at a more reasonable rate (as I walk across town or do the hoovering). I’m currently listening to the audiobook of When You Are Engulfed In Flames by David Sedaris. It’s absolutely hilarious.
Last film you saw and your verdict?I haven’t been to the cinema in ages, but the last film I saw on DVD was Beginners with Ewan McGregor and Christopher Plummer. Nothing makes me sadder than old age, I think. It’s my emotional Kryptonite. So this one upset me a little bit. I really enjoyed it though.
What track should we listen to right now?I recently bought Jape’s album ‘Ocean of Frequency’, which is wonderful, and the track ‘Scorpio’ has stayed in and around my head ever since.
Which boxset/TV series do you have on the go at the moment?I’m currently, very belatedly making my way through The Office, the US one. I have Community all ready to go when I’m done with that and I’m also keeping up to date with Veep and Mad Men as I go.
Last gig/concert you went to and your verdict?I went to Stewart Lee at Vicar Street last month. It’s sometimes difficult to talk about Stewart Lee without sounding like a bit of a knob or a comedy snob. It’s not hyperbole to say that nobody really does stand-up like him. It takes a certain level of concentration and trust to enjoy it fully. That’s just the nature of his act. He is a singular, properly original performer and the greatest comedian I’ve ever seen. As with the other times I’ve seen him, I loved every minute of it.
And finally, if you check out one comedian this month, make it…Don’t just check out one. Check out loads. Edinburgh is on the horizon so there will be lots of fantastic comedians starting to preview their shows soon. It’s really exciting to see comedians put shows together and you can often see these works in progress for nothing or next to it. Keep an eye out for the likes of Conor O’Toole and A Betrayal of Penguins as they get ready for the Fringe. Also, the excellent 10 Days in Dublin festival will be on in July and there will be lots of great comedy on show there.

Natasha Trethewey Named U.S. Poet Laureate

From PBS;
Natasha TretheweyPulitzer Prize-winner Natasha Trethewey will be the 19th Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry, the Library of Congress announced on Thursday.
Born in Gulfport, Miss., in 1966, Trethewey's work has chronicled the complicated history of her own family and that of the South. As the daughter of a black mother and white father, an interracial union that was still illegal in Mississippi at the time, "it was very hard to drive around town with my parents, to be out in public with my parents," she told the NewsHour in 2006. Her hometown was later ravaged by Hurricane Katrina. The shotgun houses in the neighborhood where she was born and raised were destroyed.
With the NewsHour, she returned home for the first time following the storm to discuss her third collection of poems, "Native Guard," which went on to win the 2007 Pulitzer Prize.

Dublin Dental Hospital shortlisted for RIAI Irish Architecture Awards

Dublin Dental Hospital was one of the 34 projects shortlisted for this year’s Irish Architecture awards which were announced on 6th June 2012 by the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland (RIAI).
The public choice award gives the public the opportunity to vote for their favourite shortlisted projects.

Summer reads -Time Out Florida

Excellent recommendations from COLETTE BANCROFT of the TAMPA BAY TIMES yesterday.
"Sacré Bleu: A Comedy d'Art" by Christopher Moore Set in the Paris demimonde in 1890, this novel follows painters Lucien Lessard (fictional) and Henri Toulouse-Lautrec as they investigate the murder of their friend and colleague Vincent van Gogh. Wait, didn't van Gogh commit suicide? That isn't the only assumption Moore upends in this book, which boasts a cast of many other artists, a wonderfully evocative portrait of Paris and just enough touches of the sexily supernatural to intrigue.
"The Red House" by Mark Haddon A doctor with a newly acquired wife and problem stepdaughter invites his estranged sister and her family to a weeklong country getaway. Sounds like a recipe for the worst vacation ever, but Haddon ,a master of voice, layers the narrative from eight different points of view, piecing together the puzzle of family in surprising ways.
"The Limpopo Academy of Private Detection" by Alexander McCall Smith. Precious Ramotswe, proprietor of the No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency must interpret her dreams about a tall stranger while coping with several cases at once. Smith, has a delightfully light, affectionate touch with his characters and with the culture and landscape of Botswana.
"The Orphanmaster" by Jean Zimmerman. In the rough Dutch colony of New Amsterdam, at the tip of modern-day Manhattan, orphaned children are disappearing. The settlers blame a mythical being that eats human flesh, although there are more than enough real suspects. Law enforcement barely exists, so the investigation falls to amateurs: a successful young trader (herself an orphan), a dashing British spy, an African giant and a mute 7-year-old.
"Let's Pretend This Never Happened (A Mostly True Memoir)" by Jenny Lawson. Based on a blog, Lawson recounts her childhood, featuring recreational jumping from roofs and a taxidermist father who says things like, "We'll have to take your car. Mine has too much blood in it." She also covers her adult anxiety disorder, her hilariously profane arguments (sometimes via Post-its) with her husband and, in every bloody detail, the epic birth of her daughter. You may feel guilty laughing about some of this stuff, but Lawson's skewed, sardonic voice will have you snorting coffee out your nose anyway.
"They Eat Puppies, Don't They?" by Christopher Buckley. Political satirist's acerbic novel about Walter "Bird" McIntyre, a weapons system lobbyist coping with an expensive trophy wife in the economic downturn. How to ramp up his income stream? He teams with Angel Templeton, a ruthless Coulter-esque blonde at the Institute for Continuing Conflict, to "gin up a little anti-China mojo." Spread a baseless rumor that the Chinese government is trying to poison the cuddly Dalai Lama, and weapons appropriations will skyrocket. What could go wrong?
"Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail" by Cheryl Strayed. At 26, after her mother's death and the disintegration of her marriage, Strayed decided to hike the 1,100 miles from the Mojave Desert to Washington state — alone. In this unflinching memoir, she relates how, with a massive backpack and no long-distance hiking experience, she set out through perilous weather, rattlesnake and bear encounters, beauty and loneliness. Physically and mentally, the walk tore her down and built her back up.
"The Wind Through the Keyhole: A Dark Tower Novel" by Stephen King. Between 1974 and 2004, King  published seven novels in the Dark Tower series, set in the decaying, magical Mid-World and mashing up fantasy, science fiction, horror and Westerns. He returns in this book to his stoic hero, gunslinger Roland Deschain, for a story-within-a-story about the power of story. It's set between books four and five of the series — although this book stands on its own for new readers.
"The Uninvited Guests" by Sadie Jones. On an evening in 1912, Emerald Torrington's aristocratic family is preparing for her birthday celebration dinner when a group of survivors from a nearby railway accident shows up at the manor house. This sly story is a little bit like Downton Abbey and a little more like Lemony Snicket's "A Series of Unfortunate Events," but very much for grown-ups.
"Amped" by Daniel H. Wilson "Robopocalypse," the 2011 first novel by Wilson (who has a doctoral degree in robotics), scored bestseller status and an upcoming Spielberg film. This one posits a world in which implanted technology gives some humans extraordinary abilities. Cool — until the U.S. Supreme Court declares the "amps" less than human, sending one named Owen on the run and into the heart of a movement that may be revolutionary — or apocalyptic.
"Wild Thing" by Josh Bazell This darkly comic thriller is a sequel to Bazell's "Beat the Reaper," with mob hit-man-turned-doctor Pietro Brnwa back in action. He's hired by a reclusive billionaire (referred to as Rec Bill) to determine the veracity of a rural legend: a lake monster that's dining on swimmers in Minnesota's remote, idyllic Boundary Waters. It's not the only maneater: On the hunt, Brnwa also has to wrangle his colleague, the sexy but self-destructive paleontologist Violet Hurst, as well as sort out the scam artists from the meth dealers in the little town of Ford.

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Summer at Abbey Theatre


Tom Murphy's gripping tale of emigration and ambition, The House is taking to the Abbey stage for a six week run.
Set in 1950s Ireland, Christy Cavanagh is among the emigrants coming home for their annual summer trip. He is looking forward to the usual simple pleasures; a pint in the local, meeting with friends and catching up on the news. But this will be a visit like no other.

The summer production of The Plough and The Stars opens in July.Set in a tenement house, against the backdrop of the Easter Rising in 1916 by Sean O Casey.

Lorraine Pasquale

I love Lorraine Pasquale, she's so down to earth and her new book Home Cooking Made Easy is exactly what the title says. As a result some of the recipes are a bit basic but most have a little twist. My two favourites for quick dinner party nibbles are linked below;