Cabinet Magazine, Wundercabinets & Athanasius Kircher

I’ve discovered that my appreciation for anything (music, books, website, etc,) has this cyclical tendency, on-again-off-again. I listen/read/visit, and then I get distracted and put down the pursuits. But often these interests reappear because I’ve found something else that compliment and reinforce something I liked at one time. More times then not I find that I am not alone in my appreciation of what ever has caught my interest.

Cabinet Magazine is one of those things. The magazine issues are collections of arcane facts and stories about people, places and ideas. And being a successful magazine, it must mean I’m not the only one reading about strange and unusual things. Like…

  • King C. Gillette (1855-1932), creator of the disposable razor published a book The Human Drift advocating the creation of a Utopian city near Niagara Falls. Why the Falls? A perfect source of power for his new society.
  • An article on “the Miniature Book Society, an organization whose interests extend only to printed works three inches or smaller.”

  • And much, much more.

Last Monday, I called their NY office and ordered all of their back issues, the most current and got a 1-year subscription. Wednesday all the issues arrived! This is my attempt to surround myself with reading material that will capture my interest and keep me focused. A problem I’ve been having lately. I’m going to continue to attempt to get the remaining issues that were sold-out to complete my collection.

The magazine is influenced by the Wunder cabinet (also Wunderkammer or cabinet of curiosities) . A precursor to museums (which means to excite the Muse) these cabinets or rooms were private collections of natural oddities, things, etc, that individuals would display on their homes.Wundarkammern; cabinets of curiosities, which proliferated in the 16th and 17th centuries. These were usually collections of natural history specimens—skeletons, stuffed animals, fetuses. Sometimes they were ethnographical artifacts, brought from distant lands. Gathered magpie fashion, these cabinets were eclectic, unsystematic and sometimes a bit gruesome.” The Getty Museum in LA has a book, Devices of Wonder, that includes the topic of curiosity cabinets in it.

And lastly, the 17th century Jesuit polymath who much of this oddness orbits around. From the Chronicle of Higher Educations article, Athanasius Kircher, Dude of Wonders

“…The consensus is unambiguous: Athanasius Kircher was, indeed, very cool. A dude of wonders, even. Even a partial catalog of Kircher’s accomplishments tends to make one’s jaw drop. A German-born Jesuit priest, he served as a professor of mathematics at the Jesuit training institute in Rome. Nicknamed ‘the master of a hundred arts,’ Kircher also knew dozens of languages, including Chinese and Coptic. His scientific writings — studied with rapt interest by scholars (Roman Catholic and otherwise) around the world — included works on acoustics, astronomy, chemistry, mineralogy, and optics. He also published some of the earliest scholarship on ancient Egypt…”

Museums, Rollergirls, Cruiseships and Internet Overload

In brief:

Visited the National Museum of Patriotism in Atlanta on Wednesday. Pictures were taken (not posted yet) and some audio recorded in hopes of a podcast on the Georgia Podcast Network. Thanks to Rusty and Amber for the audio recorder, I’ll try get my ass in gear and get a podcast ready before my ship sails.

I will be missing the next two months worth of Atlanta Rollergirls rollerderby because of work on cruiseships. So, please go people, these girls do the derby out of love and it shows. Not happy about missing the derby bouts, but very happy about the paychecks. Soon I will be spending 13 days installing high-tech lighting systems on board a cruiseship. This time it will be at sea and not at drydock like the last one. So the conditions will improve, but I will lose most communication with my sweetie. No cell phone reception, expensive internet, and $7.98 per minute from guest rooms. Notes in bottles, maybe?

I will hate to be unable to not hear her voice on a daily basis, but being away from the internet may be a needed interruption. I’m constantly surfing my usual sites, not out of any real need, but almost compulsive action. I was net-free on the first ship, and found nothing really important/interesting when I resumed surfing again.

And now to finish writing and continue my search for the end of the internet…

Weekend Art Roundup – Eyedrum & Museum of Design Atlanta

Eyedrum

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Museum of Design

I’ll be posting pictures fully-titled and tagged to Flickr when their site is back up from scheduled maintainence. Until then, these pix will have to due. Until then, any pressing questions on artists or artwork, leave a note.

A Few Pictures Taken While out in Atlanta

Yesterday I went to to Youngblood Gallery to see the Ernesto Cuevas Jr. show. Bought a copy of Cabinet Magazine in their boutique store and took a couple of pictures in the neighborhood.

Pictures from the "Assemblation" show @ Eyedrum, Atlanta

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The large image above from the “Assemblation” show at Eyedrum doesn’t play well with my sidelinks. I’ll sacrifice good blog design because the artwork by Amandine Drouet deserves a decent-sized image. Blogger won’t let me load images off my computer, which always looks better.

The show was a great one. Big, colorful, and cluttered. A full takeover of the exhibition spaces, mainly full of sculptures and 3-D pieces. My favorite pieces by Amandine Drouet, in contrast to most of the show, were the most subtle. White, illuminated sculptures resting on a nubby bedspread or suspended overhead. The pictures do more justice to the pieces than words could.

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The “Assemblation” Show @ Eyedrum Art Center, Atlanta – a photoset on Flickr

New Orleans Roadtrip = A Stop At the Lunchbox Museum

A wedding in New Orleans had me driving down to the Big Easy by myself. A short sidetrip to Columbus, GA allowed for a visit to the River Market Antiques Mall and Lunchbox Museum. Many pictures were taken, and are now online. Wonderfully odd, the antiques mall not only houses the Lunch Box Museum, but the Southern Stoneware Museum and Larry Hall’s “Empire City,” a fictional model city.

River Market Antiques Mall, Columbus, GA – Lunchbox Museum & Larry Hall’s “Empire City” – a photoset on Flickr

Roadtrip Weekend: Back From Savannah

A short trip was taken to Georgia’s second largest city.  Not impressed, but unwilling to write it off completely.  It paled in comparison to New Orleans, my home for 7 years.  But two really good meals held out the hope that future visits will be more promising.

Assorted pictures from the trip…  a huge dog, a welcoming church, The Scottish Rite Temple at Madison Square, and a detail shot at the Gryphon Tea Room.

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