Monday, August 25, 2008

Marcus Aurelius


So, I saw this article and wanted to put it in here. Aurelius' Meditations is still one of my favorite works of philosophy. I read somewhere that former president Clinton makes a practice of reading it through once a year. Here's a quote from him to give you a little taste,

"Everything that happens is as normal and expected as the spring rose and the summer fruit; this is true of sickness, death, slander, intrigue and all the other things that delight or trouble foolish men."

I named my dog after him. It's exciting for me to see a new likeness unearthed!


Huge statue of Roman ruler found

By Paul Rincon
Science reporter, BBC News

Marcus Aurelius ruled over the empire for 19 years

Parts of a giant, exquisitely-carved marble sculpture depicting the Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius have been found at an archaeological site in Turkey.

Fragments of the statue were unearthed at the ancient city of Sagalassos.

So far the statue's head, right arm and lower legs have been discovered, high in the mountains of southern Turkey.

Marcus Aurelius was portrayed by Richard Harris in the Oscar-winning 2000 film Gladiator and was one of the so-called "Five Good Emperors".

He reigned from 161AD until his death in 180AD.

In addition to his deeds as emperor, Marcus Aurelius is remembered for his writings, and is considered one of the foremost Stoic philosophers.

The partial statue was unearthed in the largest room at Sagalassos' Roman baths.

The cross-shaped room measures 1,250 sq m (13,500 sq ft), is covered in mosaics and was probably used as a frigidarium - a room with a cold pool which Romans could sink into after a hot bath.

It was partially destroyed in an earthquake between 540AD and 620AD, filling the room with rubble. Archaeologists have been excavating the frigidarium for the past 12 years.

The dig is part of wider excavations at the ruined city, which was once an important regional centre.

Imperial gallery

Last year, the team led by Prof Marc Waelkens, from the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium, uncovered fragments of a colossal marble statue of the emperor Hadrian in the rubble.

This month, the researchers found a huge head and arm belonging to Faustina the Elder - wife of the emperor Antoninus Pius.

Archaeologists now think the room hosted a gallery of sculptures depicting the "Antonine dynasty" - rulers of Spanish origin who presided over the Roman Empire during the second century AD.

Foot of Marcus Aurelius statue (Sagalassos Archaeological Research Project)
The emperor wore army boots decorated with lion skins
Early on 20 August, a huge pair of marble lower legs, broken just above the knee, turned up in the debris.

They also found a 1.5m-long (5ft-long) right arm and hand holding a globe which was probably once crowned by a gilded bronze "Victory" figure.

But it was the giant marble head which identified this statue as the young Marcus Aurelius. The colossal head, which is just under 1m (3ft) in height, is said to bear his characteristic bulging eyes and beard.

Prof Waelkens said the pupils were gazing upwards "as if in deep contemplation, perfectly fitting of an emperor who was more of a philosopher than a soldier".

He added that this was one of the finest depictions of the Roman ruler.

The emperor wore exquisitely carved army boots decorated with a lion skin, tendrils and Amazon shields.

The torso was probably covered in bronze armour filled inside with terracotta or wood. When the niche's vault collapsed in the earthquake, the torso would have exploded.

Bath complex

The statue of Hadrian was found lying halfway down in the frigidarium's rubble.

This initially led archaeologists to think it had been hauled in there from another part of the huge bath complex, perhaps to remove its gilded bronze armour, or to burn the huge marble pieces to make cement in a nearby lime kiln.

However, they now think sculptures of Hadrian, his wife Vibia Sabina, another Roman emperor Antoninus Pius, his wife Faustina the Elder, and Marcus Aurelius all once adorned niches situated around the room.

There were three large niches on both the western and eastern sides. The fragments of Hadrian's statue were found near the south-west niche.

The front parts of two female feet were discovered in the opposite niche, on the room's south-eastern side.

Arm and hand of Marcus Aurelius (Sagalassos Archaeological Research Project)
The remains of a globe can still be seen, cupped in the right hand

The archaeologists now think these belonged to a colossal figure of Vibia Sabina, who was forced into marriage with the homosexual Hadrian at the age of 14.

Remains of the statue depicting Faustina the Elder were found further along, on the eastern side.

In the opposite niche, they found the front parts of a pair of male feet in sandals, which could belong to her husband, Antoninus Pius - who succeeded Hadrian as emperor.

The experts suggest Antonine emperors occupied niches on the western side of the room, while their spouses stood opposite, on the east side.

Five good emperors

After the discovery of Faustina and her male counterpart, the archaeologists guessed the north-western niche would contain a colossal statue of Marcus Aurelius - the longest surviving successor of Antoninus Pius.

The discovery on Wednesday confirmed this prediction, and suggests the north-eastern niche may contain remains of a statue depicting Faustina the Younger, Marcus Aurelius' wife.

Archaeologists will get the opportunity to excavate this part of the room next year.

Lower legs of Marcus Aurelius statue (Sagalassos Archaeological Research Project)
The statue of Marcus Aurelius stood in the north-western niche
Despite his philosophical leanings, Marcus Aurelius had to spend much of his reign fighting Germanic tribes along the Austrian Danube, where in 180AD, he died in nearby Carnuntum.

The part of Marcus Aurelius in Gladiator was one of Richard Harris' last roles (the actor died in 2002). Although much of the storyline is fictional, it is set against an historical backdrop of the imperial succession from Marcus Aurelius to his son Commodus.

While Marcus Aurelius is considered, along with Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian and Antoninus Pius, as one of Rome's Five Good Emperors, Commodus' reign was marked by internal strife, cruelty and conspiracies.

Commodus took part, naked, in gladiatorial battles - which he always won. Opponents, whose lives were apparently spared, would eventually submit to the emperor.

He was murdered in 192AD: not by a general called Maximus, but by an athlete named Narcissus, sent by conspirators to strangle the megalomaniac emperor in his bath.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Monday, May 26, 2008

Upcoming Show Flier


Here's the flier for my show coming up on Friday.


Friday, May 9, 2008

Stabbing

Last night about 9:42 a guy got stabbed on the corner a couple houses down from my house by the busstop. I was going out to get firewood and I heard a bunch of angry yelling so I went out onto the sidewalk and watched. There were a couple of groups of people. One big white guy caught my eye. He was in the middle of the street screaming across the intersection. I guess he felt disrespected and wanted to let everyone know that he wasn't to be fucked with or something. Stupid kids shit....anyway a few seconds later a kid from the other side of the street lurches down on the pavement as a car pulls up. A bus pulls up. The yelling guy and the crowd around him start moving away. I walk toward the collapsed kid and see that he's got blood all down his shirt and pants so I call 911.
The cops show up as I reach the dispatcher. Other people have already called. Two cop cars at first. One officer trying to figure out who saw anything while keeping the stabbed guy lying still. The stabbed guy wont stop sitting up and rolling around...acting drunk. Like he sortof feels it but doesn't know whats going on. I hear him moan something about a ceasure. One young black kid on a bicycle is yelling "Send an ambulance! He's dying man! He's dying!" The stabbed guy says he cant breath and slumps on the ground. The cop tries to get people to stick around but a bunch of them leave in the confusion when the ambulance and more cops show up. The kid on the bike leaves...even though he was right there when it happened.
The paramedics work on him. Hook him up to an ekgish thing. Start CPR. Stop CPR. Unhook him. I hear a paramedic say "Already too far...." to one of the cops. I ask a blonde officer, "Excuse me officer...Is that man dead?" She looks kindof like she doesn't know what to do and an older cop tells me that everything will be explained later and could I please step over this way for right now. So I do...with a few other people. A cop takes my info and interviews me briefly. Then they tell me I need to go wait on the bus. I go wait on the bus. For four hours. The detectives interview me about 2:30 in the morning. I am exhausted. The body is still lying on the pavement uncovered when I step back into my house. I've never seen anybody die before.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Frontline's Bush's War

I just finished watching Frontline's 2 parter Bush's War online. It details the the immediate aftermath of 911 and the beginning of the push toward Iraq from the neocons. The book cooking at the Pentegon under Rumsfield. Powell's UN speech. The invasion. Bremer. Abu Ghraib. The insurgency. Rumies ouster...and the surge.
What a shitty goddamn ride! I recommend that you all watch it. If for nothing else just to put the whole mess of horrible news over the last seven years into context... and to remind us all just how important it is we elect a president who is COMPETENT this time around. It took so many bad calls from the top to bring us to this point. It's heartbreaking and it makes me angry.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/bushswar/

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Show Date Correction

Shit...they gave me the wrong date. The show won't be the first friday in may...
It's happening in June...so the first friday would be June 6th.
So I'll be there with the painting on the 6th then if anyone is in the neighborhood.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Just A Headline From The Net That Made Me Happy

Bush Begins Long Farewell on World Stage

Friday, March 28, 2008

Show Date

I'll be showing this painting at the Side Door during May.
I'll be there in the evening on First Friday May 2nd.
The Side Door is at
425 SE Washington St
Portland, OR 97214
(503) 233-8553

Cute Avian Frolicking


Look. We got two ducklings!


The little one we're calling Mill


And then there's Lou.


It snowed a bit this morning. Not normal March weather.
I'm happy the starts are in the new greenhouse...
In a warming box...

It stays about 10 degrees hotter in the greenhouse
than outside...and another 10-15 degrees hotter in
the box than in the greenhouse.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

And then there's this...pretty self explanatory.

Parents Pick Prayer Over Docs; Girl Dies

Daughter's.Death.Prayer

One down.

Spiral

My time
moves on in a spiral.

The spiral limits my landscape, leaves what is past in the shadows
& makes me advance
full of doubts

Oh perfect straight line! Pure
spear without spearman.
How your light turns my solomonic
path into dream!


So that's your Lorca poem for the day.
I was thinking about how blogs are pretty much about what happened in the day. Pedestrian as the foot shuffler that writes them....
Not the kind of thing you would read in print.
So what?
I don't know....
I just know that I don't understand radio, economics, and lots else.

So...uh...
who's your favorite wonk?
I'm torn between Emily Bazalon and James Carville.
That's all I got right now.
Much manufactured love,
Brandon

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

New Blog?

So I just built this blogspace for you Brandon. I hope you like it and want to post in it. I know you don't really like doing all the nuts and bolts work, and well, I do, so I did! And now all you have to do is post and add pictures and links!

Maggie