Researchers found by telling people the risk of HIV is lower than they thought, they get people to act in safer ways. But when people think the risk is very high, they sometimes act less responsibly.
Research on patients with testicular cancer and on others fighting a brain malignancy finds that people who are privately insured are more likely to be diagnosed earlier and survive longer.
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The importance of electric power is demonstrated by this view from space of lights across the continental United States at night. A severe geomagnetic storm could disrupt the nation's power grid for months, potentially leading to widespread blackouts. Resulting damage and disruption from such an event could cost more than $1 trillion, with a full recovery time taking months to years. Scientists recently published research -- including maps covering large areas of the United States -- showing how the effects from intense geomagnetic storms are impacted by the Earth's electrical conductivity. This is one of the first steps towards mapping nation-wide "induction hazards."
Image credit: NASA
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Man in Hyde Park on a sunny morning.
View the entire London Street Photography Set
View the entire London Set
View the Entire - "On the Street" Set
View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr
Spectacular views of the universe have been unveiled at the Insight Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2016 awards ceremony, held at the Royal Greenwich Observatory
Continue reading...Calder, famous for his mobiles, also created bespoke pieces of jewellery for friends from variety of materials including cutlery
They are avant-garde and often tricky to wear but the 1,800 earrings, bracelets, necklaces and brooches hand made by Alexander Calder are seen as “the pinnacle of art meets jewellery,” according to gallerist Louisa Guinness.
Continue reading...More than 60 van Gough artworks, many never shown in Australia before, are the centrepiece of an NGV autumn/winter program that also features Katsushika Hokusai and Festival of Photography
More than 60 artworks by Vincent van Gogh will be coming to the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) in 2017, many of which have never been shown in Australia.
The world premiere exhibition, Van Gogh and the Seasons, will be next year's instalment of the NGV's Winter Masterpieces series, comprised of 40 paintings and 25 drawings.
Continue reading...
Trees n Fog // Patrick Monatsberger
the blood red color of the yarn is laden with symbolism, alluding to the interior of the body.
The post chiharu shiota tethers a labyrinth of red yarn to boat carcasses at blain|southern appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
The great photographer's awesome images taken from drones, propellor planes and a 50ft selfie stick show how industry has drilled and drained our planet
Rectangles of pale blues and greens lie scattered across a sea of grey sand, looking a bit like someone dropped their Farrow & Ball colour swatches in a cat litter tray. The mottled grey background is marked with faded layers of scratches and scribbles, like an endlessly reworked charcoal drawing, from which the little blocks of colour shine out as bright jewels in the dust.
This is what the salt pans of Gujarat in northern India look like, when seen through the painterly bird's-eye lens of Edward Burtynsky. The 61-year-old Canadian photographer has devoted his career to capturing man's impact on the landscape from above, elevating the brutish debris of slag heaps and open-cast mines into sublime wall-sized hymns to how we've made our mark on the surface of the Earth. And he's on a mission to document it all before it's too late.
Related: Edward Burtynsky's corrupted landscapes in pictures
Continue reading...Research has shown city dwellers are more likely to suffer from anxiety and depression but could individual buildings have a negative impact on wellbeing?
Screaming sirens, overcrowding, traffic; life in the city isn't always relaxing.
These stressors aren't simply inconvenient or irritating, though; research has suggested that urban living has a significant impact on mental health. One meta-analysis found that those living in cities were 21% more likely to experience an anxiety disorder mood disorders were even higher, at 39%. People who grew up in a city are twice as likely to develop schizophrenia as those who grew up in the countryside, with a 2005 study suggesting this link may even be causal.
Related: Where is the world's most stressful city?
Continue reading...A century in the making, and now completed by Britain's David Adjaye, the Smithsonian's gleeful, gleaming upturned pagoda more than holds its own against the sombre Goliaths of America's monument heartland
A small circular piggybank stands on display in Washington DC, featuring a drawing of a grand neoclassical edifice, much like the ones that march up and down the city's National Mall, where America's cultural and historical booty is housed. Except this building was to be different. “The National Negro Memorial,” reads the title above the drawing a plan for a monument where “the achievements of the Negro may be placed before the world”.
Related: Triumph of truth: new museum upends 'great denial' of African American history
Related: David Adjaye interview: 'I'm not always looking at the usual references'
Continue reading...Thomas Heatherwick, whose planned Garden bridge in London is under investigation, has designed audacious ‘Vessel' sculpture for public plaza
A controversial British designer is behind an audacious $150m public art structure nicknamed the Stairway to Nowhere planned for a new multi-billion dollar commercial development on New York City's west side.
Thomas Heatherwick's design of a giant, free-standing collection of multi-level staircases that will give the public fresh views of the city was unveiled in New York on Wednesday and is currently under construction in Italy.
Continue reading...Seven sites on rail project will be visited by 900 people as part of London architecture event which sees more than 750 buildings open for free
The giant tunnels of the Crossrail project in London are already feats of global engineering history and, this weekend, the public will have the rare chance to see the subterranean spectacle before the service becomes operational in 2018.
Seven different sites, including Canary Wharf, Bond Street and Tottenham Court Road will be open to 900 members of the public as part of the annual Open House architecture event.
Continue reading...When the architectural historian Peter Blundell Jones, who has died aged 67 of cancer, was a student, one building that was much in favour was the prize-winning, technology-led Centre Pompidou in Paris (1971). All the services were visible on the outside, and celebrated in form and colour.
This was a prototype of a kind of universal building and a systemic approach to architecture that Peter rejected, because it did not take account of social, historical or physical context.
Continue reading...Are there a few fag butts on the streets of the Marais? Perhaps, but anyone who thinks London is more culturally vital than the City of Light is deluded
It's midnight in Paris at least according to the British newspapers. A plan to police the French capital with an “incivility brigade” has opened a sewer of schadenfreude as the British media portray the city as a “post-apocalyptic hellhole”. The brigade is a public relations disaster. Its very existence draws attention to cigarette butts and public urination instead of publicising the city's strengths, while the patrols are reported to be largely absent.
Related: Paris's 'incivility brigade' nowhere to be seen
Related: 'A tortured heap of towers': the London skyline of tomorrow
Continue reading...French grande for UNIVERSO DI NOTTE (Alessandro Jacovoni, Italy, 1962)
Artist: Constantin Belinsky
Poster source: Heritage Auctions
“Beginning in Las Vegas with a dance of the Bluebells, we are shown a variety, with jugglers, singers, Thai boxing, cock fighting and so on. A Variety taking place in Hong Kong, Manila, New York, Paris, Cremona. The break between an act and the next being a striptease.” IMDb
Luminous. Luscious. Velvety.
Sensuous adjectives for a dish perhaps, but words used by scholars nonetheless to describe the exquisite glaze of a rare copper-red piece of Chinese ceremonial porcelain made 500 years ago during the Ming Dynasty ( 1368-1644). Crushed raspberries are what the glaze calls to mind for Jan Stuart, the Smithsonian's Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery's Melvin R. Seiden Curator of Chinese Art. “Pulpy raspberry reds punctuated by little dark seeds,” are what her eyes see. “Certain bits of its color coalesce where you get almost dark speckles.”
Uncanny is how Stuart also describes the visual similarities between this dish and a series of oil and acrylic paintings done by American painter Mark Rothko in 1959, initially planned to decorate a luxury dining room in New York City. In both dish and Rothko paintings, “the unstable, subtly shifting hues touch our imagination, reminding us that color not only results from materials and processes but also transcends time and place,” Stuart writes in the exhibition text.
“The potters, of course, could have never envisioned a Rothko painting and we are all pretty certain Rothko never saw a Chinese copper-red glaze dish,” Stuart adds. (Rothko, a prolific writer, never mentioned anything about ceramics and Chinese ceramics in particular.)
Untitled Seagram Mural sketch Painting, Mark Rothko 1959, Oil and acrylic on canvas. Gift of the Mark Rothko Foundation, Inc. National Gallery of Art (© 1998 Kate Rothko Prizel & Christopher Rothko / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York)
“The similarities are completely coincidental,” Stuart says. Yet nothing is coincidental about the artworks themselves. Both are the work of masters at the peak of their abilities, each consciously striving for control and perfection some 500 years apart, and achieving effects that echo each other.
Newly acquired by the Freer and displayed in the conjoined Sackler building, the dish now shares a small room with a single painting by Mark Rothko in the new exhibit “Red: Ming Dynasty/Mark Rothko.” To not distract from the experience, dish and painting are the only objects in the room. Exhibit text is on the walls of a separate entry/exit chamber.
“You can either read the text before, or after, or not at all,” Stuart says. “I very much wanted to separate it in the sense that I wanted people to know you can experience these two objects without even asking yourself when they were made or what they are. It's really your choice, but I want you to have the experience of red.”
Stuart conceived of “Red” after showing the dish to various museum staff and others as it was being considered for acquisition. “On more than one occasion someone said to me they saw Rothko in the glaze,” Stuart recalls. “So it made me start thinking: OK. Is this a way to excite people,” by displaying the dish with a Rothko painting.
She began looking around at Rothko paintings at the National Gallery. “Then suddenly I realized, Perfect. I saw the same palate, exactly the Rothko that some knowledgeable art connoisseurs were seeing.”
She contacted Harry Cooper, head curator at the National Gallery of Art, who reviewed her exhibit proposal juxtaposing the two pieces in a single room. “I was thinking he might say to me ‘Oh no. This is crazy.' But he was just delightful and supportive” Cooper and National Gallery director Earl Powell agreed to lend the Sackler a Rothko painting to be exhibited with the dish.
Dish with copper-red glaze, Ming dynasty, Xuande reign (1426-1435), China, Jiangxi province, Jingdezhen. (Purchase: Charles Lang Freer Endowment and Friends of the Freer and Sackler Galleries)
In 1959, Rothko (19031970) was layering red pigments in daring ways, achieving depth and variation that make his flat canvas seem palpable. Rothko believed that color was a portal to emotion and that art could change a viewer. “Rothko was painting very consciously, thinking about the emotional impact of his work, the visual impact of his work…consciously thinking, laboring over every stroke with what effect he's going to get,” Stuart says. “He was concerned with the texture, he wanted shape, he painted the edge of his canvas and never wanted them framed.”
What Rothko was doing consciously is echoed exactly in what the master Ming potters were doing but with a totally different mindset. “What they were creating they did not regard as art,” Stuart explains. “They were carrying out an imperial command to produce a perfect dish to be used in a ritual ceremony. They were concentrating on it, I think, as technology, trying to achieve the single hardest glaze color to make, which is red, and they created a glaze with of depth and texture.”
The potters learned that giving the dish a narrow white rim made the red color pop even more. They were also concerned about shape. “It is just this uncanny parallel of Rothko, and yet not a single thing in their thought process was consciously the same.”
“Red: Ming Dynasty/Mark Rothko” at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery. (Photo by Freer/Sackler staff)
Subtle variegation is what gives the glaze of the Ming Dynasty dish its visual depth and reveals the technical mastery of the potters. Using a technique in which nanoparticles of copper oxide colored the glaze, the potters achieved a tone in the bluish end of the vermillion spectrum. “If you look at the glaze under high-powered magnification you see it is a network of bubbles, mostly unbroken. These bubbles are of two types and shades of reds, and form into networks; and the way they are mixing is non-homogeneous, so they're refracting and reflecting the light in a complex way that gives that sense of depth and texture,” Stuart says.
“And if you look really closely at the glaze you will see some tiny, tiny pinprick holes—sometimes described as an orange-peel effect. Those are some of the bubbles that broke, due to the great heat in the kiln. But most are still unbroken and that is what reflects and refracts light in such a complicated pattern. Certain bits of the color coalesce where you get almost dark speckles in it…that's why I always think of crushed raspberries,” Stuart says.
“Sometimes for me I stand in the exhibit and feel like I am almost weeping with the beauty of red,” Stuart reveals. “It's all about all of the different tonalities of red, it's what really brilliantly thought about layering of color tones can do to open your emotions, making you feel happy, sad, everything.”
(Red: Ming Dynasty/Mark Rothko is on view in the Sackler Gallery through Feb. 20, 2017.)
The post Truly seeing red at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery appeared first on Smithsonian Insider.