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tips for contemporary living

(DIY) Drawing Lessons

A perfect place to start!

A01 Illustrated Glossary of Drawing Words and Terms
A02 Understanding Talent
A03 Buying Drawing Supplies
A04 Creating Your Own Drawing Space
A05 Making a Portfolio
A06 Good Posture First!
A07 Making and Using a Viewfinder Frame
A08 You’re A Natural!
A09 Drawing Curved Lines Naturally
B01 Drawing with Spaces
B02 Shapes of a Duck
B03 Simple Symmetry
B04 Faces and a Vase
B05 Blind Contour Drawing
B06 Seeing Values
B07 Grendel Gremlin
B08 Seeing Shapes in a Photo of a Dog’s Head
B09 Drawing Negative Space Surrounding a Chair
B10 Seeing Shapes of a Horse’s Head
B11 Seeing Light and Shadow
C01 Self Portrait
C02 Three Families of Lines
C03 Kayla the Koala
C05 Linus the Lion
C06 Bitty
C07 Kira
C08 Wanda
C09 Starr Fish
C10 Allie Alligator
C11 Merbaby
C12 Variations of Bud
D01 Squirkling Values
D02 Graduating Squirkles
D03 The Pupil of Iris
D04 Baby Curly
D05 Sam & Samantha
D06 Spruce Tree
D08 Billy Blob Blended
D10 Squirkling a Bumpy Texture
E01 Basic Perspective for Beginners
E02 Overlapping Silly Faces
E03 Simple Atmospheric Perspective
E04 One Point Perspective
E05 The Magic Ellipse by Cindy Wider
F01 Hatching Value Scales
F02 Hatching Simple Mountains
F03 Playing With Pencils
F04 Graduated Values
F05 Kobrah
F06 Sketching Outdoors
F07 Corny Conehead
F08 Basic Contour Hatching
F09 Graduations with Contour Hatching
F10 Serene Scene
F11 Tulip
F12 Seahorse
F13 Light on a Mug
F14 Medieval Spoon
F15 Wooly Woo Noo
G02 Coming Out of the Dark
G03 Smelly Spheres
G04 Baldy Noears
G05 Getting Started with Shading by Cindy Wider
G06 Creating a Value Scale by Cindy Wider
H01 Horizontal Facial Proportions of Adults
H02 Proportions of a Hand
H04 Drawing Eyelashes
H05 Kim
H06 Sketching from a Manikin
H11 Drawing Lips
H12 Long Straight Hair
H13 Sketching Figures with Lines
H14 Jamie
H15 Baby Cameo
H16 Brandon
H17 Figure drawing basics
I01 Fluppy Puppy
I02 Canine Noses
I03 Eye of a Dog
I04 Spotted Fur
I05 Fuzzy Stripes
I06 Simple Feather
I07 Rocky Rodent
I08 Tuttle Turtle
I09 Kevin Bakon
I10 Jumpin Jack
I11 Siamese Tiger Fish
I12 Dolly the Sheepish Sheep
I13 Cuddles
J01 130 Tips & Helpful Hints
J02 To Blend or Not to Blend
J03 Symmetry Secret
J04 Transferring an Image by Cindy Wider
J05 Focus on Focal Points
J06 How to Use a Value Map
J07 The Process of Working with a Grid by Cindy Wider
J08 How to Draw with Charcoal
K01 Above, On and Below the Horizon Line
K02 Drawing an Ellipse
K03 Drawing a Cylinder with 2-Point Perspective
K04 Two-Point Perspective
K05 Drawing Boxes with Two Point Perspective
L01 Crosshatching Values
L02 Graduations with Crosshatching
L03 Crosshatching a Value Map
M01 Fur on a Form
M02 Feathers on a Wing
M03 Detailed Dog Eye
M04 Kitty
M05 Black Widow
M06 Bill the Cat
M07 Swan
M08 Panda the Shih Tzu
N01 Misha
N02 Tux
N03 Silly Cylinder
N04 Emma Emu
N05 Freaky Froggie
N06 Bill the Corny Rattler
N07 Hairy Harry
N08 Precious
O01 Gentle Giant
O02 Daniel
O03 Kay
P
P01 Ashley
P02 Claudette
P03 Facial Proportions of Babies
P04 Guidelines for the heights of people
P05 Clio
P06 Eyelashes on an eye
P07 The cousin of…
P08 Adult Noses in Profile
P09 Insights Into an Ear
P10 Getting Under Your Skin – Facial Muscles
P11 Forms of Adult Torsos
P12 Adult Facial Proportions
P13 Mouth of a Baby
P14 Frontal View of Adult Noses
P15 Drawing a Collage
P16 How to Draw Curly Hair
Q01 Dragon Egg
Q02 Grape Smoothie
Q03 Drawing Denim
Q04 Bud the Rose
Q05 Drawing Squirkles Around a Tree
Q06 3D Cylinder by Cindy Wider
R01 Primary and Secondary Colors
R02 Oil Painting Brushes
S01 Sunny Blue
S02 Wooly Blue
S03 Daisy Dodo
S04 Chuck Chic
S05 Flutterby
T01 Rosey
T02 Shadow
T03 Hooter
T04 Dandy
T05 Isaac
T06 Daphnia
T07 A Zebra Named Spot
T08 To Bee or Not to Bee
T09 Katie the “Rottiepitbea”
U01 Annie
U02 Eye on Melissa
U03 Claire
U04 View of an Adult Arm
U05 Leg and Foot
U06 Facial Aging
U07 Female Figure
U08 Manisha
U09 Isha
U10 Joel Allan
U11 Fabric of a Sleeve
U12 Big Smile
V01 Light Beyond the Trees
V02 Photorealism: Very Close Up
V03 Photorealistic Dagger
V04 Teddy Tink
V06 Old Tree
V07 Sunflower
V08 Shiny Leather Boots by Cindy Wider
V10 Little Urn by Cindy Wider
V11 Medieval Arrowhead
W01 Karin
W02 Bill View 2
W03 Evie
W04 Carved In Stone
W05 Robby & Rob
W06 Hallie Kate
W07 Greek Mummy Portrait
W08 Wesley the Maltese
W09 Heidi
X01 Dudley The Dragon
X02 Lord Algernon
X03 Lord Hans
Y01 Golden Rosebud
Y02 Wobby
Y03 Designing a Tattoo of a Grease Monkey
Y04 Values in Colors
Y05 Painting with Acrylics: Part 1
Y06 Painting with Acrylics: Part 2
Y07 Painting With Acrylics: Part 3
Y10 Winged Lightning
Y11 Art Inspired by Music
Y12 Introduction to Pointillism
Z01 Nose Study (Leonardo da Vinci)
Z02 Examining Styles and Techniques
Z03 Examining Lighting & Composition in Masters’ Paintings
Z04 Study of an Infant’s Nose
Z05 Study of the Head of an Infant
Z06 Hatching with chalk
Z07 Mona Lisa
Z08 Study of Old Man’s Face in Profile
Z09 Study of a Girl’s Face
Z10 Study of a Flower
Z11 Madison
Z12 Sketch of a Youth
Z13 Study of a Rosebud
As in
www.drawspace.com/lessons?sort=free/

DIY- Tips for Making your Own Beauty Products

Making Your Own Beauty Produtcts

Skin can be complicated to take care of. However, this doesn’t mean your routine has to be complex and long winded – so long as you’re smart about which products you need to buy or not. To make your life easier, we’ve gathered up some top tips – hopefully they’ll help to streamline your skin care, and get you right on track for Summer. And with your own DIY beauty products.. let’s see how with the following authors.


acne scar treatment

 

How I Fixed My Skin by Making My Own Beauty Products

by LESLEY CLAYTON

My 14-year-old niece looks out from behind the pantry door in our kitchen to ask me where the honey is. I tell her that I left it in the shower, and she gives me that teenager-perfected look of pity and revulsion. But she’ll just have to get used to it because, for the foreseeable future, what she uses to sweeten her tea and what I use to clean my face are coming out of the same jar.

Since I was younger than she is now, I’ve had what my mother calls “problem skin.” It is an excessively sensitive, acne-prone mess of keratosis and razor burn whose hobbies include scarring, peeling in direct sunlight, blotching red when I watch GOP debates, and bursting into itchy pustules if I use the wrong laundry detergent. As a teenager, I took comfort in the assumption that adulthood would mean post-pubescent cutaneous bliss, but my skin just got worse.

Recently, I started to wonder if the problem wasn’t my skin, but the harsh chemicals I used on it. So after 15 years and thousands of dollars in creams and gels and dermatologists and medications and microdermabrasion and infomercial impulse buys, I decided to go the full hippie and renounce all commercial skincare products. Now, I’d dabbled in homemade scrubs and bath soaks here and there because I espouse a doctrine of DIY frugality and have been desperate enough to try anything. But this time, I got serious.

I gathered every bottle, tube, and pot of store-bought product (and there are a lot of them after all that trial-and-error) and put them in a drawer, then decided on a couple of ground rules.

1. Nothing goes on my face that I wouldn’t eat (with the exception of makeup and sunblock). Sometimes I even put things on my face and eat them simultaneously, but we’ll get to that later.

2. The materials are cheap. With a project like this, it’s very easy to spend a small fortune on natural ingredients making claims as inflated as their commercial counterparts. I, however, am budgeted within an inch of my life. I’ve heard wonderful things about the benefits of tamanu oil, but at $13 an ounce, it doesn’t interest me. Luckily, I already had a small cache of essential oils collected over the years. They make a great addition to natural skin care concoctions, but aren’t necessary. The only carrier oils I use are olive, grapeseed, and coconut, because I also cook with them.

With these basic rules established, the objective is the same as any other facial care regimen: cleanse, tone, moisturize.

Cleansers

Every day I wash my face with honey. In its raw form, honey has serious antiseptic and antibacterial properties that are perfect for getting gunk off your face. Just make sure the label explicitly says it’s raw, because pasteurization wipes out all the benefits.

Treat it like you would any other cleanser: Rub about a teaspoon onto damp skin and rinse clean. If you can leave it on for a few minutes while you brush your teeth, even better. With wet hands and face, it’s not sticky at all and comes off easily. If I need a little more oomph, like for removing makeup, I’ll mix it with a little baking soda in my palm before applying for extra scrubbing power.

There is a method of facial cleansing that uses oil exclusively, which seems counterintuitive to those of us who spent the late ‘90s as shining beacons of sebum. (The internet is full of raves, but science says I should stay away.) A little olive oil on a cotton swab makes a phenomenal eye makeup remover.

Toners

I keep two toners on hand. The first is a recipe I developed after sneaking a cellphone picture of an ingredients label in a pricy handmade cosmetics shop. Boutique espionage is the greatest starting point in at-home product development. Toner No. 1:

1 oz vodka
2 oz water
5 drops tea tree oil
5 drops grapefruit essential oil

The vodka is serving two purposes here. The oils and water need an emulsifier in order to mix—think of it as a vinaigrette for your face—and alcohol does that. Any time you want to dilute essential oils in water, you’ll need one. It’s also a powerful astringent that will tighten your pores. Tea tree oil is an anti-inflammatory that helps tame redness, andgrapefruit smells nice. This one’s refreshing as hell, but very drying. Oily skin and humid climates can stand up to daily use, but listen to your face and scale back if it’s feeling too aggressive. I keep it in a spray bottle for quick application in especially clammy situations, like after a workout or during that long stretch of Texas summer when the air is made up of crotch sweat and tequila vapor.

Toner No. 2 is just equal parts water and apple cider vinegar. I use it on a cotton swab when I’m feeling dry. It’s gentler than the vodka toner and balances your skin’s pH.

Moisturizers

This one’s easy. Grapeseed oil. On my face. Just remember a little goes a very long way. The challenge in this is getting it on as lightly as possible. Using your fingers to slide on a thin layer gets easier with practice, and a cotton swab can be a huge help, but I use a Misto. Seriously. It gives me moisture light enough to wear under makeup.

On days I’m not wearing makeup but don’t want to look like a greasy teenager, I rub the cut side of a potato all over my face. It feels wet going on but dries in a few seconds and the starches control shine longer than any powder makeup claiming the same.

Scrubs

For a fantastic exfoliating scrub, combine used coffee grounds and enough olive oil to form a paste. It’s aggressive (especially if you French press), so I wouldn’t try it while broken out.

Masks

I love masks, but I rarely make one unless I’m using ingredients that would otherwise be thrown out. I’ve read that avocados are wonderful for repairing sun damage and fighting wrinkles, but I will never experience that because eating guacamole is a core tenant of my personal beliefs. What I’m saying is that we’re going to use every part of the buffalo.

I mask once a week at most, and have three go-to recipes.

Mask No. 1: The pulp from my juicer that I normally trash can be mixed with just enough coconut oil to form a paste, spread onto my face for 10-15 minutes, and rinsed clean for deep moisture. The works great withcarrots, cucumbers, spinach, tomato—really anything worth juicing is worth putting on your face. Just be wary of acidic fruits (which should be fine in moderation) and beets, lest you risk losing Homecoming Queen to Muffin Sangria.

Mask No. 2: Yogurt’s lactic acid is as good for your skin as it is your digestive tract. Any morning I don’t finish a breakfast of yogurt, honey, and flax seeds, leftovers are going on my face. Lay this on thick until it dries. Pieces of it should come of easily in your hands, making rinsing a bit easier. Oatmeal is another great dual-purpose breakfast and mask.

Mask No. 3: Anytime I make mayonnaise or pasta carbonara, that abandoned egg white is going on my face for my favorite and simplest mask. Whip the egg white with a whisk or food processor until it’s frothy, spread it on your face, and let it dry completely. The white will tighten like crazy—you can crack it if you smile—but it will melt away easily with warm water.

Granted, my BA in English doesn’t qualify me to make these recommendations with any scientific or medical authority, but I’m confident that I can know a lot more about what going on my face when I browse for skincare products in my pantry than I ever did when I was shopping in a drugstore. And I think it’s safe to assume that honey won’t be taken off the market for its link to inflammatory bowel diseases, like our old friend Accutane. What I can say with certainty is that I haven’t put a cleaning agent of unknown origins to my skin in over a month, and my face has never been happier.

Point: hippies.


Stretch mark removal cream

How to Make Your Own Beauty Products from Scratch

by LESLEY CLAYTON

 

Let’s keep things simple this week. When it comes to personal-care products, we are big believers in streamlining what you use—see “Eight Products You Think You Need But Don’t” for a refresher—buying less in general, and getting creative. We have both always loved experimenting in our kitchens and our bathrooms, checking ingredients in products we love, isolating the main ones, and then trying them on their own. Sometimes it works: A favorite hair leave-in contained aloe, for example, so one day we tried aloe alone and found that, lo and behold, it worked just fine on its own. And sometimes it didn’t. Over the years we have tried dozens of DIY beauty recipes to find ones we like—and that work. Below are our favorite six. And the best thing about these is that none contains more than four ingredients, and chances are good you have them all in your kitchen already. So get cookin’ and if you have your own, be sure to share it in the comments.


Simple body scrub

Many body scrubs, even the ones that claim to be sugar- or salt-based, actually contain beads made out of polyethylene, which isenvironmentally deplorable (it all goes down the drain, remember)—to say nothing of the preservatives, fragrance, penetration enhancers, and sulfates that typically bulk up these products. Instead, head to your kitchen. Grab a bowl and combine a quarter cup of any oil you like (I like olive best), an eighth of a cup of coarse brown sugar, same amount of salt, and an essential oil you love. Vanilla seems to me the can’t-beat option for smell, but go with your favorite. And if you have dry skin, a sunburn, or eczema, leave out the salt and double up the sugar.


Honey face wash

We already told you about our new favorite homemade face wash last week but here’s the recipe: In the palm of your hand, combine a tablespoon of raw, unfiltered honey with a half a tablespoon of baking soda, mix it together, and apply to damp skin. The honey is antibacterial while also soothing dry skin, and the baking soda is gently exfoliating without tearing or irritating your face. Cheap, too.


One-ingredient eye liner

For the ladies (or the gents with a flair for the dramatic) this is as easy as it gets: Grab a capsule of activated charcoal, which you can get at most pharmacies and any health food store. Instead of ingesting it for your tummy ache, dump out the contents on a clean surface, moisten the tip of a makeup brush with water, and sweep it on like you would any other eye liner. It goes on easily and lasts just as long as regular powdered liner—minus the preservatives, artificial dyes, fragrance, and other chemicals.


Perfume

Because fragrance is protected under trade secret laws, there is literally no way to know what is in that perfume or cologne you think of as your signature scent. But if a recent study is any indication (and it is), there are some things in there we shouldn’t be too happy about. Instead, make your own! Combine essential oils you like—cedar, ylang ylang, vanilla, lavender, citrus oils—with a little bit of vodka, and keep it in an airtight container. You can experiment and tweak it as the seasons change—lighter in summer, heavier for winter—without having to drop another $80 on potentially dangerous chemical cocktails.

 

Shave oil

Outside the shower, grab an oil you like—olive, argan, jojoba, and coconut work well—slather it on the area that needs a shave, and go for it. Oils are hard for some people at first: We are hard-wired to think oils on our face are a bad idea, but if you use a skin-compatible oil like the ones listed, it won’t clog pores or cause breakouts. (In fact, some people find the opposite happens!)


Yogurt face mask

This one raises some eyebrows—putting yogurt on your face sounds a little gross at first—but it can be a great skin-brightening, moisturizing mask on its own for sensitive skin. Combine a cut of yogurt with half a cup of non-instant oatmeal, mix, and apply. The lactic acid in the yogurt softens skin gently, and can be great for dehydrated and congested skin. Leave it in for 15 minutes, and rinse. No need to wash after.

This is a series inspired by No More Dirty Looks: The Truth About Your Beauty Products and the Ultimate Guide to Safe and Clean Cosmetics, a book by GOOD’s features editor Siobhan O’Connor and her co-author Alexandra Spunt.

Read more on their blog

Illustrations by Brianna Harden


Rosacea treatment products for facial redness

As in

www.good.is/post/how-to-make-your-own-beauty-products-from-scratch/

by SIOBHAN O’CONNOR - Author of No More Dirty Looks

and

http://www.good.is/post/how-i-fixed-my-skin-by-making-my-own-beauty-products/

by LESLEY CLAYTON - writer

Thanks to the authors

 

 

Homemade Almond Milk : Tips on how to prepare it

The following article was written by Kaycee Basset and originally appeared on Vegan Machine.com.

Almond milk is my favorite kind of milk! Not only is it the healthiest (in my opinion), it also tastes the best. Almond milk is loaded with protein, calcium, and vitamin E, typically having more protein and calcium than mammal’s milk.  


There are many different ways to make almond milk. There are recipes for cooked, uncooked, and raw versions, and you can pick from a variety of flavors, including plain, unsweetened, vanilla, chocolate, cinnamon, and more. It’s all up to you!

Making almond milk will be a two-day process if you decide to blanch the almonds (cook them to remove the skin), so if you get a craving, start making it right away. Blanching isn’t a mandatory step, and it should be skipped when making raw almond milk.

My favorite almond milk recipe is for a cooked version flavored with vanilla and cinnamon. I’ll take you through the process step by step.

Vanilla Cinnamon Almond Milk
1 1/2 cups raw almonds
1 tsp. vanilla extract
4 cups water
Pinch of cinnamon

Blanching

  • Bring a small pot of water (just enough to cover the almonds) to a boil.
  • Add the almonds and boil for 1 minute.
  • Remove the almonds from the boiling water and place in a bowl of cold water for a couple of minutes.
  • Transfer the almonds to a fresh bowl of cold water and let sit for another 1 to 2 minutes.
  • Peel the skin from the almonds.
  • Put the peeled almonds in a bowl and cover with water. Let sit overnight (or for at least 8 or more hours).

Making the Almond Milk

  • In a blender, combine the almonds, the vanilla, and 2 cups water. Blend thoroughly.
  • Pour the mixture through a very fine strainer, clean cloth, paper towel, or nut milk bag into a large pot.
  • Put the remaining pulp and leftover almond bits back into the blender and add the remaining 2 cups water. Blend for 1 to 2 minutes and repeat the straining process. (Be sure to save your leftover pulp for use in other recipes; see note below.)
  • Bring the filtered milk to a simmer on the stove, adding the cinnamon. Remove from the heat and let cool.
  • Strain the milk once more and pour into an airtight container.
  • Store the milk in the fridge—it should keep for 5 days.

As I mentioned, there are many different ways to make almond milk. The following are a few more fun options to try:

  • Double the vanilla for a stronger vanilla flavor.
  • Substitute agave or vegan sugar for the maple syrup.
  • Leave the skin on the almonds for more fiber and nutrients and for a stronger almond taste.
  • Add your favorite extracts or spices. Some enticing choices might include nutmeg, ginger, lavender, rose water, chocolate, or mint.
  • Make it raw! Use raw almonds, raw extracts, and a raw sweetener, and don’t blanch or cook the almonds.

Get creative! Don’t forget to save the pulp! Spread it evenly on a baking sheet and let it dry out—then add it to baked goods, smoothies, granola, oatmeal, and more. Yum

As in

www.peta.org/living/vegetarian-living/homemade-almond-milk.aspx?c=pfs/

(DIY) Do-it-yourself Sol LeWitt Wall Drawings


Proven Drug Testing Solutions

You too can present a retrospective of the great Wall Drawings of Sol LeWitt!

You’ll need a crew. Art students will do. Also recent art graduates, and artists- if they can follow instructions.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting
You gotta buy ‘em some paint. Get the good stuff.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Maybe they’ll throw in some hats.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Find a large space. Very large. We’re not talking precious little miniatures. Usually, an abandoned industrial warehouse, factory, or a mill complex works well.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting
From the days when America actually made stuff you could use.

But inside you’ll have to build white walls. Lots of them. And make sure they’re to LeWitt’s specifications.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Follow the plan for what goes where, or you’ll be at your wits end.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

(Even the plan is beautiful.)

Now pin up the working drawings by LeWitt so you know what to follow. They’re done by hand, not computer. So, as “perfect” as they look, they’re not. That’s refreshing.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

If you’re lucky, Sol LeWitt’s daughter Eva, a colorful artist in her own right, might lend you transparencies and one of those good, old-fashioned overhead projectors.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting
Now get out your tape and mock up the walls!

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting
Remember, Sol LeWitt had helpers too.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting
If you’ve done it all right, interesting patterns will start to appear.

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

This

LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

becomes

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Line up your charts of the colors LeWitt specified to make sure you get ‘em right

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting
and let ‘er rip! (click the arrow)

Music to my ears.

Handwork, as at Lascaux.

Yes, if you follow LeWitt’s instructions you too can produce absolutely stunning Wall Drawings

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

The world around you is transformed.

Before

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

After

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

The later, bolder ones

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

show how artists use of color often changes as they age.

So for your retrospective, try to include some of LeWitt’s more subtle works

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Those are revelatory. And it’s moving to follow the artist’s path.

For these subtle ones, have the crew keep the pencils very sharp

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting
To get

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

Can you say compulsive?

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

And keep the lines fine and straight, or this poor guy will go blind to correct it! (click on arrow)

When you’re all done, you’ll have wonderful, jarringly powerful spaces:

Sol LeWitt, MASS MoCA, wall painting

just like at the Sol LeWitt retrospective opening at MASS MoCA November 16, 2008.

Congratulations to the crew! And to MASS MoCA’s Director Joseph Thompson, and to all involved, including Yale University Art Gallery, and the Williams College Museum of Art, Williamstown, Massachusetts, and Bruner/Cott and Associates architects, who restored the building.

Done in collaboration with Sol LeWitt, before his death in April 2007. The retrospective will include one hundred works—covering nearly an acre of wall surface—that LeWitt created from 1968 to 2007.

Here’s how it came to be, according to MASS MoCA: Jock Reynolds, the Director of the Yale University Art Gallery, who in 1993 worked closely with LeWitt to produce an earlier retrospective of his wall drawings brought Sol LeWitt to see MASS MoCA and its Director Joseph Thompson.

“LeWitt toured the MASS MoCA’s campus of industrial buildings, where the artist was immediately intrigued by Building #7. The structure, situated at the center of MASS MoCA’s multi-building complex, and featuring large banks of windows that open onto two flanking courtyards, appealed to LeWitt as an ideal site for a multifloor installation of his work. His specifications for the space included new circulation paths, including a series of “flying bridges” and newly created courtyard spaces, that will connect the LeWitt building to MASS MoCA’s changing exhibition galleries and entry lobby.
Thompson comments, “As we’ve built the interior partitions to Sol’s specifications, it has become clear that his understanding of architectural space was as masterful as his wall drawings themselves. He consciously sited his wall drawings to engage both the interior of Building #7 and its outside environment. It is stunning to see how well his monumental aesthetic intervention within the heart of the MASS MoCA campus of buildings is going to enliven the entire museum. Sol left almost every window in Building #7 generously open to invite in a play of continuous natural light—which is somehow typical of his creative spirit.”
“Detailed,” “painstaking,” and “strangely liberating” are terms that have been used to describe the experience of creating Sol LeWitt’s monumental wall drawings. The drawings at MASS MoCA will be executed over a six-month period by twenty-four of the senior and seasoned assistants who worked with the artist over many years. They will be joined by thirty students from Yale University, Williams College, and North Adams’s Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, as well as by undergraduate students from other colleges and universities around the country.”

Along with Tadao Ando’s buildings for the Clark Art Institute in the same area, by November this is worth a trip.

Rest easy, in your pretty little town in the Berkshires, knowing you’ve added interest to the world. Rest easy too – your work lives on – Sol LeWitt.

.

—–
This is a repost of
http://edwardlifson.blogspot.pt/2008/06/do-it-yourself-sol-lewitt-wall-drawings.html
Thanks to 


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A CELL is NOT a BABY: (DIY) Do It Yourself Abortion TiPS

In order to have a proper choice you need the best information available. What ever you decide, just keep in mind your health. Whatever you do, just don’t do it alone or unsupervised.  Below some tips and general info regarding your choices. 

 

Home Abortion Remedy – Vitamin C

I found this recipe in a book called “A Woman’s Book of Choices: Abortion, Menstrual Extraction, RU-486” by Rebecca Chalker and Carol Downer.
The books says to take 6-10 grams of ascorbic acid a day for 5-10 days. It says specifically ascorbic acid. Don’t use vitamin C with bioflaviniods in it, because they work to prevent miscarriage. Read the label and check the ingredients, write down what to look for if you think you won’t remember when you get to the store. Tons of vitamin c products are available, look for the cheap generic brands, they are usually the ones that have pure ascorbic acid. Don’t use anything that has Rose-hips in it, they conntain bio-flaveniods which help to prevent miscarriage.

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