Monday, September 3, 2012 Miriam Cahn is known to create works crawling on her hands and knees, sometimes naked and sometimes with her eyes closed. Performance and product bleed into one as the Swiss artist leaves her physical residue on her roughed up paper canvases. BLOG POSTS | Steve Turtell: Allen Ginsberg, Teacher He was the single best teacher I've ever had. That he liked me and my work confirmed me as no other encouragement ever had. | | George Heymont: Nothing Could Be Finer Than an Evening With Barbara Cook Today, many singers who are a fraction of Barbara Cook's age wish they could sing with the wisdom, phrasing, and musical intuition of an artist whose voice has maintained its sweetness and purity for so many years | | Peter Mandel: The Weird World of Google Doubles The Internet is a nearly infinite universe of things I do not want to know. I can usually ignore the boasts, the shards of opinion, the superfluous stuff that swirls around on my laptop. But there's one online fact that simply sticks in my craw: There are people out there who have been brazenly using my name. | | Regina Weinreich: Ethel: A Daughter's Tale, Summerdocs Finale In Ethel, a new HBO documentary, the fascination with all things Kennedy shifts to the legacy of Robert. Filmmaker Rory Kennedy, his 11th child, focuses on the role of her mother in their remarkable marriage, and in the aftermath of his death. | | John Lundberg: Is Cold Calculus Behind One of Mitt's "Favorite" Poems? It's a powerful piece of poetry -- a clarion call for the strong men of 1890s America (sorry, women -- you weren't included) to build a strong nation, and a fitting choice to inspire today's Americans to fight their way out of a recession. But Romney 's little literary story isn't as pure as it seems. | | MOST POPULAR ON HUFFINGTONPOST.COM |
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