思った以上に、みんなが真剣に楽しく聞いてくれたので 一人でも多くの子が、自分が将来就くべき仕事について自らの目で見て、 体で感じながら選んでいけるように行動に移してもらえたらと感じました。
思った以上に、みんなが真剣に楽しく聞いてくれたので 一人でも多くの子が、自分が将来就くべき仕事について自らの目で見て、 体で感じながら選んでいけるように行動に移してもらえたらと感じました。
前回の記事で紹介した会議は平成20年なので6年も前の話です。「資源管理のあり方検討会」というのが、今年の3月から開かれています。何の風の吹き回しか解らないのですが、水産庁から委員になって欲しいという依頼がありました。「資源管理をやることを前提に、前向きに議論をしたい」という話だったので、委員を引き受けました。 資源管理のあり方検討会 概要 水産資源の適切な保存管理は、国民に対する水産物の安定供給の確保や水産業の健全な発展の基盤となる極めて重要なものです。 しかし、かつて1千万トンを超える水準にあった我が国の漁業生産は、現在は500万トンを下回る水準となっています。こうした状況の中で、水産日本の復活を果たすためには、世界三大漁場と言われる恵まれた漁場環境を活かしながら、水産資源の適切な管理を通じて、水産資源の回復と漁業生産量の維持増大を実現することが喫緊の課題となっています。 このため、現在
・ファミリーレストランの再現レシピが大集合 ファミリーレストラン。 ファミレスチェーンとしては有名ですよね。 ガストに行ったことがある人。 ガストに行ったことが無くてもガストの名前を聞いたことがある人。 そういう人がほとんどじゃないでしょうか。 今回は、そんな、ガストの再現レシピ。 ファミレスの味を再現したレシピと言っていいですね。 ガストのあんなメニューやこんなメニュー。 定番料理。定番メニューをつくることができます。 定番メニューと言えば、人気のサラダうどんは欠かせないですね。 それにベーコンのチーズ焼き、グラタン、ハンバーグ。 デザートに黒糖ゼリーなどなど、多方面なレシピが揃えました。 では、魅惑の再現レシピの世界へご招待します。 ・魅惑のファミレス再現レシピが大集合 [No.1] [出典]サラダうどん★昔のガスト風うどん(^^♪ by huhuhu13 [クックパッド] 簡単おいし
ストレスがたまっている人、うつ状態になった人、周りにそういう人がいる人にもオススメな一冊。 ストレスになる考え方を変えるための、認知行動療法が事例を通して学べる本を紹介。認知行動療法でいい本はいくつかあるけど、最初に一冊だけオススメするならどれにするか?と聞かれたらコレ。 ケアする人も楽になる 認知行動療法入門 BOOK1 作者: 伊藤絵美,matsu出版社/メーカー: 医学書院発売日: 2011/02/01メディア: 単行本(ソフトカバー) クリック: 7回この商品を含むブログ (3件) を見る こんな人にオススメ ・認知行動療法を学びたい人(Book1) ・相性が悪い人との付き合いかたに悩んでいる人(Book1) ・無能な同僚・上司・部下に腹が立って仕方がない人(Book2) ・キレる上司のいる職場に恐怖を感じる人(Book2) ・精神的に不安定な知人とのかかわり方に悩む人(Book2
新千歳空港の立ち入り制限区域への扉の位置などを記した図面がインターネット上で誰でも閲覧できる状態になっていた問題で、空港の運営会社が、国土交通省の通知に違反して、無断で図面をグーグル社に提供していたことが分かりました。 この問題は、インターネット上でメールの内容を共有できるグーグル社の無料サービス「グーグルグループ」に、新千歳空港の立ち入り制限区域への扉などを記した図面が、グーグル社のミスで誰でも閲覧できる状態で掲載されていたものです。 空港ビルを管理する北海道空港会社は、非公開とすべき部分を加工せず、グーグル社にそのまま図面を提供していたということですが、その際、国からの通知に反して、国土交通省の空港事務所に事前に相談していなかったということです。 空港会社は当初「事前に空港事務所の許可を得て提供した」と説明していましたが、その後の調査で相談は提供後だったことが分かったということです。
当局への不信感をあらわにしたレッド・ホット・チリ・ペッパーズのチャド・スミス - C Flanigan / WireImage / Getty Images 米ロックバンド、レッド・ホット・チリ・ペッパーズの楽曲がCIAの拷問に使用されていたことが明らかになり、同バンドのドラマーのチャド・スミスが当局への不信感をあらわにした。TMZ.comが報じた。 米上院情報特別委員会は今月3日、CIAがジョージ・W・ブッシュ大統領の政権下で行っていた虐待的な尋問(拷問)に関する機密報告書を公開することを可決。後にその報告書の内容は一部リークされ、テロ容疑者をペット用のスペースに押し込み、手錠で天井に縛り付けた上で、レッド・ホット・チリ・ペッパーズの楽曲を大音量で延々再生するという拷問の詳細が報じられた。 TMZ.comの取材に応じたチャド・スミスは、自分たちの楽曲が使われていたことを全く知らなかったと
昨年秋頃から年明けにかけてRailsで顧客のサービスをひとつ作った 久々のチーム開発で。チーム人数は3名。 せっかくなので使ったツールややり方などを備忘録的に残しておく。次いつまたチーム開発する機会があるのか知らんけど。 実践したこと プルリクベースの開発 Webサービス開発現場から / 近頃の開発のやり方 ・・・ Github と Pull Request とコードレビュー 上記のやり方が面白そうだったので試してみた。 Githubを使っていれば拍子抜けするほど簡単に流れに乗ることができた。 Git力が足りないので最初は少し大変だったが、馴れてくると細かくブランチを切ってフィーチャーごとに対応するということが開発のテンポを良くしてくれた。 コードレビューはイージーミスによるバグや既存のコードと大きく流れの違うコードが混ざるのを未然に食い止める事ができたりと、一定の成果はあった。 一方でい
理研の「STAP細胞」研究をめぐる問題に関しては、私は余り興味が湧きません。一点だけ、生命倫理へのタブーの薄い日本では、こうした再生細胞の研究は今後も大いに期待されるので、その足を引っ張ることがなければいいという思いはしています。それ以外は、「起きたこと」よりも、「伝えられ方」の方が「事件」であるし「問題だ」という見方をせざるを得ません。 その「伝えられ方」の中で、一点だけどうしても我慢のならないことがあります。それは、論文に「コピペ」が横行しているのはケシカランという報道が余りに加熱しているために、まるで「コピペがゼロ」の、つまり「100%オリジナルな論文」が理想であるかのようなイメージが拡散していることです。 これは大変な間違いです。学術論文(リサーチ・ペーパー)は文学作品ではありません。100%オリジナルなどというものは、評価の対象にすらならないのです。 余りにも基本的なことなので、
本当にあたたかくなりました。遂にお出かけしたくなる季節、春がやってきましたね! さて本日2014年4月14日(月)、日本テレビ系列「ヒルナンデス!」にて『春の 旅行・お出かけ便利グッズ』なるものが紹介されていました。 東急ハンズで人気の「おでかけ便利グッズ」売れ筋ランキングベスト10との事で、「ドコでも洗濯が出来てしまうアイテム」など、どのアイテムも気になるアイテムばかりだったのでまとめてみました! 東急ハンズの売れ筋ランキング「春のお出かけ便利グッズ」 第10位から1位は以下の通り。 10位 GEL・COOL 凹PECO 9位 ティッシュボックス ルテラ 8位 tugo(トゥーゴー) 7位 アンブレラハンガー 6位 カード型 ホットプレッサー 5位 BENTO BOX 4位 収納名人 3位 フットレストハンガー 2位 スリープマスク 1位 どこでも洗たくパック それでは順に、第10位から
埼玉県立高校の女性教諭が長男の入学式のため勤務先の入学式を欠席した対応が波紋を広げている。関根郁夫県教育長は14日の定例記者会見で「生徒や保護者に心配をかけた」と学校側の対応に苦言を呈すると同時に「色々な考え方がある」と話し、「欠席」に至った経緯に一定の理解も示した。県教育委員会には14日午前までに73件の意見が寄せられたが、賛否は割れている。(中村昌史) 「生徒や保護者に申し訳ない。心配りがあってよかった」。関根教育長はこう述べた上で、11日の県立高校長会で「保護者、生徒の声を受け高校生活を安心してスタートできるよう指示をした」と明らかにした。県教委によると、73件の意見のうち、53%が女性教諭に理解を示す意見。34%が校長・教育長への批判、12%が教諭への批判だった。 女性教諭は勤務先の入学式前、長男の入学式に出席したい意向を説明し、校長らに休暇を認められた。式当日は別の教諭らが「大切
前に押井さんの考えているパトレイバーデザインの記事を書きました。今回は最初らパトレイバーに関わっているゆうきさんと、デザインをした出渕さんの考えていたパトレイバーのデザインについて整理してみたいと思います。 ダサカッコイイ人型ロボット まず、パトレイバーの前身となるものから温めていたゆうきさんは、パトレイバーのデザインをどう考えていたのでしょうか。 夜陰に乗じて金融機関を襲った一味は、レイバーを乗り捨てて車で逃げだそうとするが、その目の前に立ちふさがる巨人の影に思わずブレーキを踏んでしまう、というのが左側の絵の大まかなシチュエーションですな。 これは最近描いた絵なので“一応イングラム”になってますけど、メカデザインが決まる前~パトレイバーの発想をした頃~から頭の中にあったイメージは こーゆーものでした。そのため、主役メカにはどうしても“あからさまな人形(ひとがた)シルエット”が欲しかったわ
読売新聞社は11~13日、全国世論調査を実施した。 4月からの消費増税に伴う負担を「非常に感じている」との答えは22%で、「多少は感じている」53%を合わせると、「感じている」は計75%に上った。「あまり感じていない」19%と「ほとんど感じていない」5%を合わせて、「感じていない」は計24%だった。 税率引き上げ後も、家計の支出を「減らしていない」と答えた人は62%に上り、「減らした」の34%を大きく上回った。消費増税の負担を感じている人は多いが、消費の冷え込みには必ずしもつながっていないようだ。 税率引き上げの負担増を「感じている」人でも、家計の支出を「減らしていない」との回答は56%に上り、「減らした」の40%より多かった。
Perhaps the most talked about artwork at the recent 2011 Armory Show in New York was the full-sized neon fence, a wrought-iron-styled thing in glowing light, which stood guard around the plot of Pier 94 labeled on the fair’s map as “Paul Kasmin, booth 1070.” Crafted by the Chilean artist Iván Navarro (b. 1972), The Armory Fence is accompanied by a new series of the artist’s signature illustionisti
On Wednesday, two young artists took the movement known as Relational Esthetics for a joyride. The artist Rirkrit Tiravanija, whom I’ve discussed before, has long explored the rich terrain of giving things away for free, of making interactions with art and other people possible, and of sharing. In his current show, he has upped the ante. Setting up a soup kitchen that provides soup for a dollar a
KEVIN SPACEY SPEAKS FOR THE ARTS Can anyone stand up to the Republicans who want to ban singing, dancing and all the other joyful activities funded by the National Endowment for the Arts? Maybe Lex Luthor (Superman Returns) or Dr. Evil (Goldmember)? A hard-bitten character from Hurlyburly, American Beauty or The Big Kahuna? What about Bobby Darin (Beyond the Sea)? Academy Award-winning movie star
For the 61-year-old Swiss-German artist Miriam Cahn, now having her first U.S. show at Elizabeth Dee on West 20th Street in Chelsea, art-making is an atavistic affair. She made many works timed around her menstrual cycle, to root them in the natural processes of womanhood, and produced large black-and-white drawings using her entire body to make marks on large sheets of paper on the floor. “I stre
Not content to stalk the ghost of Andy Warhol in his two previous books (I Bought Andy Warhol and I Sold Andy Warhol (Too Soon)), former Artnet Magazine columnist Richard Polsky moves further back in time in his new tome Boneheads: My Search for T. Rex (Council Oaks Books). The grandiose "search" actually consists of the diminutive Polsky scraping down some South Dakota rock for a couple of hours
The sleepy eyed passers-by who stopped at the small pedestrian outcropping on 17th and Broadway this morning were befuddled. There was something going on there: this was for certain, as indicated by a number of journalists toting cameras and notepads gathering expectantly around a tall, mysterious object wrapped in silver cloth. It wasn’t until 11:05 am sharp that the auspicious moment’s star -- t
It’s sweet times at Sotheby’s auction house -- at least for Sotheby’s stockholders and top management of the company. Sotheby’s stock is now near $50 a share, up considerably from the doldrums of March 2009, when shares in the firm were trading for under $7. Were you one of the smart ones who had confidence in the art market’s upside potential? Sotheby’s top management is being rewarded, according
A photo by Patrick Cariou at left, and its adaptation by Richard Prince at right As is well-known, the artist Richard Prince has lost his copyright infringement suit to the photographer Patrick Cariou [see Artnet News, March 21, 2011]. The decision is now pending an appeal. The news has prompted heated commentary by almost everyone, including copyright maximalists, photographers, collage artists,
Philadelphia Museum of Art Apr. 2-July 31, 2011 Presenting some 50 odd international health-related posters dating from 1846-1985 whose subjects range from good hygiene to “amoral behavior” to pharmaceuticals and which demonstrate the versatility of the 19th- and 20th-century poster designer Curators: Innis Howe Shoemaker, John Ittman Catalogue: 60 pp., $18 Funding: GlaxoSmithKline Laboratories, A
"You can call me Doctor Doctor Doctor," joked New York magazine art critic Jerry Saltz. Next month, Saltz receives an honorary doctorate of fine arts from the Kansas City Art Institute. He is also delivering the commencement address at the KCAI graduation ceremony, which takes place on May 14, 2011. It's the third honorary degree for Saltz, who hastens to note that he is otherwise without a diplom
To the envy of art writers everywhere, the world’s most powerful financial newspaper, The Wall Street Journal, has finally turned its eye on the world’s most powerful art dealer, Larry Gagosian. Profiled by ace art-market journalist Kelly Crow in the paper’s April Fools edition -- the timing was presumably coincidental -- Larry Gagosian, whose modus operandi is described as an elegant combination
The Kenneth Noland estate has rolled out some sublime classic Nolands at Mitchell-Innes & Nash through Apr. 30, 2011. When you enter the gallery and envelop yourself in "Kenneth Noland Paintings 1958-68," peace will instantly descend: these circle stains and perfectly pasteled blobs on raw canvas are as deft as the abstract touch can get. The show's catalogue, pretentiously titled "American Art fo
Cairo-based artist and electronic musician Ahmed Basiony, 32, was killed by sniper fire in Tahrir Square on Jan. 28, 2011, while participating in the demonstrations that launched the Egyptian popular uprising on Jan. 25. He leaves behind a wife and two children. Now, the Venice Biennale has announced that Basiony has been selected to represent Egypt in its pavilion in the Giardini for the 2011 bie
Photography is schizoid by nature. On the one hand it is devoted to fashion, documentary and history, on the other it plumbs the heights of carnality. So in the spirit of "link baiting," we offer you a quick review of last week's spring photo sales in New York from an erotic perspective. Sex, it's all about the life force, after all. You can write your own punch lines. Forgive us if we couldn't he
Jock Reynolds sighed. "Sometimes, Charlie, the best curations are the ones for which you barely lift a finger." Last year, the eminent historian David McCullough, Yale ’55, and Mr. Reynolds, director of the Yale Art Gallery, were discussing a chapter of McCullough’s new tome, The Greater Journey (to be published next month), about American artists and writers such as Mary Cassatt and James Fenimor
SOFA New York, Apr. 14-17, 2011, at the Park Avenue Armory, has long been famous as a platform for predominantly mainstream craft, featuring a predictable ubiquity of glass. For 2011, however, the fair has gotten considerably hipper. Now found at the 14th edition of SOFA are items as enticing and relevant as what you might see downtown. You could even call it "Chelsea North." With its video lounge
The measure of a translation has been its fidelity to an original, traditionally conceived as absolute and immovable. Jerusalem-born, Berlin-based video artist Omer Fast, whose 2005 video Godville is included in the 11-artist exhibition “Found in Translation” at the Guggenheim Museum, is known for his affecting short films that breathe new life into the familiar Postmodernist notion that the concr
DEMONSTRATIONS DEMAND AI WEIWEI FREEDOM Demonstrators around the world gathered peacefully in front of Chinese consulates and embassies to demand the release of Chinese activist artist Ai Weiwei, 53, has been held incommunicado by Chinese government authorities since his arrest on trumped-up charges on Apr. 3, 2011. Adding a new wrinkle to the notion of a “sit-down protest,” many participants brou
When the Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles opened its “Art in the Streets” exhibition, one graffiti artist -- New York’s own LA II, aka Angel Ortiz, who collaborated with Keith Haring -- received his invite to the VIP opening while he was sitting in a cell at Rikers Island, New York’s city jail, where he faces a felony charge. According to Heidi Follin, whose Follin Gallery represents the art
It must be remembered that the detention of Ai Weiwei is but part of a multipronged strategy by the Chinese Communist Party to stifle and kill dissent of all kinds in China. At the moment, for example, Chinese troops are forcibly removing all monks between the ages of 18 and 40 from the Kirti monastery in eastern Tibet, all 7 of the courageous Chinese human rights attorneys in Beijing have been mi
Most feminist artists from the 1970s have been trapped in a kind of time capsule by the art world, one which preserves their past successes and ignores their more recent endeavors. So kudos to Chelsea art dealer Alexander Gray for featuring the latest paintings by veteran artist Joan Semmel (b. 1932), a pioneer of feminist figuration. This show reveals that Semmel has still got it. Her most recent
The New York Daily News, an otherwise liberal newspaper, offered the following lead editorial on Easter Sunday, entitled "Shameful Display," reading in part, "They're having wine and cheese parties surrounded by framed images of urban blight at Los Angeles' Geffen Contemporary Museum," and then, referring to the graffiti show's move to the Brooklyn Museum next March, "We'll make a deal with Brookl
Berlin's art scene has figured out how to do away with the art fair and have an art fair, too. It's called Gallery Weekend Berlin (GWB), Apr. 29-May 1, 2011, and now, in its seventh edition, represents 44 galleries in neighbourhoods across the German capital. Though spread far and wide, Berlin's highly developed transit system, not to say widespread use of bicycles, makes the city tour not altoget
Scary severed heads and cannibal dancers by Kara Walker glared down at the benefit party for Participant Inc., the ten-year-old, super-hip Lower East Side alternative space overseen by the bohemian Lia Gangitano, held at Sikkema, Jenkins & Co.’s white gallery space over in Chelsea on Monday, Apr. 24, 2011. How hip is Participant? So hip that 19 of our younger power galleries, including 303, James
Sarah Jessica Parker and Liv Tyler host the Brooklyn Museum annual bash on Apr. 27, 2011. Photos by Eric Weiss.
"Picasso and Marie-Thérèse: L'Amour fou," the rapturous, vagino-maniacal show of more than 80 Pablo Picasso works at Gagosian, is a love story. It tells a tale of a devouring monster, a goddess and doormat, frenzied sex, and abject cruelty. The woman of the show’s title is Marie-Thérèse Walter, called “the greatest sexual passion of Picasso’s life,” “endlessly submissive and willing,” the sumptuo
All you have to know about Francis Alÿs is to meet him, which I did at the opening of his retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art last Tuesday evening. At 51, Alÿs, a Belgian who lives in Mexico City, looks like James Taylor, with an impressive aquiline nose, long hair, sweat pants and the skinny body of a 30-year-old long-distance runner. Curators who adore his look, out of Peter Matthiessen by
The appointment of James Cuno to the presidency of the Getty at age 60 is many things. It is a rubber stamp to the role of public intellectual for a man whose media presence is silky smooth and who, in the public eye, has always liked to have it both ways, as interpreter of globalization and champion of the American heartland, opponent of cultural patrimony and quick deaccessioner, builder of the
I walked into the Jasper Johns exhibition at Matthew Marks last week with Ashley Bickerton, and Ashley immediately began to touch and feel the heavy metal sculptures, Johns’ classic number sequences, done by the artist in wax and cast in copper, silver and aluminum. At one point, Ashley even rubbed his cheek against one like a cat. Poised between our visit to Ashley’s own show at Lehmann Maupin, w
It’s true. The world's coolest contemporary art fair is coming to New York. London's Frieze Art Fair has finally confirmed the years-old rumor that it is expanding to the Big Apple. Organizers say the New York iteration will be the same size as London’s -- with around 170 galleries participating -- and take place on Randall’s Island in about one year, May 3-6, 2012, in time for the spring contempo
“Installation pieces are problematic,” said veteran Chelsea art dealer Renato Danese, an understatement if there ever was one. He was talking about the kind of 3D artworks that sprawl throughout the gallery space, and may well be site-specific. They are also problematic for another reason -- they can be hard to sell. “It’s almost impossible to sell a whole installation,” said Vanessa Rubinick, man
May 31, 2011 Chicago celebrated two fairs recently, but the real action is in the art schools. Herewith, photos from the graduate exhibitions of three Master of Fine Arts programs: The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, which took place at Co-Prosperity Sphere; the Center for Book & Paper Arts at Columbia College’s Thesis Exhibition; and the School of the Art Institute’s MFA Show at the S
I spent 25 years as a campaign drone for various Democrats, including three working for Gary Hart, so, nostalgically, I sit in the woods pondering various questions such as "why didn’t Hillary Clinton leave Bill during the Lewinsky affair?" (hint: she got her own intern, whose name you know) and "why didn’t Barack Obama have any girlfriends before he married Michelle?" Political scandal is a bodyg
The BMW Guggenheim Lab on Houston St. and 2nd Avenue GUGGENHEIM GOES DOWNMARKET FOR ITS BMW-SPONSORED “LAB” The popup BMW Guggenheim Lab opening today on Houston and 2nd Avenue in the East Village is a departure from the Guggenheim Museum’s usually glamorous global expansion efforts. Instead of a starchitect-fronted building in an upscale cultural district, this traveling think tank and community
On Saturday night, July 30, 2011, the Watermill Center in the Hamptons threw its annual fundraiser to support its laboratory of international performance art. It's a high-season Hamptons event where the most compensated gather in fine plumage to pass coinage to the least compensated, which would be performance artists from the contemporary art world. This year the annual event overlapped with Wate
Can color make you cool? One way to find out would be to view the icy-blue porcelain dinnerware, the all-white Moon Jars and the refreshingly glossy pale-green vessels in the exhibition “Pure Clay,” currently on view at RH Gallery on Duane Street in Tribeca. “Pure Clay” consists of ceramics by the Korean-born artists Young-Sook Park and Lee Ufan. You may have already seen Ufan’s paintings and stee
With all the complaints about Standard & Poor’s these days, let’s not drag Henry Varnum Poor into it. That would be the artist Henry Varnum Poor (1888-1970), painter of landscapes, portraits and still-lifes, as well as an accomplished self-taught ceramicist. He had nothing to do with Wall Street, save that he was grandnephew of money-man Henry Varnum Poor (1812-1905), the financial analyst and fou
Earlier this week, China’s Jing Daily reported that many of the country’s investors see art collecting as one of the last safe investment options amid increasing national inflation and global debt crises. This argument is supported by recent Christie’s and Sotheby’s half-year reports that the exploding Asian market is responsible for significant growth in the two firms’ sales totals. Christie’s As
Hot air spreads through Manhattan like a cloud of dust as the 10th anniversary of 9/11 approaches, with maudlin sincerity crowding out any mention of 9/11 politics, economics or its negligible effect on U.S. trash culture. Our Artnet Worldwide offices in Lower Manhattan are but steps away from the awful Freedom Tower, architect David Childs' armored and truncated obelisk that promises to be a mass
It’s Fashion Week, the opening of the fall art season, and there are hundreds of parties. So how does an art opening compete -- especially one for a reclusive middle-aged artist who all but disappeared in the 1990s? It’s possible if the curators are banking heir Andy Valmorbida and Vladimir Restoin-Roitfeld, son of former French Vogue editor Carine Roitfeld, who cashed in on their vast celebrity c
ASCO, ED KIENHOLZ AND MARIA NORDMAN IN "PACIFIC STANDARD TIME" It is not yet the end of daylight savings time but it certainly is the beginning of Pacific Standard Time, the Getty-funded initiative behind dozens of museums and gallery exhibitions focused on art made in Los Angeles after 1945. Along with three art fairs and countless performances, lectures, panels and so forth, it opens officially
People have several misconceptions about the artist and filmmaker Eve Sussman. She is not British, although she travelled extensively during her childhood, and is now based out of a studio apartment facing the East River in the heart of Hasidic Williamsburg; her art is not exclusively about Art History, although her best-known productions happen to be; and her career did not begin in 2004, when he
Appropriation artist Richard Prince has won the latest round in his copyright battle with photojournalist Patrick Cariou. Three judges for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit rejected Cariou’s motion to dismiss Prince’s right to an appeal yesterday, writing that “there remains ‘a continuing controversy capable of redress by this Court.’” Prince’s lawyer, Josh Schiller of Boies, Schill
Luxe may have “lost its luster,” as a recent book of pop sociology had it, but you could never tell from the London Design Festival, Sept. 17-25, 2011. Now in its ninth year, the fest brings 280 partners and almost 300 design events across 25 design disciplines to Britain’s capital. Featuring special exhibitions and lectures for the third year at the Victoria and Albert Museum, with ancillary even
I hadn't been out to Williamsburg since 1998, when the great feminist artist Cindy Tower, who lived out there on Lorimer Street, dumped me, so when I heard that my Artnet Magazine colleague and newfound pal Tony Fitzpatrick was showing at Pierogi on North 9th Street, I hopped the L train for the big return. No sooner had I arrived than Pierogi czar Joe Amrheim whisked me in his car over to the Boi
Last week started off with a bang at the Museum of Modern Art press preview for "De Kooning: A Retrospective," when New Republic art critic Jed Perl blew his top at the press officer who didn't have a complimentary copy of the catalogue for him. "I'm one of a handful of critics writing for a national magazine, and I must have that catalogue immediately," he said, in a surprising display of temper.
Last Thursday evening, Norwegian artist Ida Eklbad (b. 1980) stood out from the crowd gathered at Greene Naftali Gallery on 26th Street for the opening of her new exhibition. Understated and elegant in a slate-gray velvet dress that clung to her very-pregnant belly, her blonde hair pulled back to reveal a high forehead, she chatted with visitors who swarmed around her, ducking into the gallery’s b
Started as a late-night art party in Paris in 2001, the Nuit Blanche (“White Night”) festival has since spread to cities around the world, with local celebrations from Bucharest to Tokyo offering free, site-specific evenings of light, sound, performance and projection-art every year. Tomorrow, Oct. 1, 2011, works from 30 international artists are on view from 6 pm to 12 midnight along the Greenpoi
Rembrandt’s portrait of Saskia in profile, exalted by a curvaceous broad-rimmed red hat, is but one of hundreds of great art works from the past in which women (and men) are depicted wearing a hat, or some sort of head covering. The hat has such a pervasive presence in art that it often passes unnoticed, unless it forces our attention by its incongruous presence. Think of the strange wreathed hat
J. Paul Getty Museum Oct. 1, 2011-Feb. 5, 2012 The nominal lead exhibition of Southern California’s Getty-funded historical art fest (involving some 60 institutions) gives an overview of Southern California’s postwar art scene via 79 objects by more than 45 artists who were based in Los Angeles between 1950-70, including Larry Bell, Vija Celmins and Richard Diebenkorn Curators: Andrew Perchuk, Ran
So, the Getty Museum hosted the gala kick-off for "Pacific Standard Time: Crosscurrents in L.A.: Painting and Sculpture from 1950 to 1970" last night, Oct. 3, 2011. Must have been over 1,000 people crowded onto the Getty plaza. Felt like it, anyway. Everyone was told to be there by 7:30 pm for the "reveal," which turned out to be a pretty spectacular laser light show on the cultural history of Los
Are you ready for some football? No? How about the 2011 Whitney Gala and Studio Party, Oct. 6, 2011, at Pier 57 in Manhattan. Say one thing for Whitney Museum director Adam Weinberg, with a $220 million left to raise in the capital campaign for the museum's under-construction Meatpacking District facility, he gets kudos for luring sponsorship from the likes of JP Morgan Chase, Ritz Carlton Rewards
As the tents go up in London’s Regent’s Park, thousands of art enthusiasts -- and the millionaire collectors who actually come to buy -- are streaming into the city for the Frieze Art Fair, Oct. 13-16, 2011, and for the hundreds of fringe exhibitions, fairs and parties that go along with it. The feeding frenzy has slowed, of course, since the economic downturn in 2008, but while the fair stopped r
For women especially, as much as we may fight the truth, the passage of time has toxic side effects -- imposing aging’s feared, inevitable entropy in a society that hides from death and worships anorexic female beauty along with the flawless attributes of youth. Martha Wilson confronts our fears head on in her show currently on view at PPOW, a tough, clever, uncompromising take on changing persona
At the opening of “Three Trips Around the Block,” a scorching 15-year survey of work by Rico Gatson at Exit Art, people were lining up to stick their heads through the bottom of a box hanging from the ceiling. Titled Two Heads in a Box (1994), this confrontational video installation is the show’s earliest work. Imprisoned behind three bars inside its black interior is a movie that features Gatson’
Pacific Standard Time (PST), the Getty-funded initiative that's revitalizing the forgotten cultural beginnings of Southern California, reigns this month in the museums and galleries around Los Angeles. The PST focus on the area’s post-war cultural history has inspired a number of galleries to dig into their inventory to present some very intriguing, even surprising exhibitions. The Box, an unassum
In 1977 at only 31 years of age, the artist Donald Evans burned to death in a house where he was living in Amsterdam. An intensely private man, the New Jersey-born artist had obsessively created exquisitely drawn and colored stamps for a virtual universe of countries he invented. Now on view at Tibor de Nagy Gallery, his work is magical, poetic and unique. Evans was always a kind of a cult figure.
The centerpiece of Pepón Osorio's first solo New York gallery exhibition since 2005, at Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, is a rotating double environment called Drowned in a Glass of Water (2010). Now, Osorio, a pioneer installation artist, may be a MacArthur Foundation fellow, a multiple Whitney Biennialist and the veteran of a brilliant solo show at El Museo del Barrio, which featured his seminal recre
In March 2011, the Leila Heller Gallery in New York City held an exhibition of 38-year-old artist Shirin Fakhim’s provocative found-object sculptures of Tehran streetwalkers, her first solo show in Manhattan. A number of works were sold, for around $10,000 apiece. But Fakhim lives in Iran, which has been targeted with a range of economic sanctions by the U.S. and other countries around the world.
1. The Clock, Christian Marclay Imagine Darren Aronofsky onstage at the Academy Awards next February, announcing, “And the winner for Best Picture is . . . Christian Marclay’s The Clock.” Movie stars would be dumbstruck; the art world would cheer. Marclay’s film, painstakingly assembled out of time-specific clips from classic movies, was a 24-hour odyssey of chronology. 2. The Chauvet Cave Paintin
Are we ready for a new design fair in Manhattan? NYC20 -- otherwise known as the New York 20th Century Art and Design Fair, April 12-25, 2012 -- is pitching its tent in Damrosch Park at Lincoln Center, home to the Big Apple Circus. There, fair organizer Dolphin Promotions is partnering with online venture 1st Dibs. A total of 40 dealers are participating, with the preview party benefiting the Bard
Damien Hirst is the Elvis of the English art world, its ayatollah, deliverer and big-thinking entrepreneurial potty-mouthed prophet and front man. Hirst synthesizes punk, Pop Art, Jeff Koons, Marcel Duchamp, Francis Bacon and Catholicism. He’s the working-class hero who as a 23-year-old art student at the University of London’s Goldsmiths college organized “Freeze,” an exhibition of his artwork a
"We got scissors?" asked Metropolitan Museum PR veep (and Abraham Lincoln scholar) Harold Holzer, as he scrambled to set up the mass ribbon cutting that would launch the Met's "New American Wing Galleries for Paintings, Sculpture and Decorative Arts," to use the official appellation, on the morning of Jan.12, 2012. More than 20 trustees, museum staff, politicians and patrons -- including museum di
It has become easy to think of the American political parties as two mammoth and unending chain gangs, with most Americans belonging to one or the other and blindly cheerleading for its respective brand of mediocrity. I watched the Republican debates the other night and thought the American body politic could be done a great service if someone would roll a grenade or two into the green room about
Veteran curator and Vanessa Beecroft collector Simon Cerigo and I were cruising down 11th Avenue, between openings, last Friday night. "Look at all the black boxes," I marveled, gazing at the Chelsea glass box buildings, finally completed last spring, and all the same design (glass and more glass), because that kind of New York building usually doesn't need any city clearances to get made. "They b
The ancient Turkic land of Azerbaijan might not be first on the places-to-visit list of many art collectors, but that isn't stopping Phillips de Pury & Company. "Fly to Baku: Contemporary Art from Azerbaijan," a special selling exhibition, opens at the firm's Howick Place galleries in London on Jan. 17-29, 2012. The show features works by 21 artists selected by Hervé Mikaeloff, an independent art
Move over Zaha Hadid and Ron Arad -- London architect/designer Thomas Heatherwick, a new Brit import, is about to cement his position in the pantheon of design on these shores. His work has been relatively unknown in the U.S. up until now, but this week the Chelsea branch of Haunch of Venison unveils his latest output in its exhibition, “Extruding and Spinning,” on view through March 3, 2012. Heat
Art Los Angeles Contemporary, now in its third year, brought 70 galleries to the 40,000-square-foot Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, Jan. 19-22, 2012. Overseen by fair organizer Tim Fleming along with a host committee including Neil Patrick Harris and supercollector Eugenio Lopez, the fair welcomed an impressive range of exhibitors. Out-of-towners include Altman Siegel (San Francisco), Marta Cervera
All the good ones die, or get murdered. Jesus -- Murdered. Martin Luther King -- Murdered. John F. Kennedy -- Murdered. John Lennon -- Murdered. Malcom X -- Murdered. Ronald Reagan? Wounded. The great Etta James has died. Her baby face and angel's voice are gone. The sun came up, the mail got delivered and life goes on -- but the world is at least one shade more gray. If her soaring, soulful rende
The Cariou v. Prince copyright saga has been going on for three years now, but at least the lawyers are keeping it interesting. In a brief filed today with the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, lawyers for French photographer Patrick Cariou sketched a David-and-Goliath-style rebuttal against appropriation artist Richard Prince and Gagosian Gallery. The brief is Cariou’s respon
More than any other fair, the 58th annual Winter Antiques Show, Jan. 20-29, 2012, is a barometer of taste. With 73 dealers elegantly installed at the Park Avenue Armory, the show covers all periods, with an especially strong selection of Americana. What’s especially notable this year is the early colonial art and artifacts, with a lock of President George Washington’s hair, collected shortly after
The leaders of London's Frieze Art Fair have a reputation for being controlling, intimidating and disciplined (hence, successful), so it was no surprise when I walked into St. Mark's Bookstore (now restocking its inventory for the first time since Cooper Union tried to shut it down last winter) in the East Village last week and found a stack of Frieze Art Fair pamphlets inside the door, advertisin
Congratulations to curator Arthur K. Wheelock, Jr., of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., for the museum's purchase of a beautiful Portrait of a gentleman in a brown doublet and ruff by the 17th-century Dutch master Thomas de Keyser at Christie’s New York sale of Old Master paintings on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012. Bidding via the phone, the Gallery outdid formidable competition from Lo
For many on the German art scene, Bernhard Martin (b. 1966) has always been the man who played “painter prince,” complete with rings, Rolex and gold tooth, not to mention a studio loft in Berlin and a mansion in the country. A brilliant outsider who rode the nostalgic wave of New German Painting, Martin started studying at the Kasseler Kunstakademie at the age of 16 and swapped artwork for onion s
The Druids, a class of priests who lived in the Iron Age, communicated via an alphabet that consisted entirely of drawings of tree branches, with each letter or sound accorded an arboreal species and drawn to graphically resemble it. For instance, the “B” sound was “beith,” which means “birch tree” in modern English, and the letter comprised a drawing of a birch branch, while “ea” was an aspen tre
In addition to it being the Jackson Pollock Centennial and quarter-centennial observance of the Andy Warhol demise, it is also the centennial of John Cage's birth (his dates are Sept. 5, 1912-Aug. 12, 1992). This is what happens when we wander too far afield into a new millennium: anniversaries tend to pop up like fly-by-night Bowery gallery spaces. So what are we to make of Cage? Ten years ago I
Philadelphia Museum of Art Feb. 1-May 6, 2012 Presenting over 70 works that explore a presumably "modernist" interest in “close-ups,” including 45 of Van Gogh’s own paintings made between 1886 and his suicide in 1890, and 30 comparative works such as Japanese woodblock prints, drawings by Jean Corot and Camille Pissarro, and photographs by Frederick Evans, August Kotzsch and others Curators: Josep
Just what is an antiquary? A clue is provided by an 1812 colored engraving by George Cruikshank, which shows a crowded meeting of the London Society of Antiquaries in comic disarray, the unheeded chairman waving his arms about and brandishing a paper that may well be marked with a Regency-era version of “kiss my ass.” Various members nap or avidly compare notes, and one of them examines a pseudo-c
Dorothea Tanning died on Jan. 31, 2012, at the age of 101, and pieces of history died with her. Artist, poet, wife of Max Ernst from 1946 until he died in 1976, and (along with Frida Kahlo, Leonora Carrington, Kay Sage, Lee Miller, Maya Deren, Remedios Varo and Leonor Fini) one of a group of great women Surrealists, she was at the center of a movement that was a vicious mill for women. Among the s
Terri Griffith, Kathryn Born, Janet Koplos, eds., The Essential New Art Examiner, Northern Illinois University Press, 2011, 336 pages, $22.50. “The New Art Examiner was Chicago’s only successful art publication,” Kathryn Born writes in the foreword to The Essential New Art Examiner (Northern Illinois University Press, 2011). “It had a 29-year run, starting in 1973 and ending in 2002, and since its
The Chronicle of Philanthropy released its annual list of the top 50 donors in America today, 12 of which are big players in the arts. The 50 philanthropists gave a total of $10.4 billion last year, with cultural institutions getting a total of more than $213 million from the 12 arts patrons. “Caveat Emptor” should be your slogan when it comes to buying artworks by contemporary artists on the “sec
The furniture of the Italian pioneering designer Joe Colombo (1930-1971) wasn’t always held in high regard in this country. “Back in the ‘60s, people would put his designs on the back porch and then toss them, because they were plastic,” says Zesty Myers of the Tribeca-based R20th Century. Now, Myers is working to change that perception with the important if short-run “Homage to Joe Colombo,” Feb.
“They’re like leaves from Kiki’s own Book of Hours,” said the bi-continental curator and art dealer Simon Watson after previewing, via the tiny screen on my digital camera, Kiki Smith’s new show at the Neuberger Museum. “And the color,” he added. “She’s taken her work to a whole new level.” Simon was talking about three large (ca. 9 x 6 ft.) Jacquard tapestries, titled Earth, Underworld and Sky, w
What a difference two years can make! Back in 2010 I concluded my Artnet report on the Bologna art fair, officially called “Art First” but referred to by everyone in Italy as “Arte Fiera,” with optimism. “Arte Fiera di Bologna is doing well,” I wrote. “Clearly, it will continue to dominate in Italy. It wants to be more international.” Now, with the European economy in a protracted slump, any plans
Alexander and Bonin 132 Tenth Ave. Jan. 28-Mar. 10, 2012 Willie Doherty (b. 1959) has been taking evocative photos of the battle-scarred terrain of Northern Ireland since the 1980s. Large 4 x 6 ft. black-and-white photographs of un-peopled suburbs, railroad tracks and alleyways, captioned with one or two words of text -- “undercover” or “unseen” -- poise on the threshold of meaning. A critique of
You enter Klara Lidén’s portentous cemetery of trees and wintry imminence through a small door in a police-barricade-blue plywood wall. Immediately inside, you’re confronted with the startling sight of a space filled with discarded Christmas trees, all scooped up from the sidewalks of New York by Lidén and her cohorts. A disruption of the senses comes, thoughts of the Brothers Grimm, the forebodin
Back in 1984, the pioneering curatorial team of Collins & Milazzo -- Tricia Collins and Richard Milazzo, who were also critics as well as dealers, consultants and, perhaps most importantly, friends and boosters of artists -- organized a group exhibition for White Columns, one of a series of shows they did that helped define the polymorphous postmodernism of the era. The show was titled “The New Ca
Today, February 15th, is the birthday of Lord Buddha, or Sakyamuni as the Japanese know him. It seems an auspicious moment, then, to review the new Takashi Murakami retrospective at Al Riwaq, a 5,000-square-meter exhibition space in Doha, Qatar. Murakami himself greets visitors to this show of 70 works, 15 of them new. That is to say, a giant inflatable Murakami self-portrait, posing as Daibutsu,
In The Season, his classic study of showbiz, screenwriter William Goldman relates a tale which takes place at the Museum of Modern Art in the mid 1950s. MoMA's film department had prepared a reel of highlights from Marlene Dietrich's films (chasing Gary Cooper across the desert in heels, flashing a chubby thigh while warbling in The Blue Angel) as a fundraising tool and decided to debut it, for th
Art Los Angeles Contemporary 2012 GO WEST, YOUNG ART FAIR “People like you need to fuck people like me,” reads a scarlet neon sign by Tracey Emin, brightening the pool house of mega-collector Eugenio López, who was nowhere to be found during the kick-off party for the third edition of Art Los Angeles Contemporary (ALAC), Jan. 19-22, 2012, which was installed at the Barker Hangar at the Santa Monic
For half a century, the artist Ellsworth Kelly (b. 1923) has been acclaimed for his clean, clear forms of specific and brilliant color. His precise and confident approach is best known in paintings, but can be seen as well in his drawings, sculptures and, it turns out, in his prints. Despite its title, the exhibition “Ellsworth Kelly: Prints and Paintings,” on view at the Los Angeles County Museum
Every once in a while a book comes along that cuts through all the sugar-coating and gets right down to the chewy chocolate center of things. Such is Reverend Jen's Elf Girl, the rollicking memoir of the sweet Lower East Side life of the self-described “sex symbol for the insane.” Our good Rev, whose sparkly charm is only amplified by the elf ears she wears, the tiny Chihuahua that accompanies her
Whitney Biennial A VERY SHORT HISTORY OF THE WHITNEY BIENNIAL Now that Occupy Wall Street has officially called for the Whitney Museum to cancel its next biennial in 2014 (you know, OWS, I have enough trouble dealing with 2012, but that's just me), one must ask, "Is such a request necessary?", for, via its redundancy and frequency, the Whitney Biennial long ago cancelled itself. Gaping back down m
When the Pace Gallery opened its “Happenings” exhibition earlier this month, the crowd packing the 25th Street gallery space entered a time machine. Industrial tin walls packed chockablock with photographs and artifacts transported viewers back to the Reuben Gallery in the East Village, where Allan Kaprow staged his seminal 18 Happenings in 6 Parts in 1959. Plenty of the artists who participated i
Performance artist Kalup Linzy (b. 1977) is a sweet, quiet Southern boy, though the midriff-baring, drag-dressing, sassy-tongued personas he adopts in his videos might lead you to believe otherwise. Speaking with Artnet Magazine on the campus of the Savannah College of Art and Design last week, where he was participating in the school’s annual art showcase (titled “defINE ART,” Feb. 21-25, 2012),
“The Ungovernables,” the New Museum's building-filling triennial of artists born between 1973 and 1984, really ought to have been called “The Explanations.” It’s loaded with art that you need to read about so you can even grasp what it thinks it's dealing with. Nearly every artist’s work is joined by dense wall text full of buzzwords like "interstitial spaces" or syllogistic, nearly generic statem
The American Dream is that of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for every man, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement. It is a difficult dream for the European upper classes to interpret adequately, also too many of ourselves have grown weary and mistrustful of it. It is not a dream of motor cars and high wages merely, but a dream of a social order
Albert Camus famously claimed that “A guilty conscience needs to confess. A work of art is a confession.” Spearing that sentiment into the heart of an exhibition’s thesis can be ostentatious and dangerously philosophical. But artist-curator Elsa Meléndez has pulled it off, somewhat, in “Vívidos / Vividos,” Dec. 29-Mar. 23, 2012, a group show about brutal personal truths at the Museo de Arte de Cag
I bought a painting on aluminum by Melissa Brown from Kravets/Wehby Gallery in 2004, because I liked it. The purchase depicted the ermine from Leonardo's Lady with Ermine (also "covered" by Elizabeth Peyton, by the way), pictured against a backdrop of bombs dropping on Baghdad during the first Gulf War. I had no idea what the hell it meant and, for years, when I showed this painting to visitors, I
In the early years of the 20th century, Leo Stein, his younger sister Gertrude, his older brother Michael and his sister-in-law Sarah, recently arrived in Paris from the United States, cornered the market of contemporary art by Pablo Picasso, and to a lesser extent by Henri Matisse. Incredible though it may be, the history of Cubism was written on the walls of Leo and Gertrude’s rue de Fleurus stu
“This feels like a fair for kids,” a middle-aged, blue-haired woman whispered to her mate as they perused the airy aisles of SCOPE New York, Mar. 7-11, 2012. “The grown-up stuff is across the street!” Indeed, the 11th edition of SCOPE, which has set up shop in a white tent along the Hudson River two blocks north of the gargantuan Armory Show, is full of bold colors, bizarre materials and kitschy d
An uncaptioned illustration from the TEFAF global art market report, photo by Loraine Bodewes How big is the global art market? A new report from The European Fine Art Foundation (TEFAF), released in conjunction with the current TEFAF Maastricht art fair, Mar. 16-25, 2012, sets the total size of the global art market at €46.1 billion, or about $60.8 billion (€1 = $1.32) for 2011. According to econ
Was Andy Warhol the first guy to think of photocopying body parts? In 1969 the artist was at the School of Visual Arts supply store when he saw the new Photostat machine, a copier that made Xerox-like replicas but printed them as silver gelatin photographs. The store’s owner, Donald Havenick, said he tried to warn Warhol and his companion, Bridget Berlin, that the bulbs burned hot. But that didn’t
Art is for anyone. It just isn't for everyone. Still, over the past decade, its audience has hugely grown, and that's irked those outside the art world, who get irritated at things like incomprehensibility or money. That's when easy hit jobs on art's bad values appear in mainstream media. A harmless garden-variety example aired last night on CBS's 60 Minutes (I didn't know it was on anymore), as M
Greene Naftali 508 West 26th Street, 8th floor Mar. 29-Apr. 28, 2012 A member of the generation of New York artists that includes Christopher Wool and Charlene von Heyl, Jacqueline Humphries (b. 1959) is known for large-scale, conceptualist abstractions that have visceral appeal. Of late she has been using brushy expanses of silver paint, producing works that combine the furious energy of expressi
Bill Powers, What We Lose in Flowers, 2012, New York, 66 pp., $20. We know Bill Powers, the Half Gallery proprietor and "Work of Art" judge, and his wife Cynthia Rowley, the adventurous fashion designer and sometime visual artist. Bill has also been an editor, and now he has written a new paperback book, What We Lose in Flowers. A short story, really, it is distinguished by its title, which rhymes
Nancy Spector at the launch of the Guggenheim UBS Map Global Art Initiative The Guggenheim Museum is apparently tired of its dusty, Western-centric legacy. At a press conference today, Apr. 12, 2012, the museum announced that it had partnered with the UBS to launch a five-year series of exhibitions, acquisitions and educational programming called the Guggenheim UBS MAP Global Art Initiative. “We a
“The Dawn of Egyptian Art” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Apr. 10-Aug. 5, 2012, explores Egyptian civilization before the pharaohs and the codification of hieroglyphics, when this developing culture was experimenting with ways of governing, rituals and iconography. This stunning show whips up a sense of the mysterious in presenting objects -- figurines, pottery, ivory and stone carvings -- tha
Art dealer David Kordansky and Rashid Johnson with Houses in Motion, a work of branded redwood flooring from the collection of Rosa de la Cruz Jet setters and art-world heavyweights, not monsters or black cats, showed up for the opening of “Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks,” Apr. 14-Aug. 5, 2012, organized by Julie Rodrigues Widholm at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago on Friday the 13th,
Artnet Design GALLERIES GET BIG IN HOUSTON, NYC & PHILADELPHIA Down in Texas, the Sicardi Gallery is setting up a new two-story space just across from the Menil Collection and the Houston Center for Photography. Designed by local architect Fernando Brave, the 5,800-square-foot facility boasts 16-foot-high ceilings and a 12 x 12 foot projection window for outdoor videos. “After 17 years in business
Christopher Wool’s decorously aggressive exhibition at the Musée d’Art Moderne de La Ville de Paris spreads out across a curved main-floor gallery that’s been divided into three sections. Comprised mostly of large white canvases covered with silkscreened marks, the paintings are distanced reproductions of sprawling painterly gestures recycled and recombined in a variety of sizes and layers. Now in
The material medium is sort of the unconscious of the consciously conceived image, informing even the most refined art with its raw properties, and no medium is more unconsciously significant than clay, for it bespeaks the earth that we unconsciously take for granted, the earth to which we are unconsciously attached, the mothering earth from which we are born and to which we will return when we di
Ham comes from pigs, acorns come from oaks and the New York-based British artist Paul Etienne Lincoln could be found, on April Fool’s Day, at Duane Park in Tribeca. The popular cabaret-restaurant, which Lincoln designed in 2008 for general manager Marisa Ferrarin, was the site for the U.S. debut of Lincoln’s latest mechanical folly. Titled Bad Bentheim Schwein (2008-2011), it is a singing pig made
The forensic art authenticator Peter Paul Biro has turned up DNA samples on worn Jackson Pollocks and traced fingerprints on 200-year-old J.M.W. Turner paintings. But now that he’s become better known as the bitter subject of a 16,000-word New Yorker exposé, he seems determined to squeeze blood from paper. Last year, Biro and his attorney, Richard Altman, launched a $2 million libel lawsuit agains
Visitors to the Gudjon Ketilsson exhibition, "Extensions of the Head," at Luise Ross Gallery on West 25th Street in Chelsea are likely to stop dead in their tracks at the sight of a gargantuan -- well, one meter long -- cord of braided, knotty hair hanging inside the door. Size does matter, and it would be a brawny lad indeed who would sport this rattail. Carved from mahogany and varnished, The Br
Most art fairs are the handiwork of dealers or trade associations. The Dallas Art Fair, Apr. 12-15, 2012, is different. An artist is behind it -- the graphic novelist Chris Byrne, who partnered with Dallas real estate developer John Sughrue four years ago to get the fair up and running. Byrne selected the 78 galleries in the fair’s 2012 edition with New York dealers Chris D’Amelio and Zach Feuer.
Barnes Foundation MEET THE NEW BARNES: SAME AS THE OLD BARNES -- ONLY BETTER After a half-century of misguided intentions, a will interpreted every which way, deteriorating infrastructure, neighbors wanting it gone then wanting it back again, and outrage over the thought that art should ever be viewed under any rules but its owner’s, one of the greatest and Frenchest and most oddly displayed colle
It seems the Bruce High Quality Foundation gave up its scrappy, anti-establishment stance when it took part in the 2010 Whitney Biennial. The New York City Police Department held fast to its “see something, say something” mantra last weekend after Brooklyn residents reported LED-lit “I Love New York” bags hanging from trees, all connected by wires to a suspicious looking power box.
Supersized sculptures and installations by Studio Job, Ettore Sottsass and other major league designers are among the wonders in the new Fondazione Bisazza, a museum dedicated to design and contemporary architecture that is set to open in Vicenza, Italy, a town best known for Palladio’s iconic villas, on June 8, 2012. This new nonprofit is monumental in scale, encompassing over 65,000 square feet,
Art Market Watch SPEED! MONEY AND THE GLOBAL ART MARKET Speed is a synonym for velocity and the slang term for amphetamine, a drug creating an ecstatic illusion of rapidity and efficacy. Money, which plays an increasingly important role in the dynamics of the global art market, has a similar effect. Money dynamizes and accelerates the art market -- not just temporarily but structurally. What are t
In 1996, Christopher D’Amelio and Lucien Terras left their jobs at Paula Cooper Gallery to open their own space -- in a small storefront in desolate West Chelsea, and with just four artists. But over the next 15 years, the partnership matured into the respected D’Amelio Terras Gallery, which went on to represent Polly Apfelbaum, Nicole Cherubini and Robert Moskowitz, as well as Tony Feher, who was
This summer, Los Angeles gets its first biennial, “Made in L.A. 2012: New Art Now,” June 2-Sept. 2, 2012, featuring works by 60 artists spread between three institutions, the Hammer Museum in Westwood, LAX Art in Culver City and the Municipal Art Gallery at Barnsdall Park in Hollywood. The show is also laying claims to some billboards, has a presence at Venice Beach, and is accompanied by an iPhon
OVERVIEW Jupiter moves from Taurus (having been in that sign for approximately a year), into Gemini on the 11th. Jupiter visits each sign once every 12 years and spends approximately 12 months travelling through it. Wherever Jupiter is, is where he tends to spread his benevolence, or at least protection. The job of Jupiter astronomically is to deflect asteroids from Earth’s orbit, and indeed metap
After reading the recent prediction by Charlie Finch, “Will the Art Market Crash?” I had one thought: Ahh. . . the doomsday that I have been eagerly awaiting. My opinion on the art market, as an individual observer and as an art collector, should matter very little. I am hardly an economist, and I take a very narrow, focused view of the transactions in this market. I look at many things, but I onl
When the Metropolitan Museum says that it’s “encyclopedic,” it ain’t kidding. At its semi-annual “press lunch” on Monday, museum director Thomas Campbell outlined a fall schedule that ranges from Andy Warhol to Gian Lorenzo Bernini, with stops at George Bellows and Henri Matisse also on the docket. Here, a quick rundown of what looks to be an impressive fall and winter season at the museum. * Chin
One might wonder why on earth Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, the curator of Documenta (13) in Kassel, Germany, June 9-Sept. 16, 2012, would choose to hold two years of art lectures and workshops in the war-torn country of Afghanistan. The Afghan Seminars, as they are called, took place between 2010 and 2012 in collaboration with the Goethe-Institut Afghanistan, the Afghanistan Center at Kabul Univers
“Aww, colors are pretty! I like green and the red is vibrant,” said a man as he contemplated the intersection of State and Adams in Downtown Chicago. On the corner, the blood red sign of the Bank of America pulsated brighter than ever against the lime green building façade, newly colored, like the rest of the immediate area, courtesy Jessica Stockholder’s public art installation, Color Jam. Stockh
Art Market Watch SPRING ANTIQUITIES AT SOTHEBY’S AND CHRISTIE’S NEW YORK The eurocrisis provided defenders of the encyclopedic museum with an argument this month, as “austerity measures” in Greece prompted ever-deeper cuts in cultural spending, particularly in archeology, endangering objects and sites, and bringing scholarship to a halt. Keep those treasures safely in the museums, wherever they ar
The Art Basel art fair is facing an increasingly "Asian-ized" future, according to predictions from both art dealers and fair staff at the 43rd annual fair, June 14-17, 2012. The forecast follows logically enough from the dramatic growth of the Chinese sector of the art market. Significant here is last year’s purchase of the Art HK fair by Basel parent company MCH Group. Adding to the evidence was
Just in time for Father’s Day, Karl Haendel explores the relationship between fathers and their sons -- generated one suspects by feelings about his own father -- in a show with the incisive title, “Informal Family Blackmail,” May 26-June 28, 2012, at Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects in Culver City. For over the past decade, Haendel has been celebrated for his extraordinary gifts as a draft
Two years since his surprise appointment as director of the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, Jeffrey Deitch admits that the switch from running a successful commercial gallery in New York to salvaging a struggling nonprofit was a “rude awakening.” During a conversation with art advisor Josh Baer at Art Basel last week, Deitch described the burden of raising money from museum patrons, who, u
I started hearing about Rudolf Stingel’s project for Art Unlimited this year before I even got in the door. People said it was beautiful. That it made them cry. That it was the single most profound work of the 61 projects in the show. This was surprising. Art Unlimited is the section of Art Basel, June 14-17, 2012, for unbound ambition. For sheer spectacle, it’s the best reason to visit the Swiss
Art Market Watch TIFFANY, RIETVELD, NOGUCHI AND LALANNE: DESIGN IN NEW YORK With the “Alpha Design Crowd” gone to Design / Miami Basel, as Brook S. Mason reported last week, who was left to shop at the New York design sales that took place at Sotheby’s, Christie’s and Phillips de Pury during the same period, June 13-15, 2012? Well, anyone looking for a Louis Comfort Tiffany lamp, maybe? At Sotheby
1.現在派遣法改正を検討していることを「全く知らない」 42.1%。 2.平成24年(2012年)の派遣法改正内容について「十分把握している」「ある程度は把握している」合わせて46.7%。 3.「場合によっては3年を超えても派遣で働きたいと思う」63.3%に対し、「3年を超えて働くつもりはない」は15.8%。 4.日雇い派遣原則禁止は「見直すべき」40.6%に対して「見直す必要はない」16.9%。 5.「派遣の方が都合よく働ける場合もある」 「3年後に正社員にしてくれるならいい」など働く主婦の意見は様々。 主婦に特化した人材サービス『しゅふJOB』(事業運営者:株式会社ビースタイル/本社:東京都新宿区、代表取締役:三原邦彦)の調査機関しゅふJOB総研は働く意欲のある主婦層を中心に、今国会に提出されている改正派遣法案についてアンケートを行いました。「あなたは3年を超えて派遣で働きたいと思いま
Eshell、つかってますか。いーしぇる。 わたしはEshellをつかっています。 Windowsだけ使って生きてきてるので、いまいちシェルの使い方もわからずでしたが、とにかく触ってみようとおもって使い始めたのがbashさんでした。 しかしどうもいまいち操作感がしっくりこなかったのでEmacs Shell上で動かすようにしてみて、そこからしばらくしてEshellに乗り換えた形です。 最初はなにこれって思いましたが、少しずつカスタムしてみたらすごく手に馴染むようになったのでまるでEmacsみたいなシェルでした。じわじわくる。 まだまだ便利な使い方がわからないのでしばらく使いこなせるようにがんばります。 - 本題です。 Eshellをカスタマイズしてたら突然「Text is read-only」とかいうエラーメッセージを出しはじめてEshellが閉じられなくなったことはありませんか。 Emac
安心への取り組み:株式会社じげんはプライバシーマークを取得しています。 ©ZIGExN Co., Ltd. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
こんにちは、WEBマーケッターの荒木です。 ビジネスまたは趣味として、ブログを書いている人は多いと思います。 私もこうやってブログを書いておりますので、ブログの運用について相談を受けたりします。 そのなかで多いのが、「ジャンルを絞ったほうが良いのか?」という相談です。 これについてはいろんな意見があると思いますが、 私の意見としては「ジャンルは絞ったほうが良い」です。 なぜブログのジャンルを絞ったほうが良いのか? ブログのジャンルを絞ったほうが良い理由のひとつは 「覚えてもらいやすい」ことにあります。 記事の内容が「ダイエットや「パソコン」や「政治」などジャンルを幅広く扱っている場合、記事単体として評価されることはあっても、ブログとしてあまり印象に残りません。 例えば「ダイエット」だけに絞ったブログで、ひとつの記事に対してユーザーが「この記事はためになった。また読みたい」と評価をしてもらえ
「あのサイトのアクセス数はどのくらいだろう?」と思ったことはありませんか? どの計測ツールを使ったかによって数値は変わってくるため、一概に比較はできません。しかし、サイト毎の影響力を調べたいというニーズはあるのではないでしょうか。 「SimilarWeb」は、ウェブサイトの訪問者数を調べられるサイトです。訪問者数だけではなく、「参照流入が多いのか検索流入が多いのか」「流入経路」「検索キーワード」までもわかってしまいます。しかも無料です。 使い方は簡単。中央の検索フォームに、調べたいサイトのURLを入れるだけ。今回は例として、Yahoo! JAPANのトップページを入れてみることにします。 トラフィック概要です。ウェブサイトのランキングなどが表示されていますね(世界50位!)。2月の訪問者数4億1200万、サイト滞在時間00:13:10など、2月のサイトのアクセス数なども表示されています。Y
ブログ記事で目次を自動的に見出しから生成する方法を紹介します。WordPressプラグインは使わないで、自力でJavaScriptで設置してみました。 ゆめぴょんです。こんちはっ(^^)/ 私のブログでは文字数の多い記事もあるため、目次を設置したいと思ってました。一時期WordPressプラグインを用いて設置していましたが、意外と簡単に自前設置できるので制作してみました。 目次は上に表示されていると思います。クリックするとゆっくりとその見出しまでスクロールしていきます。読者にも便利なナビゲーションになります。 今回は「WordPressプラグインはずし特集」の第8弾です。今までの特集記事は全て下のリンクにまとめています。 今回、不要になるWordPressプラグイン これまた昨年くらいから、いろんなブログで紹介されている有名プラグイン「Table of Contents Plus」です。
「キーワード単位ではなく、情報単位で考える」 ことの意味 | SEO初心者向け SEO は、キーワードの順位を上げるテクニックだけを考えていても上手くいきません。検索を通じて、ユーザーに情報を届ける、彼/彼女らが知りたいことを必要なタイミングで提供する、それを繰り返していくことで、サイトの信頼や支持を気づくことが出来るのです。こうした前提を踏まえておけば、Google 検索アルゴリズムの変更にいちいち振り回されることもありません。 公開日時:2014年04月02日 10:39 「(2013年9月にGoogleから発表された)ハミングバードの導入で SEO の方法をどう変えたらいいのですか?」という問いに対して、私はいつも「(ごちゃごちゃ細かいこと気にせず)普通に文章を書けばいいんですよ」という回答をしています。少なくとも一般的な事業会社のSEO担当者であれば、細かな仕様変更に振り回されずに
Webマーケティング業界では、アルファベットの略語が日常的に飛び交っています。新入社員はそんな光景に「本当についていけるのか」と不安を感じてしまうのではないでしょうか。 もし、新入社員がこの「アルファベット略語」を最短で理解し、社内の会話や上司の指示をスムーズに理解できるようになれば、安心して業務に取り組むことができ、戦力として活躍できるまでの期間を短縮できます。 そこで、今回は、Webマーケティング業界の新入社員が最初に押さえるべき20の略語を、重要度順に整理して解説しました。重要度の重み付けを客観的にするため、すでに存在するWebマーケティング用語を解説する13サイトの出現頻度を全て調べてスコアリングしています。出現頻度の順に解説しているので、この記事の用語を上からチェックしていけば最小の労力で重要な用語を理解できます。 【無料】Webマーケティングの勉強に役立つ動画8選 ※本記事は2
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A/Bテスト 5 Ads Data Hub 1 AdSense 5 AdWords 19 AdWords 連携 21 AMP 4 Analytics 1 Analytics 基本 5 API 2 BigQuery 11 Cookie 1 CPA 1 DCM 1 DFP 3 DoubleClick 11 DoubleClick Campaign Manager 1 DoubleClick for Publishers 3 e コマース 2 Firebase 8 Firebase Analytics 4 Firebase 向け Google アナリティクス 2 ga.js 2 GA4 12 GACP 18 GCP 1 Google Ads 1 Google Cloud Platform 1 Google Consumer Surveys 2 Google Insights for Search
今回から始まる本連載「Googleアナリティクス セグメント100選」では、Googleアナリティクスで分析をおこなう上で有用な機能の1つであるセグメントにフォーカスを当てる。できるだけ具体的に、 どういうサイトでどのような目的の場合にどのようなセグメントを利用すると有効かという視点で、1回につき1セグメントをなるべくシンプルな形で紹介していく予定だが、第1回となる今回は、セグメントとは何で、活用するとどういう価値があり、Googleアナリティクスでどうやってセグメントを設定するのかを解説する。 セグメント(=分割)は分析の第一歩「セグメント」とは、「部分」「断片」「分割されたもの」などの意味を持つ英単語で、要するに、「全体をいくつかに分割したうちの1つ」ということだ。そもそも「分析」や「分かる」という言葉に「分(ける)」という文字が含まれていることからもわかるように、「分割して見る」とい
Google に渡すサイトマップは XML じゃなくてテキストファイルでいいことになってた 2014年04月03日 14:19Google ウェブサイトを運営するとき、サイトマップを作ることも多いと思います。 ユーザーに見せるやつじゃなくて、Google (など) に渡すやつ。 作らなくてもいいんだけど、 サイトマップがあった方が検索エンジンのクローラーに 「ほらここにページがあるから見に来てね」 と伝わりやすいという話になってますね。 このブログのサイトマップもここにあります。 XML Sitemap XML じゃなくていい さてこのサイトマップ、たしか仕様を知った頃は XML で作ることになってたように思います。 XML の要素に情報を追加することで サイトの状態について細かい指定ができるようになってますね。 sitemaps.org – プロトコル ただ、そこまでちゃんとやってるとこ
ユニバーサルアナリティクスが正式公開 追記:2015年10月15日 公式ヘルプフォーラムで話題になっていましたが、以下のサポート終了の記述ページはなくなっていました。見解が変わったとの発表は2015年10月15日現在公式ブログでは見られません。 ※アーカイブオルグの当時の記事 >>アップグレード センター – よくある質問 – Google アナリティクス — Google Developers ※当時のキャプチャ。 ついにベータ版が取れて、晴れてGoogleアナリティクスの正式新バージョンとなったようです。 >>アナリティクス 日本版 公式ブログ: ユニバーサル アナリティクスが正式リリースされました 従いまして、現状のGoogleアナリティクスは、最大で2年後、つまり、最大で2016年3月いっぱいでサポート終了、機能停止となります。 Universal Analytics が新しい運用
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リスティング広告の絞り込み部分一致をご存知ですか? 先日、同業者の方と話す機会があったのですが、絞り込み部分一致の存在を知らなかったようです。 プロの方でも知らないということは、一般の方にはまだ浸透していないのかもしれません。 リスティング広告は、絞り込み部分一致の登場により、知識の少ない方でも成果を出しやすくなりました。 今回は、その絞り込み一致のメリットやその他のマッチタイプとの違いについてのお話しです。 リスティング広告のマッチタイプの種類 まずは、リスティング広告のマッチタイプについて、ご存知でない方のためにおさらいです。 マッチタイプとは、登録キーワードに対して、ユーザーが検索に使用したキーワードがどのような形式の場合に広告を表示するかを決定するものです。 マッチタイプには、「部分一致」「絞り込み部分一致」「完全一致」「フレーズ一致」の4つに分類されます。 それぞれの特徴について
ブログを書くときのタイトルの文字数って何文字がいいとかっていう話を見たり聞いたりするので多少は気にしてました。 Web制作会社LIGのブログにはこんなことが書いてあります。 検索エンジンを意識した文字数、30字までにおさめる via:アクセス増加を狙え!読みたくなる記事タイトルの付け方、7つの秘密 | 株式会社LIG こういうのを見たりすると「そうか30文字くらいがいいのか」って思いますよね。 そんなのは別に気にしなくてもいいのかなっていう出来事がありました。 検索結果で表示されるページタイトルは変わる Googleの検索結果に表示されるページのタイトルって変わるの知ってました? 僕は昨日の朝まで知りませんでした。 どんな風に検索されてどれくらいの位置で表示されるのかが気になって調べてみたんです。 そしたら同じページなのに表示されるタイトルが違くてビックリ! 同じ記事の2つの異なる表示結果
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ブログのサイドバーやフッターに何を置けばよいのか。とくに WordPress は自由度が高いぶん悩んでしまいますよね。 ブログの目的や何を重視するかで最適解は異なりますが、以下 4 つのエリアにおけるごく一般的なレイアウトについて解説していきます。 ヘッダー サイドバー 記事下 フッター ヘッダーに配置する要素 「ヘッダー」と呼ばれるページ上部のエリアには、最低限 2 つの要素を配置しましょう。 ロゴ(ブログ名) グローバルメニュー ロゴ(ブログ名) ロゴは、あなたのブログ名を読者に覚えてもらうための必須要素です。 1 回目の訪問で読者がブックマークしなかったとしても、あとで読み返したくなったときにブログ名で検索して再訪問してくれるかもしれません。 ブログ名で検索することを SEO 用語で「指名検索」と呼び、ブログ全体の検索評価に深く関わってきます。 たまにブログ名ではなくキャッチコピーを
リンク否認ツールの威力 3月上旬から相互RSSスパムの被害に遭いまして、GoogleやYahoo!の検索流入の内、新着記事が全く検索エンジンにヒットしなくなるという事象が発生しまして、その対抗策としてGoogleウェブマスターツールのリンク否認ツールを使用してみました。 【SEO対策】悪質なリンクからの自分のHPやブログを守る!「リンク否認ツール」を使ってみた! その後、2014/04/01にエイプリルフールのネタに被せて、検索流入が改善した事を書いたのですが・・・ リンク否認ツールを使ったら翌日に検索流入が5倍に改善! 5倍はウソで、3割増しがホントでした。でもそれは3/31の1日だけの話で・・・ その4/1の朝から、検索流入が激減。 Googleウェブマスターツールの「検索クエリ」のグラフ表示で、表示回数が22%減、クリック数が35%減となりました(>_<) 下のグラフの右の赤丸がそう
Google、国内7つのリンクネットワークに制裁を科したことを公表 グーグル、日本国内の SEO目的の(不正な)リンクネットワークに制裁を科したことを公表。過去にいくつかのネットワークが無効になっていることは確認されており、それに言及されたものと推察。 公開日時:2014年04月08日 15:48 米Google特別エンジニア(Distinguished Engineer)・Matt Cutts氏は2014年4月8日、過去数ヶ月にわたって日本国内の7つの(SEO目的の)リンクネットワークにペナルティを科したことを明らかにした(関連:解説記事)。 Incredibly proud of Japanese webspam team. Over last few months they've taken action on seven link networks! Makes playing f
以下の文章は性暴力についての話,それもかなり露悪的な自分の性癖(誤用)語りですので,不愉快に感じる方やトラウマを抱えていらっしゃる方は読むのをご遠慮いただけるとお互い幸せになれるのではないかと思います.もちろん不愉快に感じて俺を批判する人がいるのは言論の自由というものがある以上当然ですが,自分の意志で見たという点への責任だけは引き受けてください. 小学校くらいの頃から,なんか自分の性癖(誤用)は変だった.色んなアニメ,たとえば名探偵コナンでも金田一少年の事件簿でも何でもいいんだけど,女性が縛られて監禁されているシーンってあるでしょう.ドラマだったら透明人間にもそういうシーンあったっけ(俺の黒木瞳の原体験はあのドラマです.最近の子供はわかるのかなあのドラマ……).ああいうのが性的な含意の一切ないシーンでも普通にすごく興奮して,親や祖父母に隠れて録画のそのシーンばっかり繰り返して再生してたり(
Google、アドワーズ広告のキーワードデータ提供中止を検討か グーグルが API 通じたサードパーティーベンダーへの、広告キーワードデータの開示を中止することを検討しているとの報道。 公開日時:2014年04月09日 09:19 A.J. Ghergich 氏が投稿した記事によると、米Googleがアドワーズ広告のキーワードデータを API を通じてサードパーティーに提供することを中止する方針だ。Search Engine Land も同氏を含む複数の情報源から確認している模様だ。 同氏は Google から直接説明を受けた信頼できるソースから入手した文書を読んだ上で、その概要を伝えている。要点は『Googleはサードパーティー(KenshooやMarin Software、Acquisio など)にキーワードデータを提供することを中止する』『アドワーズ広告アカウント内のレポートは従来通
Googleでウェブスパムチームを統括し、検索品質チームにも携わっているマット・カッツ氏は、ブログやYouTubeのチャンネルでGoogleにおけるSEO関連の解説を発信している人物です。SEO対策を行ううえで非常に重要な情報が公表されるので、ウェブ管理者を中心に人気を集めるコンテンツですが、時に説明が長いのが玉にキズ……。そんなカッツ氏のムービーを、内容を短くまとめたコメントと一緒にリスト化しているサイトが「The Short Cutts」です。 The Short SEO Cutts, The Short Answers to Every Matt Cutts Search Engine Optimisation Video http://www.theshortcutts.com/ このサイトは、イギリスのデジタル・マーケティング・エージェントであるClick Consult社がまと
[対象: 上級] Googleは、企業が顧客に提供する問い合わせ用の電話番号を検索結果に表示するようにしました。 また、企業や店舗などの住所や営業時間、レストランであればメニューの情報などをより適切に理解させるための推奨設定を提案しました。 Surfacing your business’s contact and local info in Google どちらもschema.orgを用いた構造化データを利用します。 問い合わせ用電話番号の表示 企業が公開している問い合わせ用の電話番号を検索結果にわかりやすく表示します。 対応する種類の電話番号は次の4つです。 Customer service(カスタマーサービス) Technical support(テクニカルサポート) Billing support(支払いサポート) Bill payment(請求書の支払い) 問い合わせ用電話番号を
noteはAngularJSを使って、ブラウザで描写しているこの"note"というサービスはAngularJSを使って、JavaScript側(つまりブラウザ側)でノートの中身を公開しているみたいなのです。 それはブラウザでソースを見てみるとわかります。 例えばhttps://note.mu/sadaaki/n/nd921f3f7c635のノートのソースをChromeで見てみると・・・ まずhtmlタグにng-appのプロパティがついています。これはAngularJSを使うならば必要なプロパティで、ここからnoteはAngularJSを使っているんだなあと分かります。 AngularJSは簡単に言うと、サーバー側ではなくブラウザ側でHTMLを描写する仕組みです。これを利用するとどんな利点があるのか。僕の理解している範囲内だと、サーバー側はベースとなるHTML(上のソース)と各ノートのJSO
400人以上の美女が掲載!これが癒やされないわけがない!美女は見ているだけで癒されると思っているのは僕だけではないはず。男子ハックではこれまでも「美人」「美女」を見ることができるサイトを紹介してきましたが。今回紹介するのは「待ち合わせ美女」というサイトです。 関連:男子必見の美人さんをいっぱい見ることができるWebサービスまとめ 「美女と待ち合わせ」という素敵なシチュエーションをイメージができるような写真が多数紹介されています。
記事内に広告を含む場合があります。記事内で紹介する商品を購入することで、当サイトに売り上げの一部が還元されることがあります。 去年の12月に、僕がiPhoneの1画面目に置いているアプリのまとめ記事を書きましたが、 ブロガー・アプリ開発者な僕がiPhoneの1画面目に置いているオススメアプリ24個を紹介します!(2013年12月版) – 拡張現実ライフ それから約4ヶ月、1画面目に置いているアプリが変化したので、再びまとめ記事を書きたいと思います! 追記 iPhone 6 Plus版を書きました! iPhone 6 Plusのホーム1画面目に置いているオススメなアプリ35本(2014年11月版) 1段目 Messenger
[対象: 中級] Google日本 (google.co.jp) が、SPYW (Search Plus Your World)を正式に公開した可能性が濃厚です。 これまではテストを繰り返し実施していたものの、ごく短時間で消えることが普通でした。 しかし先週末頃から、常時、幅広い環境でSPYWを確認できています。 SPYWが適用されているかどうかは、検索結果右上にある「人」と「地球」マークのアイコンで識別できます(このあと見せるキャプチャで確認してください)。 僕が調べた限りでは、英Google (google.co.uk) や 豪Google (google.com.au) でもGoogleアカウントにログインした状態でSPYWが適用されていました。 3月末にIA Summitで米国に滞在してるときは、co.jpでも常にSPYWを利用できました。 一方で同じとき日本では、見えたり消えたり
来日しているトルコのダウトオール外相はNHKのインタビューに応じ、「日本の技術と安全性を信頼している」と述べ、日本の技術でトルコでの原発の建設を推進し、エネルギーの輸入に依存する現状から転換を図りたいという考えを示しました。 日本とトルコを巡っては、原子力発電所の建設に向けた関連技術をトルコに輸出できるようにする原子力協定の締結が去年5月の首脳会談で合意に至り、現在、両国が承認に向けた手続きを進めていますが、東京電力福島第一原子力発電所の事故後も原発を輸出することに慎重論が出ています。 核軍縮と核不拡散に関する外相会合のため来日しているトルコのダウトオール外相は、13日の岸田外務大臣との会談を前に、広島市内でNHKのインタビューに応じました。 ダウトオール外相は、ウクライナ情勢を巡るロシアの対応を非難したうえで、トルコが輸入する天然ガスの半分以上をロシアから調達していることを踏まえ、「エネ
13日午前、栃木県日光市の東武日光駅の駅前にシカが現れ、マイクロバスに接触したあと、観光客2人にぶつかって逃げました。 2人は軽いけがをし、警察は周辺をパトロールしてシカに注意するよう呼びかけています。 13日午前9時半ごろ、日光市松原の東武日光駅の駅前に1頭のシカが現れ、乗客を乗せずに走っていたマイクロバスと接触しました。 驚いたシカは近くの歩道に向かって走り出したところ、歩道で、いずれも54歳の台湾から来た女性観光客2人にぶつかり、そのまま走って逃げたということです。 女性2人は腰などを打って病院に運ばれましたが、けがの程度は軽いということです。 マイクロバスの運転手に、けがはありませんでした。 警察によりますと、逃げたシカは体長がおよそ1メートルで、日光市の市街地の駅前にシカが出没するのは珍しいということです。 近くのみやげ物店の女性店員は「店の前をすごい勢いで動物が走っていきました
是非フルスクリーン(設定HD1080p)でお楽しみください。 Shugo Tokumaru OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO "Poker" (from "In Focus?") Dir: MIRAI MIZUE & YUKIE NAKAUCHI(MIRAI FILM) http://www.shugotokumaru.com 4000枚もの原画から制作されたこの映像は、実験アニメーションの父ノーマン・マクラレンの作品をモチーフに描かれた動きから始り、後半にかけては水江未来&中内友紀恵によるカラフルで独特な個性が、何十種類もの楽器で演奏されたトクマルシューゴの楽曲の中で爆発する、言わば『トクマルシューゴ × 水江未来 × ノーマン・マクラレン』という時を超えた壮大なコラボレーションによる音楽映像作品となっています。 ●フランス『アヌシー国際アニメーション映画祭2015』
Five-day-old Imperial zebra (aka Grevy zebra) 'Heinrich' stays close to his mother Kianga (back) at his enclosure at Berlin's Tierpark zoo November 12, 2013. The Grevy's zebra is considered endangered. Its population was estimated to be 15,000 in the 1970s and by the early 21st century the population was lower than 3,500, a 75% decline. AFP PHOTO / JOHN MACDOUGALL (Photo credit should read JOHN MA
http://avex.jp/amuro/ namieamuro.jp 自身"初"のバラードベストアルバム『Ballada』発売決定!予約受付開始! トリプルミリオンを記録したアルバム「SWEET 19 BLUES」からのリカットシングルとして発売された「SWEET 19 BLUES」(1996年発売)、邦楽女性ソロアーティスト歴代1位のシングル売上を記録している「CAN YOU CELEBRATE?」(1996年発売)、フジテレビ系月9ドラマ「私が恋愛できない理由」の主題歌として話題を呼んだ「Love Story」(2011年発売)など、ダンスナンバーのみならず数多くのバラード曲を発表してきた安室奈美恵。 今まで発表してきたバラード全38曲を対象にバラード人気投票を実施し、 そこから選ばれた上位15曲を収録するバラードベストアルバムが発売決定! 上位15曲の音源に加え、更に、ボーナ
あらゆる細胞に変化できる万能細胞のiPS細胞(人工多能性幹細胞)を開発した山中伸弥・京都大iPS細胞研究所長(51)が7日、大阪市内で毎日新聞の単独取材に応じた。理化学研究所などが開発したと発表した新型万能細胞・STAP(スタップ)細胞(刺激惹起(じゃっき)性多能性獲得細胞)について「(万能細胞になる)メカニズムはiPS細胞と同じ可能性がある。ノウハウを提供し、協力したい」と話し、共同研究の必要性を強調した。iPS細胞研究所で近く、STAP細胞の作製を試みるという。
The tallest player in High School Basketball standing at 7'6 Tacko Fall is always turning heads and always plays his way to becoming the crowd favorite in every gym.
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2010年05月21日 DBIx::Class 0.08121ではPlagger::Plugin::Store::Fastladder 0.01が動かないのでアドホックなパッチを書いた こうですか!? わかりません>< 73c73 < my $subs = $me->subscriptions({ feed_id => $feed->id }); --- > my $subs = $self->rs('Subscriptions')->search({ member_id => $me->id, feed_id => $feed->id }); 75c75 < $me->add_to_subscriptions({ --- > $subs->create({ 114c114 < my $subs = $me->subscriptions({ feed_id => $feed->id })-
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ここのところ、ずっと /var/log/messagesに perl が core を吐いたと言うメッセージが出ていた。 調べてみたところ、plaggerで落ちてる。 core ファイルができているので、gdb で bt を見てみたところ、libxml2を使っているperlのライブラリあたりで、リソースの解放あたりで落ちてる。 不思議なことに、ログインして手動でplaggerを起動すると落ちなくて、cronから起動すると落ちている。 何が原因かわからなかったけれど、とりあえず該当のperl moduleとか、perlとかをアップデートしてみたけど改善せず。 どうせだから〜と、portupgrade p5\* とかやってperlのモジュールを全てアップデートしてみた。 すると、plaggerが以下のエラーで落ちるようになった。 Plagger::Plugin [debug] Load YAM
It is already known as the eternal city, and if new archaeological findings prove correct Rome may turn out to be even more ancient than believed until now. Next week, the city will celebrate its official, 2,767th birthday. According to a tradition going back to classic times, the brothers Romulus and Remus founded the city on 21 April in the year 753BC. But on Sunday it was reported that evidence
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