niedziela, 17 lipca 2022

Fwd: Neues von literaturkritik.de 11 07 2022



---------- Forwarded message ---------
Od: Literaturkritik.de Newsletter <newsletter@literaturkritik.de>
Date: pon., 11 lip 2022 o 23:04
Subject: Neues von literaturkritik.de 11 07 2022
To: <andrzej.czerwinski22@gmail.com>


Sehr geehrter Herr Czerwinski,

in literaturkritik.de sind die unten angegebenen Artikel neu erschienen. Bitte beachten Sie, dass diese zum Teil erst im Rahmen einer der nächsten Ausgaben und dort in bestimmten thematischen Zusammenhängen veröffentlicht werden. Die zur Zeit neueste Ausgabe erreichen Sie unter der Adresse: https://literaturkritik.de/aktuelle_ausgabe.php.

Stand: 11.07.2022

11.07.2022
Ich und Fake-Ich.
Rezension von Lisette Gebhardt zu
Keiichirō Hirano: Das Leben eines Anderen. Roman
Suhrkamp Verlag, Berlin 2022
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28977


11.07.2022
Mafia und Mythos
Rezension von Jochen Vogt zu
Don Winslow: City on Fire
Harper Collins, Hamburg 2022
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28937


11.07.2022
Von der Fähigkeit zur Vernunft
Rezension von Werner Jung zu
Steven Pinker: Mehr Rationalität. Eine Anleitung zum besseren Gebrauch des Verstandes
S. Fischer Verlag, Frankfurt a. M. 2021
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28946


11.07.2022
Unordnung und großer Mut
Rezension von Hannes Krauss zu
Julia Franck: Welten auseinander
S. Fischer Verlag, Frankfurt a. M. 2021
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28978


08.07.2022
Prosa als fehlender Rest. Zum 90. Geburtstag des Georg-Büchner-Preisträgers Jürgen Becker am 10. Juli
Von Peter Mohr
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28988


08.07.2022
Pause im Irrsinn
Rezension von Werner Jung zu
Sibylle Berg: RCE. #RemoteCodeExecution
Verlag Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Köln 2022
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28947


08.07.2022
Ein tollkühner Erpresser
Rezension von Dietmar Jacobsen zu
Jens Eisel: Cooper
Piper Verlag, München 2022
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28986


08.07.2022
Neues zu Thomas Mann
Rezension von Wolfgang Bühling zu
Dirk Heißerer; Carl Georg Heise; Viktor Mann; Manfred Sturmann: Persönliche Erinnerungen an Thomas Mann. Herausgegeben und kommentiert von Dirk Heißerer
Königshausen & Neumann, Würzburg 2021
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28979


07.07.2022
„Lateinamerika hat die Tendenz, sich in Literatur aufzulösen". Ein Gespräch mit Stefan Kutzenberger
Von Sascha Seiler
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28991


07.07.2022
Selfies aus dem Untergrund
Rezension von Dietmar Jacobsen zu
Heike Geißler: Die Woche
Suhrkamp Verlag, Berlin 2022
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28987


07.07.2022
Russland: Friedhof und Strafkolonie
Rezension von Kai Sammet zu
Irina Rastorgueva: Das Russlandsimulakrum. Kleine Kulturgeschichte des politischen Protests in Russland
Matthes & Seitz Verlag, Berlin 2022
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28990


07.07.2022
Vom Beschützen, Erinnern und Bewahren
Rezension von Julia Augart zu
Scholastique Mukasonga: Frau auf bloßen Füßen
Peter Hammer Verlag, Wuppertal 2022
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28930


06.07.2022
Vielschichtiges Romandebüt zwischen den Kulturen
Rezension von Karsten Herrmann zu
Amanda Lee Koe: Die letzten Strahlen eines Sterns
CulturBooks, Hamburg 2022
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28982


06.07.2022
Mehr sein als nur die erste Geige
Rezension von Stefan Cernohuby zu
Alessandro Ferrari; Flavia Scuderi: Marlene Dietrich. Bd. 1
Panini Verlag, Nettetal 2021
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28985


05.07.2022
Das bedrängte Leben
Rezension von Simon Scharf zu
Matthias Bormuth: Ambivalenz der Freiheit. Erweiterte Studien zum suizidalen Denken
Wallstein Verlag, Göttingen 2022
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28952


05.07.2022
Wissen, Medien und Publizistik
Rezension von Michael Rupp zu
Nikolaus Henkel: Sebastian Brant. Studien und Materialien zu einer Archäologie des Wissens um 1500
Schwabe Verlag, Basel 2021
https://literaturkritik.de/public/rezension.php?rez_id=28980



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Obejrzyj film „Seeing The Universe Like We've Never Seen It Before” w YouTube

wtorek, 12 lipca 2022

Fwd: Pussy, Pleasure, Power!


---------- Forwarded message ---------
Od: arte.tv <news@newsletter.arte.tv>
Date: wt., 12 lip 2022, 17:59
Subject: Pussy, Pleasure, Power!
To: <andrzej.czerwinski22@gmail.com>


Kobiece pożądanie w popkulturze

Obejrzyj film „Russlands Überfall auf die Ukraine: Wie geht es weiter?” w YouTube

poniedziałek, 4 lipca 2022

Fwd: How to Become a More Artistic Photographer



---------- Forwarded message ---------
Od: ERIC KIM <newsletter@erickimphotography.com>
Date: sob., 2 lip 2022 o 18:49
Subject: How to Become a More Artistic Photographer
To: Andrzej Czerwinski <andrzej.czerwinski22@gmail.com>


How to Become a More Artistic Photographer

Dear friends, something I realize: I think the goal we are striving towards is to become a more artistic photographer. What does this mean? And how do we do it? Some of my thoughts:

Art and photography

What is art? I think art is our way of configuring and reconfiguring the world. We could do it digitally, embodied reality, in our minds, with atoms, with streams, etc. We could use any matter, or "meta-matter" as our way.

For example, you could do in three dimensions, you could do it in two dimensions, you could do in virtual reality, you could do it in embodied reality, you could do with photography, music, words, etc.

"Good" art versus "bad" art.

Now this is the big issue at hand: because modern day society is all about ranking, there is a striving towards making your art "better". But what does this even mean?

First and foremost, it seems what we try to do is to quantify our art. Why? With modern day society, we could only rank if we use numbers. For example, this is why we like sports: you could judge the superiority of somebody or a group based on hard numbers. How many points the score of the game, who the clear winners or losers are, etc.

Why photography is so elusive

Out of all of the art forms, photography is one of the newest ones. Also, because it is one of the more technical ones, a lot of the old-school artists look at it with suspicion.

But this is the funny bias: if you think about the great artists of the past, like Leonardo da Vinci, they were actually very technically reminded. For example, the way they used oil paint is extremely technical. Also, Leonardo da Vinci might be better seen as an engineer than a "artist", yet it is his Mona Lisa and his paintings which have more valor and notoriety than his mechanical works.

So what are we to do about this as photographers?

Funny enough, the thing which has probably benefited me the most to improve my photography, art and creativity isn't reading art, creativity or photography books. Rather, reading philosophy and studying ethics. Why? Essentially our table of values as a society is predicated on ethics, morality, and philosophy. Even if you think about what a PhD is; it stands for philosophy doctorate. That means, whenever you master your field, you are seen as a philosopher, or a teacher of that field.

So what are we to do about this is photographers? I say, strive to first unlearn all the negative prejudices about art which you were indoctrinated with.

Society and art

To the ancient Greeks, in which life was pretty easy and carefree, the highest apex was art. Reciting poetry in public, writing plays, philosophizing at the stoa, etc.

However nowadays, we are now the new slaves. For example, if you think about your email, even when you're not at work, consider your mind enslaved.

Perhaps it is a thing about industrialization, and are further focus on self-reliance, which makes us valorize work, toilsome and hateful labor above everything else. It is a strange morality and ethics; to become more virtuous and good, you must become more loving towards doing hateful duties.

What is considered the most "useless" thing? Art. Why? Superficially, art doesn't pay the bills, art is not seen as "work", and it isn't directly tied into money. In modern society, the only way art is seen as virtuous is that if it makes you a lot of money. Otherwise, it is soon as a waste of time.

Observe children

One of the greatest windfalls of my life is having Seneca. Currently, he is one year and four months old, and watching him learn and interact and engage with the world is the most fascinating and sublime thing of all time. For example, his infinite curiosity, and infinite energy.

His first exposure to art was probably through Cindy, who first taught him how to hold a pencil or crayon, and to write on a blank sheet of paper. To Seneca, this was amazing and magical; by moving his hand and holding this thing, he can leave his mark on something. Now, he likes to pick up chalk, and write on the sidewalk, or on chalkboards. He does not do this for praise, or money; he does it out of curiosity, just to see what it will do. It isn't even necessarily "play", it is more about experimental physics; figuring out his input and the reaction.

Perhaps this is the way that we should approach our artwork; to think of it more like an experimental physics thing. For example, what we do as photographers is manipulate light and embodied reality with our technical apparatus, which is a camera. And what is a camera? A camera is a device which captures life, interprets it, and spits out an image.

Think subtle

For me, the most artistic photos are the most subtle ones. For example, a tiny speck on the sidewalk, or a small detail, scratch, rust mark, etc.

There are certain visual triggers that we have, that which we are not certain why is a trigger to us. But it is. And this is what I say:

If you see something that is even .001% interesting to you, just shoot it, and figure out what to do with it later.

Digital is superior

This is the great upside of digital photography is that there is literally no downside shooting additional photos. Even a modern-day times, because of all this retro hipsterdom, the greatness and the grandeur of digital photography is not fully realized yet. I don't know any really really serious photographer who is super gung-ho about digital. Everyone is always rhapsodizing about the glorious analog past. But perhaps this is more out of preference for the status quo and old way of doing things, rather than thinking carte blanche, first principles, and striving to use great human technology to the maximum.

For example, the greatness of Elon Musk and Tesla is how first principles he thought. Rather than thinking about how to take the past car and make it better, he thought about it blank slate. What should a car be, and what shouldn't a car be?

For example, we charge our phones every night. Shouldn't we do the same with our cars, in the year 2022? To me it is insanely bizarre and backwards that even in the year 2022, which is insanely the future, we are still extracting fossil fuels, producing gasoline powered cars, and actually purchasing gasoline powered cars. To me, only losers would buy a brand-new Porsche 911, or even a brand new Lamborghini, Rolls-Royce, etc. Any modern car you purchase that is not a hybrid or an electric vehicle is unbecoming of a man.

Therefore, a very simple thought: to become a more artistic photographer, first recognize that digital photography is actually superior to film photography, and also consider all of the untapped potential of digital photography. Yes, we still have at least 5000 years ahead of us as photographers, in terms of what is possible in photography.

Even as an entrepreneurial thing: consider that now, with the iPhone camera, photography is at least 1000 times the superior and popular art form creation technology on planet earth. Any new technology, platform, service or approach you do with photography can easily make you a billionaire or beyond.

Some other practical thoughts:

  1. Think high contrast black-and-white, and use highlight priority exposure metering. In digital photography, the most ugly thing you could do is blow the highlights. If you obey the highlights, and don't blow them, they will look sublimely beautiful.
  2. Currently speaking, the Ricoh GR 3X is the best digital camera. Pair it with an ERIC KIM WRIST STRAP or ERIC KIM NECK STRAP and call it a day.
  3. If you love color photography, I recommend digital medium format. The best colors I've ever gotten in the camera, whether film or digital is actually the positive film preset JPEG on the Pentax 645Z digital medium format camera. For color photography, digital medium format is the game changer.
  4. Look at things with an innocent eye.  look at things without bias.
  5. Use macro mode. Get insanely close, and focus on the small details.
  6. Love decay, rust, corrosion. Typically speaking, gritty and grungy neighborhoods make for better photos than clean ones. Therefore when you're traveling, or even at home, go to the places with some urban decay, instead of the clean-cut ones. For example, there is a good reason that all of my Singaporean friends like to shoot in Little India, instead of just going to the mall.
  7. Study philosophy, not "art". Rid yourself of your prejudices about art, by ignoring art books. Just study philosophy and poetry.

ERIC

DISCOVER YOUR CREATIVE SOUL

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NEW: DISCOVER YOUR SEOUL: ERIC KIM SEOUL SOUTH KOREA STREET PHOTOGRAPHY TRAVEL EXPERIENCE 2022 (September 30-October 2, 2022) >


If this gave you any artistic thoughts or motivation, feel free to forward to a friend!


ERIC KIM THOUGHTS >


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