From Stéphanie Giry’s “An Odd Bird” (Legal Affairs: September/October 2002):
After a weeklong journey from France, crates of sculptures by Constantin Brancusi arrived in New York harbor on the steamship Paris, escorted by the artist Marcel Duchamp. It was October 1926 and the sculptures were to be exhibited in the city at the avant-garde Brummer Gallery. [...]
Posted on June 1st, 2006 by Scott Granneman
Filed under: business, history, law | Comments Off
From danah boyd’s “Friendster lost steam. Is MySpace just a fad?“:
What’s at stake here is what is called “subcultural capital” by academics. It is the kind of capital that anyone can get, if you are cool enough to know that it exists and cool enough to participate. It is a counterpart to “cultural capital” which [...]
Posted on April 3rd, 2006 by Scott Granneman
Filed under: Commonplace Book, Wash U: Social Software | Comments Off
From Best Undiscovered Museum of Americana:
It’s hard to imagine how anything so big could be such a well-kept secret, but there are only two kinds of people in the world: those who haven’t heard of the Shelburne Museum , and those who rave about it. I’m one of the latter.
Situated on 45 acres outside Burlington, [...]
Posted on November 1st, 2005 by Scott Granneman
Filed under: Commonplace Book, Cool Stuff | Comments Off
From "Culture Club" by Louis Menand in the 15 October 2001 issue of The New Yorker:
Things take their identities from what they are not … The concept of a highbrow culture, the culture of great books and the like, depends on the concept of a lowbrow, or popular, culture, whose characteristics highbrow culture defines iself [...]
Posted on October 16th, 2005 by Scott Granneman
Filed under: Commonplace Book, On Writing | Comments Off