Saturday, February 22, 2014

THE BASLICATO






When neurologist Dr. Brook Wilson agrees to take on wild celebrity Italian race car driver Jason Maxwell, known as "The Baslicato," as her patient, little did she realize their relationship would turn her calm, pleasant, well-ordered and well-planned life upside down, sending her off on dangerous adventures in southern Italy and personal journeys into her family's history in northern Ohio. As she prepares him for his big race, she must deal with his demented wife while driving her boyfriend, Dr, Garrett MacEgan into acts of criminal desperation in a attempt to hold on to her.

Friday, February 21, 2014

Interview with Artist Katy Kerr



 Katy Kerr
Ionia, M

Good morning, Katy.  Welcome to Vision and Verse.  How would you describe your artwork? 
I do a variety of artwork from charcoal work to acrylic painting, murals, mixed media in the form of custom mailboxes, hand painted patio stones, glasses and tiles. I tend to do a lot of animals but have done portraits and other subjects as well.




What is your favorite medium? 
I enjoy creating with my charcoals best as they just pop and have such life when they are done.





Favorite food.
Seafood, almost any kind.


Where would you like to visit? 
I would love to visit Italy and Greece someday along with Ireland.



Favorite musical artist. 
I can't say I have a favorite artist as I listen to a variety from Christian to rock to country and everything in between.

 Do you listen to music when you work? 
Yes almost always it makes me happy and that always helps produce better artwork. What? A mixed play list with a variety of artists and genres.

What makes you laugh?
Goofy people...

How old were you when you started creating art? 
I have been drawing as long as I can remember but as far as building my portfolio I started pretty much in 2008 when I was laid off from the civil/survey CAD drafting field.

Where do you get your inspiration? 
I tend to have ideas that seem to just be meant to come to life come to me and work from there.

What do you do when you get artist's block? 
Listen to good music and talk to my friends.

Who is your favorite artist? 
I love to look at artwork from all other artists, can't say I have one “favorite.”

Favorite work of art. 
My favorite work of art at the moment is my steam punk angel I did in charcoal.

Best book you ever read. 
The bible :p

Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why? 
Everyone that has been in my life has built me to the woman I am today. Each taught it's own lesson I was meant to learn.




If you could sit down and have a conversation with ONE person, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be and why? 
Sandra Bullock, I think she would be down to earth and is an inspiration
to me.


What advice would you give someone who aspired to be an artist? 
Find something that captures your soul.

Do you have any links so we can follow you?
Katy K
freelance artist, Rodan and Fields Rep

Thursday, February 20, 2014

An Interview with Author Sandra Bolton




Sandra Bolton
Raton, New Mexico


Welcome to Vision and Verse this morning, Sandra.  Tell us a little about yourself.
My name is Sandra Bolton and I live in Raton, New Mexico. Raton is in the far northeast of New Mexico, about five miles from the Colorado border.  
I have written two novels. A Cipher in the Sand was published in 2011, and my current novel, Key Witness, is due to come out in March of this year.  I also have a collection of short stories that I hope to publish in the near future.  I consider myself a contemporary mystery writer with a little romance and a lot of adventure thrown in.


Favorite food?
As far as favorite foods are concerned, I love to cook and eat a wide range of foods and will try just about anything new. When it comes to choosing pizza or ice cream, pizza wins. I prefer savory foods over sweets.  
Coffee is a must first thing in the morning, and about three cups. I may have a cup of tea in the afternoon.

Where would you like to visit?
I've had the opportunity to travel extensively due to my husband's military career, but am happy to settle in one place now. I loved Italy and wouldn't mind returning for a visit.

I love Italy, too, especially Venice.  Favorite musical artist? And do you listen to music when you write?


 Music? I'm old school. Neil Young, Leonard Cohen (more for his poetry than his voice), Billie Holiday, Janis Joplin. If I'm writing I can't listen to anything that has lyrics, so some Mozart.

What makes Sandra Bolton laugh?
A lot of things make me laugh: the ridiculous, like Monty Python, silliness, and irony, my grandkids and my dog and cat.



How old were you when you began writing seriously?
I did not start officially writing until my sixties when I retired
from teaching and had time, though I have been writing new scenarios
in my head all my life.




What is your idea of the perfect evening?
A perfect evening would be stranded at my cabin in a snowstorm with a mug of hot chocolate, maybe spiked with brandy, a fire in the wood stove and a good book.




Where do you get your inspiration? 
I get my inspiration from studying people and listening to their life
stories.

What do you to when you get writer's block?
When I feel writers block coming on I take a long walk in the
mountains.

Who is your favorite author?  What is your favorite book?
It's hard to name one favorite author, but I love Kurt Vonnegut, Isabel Allende, and Margaret Atwood.
My reading is eclectic like my music.
At different times in my life I have had different "best books", so I
would say that too is difficult. "One Hundred Years of Solitude" by
Gabriel Gaarcia Marquez comes to mind.



Who is the one person who has influence your personal life the most and why?

We take something from all the people we encounter, but the person who has influenced my writing life would be Steven Havill, successful author of southwestern mysteries. I had the opportunity to attend several of his writing workshops and learned some tremendous lessons about writing. He is a great teacher.


If you could sit down and have a conversation with ONE person, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be and why?
I would like to talk to Mark Twain to learn some of insights on
writing, and to Nelson Mandela to learn about compassion and forgiveness.

What advice to you have for an aspiring writer?
I would remind all aspiring writers that perfecting the craft takes time and a hell of a lot of hard work. Don't rush. You can do that first draft fast, but that is just a shell. Rewrite, revise, and get a good editor.


Do you have some links so we can follow you?
Here are my links:

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_0_5?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=a+cipher+in+the+sand&sprefix=A+Cip%2Cstripbooks%2C449

https://www.facebook.com/sandraboltonauthor

I am currently updating my author site, SANDRABOLTONWRITESTUFF.com and
it will be live soon.



Wednesday, February 19, 2014

WHAT'S UP WEDNESDAY: NOW AT THE MOMA NY





Frank Lloyd Wright @ MOMA NY
 
February 1 - June 1, 2014
 
 
 
Frank Lloyd Wright and the City: Density vs. Dispersal celebrates the recent joint acquisition of Frank Lloyd Wright’s extensive archive by MoMA and Columbia University’s Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library. Through an initial selection of drawings, films, and large-scale architectural models, the exhibition examines the tension in Wright’s thinking about the growing American city in the 1920s and 1930s, when he worked simultaneously on radical new forms for the skyscraper and on a comprehensive plan for the urbanization of the American landscape titled "Broadacre City." Visitors encounter the spectacular 12-foot-by-12-foot model of this plan, which merges one of the earliest schemes for a highway flyover with an expansive, agrarian domain. Promoted and updated throughout Wright’s life, the model toured the country for several years in the 1930s, beginning with a display at Rockefeller Center. This dispersed vision is paired with Wright's innovative structural experiments for building the vertical city. Projects, from the early San Francisco Call Building (1912), to Manhattan’s St. Mark’s-in-the-Bouwerie Towers (1927–31), to a polemical mile-high skyscraper, engage questions of urban density and seek to bring light and landscape to the tall building. Highlighting Wright’s complex relationship to the city, the material reveals Wright as a compelling theorist of both its horizontal and vertical aspects. His work, in this way, is not only of historic importance but of remarkable relevance to current debates on urban concentration.

Photo from New York Magazine, Feb 10, 2014 issue.
Info courtesy MOMA website.
 
 



Monday, February 17, 2014

THOMAS STRUTH, PHOTOGRAPHER





Thomas Struth is a German-born photographer well known for his black and white photos of modern life.  His subjects range from landscapes, portraits, architecture, to street scenes, the jungle, and industrial facilities, encompassing locations from Asia to Atlanta.

Struth's photos are stunning, poetic, and philosophical, and run the gamut of emotions.  He is hailed as one of Germany's most exhibited and collected fine art photographers.

Struth's most recent body of work is now on display at the Marian Goodman Gallery, 24 West 57th St, New York. through Feb 22, 2014.  This is an exhibit you won't want to miss.

Street scene photo above by Thomas Struth..