Can’t wait to see this. Sounds like a great movie (if perhaps rather sad). And I definitely want the soundtrack! 🙂
Can’t wait to see this. Sounds like a great movie (if perhaps rather sad). And I definitely want the soundtrack! 🙂









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I had never heard of Arthur Pinajian before I read the Telegraph’s article, but I find myself fascinated with his art. Pinajian lived through two world wars and the great depression, born in 1914 during WWI and surviving until 1999, the end of the century. (1) Kurt Vonnegut’s novelic work “Bluebeard: The Autobiography of Rabo Karabekian,“ actually retells the story of Pinajian’s life, whose real life was really very private. (1) He was one of the great heroes of WWII, but he soon surrendered weapons for more artistic tools, when he began as a comic book artist for Marvel (3). However, Pinajian found himself more readily drawn to the abstractionist style of art and he eventually move to Long Island, fading into obscurity for the remainder of his life. (1) Pinajian another of the many artists more appreciated upon death than during life, and thousands of his paintings remained buried in garages and boxes until as late as the last decade. (2)

Typically, I am not overly fond of abstract art, in fact I don’t particularly like the painting shown in The Telegraph’s article. However, in several of his works, Pinajian successfully pulls together both abstraction and realism. I appreciate how his works depict landscapes through simple brush strokes and vibrant mixed colors. He utilizes the coloring beautifully to depict contrast and depth, without losing any of the meaning which I feel so much abstract art does. Here are my particular favorites:


I have been horribly amiss, and I must officially apologize to all of my readers. I promised you an update some time ago on my visit to Door County Wisconsin and I didn’t update. I now must run away and hide in shame . . . (disappears with hanging head) Okay, I’m back! with the long ago promised post about all the awesome things I got to experience at Door County. I already hit on some of this before in my “I’ve arrived“ post on the trip up there, but for clarity’s sake I’ll touch on some of it again. The trip up there was actually kind of my idea since my family was caving into my desire to check out the Great Lakes. Despite living in the midwest area for most of my life, I’d never had the chance to check out the Great Lakes and it was on Continue reading
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Mom, Dad, guess what I found! This is seriously a story to be told. LOL
Okay, I admit it. I’m from a VERY small town in a VERY small country, so my local county museum consisted of the old mansion home of a local famous/wealthy horse breeder, an old schoolhouse, and about a dozen ancient oil lamps and doilies. So in my mind, county museums mean small, not a whole lot to see, and an interesting hour or two.
Well, over the summer I was visiting Yokohama and ended up with a couple hours to spare. Since I was in the area, I decided to visit the Kanagawa Prefectural Museum, which is basically the city’s county museum. Now, I’m thinking I’ll see an old building, maybe catch a few old photographs, and see some old pottery, while still making it out in time to grab some souvenirs for family. But what I didn’t take into account was the fact that Midwestern US museums’ greatest events are the soldiers leaving for WWI, WWII and the wars thereafter.
Kanagawa, on the other hand, has thousands of years of history spanning dozens of empires and centuries of religious, cultural, and social upheaval and development. It’s survived hundreds of rulers, the bombings of WWII, the rise of Buddhism and the introduction of Christianity, the 1964 Olympics, and was the landing sight of Commodore Perry, the man who forcibly opened Japan to the west. So what I found was practically another national Museum.
Now, everything was in Japanese (and I do mean everything, even the brochures were untranslated). But it was also empty, so all the people were standing around waiting for people to come. They saw me wandering around and before I knew what was going on I have 4 different employees following me around with a translator machine explaining all the exhibits and what they meant. I got my own personal tour of this awesome place! Everyone was incredibly kind, and my visit (which actually took 3+ hours) was an unexpectedly amazing event.
I apologize for the quality of these photos, I ran out of film earlier in the day and was stuck with my Ipod. 😦 Still, they show what an amazing history this place has!
They also had Buddha statues, more sculptures than I could count, dozens of ancient maps, stunning paintings, and some amazing photography, as well as many other artifacts and cultural resources. It was a wonderful place to visit!
If you’re in the area and want to stop by, you can find out more information about the Museum here. I think it cost me about $6-7 total, but I don’t quite remember. Museums in Japan are more expensive than those in Korea, but I remember that this one wasn’t too bad. Great place to visit and it’s right down from Kannai street (a famous shopping street in Yokohama). Look it up!