R.I.P. Eric Rohmer







French New Wave director Eric Rohmer: R.I.P
January 11, 2010 | 11:43 am

Director Eric Rohmer, one of the founders of the French New Wave film movement, has died, his production company confirmed Monday.

Rohmer Born Maurice Henri Joseph Scherer in 1920, Rohmer fashioned his screen name after actor-director Erich von Stroheim (“Sunset Boulevard”) and the English novelist Sax Rohmer. From 1957 to 1963, he was the editor of the influential periodical Cahiers du Cinema and ultimately joined his onetime Cahiers colleagues Jean-Luc Godard and Francois Truffaut as a director.

Rohmer didn’t have the flash and sizzle of the more famous Godard and Truffaut, but he was very much their equal, creating deceptively simple fables about the human condition, with haunting performances and a particular obsession for the messy vagaries of love and betrayal. He made his directorial debut in 1959 with "Le Signe du Lion," but it was his third film, 1969’s “My Night at Maud’s,” that catapulted him to international attention and earned two Oscar nominations.

Rohmer directed more than 50 films, including such notable works as “Claire’s Knee,” the Cannes Jury Prize grand winner “The Marquise of O” and “Pauline at the Beach,” the last of which memorably portrayed a teenager ensnared in the romantic games of her aunt. His last film was 2007’s “The Romance of Astree and Celadon.” Rohmer was 89.

-- Rachel Abramowitz
Photo: Eric Rohmer. Credit: Robin Holland.

-----------------------------------------------
Director:

1. Les amours d'Astrée et de Céladon (2007)
... aka Gli amori di Astrea e Celadon (Italy)
... aka Romance of Astrea and Celadon (Canada: English title)
... aka Romance of Astree and Celadon (USA: festival title)
2. Le canapé rouge (2005)
3. Triple agent (2004)
... aka Triple Agent (International: English title) (USA: festival title)
... aka Agente speciale (Italy)
... aka Triple agente (Spain)
4. L'anglaise et le duc (2001)
... aka The Lady and the Duke (Australia) (USA)
... aka L'anglaise & le duc (France: poster title)

5. Conte d'automne (1998)
... aka Autumn Tale (Canada: English title) (USA)
6. Conte d'été (1996)
... aka A Summer's Tale
7. Les rendez-vous de Paris (1995)
... aka Rendezvous in Paris
8. L'arbre, le maire et la médiathèque (1993)
... aka L'arbre, le maire et la médiathèque ou les sept hasards (France: complete title)
... aka Les sept hasards
... aka The Tree, the Mayor and the Mediatheque
9. Conte d'hiver (1992)
... aka A Tale of Winter (USA)
... aka A Winter's Tale
10. Conte de printemps (1990)
... aka A Tale of Springtime (USA)
... aka Contes des quatre saisons: Conte de printemps
... aka Tales of Four Seasons (USA)

11. Les jeux de société (1989) (TV)
12. L'ami de mon amie (1987)
... aka My Girlfriend's Boyfriend (UK) (USA: festival title)
... aka Boyfriends and Girlfriends (USA)
... aka Comédies et proverbes (France)
13. 4 aventures de Reinette et Mirabelle (1987)
... aka Four Adventures of Reinette and Mirabelle (USA)
14. Le rayon vert (1986)
... aka Comédies et Proverbes: Le rayon vert (France: complete title)
... aka Summer (USA)
... aka The Green Ray (UK)
15. Bois ton café (1986) (V)
16. Les nuits de la pleine lune (1984)
... aka Comédies et proverbes (France: series title)
... aka Full Moon in Paris (International: English title)
17. Pauline à la plage (1983)
... aka Pauline at the Beach
18. Le beau mariage (1982) (as Éric Rohmer)
... aka A Good Marriage (UK)
... aka Comédies et proverbes: Le beau mariage (France: long title)
... aka Le beau mariage (USA)
19. La femme de l'aviateur (1981)
... aka La femme de l'aviateur ou 'on ne saurait penser à rien'
... aka The Aviator's Wife (USA)
20. Catherine de Heilbronn (1980) (TV)

21. Perceval le Gallois (1978)
... aka Il fuorilegge (Italy)
... aka Perceval (Italy)
22. Die Marquise von O... (1976)
... aka La marquise d'O... (France)
... aka The Marquise of O
23. L'amour l'après-midi (1972)
... aka Chloe in the Afternoon (USA)
... aka Love in the Afternoon
24. Le genou de Claire (1970)
... aka Claire's Knee (USA)

25. Ma nuit chez Maud (1969)
... aka My Night at Maud's (USA)
... aka My Night with Maud
... aka Six Moral Tales III: My Night at Maud's (International: English title: series title)
... aka Six contes moraux III: Ma nuit chez Maud (France: series title)
26. La béton dans la ville (1969) (TV)
27. Victor Hugo architecte (1969) (TV)
28. Louis Lumière (1968) (TV)
29. Mallarmé (1968) (TV)
30. La collectionneuse (1967)
... aka Six contes moraux IV: La Collectionneuse
... aka The Collector
31. Fermière à Montfaucon (1967) (TV)
32. Victor Hugo: Les contemplations (Livre V-V) (1966) (TV)
33. Une étudiante d'aujourd'hui (1966)
... aka A Modern Coed (USA: literal English title)
34. Paris vu par... (1965) (segment "Place de l'Étoile")
... aka Six in Paris
35. Entretien sur Pascal (1965) (TV)
... aka On Pascal (USA: informal English title)
36. "Cinéastes de notre temps" (2 episodes, 1965)
- Carl Th. Dreyer (1965) TV episode
- Le celluloid et la marbre (1965) TV episode
37. Les caractères de La Bruyère (1965) (TV)
38. Don Quichotte (1965) (TV)
39. Les histoires extraordinaires d'Edgar Poe (1965) (TV)
40. Perceval ou Le conte du Graal (1965) (TV)
41. L'ère industrielle: Métamorphoses du paysage (1964) (TV)
... aka Changing Landscapes (UK)
... aka Ver l'unite du monde (France: series title)
42. Nadja à Paris (1964)
... aka Nadja in Paris (USA: literal English title)
43. Les cabinets de physique au XVIIIème siècle (1964) (TV)
... aka Les cabinets de physique (la vie de société au XVIIIe siècle) (France)
44. La carrière de Suzanne (1963)
... aka Suzanne's Career
45. La boulangère de Monceau (1963)
... aka The Baker of Monceau
... aka The Baker's Girl of Monceau
... aka The Bakery Girl of Monceau (USA)
... aka The Girl at the Monceau Bakery
46. Présentation ou Charlotte et son steak (1960)
... aka Presentation, or Charlotte and Her Steak (USA: literal English title)

47. Le signe du lion (1959)
... aka The Sign of Leo
48. Véronique et son cancre (1958)
... aka Véronique and Her Dunce (USA: literal English title)
49. La sonate à Kreutzer (1956)
50. Bérénice (1954)
... aka Berenice (USA: informal English title)
51. Journal d'un scélérat (1950)

INEFFABLE WOMEN

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lYL8To0Vc4g

How to offer incense













How to offer incense at the funeral in Japan


When it's your turn to offer incense, stand up and go to to the urn placed in front of the altar.

Stand at attention, put your hands together with the rosary around them, and bow.

Take a pinch of incense from the container next to the urn, bring it close to your forehead, and then place it on the smoldering incense in the urn.

Repeat this process three times.

Stand at attention again, bow and return to your seat.
 

EXHIBITION OPPORTUNITY - gallery in Chelsea

EXHIBITION OPPORTUNITY
GET
“EXPOSURE“

Ceres presents 10 simultaneous exhibitions each week for five weeks with space available for both two and three-dimensional artists. Each artist will be able to fully avail themselves of approx. 13-17 running feet of wall space with 10+ foot ceilings or approx. 80-100 square feet of floor space.

http://ceresgallery.org/exposure2009.htm

One year anniversary of my friend Lisa Schumann's passing










Tomorrow, April 14th will make a year anniversary of my friend Lisa Lynn Schumann's passing away.

I got to know Lisa in 1993 as her masseuse, having been introduced by her friend, Miriam. She loved receiving my very strong massage. After I started visiting her regularly, soon we became friends. We were both dancers and same age. From the beginning, she was very supportive to my art works. She had never missed any of my exhibitions and theater productions since 1994 till 2006. I really appreciate her support and highly valued her comment. Though I became too busy after I started my graduate studies in 1996, we met at her place a few times a year for chatting & having dinner together. She always cooked for me. She was beautiful, bright and generous.

For her memorial held on 4th of this month, l scanned 100's of her photographs & made a slide show DVD combined with three Spanish guitar music in iMovie. That was the only thing I could do for her memorial since I was too busy for opening my own exhibition. It was a pleasant surprise to see so many people showed up on that day. She was truly missed by all of us. Rest in peace, Lisa. You will be always missed.



*"The view from W.T.C Observation deck #1", 1994

Masayo Nishimura: "Uptown Bound" photography










Masayo Nishimura
Uptown Bound
Photography

March 24 – April 18 2009
Opening Reception, Thursday, March 26th, 6pm - 8pm

Ceres Gallery
547 West 27th St Suite 201 New York, NY 10001
phone and fax: 212-947-6100
art@ceresgallery.org
http://ceresgallery.org/
Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12pm - 6pm and Thursday 12-8pm.

"Uptown Bound" by Masayo Nishimura



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Masayo Nishimura
Uptown Bound
Photography


March 24 – April 18 2009
Opening Reception, Thursday, March 26th, 6pm - 8pm

Ceres gallery is pleased to present Masayo Nishimura’s Uptown Bound, a solo exhibition of Nishimura’s photographs. The Opening Reception will take place on Thursday, March 26th from 6pm until 8pm. The artist will be present.

This exhibition features Nishimura’s Uptown Bound series of color photographs of the lights and shadows created by New York City subway architecture in which the roofs of cars and tracks are bathed in light from the street level, looking quiet, beautiful, and reminiscent of Medieval religious paintings. Nishimura captures a fascinating moment created by this everyday environment.

Nishimura began studying photography in 1993. From the beginning she was attracted to the lights and shadows created by subway architecture, especially the way the cars and tracks are bathed in light from the street. She always marveled at the effects produced. Down in the station, Nishimura often felt as if she were inside a huge fish tank, with blurry passengers and cars floating by in the depths. Illuminated by artificial light, everything looked quiet and detached from reality. The lighting often created dreamlike shadows, sometimes creating ghostly effects. Nishimura was always fascinated with those surreal images.

Nishimura used a 35mm SLR camera for the first few years. Then in Fall 1999, she experimented with a rented Hasselblad and B & W film. Since it was a medium format camera and difficult to operate by hand, she installed a tripod with cable release on the platform. Instead of using a flash, she used a long exposure and a slow shutter speed to capture the transforming contours of shadows over time. In April 2000, Nishimura visited the station again with the same Hasselblad, this time using color film. It was a sunny Sunday morning and she felt as if the lighting from the street level looked perfect. Just as she had done before, she set up her tripod on the platform and pressed the cable release. Nishimura continued to press the cable release for about thirty minutes until a policeman interrupted her. The results of that half- hour's work developed quite beautifully and she felt blessed.

The images Nishimura captured that morning were first exhibited in a group show which opened at the SoHo Photo Gallery in Tribeca on Thursday, September 6th, 2001. On the fifth day of the exhibition, Tuesday September 11th, she woke up late and saw that the Twin Towers had been destroyed by terrorists and had disappeared from the skyline. Now these works remind her of the innocence of New York City before 9/11, the city Nishimura has loved so dearly since she moved here two decades ago.

About Masayo Nishimura:
Masayo Nishimura is a native of Osaka, Japan. In 1986, she moved to New York to study dance. In 1993, she began her study in photography at CUNY Hunter College under Professor Mark Feldstein, where she discovered her visual interest in NYC subway stations. She also took several workshop classes at the School of Visual Arts & the International Center of Photography. Since then her subway-themed photographic works have been exhibited in various galleries in New York City. In 1999, she earned her Master of Fine Arts in Computer Art from the School of Visual Arts. Her thesis film, "Dream" – a subway love story has been screened worldwide and won various awards including New York regional finalist of the 27th Student Academy Awards. In 2000, "Dream" was screened at the Museum of Modern Art as an official selection of the "New Directors/New Films festival" sponsored by the Cinema Society of Lincoln Center and MOMA. In 2000, she started working on a series of color photographs of the lights and shadows created by subway architecture. The work titled “Uptown Bound” has continued to receive rave responses from viewers.


For more information please contact Stefany Benson, Director at :
Ceres Gallery
547 West 27th St Suite 201 New York, NY 10001
phone and fax: 212-947-6100
art@ceresgallery.org
http://ceresgallery.org/
Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12pm - 6pm and Thursday 12-8pm.

Masayo Nishimura:
mniart@aol.com
http://multisoup.com/exhi3.html

Ineffable/Woman A Bi-Coastal Conversation about Women's Art



February 24 - March 21, 2009
Ceres Gallery
Ineffable/Woman
A Bi-Coastal Conversation about Women's Art

Agathidium george bushi

Agathidium bushi

Two U.S. scientists have named three species of slime-mold beetles they recently discovered Agathidium bushi, Agathidium cheneyi, and Agathidium rumsfeldi—after Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld.

http://maiuso.com/bushi.html

CERES GALLERY - EXPOSURE

CERES GALLERY
EXPOSURE


November 25 - December 30, 2008

Exhibition #1, November 25-29 (except 27th)
Exhibition #2, December 2-6
Exhibition #3, December 9-13
Exhibition #4, December 16-20
Exhibition #5, December 23-30 (except 25th)

*The gallery will be closed on November 27, Thanksgiving Day & December 25, Christmas Day.


Ceres Gallery
547 West 27th St Suite 201 New York, NY 10001

phone and fax:
212-947-6100

email:
art@ceresgallery.org

hours:
Tuesday - Saturday 12-6
Thursday 12-8