Saturday, July 17, 2010

Art, in and of Combat

From the New York Times (July 13, 2010), an article on the US Marine Corps' art program. Carol Kino writes that the Marine Corps's combat art program "is not the only one of its kind in the United States military, but many regard it as the one most deeply committed to its artistic mission. Like those in the other services, it began after the attack on Pearl Harbor and scaled back after Vietnam. Somewhat unusually, however, it has kept at least one artist in the reserves ready to deploy."

In my first university-level class I taught, there was a student recently returned from deployment in the Middle East. He showed me some of the sketches he made while serving. They were heartfelt, smart, reflective (in every sense), and they have stuck with me ever since. Since its inception, the number of teaching artists in the Marine Corps has gone from 77 to 1. I am glad one remains, and hopeful for more.

Sgt. Jack Corillo's work is pictured above.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Nu from Blu

So exciting to see the now-familiar cast of replicating hedrons, tentacular pods, and crustacean crawlies joined by all new marks and visions (including a dino-devouring-van and a solid political sentiment)! BLU has just completed production on Big Bang, Big Boom, “an unscientific point of view on the beginning and evolution of life … and how it could probably end.”