Over boeken, literaire reflecties en het web van literatuur, door Niek de Greef. Werner Herzog, Paul Theroux, V.S. Naipaul en meer. Nederlandse en Engelstalige boeken.

Do Nothing, or indeed a lot

I am reading How To Do Nothing by Jenny Odell. But the book is not about doing nothing. It’s about what to do – about paying attention. Where social media captures our attention with screaming headlines, Odell advocates a deeper form of attention. In her own life, her interest in the birds around her is an example of deep attention. Previously, she saw birds flying; since she has immersed herself in them, she sees species and hears their specific sounds.

Raaf / Raven
Raven

I recognize that. Since we were on the Marker Wadden and learned to tell a dozen duck and goose species apart there (Icy Duck and Casarca brought the bird watchers to orgasmic ecstasy), I’ve seen more and more specifics in my daily life as well.

I saw an Egyptian goose with youngsters yesterday. I thought Egyptian geese didn’t nest in the Netherlands, but according to Natuurmonumenten, I was utterly wrong.

Halsbandparkiet / Collared Parakeet
Collared Parakeet

On our roof was a large crow-like bird. A raven, maybe, I thought. My son says it’s probably just a crow. But this one has such a big beak. That’s right, he says, but most of the birds we see that we think are crows are actually jackdaws (kauwen). I looked it up, and he was right; my image of crows is jackdaws, and the bird we saw could be a crow. But it was big and had a crooked beak. I stick with a raven anyway.

We have been hearing a strange sound in the trees lately. A guest of ours recognizes it as the Collared Parakeet (Halsbandparkiet). I looked it up, and it is correct. In the trees beyond, I suddenly heard many more Collared Parakeets. One day, one pops into our window in a full diving flight. We solemnly place the exotic green-yellow “parrot” in the green bin.

Hockney’s Insights on Painting and Photography

Davis Hockney’s book A Chronology

I read this book about David Hockney, A Chronology, a thickly illustrated book by Taschen. It is currently on sale in many bookstores.

A Talent

David Hockney, A Chronology - book cover

Hockney could paint wonderfully at a young age. I sometimes mess around myself, but when I see his early paintings, I quickly throw my crap in a corner.

Hockney: always experimenting

What I think is so great about Hockney is that he kept experimenting. He played with a photocopier and with photography, taught himself to paint with watercolors later in life, and got to work early on with a computer, iPhone, and later iPad. He made films and great set pieces and drew with pencil and charcoal.

Hockney and photography: not real enough

Despite pioneering work with his photo collages, photography ultimately did not bring him the satisfaction he sought.

“The trouble with photography: it’s not real enough, not true to lived experience.”

In his experiments with photography, he bends the reality of the photograph into the reality of what has been observed.

david hockney stagedesign

Painting is his thing. According to Hockney, three things are essential to this: the eye, the heart, and the hand. He is a master in all three.

More on Hockney: A History of Pictures.

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Keep Going van Austin Kleon en permissie om de wereld te veranderen

Ik lees Austin Kleon’s Keep Going. Het is een kunstwerkje op zich. Afgezien van de inhoud prachtig geïllustreerd met Kleon’s black-out poetry en andere illustraties.

Keep Going : 10 Ways to Stay Creative in Good Times and Bad

Inhoudelijk is het een verzameling van “best practices” voor de creatieve geest, geeft Kleon zelf ook aan. Ik lees “you are allowed to change the world”, maar er staat “you are allowed to change your mind”. Ik vind mijn slogan eigenlijk sterker. Moeten we niet allemaal tot doel hebben iets te veranderen? Een status quo bestaat niet. Dan kan je het maar beter veranderen naar een staat die je zelf het beste lijkt. Anders krijg je alleen maar wat een ander bedacht heeft.

Ik denk bij veranderen ook aan “Consistency is overrated”, een zelfbedachte slogan die Scott H. Young al eens blijkt te hebben beschreven. Consistency kan een fuik worden, een net waarin je gevangen zit. Je wordt angstig om maar consistent te blijven, je kan niet afwijken, je moet je consistentie bewaren om aan de verwachtingen te kunnen voldoen. Het wordt een dwangbuis dat je er van weerhoudt te vernieuwen.

The Anthropocene Reviewed read

Book cover the anthropocene reviewed by john green

I wrote in an earlier post that I was reading The Anthropocene Reviewed by John Green. The Anthropocene Reviewed is a collection of essays in which John Greene examines some very different aspects of being human. I heard some of the essays before via via The Anthropocene Reviewed podcast.

The topics John Green touches on range from the cave paintings of Lascaux, through Indycar races in Indiana, the QWERTY keyboard to August Sander’s famous photograph titled “Three Farmers on Their Way to a Dance,” which depicts three men who do not appear to be farmers. (By the way, the photo I read on Wikipedia is actually called “Jungbauern, 1914,” and “Three Farmers on Their Way to a Dance” is the title of Richard Powers’ book inspired by the photo.)

Green mixes facts and personal stories in the essays in an engaging, funny and moving way. A great book that tastes like more.

Postscriptum: See also this video about a review of August Sander’s photo on The Art Assignment channel, presented by John Green.

More John Green in Looking for Alaska, Turtles All The Way Down.

The Athropocene Reviewed signed, 2 stars for the signature

I am reading The Anthropocene Reviewed by John Green. I bought the “signed edition.” Good book, so far. But that autograph, John Green could have practiced on that a little longer.

Two stars for the autograph ;-).

Handtekening John Green in The Anthropocene Reviewed