Thursday, April 2, 2026

Claude

 Claude Lorraine.

 

Claude Lorrain ; born Claude GellĂ©e, called le Lorrain in French; traditionally just Claude in English; c. 1600 – 23 November 1682) was a painter, draughtsman and etcher of the Baroque era originally from the Duchy of Lorraine. 

He spent most of his life in Italy, and is one of the earliest significant artists, aside from his contemporaries in Dutch Golden Age painting, to concentrate on landscape painting. His landscapes often transitioned into the more prestigious genre of history paintings by addition of a few small figures, typically representing a scene from the Bible or classical mythology.

By the end of the 1630s he was established as the leading landscapist in Italy, and enjoyed large fees for his work. His landscapes gradually became larger, but with fewer figures, more carefully painted, and produced at a lower rate. He was not generally an innovator in landscape painting, except in introducing the sun and streaming sunlight into many paintings, which had been rare before. 

He is now thought of as a French painter, but was born in the independent Duchy of Lorraine, and almost all his painting was done in Italy; before the late 19th century he was regarded as a painter of the "Roman School".

His patrons were also mostly Italian, but after his death he became very popular with English collectors, and the UK retains a high proportion of his works

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Modern Painters, John Ruskin, Edited And Abridged, David Barrie, c. 1987

Modern Painters, John Ruskin, Edited And Abridged, David Barrie, c. 1987

I picked this book up years ago in San Antonio, at Half-Price Books. 

I have looked at it briefly off and on over the years. 

It certainly intrigues me.

I could be wrong, but it's all about landscape artists. Early on Ruskin mentions "Claude." I had not hear of "Claude" before and thought he was referring to Claude Monet. I was wrong. In fact, he was referring to Claude Lorraine (wiki). See blog

From another book: link here.

The Correct Use of Whales: Hull, or Kingston-Upon-Hull, Yorkshire; polar bears feared more than whales by whalers; 1822 -- Hull, England's most successful whaling port; Tunstall whale; Beale's journey, 1830, coast of South America, Cape Horn, across the Pacific to Hawaii, and on to Kamchatka Peninsula; echoed the work of Charles Darwin, whose own voyage on the Beagle was under way even as Beale reached the South Sea; J.M.W. Turner; Melville's passion for Turner almost rivalled that of the artist's champion, John Ruskin; Melville read Ruskin's Modern Painters, before his trip to England; Beale supplied Ismael's cetology; Beale to whales as Darwin to finches.

I noted that I haven't posted notes on this book yet (April 1, 2026) -- apparently it's time to get started.

Narrative: 591 pages; does not include index.

First thought after starting this project: Ruskin, as a writer and perhaps as a thinker, has been greatly ignored. Great ignored. Amazing.

Bottom of page 17, first page of the introduction, this line: Turner himself seems to have been rather embarrassed by the extravagant praise heaped upon and no doubt shook his head over Ruskin's rough treatment of Claude, whom he (Turner) deeply respected.

Claude, I assume was Claude Monet.

 

Introduction

A naturalist, first and foremost. Huge impact on the Pre-Raphaelites, particularly Holman Hunt. See conclusion in chapter, p. 39.

First volume published in 1843; Ruskin was only 24 at the time; first embarked on this project in 1836 -- seven years earlier, putting him at age 17 when he started this project; in response to a "vitriolic review in Blackwood's Magazine of some paintings by Turner n that year's Royal Academy exhibition.

Nothing came of in. In 1842 another "outburst of philistine critical abuse reawoke Ruskin's indignation, and as they say, "the rest is history."

Biographic background: fascinating, begins on page 18. Ends on page 33. Wow. A small book in itself.

Main themes:

Conclusion: it begins --

In a short introduction it would be futile to attempt to examine thoroughly the astonishingly diverse array of ideas and images contained in Modern Painters
Quite apart from its size and complexity, there is something Protean about it. 
Ruskin was a self-indulgent writer and, though he had a powerful analytical mind, he cared less and less for argumentative tidiness and rigour (sic) as he grew older. 
Like that other great nineteenth century prophet, Nietzshe (to whom he bears more than a passing resemblance), he was not ashamed to contradict himself. In the preface to Volume V, he excused himself by claiming that "all true opinions are living, and show their life by being capable of nourishment; therefore of change." but, he added, "their change is that of a tree not of a cloud." 
Whether or not one accepts the validity of this metaphor, it would be unreasonable to expect any writer dealing with issues as profound as those tackled in Modern Painters not to modify his ideas over the course of seventeen years. 

From Virginia Woolf, p. 36:

"As Virginia Woolf said: 'The style in page after page of Modern Painters is written takes our breath away. We find ourselves marvelling at the words, as if all the fountains of the English language had been set playing in the sunlight for our pleasure' (The Captain's Deathbed, article on Ruskin).

p. 37: Ruskin's enthusiasm for minuteess of handling and complete naturalism reached out through Holman Hunt to the other Pre-Raphaelites and beyond, as did his conviction that great art ought to serve a high moral or spiritual purpose. 

1850s: Ruskin's critical reputation stood at its highest point; his opinions on artistic matters were treated almost as Gospel. 

Ruskin wrote so well and so much / so often on Turner, Ruskin actually overshadowed Turner. Ruskin = Turner. 

But:

Long before his death in 1900, Ruskin had come to be seen in avant garde circles as a backward-looking proponent of an outmoded narrative style of at. The rise of the Aesthetic Movement -- in which Whistler was the most prominent artistic figure -- can be seen a direct challenge to Ruskin's teachings about the moral and spiritual significance of art, although, ironically. it owed much to Ruskin's inspiration. Intellectuals of the Bloomsbury generation, in thrall to Roger Fry and his doctrine of "significant form," regarded Ruskin as a figure of fun. to judge frm the sales of his books, Ruskin's popularity with the wider public actually increased towards the end of his life, but it seems to have gone in to a steep decline around the time of the First World War, as part of the obscure process by which all things Victoria gradually became deeply unfashionable.

Classical -- Naturalism/Realism -- Pre-Raphaelite -- Impressionism --  Aesthetic Movement -- Modern
 

1840:

Turner: Romantic painter, 1775 - 1851, 65 years old (1840), died at age 76;
Ruskin: 1819 - 1900, 21 years old (1840); Modern Painters, 1843 - 1860; died at age 81;
Holman Hunt: 1827 -- 1910; Pre-Raphaelite; 13 years old (1840); 
Whistler: 1834 - 1903; six years old (1840); Aesthetic Movement;
Claude Monet: 1840 - 1926; born in 1840; younger, but a contemporary of Whistler;
Virginia Woolf: 1882 - 1941; in 1928, she can only read Ruskin; read about Turner;



 

Moby Dick published 1851; Modern Painters, Volume I, 1843. One assumes Herman Melville was reading Modern Painters even at the time he was writing Moby Dick

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The Modern Welfare State


 

 

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Lagunitas

AI prompt

Lagunitas: the word shows up often in books with regard to the Bay Area, Marin County. What is the story of Lagunitas and what is it?

AI reply

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The Maps


 


 


 

Why Machines Learn: The Elegant Math Behind Modern AI, Anil Ananthaswamy -- March 31, 2026

Why Machines Learn: The Elegant Math Behind Modern AI, Anil Ananthaswamy, c. 2024 / 2025

Chapter 5: Birds of a Feather

page 149: the search for nearest neighbors -- this is a really, really cool chapter --

begins with the Islamic Golden Age and the work of Abu Ali al-Hasan Ibn al Haytham, or Alhazen, a Muslim Arab mathematician, astronomer, and physicist, link here.

the "father of modern optics" for his revolutionary Book of Optics. He Correctly explained vision by light reflection rather than emission, developed the scientific method, and made major contributions to physics, astronomy, and mathematics 

page 150

Marcello Pelillo, a computer scientist at the University of Venice, Italy, had been doing his best to draw attention to Alhazen's ideas.

  • stumbled upon this book in a New Haven, CT, bookstore: Theories of Vision from Al-Kindi to Kepler
  • the late 1990s: Pelillo was than visiting professor at Yale
  • doing research in computer visionpattern recognition, and machine learning
  • a slim book -- just 200 pages
  • the author argued that Alhazen was "the most significant figure in the history of optics between antiquity and the seventeenth century."
  • intromission: wiki; light entering the eye, correct;
  • extramission: wrong; eyes emit rays to "touch" objects; wiki;
  • coherent explanation of vision. 

This was key, from Alhazen, noted by Pelillo:

"When sight perceives some visible object, the faculty of discrimination immediately seeks its counterpart among the forms persisting in the imagination, and when it finds some form in the imagination that is like the form of that visible object, it will recognize that visible object and will perceive what kind of thing it is."

See this post

page 152:

Pelillo

Alhazen

the algorithm -- the "nearest neighbor (NN) rule": 

Thomas Cover: a young, whip-smart information theorist and electrical engineer at Stanford;

Peter Hart: precocious graduate student,

page 155:

the first mathematical mention of the nearest neighbor rule appeared in a 1951 (the year I was born) technical report of the USAF School of Aviation Medicine, Randolph Field, Texas....the authors were Evelyn Fix and Joseph L. Hodges, Jr.

In 1940: Evelyn Fix came to work at the University of California, Berkeley, as a research assistant in the Statistical Laboratory, assigned to a project for the National Defense Research Committee. US researchers were getting drawn into the war waging in Europe....

... Fix received her PhD in 1948, stayed on at UC-Berkeley...

... came in touch with Joseph L. Hodges, Jr, and they produced the technical report of 1951 -- the question, of course, is how these two were the USAF School of Aviation Medicine.

As a graduate student looking for a doctoral thesis topic related to pattern recognition, Peter Hart stumbled upon the Fix and Hodges paper and the nearest neighbor rule. The rest is history, as they say.

The nearest neighbor rule. Link here

Evelyn Fix, wiki.  Berkeley Statistics: link here.


 

Monday, March 30, 2026

On Grief: Joan Didion and Joyce Carol Oates -- March 30, 2026


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On Death And Grief

Joyce Carol Oates vs Joan Didion. 

JCO: born 1938.

JD: born 1934. 

John Gregory Dunne: born 1932; died 2003; massive, sudden myocardial infarction; age 71.

Quintana Roo Dunne: adopted daughter of Joan and John; born 1966, died 2005, age 39;

More later. It's too early in the morning to write on this now.

AI prompt: Joyce Carol Oates vs Joan Didion.

Joyce Carol Oates: Blonde; a fictional biograph of Marilyn Monroe.
her memoir following the death of her husband, A Widow's Story
reviewed in The New Yorker, December 5, 2010; link here.

Joan Didion on grief:

  • Blue Nights, wiki; and,
  • The Year of Magical Thinking, wiki.

AI prompt: was the word "vortex" when associated with grief, coined by Joan Didion or was "vortex" already used by grief therapists by then? 

Gemini: while Didion may not have been the absolute first person in human history to use the word "vortex" to describe emotional pain, she coined it as a specific, widely recognized metaphor for the modern, clinical experience of abrupt bereavement.

Blue Nights: published 2011

  • a memoir; an account of the death of Didion's adopted daughter, Quintana Roo Dunne Michael, 
  • died at age 39, 2005
  • multiple major medical problems exacerbated by fall and subsequent intracranial hemorrage
  • "blue nights": summer solstice, when the twilights turn long and blue;
  • notable for its nihilistic attitude towards grief as Didion offers little understanding or explanation of daughter's death 
  • a companion piece The Year of Magical Thinking, published six years earlier, 2005
  • following the death of her husband and hospitalization of her daughter

The Year of Magical Thinking: published 2005

  • memoir; the year following the death of her husband, John Gregory Dunner, 2003;
  • acclaimed as a classic book about morning
  • won the 2005 National Book Award for Nonfiction
  • drew upon her extensive notes, journaling;
  • New York Times Book Review: ranked the book as the 12th best book of the 21st century; 

I spent a lot of time on this subject, grief and "vortex" for a couple of specific reasons. 

********************************
On Grief

A reader, slightly older than I (I'm 76) recently lost his wife. He is overwhelmed with grief. His notes reminded me of Joan Didion in The Year of Magical Thinking.  

Joan Didion titled her memoir The Year of Magical Thinking to describe the irrational, delusional thought patterns she experienced while grieving the sudden death of her husband. She believed that her own thoughts, rituals, or unwillingness to accept reality could reverse his death, such as refusing to give away his shoes because she felt he would need them upon his return. 

I have read The Year of Magical Thinking. I don't think my reader would enjoy that book. But if he did read the first couple of chapters -- I think he would find that his grief response to his wife's death is very similar to what Didion when through after her husband's sudden death per her memoir.

Me? I'm glad I read the book but I cannot relate to it all. 

I had suicidal ideation for many years, particularly in my coming of age years, and I often think that had I not married I would have committed suicide. Having said that, I always returned to rational thoughts and never attempted suicide, and I doubt I would have had the "guts" to do so. But, I think that's the way a lot of folks thought and committed suicide anyway. 

But I have experienced grief as profoundly as Didion has, but it was with the loss / break-up of deep heterosexual relationships. I believe I can count two such relationships. In both cases the grief was profound. 

My wife and I will celebrate our 50th wedding anniversary next year, March 19th. We were married in Las Vegas on the spur of the moment. We were living in separate apartments across town in the county of Los Angeles, she in west Hollywood and I in South Pasadena, both equidistant but in different directions from our place of work / study. She was working as a therapist at Los Angeles County hospital; I was in medical school there, across the street at USC-LAC medical school.

Within 24 hours of our wedding, I had second doubts, significant remorse, but I never wavered in my commitment to me wife. As noted above, I doubt I would have survived to this age had I not been married. It's hard to say.

Even harder to say is how I will handle her death. I miss her terribly when we are apart, but now the relationship is about what one would expect after 50 years of marriage. But I can't imagine experiencing the "vortex" due to that profound grief as described by Joan Didion.

My wife might. Maybe men and women experience grief differently but then I am reminded of the reader and his grief following the loss of his wife of 50+ years. 

As noted, I experienced the "vortex" of profound grief on two occasions, both occurring after the abrupt end of two intense heterosexual relationships. 

The "vortex" is as real as Didion describes it. The grief only goes away/dies after the love-of-one's-life has also died. For me, the first woman died about twenty years ago and I seldom think about her and can rationally discuss her with my family and friends. The other woman is still alive, very geographically separated and I've never seen her again or contacted her after we broke up but I still find myself in that vortex on occasion when I think about her. That happens less and less but it's amazing how long that grief has persisted. 

The grief following those two relationships never significantly negatively impacted my life and I found no reason to seek therapy or join a "grief group." Working 24/7 in the military and raising a family (two children) and the five grandchildren did not allow me spend time in the vortex.  

 

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Palestine / Israel and Greece -- From Tribal Chiefs To Monarchies -- March 11, 2026

IA prompt

n the big scheme of things, it appears civilization in Greece and civilization in Palestine/Israel was going through the same stages of moving from tribal chiefs / tribal kings to a single monarch (or a few monarchs) from 2000 BC to 1000 BC?

IA reply



 

Monday, March 9, 2026

The News: A User's Manual, Alain de Botton, c. 2014.

Today: The News: A User's Manual, Alain de Botton, c. 2014.

A gift from our younger daughter many years ago.

We are addicted to the news, and governed by the news cycle:

  • 0400: check the overnight headlines on Fox Newsx
  • 0600: check Oilprice; occasionally check pre-market
  • 0800: ten to thirty minutes of Jim Cramer
  • 1700: ten minutes, check the weather on network television

From Botton, p. 11:

Societies become modern, the philosopher Hegel suggested, when news replaces religion as our central source of guidance and our touchstone of authority. In the developed economies, the news now occupies a position of power at least equal to that formerly enjoyed by the faiths. 

Dispatches track the canonical hours with uncanny precision: matins have been transubstantiated into the breakfast bulletin, vespers into the evening report.  

 It is clear, the author needs to write a sequel: Agentic AI: The New Writers.

Gustave Flaubert:

The noblest promise of the news is that it will be able to alleviate ignorance, overcome prejudice and raise the intelligence of individuals and nations.

But from some quarters it has intermittently been accused of a contrary capacity, that of making us completely stupid. One of the most uncompromising versions of this charge was levelled in the mid-nineteenth century by Gustave Flaubert. Flaubert belonged to a generation that had experienced the rise of mass-circulation newspapers at first hand. 

Flaubert was appalled by what, in his estimation, these newspapers were doing to the intelligence and curiosity of his countrymen. 

Quick: what novel was Flaubert best known for? 

And then there's John Hanning Speke (1827 - 1864). Remember him? I didn't think so. 

Before our time, the only way to get to Uganda was to travel for two months by sea around the perilous Cape of Good Hope bound for Dar es Salaam, then inland for another few months through bush and desert, with every likelihood that one would never return. 

In 1859, on the eve of the US Civil War, John Hanning Speke, the first European ever to enter Uganda and the man who gave Lake Inyansha its new name, Lake Victoria, made it back to Britain and gave a lecture on his travels to an almost hysterical 800-strong crowd in the Royal Geographical Society in Kensington.  

And that's just a start. 


Friday, February 27, 2026

Van Gogh: The Life, Steve Naifeh and Gregory White Smith, Pulitzer Prize winning authors of Jackson Pollock, c. 2011

Van Gogh: The Life, Steve Naifeh and Gregory White Smith, Pulitzer Prize winning authors of Jackson Pollock, c. 2011, Random House. 

  • narrative: 868 pages
  • appendices: 16 pages
  • acknowledgments: 4 pages
  • a note on  sources: 3 pages
  • selected biography: 24 pages
  • index: 32 pages

"liminal" -- can't remember if I first came across this word in this book; if so, early in the book. "Occupying both sides of a boundary or threshold." 

"incandescently productive" -- p. 16. A chatbot will provide a very good interpretation.