Lobster and Canary
Sunday, October 27, 2013

The Founder's Tale, Round Two

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Artists and artisans of every possible stripe, editors, publishers, gallerists, curators, producers of theatricals: all are (too often un...
Sunday, October 20, 2013

A Golden Age of Print

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Andrew Losowsky, senior books editor at the Huffington Post , recently observed that print culture--far from dying as a result of the dig...
Monday, October 14, 2013

Alexander Is Lowered Into The Sea: The Archaeology of Story

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[Image & Artwork Copyright Held By The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC; Image Used Here For Purposes of Commentary Only, i.e., Within...
Saturday, October 5, 2013

Memorials to the First Voyage

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Barbara Remington's Covers for the 1965 Ballantine Paperback Edition of LOTR (photo of copies from the 21st printing, 1968; from...
Sunday, September 15, 2013

"What Would It Be Like To Actually Don Their Slippers?": The Fairy Tale Worlds of Caroline Golden

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That's No Rabbit (2007; mixed media collage) [All artwork and images copyrighted to the artist, Caroline Golden, and used here sol...
2 comments:
Sunday, September 8, 2013

Nighthawks on 23rd Street

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Three weeks ago the Whitney installed in "the prow" of the Flatiron a life-size cut-out replica of Hopper's Nighthawks--...
Sunday, August 25, 2013

Museum in the city, city as museum

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Head of a Queen Mother ( Iyoba ), Edo Peoples, Kingdom of Benin (Within Territory of Nigeria Today), c. 1750-1800 At the Metropolitan...
Sunday, August 18, 2013

Through the heliopause

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Voyager 1 sails on, over 11 billion miles from Earth, the farthest out any human-made object has ever been...scientists are debating whet...
Sunday, August 11, 2013

The street history of painting

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Robert Motherwell   David Reed [Images found on the Web; artists and/or his legal representatives hold the copyright; us...
Sunday, August 4, 2013

Braking for beauty (slow down and see)

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Turner, Chichester Canal (c. 1828; in the Tate) Jennifer L. Roberts  ( Professor of History of Art and Architecture at Harvard   ) r...
Sunday, July 28, 2013

Lisa Occhipinti: The Book Re-Envisioned and Restored

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Lisa Occhipinti [As always, all images and the objects they depict are copyrighted to the artist and/or his/her legal representati...
1 comment:
Sunday, July 21, 2013

Still too hot

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The heat and humidity intensified this week in NYC...it is just too hot (canary feathers singed and drooping) and humid (even lobsters n...
Sunday, July 14, 2013

Never too hot for art

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Raqib Shaw, Adam (2008) For more of his work, click here .    And here . The dog days of summer came early this year in New York ...
Sunday, July 7, 2013

Slantwise across the sky

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Sarah Charlesworth , one of the pioneers in Conceptual Art, died two weeks ago. The Lobster and the Canary are fascinated by her s...
Sunday, June 30, 2013

A picture is worth how many of whose words? (A small homage to Robert Rauschenberg)

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I return often to Rauschenberg 's collages and combines, seeing in them the felt but not-yet-written stories that attend my night-tho...
Sunday, June 23, 2013

In medias res...

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Johann Zoffany, Tribuna of the Uffizi (1772-1778) As we prepare for an ever more cybernetic future, we stumble over boundaries we m...
Sunday, June 16, 2013

Camille Alexa: Interview

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Camille Alexa is one of the most thoughtful and inventive writers I know.  (If you have not read Alexa, and you like the work of Aimee B...
Sunday, June 9, 2013

Diego Salazar Gallery Group Show

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Deborah A. Mills & Daniel A. Rabuzzi (a.k.a Imps Etc.), "Changeling Blocks, numbers 4-6: Baba Yaga, Coraline & Friends...
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About Me

Lobster and Canary
New York City
I am Daniel A. Rabuzzi. Lobster & Canary explores fantastical/surreal fiction, poetry, and visual arts, fairy tales, oral epic, & children's lit. CZP (Toronto) published my novels *The Choir Boats* (2009) and *The Indigo Pheasant* (2012). I live in an enchanted city called New York, with my wife and soul-mate, the artist Deborah A. Mills, along with the requisite two cats. Deborah & I design & create art together; our first collaboration was shown in 2012 at The Observatory (Gowanus, Brooklyn). Learn more about me: www.danielarabuzzi.com. Contact: drabuzzi (AT) earthlink (DOT) net. "Lobster and canary" is a Norwegian expression, meaning "odds and ends, a bit of this and a bit of that." The lobster in the header is from Abraham van Beyeren's "Still Life with Lobster and Fruit" (1650s)--the original painting is at The Metropolitan Museum of Art (NYC). The canary above is by Carl Fabritius (1654)--the original hangs in The Mauritshuis (The Hague). My understanding is that I am using the former image by virtue of fair use, and the latter because it is in the public domain.
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