Tag Archives: museum

The Week in Pictures: Climate Change to Kill 5 Million People by 2020, Solar-Powered Hornets, and More (Slideshow)

Last week, a boat in the Amazon spilled around 210,000 gallons of popcorn into a major river, making the surface of the water look a bit like the floor of a movie theater. Find out how oil workers came to the rescue, below, and read on for more stories from the world of green, including photos of the beautiful Miluira Retro Electric Roadster from Japan, an exclusive peak inside Michelle Kaufmann ‘s Smart Home at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, the story of a woman who has used the same Christmas tree every year since 1928, and more on those solar-powered hornets. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Week in Pictures: Climate Change to Kill 5 Million People by 2020, Solar-Powered Hornets, and More (Slideshow)

Paramore Have ‘Squeezed Out The Last Drop’ From Brand New Eyes

‘Playing God’ single and video will be the album’s last hurrah, Hayley Williams tells MTV News. By James Montgomery, with reporting by Matt Elias Paramore’s Hayley Williams Photo: MTV News As if the scrapbook sentiments of their just-released “Playing God” video weren’t evidence enough, Hayley Williams will be the first to tell you that Paramore are officially finished with Brand New Eyes, the album that took them to the brink and back. “Oh, we squeezed out the last drop last month,” she laughed. “We put out ‘Playing God’ and did a video for it with our friend [director] Brandon [Chesbro], and I feel great. I feel like … we hit the finish line and we’re golden. I love it. I’m proud.” So there will be no more singles from BNE, which was released more than 14 months ago and went gold. In fact, Williams said she knew as much when she began drawing up the “Playing God” treatment with Chesbro — which is why the duo decided to film it at her house in Franklin, Tennessee, and include as many of their friends as possible. It only seemed appropriate, given the sheer amount of personal growth (and intra-band communication) that went into the album’s creation, most of which is tackled in the song itself. “We filmed it at my house, so it was really personal, and I think that’s how we like to keep things,” she said. “We had friends hanging out on set all day, and Brandon being one of our best friends, he directed it. … It was just a fun, personal play on the lyrics of the song.” And, of course, there are also plenty of nods to Paramore’s past — the swinging light bulb from their “Ignorance” clip, the mirrors that adorn the back cover of Eyes, the old band photos Williams can be seen looking through — and the pop-culture world the band inhabits. It wouldn’t be a parting gift without a few presents to unwrap, after all. “There’s a lot of little things for our fans to figure out,” Williams said. “Nods to Gaga, with the glasses and the poison, and ‘Dexter,’ with the plastic on my wall in the basement. Making it was fun. I love it.” If you could pick another single from Brand New Eyes, what would it be? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Paramore

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Paramore Have ‘Squeezed Out The Last Drop’ From Brand New Eyes

Lady Gaga’s Madame Tussauds Wax Statues Unveiled

Little monsters turn up in NYC for unveiling of Gaga in a hair hat. By Jocelyn Vena, with additional reporting by Evan Leong The Lady Gaga wax figure at Madame Tussauds in New York City Photo: Gary Gershoff/ Getty Images All day on Thursday (December 9), Madame Tussauds unveiled eight wax versions of Lady Gaga all over the world, including at the museum’s European outposts, as well as one in New York’s Times Square. MTV News was on hand for the NYC unveiling of the pop star’s wax likeness, where her little monsters showed up dressed up in Gaga-like garb to catch a glimpse of the statue. For the New York version, Gaga appears in a sheer black dress paired with a wide-brim hat made of hair, a look she wore to the Consumer Electronics Show back in January. Earlier in the day, figures were unveiled in Asia and Europe, and they fittingly each have their own unique fashion statement, which Gaga fans were invited to help pick out. In Berlin, Gaga wears a blazer, leotard and hair bow; in London the figure dons a Philip Treacy telephone hat and sparkly navy Armani suit; in Amsterdam, she’s in a nude bodysuit, a white blazer and a towering purple beehive. Her skintight black harlequin outfit is featured in Hong Kong, and her wire “wing” dress is on display in Shanghai. Gaga statues are also making their debut in Los Angeles and Las Vegas later in the day. “As one of the biggest and most unique talents in the world, Lady Gaga is the perfect subject for the biggest figure launch in Madame Tussauds’ history,” a November press release said, explaining why Gaga was getting so many statues. “All of the styles being worked on are classic Gaga, and we’re sure her fans will be delighted with the unique looks when we unveil the figures next month.” Gaga is one of the many pop stars to get a wax statue this year. She joins Taylor Swift , Kim Kardashian and Gwen Stefani as some of the latest celebs to be immortalized for the museum. Which is your favorite Lady Gaga wax figure outfit? Discuss it in the comments! Related Photos Lady Gaga Gets Waxed Worldwide Related Artists Lady Gaga

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Lady Gaga’s Madame Tussauds Wax Statues Unveiled

WaPo Art Critic Rants at Removal of Ant-Covered Jesus; He’d Ban Norman Rockwell

Washington Post art critic Blake Gopnik is hopping mad that the National Portrait Gallery pulled a video from its “Hide/Seek” exhibit on homosexual imagery, insisting: “Now the NPG, and the Smithsonian Institution it is part of, look set to come off as cowards.” Gopnik insisted the ant-covered Jesus in the video was inconsequential, and that if he played censor, he'd keep the insect-covered Christ and scrap the Norman Rockwell: Norman Rockwell would get the boot, too, if I believed in pulling everything that I'm offended by: I can't stand the view of America that he presents, which I feel insults a huge number of us non-mainstream folks. But I didn't call for the Smithsonian American Art Museum to pull the Rockwell show that runs through Jan. 2, just down the hall from “Hide/Seek.” Rockwell and his admirers got to have their say, and his detractors, including me, got to rant about how much they hated his art. Censorship would have prevented that discussion, and that's why we don't allow it. read more

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WaPo Art Critic Rants at Removal of Ant-Covered Jesus; He’d Ban Norman Rockwell

3rd eye a way to watch your back: NYU artist gets camera implanted in head

NEW YORK – A New York University arts professor might not have eyes on the back of his head, but he's coming pretty close. Wafaa Bilal, a visual artist widely recognized for his interactive and performance pieces, had a small digital camera implanted in the back of his head — all in the name of art. Bilal said Tuesday that he underwent the procedure for an art project that was commissioned by a new museum in Doha, Qatar, in the Arab Gulf. Titled “The 3rd I,” it is one of 23 contemporary works commissioned for the opening of the Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art on Dec. 30. The exhibition is entitled “Told/Untold/Retold.” “I am going about my daily life as I did before the procedure,” the Iraqi-born artist said in a statement. Bilal, who is teaching three courses this semester at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, will wear the camera for one year. It is 2 inches in diameter and less than an inch thick. The project will raise “important social, aesthetic, political, technological and artistic questions,” he said. He declined to say when the camera was implanted or other details of the art installation, saying it “will be revealed to the public as part of the museum preview on Dec. 15” and on a website to be launched on the same day, http://www.3rdi.me . He said he chose to have it put in the back of the head as an allegorical statement about the things we don't see and leave behind. How it all fits together is still a bit of a mystery. The camera will capture his everyday activities at one-minute intervals 24-hours a day and then be transmitted to monitors at the museum, said curators Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath of Art Reoriented, who commissioned Bilal on behalf of the museum. “He doesn't have to alter his lifestyle or what he does. In principal, he's moving on with his life,” Bardaouil told The Associated Press from Doha. “It will be a three-dimensional, real space-and-time experience. Once the piece is revealed, you'll realize that the camera is only one aspect of the work and there are aspects as important that will be experienced.” The project has raised challenging questions for NYU, the nation's largest private school with about 44,000 students. “As a school of the arts, a school whose mission is to educate artists, we place a high value on his right to free expression in his creative work as an artist …,” NYU said in a statement. “We also take seriously the privacy issues his project raises, its impact on our students, and the importance of preserving trust in the pedagogical relationship between a faculty member and students.” NYU said it has had numerous “constructive and productive” conversations with the artist and was continuing “to discuss with him the right mechanism to ensure that his camera will not take pictures in NYU buildings.” But a number of students said they were not overly concerned about their privacy being violated. “I don't really know what you would be protecting them (students) from, what would be happening in the classroom that couldn't be shared,” said Erin Wahed, 22, who graduated in May with a BFA in photography but did not take any of Bilal's classes. Seth Mrocska, who was friends with some of Bilal's students but did not have him as a professor before graduating in May, agreed, saying “It's not that there's much to hide in the classroom.” However, he said he wasn't OK with the images being transmitted to another country and “shared across a media platform to be stored for all to view.” Bilal said “The 3rd I” builds on his other body of work that combines performance art, digital and body art and photography “into a unique conceptual piece.” Many of his previous works have invited debate and controversy. In a 2007 online installation, “Domestic Tension” in 2007, virtual users could shoot a paintball gun at Bilal 24 hours a day. The Chicago Tribune deemed it “one of the sharpest works of political art to be seen in a long time” and named him Artist of the Year that year. A 2008 video game piece, “Virtual Jihadi,” was censored by the city of Troy, N.Y. where it was shown. In it, Bilal inserted an avatar of himself as a suicide bomber hunting then-President George W. Bush. The New York Civil Liberties Union filed a claim against the city of Troy for closing the arts center showing the work. The artist has said the work was meant to shed light on groups that traffic in hateful stereotypes of Arab culture with video games like Quest for Saddam. In a recent live performance piece titled “…and Counting,” Bilal had his back tattooed with a borderless map of Iraq covered with one dot for each Iraqi and American casualty. Bilal, whose brother was killed by a missile at an Iraqi checkpoint in 2004, used the piece to highlight how the deaths of Iraqis are largely invisible to the American public. The dots for the Iraqis were represented by green UV ink only visible under black light, while Americans were represented by permanent ink. The 59,000-square-foot Mathaf museum will house more than 6,000 works of modern and contemporary Arab art from the collection of Sheik Hassan bin Mohamed bin Ali al Thani, founder of Mathaf and vice-chair of the Qatar Museum Authority. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101123/ap_on_en_ot/us_the3rd_eye added by: MotherForTruth

Tim Burton Has A Big 2010 Thanks To ‘Alice In Wonderland,’ MOMA Exhibit

And that’s why the veteran director is one of the entertainers we’re most thankful for this year. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Tim Burton Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/ Getty Images In Hollywood, the land of superlatives and flagrant puffery, the term “visionary” is thrown about too casually and bestowed upon flash-in-the-pan acts that all too often come and go with the change of seasons. However, one artist for whom the descriptor is fitting, whose films truly transport audiences to other dimensions and offer a childlike sense of wonder, is director Tim Burton. And this year, thanks to “Alice in Wonderland,” which brought in an estimated $1 billion at the box office ($334 million domestic, $690 million international) in addition to 20-plus years of unique and exciting filmmaking, Burton is one of the folks in the entertainment world for whom we’re most thankful. As part of MTV’s Thankful Week, we had the pleasure of chatting with Burton about the stress and eventual success of “Alice,” if we’ll be seeing a sequel or a musical adaptation on the Great White Way and a few hints about upcoming projects. MTV : Tim, every year here at MTV News, we select a few people we’re most thankful for. And you’ve had quite a year with the phenomenal success of “Alice in Wonderland” and a retrospective at New York’s Museum of Modern Art . Tim Burton : Wow. Well, that’s quite an honor. Thank you. MTV : Did it feel like this year was a special one? Burton : Yeah, it was interesting. The MOMA show was very special, and then going to the Cannes film festival and “Alice” — it was a lot of stuff going on. It was a special year for me, definitely. MTV : Were you a little more reflective than usual with the MOMA show? Burton : Yeah, I think so. It kind of forced me to look at myself, which I don’t do very often. I even avoid mirrors as I walk by them. It was a bit of a surprise in a good way. It did make me more reflective. You know, as you go on in life, there are less and less surprises — especially nice surprises, so it’s really, really great to feel surprised in a good way. MTV : We spoke a few times when you were working on “Alice,” and frankly, you seemed stressed. Burton : I was really stressed. We were doing music to no images. It was terrifying. In a weird way, it was quite exciting too, because you never know with a film what it’s going to turn out to be. But this was just an extreme, extreme version of that. MTV : How did you feel about the 3-D debate that came with the film? Some criticized the conversion to 3-D you used. Burton : Right, yeah, but that was kind of a funny argument because the thing is, we’ll shoot what? It’s not like we were doing motion-capture or we had sets. There was nothing to shoot. We planned for it. It was kind of a created argument in a way. Everybody likes to have a celebrity death match. Who will win? Things have more shades to it than that. MTV : Right, because a lot of it became about you and James Cameron’s different approaches to 3-D. Burton : Yeah. They’re doing “Titanic” in 3-D . What, they’re going to go back and shoot it in 3-D? No. They’re going to do the same thing we did. MTV : Is Disney putting the pressure on for a sequel for “Alice”? Burton : No, they haven’t, which was smart of them. They saw that it was kind of its own thing. They didn’t push for it at all, which I thought was really amazing, and smart, and right. MTV : And you are content to leave the story where it is? Because you do leave an opening at the end … Burton : Yeah, but that’s what the material does to me, it leaves it open for you. It’s kind of like dreams. It leaves it open, as it should, for interpretation. It’s like I got a lot of pressure to do a sequel to “Nightmare [Before Christmas],” and I just didn’t want to do that, because some movies should just be left alone. I think it keeps their kind of spirit intact in a way. MTV : There’s been talk about adapting “Alice” into a Broadway show. Are you involved in that? Burton : I’m talking to them about that just because there was a seedling of an idea that I thought was interesting. I don’t know how far it will go, but it’s something. I’ve always kind of wanted to do something live onstage. I’m just going to explore it and see what happens. MTV : It sounds like you’ll be shooting “Dark Shadows” with Johnny Depp soon? Burton : Yeah, I’m working on the script, and, you know, it’s been kind of a long time coming, but I think I’m getting a script that I like. I don’t really like talking, because I’m not really sure what’s happening yet, but I’m excited about it. I think, yes, finally for me, it’s getting to be the right tone. MTV : Have you and Johnny talked specifically about his take on Barnabas Collins, the vampire at the center of the series? Burton : Yeah, we’ve been talking about it. I mean, he’s finishing up another movie, but we’ve had a couple of really good meetings. Yeah, you know, I’m excited. MTV : Have you started shooting “Frankenweenie” ? Burton : We just started a couple of shots. It ‘s good. We’ve got a pretty low budget, but I’m excited about it. We’ve got a couple of shots that are done. Yeah, it’s just starting. It’s great. Thanksgiving is a time for taking stock, expressing gratitude and, most importantly, overeating. We at MTV News have been gorging all year at movie theaters, so it’s about time we looked back and gave thanks to our favorite actors and filmmakers of 2010. Enjoy exclusive interviews with our winners all week long. Check out everything we’ve got on “Alice in Wonderland.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Tim Burton Has A Big 2010 Thanks To ‘Alice In Wonderland,’ MOMA Exhibit

Is This the World’s Most Famous Chair?

Photo: functionalfate Palermo Is this the world’s most famous chair? It is certainly the most ubiquitous; spotted everywhere from front porches to cafes to garbage dumps to beaches across the world. It’s not known who designed it but it has a name: the Monobloc, it has a website , a book and it has just had its own exhibition in Munich at the International Design Museum in Munich…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Is This the World’s Most Famous Chair?

‘Breaking Dawn’ Casts Rami Malek As Benjamin

‘I’m thrilled,’ the ‘Pacific’ actor says of joining high-profile series. By Kara Warner Rami Malek Photo: Mark Sullivan/ WireImage Just when it seemed like things were all quiet on the “Twilight” front — save for a few updates from actress Nikki Reed and screenwriter Melissa Rosenberg — “Entertainment Tonight” reports that “Pacific” star Rami Malek will be joining the “Breaking Dawn” cast as Egyptian vampire Benjamin. “I think it’s going to be great,” he told “ET.” “It’s going to be super exciting, and I’m thrilled.” In addition to “The Pacific,” Malek has appeared in various films and TV shows, most recently in the “Night at the Museum” movies as Ahkmenrah. He is also in Tom Hanks’ upcoming film “Larry Crowne.” So who is Benjamin? Fans of the books will remember him as a member of the Egyptian coven who, upon receiving word from Carlisle, comes to help Bella and the Cullens battle the Volturi. Benjamin is a young vamp blessed with the special ability of controlling the elements (

Time’s Sullivan Defends Obama’s Christianity, Attacks Conservatives for Perception by Some He’s Muslim

The number of Americans from all kinds of demographics who are unsure that President Obama is a Christian have grown since he’s been in office. For instance, “fewer than half of Democrats (46%) know Obama is a Christian, down from 55% in March 2009. Barely four-in-ten African-Americans say he’s a Christian, down from 56% last year,” an exasperated Amy Sullivan noted in an August 19 Swampland blog post at Time.com. So who’s fault is that? Conservatives, of course, the religion reporter insisted: It would also be foolish and naive to pretend that conservatives who call Obama a Muslim are doing it in a neutral way and that their intention is anything other than to raise questions about his “otherness.” Sullivan failed to name which prominent conservatives in particular she felt were responsible for moving public opinion on the president’s religious loyalties. But in her zeal to vigorously defend Obama as a follower of Christ, Sullivan concluded by asserting that the White House has to take care to “offset those perceptions [that Obama is secretly a Muslim] with a little more openness about the president’s real Christian faith.”   Perhaps Sullivan was being extremely charitable and wished to avoid rank cynicism, but not once did it occur to her that President Obama might be an agnostic who, like many Americans, nominally associates with the Christian faith because it’s a proper thing to do.   Prior to his presidency, might President Obama have attended — albeit infrequently — Trinity United Church of Christ out of a mix of a vague sense of social and familial obligation and political calculus? Sullivan leaves that possibility unexplored.   To her mind, Obama is unquestionably a Christian and that story must be put out there by the White House PR shop in order to bolster Obama’s connection with the electorate (emphasis mine): I suppose you could call the White House’s complete lack of concern about Obama’s religious image admirable. It wouldn’t be hard to imagine a crafty political adviser marching into the Oval Office and insisting: “Mr. President, I’m sorry, but we have to have you walking into a church every Sunday morning, preferably with a big Bible under your arm.” And i n a perfect world, nobody would give a hoot whether the president went to church or said grace before meals or ever uttered one word publicly about his religious beliefs. But these Pew results suggest that nearly two years after Americans elected Obama, they know less about him than they did when he was a presidential candidate still making his way onto their radar. Forget the question of what that means for 2012– it’s already a problem for a leader who wants to connect with the country. One last note on another finding I found fascinating: Of those Americans who think Obama is a Muslim, nearly one-quarter (24%) told Pew pollsters they think he talks about his faith too much. Which is impossible, of course, because Obama is not a Muslim, so he’s spent exactly zero minutes talking about being one. What the result really illustrates is how thoroughly those who oppose Obama are willing to read everything he says and does through a filter of distrust. Sixty percent of those who think Obama is a Muslim say they got that idea from the media. But interestingly, one-in-ten say they got it from Obama’s own behavior or words. They hear the Cairo speech or see the outreach to Muslim countries and assume, well of course, it’s because he’s Muslim. That doesn’t mean he shouldn’t engage in the outreach–far from it. But it does make it even more important for the White House to offset those perceptions with a little more openness about the president’s real Christian faith.

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Time’s Sullivan Defends Obama’s Christianity, Attacks Conservatives for Perception by Some He’s Muslim

Have You Attended/Will You Attend a Town Hall Meeting During the Recess?

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Have You Attended/Will You Attend a Town Hall Meeting During the Recess?