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Laurie Simmons. (Top Ten).


Laurie Simmons's work is currently on view at 20.21 Galerie in Essen, Germany. Her new line of fashion dolls for Bozart Toys will debut this fall.

(1) ANIMAL PLANET Hard news from a parallel kingdom: This cable channel offers the perfect antidote to CNN CNN
 or Cable News Network

Subsidiary company of Turner Broadcasting Systems. It was created by Ted Turner in 1980 to present 24-hour live news broadcasts, using satellites to transmit reports from news bureaus around the world.
 with a combination of journalism, reality TV, and nature-nut escapades. One of my favorite shows, Animal Precinct, follows the beat of the ASPCA's Humane Law Enforcement Department, a group that investigates the thousands of crimes against New York City's animals each year. Episodes have chronicled the infiltration of dog- and cockfighting cockfighting, sport of pitting gamecocks against one other. Though popular in ancient Greece, Persia, and Rome, cockfighting has been long opposed by clergy and humane groups.  rings and the arrest of a man who burned his cat's whiskers See metal whiskers. . The chase scenes are riveting--better than Cops. Emergency Vets, Animal Planet's answer to ER, examines such cases as the cat with a nagging headache and the dog with a drinking problem (ten quarts of water a day).

(2) THE LANGLEY SCHOOLS MUSIC PROJECT, INNOCENCE & DESPAIR This CD--a resurrected 1976 two-track recording of a painfully sincere chorus of sixty schoolchildren schoolchildren school nplécoliers mpl;
(at secondary school) → collégiens mpl; lycéens mpl

schoolchildren school
 in a Western Canada gym--is being passed around like good gossip. Songs by Paul McCartney, the Beach Boys, and Don Henley collude col·lude  
intr.v. col·lud·ed, col·lud·ing, col·ludes
To act together secretly to achieve a fraudulent, illegal, or deceitful purpose; conspire.
 with wobbly voices and Orff percussion to create an otherworldly school sing. "Desperado" is the exquisite high point.

(3) THE DIG SITE AT THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY American Museum of Natural History, incorporated in New York City in 1869 to promote the study of natural science and related subjects. Buildings on its present site were opened in 1877.  Russ Tamblyn's diminutive role in the 1958 movie musical Tom Thumb and Ray Harryhausen's special effects in The 7th Voyage of Sinbad from the same year have left me with a lifelong desire for a palm-size friend. The "dig site," an archaeological diorama modeled after an excavation in La Micoque, France, features a group of projected animated holographic figures, each six inches tall. Watch as the anthropologiststar and his crew engage in a lively question-and-answer session covering the site's history.

(4) THE GEOFFREY YOUNG GALLERY If the idea of a summer gallery conjures visions of pastel seascapes Seascapes is an RTÉ Radio 1 programme broadcast on Fridays at 8.30 pm. and presented by Tom MacSweeney. It is intended to cover all subjects of maritime interest, from leisure to commercial shipping, as well as fishing and the environment.  and lacquered Don Quixotes, visit this tiny space in Great Barrington, Massachusetts Great Barrington is a town in Berkshire County, Massachusetts, United States. It is part of the Pittsfield, Massachusetts Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 7,527 at the 2000 census. . Young is a poet and publisher of The Figures, a small press. He opened the gallery ten years ago as an outlet for trophies from bicoastal bi·coas·tal  
adj.
1. Relating to both the east and west coasts of the United States, as:
a. Traveling frequently between coasts as part of a business or living arrangement:
 studio visits. Most of the works are small, affordable, and presciently selected. I first saw the art of James Siena, Alexander Ross, Kenneth Goldsmith, Marjory Reid, Keith Boadwee, Michelle Segre, and the Reverend Paul Plante there. And it's the only place I've ever seen Gregory Crewdson's firefly images. This past summer I discovered the altered-porn-magazine pictures of San Francisco artist Benji Whalen, who paints flannel pajamas pajamas
Noun, pl

US pyjamas

pajamas npl (US) → pijama msg; piyama msg (LAM
 on reclining women in a clumsy, edgy attempt to turn them chaste.

(5) "THE LOVE THEME FROM SPARTACUS" Any cover of this hauntingly sad Alex North composition is a find, though nothing compares to Bill Evans's complex jazz treatment on the 1963 Verve album Conversations with Myself. A close second is on Yusef Lateef's Eastern Sounds. Sometimes I'll wade through the endless Roman army marches on the sound track from the 1960 Kubrick film just to hear "The Love Theme."

(6) MARTIN MUNKACSI With fashion photography in a ho-hum moment, this Hungarian-born photographer's pictures, shot for Harper's Bazaar from the '20s to midcentury, offer a breath of fresh air--literally. After escaping Nazi Germany for the United States, Munkacsi set about freeing models from the studio. His images, which look like they were made yesterday, show women running on beaches, standing on their heads, perched on rooftops, and twirling Twirling is any of several artforms, hobbies, or sport and recreational activities accomplished by spinning or rotating the twirled object either for exercise, or in a rhythmic, or otherwise artful manner.  umbrellas on rainy days.

(7) LITTLE STREET. VINEGAR HILL, BROOKLYN Vinegar Hill is a neighborhood in the borough of Brooklyn in New York City on the East River waterfront between DUMBO and the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The neighborhood is part of Brooklyn Community Board 2.  Take the F train to York Street in DUMBO. Walk downhill toward the water. Turn right on Front Street and walk uphill until you come to Hudson Avenue. Turn left, then right onto Evans Street. Evans dead-ends on Little Street, which may be the littlest street in New York. It certainly is the quietest. It's Brooklyn a hundred years ago, with sweeping views of the Navy Yard (where my father was stationed as a lieutenant when he returned from Saipan and Okinawa) and a white mansion that once housed the naval commandant. On your way back notice the tiny mid-nineteenth-century brownstone brownstone, red to brown variety of sandstone. Its unusual color is caused in some instances by the presence of red iron oxide which acts as a cement, binding the sand grains together.  community, all that's left of Vinegar Hill.

(8) CHERRY RESOURCE CENTER Joseph LaRose sold women's shoes in Jacksonville, Florida, for fifty years. When he couldn't find the proper footwear for clients like Joan Crawford and Brook Shields, he had it custom-made with an eye toward exquisite detail. On his death in 1999, Cesar Padilla and Radford Brown, owners of the downtown Manhattan vintage clothing store Cherry, purchased more than 100,000 pairs of shoes from the L Rose inventory and lovingly installed them in a Long Island City war house. A visit there (by appointment only) is like trip to a shoe museum, only here you can buy what's on display. It is also, for me, the story of my life in shoes: pumps my grandmother and aunts ore to parties, the Bernardo sandals my sister bought, the Pappagallos my mother refused to buy for me.

(9) JIHAD VS. MICWORLD: HOW GLOBALISM glob·al·ism  
n.
A national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence.



glob
 AND TRIBALISM ARE RESHAPING THE WORLD, BENJAMIN R. BARBER Life in New York since September 11 seems to be about courage by day, poll-sci class by night. Everyone is sifting through mountains of information in an attempt to understand the new new world order. J had vs. McWorld speaks clearly about the conflict o two diametrically di·a·met·ri·cal   also di·a·met·ric
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or along a diameter.

2. Exactly opposite; contrary.



di
 opposed worlds--consumer capitalism and religious fundamentalism, addressing both their differences and their commonalities.

(10) MCDONALD'S 160 BROADWAY, NEW YORK A stone's throw from Ground Zero, this McDonald's is the best place downtown to ponder, daydream, and otherwise get sentimental--there's a grand piano and pianist stationed o the mezzanine. The musical selections have take on a more patriotic tone since the reopening on September 24, but if you can stand McCappuccin ,sit a while and you'll still hear Gershwin, Porter, Berlin, and Bacharach live, seven days a week.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2002
Words:973
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