Bargemusic tickets


For the few of you who requested tickets for the Barge concert:

There are 10 tickets reserved for Barge Music on November 18th. at 8:00PM.

The tickets will be held under “Macaulay Honors College”, just show your ID.  If you cannot go, make sure you let us know ASAP so someone else can get the ticket.

Reviews of Events

If you have still to cover an event, you should check the listings under the category of “Events” on our class website.  There are still some Opera tickets offers and other great events.  If you need to do a review of Meet the Artist, then you could use one that took place during class time:  Dante Adela and Del-Barrio class and talk for example.

lecture notes 11/5

“We live in a state of Blessed ignorance, but it is also a state of marvelous enlightenment”
(Hofstadter, I am a Strange Loop, p.362)
That establishes Euclidean geometry as tactile not visual. http://learn.uci.edu/media/OC01/11002/AR0111002_L1T2P1.gif
visual field intersects on our retina. http://img.webmd.com/dtmcms/live/webmd/consumer_assets/site_images/articles/health_and_medical_reference/eye_health/understanding-vision_problems-basics-myopia-and-hyperopia.jpg
our view.
http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/23/70823-004-2AD75C17.jpg
our vision.
http://www.griseldaonline.it/foto/checcoli/3A-%20jan-van-eyck-madonna-del-cancelliere-rolin-1439-parigi-louvre.jpg
Imagine what one would paint if we based our understanding of our world reality on our sense of smell. We know of a few new studies in this field:

From Artificial Chemical Sensing:

Olfaction and the Electronic Nose, Stetter, J.R.; Pensrose, W.R., eds.
Electrochem. Soc.: Pennington, NJ, 2001, pp. 8-14.
A COLORIMETRIC NOSE: “SMELL-SEEING”

Kenneth S. Suslick and Neal A. Rakow
School of Chemical Sciences
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
600 S. Mathews Ave., Urbana, IL 61801, USA
THE SMELL-SEEING ARRAY

When an array of metalloporphyrins deposited on an inert support (e.g.,
reverse phase silica gel) is exposed to various analytes, color changes in the
various porphyrin complexes are observed, and the color changes are often
dramatic. By simply subtracting the digital images of the array before and after
exposure, one may obtain a quantitative color change pattern: we refer to this as
“smell-seeing”. As shown in Figure 2, these color change patterns give striking
visual identification of a range of ligating vapors (including alcohols, amines,
ethers, phosphines, phosphites, thioethers, and thiols). Weakly-ligating vapors
such as arenes, halocarbons, and ketones can also be differentiated. Diffuse
reflectance spectroscopy studies have shown that solid-state spectral shifts are
similar to those known for ligation in solution. The array has demonstrated
interpretable and reversible responses even to analyte mixtures of strong ligands,
such as pyridines and phosphites. Color change patterns for mixtures are distinct
from either of the neat vapors.
Figure 2. Color change profiles (shown in black and white) for a series of vapors; the
degree of analyte softness (roughly the polarizability) increases from left to right, top to
bottom. Analytes were delivered in nitrogen streams saturated with the vapor at 20°C.
Images obtained upon full equilibration using an HP Scanjet 3C flatbed scanner.
Difference maps were obtained by subtracting the RGB images (i.e., { |R(after exporsure
to analyte) – R(before)|, |G(after exporsure to analyte) – G(before)|, |B(after exporsure to
analyte) – B(before)| }

direction,light source, http://www.pspug.org/tutorial/html/tutmini/pspug-perspective_v7.htm
or the indication of a collective perspective on a given fact.
http://www.thehindu.com/lr/2009/01/04/stories/2009010450260600.htm

An areal view of the earth does not revile the subdivision of the buildings, just their roof,
http://www.mccullagh.org/db9/1ds-3/san-francisco-aerial-view.jpg
an infrared photograph of a landscape will indicate the place of an object, not their color, http://images.pennnet.com/articles/mae/thm/th_0701maesupp_f1_02.jpg
An X-ray will define the inner bones, but will neglect the surface of our skin.
http://www.shop4dentist.com/images/x-ray-04.jpg
construct a reality. We learned that
http://spiralzoom.com/Science/spiralconsciousness/Strangeloop_op_221x600.jpg

“In the brain model proposed here, the casual potency of an idea, or an ideal, becomes just as real as that of a molecule, a cell, or a nerve impulse. Ideas cause ideas and help evolve new ideas. They interact with each other and with other mental forces in the same brain, in neighboring brains, and thanks to global communication, in far distant, foreign brains…an advance in evolution…” (p.205, 2007 Hofstadter, D. I am a Strange Loop)
http://brainwaves.corante.com/articles-synesthesia-brain.jpg

Guggenheim – Synesthesia:
http://bnee.com/wp-content/uploads/2006/09/synesthesia.jpg

“Some people – a surprisingly large number- “see” color or “taste” or “smell” or “feel” various sensations as they listen to music…” (P. xiii 2008, Musicophilia by Oliver Sacks)

Tickets, for reviews

Dear Class,

If you have not yet had a chance to write a second review, or just would like to take advantage of free tickets to events.  Here are some options:

November 3
There are 10 tickets left for the November 3 Manuscript discussion and performance at Alice Tully Hall 8:00PM
The final scene from the Marriage of Figaro will be discussed and performed.
Go to the Julliard Box office ASAP to pick a ticket.  They will not last.

November 9
Chinese contemporary music at Alice Tully hall 8:00PM
They have 25 tickets left

If you are interested in theater the Nickel and Dimed performance on the 3rd floor of the Julliard School will be open for those who stand in line, October 29,30 and 31.  You must get there at 7:00PM to get in.  The same rule for “The Savage in Limbo ” November 12 and 13th.

If you do not mind what you are about to see, just walk up to the box office and ask what tickets do they have for free performances in November?

Let us know on the website of your experience.

In persute of Truth

“Was Somebody asking to see the soul?

See , your own shape and countenance..”

Walt Whitman in Leaves of Grass

Please discuss one or two of the following statements:

1. When viewing a work of art, or listening to one, can we see

the truth?  Can we feel it?

2. Medieval artists resorted to Geometry to express a spiritual truth , and Baroque composers built their cannon on a mathematical symmetry.  Are these methods limit  our definitions of truth and therefore of beauty?

Free Theater, today tomorrow and weekend


We are pleased to offer you complimentary tickets to the LCT3 production of What Once We Felt, a new play by Ann Marie Healy, directed by Obie-Award winning director, Ken Rus Schmoll.

Set in a darkening future, What Once We Felt follows a writer’s journey through the political world of publishing, as her novel becomes the last print published novel ever.

What Once We Felt is the first of three LCT3 productions of the 2009-2010 season.  LCT3 is Lincoln Center Theater’s new initiative devoted to producing work of new playwrights, directors and designers.  More information is available at www.lct3.org <http://www.lct3.org>  <http://www.lct3.org> .

Catch this exciting production – on us – by reserving tickets to one of the following performances:

TONIGHT, October 28th @ 8pm
Thursday, October 29th @ 8pm
Friday, October 30th @ 8pm
Saturday, October 31st @ 2pm
Saturday, October 31st @ 8pm

To reserve your tickets, please email your request to dunn@lct.org <mailto:dunn@lct.org> .  Please include your name, the performance date and time, and the number of tickets (limit 4 per person).  Requests must be received by 5pm on Friday, October 30th for weekend performances.

You will receive a confirmation email.  The play runs 2 hours with an intermission.  Tickets will be held at the box office and are available for pick-up 30 minutes before curtain.

All performances are held at:
The Duke on 42nd Street
229 West 42nd Street

Enjoy!

Ashley M. Dunn
Marketing Assistant
Lincoln Center Theater
150 W. 65th Street, New York, NY 10023
P: 212.501.3216
F: 212.873.0761

Theater Tickets


We are pleased to offer you complimentary tickets to the LCT3 production of What Once We Felt, a new play by Ann Marie Healy, directed by Obie-Award winning director, Ken Rus Schmoll.

Set in a darkening future, What Once We Felt follows a writer’s journey through the political world of publishing, as her novel becomes the last print published novel ever.

What Once We Felt is the first of three LCT3 productions of the 2009-2010 season.  LCT3 is Lincoln Center Theater’s new initiative devoted to producing work of new playwrights, directors and designers.  More information is available at www.lct3.org <http://www.lct3.org>  <http://www.lct3.org> .

Catch this exciting production – on us – by reserving tickets to one of the following performances:

TONIGHT, October 28th @ 8pm
Thursday, October 29th @ 8pm
Friday, October 30th @ 8pm
Saturday, October 31st @ 2pm
Saturday, October 31st @ 8pm

To reserve your tickets, please email your request to dunn@lct.org <mailto:dunn@lct.org> .  Please include your name, the performance date and time, and the number of tickets (limit 4 per person).  Requests must be received by 5pm on Friday, October 30th for weekend performances.

You will receive a confirmation email.  The play runs 2 hours with an intermission.  Tickets will be held at the box office and are available for pick-up 30 minutes before curtain.

All performances are held at:
The Duke on 42nd Street
229 West 42nd Street

Enjoy!

Ashley M. Dunn
Marketing Assistant
Lincoln Center Theater
150 W. 65th Street, New York, NY 10023
P: 212.501.3216
F: 212.873.0761