Monthly Archives: December 2013

Paul Klee at the Tate Modern

(Community Matters) Also enjoyed the Paul Klee exhibit at the Tate Modern. His experimentation with materials – especially his mix of media, see Twittering – is especially engaging.

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Honoré Daumier Exhibit

(Community Matters) loved, loved, loved the Honoré Daumier exhibit at the Royal Academy of Arts. 

Daumier's Gargantua (1831)

Steven and I discussed over dinner – wondering if societies have corrected such egregious tilts in economic & political systems without resorting to violence – or without violence being directed at those protesting.

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The Late, Great American WASP

(Community Matters) In the Wall Street Journal: The Late, Great American WASP

“Under WASP hegemony, corruption, scandal and incompetence in high places weren’t, as now, regular features of public life.” – obviously a nostalgic reflection of selective memories

Being The Only One of Anything Can Be Exhausting

(Community Matters) AAS: It might be weird, but seeing Austin in the rear view is a relief

Freedom of Speech?

phil robertson(Community Matters) So, as one of my favorite politicos said, I had no idea who Phil Robertson was until the last few days and could have lived without ever knowing. But, now I know what Duck Dynasty is too, and I know Mr. Robertson told GQ magazine that homosexuality is a perversion condemned by the Bible and that African Americans were happy under Jim Crow laws.

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2013 Trial Urban District Assessment (TUDA)

(Community Matters) Reading results of the 2013 Trial Urban District Assessment (TUDA) – shows Austin performing at better than average urban results but without measurable differences since 2011. The gap between higher and lower performing students is way too high & unsustainable, an admitted problem in Austin and all urban areas.

Notable progress in closing gaps in achievement in urban districts includes:

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Bill Moyers Outraged Over Washington

(Community Matters) Worth watching; he’s right.

 

Y Combinator Authors SAFE Financing Docs In Lieu of Convertible Notes

(Community Matters) The safe (simple agreement for future equity) is intended to replace convertible notes in most cases, while remaining fair to both investors and founders.

NYTimes Editorial on US Primary Education

nyt education(Community Matters) The NYTimes says we’re way behind and falling further so. It cites inequality in funding and less rigorous teacher training and professionalism as two main contributors to less than average performance in USA student assessment.

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Austin is Getting Much Wealthier

brian-kelsey-pic(Community Matters)Austin is getting much wealthier: In 2000, 14% of households in Austin (city) had incomes of at least $100,000. In 2012, it was up to 24%. In 2000, households with incomes of less than $15,000 outnumbered households with incomes of $100,000 or more. In 2012, $100,000+ households outnumbered < $15,000 households by almost two to one. This is a remarkable shift in the city’s demographics in a very short amount of time and can go a long way toward explaining why housing is so expensive, especially in centrally located neighborhoods.”

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Ballet Preljocaj’s Les Nuits

preljocaj(Community Matters) Just realizing I only posted on FB, not in blog.

Ballet Preljocaj’s Les Nuits completely blew me away. Saw it with Charles Santos & LA Music Center’s Renae Williams Niles in the Royal Theatre at Versailles. Angelin Preljocaj now on list of my favorite dance choreographers. While it could be too edgy for some audiences, I sure hope Les Nuits makes it to Texas as well as LA and NYC.

bummed I wasn’t able to meet Angelin but thoroughly enjoyed dinner after with his production manager, Emmanuelle Mandel.

Pope Francis

Papal audience, St. Peter's Square, Vatican City, Rome, Italy - 06 Nov 2013(Community Matters) In the New Yorker (such eloquent & inspiring words):

“Who Am I to Judge? A radical Pope’s first year,” by James Carroll : “‘Who am I to judge?’ With those five words, spoken in late July in reply to a reporter’s question about the status of gay priests in the Church, Pope Francis stepped away from the disapproving tone, the explicit moralizing typical of Popes and bishops. This gesture of openness, which startled the Catholic world, would prove not to be an isolated event. In a series of interviews and speeches in the first few months after his election, in March, the Pope unilaterally declared a kind of truce in the culture wars that have divided the Vatican and much of the world. Repeatedly, he argued that the Church’s purpose was more to proclaim God’s merciful love for all people than to condemn sinners for having fallen short of strictures, especially those having to do with gender and sexual orientation.

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