INSPIRATION

on a cold day, eat your colors

I love soup, stew and everything in between. I made up this recipe on a cold day in San Francisco, when the frigid wind crept through my bay windows and my space heater did nothing. When I was still scared of using my fake-log gas-powered fireplace. When I was thankful for Philz always being so warm inside and annoyed that I couldn't walk to Dolores in the same thing that I would actually wear in Dolores. When it wasn't really cold at all. Now in DC, wind chill is a whole different ballgame. So I added an ingredient: sriracha. All of these things were bought at the super amazing Giant store in Shaw. It is not only huge, but clean, friendly, has a red box and a coin start--so it basically both overwhelms my sister and I AND gives us some nice little suburban escape time. We could not find the Kale, but found a bag so huge (for $4) it will take us weeks to finish--even with making kale shakes, kale chips and kale salads.

The prettiest soup you'll ever eat Ingredients:

Onions for soup

Kale for soup

Cabbage for soup

Carrot for Soup

a can of black beans and a can of kidney beans

sriracha

I also added some potatoes. Now peel and slice everything. Bring some water to a boil and add some chicken bouillon, olive oil, salt and pepper. Now add the onions, potatoes and carrots. Once those are mid-way cooking, add the cabbage and kale. Once those are nearly done, add the beans and season--I used salt, pepper and sriracha. I usually let it simmer for a bit until it's a nice consistency and the water is totally purple.

It's the most beautiful arrangement of orange, white, green and purple. I would post a picture, but I want you to be surprised.

Enjoy!

Space, Splash! and Half Wild at the Hillyer Art Space

*these shows close Saturday so hurry up and go visit!* After getting my butt kicked in a circuit class at VIDA fitness, I decided to take advantage of the sun and slightly warmer temperatures. I wanted to check out the Hillyer Art Space before the shows close. I was particularly interested in Fawna Xiao's Half Wild exhibit, but I was presently surprised by the other exhibits also up. HilyerArtSpace I walked down U street and took a left at Florida, then a left down Hillyer Court. I passed the Senegal Embassy and some nice looking homes.

Show Titles Hillyer Art SpaceThe sign says to enter through the garage, so I did. The first exhibit is Greg Braun who uses matte board and gypsum dry wall to create spaces within spaces. I loved the starkness and the shadow play. It was really fun to see his hand drawn sketches and preliminary scale models; the sketches being particularly illuminating because they were on those freebie type pads of paper you get at hotels and such.

GregBaunhandsketches

GregBaum-7.ShadowStartSeries+8

GregBaum-HorizontalNebula

The next room is filled with bright JD Deardourff screenprints that are amazing. I initially hated them, but the more I pondered how he created them and the colors he was able to make the more I fell in love. Inspired by the collages he made out of comic book splash pages, Deardourff recreated the essence of the comic book art through mimicking the pre-computer CMYK method with screenprinting. I really wanted to take a piece home with me.

JDDearfourff-TimberWolves at Chicago

JDDearfourff-FireWalkWithMe

The last gallery is of Fawna Xiao's work, the whole reason I went in the first place. I really enjoyed her minimal approach to color and the texture she got out of her prints. It was reminiscent of wood block prints, yet very delicate and complicated. Contemporary like 3D printing, but old school like foam sponges. Her and her dad built all the frames by hand and her prints are all single editions.

FawnaXiao-AloneatSea

FawnaXiao-Black--Twin Peaks, Tiny Peaks, Small Rock

FawnaXiao-BLack Mountains-Crown

FawnaXiao-Blue#1,#2,#3

I really enjoyed the space and I hope to see more shows at Hillyer! Check out there website for upcoming exhibitions and events.

the sunset in the District

SunhittingbuildingsDC

Happy (almost) 3 day weekend!!

There's something magical about the Friday morning before a three day weekend.The sun is a little brighter, the winter cold a little less cold ... The Starbucks barista made my Americano in less than 5 minutes, Bao Bao was on the cover of the metro's Express, and a co-worker brought everyone everything bagels! Not to mention ... Everyone in my Government building is extra happy and cheery. People are already wishing each other a good weekend at 10am over here!

In case you're in DC and looking for things to do this weekend.. Here is my super ambitious weekend wish list:

- Happy hour and tacos at El Rey

- Karaoke in Adams Morgan

- make it to my favorite dance class at Vida Fitness

- Visit Bao Bao, the ultimate celebrity in dc these days

(Rusty is getting jealous remember Rusty?)

- Viceroy at U street music hall

- Make Pozole (recipe on blog) & green chile chicken enchiladas for my roommates

- Visit the Genome exhibit at the Smithsonian Natural History museum

- re-watch Frances Ha (because it was that good)

- Go on a bike ride on Monday ... Because it's supposed to be 50 and Sunny!

Let's see how much actually happens ...

Happy 3 day weekend everyone!

Art for your walls: Inge Morath

inge-morath_ConsumerGirl I love this piece by Inge Morath. You can get a signed and numbered limited edition print from the Corcoran gallery. It's from the documentary about Inge's life as a photographer by German filmmaker .

Born in Austria in 1923 to two scientists, Morath grew up in Germany and studied language at Berlin University, speaking French, English, Romanian and German (and according to her foundation later Spanish, Italian, Russian, and Chinese) -- amazing! Towards the end of WWII, she escaped to Austria and worked as a journalist and translator. In post-war Vienna she met photographer Ernst Haas and started writing articles to accompany his photographs.

During a visit to Venice in 1951, she started taking photographs.

 “It was instantly clear to me that from now on I would be a photographer,” she wrote. “As I continued to photograph I became quite joyous. I knew that I could express the things I wanted to say by giving them form through my eyes.”

Morath got an apprenticeship, used the pseudonym Egni Tharom to sell her first photographs and soon moved to Paris. She started as a photographer capturing small assignments and by 1955 was a full member of Magnum Photos Agency traveling the world.

She also worked as a still photographer on movie sets, where she was able to capture famous stars in film, including The Misfits, where she presumably met Arthur Miller and Marilyn Monroe. And, of course, in 1962 Morath married playwright Arthur Miller (who had divorced Marilyn Monroe the year before) and relocated to the USA. Morath and Miller worked together, raised a family together, and were married until she died. She has worked on many, many projects and with amazing writers, artists, filmmakers, movie starts, etc. etc. Check out Magnum Photos and the Inge Morath foundation for more ...

Completely, totally, me.

Hannah&JessaJust watched the premier of Girls' season 3, one episode on my DVR and the other on HBO's Youtube Channel, where you can watch full episodes 1 and 2. I'm really glad HBO took the lead in just putting the episodes online instead of ignoring the fact that we will find it on the internet some way, some how! I wonder if HBO might continue for the whole season. It's a worthy experiment and I predict it will pay off--in ad sales. If only we could buy the soundtrack and Jessa's wardrobe directly from the screen. So Recap: Jessa's back. Marni is not able to circumvent normal life experiences. We all love Adam because he says things that Jessa also says, but is no longer considered a sociopath. Shoshanna is unabashedly Shoshanna, speaking pearls of wisdom while still fascinated with that which we think we are over. And, surprise, Hannah needs friends.

And the question we all want answered? Who sings that song? It's Jenny Lewis. And yes, you can download it tomorrow from Entertainment Weekly, if you preorder the soundtrack, or hear it now.

I enjoyed both episodes and while I think we all have tendency to tear up this show and talk about what is and is not true, helpful to female empowerment, or race/class/gender stereotypical, I think both episodes at least start a conversation about two issues: therapy (or the path towards some kind of 'normal') and female friendship (or as Adam calls it 'vortex of guilt and jealousy'). I think it's interesting how Jessa is the one in group therapy, Marni turns to her mom, Shoshanna doesn't talk to anyone about her breakup and Hannah, the person who probably would most benefit from group therapy, relies on Adam. Of course, Hannah gets a gold star for her mental illness, because it helps her writing, and Jessa gets called a sociopath and kicked out of rehab after saying the one thing I wish someone told me everyday "You can't make things that mean nothing mean something".

But when do things mean something? Does this show mean something? Is it about nothing? Is it our Seinfeld?

"You're too young to understand which thoughts are useless to you"

As Jessa's father figure muses, children have all the knowledge, but none of the language and as you get older you 'start to live with the same ignorance as the very young'. I really wonder whether Lena or Judd wrote this. Or if someone's dad wrote this. It's like how I keep telling my mom I wish I had the perspective I have now when I was my sister's age. But you can't and you won't, unless we all reincarnate with our existing wisdom gained. Of course the father figure tries to sleep with Jessa and is taking drugs to get through group sessions, that's the wisdom he has gained in his life, the behavior he has practiced and perfected, the bliss he has chosen. Because everyone still learns different things from the same experiences. We want to think we learn how to do things better, but there is no better. There just is.

My favorite part of Girls is that I can watch on screen people do or say things that I have actually experienced (just like Seinfeld ;)--but it plays out in a way that I cannot control--just like life (and Seinfeld). And that is comforting.

There's this did-you-get-it are-you-one-of-us part of Girls that's simultaneously inclusive, because it is so common, and exclusive, because it is so now. The have-you-been-in-this-situation-or-not. Taylor, remember when you also quoted the Rolling Stones? I got it. Someone else might not have, but that doesn't make them better, worse, more or less cultured. It just makes them more or less included. Yet, the funny part is all you have to do is type the lyrics into google, and you get and answer. Some people think this is deteriorating something important, but again, we all do it and we all get different things out of it.

Like reading blogs where many different people say or like the same things. Even the most obscure thing, someone else likes it. Girls, like most popular things, remind us we are much more alike than we would sometimes like to think. And yet we are all distinctly individual and learn distinctly different things from our experiences. Both things help us be, and feel, normal. And while some people may think they've already fixed everything, made herself normal, the fact is you cannot fix, know, or experience everything and there isn't really a normal, there's just an acceptance of being simultaneously in and out of control of the crazy thing we all experience: life. You can tailor your experience, with the right amount of money, time, knowledge, wisdom, whatever, but you can't control it.

Which is why Shoshanna is now my favorite character. She reminds me that it's okay to sing disgusting top 40 songs with my 16-year-old sister who may or may not understand them, because someday she will understand them, and life will go on.

Lingering questions:

Is Hanna pregnant? Will Jenny Lewis come out with another solo album this year? Does Marni get over herself? Is Hannah in love with Adam or does she just think she is in love with Adam? Does it matter?

And here's the tracklist for Girls Volume 2out February 11th on Fueled by Ramen.

Vampire Weekend: "I’m Going Down" Jenny Lewis: "Completely Not Me" * M. Ward: "I Get Ideas" Lily Allen: "Late Comer" Beck: "Blue Moon" Miguel: "simplethings" * Christina Perri: "I Don’t Wanna Break" Oasis: "Wonderwall" Zero DeZire: "It’s My Birthday (Remix)" * Aimee Mann: "How Am I Different" Father John Misty: "Nancy From Now On" Jake Bugg: "There’s a Beast and We All Feed It" Cat Power: "Free (Gigamesh Remix)" * Daniel Johnston: "Life in Vain (Live at Austin City Limits)" Michael Penn: "Daisy (From One Man’s Trash)" *

It's everything and it's nothing. -- Thank you Lindy West. (read Jezebel's recap here)