Top Posts From AJBlogs 05.07.14

First, Believe
AJBlog: Engaging Matters | Published 2014-05-07

Magazines in the Digital Age, and Artist Documentaries
AJBlog: CultureCrash | Published 2014-05-07

Impressionist/Modern Fizzle: Painful Sale Caps Sotheby’s Difficult Week
AJBlog: CultureGrrl | Published 2014-05-08

The Word Is Out From Delaware Art Museum
AJBlog: Real Clear Arts | Published 2014-05-07

$15.7-Million Cost in Losing Battle with Loeb?!? My Storify on Sotheby’s Earnings Call
AJBlog: CultureGrrl | Published 2014-05-07

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Author And Environmentalist Farley Mowat, 92

“Mowat, author of dozens of works including Lost in the Barrens and Never Cry Wolf, introduced Canada to readers around the world and shared everything from his time abroad during the Second World War, to his travels in the North and his concern for the deteriorating environment. More than 17 million copies of his books … have been sold worldwide.”

When Neuropsychology Meets Urban Design

Columbia University’s Cloud Lab and a company called NeuroSky have been fitting out volunteers with brain-scanner headsets and having them walk around Brooklyn’s Dumbo neighborhood; the headsets record second-by-second brain scans of the wearers’ responses to the cityscape. Is this science? (For now, they’re claiming it’s art.)

YES! Boulder Rises Up Against Bad Public Art

A piece commissioned from Miami-based R & R Studios, meant for the front of the main branch of the city’s public library, consists entirely of the word Y E S ! in bright red capital letters. “But this week, facing an onslaught of criticism, City Manager Jane Brautigam said the wheels of Boulder’s bureaucracy had spun a little too quickly.”

Gut Reaction: Book Celebrating Digestive Tract Is Bestseller In Germany

Darm mit Charme (‘Charming Bowels’) – which has sat atop the German paperback charts for the last eight weeks and shifted more than 200,000 copies in the process – may deal with defecation, constipation and other bowel movements, but its message is far from flippant: our gastrointestinal tract is not only the body’s most under-appreciated organ, but ‘the brain’s most important adviser’.”

Nul Points: The Eurovision Song Contest’s Greatest Train Wrecks

“Since Eurovision adopted its current voting system, where dozens of countries assign between one and 12 points to the competition’s entries via telephone voting, only 14 songs out of thousands have received the most dreaded rating of all: ‘Nul points’. … Its rarity is partly because of the competition’s scale: with so many countries voting, and so many geographical allegiances at play, your song has to be truly putrid to fail to collect one point from anyone.” (includes video hall of shame)