MUSEUM FATIGUE

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Yungang Grottoes: The Missing Pieces Meet The Big Holes

August 15, 2013 by Museum Fatigue

Oh, I’m lookin’ for my missin’ piece I’m lookin’ for my missin’ piece Hi-dee-ho, here I go lookin’ for my missin’ piece –The Missing Piece (Shel Silverstein, 1976) This afternoon I was doing some cataloging of images when I came across a folder from a few years back. In it I found a few photos from the Yungang Grottoes—a collection of ancient carved buddhist grottoes just outside the city of Datong in Northern China. Every year that I take student […]

Categories: China, Collecting, Museums, Photo Essays, Representation, Tourism • Tags: chinese sculpture, collections, cultural property, Cultural Revolution, Datong, Met, Metropolitan Museum of Art, sculpture, shel silverstein, unesco world heritage site, vandalism, Yungang Grottoes,云冈石窟

2

Flying Spaghetti Monster Pasta

February 17, 2013 by Museum Fatigue

Tonight we decided to have a little fun with our food. Inspired by a photo of sausages connected by spaghetti, we were inspired to go one step further—to create a pastafarian meal in honor of His Noodliness, The Flying Spaghetti Monster. It went well with a glass of Hey Mambo Sultry Red. Click on the photos for an explanation of the steps. “May you be forever touched by His Noodly Appendage.”

Categories: Food, How To, Photo Essays • Tags: Flying Spaghetti Monster, humor

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An Attempt at Exhausting a Place in Paris

August 3, 2012 by Museum Fatigue

This summer I have spent a good amount of time reading widely, and even somewhat randomly, books that examine the sociocultural in a poetic or literary way. I have been searching for an ethnographic approach to rethink and rewrite my research on social memory and nostalgia in a way that addresses the contingent, contradictory, emergent and affective nature of memories both individual and collective. I began by revisiting some books from my grad school days by Michael Taussig, José Limón and […]

Categories: Books, Photo Essays • Tags: fieldwork, Paris, Perec, Place, Representation, travel

4

Michel de Certeau’s Grave

August 2, 2012 by Museum Fatigue

A few weeks ago, while making plans for a last-minute trip to Paris, I spent some time working my way through the long list of possible things to see and do on a trip of about eight days. My wife and I were going to count on Rick Steves to get us through the basics—The Louvre, Versailles, The Eiffel Tower, etc—but I really wanted to take advantage of the trip to see things related to my academic interests. Since I […]

Categories: Photo Essays • Tags: graves, Michel de Certeau

11

Occupy Student Debt

October 10, 2011 by Museum Fatigue

**This is a repost of the original Facebook image and accompanying text. I have been meaning to archive a copy here. A sociology student at Hamline interviewed me about this image for her blog shorty after I posted it. It offers some useful context and explanation. Occupy Wall Street sure seems like a long time ago. Sadly, student debt is as big a problem as ever. I am a college professor increasingly frustrated by the incredible debt I see college students taking […]

Categories: Debt, Education, Photo Essays, Politics • Tags: 99%, Occupy Wall Street, public education, student debt

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Demolishing Shanghai’s Old City, Spring 2006

December 12, 2010 by Museum Fatigue

Before it can be nostalgically remembered as “Shanghai’s Old City” and before newly constructed “traditional buildings” can be experienced by both foreign and domestic tourists as authentic “Chinese culture”, historical structures must be cleared. This afternoon I came across a set of photos I shot in Shanghai in April 2006, which show just such a clearing. The photos were taken in part of the old Chinese city section of Shanghai in the period between the local residents’ departure and the […]

Categories: End of Times, Photo Essays, State of Emergency, Urban • Tags: China, old chinese city, Photography, Shanghai, 拆

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Finding Red Flag Canal

July 14, 2010 by Museum Fatigue

One summer of my early graduate school career I made friends with the very large man who managed the audiovisual collection at the University of Washington. I don’t remember his name. He was friendly in a grumpy sort of way and loved quirky films and videos almost as much as he loved rollercoasters. I had come to him with a request for some films for a class I was TAing, when we got to talking about China. He told me […]

Categories: China, Memory, Museums, Mythologies, Nostalgia, Photo Essays • Tags: China, Cultural Revolution, 紅旗渠, nostalgia, Red Flag Canal, red tourism

2

A Visit to Gao Village

June 21, 2010 by Museum Fatigue

In the summer of 2010 I was lucky enough to be able to make a visit to Gao Village. It was a rainy day, and we were behind schedule when we arrived. I didn’t take as much video or as many photos as I had hoped. Above is a small selection of photos, and the short Flip video below documents our arrival.

Categories: Books, China, Photo Essays, Video clips • Tags: Gao Village, Jiangxi

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Shanghai Expo 2010: Better City, Better Line

June 19, 2010 by Museum Fatigue

Shanghai offers truly magnificent sights. To me, the city is at least as beautiful as any of China’s famous natural scenic spots such as Huangshan or Guilin. It is even more impressive, however, because in a mountain or forest all you need to do is build some trails, chain off some vistas, and set up a few hotels—the scenery is already there. Shanghai, on the other hand, as been nearly entirely rebuilt over the past two decades and everything in […]

Categories: Bodies, China, Essays, Exhibitions and Fairs, Photo Essays • Tags: Expo 2010, lines, Shanghai, waiting

3

Gramsci’s grave

May 2, 2010 by Museum Fatigue

I was just looking for another image to post to test posterous’s integration with Facebook and found this picture from last summer. Our last day in Italy we dashed down the street from the apartment we were renting to the cemetery were Antonio Gramsci was buried. It was a beautiful morning to walk in the cemetery.

Categories: Photo Essays • Tags: Gramsci, graves

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