Edward Koren’s “Out with the Old”

This image is a gentle critique of consumerism. The artist himself does not buy too much stuff as his parents taught him not to spend too much money. He never throws anything away, be it paper or plastic bags. He recycles and reuses them over and over again.

Find the artist’s comments on his cover here

Listen to NPR’s programme on Christmas and sustainability here

Definition of sustainability : the quality of not being harmful to the environment or depleting natural resources, and thereby supporting long-term ecological balance.

Find the estimated waste per capita here

Read here the packaging waste statistics

Find how to reduce waste

Adrian Tomine’s “Fall Sweep”

Click on this link to read about the cover

Autumn (fall in American English) can be a bittersweet season. We can enjoy the beauty of the changing leaves and fear the lack of light. This year (2022), there’s a long list of anxieties: the war in Ukraine , climate change, and some American politicians endangering democracy. In his new cover, Adrian Tomine illustrates a worry that has never really left during the past few years, and that could come back as colder weather pushes us back indoors. One characteristic of his art is how he can just focus on a moment or even a mood, and then try to figure out how to convey that on paper.

 “Old Haunts”by Sergio García Sánchez’s , Oct 24 2022?

Read what the artist has to say about his work here

October 31st 2022 will be a first experience of trick-or-treating for some children, after long covid restrictions : dressing up, walking from door to door, and getting chocolate bars and the candy corn. The artist Sergio García Sánchez brings fresh eyes to a halloween scene; his Grand Central Terminal in New York is haunted by an unusual crowd.

The artist did not celebrate Halloween when growing up in Spain, although there is a holiday honoring the dead, around the beginning of November. People go to the cemetery to paint the tombs of their relatives with whitewash (encalado) and decorate them with flowers. On November 1st, Día de todos los santos, people remember the dead by attending Mass and visiting the cemetery. Nowadays, culture is more global and young people in Spain also dress up for Halloween.

When it started to become popular in Spain, everyone would dress up as monsters and zombies—Spaniards love zombies. Now there is more variation, and we see pirates, nurses, clowns, superheroes, and a lot of supervillains.

This cover shows Grand Central terminal in New Yorker with many people. This train station is a familiar landmark for New Yorkers, and has been featured in many movies or series.

Here is a list of such movies :

  • The Fisher King
  • North by North West
  • Superman
  • The Avengers
  • The Cotton Club

No photos, please, by Anita Kunz, Aug 22, 2022

Read the article here

Anita Kunz has centered a lot of her work on celebrities. She is not really interested in their personality, but she wonders about the concept of celebrity : why are these people famous ? do they really matter ?

Mona Lisa may be famous for her mysterious smile. People want to ask questions about her life and her identity. All the questions might be what makes her famous.

Lockdown by Chris Ware, Oct 17 2022

Follow this link to the article

Chris Ware has been inspired by his life with his daughter, who is a student, and his wife, who is a teacher. This cover is about gun violence in schools. Teachers, students and parents have come to accept the safety drills that are supposed to prepare children and adults to an attack. The picture is ambiguous : is it a drill or a real attack ?

Introduction : Genre of the document, title, author, date, question :

What reality does this picture illustrate ?

Description : the setting, the attitude of the children and the teacher, the hidden danger….

Context and facts :

  • the American Constitution and the “right” to carry arms
  • The number of weapons owned by American citizens (compare the number of inhabitants and the number of guns)
  • The question of gun control : what are the laws that protect people ? how can you buy guns in the US
  • The meaning of protection : – gun owners say they protect themselves by owning guns – the number of attacks in schools and deaths in the USA, the nature of guns. Here
  • Compare with Canada.

Conclusion : Answer the question. Do guns protect the population ?

Your opinion….Your experience of alerts and training in school.

Weapons and Mass Shootings

Title : Shopping Days Author : Eric Drooker   Date : Dec 14, 2015

Question : Should weapons be part of normal shopping ?

Keywords : consumerism, gun rights, violence, normality, absurdity


Keywords : Patriotism, the star-spangled banner, racism, police, injustice.

Read the New York Times.

After one more injustice committed by the police, artist P. Mendelsund created this cover showing a broken American flag. The colour blue and the white stars can easily be seen as the flag. The hole could have been caused by a gun shot. Both gun violence and racism were issues in 2015. The United States, and especially places such as Baltimore, have suffered from violence for a long time.  The flag can be seen as a metaphor for the whole country, whose social fabric is damaged by all the crimes and the systemic police violence.

Injustice : Baltimore, 2015 by Peter Mendelsund’s

Check the article on this cover here

Peter Mendelsund’s says with humility that pictures cannot fix a broken country.

On April 12, 2015, Baltimore Police Department officers arrested Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old African-American resident of Baltimore in Maryland. Gray was injured while he was in a police vehicle and he went into a coma. On April 18, there were protests in front of a district police station.  Gray died.

More protests were organized after Gray’s death were known by the public, as the police department could not explain why freddy Gray was injured or why he was arrested. Spontaneous protests started after the funeral service, although several included violent elements. 

SAY THEIR NAMES by Kadir NELSON

Click here to look at the New Yorker cover

  From the slave trade in which people were treated like objects

… to the violence against slaves    Gordon  was an enslaved African American who escaped from a Louisiana plantation in March 1863, gaining freedom when he reached the Union camp near Baton Rouge. He became known as the subject of photographs documenting the scarring of his back from whippings received in slavery. Abolitionists distributed these photographs of Gordon throughout the United States and internationally to show the abuses of slavery.

The Tulsa race massacre      Beginning May 31, 1921, thousands of armed white Tulsans invaded the Black section of the town, terrorizing its residents, looting their homes and businesses, and burning to the ground some 35 square blocks of the city. Before the rampage was over, more than 10,000 Black people were left homeless. 

 

The Selma to Montgomery march         was part of a series of protests that occurred in 1965 in Alabama, a Southern state with  racist policies. In  an effort to register Black voters in the South, protesters marching the 54-mile route from Selma to the state capital of Montgomery were confronted with deadly violence from local authorities and white vigilante groups. As the world watched, the protesters—under the protection of federalized National Guard troops—finally achieved their goal, walking for three days to reach Montgomery, Alabama. The historic march, and Martin Luther King, Jr.’s participation in it, raised awareness of the difficulties faced by Black voters, and the need for a national Voting Rights Act.

Rodney King, Emmett Till, Rosa Parks, Malcolm X, Medgar Evers, Martin Luther King Jr, Stephon Clark, Philondo Castile, Tamir Rice Breonna Taylor, Walter Scott, David McAtee, Alton Sterling, Yvette Smith, Sandra Bland, Michael Brown, Botham Jean, Aiyana Stanley-Jones, Eric Garner, Freddie Gray, Laquan McDonald, Trayvon Martin, Tony McDade, Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd…are names to remember. They were unique people.

In Creative Battle

INTRODUCTION

Author : Mark Ulriksen  Date : Jan 15 2018  Title : In Creative Battle (cf I Have a Dream ” we must not allow our creative protest to degenerate into physical violence”)

Genre : portrait

Question : freedom of speech vs bigotry / To take a knee to take a stand/ What does the presence of MLK between two football players mean in 2018 ?

1 Describe the picture : position (look at the photos below), people (Michael Bennett, Martin Luther King Jr, Colin Kaepernick), outfits (football, dark suit), context (stadium, during the national anthem)

What are they doing ?

2  Martin Luther King – his job, fight, ideals, influences

3 Context : police violence, Black Lives Matter, athletes, prayers, patriotism, controversy, Donald Trump

Conclusion : Explain the title. Tell about the situation for Black people nowadays (after Joe Biden’s election) or before, when Donald Trump was President.

Listen to Guillaume speaking about the picture

  click here for the real cover

  

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