Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Put your red shoes on when the storm comes...

 Here comes an old article that I posted on my other blog first, on Linda Art CPH, then I moved it to the Linda Life Coach CPH.

How to handle storms? This is the last post in this blog. I hope you enjoy it. 


In this post we first go through the Lost Generation, then compare it to Dorothy’s ruby shoes, and finally we arrive at women who face challenges and look for feminine power, a power that is already inside them.

Their private life is their public life, they don’t go home to eat, they are in permanent circulation from cafe to cafe.
– Donald W. Faulkner about the Lost Generation in Paris

Who belonged to the Lost Generation?

The Lost Generation was a group of US writers and artists who came to Europe to live and work in Paris during World War I. They stayed until the Great Depression. Gertrude Stein, who was Ernest Hemingway’s mentor, coined the phrase ”Lost Generation” and gave the group its name. The group included the following American writers: F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Dos Passos, Ezra Pound, Ernest Hemingway, T.S. Eliot, Henry Miller, Thomas Wolfe, John Steinbeck, and E. E. Cummings. Members of the group often had strong connections with one another, and would meet to criticize one another’s work.

All of you young people who served in the war…you are all a lost generation.
– Gertrude Stein

Why did they move to Europe? 

The good old American values disappeared. Faith and religion were broken. The Lost Generation found America intolerant, materialistic, and uninspiring. Most of these writers served in the American army in Europe during WWI. Hemingway, for example, served on the Italian front. America was full of cynical people, who lost their future. A bohemian travelling intellectual life was more attractive.  Paris at that time was cheap and full of creative energy.

If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life it stays with you, for Paris is a movable feast.
– Ernest Hemingway


Montmartre
Source: https://www.istockphoto.com/

Who influenced them in Paris?

In Europe at the time it is the Golden Age Twenties. Paris is the cultural capital of the world. New movements in art such as Dada, Art Deco, and Art nouveau are on the rise. So are graphical artist such as Picasso, Max Ernst, Joan Miró, and Salvador Dali, to name a few.  The literary scene is also flourishing with poets and writers such as André Breton, Louis Aragon, Paul Eluard, Robert Desnos, and Jean Cocteau. Fashion designers like Coco Chanel, Jeanne Lanvin, and Jean Patou  are inspiring innovation with their designs.

Source: https://forums.ernieball.com/


What is the connection between Dorothy and the Lost Generation?

Dorothy is in trouble when a powerful tornado takes her to a magical land, the Land of Oz. After WWI, Paris is the ”Land of Oz” for the Lost Generation. It gave these artists a fresh start. Dorothy killed the Wicked Witch of the East. Hemingway and his friends couldn’t kill the past, but they could paint it in a different way. They could preset an idealized past, that has little connection to the reality they remembered.  Glinda, the Good Witch of the North, gives the red shoes to Dorothy. These ruby slippers help Dorothy on the journey to the Wizard of Oz and ultimately back home. Gertrude Stein is Hemingway’s mentor, his Good Witch of the North.

Dorothy and the Lost Generation go through a process of self development. They discover the power, the gifts, inside them.

You’ve always had the power my dear, you just had to learn it for yourself.
– Glinda, the  Good Witch of the North

A writer should write with his eyes and a painter paint with his ears.
– Gertrude Stein

Now, about you!

If you are lost, like Dorothy, or if you feel something is wrong with your life, look inside you. You will find the answer there. Just like Dorothy, you have to go through a process to reveal your inner gifts.

Below you will find a list of positive words. Two words for almost every letter of the alphabet. Reading through this list can help you to go through the same process that the Lost Generation artists experienced in Paris, in a very condensed and incomplete way.

amazing, admirable, beautiful, balanced, cheerful, charming, delighted, delicate, elegant, excellent, fabulous, funny, gorgeous, generous, happy, harmonious, interesting, intuitive, joyful, jolly, kind, keen, lovely, loyal, mercy, mindfulness, noble, nice, optimistic, open-minded, pretty, powerful, relaxed, romantic, smiling, smart, thankful, tranquil, unique, upright, vivid, velvety-eyes, wonderful, wise, youthful

Are you ready to put your red shoes on?


Jonathan Wilkins & Katusha Demidova Foxtrot Showdance
Source: YouTube



Danish National Art Library / Danmarks Kunstbibliotek who is a good commenter?

 Do you like Art? Do you like Libraries?

Danish National Art Library / Danmarks Kunstbibliotek is a good start if you look for a quiet place and a lot of interesting books.

What did I find today?

The photo was taken by me.


What does Relyea think? 
Art magazines have come to find art historians more attractive as contributors than independent art critics. This is something he is particularly well placed to notice, having himself crossed over from the hardy band of critics to the better-shaded groves of academe. His explanation for this is not the one I'd have thought of at first - the fact that someone already making a living by his or her work at a for the relatively low pay offered by art magazines than someone university can better afford to work trying to make a living solely by writing. Rather, he suggests, the reason has at least in part to do with the overriding demand for global connectivity: "The critic, when compared to the historian, looks isolated and unconnected" whereas art historians "are abundantly hyperlinked" thanks to their "transcontinental academic archipelago of professionally linked colleagues, sites, and organizations, with their cross-advertised conferences and symposia, through which to travel, mingle, connect." - The Art in crisis (page 82-83)

About the book: Edited by Brad Haylock and Megan Patty.
Contributions by Taylor Renee Aldridge & Jessica Lynne, Kalia Brooks Nelson, Maddee Clark, Justin Clemens, Ben Eltham, Fayen d'Evie & Lizzie Boon, Dan Fox, Maria Fusco, Sarah Gory, Boris Groys, Paul James & Brad Haylock, Flavin Judd, Sara Kaaman, Jessica Gysel & Katja Mater, Bella Li & Justin Clemens, Freek Lomme, Rachel Marsden, Nikos Papastergiadis & Hou Hanru, Megan Patty, Barry Schwabsky, Anna-Sophie Springer & Caleb Waldorf, Astrid Vorstermans.


Who are the real beasts?


Source: Book of Beasts: The Bestiary in the Medieval World
by Elizabeth Morrison (Editor), Larisa Grollemond (Contributor)

"Brimming with lively animals both real and fantastic, the bestiary was one of the great illuminated manuscript traditions of the Middle Ages. Encompassing imaginary creatures such as the unicorn, siren, and griffin; exotic beasts including the tiger, elephant, and ape; as well as animals native to Europe like the beaver, dog, and hedgehog, the bestiary is a vibrant testimony to the medieval understanding of animals and their role in the world. So iconic were the stories and images of the bestiary that its beasts essentially escaped from the pages, appearing in a wide variety of manuscripts and other objects, including tapestries, ivories, metalwork, and sculpture."

I don't think so...


When my "step-grandmother" was the head of sewing school

 What did I learn from my grandfather's second life partner?

She was the head of the department of design and sewing in the sewing high school in Debrecen...

She was nice, she was strict, she carried a lot of pain as well, which she always hid behind her smile.

She was always making some nice dresses; she had her small designer and sewing corner at home. Every time we visited her, she had some project on her sewing machine...

They lived on the top floor, and from their balcony, I could see the whole city at sunset. 

Did she ever make a dress for me?

I do not know, but when we had the last year in the gymnasium, we ordered our dress for the tableau photo from her school... but that time she was already a pensioner...

So my gymnasium class got a little bit from my past, my history as well.

So next time, when you see the tableau in the gymnasium... remember this story :D :D :D

This is Debrecen in a different sunset, from a different viewpoint...
Source: https://www.istockphoto.com/



When I lived together with a Textile pattern designer

 My first university years were very busy between 2004-2008.

I lived in so many places and cities and countries, and continents.

How did it start?

I was super angry with my parents, and I wanted to be free...

So I took the first apartment in Angel land :D :D :D next to the Camel Palace :D :D :D

Where the police worked :D :D :D 

It is a direct translation from Hungarian :D :D :D

I lived together with a primary school teacher, who made her hair every night, so we had a hair salon every night. Plus 7 hamsters in the same room :D :D :D

My roommate figured out pretty soon that studying to be a teacher is a romantic story compared to teaching kids in a school, where there is not enough money to buy basic study materials...

So after 2-3 months, she left her teaching job and became a car insurance agent...

Nah, in the next room, a security service woman lived, who was the owner of the hamsters, but she did not wish to live with them in the same room, as they were too noisy.... :D :D :D they were f*cking all night :D :D :D

Jujjj

In the other room, there was a girl who also needed her privacy, as she was studying to become a lawyer at ELTE. 

Huuuu

Who else did we have?

We had the owner, who was in the last year of Civil Engineering at YBL Architect University, and her boyfriend, who was already a graduated Architect Engineer from the same university. They lived in the salon in front of the kitchen.... So I never ate at home...

Na let's jump to the Textile Engineer :D :D :D

A few years passed, and a lot of stories happened...

I ended up in one of the outside districts of Budapest, Kőbánya / Quarry... we lived in a big house with a garden together with the pensioner, Textile Pattern Engineer... She was the head designer for decades at the biggest textile producer factory in Budapest...

Why did we stop living together?

I nearly died! I got serious pneumonia, as I was not allowed to heat my room well in the Winter...

She also had to sell her house after I left her, and got into a pensionist house... or to her daughter...


What did I study from her?

A lot!

What is the most important?

A textile designer loves the textile so much, that they would never let a TAILOR cut it :D :D :D

My name at that time was Szabó, which means TAILOR :D :D :D

hehehe, I did it every week :D :D :D


Fiskars Crafts 8180 RazorEdge Fabric Shears, 8-Inch
Source: https://www.amazon.com/




Monday, May 12, 2025

How many dead people you have to visit to get to the Fashion Academy? Hungary

 In my previous post, I wrote about visiting the Polish cemetery.

I had to visit another cemetery also before I got the internship to go to Poland.

My family in the 19th-century was very diverse regarding nationality...

I had one part that came from  Armenia/Gruzia... they took 10 years to get accepted fully by Debrecen...

They were merchants, textile merchants... They had a huge commercial house.. Nowadays it is an insurance house ;)

They were buried in a place that was moved and became the I. parcel of the big cemetery in Debrecen...

Guess what was built over their original place, where their tombs were in the first place?

A huge shopping center, full of fashion shops...

And a theater..

Why?

As they were the founders of the big theater of Debrecen, they even paid for 10 years the actors...

Was it the only thing they did?

Nope...

This family brought Rotary to Debrecen...

They paid several poets...

They paid for several sculptures in the city...

Who were they? It was a big family...

Some of the girls never reached 18 years, as they died earlier, but the painting about them is one of the most important art of the time, which was for a while in the National Gallery...

And a lot more...

So if you see me in the shopping center, in Debrecen and I want to drink a coffee next time... Sh*t the F*ck *P!!!

Or I will send my ancestors after you... 



Is Death part of the art, fashion industry?

 Is Death part of the art, fashion industry?

Yes, as it is a circle....

In another blog, I wrote, that I died 260 times in one day.

How was it possible?

Me as a kid, I was a regular cemetery visitor. Some kids knows their classmates in the nursery. I just remember only two. One, I kissed a boy, and the other, who thought she can be more beautiful then me...

Nah but how does it make sense?

Yahhh I know more dead kids in the cemetery, then in my nursery alive... 

Uuuhhh, why? When I was a little girl, with my grandmother we went to the cemetery very frequently. 

I was always allowed to walk around the old part, where 19th-century tombs were... and a little bit "younger" tombs... but mostly kids... some even had photos... 


So but how comes the 260 death?

When I was in Poland, I wanted to get to the Fashion Academy. But there was one more thing to do before...

Visit the GHETTO, where the Jews suffered during the WWII.

I visited 260 people's tombs, they were my family....

Then I got a new friend, who was a student of the Fashion Academy, and lived next to the cemetery, and her hobby was to run around the cemetery in the night :D :D :D


Pictures are from https://www.tripadvisor.ca/





Poland - Łódź - Manufaktura and Fashion Academy

 In 2011, I was first time in  Łódź, Poland. I was in an export internship. I lived in Poland also in 2012, 2013 and 2014.


I visited the Akademia Sztuk Pięknych, which is the Fashion Academy in Łódź.


Source: https://studyinlodz.com.pl/


Some of my photos from Łódź:









What to know about the Manufaktura?


Source: https://www.worldisbeautiful.eu/


Nowadays, Manufaktura is one of the biggest malls, shopping centers, and leisure complexes in Europe.

What was before the Manufaktura? A huge textile factory. It was the heart of the textile, that connected Paris and Moscow.


How did it start?

"In 1835, Kalman Poznański and his one-year-old son, Izrael, moved to Lodz from Aleksandrów Łódzki. Kalman owned a market stand at Stary Rynek in Lodz, where he sold various spices and fabrics. During that time, the Lodz industrialists grew in money and power - as the Russian market for fabrics, mainly cotton, increased. When Izrael Poznański inherited his father's company, he also decided to reshape and expand his business. He bought the plots around Ogrodowa Street, where he built the weaving plant in 1872. During the next 25 years, he expanded to a new complex consisting of weaving plants, spinning mills, a bleachery, power plant, finishing plant, dyehouse, warehouses, fire station and a company store. He also built houses, a hospital, a school and a community centre and canteen for thousands of his workers.! - https://www.wikiwand.com/en/articles/Manufaktura


Do you know?

- Barbara Hoff

Source: https://culture.pl/


- Piotr Kałuża


Source: https://www.rybnik.com.pl/




Put your red shoes on when the storm comes...

  Here comes an old article that I posted on my other blog first, on Linda Art CPH, then I moved it to the Linda Life Coach CPH. How to hand...