Photo Pest
Hang around me and
you'll get your picture taken
if we go somewhere fun.
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
The Fear of 13 (4*)
Friday, May 1, 2026
Cameramen
I had no idea there would be a trove of Factory images at the International Center for Photography. I never can get enough of Andy.
| Nuits Balnéaires (partial) |
| "Fresco" by François-Xavier Gbré (partial) |
| "Call Me/Love You Excerpt 2, #002 by Gray Sorrenti (partial, 2025) |
| From the series Dogs Chasing My Car in the Desert" by John Divola (partial, 1996-2001) |
| Andy, Chinatown restaurant |
| Lou & Andy |
| Edie |
| Nico |
| "When You Open Your Eyes, There Will No Longer Be Anything to See" |
| View North, Bowery |
| Plastic Dinner Plates, East Village |
| Cooper Union, East Village |
| Fifth Avenue View, Madison Square Park |
| Macy's Flower Show, Herald Square |
| Deutsche Bank Building, Columbus Circle |
| Plaza, Lincoln Center |
Thursday, April 30, 2026
What They Said: April 2026
“The Iranians have achieved mutual assured destruction without a nuclear weapon,” said Robert S. Litwak, a scholar at George Washington University who has written extensively on Iran’s nuclear program. “If Trump attacks Iran’s civil infrastructure, Iran will destroy the comparable energy and desalination facilities in the Gulf.” (New York Times, 04.01.26)
“We have this obsession with gas prices because they dictate a lot of ‘Can we drive? Can we do things we enjoy?’ And now some of that is at risk,” said Patrick De Haan, an analyst at GasBuddy, which also tracks fuel prices. (New York Times, 04.01.26)
* * * * *
“At this point, I kind of want to hire people because I’m lonely,” said Matthew Gallagher who used AI to build and operate a $1.8 billion telehealth company marketing GLP-1 and erectile dysfunction drugs with his brother as his only employee. (New York Times, 04.05.26)
“I only use it like for 10 minutes when I’m bored,” said Quentin, whose interactions with AI chatbots have declined since he began dating another teenager. “Even though I could torture people in that universe and beat up a kid named Oliver, because I hate that name, I’d rather be in my life.” (New York Times, 04.05.26)
“One principle of collage, for me,” said Lucy Sante, a visual historian and the author of Low Life, an account of tenement life in lower Manhattan during the Gilded Age, “is you have to kill one thing to make another. It’s a small-scale model of revolutionary behavior.” (New York Times, 04.05.26)
* * * * *
“It’s something so clearly unlawful and deeply misguided,” said Oona A. Hathaway, a Yale law professor who co-wrote an open letter signed by 100 legal experts and lawyers expressing their concerns about the U.S. strikes on Iran. “It’s hard to fathom how much the rules have been completely thrown out.” (New York Times, 04.06.26)
“Let those who have weapons lay them down. Let those who have the power to unleash wars choose peace,” Pope Leo XIV said in his first Easter message. “Not a peace imposed by force, but through dialogue. Not with the desire to dominate others, but to encounter them.” (New York Times, 04.06.26)
* * * * *
“One wonders,” wrote Ronald H. Spector, a Viet Nam veteran turned academic historian, in 2017 in Politico, “how anyone could have believed that a complex and intractable war that began 14 years before President Kennedy came into office and continued for six years after Johnson left it could have been won or lost by presidential decisions in Washington during the four years between 1961 and 1965." (New York Times, 04.08.26)
* * * * *
“Listen, I may not be part of the solution here[a world of doomscrolling, political chaos and uncertainty about AI] in any fundamental way,” said Patrick Radden Keefe, author of Say Nothing, a humanistic account of "the Troubles" in Ireland and a staff writer for The New Yorker. “But I’m not part of the problem. And that’s something.” (New York Times, 04.09.26)
“The feature of these negotiations that may extend the cease-fire is that there is a bit of mutually assured destruction between the U.S. and Iran right now,” said Suzanne Maloney, an Iran expert and the vice president of the foreign policy program at the Brookings Institution. (New York Times, 04.09.26)
"We call it the manosphere, but it could more accurately be described as the boyosphere," observed Louis Theroux, director of Inside the Manosphere, a documentary. (New York Times, 04.09.26)
* * * * *
“We made cameras that threw treats for pets. and now we make cameras that throw explosives at occupiers,” said Ukrainian drone manufacturer Yaroslav Azhnyuk. (New York Times, 04.09.26)
“Two months ago the global news story was Tehran massacring its own people,” said Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “Today the global news story is Tehran successfully resisting America and Israel.” (New York Times, 04.09.26)
* * * * *
"I’ve also spent a long time with the song “Memory,” writes Betty Buckley, the Tony Award-winning actress and singer who originated the role of Grizabella in the Broadway production of “Cats. "I sang it at the Tony Awards in 1983, and I sang it at The Saint, a gay club in the East Village. At the song’s core is a simple plea of longing to be seen again — to be recognized and to be welcomed back into the circle. (New York Times, 04.11.26)
* * * * *
“They could hold their ground for another two months, if not more. And economically, I think there is no threshold for how much more pain the Iranians are willing to tolerate,” said Ali Vaez, the head of the Iran program at the International Crisis Group, a think tank. (New York Times, 04.12.26)
“There’s one new thing I know, and that is: Planet Earth, you are a crew,” said NASA astronaut Christina Koch at a press conference celebrating the success of the Artemis II expedition. (New York Times, 04.12.26)
* * * * *
“Look at what [Mark Carney, Canadian Prime Minister] has been able to do; ‘remarkable’ is just not the correct word,” said Shachi Kurl, president at the Angus Reid Institute, a nonpartisan political research group. “He took a party that was a bus with no brakes headed for a brick wall and somehow managed to not only pull it from the brink of oblivion, but then within a year, get it into a majority position.” (New York Times, 04.15.26)
"I can talk to actors who are 20, 30 years younger than me who have never heard of Laurence Olivier or Noël Coward or John Gielgud or Peggy Ashcroft or these giants of my youth: Gone. Particularly theater actors, over and done with. That’s fine," said Ian McKellen. "And I don’t have children. That’s most people’s legacy, isn’t it? No. I don’t think there’s any life after death in both senses of heaven and hell and a legacy. It’s over. So you better enjoy it while you’re here." (New York Times, 04.15.26)
* * * * *
“When needed, try to be there — it’s as simple as that,” said Mary Kay Finneran, one of the last members of the Sisters of Charity, a Catholic order that has voted to close after serving New York City since 1869. “That’s how we all were as younger women. It is how I try to be now.” (New York Times, 04.17.26)
* * * * *
“They [Germany's far right party, AfD, in the wake of Viktor Orban's defeat in Hungary] will latch on to whatever narrative is convenient,” said Constanze Stelzenmüller, director of the Center on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institution in Washington. “If they have to, they will latch on to the idea of being the last of the Mohicans.” (New York Times, 04.18.26)
“Netanyahu influenced how the war started,” said Aaron David Miller, a former Middle East negotiator now at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “He won’t influence how it ends.” (New York Times, 04.18.26)
“We believe there’s a sweet spot where we can meet our investment goals and help a project through that might otherwise not get built,” said NYC Comptroller Mark Levine, who announced a $4 billion pension fund investment in affordable housing. (New York Times, 04.18.26)
“It is a bit weird to see my professors in the audience at readings, knowing that they still need to grade my papers,” said Nelio Bidermann, the 22-year-old author of a bestselling German novel that has drawn comparisons to Buddenbrooks by Nobel Prize winner Thomas Mann. “But I imagine they can still do that without being biased.” (New York Times, 04.18.26)
* * * * *
“I think the vast majority of Americans recognize that there is a large group of undocumented immigrants who have been literally keeping food on our tables,” said Kelsey Erickson Streufert, the chief public affairs officer for the Texas Restaurant Association. “And if we remove those people, it is going to hurt everyone in terms of higher prices.” (New York Times, 04.19.26)
“My grandma would collect cans out the trash can for money," recalled Hykeem Jamaal Carter, Jr. who performs as Baby Keem. "We’d walk home, sell cans. You kind of get the why. You don’t have to ask why. You’re living the why.” (New York Times, 04.19.26)
* * * * *
“Leo wasn’t looking for a fight,” said Christopher White, a senior fellow at the Georgetown Initiative on Catholic Social Thought and Public Life. “One of the reasons he found his voice is out of necessity.” (New York Times, 04.20.26)
* * * * *
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Dog Day Afternoon (3*)
A desire to see two terrific actors I have long admired from television perform live got me to the August Wilson Theater where costume designer Brenda Abbandandolo rewarded my willingness to ignore so-so reviews. Both Jon Bernthal and Eben Moss-Bachrach, attired in the tight, high-waisted pants that peacocks in the '70s favored, have nice butts.
Monday, April 27, 2026
Yesteryear (2*)
In Hollywood they call it an "elevator pitch," and this one was irresistible, good enough to overcome my snobbery about reading novels before they are classics, well-reviewed by critics I respect or recommended by literary friends: a "trad wife" influencer finds herself time-travelled back to the mid-19th century.
Author Caro Claire Burke seduced me further with her even-handedness, declaring, in a New York Times interview, “We were all sold a bill of false goods, and that’s true for conservative women and it’s true for liberal women. The point of the book is not that one wins.”
Actually, no one wins in this cynical, borderline offensive exercise in comeuppance which might just as well have been penned by one of the "angry women" who comment on narrator Natalie Heller Mills's Instagram account. Yesteryear brings to mind a self-help book I had to promote when I worked in publishing which suggested "we criticize in others our own short comings."
Natalie, a Christian homebody living her best life on a "farm" in Utah, intuitively understands the dynamics of social media.
The goal of an influencer is not to be lovable, and it is not to be unbearable. The goal is to be both at once. In other words: addicting.
But Natalie also expresses her profound contempt for the human race from the very beginning:
A space must always look lived-in for someone to want to live in it. This is a completely obvious notion, when you take a moment to really think about it, but most people don’t take a moment to really think about anything. Most people are morons.
Caleb, her husband and the ineffectual black sheep of a wealthy family whose patriarch eventually runs for president on a manosphere platform, doesn't meet her expectations either.
My husband was like a farm animal, or a very expensive suede couch. Constant work. Diminishing returns. It required relentless sacrifice and impeccable discipline to give your life over to the care and management of a man like that.
Worse yet, Caleb can't even get it up. Burke establishes an ugly parallel between this shortcoming and her attitude about his desire to teach children.
A substitute kindergarten teaching job was the professional version of a fully flaccid penis. Humiliation incarnate.
Yet his lack of desire doesn't get in the way of procreation: the couple have so many kids that I lost track. Burke uses far more ink to develop Reena, a "modern," childless woman just as alienating as Natalie even though she mostly disappears after they room together briefly in their first year of college. It turns out that Burke's equanimity boils down to thoroughly negative depictions of both her female protagonists, regardless of their politics.
If you want to spend time with characters as unlikable and unedifying as these, be my guest. And yes, I'm aware that it's sexist to insist women must be likable but I wouldn't be any more sympathetic to men this fucked up, either. Even worse, using mental illness as the cornerstone of Yesteryear's structure seems like a bait and switch as unbelievable as it is unforgivable.
Sunday, April 26, 2026
The Balusters (5*)
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Guggenheim Discoveries
| Self-Portrait (ca 1909-1910) |
But I'll start with Bove, because the unique installation of her work flatters its abstraction, a style that doesn't usually appeal to me. She also serves on the board of the Sculpture Center in Long Island City, where I had just seen a terrific exhibition.
| "Vase Face I/The Ascent to Heaven on a Dentist's Chair" (2022) |
Is it sexist to attribute Bove's use of bright color to her gender? Stainless steel seems like such a "masc" medium otherwise, although in this context it feels much cooler than the fiery mills where brawny workers produce it.
| "The Moon and the Yew Tree" (2019) |
| "Second Cartesian Sculpture" (partial, 2014) & Hieroglyph (2013) |
| "Peel's foe, not a set animal, laminates a tone of sleep" (2013) |
| "Sweet Charity" by Carol Bove (partial, 2026) |
| "The Foamy Saliva of a Horse" (partial, 2011) |
| "Untitled (The Middle Pillar)" (2007) |
| "The Night Sky Over New York, October 21, 2007, 9 pm" (partial, 2007) |
| "Twiggy" (2004) |
| "Head of a Young Girl" (1908) |
| "After Tea II (Kandinsky with the Art Dealer Goltz at Ainmillerstraße 36, Munich" (1912) |
| "Sunset over Staffelsee" (1910) |
| "Boating" (1910) |
| "In the Salon" (1911) |
| "Future (Woman in Stockholm)" (1917) |
| "Breakfast of the Birds" (1934) |
| (partial) |
Other Discoveries
| "Madame Cézanne" by Paul Cézanne (ca 1885-87) |
| "Morning in the Village after Snowstorm" by Kazimir Malevich (1912) |
| Knight Errant" by Oskar Kokoschka (1914-15) |
| "Portrait of an Old Man (Johann Harms)" by Egon Schiele (1916) |
| "Bird on a Tree" by Pablo Picasso (1928) |