During breakfast, I received troubling news in the form of a letter. Glimmer slid it into my lap silently, tears staining her cheeks. Scared, I stopped mid chew and examined the glossy picture adorning the front of the postcard. "Saluti da Italia", or greetings from Italy, was embossed on the card. Anxiously, I turned to the back and instantly recognized the scrawled handwriting of Signor Volpe. "TTI has been disbanded. You must make it back to modern day before midnight tomorrow. I'm sorry." Now I realized the source of Glimmer's distress, and a matching tear dropped into my omelet. No longer relaxed, I immediately started plotting my next move. Where should I go for one last trip? In an instant, the answer came to me.
The sounds of antique car horns and clacking heels brought me to 1920s Paris. The Eiffel tower stood alone in the sky, defying gravity. Florists sold daisies and the aroma of baguettes wafted towards me. Before remembering my purpose of being here, I gawked at the culture surrounding me. Then I recalled my mission. Inspiration. I started marveling at the revolutionary clothing worn by the short-haired women strolling through the streets. Low-waisted shifts with art-deco patterns and tight cloched hats exuded chic sophistication. I even saw women sporting the rare trouser.
After spending my last day sketching in the park and eating buttery foods, I reluctantly returned to New York. The crowds almost knocked me off my feet. My head still full of knowledge, I walked to my condo and started sewing. Magic flowed through my fingers as I melded modern colors with the silhouettes and attitude of vintage French fashion. Turning out piece after piece, I realized that my work could be turned in for a grade. My college professor at Parson's institute of design would love my originality. I had found my senior theses.
Toting my full collection with me the next morning, I entered the now familiar campus that had become my home. When I entered my design theory classroom, my heart jumped to my throat. At the front of the room stood my fashion icon, Betsey Johnson. Her original style had made me want to become a fashion designer. She announced that she was retiring and was here to find a new prodigy to inherit her dynasty. For the next hour, she inspected the work of my peers. Eventually, she reached my station. She reacted immediately, her face morphing from distaste to awe. She had nothing bad to say. My clothes were fresh and in, but original and creative. Within the day, I had obtained 27 stores and a custom line. Betsey gave me the opportunity to apprentice with her over the summer, and she said that by fall, she would be able to retire knowing that her legacy would be maintained.
Looking back as my life as a time traveler, I realized that my experience had been life-changing. It had made me the person that I was today. The journeys had been worth the time I sacrificed, and I was sad that they had to end. Although I couldn't imagine life without TTI, I was ready to go on a new adventure in modern time.
Rue Lawrence, Time Traveler Extraordinaire
Friday, May 25, 2012
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Shakespeare
Shakespeare was an English play-write and poet. He was born on April 23, 1564, and died on April 23, 1616. As a child, he attended grammar school begrudgingly. John Shakespeare and Mary Arden were the parents of William Shakespeare and his seven siblings. When he was 18, Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway due to an illegitimate pregnancy. They were happily married and had 3 kids, Susanna, Hamnet, and Judith. For the early years of their marriage, the Shakespeare family lived with William's parents, because he couldn't keep a steady job.
William traveled to London to start a career as an actor. He joined the Globe theater and became a successful actor. He regularly sent money back to Anne, for she never moved to the city. Although Shakespeare was an actor by trade, he wrote 39 plays. When the bubonic plague hit London, all the theaters were closed down, and William started writing sonnets. Poets were highly esteemed citizens, unlike controversial play-writes.
While Shakespeare's plays were considered propaganda at the time, they are now wildly popular. His tragedies, comedies, and histories have been performed countless times and adapted into many movies. Shakespeare is the second most quoted author, after the writers of the Bible. His scripts have morphed into sayings used today. The timeless themes of his plays have inspired many aspiring writers all over the world.
William traveled to London to start a career as an actor. He joined the Globe theater and became a successful actor. He regularly sent money back to Anne, for she never moved to the city. Although Shakespeare was an actor by trade, he wrote 39 plays. When the bubonic plague hit London, all the theaters were closed down, and William started writing sonnets. Poets were highly esteemed citizens, unlike controversial play-writes.
While Shakespeare's plays were considered propaganda at the time, they are now wildly popular. His tragedies, comedies, and histories have been performed countless times and adapted into many movies. Shakespeare is the second most quoted author, after the writers of the Bible. His scripts have morphed into sayings used today. The timeless themes of his plays have inspired many aspiring writers all over the world.
Reformation
The Reformation was a period of change for religion in The Holy Roman Empire. People were furious at the corruption in the church. Some believed that the church shouldn't be the main religious authority. Some just didn't want to share power with the church. After the Great Schism, a division between the Roman church, leaders started new branches of Christianity.
John Wycliffe (1330-1384) was an English Scholar. He realized that the Great Schism was an opportunity for change, and he openly questioned the pope's authority. He believed that the bible was the true religious authority, and he translated it into English so normal people could read it. This enraged the pope, and John Wycliffe was accused of heresy.
Jan Hus (1370-1415) was a priest. He believed that the head of the church was Jesus. He wanted to return the church to the people. He wanted corruption among the people that officiated the church to end, and he wanted mass to be offered in a language the people could understand. In 1415, he was burned at the stake.
Catherine of Siena (1347-1380) was an Italian mystic. She was an incredibly devoted, and had visions of god. She prayed for hours, and tried to end the Great Schism. Although she became a saint, her influence encouraged people to have personal spiritual experiences rather than church ones.
Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536) was a priest from Holland. He published a book called "The Praise of Folly" that attacked church leaders. He wanted to return to Christian goodness. Although he didn't want to branch into different forms of Christianity, his influence prepared people for the reformation.
Martin Luther was a German priest. He believed that salvation came from belief in god, not good works. Luther wrote the 95 theses against indulgences. He felt that indulgences were false salvation. Many were confused by his ideas, so he published pamphlets about his beliefs. He haggled that the bible was the true religious authority and that baptism and Eucharist were the only true sacraments. The Diet of Worms declared that Luther was a heretic, but his ideas still reached many. Later, he started Lutheranism.
Huldrych Zwingli (1484-1531) was a Swiss priest. He convinced his government to ban any non-bible based worship and secede from the church. He believed that worship of relics, saints, statues, and painting were wrong. He thought church services should be free from music. When Swiss Catholics declared war on his town, Zwingli died in battle.
John Calvin (1509-1564) was a French humanist. He started Calvinism, a strict religion based on the idea that god elected a lucky few to be saved. These people showed they were saved by acting without sin. The Calvinist branch inspired many other branches of Christianity.
King Henry VIII (1491-1547) was the King of England. He started the Church of England because he didn't want to share power. He also formed his own church because the pope denied him a divorce. He shut down all English Catholic monasteries.
John Wycliffe (1330-1384) was an English Scholar. He realized that the Great Schism was an opportunity for change, and he openly questioned the pope's authority. He believed that the bible was the true religious authority, and he translated it into English so normal people could read it. This enraged the pope, and John Wycliffe was accused of heresy.
Jan Hus (1370-1415) was a priest. He believed that the head of the church was Jesus. He wanted to return the church to the people. He wanted corruption among the people that officiated the church to end, and he wanted mass to be offered in a language the people could understand. In 1415, he was burned at the stake.
Catherine of Siena (1347-1380) was an Italian mystic. She was an incredibly devoted, and had visions of god. She prayed for hours, and tried to end the Great Schism. Although she became a saint, her influence encouraged people to have personal spiritual experiences rather than church ones.
Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536) was a priest from Holland. He published a book called "The Praise of Folly" that attacked church leaders. He wanted to return to Christian goodness. Although he didn't want to branch into different forms of Christianity, his influence prepared people for the reformation.
Huldrych Zwingli (1484-1531) was a Swiss priest. He convinced his government to ban any non-bible based worship and secede from the church. He believed that worship of relics, saints, statues, and painting were wrong. He thought church services should be free from music. When Swiss Catholics declared war on his town, Zwingli died in battle.
John Calvin (1509-1564) was a French humanist. He started Calvinism, a strict religion based on the idea that god elected a lucky few to be saved. These people showed they were saved by acting without sin. The Calvinist branch inspired many other branches of Christianity.
King Henry VIII (1491-1547) was the King of England. He started the Church of England because he didn't want to share power. He also formed his own church because the pope denied him a divorce. He shut down all English Catholic monasteries.
Friday, May 4, 2012
Brunelleschi's dome
It
started
the
Renaissan
ce in Florence and
sparked the Medici Le
gacy of patronage and spo
nsership of culture, a feat of
defying engineering accomplished
by an architect who looked to the
classical period for inspiration, build
ing orphanages with columns and ar
ches, Brunelleschi spurred the huma
nist revolution unkowingly as soon as
he built the dome at santa maria del
fiore,the dome of Florence
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Sonnet
A sonnet is a 14 line poem with 10 syllables per line. They were invented during the Italian Renaissance, and Shakespeare wrote many of them.
Renaissance Italy
Exhausted with living in the darkness
Tired of just surviving, cultureless
The Renaissance, like a candle that's lit
Hoarding great wealth, city-states benefit
Artists with a cause smear paint on canvas
Rich patrons beautify their new cities
Tools chisel stone, weapons long abandoned
Under a blanket of discovery
Lies an ever present feud, dividing
Radical Humanists against the church
But life continues with mirth, ignoring
New ideas are formed, thinkers rejoicing
Paranoid geniuses keep plans hidden
The dark is forgotten in the clamor
Sunday, April 29, 2012
Florence Art Tour
This week, I went on an art tour to see the famous works of artists that were sponsored by the Medici Family. The Medici family lived in Florence during the Renaissance. They were great patrons of art and culture. Because the Medici family revolutionized European life, some say that they were the godfathers of the renaissance. They left a legacy that changed history.
This painting is Prima Vera by Sandro Botticelli. He was one of Lorenzo Medici's favorite artists. This painting was controversial at the time because it didn't show biblical events. It portrayed a Pagan custom.
This is Donatello's David. It was the first freely standing bronze statue created during the Renaissance. It marked the beginning of art patronage.
Michelangelo was a student at the first ever art university in Florence. When he was just a teenager, Lorenzo Medici brought him under his wing. Lorenzo told Michelangelo to create non-biblical art, but Michelangelo refused. Instead, he painted works like this one, titled The Creation of Adam.
Leonardo Da Vinci was another artist patronized by the Medici family. He was interested in engineering as well as art. As a child, he helped a master artist create commissioned paintings. His use of vibrant colors set his work apart. Interested in human anatomy, he dissected multiple corpses.
On of Michelangelo's masterpieces is the ceiling of the Sistine chapel. He painted it at a time when Giovanni Medici was pope Leo X. The Medici's had religious power as well as being the despots of Florence. Leo X commissioned the ceiling in the Vatican to Michelangelo, who cynically obliged. He thought his time was better spent sculpting and. Although Michelangelo resented being forced to paint the Sistine chapel, it is now viewed as one of the greatest works of Renaissance Europe.
This painting is Prima Vera by Sandro Botticelli. He was one of Lorenzo Medici's favorite artists. This painting was controversial at the time because it didn't show biblical events. It portrayed a Pagan custom.
This is Donatello's David. It was the first freely standing bronze statue created during the Renaissance. It marked the beginning of art patronage.
Michelangelo was a student at the first ever art university in Florence. When he was just a teenager, Lorenzo Medici brought him under his wing. Lorenzo told Michelangelo to create non-biblical art, but Michelangelo refused. Instead, he painted works like this one, titled The Creation of Adam.
Leonardo Da Vinci was another artist patronized by the Medici family. He was interested in engineering as well as art. As a child, he helped a master artist create commissioned paintings. His use of vibrant colors set his work apart. Interested in human anatomy, he dissected multiple corpses.
On of Michelangelo's masterpieces is the ceiling of the Sistine chapel. He painted it at a time when Giovanni Medici was pope Leo X. The Medici's had religious power as well as being the despots of Florence. Leo X commissioned the ceiling in the Vatican to Michelangelo, who cynically obliged. He thought his time was better spent sculpting and. Although Michelangelo resented being forced to paint the Sistine chapel, it is now viewed as one of the greatest works of Renaissance Europe.
Haikus
A new age that sprouts
From the ruins of dark ages
A revolution
The Sistine Chapel
Michelangelo's great work
Sullenly painted
Medici family
Godfathers of Renaissance
Name brings resentment
Forced to deny truth
Or accept consequences
Catholic church rules
Florence, a city
of patronage and patrons
Beautiful
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)