People who thought he was great so long as his fantasy coincided with theirs. But every time he pushed further—and he always pushed further—they became confused and resentful.
— Tom Wolfe, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test
Emilie Lemakis, Met Buttons, 2022
Each of the buttons reports a guard's years on staff at the @metmuseum and their hourly wage. via @nytimes
— @arthandlermag
My Vienna has thinned into other people's Vienna.
— Edmund de Waal, The Hare with Amber Eyes
"The Texas-based collector donated her collection of over 3,000 ceramic pieces to Syracuse, New York's Everson Museum of Art with an unusual condition: that the works will be used at the museum's new resturant."
— @eversonmuseum
And that I should probably record... sit at his elbow with a notebook. I never did. It seemed formal and inappropriate. It also seemed greedy: that's a good rich story, I'll have that. Anyway, I liked the way that repetition wears things smooth.
— Edmund de Waal, The Hare with Amber Eyes
Simon indexes, re-creates, photographs, and preserves these centerpieces, linking the grand theatrics of political deal-making and the globalization of world economies to the intricacies of botany and horticulture.
— Taryn Simon wall text for Paperwork and the Will of Capital, Press XI, 2015, Brooklyn Museum
If I do not do it myself it will not be mine.
— Grant on writing his book, via Ron Chernow, Grant
Endurance lit by flares at night, a shot by Australian photographer Frank Hurley, ca. 1915.
— @publicdomainrev
Per Liga.Life, Elena was most concerned with correcting claims that the pickled vegetables were cucumbers. She said they were actually tomatoes with plums. "I don't know where the fables about cucumbers came from," she said.
— Mia Jankowicz, "A grandma in Kyiv says she took out a suspicious drone while Russia was attacking by throwing a jar of pickled tomatoes at it," Yahoo! News
We see as we are told.
— Ingrid Schaffner, “Wall Text,” What Makes a Great Exhibition, via Orit Gat, "Could Reading Be Looking?"
Still, endings have a disproportionate influence on any narrative.
— Ron Chernow, Grant
Many covers were addressed to President Roosevelt from collectors and admirers with the desire that they would form a part of his stamp collection.
— "The Postage Stamp Collection of Franklin Delano Roosevelt," wall text, Spellman Museum of Stamps & Postal History
He made the comments during a meeting with female flight attendants from Russian airlines before International Womens Day, which will be marked on Tuesday. Mr. Putin has often used such choreographed events to make high-profile statements.
The New York Times
On Monday, TripAdvisor and Google Maps halted reviews at some locations in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus after pro-Ukraine volunteers targeted the sites to share uncensored information with the Russian public about the war.
— Kate Conger and Adam Satariano, "Volunteer Hackers Converge on Ukraine Conflict With No One in Charge," The New York Times
Worse yet, contaminated diversity is recalcitrant to the kind of “summing up” that has become the hallmark of modern knowledge. Contaminated diversity is not only particular and historical, ever changing, but also relational. It has no self-contained units; its units are encounter-based collaborations. Without self-contained units, it is impossible to compute costs and benefits, or functionality, to any “one” involved.
— Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, The Mushroom at the End of the World
It isn't really about the product.
— Daniel*
Today's the day everyone runs their "Putin's weird table" stories
— @emily_elsie
There are decades where nothing happens; and then there are weeks when decades happen.
— Vladimir Ilyich Lenin via @esaagar
Oh my god, you'd be so scared wouldn't you.
— Lily laughing as she imagines me in a bathtub full of mice
I believe there is power in a whisper.
— Ásta, Multiple Formats*