More from Flashbak
Whenever Doug Biggert (1941-2023) picked up a hitch-hiker in Northern California he took their picture. To make the “explanation simpler”, and reassure hitchhikers of his intentions, he kept a binder full of his pictures to show them. What turned into a decades-long project began in 1973, when Biggert was hosting a twice-weekly late-night jazz … Continue reading "Riding With Strangers: California Hitchhikers in the 1970s" The post Riding With Strangers: California Hitchhikers in the 1970s appeared first on Flashbak.
“Everyone should live creatively. It is now recognised that the creative urge – other than sex – is manifest in varying degrees, not only in musicians, writers and painters, but in all human beings…. Creation in the widest sense must surely be adding to what already exists. If you contribute something to others and to … Continue reading "Miss Margaret Morris’ Merry Mermaids" The post Miss Margaret Morris’ Merry Mermaids appeared first on Flashbak.
Duke Ellington (born Edward Kennedy Ellington; April 29, 1899 – May 24, 1974) had a voracious appetite for sex and food. The elegant American jazz pianist, composer, master of instrumental colour and leader of his eponymous jazz orchestra wrote thousands of songs and performed all over the world, not least in his role as … Continue reading "32 Hotdogs and A Pocketful of Chops: Eating With Duke Ellington" The post 32 Hotdogs and A Pocketful of Chops: Eating With Duke Ellington appeared first on Flashbak.
In 1907, the Wiener Werkstätte art movement produced a set of 12 prints featuring different Variety acts. These Varieténummer – Vaudeville performances – were both madly daring and fanciful. Mac Bull from Philadelphia (Act 11) would drive his car around a rainbow. A. Lucci the Famous Hunger Artist (Act 3) had gone 132 days without … Continue reading "12 Variety Acts by the Wiener Werkstätte, 1907" The post 12 Variety Acts by the Wiener Werkstätte, 1907 appeared first on Flashbak.
First published in 1961, The Artists’ & Writers’ Cookbook shares 220 recipes by 55 painters, 61 novelists, 15 sculptors and 19 poets. Dedicated to the art of imperfection in the kithc”, it’s a fun book in which wit and wine feature heavily. American novelist William Styron delivers a six-page-long recipe for Southern fried chicken, … Continue reading "The Artists’ & Writers’ Cookbook, 1961" The post The Artists’ & Writers’ Cookbook, 1961 appeared first on Flashbak.
More in history
Thatcher’s Wordsmiths JamesHoare Tue, 06/03/2025 - 09:08
Ireland had been under nominal English control since the 1100s but across much of the island local Gaelic lords continued to enjoy great autonomy, similar to the highlands of Scotland. The English Crown’s efforts to extend its political control over the island during the 16th century inspired a rebellion among the Gaelic lords between […]
Whenever Doug Biggert (1941-2023) picked up a hitch-hiker in Northern California he took their picture. To make the “explanation simpler”, and reassure hitchhikers of his intentions, he kept a binder full of his pictures to show them. What turned into a decades-long project began in 1973, when Biggert was hosting a twice-weekly late-night jazz … Continue reading "Riding With Strangers: California Hitchhikers in the 1970s" The post Riding With Strangers: California Hitchhikers in the 1970s appeared first on Flashbak.
Being deprived of political rights for most of world history, women tried to contribute to political theory and philosophy as soon as they could find themselves pen, paper, and free time from making the world spin around. Furthermore, institutional political philosophy often ignored the private sphere and civil society, which were the very areas […]