From Syria to Jalisco to Noir at the Bar in Baltimore
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(Feasting Scene, Jalisco, Proto- Classical 200 BC-AD 250. Earthen- ware, red-slipped resist painting, appliqué 20 1/4 x 19 3/4 x 17 in. Walters Art Museum, Baltimore.) |
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(Bearded Figure With Necklace. Syrian, 2400- 2000 BC. Terra- cotta. H: 5 3/8 x W: 2 3/4 x D: 1 5/16 in. Walters Art Museum, Baltimore. |
Some good stuff got read by Dennis Tafoya, Art Taylor, et al., not all of it unquotable on a family blog, but my favorite part was just hanging out and talking about writing and writers, notably with Dana King. Talk turned to James Ellroy, and author/Thuglit editor Todd Robinson said Ellroy made him nervous when they met.
Now, Robinson is wide, he's bald, and he's tattoo'd — not the first person I'd picture getting nervous in the presence of others. I took this as an endearing surprise, and also as evidence that despite Ellroy's intelligence, sensitivity, hard work, wide reading, and sometimes intense self-awareness, perhaps the man really does get close to the edge sometimes.
© Peter Rozovsky 2014
Labels: Art Taylor, Dana King, Dennis Tafoya, James Ellroy, Mesoamerican art, Near Eastern art, Noir at the Bar, Thuglit, Todd Robinson, Walters Art Museum