COVID-19 lockdowns disrupted the flow of workers--and closed banks, shops and other businesses. That cut off their credit and their access to all sorts of other necessities. And, unlike large farms that own tractors and such, most small farmers in India rent their equipment. With rental shops closed, Nagaraj and Alex Pandian could not get even basic equipment to till their father's field.
In the middle of the journey of my life, I am--as always--a woman on a bike. Although I do not know where this road will lead, the way is not lost, for I have arrived here. And I am on my bicycle, again.
I am Justine Valinotti.
05 July 2021
Pedals Into Ploughshares In India
COVID-19 lockdowns disrupted the flow of workers--and closed banks, shops and other businesses. That cut off their credit and their access to all sorts of other necessities. And, unlike large farms that own tractors and such, most small farmers in India rent their equipment. With rental shops closed, Nagaraj and Alex Pandian could not get even basic equipment to till their father's field.
04 July 2021
Independence Today!
Happy Fourth!
Today is American Independence Day.
You might say that on this date last year, I celebrated a kind of independence: I took my first ride after the crash that landed me in Westchester Medical Center for a weekend.
Today, I plan to do a somewhat longer ride before meeting friends for a barbecue.
Oh, and it just happens to be my birthday. I won't reveal my age. All I'll say is that I'm not about to change the name of this blog.
Enjoy!
Photo by Aimee Ferre |
03 July 2021
A Ride To Modern Art
Say "bicycles" and "modern art," and the first work that comes to most people's minds is Marcel Duchamp's "Bicycle Wheel." Next might the "bull's head" Pablo Picasso made from a bicycle saddle and handlebars.
Ricardo Brey, "Joy" (2018) |
But even when artists aren't creating objects from bike parts or images of bicycles, the forms, motions and technology of two wheels propelled by two pedals have inspired creators for as long as there have been bicycles. "Almost every one of the Surrealists, Dadaists and Futurists did something with a bike," according to David Platzker.
Nina Chenel Abney, "Ridin Solo" (2020) |
He has curated, in collaboration with Alex Ostroy (of the NYC bicycle clothing line that bears his name) Re: Bicycling, a group exhibition in New York's Susan Inglett Gallery. Spanning the period from the Industrial Revolution to the present, the show includes more than 20 works and pays homage to, not only the bicycle itself, but its potential for autonomy and freedom. The artists past and present, according to Platzker, "took it to heart" that the bicycle is "a means of self-powered locomotion."
Ebecho Muslimova, "Fatabe Dirt Unicycle" (2021) |
For that reason, he says, "Modernism--and modern art--would never exist without bicycles."
Claes Oldenberg and Coosje Van Bruggen, "Bicycle Ensevelie, Fabrication Model of Pedal and Arm" (1988) |