Thursday, May 09, 2019

99% Week: Whimsy Up Your Ass

Earlier this week, Dave introduced you to 99% Invisible, the podcast hosted by the euphoniously-toned Roman Mars. As the G:TB staff knows, in accordance with our carefully curated editorial calendar, this post is the second installment in our new (and now ongoing) series of pod-reports on 99pi's offerings.

Episode 351, released on April 23, 2019, tells the story of Isamu Noguchi. Born in 1904 to an American mother and Japanese father, Noguchi found himself caught between two cultures as a young man. His blue eyes marked him as an outsider in Japan, and his skin tone and facial features the same in America. His lonely childhood would inspire his life's work. From the podcast, "He started to think of a concept for a giant public sculpture, and in his mind, it took the form of a massive pyramid. Try to imagine a cross between a Mayan temple and a mountain. It pushes out of the earth with a long slide sloping down with steps on two of its faces. Essentially, it’s like an asymmetrical Egyptian step-pyramid. Noguchi thought of it as a playground, and he called it Play Mountain."

After building a career as a sculptor of busts of prominent people, Noguchi sought ways to bring his ideas about play and form to broader audiences. In the early 1930s, he received an audience with famed New York parks commissioner Robert Moses. The latter envisioned a massive park-building program across the city, and Noguchi pitched Play Mountain, his whimsical, free-form monument to non-directive play. Moses favored the four S's - swings, slides, see-saws, and sandboxes, and summarily dismissed Noguchi's fanciful idea.

Noguchi went on to live a roller-coaster life, gaining fame as an artist and designer (the Noguchi coffee table is one of the most famous furniture designs of the 1950s), while also being interred briefly during World War II with other Japanese-Americans. But he never forgot about Play Mountain and his notions of the importance of non-directive play.

Ironically, while he never saw his vision executed in America, his growing fame in the art world led other designers to develop playgrounds that borrowed heavily from his ideas, even as increasing concerns for safety spurred new standards for playground equipment and influenced much of the bland sameness we see today in our parks.

It wasn't until 1988 that Noguchi got a chance to build the park of his dreams. Sapporo, Japan commissioned him to develop a 454-acre parcel of land to his whimsical specifications, called Moerenuma Park. Sadly, while he designed the project, he died in December of that year, and his collaborator Shoji Sadao oversaw its construction, which took 17 years. The finished product is "this huge green swath of land, tucked into a bend in the river. There are forests of his candy-like play equipment, mounds and pyramids and swooping paths, an enormous conical hill to climb, a huge fountain that cycles through an hour-long water show."



We'll give Roman Mars the final word on this Gheorghie artist:

"Isamu Noguchi was never able to take in the view from the peak of his creation. The sculpture he’d spent his whole life dreaming about., like a mountain teleported from the wild alien planet of his mind. The one place he ever felt he really belonged. Noguchi wanted us to see the world as if we were visiting for the first time. To move our bodies through space as if the simple facts of gravity and contour were brand new delights. To look around with wide eyes, to feel with outstretched fingers, and imagine infinite possibilities. In other words: to live like kids on a playground."

39 comments:

  1. Yoodge day here. Sean Fennessey needs to get off my corner.

    https://www.theringer.com/movies/2019/5/9/18538143/wu-tang-clan-mics-men-rza-gza-ol-dirty-bastard-inspectah-deck-raekwon-da-chef-ghostface-killah

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  2. Sunday AM I fly to the British Virgin Islands to spend 5 days and nights on a catamaran, island hopping with 5 other party people. Recommendations appreciated. Excitement overflowing.

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  3. Bring some alka seltzer, Imodium and prophylactics.

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  4. So I was gonna use a condom... but then I figured, when am I gonna be in Tortola again?

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  5. Sam Adams bought Dogfish Head today. Interesting merger. Sam Adams gains some decent IPAs to offset Sam Lagers, ciders and seltzers.

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  6. Party City closing 45 stores, dealing with global helium shortage

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  7. Folks, if you have a Dairy Queen near you, I suggest you hustle on over there and try the Blizzard Flights before they melt away. It's well worth the time and effort.

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  8. Whit, such deflating news about Party City

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  9. Sam Adams sells Truly (spiked seltzer), Twisted Tea (malt beverage iced tea), and Angry Orchard (cider) brands. All their growth over the last 5 years has been from those brands and not Sam Adams.

    Supposedly, Jim Koch hates the fact that those brands keep the lights on because he is a beer guy.

    DQ next town over now on the agenda for the weekend.

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  10. dave johnson of the daily press just tweeted this:

    BREAKING: L.J. Owens, a freshman guard last season, has informed the W&M coaching staff he will not be returning. No word on where he's headed.
    So of the five who entered the transfer portal, Chase Audige, Justin Pierce, Matt Milon and Owens are gone. Only Luke Loewe remains.

    so, you know, everything is proceeding according to plan. we might, no exaggeration, be the worst team in division one next year.

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  11. If Shaver was so good, shouldn’t he be getting offers from other schools? Is he still unemployed? Too lazy to search the googles myself, which sums up my interest level in Tribe basketball.

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  12. Tony Shaver is 65. And I believe he is getting paid handsomely by William and Mary for the duration of his contract.

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  13. shaver signed an extension several months before he was canned that ensures he gets $1.7m over the next five years. so he’s not in any hurry.

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  14. Shaver is a poor man's Bobby Bonilla.

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  15. Whit,

    friends highly recommend soggy dollar bar. sister and brother-in-law highly recommend foxy's. Both on jost van dyke.

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  16. What the hell is happening? The Tribe is tanking, Whit's going to spread seeds (under an alias, I presume) in Tortola, and Teej is talking up DQ. Anyone else had a blizzard that wasn't quite right, and they forevermore taste like a chemical compound and not food?

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  17. Fairbank beat me to it. Jost Van Dyke is worth the ferry ride. Do it on a sunday. That’s when Soggy Dollar is at its peak. It’s a great way to spend an afternoon. Foxy’s is really cool too. An outdoor dive bar. Kenny Chesney loves it but try not to hold that against the place.

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  18. there isn't an army in the hemisphere large enough to keep whitney away from a bar named foxy's. finky's, on the other hand.

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  19. The wife and I did 7 days in tortola for our honeymoon and 3 days in St John. Tortola is great. Make your way around the island and bar hop. Go to the opposite end (West End?) of the island from the airport as it’s less developed and more locals. If you can find Nature Boy, go there. It’s literally a hut on a secluded beach that a guy walks down from the hills and sets up bottles in everyday. Stop in at Bomba Shack. Cool roadside shack for drinking. If it’s a full moon they make and give out mushroom team for the full moon party. No, really.

    Take a ferry to The Baths and walk around the caves. I’m not very outdoorsy but it’s gorgeous. St John is a little longer of a ferry ride but it’s fun. Woody’s is a lot of fun around happy hour.

    I’m super jealous, Whit.

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  20. Thank you for the tips. Recorded and shared with the group. Can't wait to get down there.

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  21. whitney knows how to drive a catamaran?

    good thing you're going with an even number of people!

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  22. i'm giggling a little at all the different ways one might interpret dave's second sentence above.

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  23. My 17 year old is off at prom. It’s really hard for me to not think of all the fucked up shit me and my friends did on prom night. Luckily, it’s much harder for teenagers to book hotel rooms than it was in the mid 90s.

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  24. They probably gamed the system and got Air BnBs for the night.

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  25. so, W&Ms returning starters are all gone for next season--that's official?
    can we fire huge now please?

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  26. My youngest’s 9U travel team lost to the other undefeated team in their league 11-8 tonight. They were up 8-1 and then reverted to 9 y/o kids. Other team repeatedly hit the ball into those Bermuda Triangle areas where three defensive players end up looking at the ball while it gently lands. No bueno.

    2 rec baseball games and 1 travel baseball game tmrw. 2 travel baseball games and 1 travel soccer game on Sunday. I end up home at 5, when I will grill lamb for the missus for Mom’s Day.

    If you like lamb chops, find a marinade with fresh rosemary. They are so choice. If you have the means, I highly recommend picking some up.

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  27. no, shlara. we've still got luke loewe! all is well. remain calm.

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  28. Agreed on the lamb chops. Always a pick up when the local market has them.

    Screw you, TJ.

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  29. Quick follow-up on my kid’s reading - he finished and loved Cujo. He’s reading the Dragon book from King now, Zman. If it’s bad, he may punch you.

    My wife saw Cujo on cable and DVR’d it. I saw it once, eons ago. I never realized that the child “star” role in that movie is no other than Danny Pintauro, the wildly effeminate actor from Who’s The Boss. Will be hard to watch that movie and not laugh at that kid.

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  30. did not see a danny pintauro reference coming.

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  31. Warriors-Rockets is so much fun.

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  32. Sonja Curry - I still love you.

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  33. Alyssa Milano was mentioned at dinner tonight. We’re a ‘Who’s the Boss?” blog now.

    We all agree to never believe in Chris Paul, James Harden or Mike D’Antoni ever again, like ever ever again, right?

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  34. Never ever ever, Mark. Will be interesting to see what Morey can do this offseason, b/c a Draymond/Klay/Steph trio coming back may be too much for Houston.

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  35. Also, Steph and Klay...WOW.

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  36. Agreed, TR. The problem for Houston is they are locked in to Paul for a ton of money and three more years.

    Re: Golden State. Draymond is the best facilitator as the pick in the pick and roll I’ve ever seen. He might be Rob’s biggest win in the blog’s illustrious history.

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