“The graffiti artist who took Facebook stock instead of cash for painting the walls of the social network’s first headquarters made a smart bet. The shares owned by the artist, David Choe, are expected to be worth upward of $200 million when Facebook stock trades publicly later this year.”
Category: people
The Famous Bosnian Film Director Who Turned Serbian
Emir Kusturica, who won the Palme d’Or at Cannes twice, for When Father Was Away On Business and Underground, renounced his Muslim roots in 1995, at the end of the Bosnian War, and was baptized Serbian Orthodox. (He hasn’t returned to Sarajevo since.) He now lives part-time in Paris and part-time in a recreated 17th-century Serbian town where he has founded an international film festival.
How Charlotte Gainsbourg Feels About Her Work (It Ain’t Pretty)
“The first time I performed live, I did a terrible show in Paris. It was a nightmare and I thought I’d never do it again. No, even my agent told me how dreadful it was. … I’m not a professional actress like Meryl Streep: she knows where she’s going. I never know where I’m going! If I’m good in a scene, it’s a miracle.”
The Intensely Interior Philip Glass (Either You Get It Or You Don’t)
“That time-consuming transfiguration is at the core of the Glass mythology, but drugs work differently on different metabolisms, angels appear only to the elect, and I lack the gift of spinning Glassian tedium into bliss. In fact, I start to get his music at precisely the point where his first acolytes fall away.”
Dorothea Tanning, 101, Last Of The Surrealist Painters
Though her own fame was overshadowed by that of her husband, Max Ernst, she had a successful career in her own right, moving from dreamlike portrayals of the female form to, by the 1950s, more abstract “prism paintings.” In her 80s, she found new acclaim as a writer.
Caravaggio, Violent Hothead And Marketing Genius
“In the seething cesspool of Caravaggio’s Rome, violence was a form of advertisement; it let people know you were, so to speak, the wrong guy to f#@k with. Caravaggio’s notorious life was good publicity, too for the new, gritty style of painting he created vivid, theatrically lit, psychologically realistic slices of life.”
Patricia Neway, 92, Soprano Star Of Opera And Broadway Stages
For 15 years a principal at New York City Opera, Neway was particularly known for her work in contemporary operas. Her two most famous triumphs, both on Broadway, were as Magda Sorel in Menotti’s opera The Consul and as the Mother Superior in the original run of The Sound of Music.
Revealed: Steve Jobs Was Vinyl Music Fan
Neil Young shocked the D:Dive Into Media conference in Dana Point, Calif., on Tuesday with the news that Steve Jobs didn’t listen to digital music around the house. The iconic musician and sound-fidelity fanatic told interviewers that the late Podfather was a pioneer of digital music whose legacy was tremendous, “but when he went home, he listened to vinyl.”
A Philip Glass 75th Birthday Party
The composer stops by for ice cream cake and conversation with his old friends at WNYC radio, where he talks about being parodied on South Park and how he beat the dreaded ninth-symphony curse.
Philip Glass On The Occupy Movement
“We’ve haven’t seen this since the Vietnam War years – there was a whole generation playing video games when we should have been on the streets. … I think that what they’re doing is the right thing – it was right when it was the 70s, it was right in the 60s, it’s always right.”
