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Courtney Abruzzo
Courtney Abruzzo

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Published in Lessons from History

·Pinned

Van Gogh’s Time Machine

The Starry Night Is An Einstein-Rosen Bridge, and You’re Welcome to Come Along — Time travel as a concept didn’t exist until five years after Vincent van Gogh’s death. In fact, when HG Wells’ first published his novella The Time Machine in 1895, the phrases time machine and time travel didn’t even exist. …

Art

5 min read

Van Gogh’s Time Machine
Van Gogh’s Time Machine

Published in ILLUMINATION

·Pinned

The Problem Is, You Think You’re Special

Navigating a Me Versus We World — My daughter’s favorite show is a Japanese anime series about an unassuming middle school boy with incredible psychic powers. This character, nicknamed Mob, has been raised to believe that even though his spoon-bending gifts are unique, they aren’t special. Being athletic, getting good grades, and being popular is more highly…

Culture

5 min read

The Problem Is, You Think You’re Special
The Problem Is, You Think You’re Special

Published in Lessons from History

·Pinned

Are You World-Weary and Anxious?

Try Drawing Your Worries Away — I use my pen like a fidget spinner. I ink the sides of my shoes, the crook of my hand, junk mail, and old business cards. At restaurants I draw on the paper napkins. Sometimes it’s out of boredom. Mostly it’s nerves or anxiety. …

Mental Health

4 min read

Are You World-Weary and Anxious?
Are You World-Weary and Anxious?

Published in Lessons from History

·Pinned

When Goiters Were All the Rage

God, Michelangelo and Old Testament Babes Had Abnormally Enlarged Glands — No one loved my goiter, not even me. Despite its crabby persona and ample protrusion, I didn’t notice it for years. People never said, “Nice goiter.” I wasn’t lucky enough to have it pointed out to me on national TV like the anchorwomen in Florida whose hawkeyed viewers emailed her…

Art

4 min read

When Goiters Were All the Rage
When Goiters Were All the Rage

Published in Lessons from History

·Feb 18

Michelangelo, the Forger

If the World’s Greatest Artist Had to Fake It, Then Maybe You Should, Too. — By his death in 1564, Michelangelo Buonarotti was known as the greatest living artist of his time. Just one look at masterworks like the statue of David, the Pieta, or the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, and it’s hard not to argue that he may, in fact, be the greatest…

Art

3 min read

Michelangelo, the Forger
Michelangelo, the Forger

Published in The Haven

·Jan 23, 2021

I Want My Space Suit

Clothes were supposed to be streamlined in the future. But somehow it all went wrong. — I grew up in the 1970s on the promise of a space-age future — reminded of it on the nightly news with every NASA launch. We didn’t have Dial-a Meal, like the Jetsons, but we did have TV dinners. The food was not delicious, but it all cooked inside one…

Women

4 min read

I Want My Space Suit
I Want My Space Suit

Published in Lessons from History

·Jan 8, 2021

Picasso Hates You, Too

When You Bite the Master, He Might Bite Back — Third graders are on the cusp of dawning realism, a stage of artistic development where they want the drawings they make and the images they see to look lifelike. This may explain why five seconds into my Cubist art lesson, eight-year-old Miss Arty Pants hates Picasso. I’m already struggling to…

Education

4 min read

Picasso Hates You, Too
Picasso Hates You, Too

Published in Lessons from History

·Jul 15, 2020

Drawing to Learn (and Other Secrets Known to Shakespeare and Newton)

Art advocates and educators work endlessly to prove the arts deserve more time and attention on the educational stage. In our efforts to do so, we tend to cite evidence and arguments that fail to convince those responsible for funding the arts. Sure, art boosts civic engagement, aids in social-emotional…

Art

5 min read

Drawing to Learn (and Other Secrets Known to Shakespeare and Newton)
Drawing to Learn (and Other Secrets Known to Shakespeare and Newton)

Published in Lessons from History

·Jul 9, 2020

The Philosopher’s Stone is Blue

How Prussian Blue is Poised to Save Your Life Around 1706, in what is arguably one of the most prolific scientific accidents of all time, a color maker working in a Berlin lab ran out of his normal potash (water-soluble potassium salts commonly used as a base) and borrowed some from the alchemist who ran the lab. The colorist…

Virus

7 min read

The Philosopher’s Stone is Blue
The Philosopher’s Stone is Blue

Published in Lessons from History

·May 3, 2020

The Optimism of Mondrian in the Age of Covid-19

Art as the Antidote for Fear It’s impressive to look at something so simple and tidy as a Mondrian painting and realize that inside its unassuming blocks of color lies a profound sense of hope for the future. Around 1914, Mondrian returned to his native Holland to visit his sick father when the First World War broke out. Unable to leave, Mondrian instead began the slow and steady work of abstracting his already Cubist style. Influenced by Picasso, Kandinsky, and other artists from the time he’d spent in…

Covid 19

2 min read

The Optimism of Mondrian in the Age of Covid-19
The Optimism of Mondrian in the Age of Covid-19
Courtney Abruzzo

Courtney Abruzzo

Artist. Art teacher. Colorful observations both on and off the canvas. https://linktr.ee/courtneycurates

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