Posts Tagged ‘video’
Artist Speaking Event: Thursday, October 1
Patten and I sat captivated in the Hirshhorn’s black box theater, as we watched Guido’s “Nummer Acht (#8) everything is going to be alright.” Essentially, it’s a 10-minute video of a gigantic ship cutting through ice, with Guido walking in front of its prow. It’s absolutely mesmerizing. In her thorough review of the film, WaPo’s Jessica Dawson puts it this way:
Both boat and figure move in lockstep. Van der Werve continues forward while the icebreaker keeps pace. The scene appears as if it could go on indefinitely. To suggest just such an endless journey, van der Werve ends the film as suddenly as it began, snapping back to a silent black screen and final credits.
What to make of this? Though the action is minimal, the psychology is intense. The stark image of man pursued by industrial beast glues us to our seats. When will the man fall tragically through the ice? When will he break into a run? Will the ship give up pursuit? As time passes and it becomes clear that, in fact, nothing will happen next, the film turns into a philosophical exercise.
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Guido will be speaking about his film (and other works) at the Hirshhorn Museum this Thursday at 7 p.m., in the third-floor Lerner room. Nummer Acht—a snippet of which I’ve embed below—will be on display through October 11. If you haven’t seen it, get thee to the black box. If you’re like me, you’ll watch the video loop twice.
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Our Culinary Adventure in Rockville
Being the hard core partiers that we are, last night we took to the town (er, escaped the town) in an un-airconditioned car to that faraway northern suburb called Rockville, Maryland. Our first stop was Joe’s Noodle House, which is tucked off Rockville Pike in an unassuming strip mall. The idea was to order light, considering we’d be visiting yet another Rockville eatery, but the menu listed around 200 items and, well, we were hungry. We ordered six dishes (you order and pay at the front), and shortly after, the food arrived plate by plate. Everything we had was delicious (I’d order it all again in a heartbeat!), but here are some specifics:
Their dan dan noodles ($4.50) had that earthy ma po taste, yet the Szechuan peppercorn wasn’t too overwhelming; the wontons with red hot sauce ($5.50) came soaked in some sort of flavorful spicy oil—I could have eaten all eight of those soft things; the home-made bacon with leek ($8.95) was perhaps the best of the bunch—we all loved the way they’d combined just enough of that double-cooked fatty pork and heaps of fresh leaks and peppers; the noodle soup with radish and pork ($6.95) was fittingly mild and healthy tasting (considering the fat content of our other dishes); the steam buns with pork filling ($5.95) were nothing like what we’d expected—they were more akin to steamed dumplings vs. the dim sum-style pork buns we had in mind when we ordered, yet we all liked them; and a fried scallion pancake ($2.75) that was served with a tasty ginger-soy dipping sauce. Full from dinner #1, we paid our $38 and headed to the next spot.
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Lighthouse Tofu (or, Vit Goel Tofu Restaurant) reminds me of a Village Inn from the exterior—with its covered portico (replete with Korean newspaper dispensers and a bulletin board plastered with local flyers), suggesting long waits during peak hours. We arrived around 9:30 p.m. to no lines, but were impressed with the 6 filled tables at such a late hour (in the suburbs!). After the tenous experience of ordering at Joe’s, we welcomed the small menu and ordered three items. But before our main entrees arrived, our waitress—cloaked in a lovely traditional silk-screen chiffon dress—pushed out a full cart, setting down the banchan, many tiny a dish of kimchi, pickled cucumber, and bean sprouts. Next, she scooped rice from a dolsot (hot stone bowl) into individual metal bowls, filling the original pot with green tea. (This watery rice mixture makes for a calming, if not sweet, dessert).
Our entrees soon arrived: a giant seafood pancake ($12.99), a bubbling platter of seafood noodles (#13 on the menu; argh, what was its actual name?!?), and the dish for which makes this restaurant famous—sundubu ($9.99), a boiling pot of seafood broth filled with silky tofu. Served with a raw egg that you crack tableside and mix into the stew (watch our video below), this custardy, sensually textured, mouth-watering bowl of amazingness had me slurping spoonful after spoonful, despite my uncomfortably full stomach. I love this stuff and will definitely return—hungrier next time—and order a whole bowl for myself. After paying our whopping (pshaw!) 42-dollar bill and intoxicated on the quality ethnic food we just can’t get in Dupont, we headed home.
Europe vs. World
I’ve lived in D.C. for almost four years, yet prior to this weekend, I’d only been inside three embassies. When you live just a hop away from Embassy Row and you write a blog called City Sifting, this is embarrassing. So I approached this year’s Passport DC (the day in which many embassies—35 this year—open their doors to the public) like I’d approach any important trip: I drafted an itinerary. This was really more like a sheet of printer paper scribbled with addresses, but the point is, we got to the first embassies before they opened and visited 6 in a matter of 4 hours. Yes, a City Sifting award for me (and Laura and Patten). The most entertaining experience was at the Embassy of Venezuela, with its calypso and may pole lessons (see video below); the biggest crowd pleasing embassy was Korea, with its totem-pole carving demonstration (pictured); the “most worth the wait” embassy was Indonesia, where we felt okay about our 20 minutes in line because of the sheer opulence and jaw-dropping quality of the building’s interior, especially the Art Nouveau staircase; and Colombia was, well, the biggest surprise—hidden on the corner of 20th and Q, who knew the non-remarkable exterior would house such a lovely collection of Latin American art? They had a Botero, my fave!
Missed Passport DC? More embassies will open up their doors this weekend for the European Union Open House. From 10 a.m.-4 p.m. on Saturday, May 9, you can visit any of these 27 European embassies. I advise you to go early—crowds seem to triple as the day wears on. In the meantime, I’ve posted a video of our lovely calypso dancing lesson at the Venezuelan Embassy. For a few more photos, go to my Picasa page.

