Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Artist Profile: Brandi Carlile

Brilliant song. Brilliant artist. Brilliant performance.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

1. Pick Your Bohemian Avatar

  1. Your dentist says you need a root canal and it will be quite expensive. You …
    1. offer to play music, juggle or draw caricatures at your dentist’s son’s bar mitzvah.
    2. go through several bottles of Ambesol until the tooth falls out.
    3. make monthly visits to the dentist for cleaning, etc., so dental overhauls are not necessary.
    4. tell the dentist that you’re sure your toxic old fillings are your real problem, but since the planet Mercury is in retrograde it’s not a good time to start.
    5. offer to redecorate the waiting room.
  1. You’re on a road trip with friends and have run out of food. You …
    1. help yourself to nature’s bounty – fruit from an orchard, corn from a field, etc.
    2. pawn your guitar, great-uncle’s pocket watch, etc., in the nearest town.
    3. work at a soup kitchen or local ashram in return for food.
    4. polish off what’s left in the flask and keep driving until you get to a fine restaurant where you order the most expensive entrée on the menu and the finest Champagne. Then thank the waiter for a lovely meal and impeccable service and make your exit, acting as though you’ve left cash and a handsome tip in the billfold.
    5. would never let this happen, so you pay for everyone.
  1. Driving with friends, you’re pulled over for speeding and have no driver’s license. You …
    1. hide the pot and give the officer your friend’s license.
    2. tell the officer you’ve had quite a hectic day at country auctions and to please, please pick something out of the back of the vehicle and forget about this silly thing.
    3. if the vehicle is “borrowed,” wait until the officer gets out of the car and approaches you and then floor it.
    4. ask the officer where you can get a pair of those cool boots.
    5. start chanting.
  1. You’re about to be evicted for nonpayment of rent. You …
    1. call your dealer, publisher, aunt, great-aunt, anyone, everyone, for an “advance,” because you can’t bear to move all your stuff again.
    2. are packed up before the notice even arrives.
    3. hold a rent party.
    4. think, No problem. By the time this goes to court you’ll be in Tibet.
    5. must have forgotten when you were making that documentary film in the Middle East for a few months.
  1. You move from Portland, Maine, to New York City to paint for a month and discover a rat in your basement studio. You …
    1. a basement studio? Are you kidding? This would never happen. No, thank you.
    2. move your sleeping bag to your worktable.
    3. feed it, get it a running wheel and learn to live together.
    4. figure you must be hallucinating and pay it no mind.
    5. think, How exciting, I must be in New York. This experience can only enhance your creativity, and you start to keep a journal.
  1. It’s 7:30 in the morning and the bell rings. You …
    1. assume it’s the police or the landlord and don’t answer.
    2. get out of bed and answer the door in the nude.
    3. are still meditating, and think, life is all about tests, and decide to let it go.
    4. put on a smoking jacket or kimono, take a quick glance in the mirror and run hands through hair before answering.
    5. think what a mistake it was to have booked a shiatsu appointment when you were at a party till 5:00am.
  1. You’re feeling depressed. You …
    1. take advantage of the angst and paint a tortured self-portrait.
    2. play melodramatic music, e.g. Jean Sibelius’ Finlandia and Gustav Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde, and systematically drain all the decanters.
    3. drink the leftover red wine, get the razor blade and scissors and dramatically alter your appearance in the bathroom mirror.
    4. forget tofu and brown rice. Hello, fast food and chocolate!
    5. struggle between rescuing animals at the shelter and a shopping spree at Christie’s Oriental erotic art auction.
  1. Your vehicle overheats and you find yourself next to a lake. You …
    1. go skinny-dipping, play a little music, and maybe camp out there for the night.
    2. realize there are no mistakes and decide to listen to the cicadas and watch the bulrushes wave rhythmically in the wind until the car cools.
    3. get water from the lake for the radiator and get back on the road, for chrissake!
    4. seek the most majestic house on the lake and ask for coolant for the vehicle and rye for your flask.
    5. enjoy the smoked salmon, open the Pouilly Fumé, and wait for road service.
  1. You can’t sleep. You …
    1. drink some red wine, smoke some hash, and sketch the person sleeping in your bed.
    2. fire up a pot of coffee and rehearse your monologue loudly enough to wake up your roommate so you have someone to talk to. If you do not have a roommate, get out the typewriter or play your guitar.
    3. light some incense, put on a CD of The Eternal Music of Nature, and go online to check out airfares to all your dream destinations from India to the Himalayas.
    4. start polishing the silver plate you picked up at the flea market. That’s bound to put you to sleep.
    5. call other proven insomniacs and invite them out for drinks. Either that or finally start your memoirs.
  1. You’re at a new job and you get a call that you have to be at an audition in an hour. You …
    1. say nothing and vanish.
    2. photocopy a hundred of your résumés, poems, etc., then tell your manager your father is dying and you have to go to the hospital.
    3. disable your screensaver, position a full cup of chai on your desk, rub your laughing Buddha and trust the universe that no one will notice your absence.
    4. tell your boss you feel an “onset of the spleen” and need to see your physician at once.
    5. request a leave of absence for the rest of the day. If questioned or denied, resign.
  1. Your idea of breakfast is …
    1. leftover caviar, poached eggs, crêpes Suzette.
    2. coffee and a cigarette.
    3. ProGreens or Hawaiian spirulina with filtered water followed by leftover brown rice with soymilk, cinnamon, and nutmeg.
    4. tin of smoked oysters and a pot of Lapsang Souchong Sample toast, two-day-old brioche or old fortune cookies as available.
    5. smoked trout if you have your own smokehouse. Otherwise, stewed apples you picked from an orchard or anything as long as you’re not paying.

ANSWERS:

  1. a. Gypsy; b. Beat; c. Nouveau; d. Zen; e. Dandy
  2. a. Gypsy; b. Beat; c. Zen; d. Dandy; e. Nouveau
  3. a. Beat; b. Dandy; c. Gypsy; d. Nouveau; e. Zen
  4. a. Dandy; b. Gypsy; c. Beat; d. Zen; e. Nouveau
  5. a. Dandy; b. Beat; c. Zen; d. Gypsy; e. Nouveau
  6. a. Gypsy; b. Beat; c. Zen; d. Dandy; e. Nouveau
  7. a. Beat; b. Dandy; c. Gypsy; d. Zen; e. Nouveau
  8. a. Gypsy; b. Zen; c. Beat; d. Dandy; e. Nouveau
  9. a. Gypsy; b. Beat; c. Zen; d. Dandy; e. Nouveau
  10. a. Gypsy; b. Beat; c. Zen; d. Dandy; e. Nouveau
  11. a. Nouveau; b. Beat; c. Zen; d. Dandy; e. Gypsy

I’ve taken this quiz several times, which is from “The Bohemian Manifesto”, and once again, I land firmly in the Zen and Gypsy categories with a bit of Dandy thrown in here and there. At heart, I must be a hippie getting back to my gypsy roots.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Friday, March 12, 2010

The Bohemian Recluse

When left to my own devices, I’m somewhat of a recluse. After slinging lattes and espressos for a few hours, all I want to do is go home, curl up in bed, and amuse myself with movies, books, or the Internet. I can imagine myself being quirky and social and outgoing, but I have to deal with the fact that I have an introverted personality. I’m also terribly self-conscious about my appearance. Although nearly everyone tells me how beautiful I am, I also struggle with my weight. It’s difficult to think of myself as beautiful, or even pretty, when I’m so aware of the extra poundage. I can’t get away with wearing the kinds of clothes I want: loose, hippie clothing makes me look pregnant and tight, sleek styles simply accentuate the wrong curves. My self-consciousness has kept me from fully participating in the bohemian experience of an open, carefree, and artistic lifestyle.

I’m terrified of turning this blog into a diet, exercise, and weight loss seminar, so I’ll limit the theme of a healthy weight to only a few entries. I feel as though I cannot fully enter into an open and artistic life until I feel comfortable in my own skin. I can’t be fully free until I love the way I look and feel. And being bohemian is all about freedom. Freedom to live, love, and experience beauty in all of its facets.

My challenge to myself is to do something bohemian every day, whether it be going out into the city or sometimes staying at home to practice some sort of revolutionary artistry. Read in a coffee shop. Go to a bar on ladies night. Practice music on my guitar. Drink a bottle of wine in a public park at night (surreptitiously, of course). Go see an old silent film. Shop at a vintage boutique. Go perform some music on the street downtown. Learn to cook Indian food. Go for a walk in a new part of town. I can do this in spite of feeling self-conscious about myself because I believe that anything and everything is possible to experience beauty in this life.

Favorite Film: La belle et la bête

“La belle et la bête.” This French, 1940s version of “Beauty and the Beast” is my absolute favorite film. It’s such a beautiful, dark, and elegant masterpiece.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Bohemian Traits

I grew up in an environment as un-bohemian as you can possibly imagine, so it’s rather amazing I write a blog entitled “Bit of Bohemian.” My family was white, middle-class, conservative Protestant Christian, and definitely Republican. I even went to a conservative Christian university, but it was actually during my time there that I began to change and re-evaluate everything I had previously believed. After graduation, caught in the monotony of a soul-crushing nine-to-five cubicle job, I decided to explore my bohemian tendencies.

Personally, I’m still grappling with some of the type-A habits I formed during childhood and adolescence. The worst one is that I love to make lists: to-do lists, grocery lists, books to read lists, movies to watch lists, things I need to do today lists, and so on. It’s one of my only non-bohemian traits and it’s terribly difficult for me to stop doing it. I like typing and I love feeling like I’m getting things done, so I’ve turned to blogging instead. My bohemian blog. No more listing!

I am bohemian, but I am also growing into and discovering my own bohemian-ness.

So, what traits exemplify a bohemian?

  1. Read “The Bohemian Manifesto” by Laren Stover. It’s one of my favourite books and explains quite well what a bohemian is and what kind you may be.
  2. Express yourself through dress, style, and accessories. Don’t be afraid to try new things.
  3. Believe in your own ideals (and why you believe in them). Also, don’t ever be afraid to challenge these ideals.
  4. Always attempt to find a creative means of employment. Never settle for a job with which you’re unhappy.
  5. Express yourself creatively … painting, drawing, music, writing, or photography. The list is endless.
  6. Eat the most healthful diet you can afford, whether it be organic, vegetarian, vegan, Mediterranean, or something else entirely. Know where your food comes from and how it impacts the earth and your body.
  7. Peace. Love. Believe in it. Spread it.
  8. Surround yourself with like-minded bohemian souls.
  9. Small friends (pets): have as many as you can love.
  10. Your body is an artist’s palette. If you want piercings or tattoos, get them. But only when adequately sober.
  11. Experience the art of the bohemian spirit: music, books, poetry, movies, etc.
  12. Don’t confine your mind. Learn about other religions, philosophies, political affiliations, cultures, and such. Always have an open mind and an open heart.
  13. Do what you want and break the rules. (Obviously, within reason.)
  14. Always question authority.
  15. Travel. Far and wide. As much as possible.
  16. Live in the moment.

“Well, isn’t Bohemia a place where everyone is as good as everyone else – and must not a waiter be a little less than a waiter to be a good Bohemian?” ~ Djuna Barnes

Monday, March 8, 2010

Artist Profile: Bat for Lashes

One of my most favourite artists – Bat for Lashes!

Bohemian: A Definition

Bohemianism. La vie Bohème. Bohémienne. An unconventional lifestyle, usually among those of like-minds.

Bohemians pursue musical, artistic, and literary pastimes. They like to travel far and wide and undertake adventures, or may simply be vagabonds with no permanent homes or ties.

The term “Bohemian” arrived in the English language from the French, in which it was used to describe artists, writers, journalists, musicians, actors, and others of such artistic vocations in nineteenth century European cities.

These Bohemians were associated with left-leaning political or anti-establishment opinions and social viewpoints. These artist-types began moving into the lower-rent, and therefore lower-class, neighborhoods of Paris, which were generally inhabited by the Romani people, commonly known as gypsies. Bohémien(ne) was a common term for gypsies, who were believed to have originated in Bohemia, a region of the modern day Czech Republic.

In modern usage, a Bohemian is usually understood to be a person with artistic or literary interests who disregards both standard behaviors in society and a life of convention. It is closely associated with the hippie lifestyle. There are, however, several types of Bohemians, some indistinguishable from “hippies” and others vastly different. “The Bohemian Manifesto” by Laren Stover is an excellent resource to discover which Bohemian you embody best.

"I'm a girl from a good family who was very well brought up. One day I turned my back on it all and became a bohemian." ~ Brigitte Bardot