Oh, I see! moments
Travel Cultures Language

Virtual Traveler— A Journey of Note

by Meredith Mullins on April 13, 2020

The New York Philharmonic pays tribute to front-line healthcare workers. (Watch below.)
(Courtesy of New York Philharmonic/YouTube)

The Healing Power of Music and the Performing Arts

Much of the world has been “sheltering in place” for a while now. Some of us have lost count of the days, and, in fact, might not even be sure what day of the week it is.

Our exotic travel consists of taking the garbage out or exploring a closet that we haven’t visited for years.

As a result of this change in our daily life, we are becoming expert virtual travelers—happily wandering the rabbit hole of the Internet.

The arts find a way to build community in times of struggle.
© Meredith Mullins (in collaboration with Opera Fuoco)

The good news is that artists and arts organizations are providing a rich offering of music and theatre when we most need it. (See also last week’s OIC for the opportunities offered in visual arts.)

More importantly, the arts seem to be bringing us closer together (metaphorically speaking, of course) in a time when the spirit of community has never been more important.

Music Gives a Soul to the Universe (Plato)

The power of music, whether at home or in the concert halls of the world, is a universal force. In these “stay-at-home” times, distance has not stopped the music. The virtual traveler is invited to just sit back and open ears, eyes, and heart.

The virtual traveler can be transported from the comfort of home.
© iStock/Martin DM

Musicians and orchestras around the world are performing . . . from their homes. The virtual performances show how much music means to the musicians . . . and how much it can mean to us, the audience—a message straight to the soul.

Bolero was a popular choice among orchestras, as the New York Philharmonic (watch below) and the National Orchestra of France (watch here) both chose this dramatic Ravel piece for their first virtual performance (a good steady rhythm to keep everyone in sync).

The New York Philharmonic dedicated their performance to the front-line healthcare workers who are risking their lives every day.

If video does not display, watch it here.

The Toronto Symphony Orchestra reminded us that spring is here, even if we can’t breathe it in, with Copland’s Appalachian Spring (watch it here).

The Norwegian Arctic Orchestra paid tribute to their native son, Edvard Grieg, with a Praeludium from the Holberg Suite (watch it here).

A rare look at each musician’s part in the whole
© iStock/bizou_n

And the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra brings it home with Hang on Sloopy, the official rock song of Ohio (watch it here). Let’s all hang on.

With all of these virtual orchestras, it is a rare privilege to see the musicians highlighted as individuals. We better understand how they play their instruments and how each instrument’s part is interwoven into the whole.

Music is a unique art, where much can be layered in each moment. This new form of performance helps us to feel that special quality.

Virtual Voices

Choirs and choruses around the world are reinventing their way of performing during this time when physical concerts are not possible.

The Camden Voices, a choir from the U.K., found a new way to stay in touch with a virtual performance of Cyndi Lauper’s True Colors. Their celestial harmony and song lyrics like “Show me your smile” and “Just call me up cause I will always be there” are particularly meaningful in these times of isolation and stress.

If video does not display, watch it here.

We are also serenaded by singers around the world, who have taken advantage of YouTube and Instagram to provide a song a day to keep our spirits up or a live mini-concert from home.

For example, listen to Rufus Wainwright (watch his quarantunes here) or Keith Urban (watch here). And if you’re a New Yorker missing one of the iconic Washington Square Park street musicians, know that Colin Huggins, a regular in that park, has moved his mobile piano indoors to continue to provide his music (watch him here).

For that often-needed humor, creative musicians and YouTube masters are offering some lockdown parodies.

If video doesn’t display, watch it here.

If video does not display, watch it here.

The Digital Stage

The Kennedy Center is streaming performances from the archives on the corona-safe digital stages of YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook. Don’t miss:

If video does not display, watch it here.

Lincoln Center’s online offerings include concerts, pop-up classrooms, dance, songs, puppetry, and paper weaving.

The center is also sharing a selection of master classes from female filmmakers, including Agnès Varda, Ava DuVernay, Jane Campion, Sofia Coppola, Greta Gerwig and more.

The Magic of Performing Arts During Corona

For the virtual traveler in search of culture, here is a sampling of organizations providing solace for the soul.

If video does not display, watch it here.

A Grand Finale

As with any good musical composition, we end this collection of culture with a flourish. Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony (Ode to Joy) is a perfect way to lift the spirits. The Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra finds a way to reach our souls from a socially acceptable distance . . . and somehow gives us strength.

For me, it was as if the whole planet lent voice to that final chorus.  Oh, I see. In these tumultuous times, the virtual traveler can seek solace, connection, and inspiration through arts and culture.

We will get through this together . . . with a little help from our friends.

If video does not display, watch it here. 

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

Virtual Traveler— See What You Can See

by Meredith Mullins on April 6, 2020

Yes, you can SEE music. Take a ride in the video below.
© DoodleChaos

At Home with Art and Culture

If you find you’re still in your pajamas at three in the afternoon, or if you have started your own bar crawl by putting a glass of wine in every room of your home, or if you have finished all of Netflix, or you have cleaned every closet … twice, STOP!

It’s time to become a virtual traveler and explore the world’s art and culture in the comfort of your home. The physical doors of arts venues are shuttered during this time of “sheltering in place,” but artistic organizations and artists are rising to the challenge.

Start by SEEING Beethoven’s 5th by Doodle Chaos, where animated line riders show you the beauty of fearless flying, flipping, and falling in rhythm, including the power of pauses between notes.

 

If video does not display, watch it here.

And keep going—it’s easy! Now, more than ever, the Internet brings the arts to you.

An at-home re-creation of “The Absinthe Drinker” (original on the left)
Can you name the painter?
© Erick Paraiso/John Pichel

Old Masters . . . and New

At this important moment in history, organizations are responding quickly to fill the arts community void by adding creative ideas for arts engagement to their other online opportunities.

To keep your artistic spirit alive and well, the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles launched an artistic challenge that has inspired people around the world. Based on a Dutch project (Between Art and Quarantine), the museum asks you recreate an artwork from the Getty collection using whatever you can find in your confined world at home. Take a look at the Getty twitter feed or the Dutch Instagram site.

The J. Paul Getty Museum challenges you to recreate work by the masters
(for example, Van Gogh’s Irises) with things you find at home.
(Courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Trust and Cara Jo O’Connell)

In addition, the Getty is providing access to art books, online exhibits, podcasts, and videos. Discover the current exhibits of Michelangelo, the Bauhaus, and Ancient Palmyra.

Virtual Visits to Museums

Although virtual museum tours were around long before the corona crisis (note that Google Arts and Culture has put more than 2,500 museum and gallery collections online), the well-known museums in the U.S. are all offering additional online culture to be enjoyed while observing your “stay-at-home” mandate. Here is a sampling.

New York’s Museum of Modern Art has temporarily closed its doors,
but has expanded its online opportunities.
© iStock/rarrarorro

New York Museum of Modern Art

The Museum of Modern Art in New York presents a new virtual art experience each week, such as exhibit openings and home movies. Take a look at the schedule, which includes upcoming exhibits of Félix Fénéon, Donald Judd, and Dorothea Lange.

You can also participate in online art projects, such as coloring the tracings of Louise Lawler. Download the drawings here, and then post your finished work on social media with the tag #DrawingwithMoMA.

#DrawingwithMoma
© Meredith Mullins

New York Metropolitan Museum

New York’s Metropolitan Museum offers a range of its publications free online for a limited time, as well as a digital digest that includes videos, articles, concerts, and art-making activities for the whole family.

Washington’s National Gallery of Art: Silent for the moment
© Meredith Mullins

National Gallery of Art (Washington, D.C.)

The National Gallery of Art has virtual tours and video introductions to the current exhibits (Degas and the Opera, Raphael, and Early European Open-Air Painting), as well as a tour of the highlights of its collection. The museum also provides lessons and activities for home study for all ages, including special resources for kids.

Time for art projects at home, inspired by the great art museums
© iStock/Pokec

National Portrait Gallery (Washington, D.C.)

The National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. offers seven online exhibitions. Don’t forget to visit the popular portraits of Michelle Obama, Jacqueline Kennedy, and Eleanor Roosevelt, as you virtually tour the “First Ladies Exhibit.”

Jacqueline Kennedy from the National Portrait Gallery “First Ladies” Exhibit
© Estate of Yousuf Karsh

Digital art workshops are also offered free of charge, as are coloring pages of some of the famous portraits in the collection for your own artistic expression.

You’ll find virtual tours, videos, and interviews at many other museums in the U.S., including the Museum of Fine Arts (Houston), Boston Museum of Fine Arts (featuring Ancient Nubia and Gender Bending Fashion), High Museum of Art (Atlanta), Minneapolis Institute of Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago (featuring El Greco), and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

The new meditation: coloring. Try your hand at coloring a drawing of Frida Kahlo.
(Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery)

Oh I See: The Times Are Changing

In these tumultuous times, seeking solace, connection, and inspiration through arts and culture is a natural path. Unlike the current toilet paper shortage, there will always be more than enough opportunity for the virtual traveler to see the best that the world has to offer in this expanded community of visual arts.

Let the journey begin.

Stay tuned next week at OIC Moments to discover what the virtual traveler might find in the world of music and the performing arts.

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

A Cultural Heritage of Puzzles

by Meredith Mullins on March 23, 2020

Finding solutions to puzzling times
© iStock/Brightstars

Mental Exercise in These Historic Times

As the daily news proclaims, the world is experiencing something completely unique to recent history . . . and deadly serious. There is no doubt that the corona virus is changing our lives.

We are living the meaning of words and phrases such as pandemic, lockdown, social distancing, self-isolation, quarantine, self-sequestering, confinement, and sheltering in place.

We are seeing government regulations in the news, as well as lists of ways to work remotely or pass the time if we have been asked to stay at home for isolation purposes.

Social distancing at the weekend Paris market
© Meredith Mullins

We read about people in isolation drinking “quarantinis,” exploring new songs by which to wash their hands, and stepping to their windows or balconies to sing together as a neighborhood or to applaud the front-line health care workers.

Those in isolation are challenging the capacity of the internet with streaming services and social media posts and cleaning their closets a la Marie Kondo (although, I think perhaps lots of things will “spark joy” when you are in isolation for weeks).

A good way to pass the time in self-isolation
© DMT

Challenging the Brain

Even before this global pandemic, I had been thinking about our cultural heritage of entertainment with puzzles—jigsaw puzzles, word puzzles, crossword puzzles, number puzzles, visual puzzles—across countries and across cultures.

And now that we have more time to ourselves, the subject seems even more relevant.

It has long been said that working with puzzles helps to keep our brains functioning better for longer. Mental exercise for the brain is useful (as is physical exercise).

Can you guess from these puzzle pieces what artwork will be portrayed?
(Keep reading for the answer.)
© DMT

Puzzles can be family/friend/community activities or an individual challenge. What better way to pass those cold winter nights; rainy days; or, at this scary moment in history, the long hours of “sheltering in place.”

Let’s take a moment to pay tribute to the more common puzzle options: the jigsaw, the crossword, and Sudoku, as well as new trending puzzles.

The good old days of the family puzzle party
© DMT

The Jigsaw Puzzle: Piecing Things Together

Jigsaw puzzles have been around since the mid-1700s. Most historians give origin credit to a British cartographer/engraver (John Spilsbury), who mounted maps on wood and then cut around the countries. He is said to have called his work “dissected maps,” used most often for teaching geography.

Children still learn geography with jigsaw puzzles.
© DMT

Fast forward a few centuries to game companies mass producing puzzles, which became particularly popular during the Great Depression in America as an inexpensive entertainment option and a way to feel success (during hard times) when a difficult puzzle was completed. You could even rent a puzzle or check one out of the library.

Whether in the past, present, or future, the completion of a jigsaw puzzle
always inspires a moment of pride.
© DMT

Still maintaining popularity in the 21st century, puzzles can now be personalized to reflect your own photo, can incorporate 3-D technology, can be presented on computer, and can offer pictorial content limited only by the imagination.

The best news: jigsaw puzzles are cross-cultural. Visual images have no language barriers, and can be enjoyed in countries throughout the world.

The number and size of pieces range from small puzzles with just a few pieces (especially for children), to the largest (more than 50,000 pieces).

Any guesses now?
© DMT

And, for those passionate jigsaw fanatics, strategies and approaches abound. After turning all the pieces face up (a good start to begin to get the “big picture”), puzzlers might sort by color, pattern, content, or type of piece (from zero-knob and four-holed pieces to four-knob and zero-holed pieces . . . and everything in between).

A good beginning. A three-knob/one-hole piece meets a two-hole/two-knob piece.
© DMT

Some jigsaw addicts even like having a puzzle delivered in an unmarked plastic bag with no picture—the ultimate challenge.

Here is Ellen DeGeneres’ take on jigsaw puzzles, as she passes her “sheltering in place” time.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B90ToZPBL-7/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=embed_video_watch_again

If video does not display, watch it here.

Not at a Loss for Words

Crossword puzzles are perhaps the most popular word game in the world. Although word puzzles appeared in the late 18th century in America and Europe, historians credit British journalist Arthur Wynne with a crossword’s first widespread publication in the Sunday edition of the New York World in 1913.

Crosswords forever
© iStock/burakkarademir

The word FUN was already inserted into the “word-cross” puzzle, perhaps a foreshadowing of the popularity to come. Another vague clue in this first appearance (“What this puzzle is”) was also perhaps a signal of things to come. The four-letter answer was: HARD.

The ever-popular crossword puzzle
© Meredith Mullins

The New York Times, now a renowned publication of one of the most challenging contemporary crosswords, denied the attraction of the early puzzles.

It wasn’t until the bombing of Pearl Harbor that the Times Sunday editor thought the nation needed some distraction. On February 15, 1942, the first Sunday crossword appeared in the NY Times; and, by 1950, the paper ran a daily crossword puzzle.

Crossword puzzles are a good mental workout for the brain.
© iStock/Andreas Saldavs

Even though the Times is known worldwide as the pre-eminent crossword puzzle, there are several viable competitors in publications around the world. And, for a double dose of brain activity, try a crossword puzzle in a new language.

Crossword puzzles are a good tool for learning a language.
© Meredith Mullins

Does the Math Add Up?

Sudoku is the ultimate international puzzle. Its origin can be traced from China to Persia to Europe to America to Japan. It bypasses language barriers, as it is number based. It’s accessible to all . . . it just asks for a logical mind.

Although the “magic square” was present in China more than two thousand years ago, a Swiss mathematician (Leonhard Euler) is credited with the first stirrings of what is now Sudoku. At the time (the late 1700s), it was called Latin Squares. It had letters rather than numbers, but the mathematical process was similar.

In 1979, an American (Howard Garnes) created the number puzzle we know today. It was called Number Place and was published by Dell Puzzle Magazines. He made the puzzle interesting by making a grid of nine 3 x 3 magic squares.

The Sudoku format
© Meredith Mullins

Once it became popular in Japan, in part because the Japanese language is not suited to crossword puzzles, the name Number Place was translated to Suuji wa dokushin ni kagiru, meaning “numbers must occur only once.”

When a retired British judge (Wayne Gould) developed a computer program for producing Sudoku puzzles quickly and introduced the game to UK newspapers, the puzzle’s popularity exploded.

Now, Sudoku is everywhere—in newspapers, magazines, puzzle books, grand championships, TV shows, mobile apps, and, of course, on the Internet.

Presents of Mind: Contemporary Puzzle Challenges

There are hundreds more types of puzzles to keep us busy. Rubik’s Cube, Spelling Bee, Jumble, Tiles, Find the Difference (aka Sept erreurs in French), and SET®, to name a few. With the availability of puzzles free on the Internet, these challenges are there for the taking.

Can you find the things that are different in these pictures?
© iStock/Alexandra Yurkina

In fact, I might have gotten this story written sooner, had I not paused to try my brain at every new kind of puzzle I encountered in my research.

My latest discovery was SET® (found via the New York Times). I have to admit that, now, I’m an addict. I stare at those shapes, patterns, numbers, and colors for hours.

I knew from IQ tests that spatial reasoning was not one of my strengths, so it was no surprise that my brain hurt from going back and forth between the similarities and differences in the forms, patterns, colors, and numbers.

Just like life, you step back, regroup, learn, and develop new strategies. I have already improved after only a few days; and I know, with practice, I will get better.

Oh, I see. That’s really the heart of our cultural heritage.

The added benefit: my brain gets its mental workout—and will hopefully work better for longer. And the time in self-isolation will fly by, with a hope that our cultural tradition of resilience will rise to the challenge.

 

That moment of pride when you complete a 1000-piece jigsaw puzzle.
What’s next? A 2,000 piece puzzle.
© DMT

We know that our OIC readers live around the world. We wish you health and safety during this challenging time.

 For more jeux des sept erreurs, visit Turbulus. 

For online Sudoku, visit this Sudoku site. 

For free crossword puzzles, go to online crosswords or to the New York Times mini crossword.

To play SET®, go to the New York Times site.

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

Copyright © 2011-2025 OIC Books   |   All Rights Reserved   |   Privacy Policy