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Sunday 10 October 2010

Hollywood.

Sex, Drugs + Rock-n-Roll = Self-Destruct




Author: Louis Moon
Rock Stars...we are fascinated by them as much as we idolize Hollywood celebrities. We listen to their music, buy the CDs, hang their posters on every wall of our room, watch them at MTV, and go to their concerts. We idolized them so much that we often see them as demi-gods. But beneath all that fame and fortune that the world of rock and roll had given them, many of these rock stars are on the path to self-destruction.




Often, being a rock star would also mean that they are associated with substance abuse and drug overdose such as the case of Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, among others. It is a merry-go-round of money, adulation, traveling, and being in the media. Like other human beings, these demi-gods of rock music are also susceptible to pain and depression. Drugs and alcohol --- two things that get them going, two substances that were supposed to ease their pains and worries... are the same poisons that would ruin their lives.



Perhaps, we tend to forget that they just like the rest of us --- real people with real problems. Despite having multiple sexual partners, enormous amounts of money, and popularity... deep down they all want just to be loved. Even famous people suffer from loneliness and crave for love in the truest sense of the word. They want to be loved for who they really are and not for the famous persona they have created as rock artists.



Like Joplin and Morrison, there are other music legends who have been immortalized through their songs. Kurt Cobain and Ian Curtis, both young and musically gifted, were in the peak of their careers when they decided to end their lives. Cobain and his band Nirvana were known for introducing the "grunge sound." For his part, Curtis and the rest of Joy Division had left a legacy through the song "Love will Tear Us Apart." Despite the appearance of "having it all", these artists were unhappy and tortured psychologically and emotionally. Even with all their external success and public acclaim, Cobain shot himself and Curtis committed suicide by hanging.



What made them that way? Self-destructive people are aware of their faults. They can be self-critical of their work and often think that they are not good enough, creative enough, or smart enough. They can be displeased with their personality or can be burdened by their own perfectionism. In many cases, self-destruction leads to suicide or having suicidal tendencies.



Most who struggle with thoughts of suicide and other forms of self-destruction usually exhibit some or all of the following behavior:



Too much smoking

Being stress out always

Drinking a lot

Having a lot of casual sex

Not getting enough rest and sleep

Not seeing a doctor or ignoring the doctor's orders



Self-destructive people are more focused on the "outer universe and have lost sight of the need to have a sense of internal peace and self-worth. Unfortunately, for many rock stars like Cobain, their legacy will be more about their tragic end rather than about their music.



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Thursday 7 October 2010

Toni Curtis

Toni Curtis.The Painter

Tony Curtis, Thinking Inside the Box




Author: Keith Hunt
At 81, Tony Curtis is defying convention. During a time when many of his living contemporaries have faded into the comfortable obscurity of retirement, this legend of the silver screen is arguably at the peak of his second-and in many ways, first-career as a celebrated painter and boxed assemblage maker.




As children we grew up watching Dad paint,? daughter Jamie Lee Curtis announced at her father's 80th birthday celebration in June 2005. ?We did not realize that we grew up with a famous movie star.?



The same questioning and receptive mind that captures the subtle nuances of daily life and later incorporates them into his film roles has spent the last several decades storing sights and memories that now flower on his vivid, intensely-colored canvases and populate his cubed compositions. The glamour of the film world has left an indelible mark on his visual images; each film locale and co-star has provided Curtis with new inspiration for his artwork.



Demand for showings of his art keeps Curtis constantly on the move. In May, the Carmel Art Festival in California celebrated ?Tony Curtis Day?, honoring the artist in an enormously successful show at Gallerie Amsterdam. Shortly thereafter, Higgins Harte



International Galleries in Lahaina, Maui held an equally successful exhibition in mid-June featuring Curtis' work. Recently, Curtis' art was accepted into the permanent collection of the new film and media wing of the Museum of Modern Art, New York.



At his home in Nevada, Curtis' studio is a snapshot of an artist in constant motion; a worktable, covered with paints, brushes and supplies, features cubbyholes filled with random objects yet to become part of one of his boxed creations. Shelves that line the walls of the studio are packed with dozens of his small dioramas preserved beneath glass that capture a moment or feeling in the life of this living legend.



Curtis' home hosts a considerable collection of others' art as well. A tapestry made from one of his paintings rests on an easel that belonged to Edward G. Robinson. On one wall hangs LeRoy Neiman's 1961 painting, Matador; on another, an original watercolor done for Curtis by Andy Warhol, whom Curtis says ?changed the whole look of everything.? A Marc Chagall sits on an antique table alongside three Pablo Picassos and a Balthus.



This article is reprinted by kind permission of Jeff Marinelli, Publisher of Art and Living Magazine.



This article is reprinted by kind permission of Jeff Marinelli, Publisher of Art and Living Magazine. For more information please go to http://www.artandliving,com



About Tony Curtis

Tony Curtis, Hollywood legend and star of over 150 movies including ?Some Like It Hot?, is also an accomplished artist. His work may be found in public and private collections around the world.



For more information about Tony Curtis art please call him at 702-736-1767 or visit his online art gallery at http://www.TonyCurtis.com