Showing posts with label Paul V. Chaplo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul V. Chaplo. Show all posts
Sunday, March 15, 2015
Transcript of the Marfa Mondays Podcast #16: "Tremendous Forms: Paul V. Chaplo on Finding Composition in the Landscape"
Marfa Mondays 16: "Tremendous Forms: Paul V. Chaplo on Finding Composition in the Landscape" was posted as podcast (listen in anytime on podomatic or iTunes) back in January, but the transcript has just been posted here.
I'm aiming to post transcripts of all my podcast interviews, both the Marfa Mondays and Conversations with Other Writers (for the latter, so far, transcripts are available for Rose Mary Salum and Sergio Troncoso). Stay tuned for Marfa Mondays 17, an interview recorded in Fort Davis with Texas historian Lonn Taylor.
> Your COMMENTS are always welcome. My newsletter goes out soon; I welcome you to sign up here.
P.S. If you want to just follow the Marfa Mondays Podcasting Project and related posts, check out my other blog, Marfa Mondays.
Friday, March 13, 2015
Cyberflanerie: Solitario Dome Edition
>>READ THIS POST ON THE NEW PLATFORM AT WWW.MADAM-MAYO.COM
For my Far West Texas book-in-progress and the Marfa Mondays Podcasting project, I am working on an interview with Texas historian Lonn Taylor, plus a short piece about the Solitario Dome of Big Bend Ranch State Park in Far West Texas, which is to say, US-Mexico border country.
Meanwhile, a few links about the latter:
Chase Snodgrass's flight over the Solitario:
Flora and Vegetation of the Solitario Dome
by Jean Evans Hardy, Iron Mountain Press, 2009
(Whoa, call the chiropracter, I brought this one home in my carry-on.)
Geology of the Solitario
by Charles E. Corry, et al. Geological Society of America Special Paper 250, 1990.
"Igneous Evolution of a Complex Laccolith-Caldera, the Solitario, Trans-Pecos, Texas:
Implications for Calderas and Subjacent Plutons"
by Christopher D. Henry, et al. Geological Society of America Bulletin, August 1997
(Super-crunchy PDF)
"The Solitario: Sentinel of the Big Bend Ranch State Park"
Megan Hicks, The Big Bend Paisano, Winter 2004/2005
(PDF)
"Geology at the Crossroads"
By Blaine R. Hall, Big Bend Ranch State Park
(PDF)
"Solitario: A Separate Place" and "Fresno Creek:" Desert Cloister" Texas Monthly, April 1977
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Inside The Solitario Photo: C.M. Mayo March 2015 |
Meanwhile, a few links about the latter:
Chase Snodgrass's flight over the Solitario:
Flora and Vegetation of the Solitario Dome
by Jean Evans Hardy, Iron Mountain Press, 2009
(Whoa, call the chiropracter, I brought this one home in my carry-on.)
Geology of the Solitario
by Charles E. Corry, et al. Geological Society of America Special Paper 250, 1990.
"Igneous Evolution of a Complex Laccolith-Caldera, the Solitario, Trans-Pecos, Texas:
Implications for Calderas and Subjacent Plutons"
by Christopher D. Henry, et al. Geological Society of America Bulletin, August 1997
(Super-crunchy PDF)
![]() |
Google Maps screenshot |
Megan Hicks, The Big Bend Paisano, Winter 2004/2005
(PDF)
"Geology at the Crossroads"
By Blaine R. Hall, Big Bend Ranch State Park
(PDF)
"Solitario: A Separate Place" and "Fresno Creek:" Desert Cloister" Texas Monthly, April 1977
![]() |
Entering the labyrinth of the Solitario via Los Portales (That's my guide, Charlie Angell, he's the best, check him out on Tripadvisor.com) Photo: C.M. Mayo, March 2015 |
>Your COMMENTS are always welcome.
>Listen in to all the Marfa Mondays Podcasts anytime. The most recent is "Tremendous Forms: Finding Composition in the Landscape," an interview with Paul V. Chaplo, author of the magnificent Marfa Flights.
Thursday, January 01, 2015
Marfa Mondays 16: Tremendous Forms: Paul V. Chaplo on Finding Composition in the Landscape
Happy 2015! Just posted, Marfa Mondays podcast #16 (of a projected 24), an interview with photographer Paul V. Chaplo, author of Marfa Flights: Aerial Views of Big Bend Country (Texas A & M University Press). Recorded at the Texas Book Festival in October, 2014.
Marfa Flights was published to coincide with the opening of the exhibition of Chaplo's large format color photographs in the Museum of the Big Bend, in Alpine Texas. That show is open through January 18, 2015. Don't miss it!
>Listen in anytime here.
>Listen in to the other Marfa Mondays Podcasts here.
>Find out more about Chaplo's magnificent Marfa Flights here.
Marfa Flights was published to coincide with the opening of the exhibition of Chaplo's large format color photographs in the Museum of the Big Bend, in Alpine Texas. That show is open through January 18, 2015. Don't miss it!
>Listen in anytime here.
>Listen in to the other Marfa Mondays Podcasts here.
>Find out more about Chaplo's magnificent Marfa Flights here.
Saturday, November 08, 2014
Highlights from my Landing on Planet Austin
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(Shot with my iPhone on the way to my book presentation at the Texas Book Festival) |
How I love Austin and relish book fairs— so that was a good combo. Now that I go to book fairs to talk about my books, I often wonder, why didn't I go more often earlier? I mean, just as a reader. It's like entering Ali Baba's cave, these endless tables heaped with treasures...
THE TEXAS BOOK FESTIVAL, AND THE TWO THINGS I LOVE MOST ABOUT BOOK FESTIVALS
Now that I've brought out my upteenth book, I don't get too glittery-eyed about any of it; I just hope my books are there (they were, whew), the microphone works (it did, yay) and enough of the seats are filled that everyone feels it all worked out reasonably well (they were, thank you all).
Apart from talking about my latest book—which I can do until the cows and the donkeys and the rollerbladers come home—what I relish about book fairs are two things:
(1) discoveries (creative nudges) and
(2) meeting friends, new and old.
11 DISCOVERIES, BOTH STRANGE AND WONDROUS
At the Texas Book Festival in Austin I discovered:
(1) Paul V. Chaplo's gorgeous book, Marfa Flights: Aerial Views of Big Bend Country. He granted me a fascinating interview, which we recorded in the author's green room in the State Capitol. That will be Marfa Mondays podcast #15. I delightedly provided him with this blurb:
These stunning images of one of the most sparsely populated and least visited regions of North America are not your typical coffee table book pretty pictures. In Marfa Flights: Aerial Views of Big Bend Country, Paul V. Chaplo, a classically trained visual artist who also happens to be a professional photographer, found and composed out of this swirlingly violent and bone-dry landscape something wondrous and haunting. Photographed from a single engine airplane, at various times of day, the land and sky and jewel-like ribbons of water come alive with form, muscle, and color.
(2) In the parking lot on Lavaca Street, this bumpersticker made me chuckle:
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(4) Many people— people being an endless source of surprise to me— apparently find cowboy boots comfortable enough for trudging around on sidewalks. And some, going for the cowgirl-goes-nighty-night look, I guess, pair them with gauzy mini-skirts.
(5) Tattoos are a hot fashion. (I cannot fathom why, in the absence of life-threatening disease, anyone would pay to get stuck with needles. For die-hard tattoo fans, may I recommend Tattly. At least the tattoos are well-designed.)
(6) The Austin Film Festival was going on simultaneously... (Austin... film... hmm. I have always felt a distant kinship with screenwriters, yet no urge to visit their planet. I'm happy to view it through a telescope.)
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M.M. McAllen's new book, the latest and best narrative history of Mexico's Second Empire |
Hey y'all go get M.M. McAllen's book, Maximilian and Carlota: Europe's Last Empire in Mexico. It's the latest and best narrative history of the Second Empire, a fascinating translational period in Mexican history. Plus, this gorgeous hardcover edition makes a handsome holiday gift!
In case you haven't been reading this blog, in which case you'll just have to forgive yet one more mention, or else go away now and have a nice life, my book is the blast-your-sombrero-off rewrite of the Mexican Revolution, Metaphysical Odyssey into the Mexican Revolution: Francisco I. Madero and His Secret Book, Spiritist Manual.
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Here we are just after the event which was moderated by Steven Kellman:
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(8) Many Mexicans seem to nurture an intense flame of fascination with Maximilian's and Carlota's reproductive lives. I have yet to attend a talk about Maximilian, whether my own or someone else's, where one or more of the Mexican audience members doesn't ask about the supposed illegitimate children. And rare indeed when they don't also ask about Carlota's supposed offspring.
(9) It shouldn't have surprised me but it did— and I realize now that I will be asked about this again and again: What is the relation of Spiritism to Protestantism? (Answer: it's complicated. Will blog anon.)
(10) The longest lines in the book signing tent were for books I have zero interest in reading. (Sigh.)
(11) If I lived in Austin, the first thing I would buy is a pair of Yeti oven mitts. It's that kind of vibe, yeah.
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YETI go for BBQ. Fur cover tattoo. |
MORE AMIGOS, OLD AND NEW

Ciclo de Conferencias en Palacio Nacional, ciudad de México:
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