Joseph Cornell: Difference between revisions

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*Scholarship on Joseph Cornell’s art and life led to Michael Brayndick’s dissertation ''Joseph Cornell and the Dialectics of Human Time;''<ref>{{Cite thesis |title=Joseph Cornell and the dialectics of human time |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26696670 |date=1987 |language=English |first=Michael |last=Brayndick|oclc=26696670 }} OCLC Number: 26696670, University of Iowa</ref> and inspired Brayndick's 1999 play, ''How to Make a Rainbow'' with workshop performances in: New York (1998), Connecticut (2000), and the UK (2003), and the world premiere production by On the Spot Theatre at the Greenhouse Theater Center in Chicago (2013).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://onthespottheatrecompany.weebly.com/how-to-make-a-rainbow.html|title=How to Make a Rainbow|website=On the Spot Theatre Company}}</ref>
*In 1992, poet [[Charles Simic]] published a prose collection inspired by and with images of the work of Joseph Cornell: ''Dime-Store Alchemy: The Art of Joseph Cornell'' (published by [[New York Review Books]], originally published by Hopewell, N.J.: Ecco Press).<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Simic |first1=Charles |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/52052866 |title=Dime-store alchemy: the art of Joseph Cornell |last2=Cornell |first2=Joseph |date=1993 |publisher=Ecco Press |isbn=978-0-88001-348-2 |location=Hopewell, NJ |language=English |oclc=52052866}}</ref>
*Singer-songwriter [[Mary Chapin Carpenter]] imagines Cornell going about his creative life in the song "Ideas areAre likeLike starsStars", found on her 1996 album ''[[A Place in the World (Mary Chapin Carpenter album)|A Place in the World]]''.
*The English band [[The Clientele]] has a song titled "Joseph Cornell" on the group's 2001 album ''[[Suburban Light]]''.
*[[Jonathan Safran Foer]]'s anthology ''[[A Convergence of Birds]]'' (2001) is a collection of fiction and poetry inspired by Cornell's work. Foer, then an undergraduate, solicits all of his favorite authors to contribute to the collection by sending each of them a print of one of Cornell's bird boxes, and an explanation of the project. He is surprised when well-known authors such as [[Joyce Carol Oates]], [[Rick Moody]] and [[Barry Lopez]] respond to his prompts with Cornell-inspired works.{{citation needed|date=March 2020}}