Hot Chocolate Memento Mori

Deathly cocoa from Fremont Coffee
A toast to your health?

When it gets cold, there’s nothing I love more than thick, rich, creamy hot cocoa. It’s a treat, and I never kid myself thinking about “antioxidants” or such nonsense. I just enjoy the lingering effects of all that sugar in my system as I soldier on through yet another rainy Seattle afternoon.

Aside from the occasional addition of spice, until recently I didn’t think there was much beyond high-quality chocolate and milk that could make hot cocoa even better than it already is. I was wrong. If you want to make hot cocoa truly magnificent, add a SKULL, like my barista at Fremont Coffee did the other day.

Of course, my coffee shop Michelangelo wasn’t the first or last guy to do this — I had just never been lucky enough to see it before. (Go ahead and scoff, coffee connoisseurs!) In fact, a quick search on Flickr showed me that Fremont, and Seattle in general, knows no shortage of morbid coffee art.

I posted this picture on Facebook, and people seemed to love it so much that I went searching for other skull-related pictures of coffee and cocoa. Here’s a little gallery, designed for people like me who enjoy a little memento mori with their morning caffeine. Kind of the ultimate “carpe diem” inspiration, don’t you think?

EviLatte shot by Karla Jean Davis
Skull and Bones latte art by Flickr user Alexa Baehr
Halloween cappuccino skull
Halloween cappuccino skull by Flick user Cafédirect
Skull by Dougesfeo from Ratemyrosetta.com
Latte Art Skull by Flickr user Drosche
Latte Art Skull by Flickr user Drosche
Terrifying “Halloween spirit” latte art from Columbia River Coffee Roasters
Skull Java by Flickr user Drop Out Art
Sad Skull Latte by Adam Vrankulj
Latte by unknown genius
Latte by unknown genius

I’m not sure that last image qualifies as a skull (maybe it’s a Jhonen Vasquez latte?), but it was certainly odd enough for inclusion. Hey, this is my ridiculous blog, not yours!

For those who want to try this at home, here’s a little video from Montreal Caffe Java Art that shows you one technique. Pretty simple, actually! A more thorough write-up from RateMyRosetta is here. Or you could totally cheat and just use this cappuccino stencil.

Are you tea drinkers feeling left out? You could always drink your cuppa’ in this mug from CircaCeramics:

Skull cup from CircaCeramics

And stir it with these spoons from Pinky Diablo:

Skull spoons by Pinky Diablo

Or you could just use bone china — that’s creepy enough, especially if it’s made from, erm, human bones.

(Got more pictures of skull latte art and skull-themed coffee accessories? Send ’em my way!)

UPDATE: Alex Palmer, aka @LitMisc, sends this photo of a pumpkin latte with skull marshmallows from a Koreatown cafe in NYC:

My price is spine-tingling, at least

Tycho Brahe’s Psychic Dwarf

Tycho Brahe, as depicted by Sara Drake of the Small Science Collective

On Monday, a team of Danish and Czech archaeologists unearthed the remains of 16th century astronomer Tycho Brahe from his tomb in Prague. The research is part science, part murder mystery: the Danish and Czech teams plan to use CT scanning, DNA testing and PIXE analysis to find out more about Brahe’s life and times as well as his cause of death. It seems the latter has never been quite clear, and some pretty nasty rumors have started to swirl about old Johannes Kepler. As the Scientific American blog Observations revealed:

…  Brahe is being disinterred starting November 15 for analysis for the second time since he was buried in Prague in 1601. Testing on hair samples taken from Brahe’s tomb the first time, in 1901, showed an abnormally high mercury content in the astronomer’s body, raising the possibility that he had been poisoned. But Brahe may well have met his fate by less malicious means; for centuries medical practitioners applied mercury as a treatment for maladies such as syphilis. …

The poison angle got a new look in 2004 in the book Heavenly Intrigue: Johannes Kepler, Tycho Brahe, and the Murder Behind One of History’s Greatest Scientific Discoveries. Not only was Brahe poisoned, contended Joshua and Anne-Lee Gilder, but all signs point to his famed protégé, Johannes Kepler, as the culprit.

Brahe’s body is being returned to his grave on November 19th, but we won’t know the results of the study until sometime in 2011. In the meantime, Brahe’s bones will spend a lot of time spread out in scenes like this one:

Professor Niels Lynnerup of Copenhagen University examining Brahe. Photo by Jacob C. Ravn, Aarhus University.

As a side note, the best part of the Observations post was the bit about Brahe’s psychic dwarf. The post quotes from the 1890 biography Tycho Brahe: a picture of scientific life and work in the sixteenth century by John Louis Emil Dreyer, which I’ll quote at a little more length here:

Two other inmates of Tycho’s house may also be mentioned here. One was a maid of the name of Live (or Liuva) Lauridsdatter, who afterwards lived with Tycho’s sister, Sophia, and later was a sort of quack-doctor at Copenhagen, where she also practised astrology, &c. She died unmarried in 1693, when she is said to have reached the ripe age of 124. The other was his fool or jester, a dwarf called Jeppe or Jep, who sat at Tycho’s feet when he was at table, and got a morsel now and then from his hand. He chattered incessantly, and, according to Longomontanus, was supposed to be gifted with second-sight, and his utterances were therefore listened to with some attention. Once Tycho had sent two of his assistants to Copenhagen, and on the day on which they were expected back the dwarf suddenly said during the meal,” See how your people are laving themselves in the sea.” On hearing this, Tycho, who feared that the assistants had been shipwrecked, sent a man to the top of the building to look out for them. The man came back soon after and said that he had seen a boat bottom upwards on the shore, and two men near it, dripping wet. … When any one was ill at Hveen, and the dwarf gave an opinion as to his chance of recovery or death, he always turned out to be right.

As it turns out, Jepp the Clairvoyant Dwarf has his own Facebook page, where his interests are said to include telling the future, riding drunken elks, hiding Tycho’s nose, and being dead.

Exhuming Former Leaders: The New Summer Pastime?

Simón Bolívar

Don’t go calling it a trend, but there were two politically-charged exhumations in the past week — both of national importance for their respective countries, and both to investigate suspicious deaths.

First, in Venezuela, Hugo Chavez had the remains of Simon Bolivar exhumed to investigate whether the independence hero was assassinated, possibly by poisoning (most historians think he died of tuberculosis). Chavez tweeted: “It’s not a skeleton. It’s the Great Bolivar, who has returned.”

Meanwhile, in Romania, the bodies of notorious former dictator Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife Elena were exhumed for DNA testing. The couple are said to have been executed by a firing squad in 1989 and buried in the Ghencea cemetery in Bucharest, but rumors have since swirled that they were secretly buried elsewhere, or somehow escaped death. According to a Telegraph article on the exhumation:

Their bloodied bodies were shown on TV after the firing squad had done its work but the actual execution took place so quickly that the cameraman failed to film the moment they were actually shot. The fact that the country’s new rulers opted to bury the Ceausescus secretly at night and under false names also fuelled doubts.

If the remains are confirmed to be genuine, the family wants to organise a proper funeral service, more than twenty years after the event, and to erect an imposing mausoleum for the infamous couple.

The Ceausescu story reminds me of the saga of Jesse James, exhumed in 1995 because of feuding claims by his descendants, and rumors that his death could have been faked. DNA analysis proved that the remains did in fact belong to James, which is frankly kind of disappointing. Lee Harvey Oswald was also exhumed just to make sure it was him and not a Soviet spy, and the results satisfied all but the most die-hard conspiracy theorists. Oh well, there’s always Elvis!

Remember That You Will Die

I’ve long been fascinated by memento mori, both the phrase and the objects. In Latin, memento mori means “remember you will die.” The phrase is usually associated with the Middle Ages in Europe, when it was fashionable to depict skulls, bones, and corpses in art and personal effects. The message behind these motifs was to encourage people to reflect and repent, to live holy lives, lest they be swallowed by the flames of hell –  always waiting around the corner for a new sinner to char.

At the Rubin Museum in NYC, a new show includes some stunning examples of memento mori, from bejeweled skull rings to an ivory bust of a Bohemian general missing half his face. But in a fascinating departure from gloomy Europe, the exhibit also includes objects representing Tibetan ideas of death and the afterlife. (The Rubin Museum is usually devoted to art of the Himalayas, presented in a serene little pocket of Chelsea.)

Ivory bust of General Wallenstein, Europe, after 1634, Science Museum London

The show is called Remember That You Will Die: Death Across Cultures, and indeed the objects represent a small survey of European and Tibetan ideas about the end of life. Europeans had skull rings, but the Tibetans had bone armor – a shawl woven of bone beads carved to look like skeletons. In various paintings on view, deities dance with the pearlized armor in a way that recalls the glittering props of belly dancers. Several other paintings show yogis meditating in charnel grounds, which were considered an ideal place to confront the fear of death. Two 18th century Tibetan bronzes depicts the Lord of the Charnel Grounds as a skeleton, dancing amid a ribbon of his skin. Also on display is a shin bone trumpet, and a hand drum decorated with images of human skulls and intestines. (For more great images, go to Morbid Anatomy.)

Skull pocket watch, Europe 1701-1900, Science Museum London. It's said Mary Queen of Scots carried a watch engraved with a skull as she paced the Tower of London awaiting news of her fate.

The objects from both parts of the world are a joy to view and contemplate. Buying a ticket, the admissions girl told me, “prepared to be scaaarrrreed!” as if I was entering a creepy funhouse ride. Yet the images didn’t scare me at all. They’re didactic, meant to teach a lesson. In both cultures, the lesson is intertwined with social control – behave properly, and you will avoid hell and bask in heaven. However, the wonderful thing about memento mori is that even as they compel the believer to look beyond this life, they also compel him or her to seize it. For the hedonist, that can mean embracing pleasures that religious authorities would prohibit, and in that sense memento mori are sweetly subversive.  For me, the objects are a call to penetrate the sleepiness of everyday life in order to cultivate a greater awareness of the moment. One of the most fascinating things about death is how it reinforces the preciousness of life. Looking at the objects on display, I am reminded of what Kafka said about literature – that it should serve as “an ax for the frozen sea within us.” The tug of these objects can serve a similar purpose.

Malcolm McLaren’s Funeral

The Guardian just put up some incredible shots of Malcolm McLaren’s funeral — I love his coffin!

The BBC has some details about the day’s events:

His coffin, emblazoned with the slogan “too fast to live, too young to die”, was carried on a horse-drawn carriage.

Mourners included his former partner, fashion designer Dame Vivienne Westwood, and Sir Bob Geldof. …

At midday, well-wishers were encouraged to participate in a “minute of mayhem” rather than the conventional minute’s silence to mark McLaren’s life.

Dame Vivienne’s son Ben, who spent much of his childhood with the architect of punk music, told Radio 5 live this could involve playing some music or “tying up your boss”.

The slogan which was spray-painted on McLaren’s coffin was the name of his shop on London’s King’s Road, until it became known as Sex.

A green double-decker bus with a destination of “Nowhere” was also parked outside the deconsecrated north London church, which was the starting point for the funeral procession.

A few weeks ago, the Telegraph had a piece on McLaren’s surprising last words. I learned about the political prisoner Leonard Peltier in college, so this struck me as incredibly poignant:

McLaren, 64, died in a Swiss hospital on Thursday, six months after being diagnosed with mesothelioma, a rare form of cancer. His son by Vivienne Westwood, Joe Corre, and Mr Corre’s half-brother, Ben Westwood, were at his bedside, along with his girlfriend, Young Kim.

Mr Corre said: “His last words were ‘Free Leonard Peltier’. Ben had a T-shirt with the slogan on and my father saw this and admired it. He was proud of Ben for this and he had a sense of humour to the end. He smiled.”

Ferdinand Marcos, Lenin, and Other Deceased Despots

A New York Times article I read this morning contains an interesting tidbit about the fate of Ferdinand Marcos, notorious former despot of the Philippines (married to Imelda Marcos, she of the 1,060 pairs of shoes).

“Mr. Marcos died in exile in Hawaii in 1989, and although his body has been returned to the Philippines, it remains unburied. It lies embalmed in a crypt in his hometown as his widow, Imelda, waits for permission to inter him in an official ‘heroes cemetery’ in Manila.”

Here’s Imelda visiting Ferdinand’s corpse, which is on display for visitors inside a crystal coffin:

There’s a long tradition of embalming despots. After all, if you’re going to create a personality cult, why let it end at death? One of the best-known cases is Lenin, who died in 1924. According to Melanie King’s fantastic book The Dying Game, Stalin figured out the propaganda value of embalming Lenin after watching the public mourn him as he lay in state. At the time, no embalming method could preserve a corpse for very long. A team of determined Soviet doctors devised a new technique, involving glycerin, alcohol, and other ingredients, which has managed to preserve Lenin to this day. At least, so says the Scientific Research Institute for Biological Structures in Moscow, the people charged with maintaining his corpse. The same technique used on Lenin was later used on a whole host of other Communist dictators, including Stalin himself, Ho Chi Minh, Mao Zedong, and Kim Il-Song.

Today, Lenin is still on display today in a mausoleum on Moscow’s Red Square. Apparently, he gets both a new suit and coat of embalming chemicals each year. (See a picture of his bath here.) But there are rumors that a fungus is growing on his neck, and that his ears are beginning to turn blue. Even the Weekly Word News is getting concerned:

Weekly World News Feb 4, 1992

In fact, several scholars also doubt whether the Soviets had the technology to pull off such an embalming job in 1924. They think the body inside the mausoleum is actually made of wax. Visitors can only see him through a thick pane of glass, so it’s impossible to discern whether the corpse is real. I don’t know about you, but I think I’d feel a little better if it wasn’t.

Cowboy Outlaw

There’s always a moment in these stories where someone makes a really gruesome discovery. In the case of Elmer McCurdy, outlaw, that moment came in 1976, when a camera crew preparing for an episode of the Six Million Dollar Man accidentally dislocated Elmer’s arm, thinking he was a mannequin in an amusement park. True, he was spray painted day-glo orange, and was entirely dead, but Elmer had once been alive, and that’s no way to treat a former human.

Recently, my officemate Kevin filled me in on the details of McCurdy’s story, and a wonderful song that has been written in his honor. Here’s a rundown of the tale from The New York Times:

In December 1976 a very dead body was found hanging in a rundown Long Beach, Calif., amusement park ride called ”Laff-in-the-Dark.” The grotesque discovery was made during a location shoot for the television series ”The Six Million Dollar Man,” and though the glow-in-the-dark painted corpse had nothing to do with the plot, the irrepressible show business newspaper Variety headlined its story ”Bionic Man Meets Dummy Mummy.” Local officials quickly determined that the body in question was indeed a mummy, but not one from some ancient civilization. An autopsy revealed not only its American origin but also its all-too-American way of death: fragments were found of a bullet that had blasted its way diagonally through the torso to lodge in the left hipbone. Ticket stubs for a Los Angeles ”Museum of Crime” some yokel had slipped in its mouth, along with a corroded penny dated 1924, provided a starting place for investigators; they soon came up with the name of Elmer McCurdy, an Oklahoma outlaw who was killed by a posse in 1911 after a botched train robbery.

For the rest of the story, read the Times article or check out the summary on Snopes. If you’re really curious, there are at least two books on the subject. There’s also a lovely song, written by the inimitable Brian Dewan. An excerpt of the lyrics appears below:

He was sprayed a special color to help him look a fright,
And they hung him from a gallows ‘neath an ultra-violet light.
He hung there in a spookhouse for many, many years,
As youthful faces passed him by in tiny railroad cars.

Until one fine and fateful day in 1976,
He fell down from the gallows when the hangman’s noose unhitched.
His arm broke at the shoulder as he clattered to the floor
And the man who went to fix him was stunned by what he saw.

And the teenage boys did holler, and the teenage girls did faint,
When they saw the bone protruding from the varnish and the paint.
A coroner came to serve him and ran a slew of tests,
They found out who he was, in time, and laid his soul to rest.

(Photo by carletaorg on Flickr)


Where’s Moliére? The Mystery of Père Lachaise

Your final address matters most of all. Not the one where you breathe your last, but the one where your bones rest, where your name is engraved on stone. Of course, the irony is that you’ll no longer be there to care, but the terror of that thought makes the location feel all the more crucial. People who sell plots in cemeteries – the scholar Frederick Brown calls them “metaphysical realtors” – are aware of this anxiety, and often seek to exploit it.

Lately I’ve been reading Brown’s 1973 book, Père Lachaise: Elysium as Real Estate. Père Lachaise, of course, is a sprawling village of the dead in Paris’s 20th arrondissement, home to some of the most famous graves in the world – Jim Morrison, Sarah Bernhardt, Oscar Wilde. Wikipedia says it’s the most-visited cemetery in the world, which is easy to believe. When I visited in February 2010, men half-crazed with cold sold tourist maps outside the entrance (despite the free ones inside) to a steady stream of young art students, couples, and tourists from around the world. I hear that in the spring the place is even more crowded, with both tourists and hundreds of resident cats.

Moliére and the cats of Père Lachaise

For the purpose of this blog, Moliére (1622-1673) is my favorite resident of Pére Lachaise. A famed actor and playwright in his day, he had the singularly ironic fate of  going into his death throes while on stage playing the part of an ill man. He’d written the part himself, in a play of called The Unfortunate Invalid. When he fell ill, the audience had no idea Moliére was actually suffering, and thought his twitches were part of the act. He died, of a lung hemorrhage, about an hour after stepping offstage.

In the bad old days, actors were denied a Christian burial. Fortunately, Moliére’s resourceful widow pulled some strings, and got permission for a night burial in the cemetery of St. Joseph. Details of the precise burial location are sketchy: some say he was buried in a consecrated grave “at the foot of the cross,” others that he ended up in a corner of the graveyard set aside for suicides. Sources are even more divided about what happened in the years that followed: some say he was moved inside the church, others that his body stayed out in the yard.

What we know for certain is in 1792, the revolutionary government decided to name a section of town after Moliere, and went in search of his bones. By that time, no knew for certain where he lay. That didn’t seem to bother the commissioners in charge of his exhumation, who dug in what seemed to be promising spot and labeled the resulting skeleton “Moliere.” Afterward, the bones went to a museum, where they lay for about 18 years, until the man behind Pére Lachaise needed a corpse to be part of the founder’s circle.

Like PR people today, the promoter behind Pére Lachaise, Prefect of the Seine Nicolas Frochot, knew that the presence of celebrities would enhance the desirability of his product. He had a job on his hands convincing Parisians to bury their departed in the eastern suburb where Pére Lachaise lay. They were used to burying their dead in city churchyards, and the idea of a far-flung cemetery seemed a little weird. Because Moliere was so beloved, reburying him in Pére Lachaise seemed like an ideal way to convince the French bourgeoisie that the cemetery was the “in” place to spend eternity. Of course, Frochot had no idea the bones may well have belonged to a pauper or suicide, but he may not have cared. In Père Lachaise: Elysium as Real Estate, Brown says,

“…judging from their haste, one may presume that they cared no more whether these were the real bits of Moliére and La Fontaine than did the Church whether its saints’ relics were historically true. Myths suffice when any bones will do, and any bones, in turn, will serve a myth–in this case a myth still current in France, which has it that her writers, forming a national treasure, mystically belong to her bourgeoisie, however dull and ill-read.”

The move paid off. Today, many of the tourists who pass Moliere’s grave probably don’t know who he is. They’re on their way to throw flowers at Jim Morrison, or plant a lipstick kiss on Oscar Wilde’s grave. But if it weren’t for the bones of the fake Moliere, they might not be there at all, and the Parisian tourist industry would definitely suffer.

Moliére and the cats of Père Lachaise
MeKissingWildesGrave
Moliére and the cats of Père Lachaise
Moliére and the cats of Père Lachaise
Moliére and the cats of Père Lachaise