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Marx & Engels: Berlin 2010

by Chris on Aug.03, 2010, under art, culture, photography

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John Gay: Bloomsbury Pub

by Chris on Jun.06, 2010, under architecture, art, photography, places

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Public House (Bloomsbury, London.)

This photograph was taken in the 1960s-70s by John Gay (Gay was the English name taken by Hans Gohler,  a German who left his native land when Hitler rose to power  in 1933;  he was not a Jew, but was disgusted at the way the Jews were being treated. He became a naturalised British subject and took wonderful photographs of this country, usually in b&w. He died in 1999.)


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Exile on Main Street

by Chris on Jun.01, 2010, under art, music, photography

A classic cover by Robert Frank for what may have been The Rolling Stones’ best album (nothing after it was as good, certainly):

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William Blake: Isaac Newton and The Ancient of Days

by Chris on May.25, 2010, under art, painting

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The Ancient of Days

Newton

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Isaac Newton

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Napoleon Crossing the Alps

by Chris on Apr.07, 2010, under art, history, painting

Napoleon

The heroic version by David

Napoleon Crossing the Alps (also known as Napoleon at the Saint-Bernard Pass or Bonaparte Crossing the Alps) is the title given to the five versions of an oil on canvas equestrian portrait of Napoleon Bonaparte painted by the French artist Jacques-Louis David between 1811 and 1815. Initially commissioned by the king of Spain, the composition shows a strongly idealized view of the real crossing that Napoleon and his army made across the Alps through the Great St. Bernard Pass in May 1800.

Read more about David’s five versions of the painting via Napoleon Crossing the Alps – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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The more realistic version by Delaroche

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Christen Kobke (1810-1848)

by Chris on Mar.25, 2010, under art, painting

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 A Danish ‘realist’ painter with a taste for the melancholy and the infinite that the visible world seems to suggest to the receptive mind

 

 

 

 Kobke_ForumPompeii

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Kusterie: The Child and His Wood

by Chris on Mar.23, 2010, under art, politics

The child and his wood

via ::: wood s lot ::: “the fitful tracing of a portal”.

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Antonio da Messina: St Jerome in his Study

by Chris on Mar.18, 2010, under art, painting

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da Messina: St Jerome in his Study (15th century)

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Albrecht Durer: St Jerome in His Study

by Chris on Mar.18, 2010, under art

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Albrecht Durer: St. Jerome

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Durer: Detail from ‘The Triumph of Maximilian I’

by Chris on Mar.07, 2010, under art

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From 'The Triumph of Maximilian I (1522). The virtues guide the triumphal chariot

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El Greco: The Burial of Count Orgasz

by Chris on Mar.02, 2010, under art

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An amazing picture. I think it may be El Greco’s best, displaying the mannerist style in the service of a visionary, metaphysical depiction of the meaning of death in Christian theology.

The Count had been a notably devout christian in the late medieval period. He appears in this painting as a 16th century nobleman; he is being held tenderly by  a father of the church (notice the way he is being held: almost like a child).

When one looks above, the painting itself seems transformed -glowing with an intense, ecstatic light, with all the forms flowing. We see St. John interceding on behalf of the deceased.. and there is a figure up in heaven there looking like King Philip  II of Spain himself, which is odd if it is him, as he was alive when this was painted. Since Orgasz’s (anachronistic) armour is like that of the King’s, as shown in a contemporary portrait, perhaps he was the true subject of the painting we see here.

Finally (not finally really, as there is so much else to see) -see the way Orgasz’s soul, here seen as a child, is moving up a kind of birth canal to heaven. For the vision here is truly of death as the start of the new life

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Fassbender: The Sentinels/Friedrich: Moonlit Landscape

by Chris on Feb.28, 2010, under art, painting, photography


Adolph Fassbender The Sentinels, 1937


Caspar David Friedrich (1774–1840)

Moonlit Landscape

(watercolor; with moon cut out and inserted on a separate piece of paper)

via Crashingly Beautiful.

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Piet Mondrian: ‘New York City’ (1941-2)

by Chris on Feb.24, 2010, under art, painting

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In Valences of the Dialectic Fred Jameson comments on the dialectical character of Mondrian’s art. It made me think of this.(CH)

“A Mondrian does not consist of blue rectangles and red rectangles and yellow rectangles and white rectangles. It is conceived – as is abundantly clear from the unfinished canvases – in terms of lines – lines that can move with the force of a thunderclap or the delicacy of a cat.

“Mondrian wanted the infinite, and shape is finite. A straight line is infinitely extendable, and the open-ended space between two parallel straight lines is infinitely extendable. A Mondrian abstract is the most compact imaginable pictorial harmony, the most self-sufficient of painted surfaces (besides being as intimate as a Dutch interior). At the same time it stretches far beyond its borders so that it seems a fragment of a larger cosmos or so that, getting a kind of feedback from the space which it rules beyond its boundaries, it acquires a second, illusory, scale by which the distances between points on the canvas seem measurable in miles.

” ‘The positive and the negative are the causes of all action … The positive and the negative break up oneness, they are the cause of all unhappiness. The union of the positive and the negative is happiness.’ The palpable oneness of the solitary flower or tower, being subject to time and change, had to give way to the subliminal oneness of a vivid equilibrium.”

- From David Sylvester, “About Modern Art: Critical Essays, 1948-1997″

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Kant’s “Critique of Aesthetic Judgement”: Drastically Abridged Awesome Version

by Chris on Feb.22, 2010, under art, comedy, philosophy

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Immanuel Kant

Check out this FIVE MINUTE guide to Kant’s Critique of Aesthetic Judgment, illustrated with comics.

(Kant’s “Critique of Aesthetic Judgement”: Drastically Abridged Awesome Version – lacunae.)

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Douglas Wolk


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Wolfgang Schweizer: Listening to the Piano Concerto Op. 42 by Arnold Schoenberg

by Chris on Feb.19, 2010, under music, painting

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Listening to the Piano Concerto Op. 42 by Arnold Schoenberg

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