Posterous theme by Cory Watilo

I think it's what you take out of a picture that counts. There's a residue. An invisible shadow.

 

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"Jim Dingilian is one of those rare artists who stretch the limits of creativity with their amazing creations. He uses candle smoke to paint picture-perfect images on the inside of empty bottles.

“The miniature scenes I depict are of locations on the edge of suburbia which seem mysterious or even slightly menacing despite their commonplace nature. The bottles add to the implied narratives of transgression. When found by the sides of roads or in the weeds near the edges of parking lots, empty liquor bottles are artifacts of consumption, delight, or dread. As art objects, they become hourglasses of sorts, their drained interiors now inhabited by dim memories” Jim Dingilian says bout his art.  How he manages to create such detailed images inside the bottle remains a mystery, but I’m thinking he uses some sort of slim tool to scratch at the candle smoke. Still, how he manages to keep a steady hand and work through that narrow bottle hand is beyond me."

Title Quote // Andrew Wyeth

Admit something: Everyone you see, you say to them "Love me." / Of course you do not do this out loud, otherwise someone would call the cops. / Still though, think about this, / This great pull in us to connect. / Why not become the one who lives with

Polly Wales - love love love .... sensitive, brave, empathetic, dreaming, effervescent, becoming, longing, and a shy exhibitionist (couldn't resist personifying it) 

 

Title Poem // Hafiz - With That Moon Language

Existence is no more than a flaw in the perfection of non-existence.

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"Sometimes I see beauty in things that other people find strange or are even repulsed by. I become fascinated when there is something you do not want to see and the feeling you get when you do not want to look at something, yet you still do. My jewellery deals with the tension that lies between attraction and repulsion. I take seemingly inappropriate materials, making ordinary and familiar objects seem extraordinary and unfamiliar.
In the 18th century many new breeds of animals and plants were discovered and it was the main era of cabinets of curiosities. People collected rarities because it gave them the feeling of being in the presence of something extraordinary and marvelous. The cabinets of curiosities were not meant to sympathize with the creatures on display, only marvel over their oddity. In a world where not many new and exotic breeds are discovered I use dead creatures in my pieces to evoke wonder. The creatures are transformed and reborn; given a new life as objects of astonishment." - Märta Mattsson

Title Quote // Paul Valery

:: The Wound of Beauty ::

The Wound of Beauty // Gregory Wolfe

STRANGE as it may seem, beauty still needs to be defended. In the history of the West, beauty has played the role of Cinderella to her sisters, goodness and truth. I don’t mean to say that beauty in art or nature hasn’t been appreciated throughout history—though there have been times when beauty has been the subject of frontal assaults—but simply that when we start getting official, when we get theological or philosophical, beauty becomes a hot potato.

 

The ambivalence about beauty at the heart of western culture begins at the beginning. In Jerusalem, proscriptions against idols and graven images coexist with paeans to the craftsmanship of God and Bezalel, the artificer (described in Exodus) of the desert tabernacle. In Athens, Plato celebrates the divine madness that the poet experiences when the muse descends, but he also kicks the poets out of his ideal republic as unreliable, disruptive sorts.

In theory, goodness, truth, and beauty—traditionally known as the “transcendentals,” because they are the three qualities that God has in infinite abundance—are equal in dignity and worth. Indeed, in Christian thought there has always been a sense that the transcendentals exist in something of a trinitarian relationship to one another. But in practice it rarely seems to work out that way.

The funny thing is that secular and religious attacks on beauty are nearly identical. Beauty is seen as an anesthetizing force that distracts us from the moral imperatives of justice and the quest for truth. There isn’t much difference between a stern proponent of Iconoclasm in the eighth century and a modern Marxist attacking beauty as nothing but an opiate to lull us into acquiescence to the powers that be. Both critics abhor what Wendy Steiner has called “the scandal of pleasure.”

The time has come to bring beauty back, to give it the glass slipper and invite it to the prom.

The thinker who has helped me most along these lines is the twentieth-century theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar. His argument—and it is a rather unsettling one—is that of the three transcendentals, beauty is the one that is least troubled by our fallen condition. In a world plagued by sin and error, he says, truth and goodness are always hotly contested. How do you live righteously? What is the truth? As we debate these matters, we have axes to grind.

But beauty, von Balthasar says, is disinterested. It has no agenda. Beauty can sail under the radar of our anxious contention over what is true and what is good, carrying along its beam a ray of the beatific vision. Beauty can pierce the heart, wounding us with the transcendent glory of God.

Von Balthasar’s magnum opus, The Glory of the Lord, is structured in three parts, corresponding to the three transcendentals. He stresses the importance of the order in which he discusses them:

Beauty is the word which shall be our first. Beauty is the last thing which the thinking intellect dares to approach since only it dances as an uncontained splendor around the double constellation of the true and the good and their inseparable relation to one another. Beauty is the disinterested one, without which the ancient world refused to understand itself, a word which both imperceptibly and unmistakably has bid farewell to our new world, a world of interests, leaving it to its own avarice and sadness. No longer loved or fostered by religion, beauty is lifted from its face as a mask, and its absence exposes features on that face which threaten to become incomprehensible to man. We no longer dare to believe in beauty, and we make of it a mere appearance in order the more easily to dispose of it. Our situation today shows that beauty demands for itself at least as much courage and decision as do truth and goodness, and she will not allow herself to be separated and banned from her two sisters without taking them along with herself in an act of mysterious vengeance. We can be sure that whoever sneers at her name, as if she were the ornament of a bourgeois past, whether he admits it or not, can no longer pray and soon will no longer be able to love.

A quotation as dense with meaning as that is a hard act to follow. But one of the more intriguing suggestions made by von Balthasar concerns that “act of mysterious vengeance.” When you remove beauty from the human equation, it is going to come back in some other form, even as anti-beauty. A good deal of modern art can be understood in this light. In modernity, beauty has been seen as an appearance—ornamentation, sugar coating. Secularists and believers alike have either rejected beauty altogether or argued that beauty should make the pills of truth and goodness go down easier. Beauty must serve some other end; it is not an end in itself.

But the transcendentals were always understood as infinitely valuable, as ends in themselves. When it comes to beauty, however, we are afraid to assert that much. We feel the need to harness it, because beauty is unpredictable, wild.

 ( continued here :::  http://imagejournal.org/page/journal/editorial-statements/the-wound-of-beauty )

 

Will be a totter'd weed of small worth held ...

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Why do we choose to suffer voluntarily? Why do we choose family life, a monk's cell or a blood-drenched battlefield? These essays on voluntary suffering took Dutch poet and journalist Ruud Linssen more than 2 years to complete. Linssen herein links personal observations with historical and literary examples.

As this book is also a type specimen of the typeface Fakir, it is set in this blackletter. And to stress the suffering: this book is printed in the author's blood.

 

Title Quote // Shakespeare

It began in mystery, and it will end in mystery, but what a savage country lies between.

The Mining Project
1987 — 2007

“. . . Maisel has succeeded in mapping the fictive terrains of the unconscious, of nightmares and hallucinations. He has also used the camera’s objectifying optics to form cartographies of the irrational and the perverse, the preconscious and the primordial . . .”

— Robert Sobieszek, Archaeopsychic Vistas

 

Title Quote // Diane Ackerman

The road suddenly became a mirror gallery. You no longer saw landscape, but faces. I watched mine advancing.

"‘Over time, dark spots start to appear on mirrors. The silver layer is slowly oxidizing under the influence of oxygen and water, thereby showing some of its history. Normally this is regarded as degradation, however, this project shows the beauty of the material transition of silver in a mirror.’" David Derksen Design

Title Quote // Reb Farkas

Talking to oneself is just a roar from the sea.

Dreeeeeeaaaamy!

"Only from, drowning in the sea already already Caught up in the sea, all in the sea Only from, only from before you from you Daring on the peak, telling on the cheek before you from you I’ll never give, I’ll wait Daring on the peak, telling on the cheek before you from you I’ll never give, I’ll wait Only from, drowning in the sea already already Caught up in the sea, all in the sea ........" [lyrics]

Title Quote // Rosemarie Waldrop

Lee Tracy Art 100 Tears Project Installation Photography Artforms

100 TEARS - An artwork that addresses the value of human vulnerability, our interconnectedness and participation to bring forth change.

The 100 Tears artwork originates from the desire to acknowledge, find value in and accept the painful experiences of life. As we approached the beginning of the 21st century, I needed to explore a new medium of expression that would expand my own participation in the new millennium and this time of seemingly accelerated change.

The transparent quality of glass, used in Part 1, references the fragile interior experience, the vulnerable. The use of bronze in Part 2 references the gravity of hardened realities. The use of silver in Part 3 references reflection and change, the potential for transformation.

Accompanying each tear series is a video projection of the text that relates to the material and concept. Part 1 mimics a slow breeze to simulate the sensation of memory. The movement of the ocean tide is used to suggest cleansing in Part 2 and is recorded in real time. In Part 3, a complete daily cycle of the sun is captured in time lapse to suggest the ethereal.

Each series of tears begins with a specific content that is preserved in the video. Each set of tears is then transformed in meaning and altered physically by interacting with natural elements. The processes is a installation/performance/ceremony that embraces historic beliefs and practices.

"100 TEARS - An artwork that addresses the value of human vulnerability, our interconnectedness and participation to bring forth change.

The 100 Tears artwork originates from the desire to acknowledge, find value in and accept the painful experiences of life. As we approached the beginning of the 21st century, I needed to explore a new medium of expression that would expand my own participation in the new millennium and this time of seemingly accelerated change.

The transparent quality of glass, used in Part 1, references the fragile interior experience, the vulnerable. The use of bronze in Part 2 references the gravity of hardened realities. The use of silver in Part 3 references reflection and change, the potential for transformation.

Accompanying each tear series is a video projection of the text that relates to the material and concept. Part 1 mimics a slow breeze to simulate the sensation of memory. The movement of the ocean tide is used to suggest cleansing in Part 2 and is recorded in real time. In Part 3, a complete daily cycle of the sun is captured in time lapse to suggest the ethereal.

Each series of tears begins with a specific content that is preserved in the video. Each set of tears is then transformed in meaning and altered physically by interacting with natural elements. The processes is a installation/performance/ceremony that embraces historic beliefs and practices."

Every man looks upon his wood pile with a sort of affection.

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"Nothing better than a wood trunk full of wood", she says ... I think I am going to agree. Leslie Williamson's blog and website is my favorite discovery this week. Going to track down her book, "Handcrafted Modern"

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Title Quote // Thoreau

And somewhere it has a wild heart / that sends pulses even through me ...

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Settled Storms:: Artist's Statement

The structures of Rdest’s paintings are informed by an exploration of life forms and their component parts. Indexical marks left by bursts of energy are the starting point.
The works are then built up in layers with each layer being a response to the one below; all layers are translucent and visible at the same time. The shapes and patterns are inspired by sound waves, clouds, particles and cells on a microscopic level. The point of departure for these works is growth and decay; cellular division and multiplication.
Rdest’s paintings create spaces in which the viewer can encounter the recesses of their own mind; using a language drawn from natural forms and elements. She facilitates encounters with memories; suggestions and implications without representation or narrative. // Aleksandra Rdest

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Title Quote // D.H. Lawrence

Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing there is a field. I'll meet you there. When the soul lies down in that grass the world is too full to talk about.

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Title Quote // Rumi

"This breathtaking installation ... presents a graphically stunning oppo0sition between Edenic and the ashen ..." Leah Ollman, Los Angeles Times

http://gilliansblog.wordpress.com/2011/01/11/amazing-art-no-1-zadok-ben-david...

Do stuff. be clenched, curious.

Another Something and Company's blog, there is no finer. I don't actually have a list, and confidently I say it's on my top five. I value it for the sentiment, sensibility, aesthetic and what I percieve to be a world traveling gentleman's perspective, which is unlike my own and many of my other favorite blogs to follow, which gravitate toward the feminine or with a wild romantic amazement factor. Joachim Baan open my eyes equally as wide but to another province, another pathway, another something ...

Another Something & Co.

Title Quote // Susan Sontag

Job Description // Barbara Kruger

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JOB DESCRIPTION

 

your work is about:

 

the frame and the confines of articulated space

 

the edge and the tension of a peripheral locator

 

color and the signature of saturation

 

light and the creation of the illusory site

 

surface and the dictates of the forearm

 

placement and the expository ground

 

formula and the elegant solution

 

décor and the belated recognition of the practical arts

 

material and the physical embrace

 

figures and the rhetoric of the real

 

structure and the puncture of space

 

Buildings and the direction of task

 

dislocation and the subversion of the habitual

 

the arena and the business of men

 

opacity and the exhaustion of social life

 

desire and the prolongation of stasis

 

shopping and the image of perfection

 

utopia and the abandonment of context

 

sex and the collapse of the closet

 

commentary and the announcement of the additional

 

audience and the scrutiny of women

 

visual splicing and the resonance of the cut

 

naming and loosened singularities

 

transparency and the desire for rest

 

voyeurism and the long shot

 

hooliganism and the lure of the picaresque

 

privilege and the tyranny of exclusion

 

fashion and the imperialism of garments

 

broadcast and the short conversation

 

narrative and the gathering of incidents

 

dreams and the sliding of meaning

 

memory and the defeat of total recall

 

trauma and the sound that only dogs can hear

 

disease and the accumulation of profit

 

property and the feel of value

 

race and the fear of difference

 

money and the velocity of power

 

analysis and the maintenance of the laboratory

 

neutrality and the dealing of the double

 

argument and hand to hand combat

 

language and the rubbing of skin

 

quotation and the rhythm of stacked bodies

 

pleasure and the proper name

 

-1984 Barbara Kruger

Everything is blooming most recklessly; if it were voices instead of colors, there would be an unbelievable shrieking into the heart of the night.

Stirred up with the movement and morphing of colors at first and then just like a brilliant fireworks display, I was  gone ... spellbound!! Take a look at these projects by Eric Natzke ...

<p>Atmospherik (preview) from Erik Natzke on Vimeo.</p>

<p>Atmospherik : 01 Color Canvas from Erik Natzke on Vimeo.</p>

Title Quote // Rilke

....He wants no words, only to enjoy the delicate anticipation of a moment waiting to reveal itself. What are the limits of language? ......

The passenger steps out onto the overcast deck and remembers a line. Soft was the sun. The wind to his back, he is facing the stern and an endless trail of thoughts drifting away from him towards the horizon. He wants no words, only to enjoy the delicate anticipation of a moment waiting to reveal itself. What are the limits of language? This is the mind, felt, not spoken. He makes a photograph of a seagull, and does not resist the emotion that brings.

There is a town passing by on the starboard side of the ship, the mind-boggling, awe-inspiring, crazy-making, world of people. He is happy for the distance, but knows that any idea of separation is only an illusion. Everything exists according to the laws of nature. There is a core, it seems. The sea turns grey for a moment, the lights from the town slowly dimming, overtaken by fog. He makes another photograph of the fading light, the soft presence of time. The ship begins to slow, ahead a port, another journey. // Andres Gonzales   http://www.andresgonzalezphoto.com/

I love the way this set of images creates a constellation in my mind ... a tale, of a time......and everything is green.

 

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It is a principle that shines impartially on the just and unjust that once you have a point of view all history will back you up.

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"With plants creeping and crawling around the structure, BioWall can become an indoor, living hedge that divides space. By observing the behaviour of plants many farmers can predict and understand the changing weather patterns. As it becomes increasingly difficult to read the signs of our natural environment in urban, built landscapes we use plants in our work as we consider them to be the most sophisticated of sensors and displays. " -Loop

Title Quote // Van Wych Brooks

(trees are their roots and wind is wind)

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dive for dreams // e.e. cummings

dive for dreams
or a slogan may topple you
(trees are their roots
and wind is wind)
trust your heart
if the seas catch fire
(and live by love
though the stars walk backward)
honour the past
but welcome the future
(and dance your death
away at the wedding)
never mind a world
with its villains or heroes
(for good likes girls
and tomorrow and the earth)
in spite of everything
which breathes and moves, since Doom
(with white longest hands
neating each crease)
will smooth entirely our minds
-before leaving my room
i turn, and (stooping
through the morning) kiss
this pillow, dear
where our heads lived and were.

silently if, out of not knowable

silently if, out of not knowable
night's utmost nothing,wanders a little guess
(only which is this world)more my life does
not leap than with the mystery your smile
sings or if(spiralling as luminous
they climb oblivion)voices who are dreams,
less into heaven certainly earth swims
than each my deeper death becomes your kiss
losing through you what seemed myself,i find
selves unimaginably mine;beyond
sorrow's own joys and hoping's very fears
yours is the light by which my spirit's born:
yours is the darkness of my soul's return
-you are my sun,my moon,and all my stars

Tc_17

Have all the keys removed from your typewriter except the ones needed to spell her name.

via blogs.discovery.com  * Lovers' Boxes *

"Chances are, the last romantic note you received probably wasn't a note at all, but a text or an email. While words alone are enough to pluck the heart strings, their delivery on the cold, sterile screens of smart phones and laptops might make Skakespeare wrinkle his brow.

Leave it to a team of artists and engineers from Will's home country to bring a little nuance back to the oeuvre of sweet nothings...." (From link)

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Title Quote // From 'Breathing on Your Own' by Richard Kehl