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Paintings of Paul Signac 2: Les Andelys

The pointillist technique engenders a classical contemplative and serene quality to Signac’s work. Lovely.

hoakley's avatarThe Eclectic Light Company

In 1886, the former Impressionist artist Paul Signac (1863-1935) made the transition to Divisionism, using the fine dots distinctive of what’s widely known now as Pointillism(e). This change may well have been precipitated by his friend Camille Pissarro, who switched in January, and must have been greatly influenced by Georges Seurat, who moved into a new studio next door to Signac’s in June.

signacgasometersclichy131 Paul Signac (1863-1935), Les Gazomètres. Clichy (Gasometers at Clichy) (Op 131) (1886), oil on canvas, 65 x 81 cm, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. Wikimedia Commons.

This painting of Gasometers at Clichy was one of the first of his excursions into this new territory. This is one of a quite large group of views that he painted of the immediate vicinity of his family’s house, several of which show similar industrial motifs. Although they might appear mundane today, at the time these gasometers were novel, and…

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A Poem from the Iona Community by Peter Millar

richinaword's avatarmy word in your ear

Each month Peter Millar, a long-time member of the Iona Community shares a reflection. At Easter it took the form of a poem which Peter asked readers to share with others.

Reference There is no copyright on this poem. No quotes from others. It
would be great if you could share it in these days of Lent and of Easter. Thank you and let us hold God’s amazing world in our hearts.
Peter.

Easter2022 Every new day across our planet there is a constant certainty moving in our midst - it is this: violence, disconnection and radical change are our sure companions and disturbers. Sometimes the whole edifice spins too fast as we ponder the human future and the divisions that ensnare us. Yet within these shadows are fragile possibilities of light always inviting us to engage with other visions and truths - ones that spring from our depths:…

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Poetry Psychoanalysis

Road 1940

Road 1940

Why do I carry, she said,

This child that is no child of mine?

Through the heat of the day it did nothing but fidget and whine,

Now it snuffles under the dew and the cold star-shine,

And lies across my heart heavy as lead,

Heavy as the dead.

This beautiful poem by STW is another poem about the flight of refugees. It almost certainly relates to the civilian escape from Paris as it fell in 1940, It conveys both the weariness and the worry of a woman escaping with a child who is not her own and unfortunately there must be many such examples of such experiences among refugees from Ukraine at the present time. The next lines reveal that the story is being reported by an observer.

Why did I lift it, she said,

Out of its cradle in the wheel-tracks?

On the dusty road burdens have melted like wax,

Soldiers have thrown down their rifles, misers slipped their packs:

Yes, and the woman who left it there has sped

With a lighter tread.

The poem continues to discuss the rescuers ambivalence towards the child being rescued. there are echoes of the Scriptural verses of Matthew 24:19 –

And woe unto them that are with child and to them that give suck in those days!

and also of Mark 13:17

Townsend-Warner finishes with these poignant lines which might also be those of a similar refugee from the Ukraine, Syria, Afghanistan or elsewhere:-

But since I’ve carried it, she said,

So far I might as well carry it still.

If we ever should come to kindness someone will

Pity me perhaps as the mother of a child so ill,

Grant me even to lie down on a bed;

Give me at least bread.

Here is another moving poem by Townsend Warner from You Tube where you can also find her own reading of this second poem.

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Who was Karl Abraham?

Interesting that he was Melanie Klein’s analyst and his work developing on pre-oedipal issues.

Andrew Marshall's avatarMental Health Matters

Introduction

Karl Abraham (03 May 1877 to 25 December 1925) was an influential German psychoanalyst, and a collaborator of Sigmund Freud, who called him his ‘best pupil’.

Life

Abraham was born in Bremen, Germany. His parents were Nathan Abraham, a Jewish religion teacher (1842-1915), and his wife (and cousin) Ida (1847-1929). His studies in medicine enabled him to take a position at the Burghölzli Swiss Mental Hospital, where Eugen Bleuler practiced. The setting of this hospital initially introduced him to the psychoanalysis of Carl Gustav Jung.

Collaborations

In 1907, he had his first contact with Sigmund Freud, with whom he developed a lifetime relationship. Returning to Germany, he founded the Berliner Society of Psychoanalysis in 1910. He was the president of the International Psychoanalytical Association from 1914 to 1918 and again in 1925.

Karl Abraham, Psychoanalyst (1)
Karl Abraham, Psychoanalyst.

Karl Abraham collaborated with Freud on the understanding of manic-depressive illness, leading…

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Sketching near Oban, Argyle and Bute, Scotland

This must have been a brilliant adventure! My parents were in Oban during the war where my father was an aircraft fitter making modifications to Bristol Beaufighters and Blenheims. Fortunately, your trip was much more peaceful!

Jane's avatarJane Sketching

Every year the Lady of Avenel needs a refit to prepare her for her working season. The Lady of Avenel is an 102ft square rigged brigantine, currently based near Oban, on the west coast of Scotland. This year I went up there to join the working party for the refit.

I travelled by overnight train from Euston to Crianlarach.

Journey via the Caledonian Sleeper from London to Oban. Map from the Caledonian Sleeper webpage. The overnight journey takes about 10 hours Euston-Crianlarach. Then I caught a local train Crianlarach to Oban.

I drew some sketches on the journey.

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Literature Poetry

Breakfrost by W.N.Herbert

Breakfrost

The frost is touching everything before the sun:

each blade has a pencil nudity that makes

the yolk-like orange seem already old,

each flatness reached, brick-like,

as though all cold was urban.

Sheep crunch its windscreen splinters,

horses’ heads are glued to it down the blue

flanks of shade. Each leaf is a sucrose flake.

Its intimacy is more exhausting than light.

Morning’s sepia, like medieval photographs,

has to fight its way through every scattered grain.

I had not heard of Herbert, born 1961 in Dundee until I recently came across this poem in Ruth Padel’s instructive collection; The Poem and the Journey -60 Poems for the Journey of Life. It appeals to me very much and I am asking myself just why.

These first eleven lines interweave the process of getting up for breakfast with the contrasts in the outside landscape. Being cold and having no clothes on and breakfast itself – perhaps “Frosties” (crunch sucrose flake) and perhaps a suggestion of tiredness or exhaustion. The gradual awakening takes place with engaging contrasts as Padel makes clear in her own interpretation. There is cold sharpness against and before the sunlight. There are contrasting colours orange-yellow with the blue flanks of the horses. An image which might suggest the paintings of Franz Marc.

Then there is the poet’s usage of engaging tropes like “cold was urban” and “sepia…medieval photographs”. These encourage the reader to use his imagination. It is interesting too that the latter photo image reinforces the element of time which is clearly passing along during the course of the poem.

More about W.N.Herbert can be read at https://poetryarchive.org/poet/W-N-Herbert/

and I recommend “Talking Water Blues which you will find on that page

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Kazimierz Sichulski’s Galician Landscapes 1

Lovely portrayal of this area so much in our minds currently.
It reminds me very much of the work of Stanisław Wyspiański

hoakley's avatarThe Eclectic Light Company

A few weeks ago, when I showed paintings of the Hutsul peoples of the Carpathian Mountains, I came across the work of Kazimierz Sichulski (1879–1942), who’s generally recognised as one of the major Polish artists of the early twentieth century, but was both born and died in Lviv in western Ukraine. In this article and its sequel next week, I look more generally at Sichulski’s remarkable paintings.

Sichulski was born in the city of Lviv in what is now Ukraine. From 1349 to 1772, that city, then known as Lwów, was the capital of the Ruthenian domain of the Kingdom of Poland. At the time of Sichulski’s birth it was the capital of the Galician province of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, although it still had strong ties to Poland, for example in being the home of the Polish Academy of Arts. During Sichulski’s lifetime, Lviv was a multilingual and multicultural centre…

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Autoportrait Day 112~ Chien-Ying Chang

Lovely image!

Christy's avatarThe Misty Miss Christy

A random survey of self-portraits created by women through the centuries

Chinese-born painter Chien-Ying Chang (1913-2004)

Self Portrait, 1936 / Oil on canvas / Long Museum West Bund, Shanghai, China

[2 embedded links above]

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Sie wiegen sich in frischen Frühlingslüften…

Wolfregen & Constanze's avatarDas poetische Zimmer

Foto: ©Constanze

🌼~ Elbenfrühling ~ 🌼

Mit Knospen zart und noch nicht blätterdunkel
wärmt grünend sich der Wald im Lichtgefunkel
von heller Blüt und Sonnenstrahl das Herz,
als würd mit der Erinnerung im März
und Sehnsuchtszeit im dürftigen Gewand
nun im April ein Öffnendes gesandt
und hingestreut wie kindliches Erstaunen
in Matten feengleich, schneeweißem Schein,
ein Flügeln sachte zwischen den Alraunen
und dichten Moosen hier im Zauberhain;
das ist der Anemonengeister Reigen,
Windblümchen stiegen aus den Erdengrüften,
sie wiegen sich in frischen Frühlingslüften
und wollen nichts als blühn, Entfaltung zeigen,
als wüssten sie, ein Hauch nimmt sie bald fort,
mitten im Aufgehn ein Verwehn am Ort –
so sprießt des Daseins ewiges Bemühn,
bald zugedeckt vom stillen Maiengrün…

©Constanze

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#Play The Browning Version