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HARMONY: Its Outstanding Value For Ourselves & The World. (Part 2.) By Dr Linda Berman.

Some very interesting points and paintings. I have also discovered Wikioo too. There is a feeling of quasi-Jungian balance here.

waysofthinking.co.uk's avatarwaysofthinking.co.uk

Harmony With Nature.

image‘In the Time of Harmony; the Golden Age is Not Passed…’ by Paul Signac,Wikimedia Commons.

“I tried to discover, in the rumour of forests and waves, words that other men could not hear, and I pricked up my ears to listen to the revelation of their harmony.”

Gustave Flaubert

Nature has much to teach us about harmony, if only we would slow down a little and take heed of its ‘revelations.’ If we feel relatively peaceful inside, then that is the time to turn outwards, to see what the environment has to offer us and to teach us.

imageDo I Love Orchards, Do I Love Forests – Maria Primachenko. Wikioo.

“Love yourself. Then forget it. Then, love the world.”

Mary Oliver

How often do we pause to discover the intricate and miraculous workings of nature? Can we find a few moments moment to ‘stop and smell the…

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I am the great sun – Charles Causley – Analysis

Brilliant exposition!

richinaword's avatarmy word in your ear

The following sonnet was composed by Charles Causley when he was inspired after viewing a 1632 Normandy crucifix.

I am the great sun

I am the great sun, but you do not see me,
I am your husband, but you turn away.
I am the captive, but you d o not free me,
I am the captain but you will not obey.

I am the truth, but you will not believe me,
I am the city where you will not stay.
I am your wife, your child, but you will leave me,
I am that God to whom you will not pray.

I am your counsel, but you will not hear me,
I am your lover whom you will betray.
I am the victor, but you do not cheer me,
I am the holy dove whom you will slay.

I am your life, but if you will not name me,

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Autoportrait Day 240~ Barbara Shermund

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Turks Head Wapping, E1

Some unusual colours and thanks for advice on mixing greys. Love the dipped pen sketch too!

Jane's avatarJane Sketching

I walked to The Turks Head Wapping: a restaurant among trees. After a splendid lunch, I sketched the building.

The Turks Head Wapping E1, 10″ x 7″ in Sketchbook 12, 26th August 2022, 16:30pm

The drawing took me about 50mins on location, pen and ink. I added the colour when I got back to my desk.

Before and after the colour went on.

Marvellous chimneys!

The chimneys are Transparent Pyrrol Orange. Other colours are: Green Serpentine Genuine, Mars Yellow, Burnt Umber, Ultramarine Blue, Permanent Yellow Deep, and Perylene Maroon to get the darker tiled walls. The blacks and greys are Ultramarine Blue mixed with Burnt Umber. These are all Daniel Smith watercolours. The paper is Arches Aquarelle 300gsm NOT, in a sketchbook made by the Wyvern Bindery in Hoxton.

Here is work in progress:

This is a wonderful café-restaurant – recommended. It is east of Tower Bridge, about a 45…

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Hauser: La Califfa

At Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet's avatarAt Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet

Wild Roses, by Vincent van Gogh (1853 – 1890), Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, May-June 1889, oil on canvas, 24.5 cm x 33.5 cm, Credits (obliged to state): Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation), Image Source: Van Gogh Museum (detail)

HAUSER performing the theme from La Califfa by Ennio Morricone

Thanks for Visiting 🙂

~Sunnyside

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Fall Leaves, Hesse, Germany

Beautiful

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The Colony, by Audrey Magee

Sounds fascinating and reminds me of the work of Brian Friel- especially “Translations”. I’ve recently also read “Factory Girls” which was brilliant, poignant and very funny.

Lisa Hill's avatarANZ LitLovers LitBlog

Colonisation is a theme common enough in contemporary fiction, but I haven’t come across much fiction featuring the English colonisation of Ireland*.  Audrey Magee’s The Colony, nominated for the 2022 Booker Prize and the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction, explores the theme in a microcosm of Irish society on a small remote island in the summer of 1979.  Unlike heavy-handed critiques of colonisation (which have their place in educating readers about its enduring consequences), The Colony is more subtly nuanced in its depiction of a world in flux.

Magee’s island society is insulated from the Troubles which derived from the colonisation of mainland Ireland; there is only news of bombs or car-jackings in this Irish outpost.  Chillingly brief radio reports of sectarian violence punctuate the novel but do not impact on the storyline, except to signal that the violence influences even the matriarch who has staunchly resisted any change…

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József Rippl-Rónai: Intérieur d’un salon parisien (après-midi) (1910)

Interesting dark tones and colour contrasts.

At Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet's avatarAt Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet

Screenshot_2018-11-13 2017_PAR_14131_0326_000(jozsef_rippl-ronai_interieur_dun_salon_parisien) jpg (JPEG Image, 3200 × 2413[...]
József Rippl-Rónai (1861-1927), Intérieur d’un salon parisien (après-midi), oil on panel, 12 x 16 in., Painted circa 1910
Image Source: Christie’s

József Rippl-Rónai (23 May 1861 – 25 November 1927) was a Hungarian painter who first introduced modern artistic movements in the Hungarian art.

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József Rippl-Rónai at wikimedia

József Rippl-Rónai at Fine Arts in Hungary,

Thanks for Visiting 🙂

~Sunnyside

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The Liverpool Poets – Roger McGough – Comeclose and Sleepnow

McGough such an amiable fellow!

richinaword's avatarmy word in your ear

At a recent U3A meeting we looked at‘The Liverpool Poets’who were were/are a number of influential 1960s poets from Liverpool, England, influenced by 1950s Beat poetry. They were involved in the 1960s Liverpool scene that gave rise to The Beatles.

Their work is characterised by its directness of expression, simplicity of language, suitability for live performance and concern for contemporary subjects and references. There is often humour, but the full range of human experience and emotion is addressed.

The poets that are most associated with this label are Adrian Henri, Roger McGough and Brian Patten. They were featured in a 1967 book The Liverpool Scene edited by Edward Lucie-Smith, with a blurb by Ginsberg and published by Donald Carroll.

The anthology The Mersey Sound was published by Penguin in 1967, containing the poems of Adrian Henri, Roger McGough and Brian Patten, and has remained in…

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Autoportrait Day 233~ Martine Gutierrez

Christy's avatarThe Misty Miss Christy

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

American visual and performance artist Martine Gutierrez (born 1989)

Line Up 5, 2014 / Photograph of artist amidst a crowd of mannequins
Various collections, including Mount Holyoke College Art Museum, South Hadley, MA

[2 embedded links above]

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