
“When we are gone, do not look for our tomb in earth, but find it in the hearts of people.” – Rumi
Music

Pyramids at Gizeh (1929)
Oskar Kokoschka
"The famous Egyptian pyramids of Menkaure, Khafre, and Khufu rise against the deep blue sky at Gizeh (Giza). At center looms the giant Sphinx, while camels, horses, and people move about the golden desert sands. After serving in the Austrian army during World War I (1914–1918), Oskar Kokoschka taught art and traveled widely. In the Middle East, he painted broad vistas of places he had learned of from the Bible and modern archaeology. The artist’s quick, sketchy brushstrokes contrast with the timelessness of his subject."

Clarity Haynes a Brooklyn-based painter, focuses on non-traditional images and ideas of womanhood, beauty, sexuality and gender expression.‘The Breast Portrait Project’ also explores illness, aging, mortality and the shifting nature of the body. Clarity explains: “I am interested in the many ways the body changes throughout a lifetime, and in the ways in which we create and change our bodies”. 🎀

“We are such stuff as dreams are made on; and our little life is rounded with a sleep.”
— William Shakespeare

Marie Gabrielle de Gramont, Duchesse de Caderousse
Elisabeth-Louise Vigée Le Brun
Vigée Le Brun was one of the most popular portraitists of 18th-century Europe. Though her rapid rise to fame was both resisted and resented by jealous rivals, she became Painter to Queen Marie Antoinette of France, whom she first portrayed in 1778. This painting is one of a series of early masterpieces created by the artist in the decade prior to the Revolution. In terms of style and technique it is largely dependent on the example of the great Flemish artists of the 17th century, Rubens and Van Dyck, whose works Vigée Le Brun had studied in detail while traveling through the Low Countries in the early 1780s. The sitter's costume of red, black and white is based on that of the peasant women of Brittany--a precious affectation, on the part of a duchess, but one which was fashionable among the aristocracy at precisely this moment in French history. When the painting was first exhibited at the Salon of 1785, the Duchesse de Caderousse was an instant success with both critics and the public. One of the artist's most celebrated works, it remained in the possession of the sitter's descendants until November 1984.

“AUTUMNAL
Pale amber sunlight falls across
The reddening October trees,
That hardly sway before a breeze
As soft as summer: summer’s loss
Seems little, dear! on days like these.
Let misty autumn be our part!
The twilight of the year is sweet:
Where shadow and the darkness meet
Our love, a twilight of the heart
Eludes a little time’s deceit.
Are we not better and at home
In dreamful Autumn, we who deem
No harvest joy is worth a dream?
A little while and night shall come,
A little while, then, let us dream.
Beyond the pearled horizons lie
Winter and night: awaiting these
We garner this poor hour of ease,
Until love turn from us and die
Beneath the drear November trees.”
~ Ernest Dowson ~

Lime Line
Dean Fleming
Lime Line-with its eye-popping colors, dynamic geometry, optical rhythms and spatial complexity-is a far cry from the cool, reductive, stable structures of Minimalism. Dean Fleming was part of a New York group called Park Place. They explored pictorial space, the ideas of Buckminster Fuller (inventor of the geodesic dome), Space Age technology, science fiction, Einstein's Theory of Relativity and related concepts of fourth dimensional space-time. Fleming believed hard-edge abstraction was the language of contemporary culture.

“There is love in me the likes of which you’ve never seen. There is rage in me the likes
of which should never escape. If I am not satisfied in the one, I will indulge the other.”
― Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Frankenstein
“It is true, we shall be monsters, cut off from all the world;
but on that account we shall be more attached to one another.”
― Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Frankenstein

Life is like a garden
And friendship like a flower,
That blooms and grows in beauty
With the sunshine and the shower.
And lovely are the blossoms
That are tended with great care,
By those who work unselfishly
To make the place more fair.
And, like the garden blossoms,
Friendship’s flower grows more sweet
When watched and tended carefully
By those we know and meet.
And, if the seed of friendship
Is planted deep and true
And watched with understanding,
Friendship’s flower will bloom for you.


“Why we love with close hearts
Why we love with souls apart
Let the love flow from hearts to souls,
Let the world glow”
― Megha Khare





