Maverick Mist

Intertwined passions ~

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Black cat before the attack

Posted by Maverick ~ on July 13, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: Berlin, Black Cat before the attack, Friday the 13th, Gelatin silver print, Martin Munkácsi, Rod McKuen, Seni özledim, Sloopy.

Black Cat before the attack, c.1930.
Martin Munkácsi
Hungarian
Gelatin silver print

“A product of the early modernist intellectual currents of early 1900s Hungary, Martin Munkácsi worked in a bold, spontaneous manner.  He achieved international renown for his photojournalism and fashion work of the 1920s and 1930s, when he was living in Berlin.  Munkácsi  had a major impact in both these fields.  In fashion, for example, his lively images, often made outdoors, stood in marked contrast to the more typical work of the period, made in the controlled space of the commercial studio.”

Finding Rest in the Beloved

Posted by Maverick ~ on July 10, 2018
Posted in: Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: Finding Rest in the Beloved, Jalaluddin Mevlana Rumi, Lauritzen Gardens - Omaha Botanical Center, Led Zephlin, love, Stairway to Heaven.

Within a human being is such a love, a passion and longing, an itch, a desire, that, even if he were to possess a hundred thousand worlds, he would still not find rest or peace. People try their hand at all sorts of trades and professions – they learn astronomy and medicine, and so forth – but they are not at peace because they haven’t found what they are seeking. The beloved is called dil-ârâm  because the heart finds tranquillity through the beloved, so how can it find tranquillity through anything else? All these pleasures and objects of search are like a ladder. Ladder rungs are not places to stay and abide, but rather are to pass through. The sooner one awakens and becomes aware and watchful, the shorter the road becomes and the less one’s life is wasted on these “ladder rungs”.  – Rumi

On Reason and Passion

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 25, 2018
Posted in: Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: Helmut Lotti, I am Sailing, Kahlil Gibran, On Reason and Passion, Vacation.

On Reason and Passion
 Kahlil Gibran

Your soul is oftentimes a battlefield, upon which your reason and your judgment wage war against passion and your appetite.

Would that I could be the peacemaker in your soul, that I might turn the discord and the rivalry of your elements into oneness and melody.

But how shall I, unless you yourselves be also the peacemakers, nay, the lovers of all your elements?

Your reason and your passion are the rudder and the sails of your seafaring soul.

If either your sails or our rudder be broken, you can but toss and drift, or else be held at a standstill in mid-seas.

For reason, ruling alone, is a force confining; and passion, unattended, is a flame that burns to its own destruction.

Therefore let your soul exalt your reason to the height of passion; that it may sing;

And let it direct your passion with reason, that your passion may live through its own daily resurrection, and like the phoenix rise above its own ashes.

I would have you consider your judgment and your appetite even as you would two loved guests in your house.

Surely you would not honour one guest above the other; for he who is more mindful of one loses the love and the faith of both.

Among the hills, when you sit in the cool shade of the white poplars, sharing the peace and serenity of distant fields and meadows – then let your heart say in silence, “God rests in reason.”

⛵

On vacation ~ comments closed ~ thank you.

At the Risk of the Sun

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 24, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: abstract, American, At the Risk of the Sun, Dream #9, Freud, John Lennon, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Yves Tanguy.


At the Risk of the Sun
Yves Tanguy
Oil on canvas (1949)

"Strange, organic forms appear in this dramatically illuminated, desolate landscape. A heart form can be seen on the right. To the left is an imaginative array of stacked shapes, referencing parts of human and animal bodies. Yves Tanguy and other Surrealist artists sought to reveal the contents of the unconscious mind. Inspired by Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalytic theories, they depicted images from their dreams, nightmares, and memories. Tanguy based this image on the prehistoric stone monuments he saw as a child in Brittany, France."

📀

Bust

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 23, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: abstract, And She Was, Buste d'homme (étude pour les demoiselles d'Avignon), Buste de femme ou de marin (Bust of a woman or sailor), Pablo Picasso, Talking Heads.

Buste d’homme (étude pour les demoiselles d’Avignon), Pablo Picasso

 "The first half of life is learning to be an adult-the second half is learning to be a child." - Pablo Picasso


Pablo Picasso – 1907 Buste de femme ou de marin (Bust of a woman or sailor)

🗣

The First Lesson of Fraternal Friendship

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 22, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: Etienne Aubry, French, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Mother and Child Reunion, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Oil on canvas, Paul Simon, The First Lesson of Fraternal Friendship, wet nurse.

The First Lesson of Fraternal Friendship
Etienne Aubry
French (1773 or 1775)
Oil on canvas

'In a rustic interior are six figures, representing a family of the upper classes (father at left, mother third from right, older son in black bonnet, white shirt and pants, blue sash) paying a visit to their youngest son, in the care of a wet nurse. The two brothers kiss; at right, a young male peasant and an old woman survey the scene. At right is a covered bed, in right foreground is still life of brass pot, ceramic jar, onions, and cabbage.

In this painting, an aristocratic couple has taken their older son to a wet nurse’s cottage to visit his baby brother. The practice of wet nursing, in which families sent their babies away to be breast-fed for the first few years of their lives, was common throughout most of the 18th century. By the time Etienne Aubry painted this scene, wet nursing was coming under attack by Enlightenment thinkers like Jean-Jacques Rousseau for being unnatural and detrimental to a child’s development.'

🔸

Rose Tower

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 21, 2018
Posted in: Flowers, Music, Photography. Tagged: classical architecture, Dreams, Giorgio de Chirico, Italian, Kiss From a Rose, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Rose Tower, Seal, summer soltice.

Rose Tower
Giorgio de Chirico
Italian (born Greece)
Oil on canvas (1913)
🌞

In this deserted Italian city, a lone equestrian statue and the arcade of a building cast deep shadows across an empty piazza. Giorgio de Chirico’s sharp perspective and strong colors evoke the melancholy, mystery, and heat of a late afternoon. In the distance, two rippling flags provide the only hint of motion.

Combining his interest in classical architecture, Renaissance perspective, and the unsettling philosophical writings of Friedrich Nietzsche, Arthur Schopenhauer, and Otto Weininger, de Chirico painted works that were intended to awaken the unconscious mind and reveal the metaphysical realities experienced in dreams.

🌹

Vase of Flowers

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 20, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: 1720, Constantinople, Dutch, Istanbul, Jan van Huysum, Joe Cocker, Oil on wood panel, tulip, Vase of Flowers, You Are So Beautiful.

Vase of Flowers (ca. 1720)
Jan van Huysum
Dutch, 1682-1749
Oil on wood panel

"The 17th-century Dutch were horticultural leaders who introduced Europe to many new species of flowers from their Caribbean and Far Eastern colonies. Huysum gained an international reputation for the technical skill and detailed realism in his sumptuous arrangements of exotic as well as more common specimens. Included here are two rare specimens of tulip (top, left of center), a popular flower originally imported from Constantinople (Istanbul). In the famous market craze of 1637, dubbed Tulipmania, one tulip bulb in Amsterdam was worth the price of a house on a coveted canal lot. The market crashed in 1638, but tulips were still much prized when Huysum painted these blooms a century later."

🌷

Djamila

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 19, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: Aicha, Algeria, Asad Faulwell, Cheb Khaled, Collage, Djamila, Djamila Bouhired, Islamic, lithograph, warrior-hero, women's rights.


Djamila
(2018)
Asad Faulwell
American, born 1982

"21-plate variable edition lithograph mounted on Komatex, with collage, photographs, painted map tacks, and gold pins.

Asad Faulwell's art references the complexity of world politics and recognizes that nothing is easy.  Djamila is a portrait of Djamila Bouhired, an Algerian woman who fought to liberate Algeria from France in the Algerian War of Independence (1954-1962).  In Paris, Djamila was tried and convicted as a terrorist but then later pardoned.  Today she is a women's rights advocate.

Here, Faulwell depicted Djamila as a warrior-hero, using gray tones for her face that evoke stone sculptures of war heroes.  Background patterns allude to Islamic religious works, further elevating her status."

Social Fabric

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 18, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: abstract, Carole King, Carpet pieces on wood, Germany, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Nevin Aladağ, Social Fabric, tapestry, Turkey.

Social Fabric, yellow blue red
Carpet pieces on wood (2017)
Nevin Aladağ
(German, born Turkey, 1972)

'Nevin Aladağ combines pieces if tapestry and carpets from various parts of the world arranged as abstract works.  Different forms and motifs from Persia or from eastern Azerbaijan join monochrome segments with triangles and circles that negotiate formal elements of color, line, and space.  Ornaments, big cats, and birds from the Iranian regions of Tabriz, Nain, and Balochistan (symbolizing fertility, power, and happiness) contrast with monochromatic color fields and allude to craftsmanship going back hundreds of years.

The subject of borders and transgressing borders is not just addressed in terms of content, but also formally. Aladağ suggests the various onnotations of "social fabric"; social spaces are constituted by social fabrics, the demographic, historical, and cultural segments that constitute the structure of a society.  Aladağ's Social Fabric works suggest various temporalities that question conditions of production, globalized trade, and postcolonial perspectives introduced into a contemporary context.'


Social Fabric, blue petrol yellow
Carpet pieces on wood (2017)

Social Fabric, turquoise blue red
Carpet pieces on wood (2017)

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