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The Power of a Word

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 7, 2018
Posted in: Inspiration, Music, Photography. Tagged: anger, Hazrat Inayat Khan, Healing, Huey Lewis, The Power of a Word, The Power of Love, Unity Village.


The Power of a Word

There is a story told that once a Sufi was healing a child that was ill.
He was repeating 
a few words, and then gave the child to the parents saying,
“Now he will be well.”

Someone who was antagonistic to this said to him,
“How can it be possible that by a few words spoken, anyone can be healed?”

From a mild Sufi an angry answer is never expected,
but this time he turned to the man and said,
“You understand nothing about it. You are a fool.”

The man was very much offended. His face was red. He was hot.

The Sufi said, “when a word has the power to make you hot and angry,
why should not a word have the power to heal?”

Hazrat Inayat Khan

Still Life with Oleander and Fruit

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 6, 2018
Posted in: Art, Flowers, Music, Photography. Tagged: 1911, Albert André, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Post-Impressionism, Still Life with Oleander and Fruit, Tchaikovsky, Waltz of the Flowers.


Still Life with Oleander and Fruit (1911)
Albert André
French, 1869–1954
Oil on paper mounted on canvas

A sprawling bouquet of pink oleander spills from a rustic French Provençal ceramic vase in this casual and asymmetrically balanced still life. Yellow and green pears cluster at left, and a lone yellow pear rests on the tabletop at right. A brilliant flood of light illuminates the upper left side of all objects while casting shadows to the right. Together, the vitality of colors and composition suggest the pleasant comforts of home.

Albert André began his artistic career as a fabric designer in Lyon. Later, living in Paris, he counted fellow artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir among his closest friends and mentors.

🌸

Rue Saint-Honoré, Sun Effect, Afternoon

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 5, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: 1830–1903, Afternoon (1898), Camille Pissarro, French, Moody Blues, Rue Saint-Honoré, Sun Effect, Tuesday Afternoon.

Rue Saint-Honoré, Sun Effect, Afternoon (1898)
Camille Pissarro
French, 1830–1903
Oil on canvas

This vertically oriented canvas depicts an urban street scene, specifically a large square at the intersection of two avenues, painted from an elevated viewpoint. The long avenue on the left side of the composition recedes sharply into the distance, framed on either side by tall, multistoried buildings with street level storefronts. In the right foreground, a fountain is positioned in the middle of the square on a paved circular base planted with tall trees; a tall streetlamp on a smaller circular base is positioned just in front of the fountain. In the right middle ground, a band of Haussmann-style Parisian buildings stretches horizontally across the composition. The trajectory of the second avenue is suggested by the angle of the building at the far right. Numerous clusters of sparsely painted figures and horse-drawn carriages populate the streets and paved islands. The palette is a harmony of muted pastel tones punctuated by the dark brown and black forms of people, horses, and carriages. The brushwork is a mixture of short and long strokes rapidly applied in a loose, sketch-like manner.

🌞

Because of Our Wisdom

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 4, 2018
Posted in: Flowers, Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: 10000 Maniacs, Because of Our Wisdom, Because the Night, Hafez, love, Poetry, The Subject Tonight Is Love: 60 Wild and Sweet Poems of Hafiz, truth.

Because of Our Wisdom

“In many parts of this world water is
Scarce and precious.
People sometimes have to walk
A great distance
Then carry heavy jugs upon their
Heads.
Because of our wisdom, we will travel
Far for love.
All movement is a sign of
Thirst.
Most speaking really says
“I am hungry to know you.”
Every desire of your body is holy;
Every desire of your body is
Holy.
Dear one,
Why wait until you are dying
To discover that divine
Truth?”

💚

― Hafiz, The Subject Tonight Is Love: 60 Wild and Sweet Poems of Hafiz

Le Goûter

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 3, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: 18th century, Baroque, French, Jean-Baptiste Pater, Le Goûter, Les Baigneuses, Lou Reed and Others, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Oil on canvas, Perfect Day, Rococo.


Le Goûter (1725-1730)
Jean-Baptiste Pater
French, 1695-1736
Les Baigneuses, 18th century
Oil on canvas

Pater was one of the principal painters of the Rococo, specializing in depictions of the leisured lifestyle of the French aristocracy. In Le Goûter (Afternoon Tea) a group of elegantly dressed young people converse and flirt in a lush park setting. Pater's Les Baigneuses (The Bathers), also exhibited here, introduces a note of sensuality only hinted at in the first picture. The theme of the bathing party was immensely popular with Pater's patrons, and nearly 30 of his variations on this subject are known today. His paintings, in general, betray the influence of Rubens (1577-1640) in their rich color and relatively free brushwork.

🔸

Trouville, Beach Scene

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 2, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: 1824–1898, Eugène Boudin, French, Holiday, Madonna, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Normandy coast, Oil on wood panel, tourists, Trouville Beach Scene.

Trouville, Beach Scene (1874)
Eugène Boudin
French, 1824–1898
Oil on wood panel

A group of elegantly dressed tourists relax on the beach at Trouville on the Normandy coast. Beach scenes such as this were commercially successful for Eugène Boudin. His attitude toward his subjects, however, appears to have been ambivalent. On one occasion, he even described such gatherings of tourists as a “frightful masquerade.” Boudin chose to paint his outdoor scenes on small wood panels, which were more suited to the windy conditions of the beach. Lighter canvases tended to bend with the strong breeze.

🐌

On Spring

Posted by Maverick ~ on June 1, 2018
Posted in: Flowers, Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: Bobby Hebb, Giving, Lami'i, On Spring, rose, Sunny.

On Spring

From the pleasure, joy, and rapture of this hour,
In its frame to hold its soul earth scarce hath power.
Rent its collar, like the dawning, hath the rose;
From its heart the nightingale sighs forth its woes.
Dance the juniper and cypress like the sphere;
Filled with melody through joy all lands appear.
Gently sing the running brooks in murmurs soft;
While the birds with tuneful voices soar aloft.
Play the green and tender branches with delight,
And they shed with one accord gold, silver, bright.
Like to couriers feet, the zephyrs speed away,
Resting ne’er a moment either night or day.
In that raid the rosebud filled with gold its hoard,
And the tulip with fresh musk its casket stored.
There the moon a purse of silver coin did seize;
Filled with ambergris its skirt the morning breeze;
Won the sun a golden disk of ruby dye,
And with glistening pearls its pocket filled the sky:
Those who poor were fruit and foliage attained;
All the people of the land some trophy gained.
 
— Lami’i

☀

WPC: All-Time Favorites

Posted by Maverick ~ on May 31, 2018
Posted in: Music, Nature, Photography, Weekly Photo Challenge. Tagged: DPchallenge, Gypsy, Jack Russell, lighthouse, postaday, The Vogues, WPC: All-Time Favorites, You're the One.

Gypsy, who was also my 2017 Favorite, says goodbye Weekly Photo Challenge. I also added the Lighthouse from 2015 which is a favorite because it reminds me of someone somewhere far away. It has been a challenge the past five years as to what photo to select each week but it has also been wonderful seeing what others have chosen.  There’s been a multitude of great captures in the WP Community. Now as we say goodbye to WPC, as someone unknown once said: "Life is like a camera. Just focus on what’s important and capture the good times, develop from the negatives and if things don’t work out, just take another shot."

20120812-DSC00916-Edit-Edit-Edit-Edit-2
“Nothing is more beautiful than the love that has weathered the storms of life.
The love of the young for the young, that is the beginning of life.
But the love of the old for the old, that is the beginning of things longer.”
Jerome K. Jerome

💛

Weekly Photo Challenge: All-Time Favorites

Portrait of Madame Freret Dericour

Posted by Maverick ~ on May 30, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: 1769, Capriccio Stravagante Les 24 Violons, Dog, French, Joseph-Siffred Duplessis, Le Triomphe de l’Amour: Prélude pour la Nuit, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Neoclassicism, Portrait of Madame Freret Dericour, portraiture, Skip Sempé.


Portrait of Madame Freret Dericour  (1769)
Joseph-Siffred Duplessis
French, 1725-1802
Oil on canvas

Duplessis was a portrait painter of solid accomplishment during the reigns of Louis XV (1715-1774) and XVI (1774-1793). In the Nelson-Atkins portrait, Rococo elegance is beginning to be modified by the more disciplined taste of Neoclassicism. The artist combines a sound sense of form and texture-particularly effective in the smooth, silky coat of the dog-with a straightforward interpretation of character. Here, an unadorned, simple background allows our attention to focus on the sitter, whose pose and gaze are relaxed but self-assured, and whose inclusion of a favorite pet indicates a capacity for kindness and affection.

🔸

Landscape, Welch Mountain

Posted by Maverick ~ on May 29, 2018
Posted in: Art, Flowers, Music, Nature, Photography. Tagged: American, Asher B. Durand, Hudson River School, Joe Cocker, Landscape, Landscape Welch Mountain, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, New Hampshire, Oil on canvas, Philosophy of Beauty, Welch Mountain, You Are So Beautiful.


Landscape, Welch Mountain (1863)
Asher B. Durand

American, 1796-1886
Oil on canvas

Asher B. Durand evoked the philosophical idea of the Beautiful in the harmony, serenity and loveliness of this pastoral landscape of Welch Mountain, New Hampshire. He achieved these qualities by depicting the foreground with a fine brush to give remarkable detail, rendering the middle ground more sketchily and incorporating a number of flat, broadly painted areas of soft lavenders and blues in the background. Bright light and shadow play across the entire view, which is enveloped in a hazy atmosphere.

A successful engraver, Durand did not turn to painting as a career until he was 40. After Thomas Cole's death in 1848, he became the acknowledged leader of the group of American landscape painters commonly called the Hudson River School.

🌷

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