Maverick Mist

Intertwined passions ~

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I Loved You

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 19, 2018
Posted in: Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin, choral, I Loved You, Jay Rouse, Karen Ahlstrom, Romance, Russian.

20141110-IMG_0205-Edit

I Loved You
by
Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin

Я вас любил: любовь еще, быть может
В душе моей угасла не совсем;
Но пусть она вас больше не тревожит;
Я не хочу печалить вас ничем.

Я вас любил безмолвно, безнадежно,
То робостью, то ревностью томим;
Я вас любил так искренно, так нежно,
Как дай вам бог любимой быть другим.
–Александр Сергеевич Пушкин

I loved you — and love it may yet be
Deep in my soul. It might still smoulder there.
But do not trouble your dear heart for me
I would not want to make you shed a tear

I loved you — Helplessly Hopelessly
Timidity and longing plagued my mind
I loved you so tenderly so truly
God grant that you may such another find

🧡

Translation by Karen Ahlstrom 

Fantasy Interior…

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 18, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: 17th century, Baroque, Dutch Golden Age, Fantasy Interior with Jan Steen and the Family of Gerrit Schouten, Jan Steen, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, oil paint, Romeo & Juliet Fantasy-Overture, Tchaikovsky.


Fantasy Interior with Jan Steen and the Family of Gerrit Schouten
Jan Steen

 "Interior scene with two dogs in center foreground, foot warmer, right middle ground, left to right: Negro placing silver pot in marble basin; velvet-covered side chair holding belt with sheathed sword; bowing boy offering peeled lemon on round salver to seated woman in gray with open book in lap; standing man behind her in front of fireplace addressing seated man; standing woman at clavichord with elaborately carved pedestal; another woman beyond clavichord playing lute, facing left. Tapestries on wall, rear, drawn aside at door, left, through which is seen woman laying table in front of leaded windows; octagonal table bearing tray and pitcher; gray stone fireplace, center, with column on each side, motto "discite mori" on top face, be hatted skull with arrow on mantelpiece, above painting of warriors and elephants; right, tall cupboard with sculpture atop of Venus and putto flanked left, by infant Bacchus and right, Eros sharpening his bow."

▫

🍀 Lá Shona Fhéile Pádraig!

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 17, 2018
Posted in: Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: clover, Happy St Patrick's Day, Irish, Ronnie Doe, The Jarvey was a Leprechaun, The Leprechaun, Val Doonican.

The Leprechaun
By Ronnie Doe

I was walking around the green streets of Charlestown,
Right before the crack of dawn.
When coming straight towards me as cocky as could be,
Was a little, green leprechaun.
I started to fidget when I seen this midget,
Was acting so brazen and bold.
And I near lost me head when the leprechaun said,
“I’ve got me a big pot of gold.”

There was something scary about this male faerie,
But I had just heard him mention.
What he had in his fold was a big pot of gold,
And those words got my attention.
Though he was furious that I was curious,
About the story he had told.
I still asked him if he would hand over give to me,
Just half of his big pot of gold.

He said. “You’re a zero and only a hero,
Can share a leprechaun’s glory.
And you are not gallant, courageous or valiant,
Nor the hero of this story.”
My hopes started to dim, but I somehow asked him,
How he happened upon my road.
“Did you have to follow a beautiful rainbow,
To get this big old pot of gold?”

Now this little green elf starts talking to himself,
He thought I had devious plans.
He said, “You are clever but I swear you’ll never,
Have my gold in your greedy hands.”
And as the leprechaun was going on and on,
I decided I would be bold.
I got the nerve to say, “I heard there is a way,
I can have your big pot of gold.

Because I know for sure that it’s Irish folk lore,
That all I need to do is gape.
If I can fix my eyes upon your beady eyes,
There is no way you can escape.”
I tried staring him down, but I was forced to frown,
Because my stare I could not hold.
I was the first to blink and knew the little fink,
Wouldn’t part with his pot of gold.

But he was so cunning and he started funning,
And I know it gave him pleasure.
To tell me with a laugh, “You won’t even get half,
Of the gold I’ll always treasure”.
And then the leprechaun said he had to move on,
And left me standing in the cold.
Without shaking my hand, he went back to Ireland,
Along with his big pot of gold.

🍀

Boat Moored on the Seine at Argenteuil

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 16, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: Boat Moored on the Seine at Argenteuil, Boats and Birds, Gregory and the Hawk, Gustave Caillebotte, Impressionism, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.

Boat Moored on the Seine at Argenteuil
Gustave Caillebotte
Oil on canvas (About 1884)

This vertically formatted marine depicts a sailboat with a blue and pink hull and white, furled-up sail moored on the Seine river in the Parisian suburb of Argenteuil. A grassy bank with thin tree branches occupies the foreground. The river Seine and sailboat dominate the middle ground, occupying about half of the composition. Low, nondescript white and yellow buildings and a smokestack occupy the opposite bank under a cloudless blue-gray sky. The painting’s surface is animated by short, rapidly applied, directional brushstrokes; thick areas of impasto are visible throughout, particularly in the boat’s scintillating reflections on the water.

In addition to working as a leading Impressionist painter, Gustave Caillebotte developed a serious passion for sailing. He was not only a national sailing champion, but also one of France’s leading yacht designers.

In this work, the subject is one of Caillebotte’s lightweight sailboats moored on the Seine in front of his home. Caillebotte devoted marked attention to capturing the brilliant reflection of light dancing on the water, rendered in thick strokes of white paint.

⛵

WPC: I’d Rather Be…

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 15, 2018
Posted in: Music, Nature, Photography, Weekly Photo Challenge. Tagged: Donovan, DPchallenge, I'd Rather Be, john muir, postaday, There is a Mountain, Weekly Photo Challenge.

"I’d rather be in the mountains thinking of God, than
 in church thinking about the mountains." — John Muir


Weekly Photo Challenge: I’d Rather Be

The Green Vase

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 14, 2018
Posted in: Art, Flowers, Music, Photography. Tagged: Flowers Never Bend With the Rainfall, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Odilon Redon, Simon and Garfunkel, Still Life, Symbolist movement, The Green Vase.

The Green Vase
Odilon Redon
Oil on canvas (about 1900)

"Best known as a painter of dream-like, often darkly themed subjects, Odilon Redon produced hundreds of brilliantly colored floral still lifes in the last 16 years of his life. Although seemingly a simple painting of a bouquet of flowers, the vase hovering in space and the powdery surface place the subject somewhere between dream and reality. Redon was closely associated with the Symbolist movement and its fascination with the subconscious and the imaginary.

This vertically formatted painting depicts a still life. Simply composed, the painting features a double-handled green vase centered on a reddish-brown table or ledge filled with a bouquet of varied red, pink, purple, white, and yellow flowers. Behind the still life is a blank wall that shifts from gray-blue to golden-brown hues as the eye travels upwards. The vase casts a subtle shadow on the table/ledge. The paint is applied thinly and sparingly in small, loose brushstrokes."

💐

Guernica

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 13, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: Antiwar, Guernica, Khan Academy, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Pablo Picasso, Paris World's Fair, The Kingston Trio, Through the eyes of Picasso, Where Have All The Flowers Gone.

Guernica
Pablo Picasso
Oil on canvas (1937)

"What would be the best way today to protest against a war? How could you influence the largest number of people? In 1937, Picasso expressed his outrage against war with Guernica, his enormous mural-sized painting displayed to millions of visitors at the Paris World’s Fair. It has since become the twentieth century’s most powerful indictment against war, a painting that still feels intensely relevant today."

Antiwar icon

"Much of the painting’s emotional power comes from its overwhelming size, approximately eleven feet tall and twenty five feet wide. Guernica is not a painting you observe with spatial detachment; it feels like it wraps around you, immerses you in its larger-than-life figures and action. And although the size and multiple figures reference the long tradition of European history paintings, this painting is different because it challenges rather than accepts the notion of war as heroic." Continued... Picasso, Guernica

🌹

Woman with Stroller

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 12, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: Adele, Françoise Gilot, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Pablo Picasso, Picasso: Creator and Destroyer, sculpture, Sweetest Devotion, Woman with Stroller.


Woman with Stroller
Bronze (1950)
Pablo Picasso

"After seeing his lover Françoise Gilot push their son, Claude, in a carriage, Picasso began to construct this sculpture. A master scavenger, he assembled it out of found materials before casting a bronze version. Cake molds, stove plates, a table mat, rolled metal sheets, and pieces of pottery come together in this monument to motherhood."

🍼

Mother and Child

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 11, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: cubism, Mother and Child, Mother and Child Reunion, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Pablo Picasso, Paul Simon, Through the eyes of Picasso.

Mother and Child
Pablo Picasso
Oil on canvas, 1907.

"Motherhood takes an unusual turn in this painting, which followed the completion of the completion of Les Demoiselles d"Avignon. Vivid contrasting colors, stylized faces and coarse brushstrokes seem to defy the warmth and gentleness more commonly used to depict this subject. It is another signal of Picasso's decisive turn toward a strong and often startling visual language."

👩‍👧

Iris spring ~

Posted by Maverick ~ on March 10, 2018
Posted in: Flowers, Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: Alfred Lord Tennyson, dwarf iris, Jalaluddin Mevlana Rumi, Loreena McKennitt, love, purple, soul, Spring, The Mummer's Dance, wild iris.


“In the Spring a livelier iris changes on the burnish’d dove;
In the Spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.”
Alfred Lord Tennyson


“What in your life is calling you, When all the noise is silenced,
The meetings adjourned… The lists laid aside, And the Wild Iris blooms
By itself In the dark forest… What still pulls on your soul?” — Rumi

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