Maverick Mist

Intertwined passions ~

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Bear

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 27, 2018
Posted in: Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: #internationalpolarbearday, Aria Rozo, Bear, Mono, polar bear, Pure As Snow.

Bear

by Aria Rozo

You came through rain
Wet, shivering
Strength you feign

I embraced you,
From where have you fled?
Come rest next to the warm fire
Our shed

The months pass, trees shake off golden dust
You grew just like the sun
Peeking over the horizon, to it we run

Playing in that forest our silent home
Away from the worries of a city
In solitude, not alone

Words said never
Rain fell, my cheeks wetter
Yet you, oh so gentle
Cheered me, my heart settle

Soon our paths diverge, time grows low
To separate worlds we must go

Separate we are, though not alone
We set out to claim our thrones

Lament not we will meet again
If not here, then in our Ascent

For this is only a temporary parting
Our bond is much more than our holding

Just as this White rain, the world, covers
Entirely so do our thoughts
Envelop the other

❄

Family Portrait in a Landscape

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 26, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: 1600's, Family Portrait in a Landscape, Flemish, Gonzales Coques, Martin Wegelius, portraiture, Rondo quasi Fantasia.


Family Portrait in a Landscape
Gonzales Coques
Flemish  (1614–1684)

Gonzales Coques developed a portrait style that combined the intimacy of a small-scale painting with the grandeur of court portraiture. Here, this family displays their wealth by posing in a garden setting decorated with ornamental features taken from the artist’s repertoire of stock accessories. The black groom leading a horse does not necessarily represent an actual person, but would have been perceived at the time as an “exotic” status symbol. Artists regularly inserted African youths into portraits even when their sitters did not retain black servants in their households.

🎹

Saint Jerome

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 25, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: 1600's, anachronism, angels, Dutch, Gregorian, Hendrick Bloemaert, Oil on canvas, Saint Jerome, study.


Saint Jerome
Oil on canvas (1630)

Hendrick Bloemaert
Dutch (1601-1672)

Saint Jerome was born in 347 and died in 420. Jerome was known for translating most of the Bible into Latin and his teachings on Christian moral life.  An interesting anachronism in this is Bloemaert painting Jerome with glasses which were not invented until around 1290 in Italy.  It most likely was done on purpose to give a studious appearance.

🔺

Water Lillies

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 24, 2018
Posted in: Art, Flowers, Music, Nature, Photography. Tagged: Arabesque No.1, Claude Debussy, Claude Monet, French, Impressionism, Water Lillies.

Water Lilies
(about 1915–1926)
Claude Monet
French, 1840–1926

'In 1893, Claude Monet bought land adjacent to his property in Giverny, dug a pond, and turned it into a Japanese-inspired water garden. This contemplative environment served as inspiration for a series of paintings that occupied Monet’s artistic production from 1901 until his death in 1926. Typical of his other paintings dedicated to the water lily pond, the subject here is not so much the flowers but the dream-like effects produced by light reflecting off this liquid world.

Water Lilies was originally created as the right-hand segment of a triptych composed of three identically sized panels. Monet conceived it as part of a larger decorative installation intended to produce a soothing, meditative experience for its viewers.’

🎨

Many Scientists Convert to Islam

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 23, 2018
Posted in: Inspiration, Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: Above and Beyond, Many Scientists Convert to Islam, muslim, Nomi Stone, On a Good Day, Ramadan, Religion, Robin Bates, Søren Kierkegaard, train.

Many Scientists Convert to Islam
by Nomi Stone

🔸

Conversations with a Muslim friend

So, if you don’t believe in full it means you don’t
believe. Words tumble onto the rock. A book
happens.

Okay then tell me about heaven’s beautiful
food and women. Who are these women?

My friend says, “This life is like a twenty-minute train ride.”
He says, “I live inside my
faith more fully every day.”

I am standing on soaked pavement outside
that majestic hotel in the center of town. Just before
dark, the birds come in a furious swoop like
hornets, stinging the sky to let in

what is on the other side.

         

Then the next life is equally
about the body, denied in the first?

“Do you know the Prophet knew the exact number of bones in the human
body? And why do you ask so many questions? You ask
more questions than you take in breaths of air.”

The birds beat. They crumple in
rivers of sky. At the same time every day. Kierkegaard said that

every instant a man in despair is contracting it. My friend is not
in despair; I am not in despair.

         

Kierkegaard says there are three kinds of despair: despair
at not being conscious of having a self, despair at not being
willing to be oneself, and despair at willingness to be

oneself. Listen, the train. Why complain about
the seat, the air conditioner? Just do
your best until you arrive.

During Ramadan, I fasted a week. I went to the mosque.

My friend’s uncle said:
“So you are becoming Muslim?” I said: “No.” He said: “Shame
on you.”

In the cold November current, there is a whirring of wings. Sometimes
they cloud into petals, sometimes they don’t.

       

When the forehead presses to the earth, the blood moves
down. In the joining, the self lightens. You must count the three perfect
joints of each finger to keep time. Make no mistake, you leave the body only

through the body. The train ride. This quiet voice that is borrowed or my own.

🔸

WPC: A Face in the Crowd

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 22, 2018
Posted in: Art, Photography, Weekly Photo Challenge. Tagged: A Face in the Crowd, DPchallenge, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Pablo Picasso, postaday, Roberta Flack, The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face, Weekly Photo Challenge.

“Who sees the human face correctly: the photographer, the mirror, or the painter?” ― Pablo Picasso

Weekly Photo Challenge: A Face in the Crowd

Landscape

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 21, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Nature, Photography. Tagged: French, Landscape, Paul Gauguin, Shawn Phillips.

Landscape (1894)
Paul Gauguin
French, 1848–1903

In this vibrantly colored landscape of a French peasant out with his dog, Paul Gauguin employed the tropical palette he developed while living in Tahiti from 1891 to 1893. Typical of his later production, Gauguin painted on a burlap-like fabric whose coarse and uneven texture was a deliberate component of the picture’s overall appearance. Gauguin intended the surface to convey the character of ancient wall murals. Commercially unsuccessful in Paris, Gauguin returned to Polynesia in 1895 and remained there the rest of his life.  

🍃

Still Life with Cat and Fish

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 20, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: Al Stewart, French, Jean-Baptiste-Simeon Chardin, memory, still life painting, Still Life with Cat and Fish, Year of the Cat.


Still Life with Cat and Fish
Jean-Baptiste-Simeon Chardin 
(French, 1699 – 1779)

“On a brown stone ledge in lower foreground are placed an overturned shallow pottery bowl with a large piece of cut fish lying on top; at left, a calico cat placing its front left paw on the fish; at right, two scallions, three mussels, and a piece of fruit; suspended above the ledge, right of center, hang two hake; all are set against a brown wall.”  🐈

"The French painter Jean-Baptiste-Simeon Chardin is considered one of the finest exponents of still life painting in the history of art. Largely self-taught and influenced in particular by a down-to-earth realism, he produced highly polished small-scale works of still life as well as numerous examples of genre painting evoking a sober, simplistic harmony. Although both his background and his subjects were humble, he became one of the most important and influential contributors to French painting of the 18th century, raising still lifes and domestic scenes to a new level of importance."

Les Demoiselles d’Avignon

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 19, 2018
Posted in: Art, Music, Photography. Tagged: African masks, cubism, Iberian sculpture, Leonard Cohen, Pablo Picasso, Reproduction of Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, Sisters of Mercy.


Reproduction of
Les Demoiselles d’Avignon

Pablo Picasso
Spanish (1881-1973)

Considered one of the most famous works of art from the 20th century.  Picasso’s Les Demoiselles d’Avignon marks a radical break from traditional European painting.  Within a compressed space, five nude women appear to project from the picture’s surface.  Their bodies are composed of flat, fractured planes, while their faces are inspired by Iberian sculpture and African masks.  This work signals a revolution in Picasso’s style and established him as the leader of the Parisian avant-garde.  Les Demoiselles dAvignon was painted in France and completed in the summer of 1907. A seminal work in the development of Cubism, Picassos eye-catching depiction of five prostitutes in a brothel revolutionized the art world. ◽️

A Ballad of Dreamland

Posted by Maverick ~ on February 18, 2018
Posted in: Flowers, Music, Nature, Photography, Poetry. Tagged: A Ballad of Dreamland, Algernon Charles Swinburne, dream, love, roses, secret bird, The Promise, Tracy Chapman.

A Ballad of Dreamland
Algernon Charles Swinburne

I hid my heart in a nest of roses,
   Out of the sun’s way, hidden apart;
In a softer bed than the soft white snow’s is,
   Under the roses I hid my heart.
   Why would it sleep not? why should it start,
When never a leaf of the rose-tree stirred?
   What made sleep flutter his wings and part?
Only the song of a secret bird.

Lie still, I said, for the wind’s wing closes,
   And mild leaves muffle the keen sun’s dart;
Life still, for the wind of the warm sea dozes,
   And the wind is unquieter yet than thou art.
   Does a thought in thee still as a thorn’s wound smart?
Does the fang still fret thee of hope deferred?
What bids the lids of thy sleep dispart?
Only the song of a secret bird.

The green land’s name that a charm encloses,
   It never was writ in the traveller’s chart,
And sweet as the fruit on its tree that grows is,
   It never was sold in the merchant’s mart.
   The swallows of dreams through its dim fields dart,
And sleep’s are the tunes in its tree tops heard;
   No hound’s note wakens the wildwood hart,
Only the song of a secret bird.

ENVOI

In the world of dreams I have chosen my part,
   To sleep for a season and hear no word
Of true love’s truth or of light love’s art,
   Only the song of a secret bird.

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