Monday, February 28, 2011

Swot Analysis In Salon

I remember: Pierrot Lunaire

Ivan Stepanovich Ivanov-Sakachev - A student in art history
Via Art unknown


I remember the year 1967-68 - we were finally a small group to leave the Hotel , dreamily we completed (the word) a license philosophy, and to change the Buffet we opted for the certificate Esthetics .

At the time this happened in the building Assyrian-Babylonian Art Institute . We immerse himself in a sea of ladies in lace collar that had on us the advantage of knowing the works and that, moreover, we snobs. We watched the parade in sofa slide Chick, Juan Gris, Fernand Leger and Quattrocento. The program this year, Cubism ...

Juan Gris - Fantomas , 1915
National Gallery of Art, Washington
Source: Wikimedia Commons


... the Vanitas ...


Antoine Steenwinkel - Vanitas, self-portrait of the artist , XVIIth century
Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp
Source: dianalehti


... and Schoenberg.



Eine Nacht. Ein Leben TV movie by Oliver Herrmann, 1999
mus. Arnold Schoenberg, Pierrot Lunaire, 1912 - Christine Schäfer, soprano
with lyrics by Albert Giraud, trans. Otto Erich Hartleben
InterContemporain Ensemble, Pierre Boulez
Uploaded by LopezDeLoyola


We listened Bernard Lamblin and Revault Allonnes.

Revault Allonnes Olivier (1923-2009) was for all those who approached a little more than a teacher. Great-grand-son of Ernest Renan, it was this school of aesthetics behind Mikel Dufrenne, who tried to resist as well to the ankylosis Marxism, structuralism than ambient. And he was one of the few teachers of the University to support its students to the point of splitting from May 7, 1968 a personal letter to the rector of Paris: "I expressed with them in the street and continue to do "(1).

Revault By listening to that for the first time at the Sorbonne and its dependencies, we heard the name include:



Theodor Adorno Wiesengrund
Six Studies for String Quartet String , 1920, 3rd movement
Uploaded by Hochdorff


In those days in Paris, the Frankfurt School was not really hype. What was hype, Althusser was among the Maoists (and / or Stalinists), Lukács and Soub among others. Everyone also read a little Henri Lefebvre, and thousands of IS purchased at a specific booth on the Boulevard St Michel. But not Frankfurt.

(Even Walter Benjamin, it was not in French than two thin volumes translated by Maurice Gandillac and Adorno's Philosophy of the new music and Essay on Wagner .)

There were beneficiaries, blocking translation - especially at this time, the Negative Dialectics - I remember Revault cursing again and again against these pitfalls, with unfeigned indignation. But as usual dross legal merely cover the deeper causes of the deafness. Revault was painstaking work, and effective for raising extinguishers (2). is thanks to him that Aesthetic Theory ...




did not wait for ... be translated as long as other books of Adorno: thirty years for Minima Moralia , and the same punishment for the Dialectic of Reason if one takes as a starting point for its first edition, American .

When the lights came back on after the slides, and follows on from Revault Critical Theory, we enjoyed a temporary advantage over the tribe of lace collars: Hegel was for us a ground less slippery than Braque Pieter Claesz . However, we hid our surprise - so we had our previous masters hidden things? We déléguâmes in a Germanist Negative Dialektik ; he returned, shaking his sandals and we confirmed in this pidgin khagneux we stuck to the skin, but it was stocky Sioux - translate: difficult to understand for a lay audience, but with superior intelligence. I also confirm, yet I rub my hand this Boeotian bark rather rough - in fact anyone can get an idea, but here English .

Once or twice a week, we sat in this room, Revault itemized series, we listened Pierrot Lunaire - then we made the acquaintance of this confusing dialectic which, like the scorpion in the circle of fire, prides himself on his own sting, but to be reborn - Scorpion / Phoenix: " more thought on behalf of 'unconditioned, closes with a passion for what may condition the more it is engaged, unconsciously but more fatally, in the world. Even its own impossibility, it must understand the love of possible. Compared to the requirement that it must face the question concerning the reality or unreality of redemption becomes almost indifferent "(3).


At the end of the year, Revault turned to his students and questioned innocently

" So who wants to become unemployed intellectual? "

Like any vessel, Theory critically needed rowers, we were cowards, we did not lift a finger. Also we were in April 68, the first time passed very quickly, then more slowly. And I never crossed Revault in his books, but I would be eternally grateful for this scorpion, and the phoenix.








can easily find his thesis of 1973, recently reissued, is incredible as a book of almost forty years old has little - if any passages detonate, it is simply that the time was flabby around this thought. Who else but Revault could try to transcribe the songs of nightingales in scoring Hornbostel-Souriau, just to verify that Hymns of sparrows at dawn or Exotic Birds, Messiaen, were not realistic? There is also an essay in the book light on Picabia analysis of Judgement Bonnard (4) which reads like a detective story, and the first chapter published in France seriously on rebetiko ...



Το μινόρε της αυγής / The song of the dawn (Spyros Peristeri / Minos Matsas), 1947
Song: Chatzichristos Apostolos Markos Vamvakaris, Yiannis Stamoulis
Bouzouki: Kostas Kaplanis
Up online panagos274


Nowadays how many theses state (sorry, HDR ...) to end in parallel between Lenin and Jerry Rubin (with the advantage of the latter)? And this conclusion is often cited, but I quote: "... narrowing crescent area created in the lives of men can only achieve the conditions for creativity still unknown. The determination is ultimately always surrender challenged by the creation, and especially since it determines dramatically closer. (...) All the necessities of art, material, technical, traditional, social, ideological, never resulted in another anything but the need to destroy them. These are the oppressions generate bursts, and these are possible only because of oppression, who want or think they are total, never are. Simply, the more they seek to bear on the whole, the more they are committed to being totally rejected. (...) The great law of artistic creation is that its power is proportional to the systems that want to stifle it. More extending the rules, and they control over the expanding field where new art is going to overflow, and increasing the force that will break. It is likely that this law is not limited to aesthetic activity, nor is it limited Today, the field of art. In a society that tends to abolish all creation, abolition of the company becomes the only possible creation "(5).


Vadim Zakharov - Adorno Denkmal / monument Adorno , 2003
Theodor W. Adorno-Platz, Frankfurt am Main
On the desktop of the philosopher, the metronome and the copy of the Negative Dialectics .
Source: Wikimedia Commons





(1) Open Letter to the Rector newspaper Combat , May 10, 1968. In the same letter Revault, who was still single assistant and who also supported the Algerian activists during the liberation war, was clearly the approximation about the behavior of the Parisian police who had "done hand for eight years against Algerians. "

(2) He was not alone, there were also Jean-Michel Palmier , Jean-Marie Vincent and Miguel Abensour .

(3) TW Adorno, Minima moralia, reflections on life mutilated, fragment 153, trans. Eliane Kaufholz, Payot ed. 1983.

(4) Dalloz, 1953, pp. 405-408. The decision of 17 January 1953, denied to the painter's freedom to decide for itself what in its production fell within the finished work, as opposed to blanks. The judges confided this distribution to experts. The issue was the dissolution of the joint estate of his deceased wife and Bonnard: blanks remained owned by the painter, which was not the case of works completed. This famous ruling the problem of defining the finished work, especially in contemporary art.

(5) Olivier Revault of Allon, Artistic creation and the promises of freedom , Klincksieck ed. 1973, repr. 2007, pp. 290-291.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Floor Plan In An Aluminum Boat

Sky Island













Jean Dubuffet - Tower Figures, 1967-1988



Ile St Germain, 27/02/11.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Whats A 1996 Dutchmen Duck Worth

Transit: A day will come Angrand

Charles Angrand - Line West has its output Paris, 1886
Source: Gandalf's gallery - CC


About Charles Angrand, see also above .

Friday, February 25, 2011

Fluorinse Et Les Ingrédients



Buonarroti Michelangelo - Libyan Sibylle The , Sistine Chapel, 1508-1512
Source: Wikimedia Commons



The Libyan Sibyl is one of the five prophets painted by Michelangelo on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Each of them holds a book or a scroll, reference to both Sibylline books of antiquity, to Oracles cryptic built from the second century, often confused with the former, and the book opens in Chapter 20 of the Apocalypse:

" καὶ βιβλία ἠνοίχθησαν καὶ ἄλλο βιβλίον ἠνοίχθη ὅ ἐστιν τῆς ζωῆς, καὶ ἐκρίθησαν οἱ νεκροὶ ἐκ τῶν γεγραμμένων ἐν τοῖς βιβλίοις κατὰ τὰ ἔργα αὐτῶν - books were opened. And another book was opened, which is the book of life. And the dead were judged according to their works, from what was written in the books. ( Apocalypse 20:12, trans. NIV).

Renaissance italian Sibyls following a tradition that combines elements of Greek and Latin, Hebrew and Christian and was often associated with the theme of the Annunciation - you can see an example in the part ( Sacra rappresentazione ) Feo Belcari, rappresentazione di Nostra Donna dell'Annunciazione dedicated to Pierre 1er de Medici said The Gouty , represented in 1471 and can be read here , but in English . In this tradition it is the Libyan Sibyl who utters the famous prophecy: "A day will come (1) where darkness be dispelled ... "

For tyrants also, their day will come - for some it is even close enough.



(1) Incidentally, the words" one day come "in the mouth of a Sibyl should evoke something for readers of Julio Cortazar.





Fans Sixtine can take a look at Kerdonis - it's beautiful. And, for a comment, at Jacques Darriulat , always informative.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Funbrain Math Arcade Poptropica

The art of reading: Jie Ma / Miguel Brieva

Miguel Brieva - addition libros Frozen / Freeze your books



Jie Ma - Eclipse , 2010
(3ds max, Photoshop, Vray)

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Burgundy Candy Table At Wedding Reception

I wonder how it feels




Nina Simone - I wish I knew how It Would Feel To Be Free
(words and music: Billy Taylor & Dick Dallas)
Montreux, 1972
Uploaded by tungbgs


I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free
I wish I could break All the chains holding me
I wish I could say all the things that I should say
say 'em loud, say 'em clear
for the whole round world to hear.

I wish I could share all the love that's in my heart
remove all the bars that keep us apart
I wish you could know what it means to be me
Then you'd see and agree
that every man should be free.

I wish I could give all I'm longing to give
I wish I could live like I'm longing to live
I wish that I could do all the things that I can do
though I'm way overdue I'd be starting anew.

Well I wish I could be like a bird in the sky
how sweet it would be if I found I could fly
Oh I'd soar to the sun and look down at the sea


and I'd sing cos I'd Know That
I'd know how it feel to be free


Manifestation of the Libyan community Dublin 19/02/11
Photo: Tom Szustek - CC

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

What Episode Did Goku And Chichi

silence, even in the carp, does acceptance is not necessarily



Despite appearances ...




... which are those of the winter ...




... in fact ...



Bill Evans Trio - My Foolish Heart (Victor Young / Ned Washington)
Bill Evans (p) Chuck Israel (b) Larry Bunker (d)
posted by jane8948


... as some have already noticed, next to cats ...




... it soon




... which is already being felt, whispering ...




... flyer ...




white magic ... its slow ...




... but already stressed, stubborn ...




... like carp ...




... koi ...




... who goes and then returns.




It already feels he is not going to let ...




... and it spreads its flags ...




... as we would call ...




... to rebellion.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Pregant With A Hard Cervix

The art of the brawl: an orgy, nine Marilyn, one hundred pounds of sunflower seeds in china and one thousand seven hundred and fifty Nurses




Orgy Of The Rich , group action Artsagainstcuts
sale Sotheby's London, 15/02/11
Uploaded by orgyoftherich


Shares of Artsagainstcuts part mobilizations underway in the United Kingdom against cuts in public spending - so student demonstrations last December. On Feb. 15 Sotheby's put on auction, among other things, (nth) acrylic silkscreen by Andy Warhol ( Nine Multicolored Marilyn , £ 3.2 million) and one hundred pounds ...


Ai Weiwei - Kui-Hua-Zi/Graines sunflower , 2010



... of sunflower seed painted porcelain, specialty of the artist Chinese Ai Weiwei, £ 349,250.

Total proceeds from the Sotheby's sale was 44 million pounds including fees. According Artsagainscuts this represents a year on salaries of 1389 teachers in early career from 1750 qualified nurses, or the budget of 150 libraries.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Old Adobe Premiere Where Can I Get It?

The art of breakfast: Jia Zhang Ke



Jia Zhang Ke - Black Breakfast ( Stories on Human Rights, 2008)

Friday, February 18, 2011

Regristration Card Template

Nellie and Wisconsin

Larry Welo - Fertile Ridge , etching polychrome three plates
Source



Kronos Quartet & Ron Carter - Crepuscule With Nellie (Thelonious Monk)
( Monk Suite , 1985)
Uploaded by MusicForYourFunk



Larry Welo lives and working at Blue Mounds, Wisconsin - " it is a place that glaciers have left behind, giving a beautiful landscape of hills unequal. "A small number of prints, but superb here. Also, see his website .




And during that time ...

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Low Hard Cervix Before Af

The art of window: NC Wyeth


NC Wyeth - Thumbelina ( Anthology of Children's Literature , Houghton Mifflin & Co., 1940)
Via Golden Age Comic Book Stories


The drawing shows an Andersen tale, Tommelise , English and Thumbelina Thumbelina in French.

" A woman was very anxious to have a baby, but not knowing how to get there, she went to an old witch and said," I wish I had a small child, tell me what it must be for that.
- This is not very difficult, "replied the witch; here a grain of barley that is not the kind that grows in the fields of peasant or eat the chickens. Put it in a flowerpot, and you'll see.
- Thank you, "said the woman, giving sixpence to the witch. Then she went home and planted the barley grain.
Soon she lives out of the ground a large beautiful flower like a tulip, but still in bud.
"What a pretty flower! "Said the woman, kissing on the red and yellow leaves, and at the same time the flower opened with a bang. We now saw that it was a real tulip, but in the interior on green background, sat a little girl, slim and charming, an inch high at most. Also was called Thumbelina.
She was cradled a well polished walnut shell; mattress of violet leaves, and cover for a rose leaf. She slept during the night but the day she was playing on the table, where the woman placed a plate full of water surrounded by a garland of flowers. In this dish was swimming great tulip leaf on which Thumbelina could sit and wander from one side to another, with two white horse-hair who acted as his oars. It thus offered a pretty sight, and then she could sing in a voice so sweet and melodious, they had never heard the like.
One night while she slept, an ugly toad entered the room through a broken window ...
"
Hans Christian Andersen - Thumbelina , Tales, trans. David Soldi

... more here.

Anyone Treated For Mycoplasma Get Pregnant

Egypt: A French professor blamed



La famille de l'enseignant, sa femme et ses deux enfants, vivent en Egypte.
The family of the teacher, his wife and two children live in Egypt. © SCREEN CAPTURE

The teacher was reprimanded for wearing a sign "break-toi pauvre con" Tahrir Square.
Like thousands of Egyptians, he marched Tahrir Square in Cairo to demand the departure of Hosni Mubarak, February 1. This French, teacher in a school in the Egyptian capital, was severely punished by the French state for wearing that day a sign mentioning the now famous "broken-toi pauvre con". A version of "Get out Mubarak!" Chanted the protesters, a variant of "Get out Ben!" Tunisian demonstrators.
Everything happened very quickly, "says the magazine Telerama , who unveiled the information Wednesday. It is consulting with pictures taken by one of its photographers rushed to the scene that the Quai d'Orsay has got wind of the presence of the banner. The Embassy of France in Cairo decided to convene on February 4. The professor, who is married to an Egyptian father of two children, was returned the next day in Paris.

Repatriated next day

Threatened with demotion, he has finally "inherited" as a reprimand. The Quai d'Orsay explained that he could return to Egypt next summer just after his retirement.
However, it is possible, implies Telerama, the Foreign Ministry has promised the teacher with a faster return home if he agreed to conceal the affair. For now anyway, the professor refused to answer journalists. According
information BFM TV, the teacher should be reinstated in the fall.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Stouffers Outlet Store Hours

The man in the street




is a street, Near the cats ...




That was the old plate ...






... the news is more explicit. But philosopher and sociologist, is not it a bit pale for author of Reflections on Violence and Materials for a theory of the proletariat ?

Imagine a other plate, more specifically in its praise :






... and those to whom such a tribute would seem inopportune, irrelevant or outdated, encourage them to read this passage from the author:


" should not hope that the revolutionary movement can never follow a proper direction determined in advance, it can be led learned in a plane as the conquest of a country, it can be studied scientifically, other than in his present. While it is unpredictable. So should we not, as has so often done the old theorists of socialism, rebelling against the facts that appear to be likely to distance the day of victory.

Expect to meet a lot of deviations that seem question everything and there will be times where you lose all believe what had been regarded as definitively acquired; trade unionism may seem a triumph even some moments. Precisely because of this character the new revolutionary movement that is important not to give other formulas that mythical formulas: the discouragement may result from the disillusionment produced by the disproportion between the actual and expected state, experience shows us that many excellent Socialists were thus led to abandon their party.

When discouragement comes to surprise us, let us remember the Church's history, amazing stories, which baffled all the arguments of politicians, scholars and philosophers, one might think that sometimes led by a genius ironist that would appeal to accumulate the absurd in which institutional development was crossing accidents per mile. Many times the more thoughtful people have said that the disappearance was only a matter of a few years and yet the apparent agonies were followed by rejuvenation.

apologists of Catholicism were so struck by the inconsistencies in this story have claimed that they could not explain without involving the mysterious designs of Providence. I see things in a more simple: I see that the Church fled despite the mistakes of the leaders, thanks to the spontaneous organization; at each rejuvenation have formed new religious orders who have supported the edifice in ruins, and even have the notes. This role of monks is not unlike that of trade unions saving revolutionary socialism, the deviations towards trade unionism, which are still formidable threat to socialism, recall these monastic relaxation of rules that eventually melt down the separation the founders had wanted to establish between their followers and the world.

The phenomenal experience that gives us the history of the church is well calculated to encourage those who founded great hopes on trade unionism revolutionary and advising workers not to seek any political alliance cleverly with the bourgeois parties - because the Church has more benefits from the efforts that tended to separate it from the world of alliances between the popes and princes.
"


Georges Sorel - Decomposition of Marxism (1908)