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thursday art walk

The Return of Marcus Sextus

by Pierre-Narcisse Guerin

The Return of Marcus Sextus

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June 18, 2009   2 Comments

thursday art walk

A day late – I blame the holiday.

This one is “Cathedral in Winter” by Ernst Ferdinand Oehme

winter

May 29, 2009   1 Comment

thursday art walk

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The Captivity is as Barbarous as the Crime

by Fransisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes

May 21, 2009   Comments Off

an ocean full of paper boats

“I may as well admit that I have been more influenced (as a person) by my childhood readings of Tolkien and Lewis than I have been by any philosophers I read in college and grad school. The events and characters in Narnia and Middle Earth shaped my ideals, my dreams, my goals. Kant just annoyed me.”  N.D. Wilson

treebeard_alsLike Wilson, I find myself far more influenced by the writings of Tolkien and other fantasists and fiction writers – C.S. Lewis, Lloyd Alexander, Madeleine L’Engle, etc. – than by the work of philosophers, theologians, and political theorists.  I read The Lord of the Rings when I was nine (the first time) and it was a pivotal, life-changing event.  I had already plowed through Lewis by first grade, and the Prydain novels by second or third.  Other fantasies and legends filled my young mind, shaped my vision of the world and other worlds.  Cooper’s The Dark is Rising sequence; numerous Arthurian legends and re-tellings; L’Engle’s A Wrinkle in Time and its sequels; and countless other tales of magic and mystery and heroism.  Even Willow has its place in my heart – long before he had ambitions for public office, Val Kilmer was simply Mad Martigan to me.

And yes, I devoured these and other works of fiction when I could have been reading Kant or Plato or Hayek.  Even as I grew older.  While Mark Twain could keep me up into the little hours, Karl Marx would send me straight to sleep.   I read George R.R. Martin’s Song of Fire and Ice (incomplete but amazing) series when I could have been reading Augustine.  (More on Martin later…)  I read Susanna Clarke’s extraordinary Jonathan Strange & Mr Norell when I could have been reading Keynes or Friedman.    I’m reading the third installment of Gregory Maguire’s Wicked trilogy – A Lion Among Men – now, when I should be soaking myself in political science…. [Read more →]

May 15, 2009   10 Comments

thursday art walk

The 2000 Yard Stare

2000yardstare-lg

by Tom Lea

May 14, 2009   Comments Off

Thursday Art Walk

seven-spirits-of-god-william-blake

Seven Spirits of God, by William Blake

__________________________________________

and, from The Everlasting Gospel

The vision of Christ that thou dost see
Is my vision’s greatest enemy.
Thine has a great hook nose like thine;
Mine has a snub nose like to mine.
Thine is the Friend of all Mankind;
Mine speaks in parables to the blind.
Thine loves the same world that mine hates;
Thy heaven doors are my hell gates.
Socrates taught what Meletus
Loath’d as a nation’s bitterest curse,
And Caiaphas was in his own mind
A benefactor to mankind.
Both read the Bible day and night,
But thou read’st black where I read white.

April 30, 2009   Comments Off

quote of the day

“It’s not fair for me just to single out the lyrics, because I also know I’m listening to Christian radio immediately because of the shimmery keyboards and amped-up major-key guitar lines — there’s a sound there that Christian pop musicians have staked out as their own, and I get why it sounds “Christian” to them, but it rings about as true to me as a heaven actually full of harp-strumming cherubs. Mainstream pop may suck, but at least it sucks in so many different ways.” ~League commenter Josh Wimmer

March 31, 2009   1 Comment

Thursday Art Walk

The Monkey Painter

by Alexandre Gabriel Decamps

monkey

March 26, 2009   Comments Off

thursday art walk

The Dream of St. Joseph

by Georges de la Tour

stjoseph

March 19, 2009   Comments Off

Thursday Art Walk

14menzel

. Studio Wall .

by Adolph von Menzel – 1872

March 5, 2009   2 Comments

Thursday Art Walk

The Wheel of Fortune

wheel

by Edward Burne-Jones

February 26, 2009   Comments Off

Too cool…



Khoda from Reza Dolatabadi on Vimeo.

via Andrew:

6,000 separate paintings … and one five minute animated video. It took a student artist two years to paint them all and produce this. Pause the movie at any moment and you have an individual work of art.

I’m not a patient enough person to do this, even if I could paint to save my life.  That’s why I blog.

February 19, 2009   Comments Off