Paradise — Lucas Cranach the Elder

David Byrne/Brian Eno Interview

Guy Debord on “Consumable Pseudocyclical Time”

 

Consumable pseudocyclical time is spectacular time, both in the narrow sense as time spent consuming images and in the broader sense as image of the consumption of time. The time spent consuming images (images which in turn serve to publicize all the other commodities) is both the particular terrain where the spectacle’s mechanisms are most fully implemented and the general goal that those mechanisms present, the focus and epitome of all particular consumptions. Thus, the time that modern society is constantly seeking to “save” by increasing transportation speeds or using packaged soups ends up being spent by the average American in watching television three to six hours a day. As for the social image of the consumption of time, it is exclusively dominated by leisure time and vacations — moments portrayed, like all spectacular commodities, at a distance and as desirable by definition. These commodified moments are explicitly presented as moments of real life whose cyclical return we are supposed to look forward to. But all that is really happening is that the spectacle is displaying and reproducing itself at a higher level of intensity. What is presented as true life turns out to be merely a more truly spectacular life.

Guy Debord, section 153 of The Society of the Spectacle

 

Reading — Ivan Kramskoi

Hunter S. Thompson Interviews Keith Richards (Video, 1993)

List with No Name #5

  1. Black Beauty
  2. Flicka
  3. Strawberry/Fledge
  4. Gunpowder
  5. Silver
  6. Hwin
  7. Banner
  8. Shadowfax
  9. Alfonso
  10. Fru-Fru
  11. Atrax
  12. Boxer
  13. Mollie
  14. Clover
  15. Stranger

Glimpse of a Perfect Lover — Joao Figueiredo

“List of What Porn Is (and Isn’t)” — William T. Vollmann

Woman Reading — Edouard Manet

Portrait of George Sand — Eugene Delacroix

Werner Herzog Talks About John Waters: “He’s the Boldest of the Bold of Filmmakers”

The Reading — Edouard Manet

Storm — Yves Tanguy

Moby-Dick Illustration — Bill Sienkiewicz

“He Burned Away Like a Comet” — Werner Herzog on Klaus Kinski

The Missal — John William Waterhouse

Black Orpheus (Full Film)