Philosophy of education (Life in Hell)

philosophy of education

Don Quixote — Charles Seliger

Poster for Exhibition of Art Work by Henry Miller — Tadanori Yokoo

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Ida Reading a Letter — Vilhelm Hammershoi

Night — Ferdinand Hodler

“In death we have both learned the propensity of man to define the indefinable” (Harry Clarke)

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Courtesan Reading — Kikugawa Eizan

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Rabbit, Upper-Right Corner (Bosch)

The Gospel According to St. Matthew — Pier Paolo Pasolini (Full Film)

Golgotha — Edvard Munch

Five Angora Rabbits — Theo van Hoytema

Käthe Kollwitz kept painting poor people (Kollwitz/Vollmann)

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She worked without reference to the fiery proto-Cubism of those years, the representational, classical past as dead as the Second Reich itself, dead, dead!—as dead as the Tsarist officers who’d now sunk beneath their own weedy mucky parade grounds so that the Party of Lenin and Stalin could march across their moldering faces. Since 1912 she had kept a room on Siegmund-shof for her plastic arts. That was where she would create the mourning woman out of stone. Mostly she carved, etched, and painted in that flat on Weissenbürgerstrasse. Those were the years when the figures in other people’s paintings began to go ever flatter, more garish, more distorted, the colors hurtful to her although she liked some of the galloping calligraphic riders in Kandinsky. Grosz’s desperately angry caricatures, the X-ray bitterness of Otto Dix, not to mention abstract constructivism; she didn’t swim with that tide. Käthe Kollwitz kept painting poor people, starving people (white figures in dark fields, dark chalk on brown Ingres paper), raped women, mothers with dying children, mothers with dead children. In the end she depicted mainly herself, her stricken, simian face thinking and grieving. She too was a mother with a dead child.

From William Vollmann’s Europe Central.

How to Spell the Alphabet — Tauba Auerbach

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Reading Man (Self-Portrait) — Forrest Bess

Naked Girl with Egg — Lucian Freud

The Annunciation — Henry Ossawa Tanner

Violin Player — Gerrit Dou