In the Dust Cloud — Jacek Malczewski

Une Lecture — Pierre-Paul Prud’hon

Boy Meets Girl — Leos Carax (Full Film)

An Excerpt From Karl Ove Knausgaard’s My Struggle II: A Man in Love

She fell into a pit that autumn. And she reached out for me. I didn’t understand what was happening. But it was so claustrophobic that I turned away from her, tried to maintain a distance, which she tried to close.

I went to Venice, wrote in a flat my publishing house had at its disposal, Linda was supposed to follow and stay for just under a week, then I would work for a few more days and return. She was so black, she was so heavy, kept saying I didn’t love her, I didn’t really love her, I didn’t want her, I didn’t really want her, this wasn’t working, it would never work, I didn’t want it to, I didn’t want her.

“But I do!” I said as we walked in the autumn chill in Murano with eyes hidden behind sunglasses. However, when she said I didn’t really love her, I didn’t really want to be with her, I wanted to be alone all the time, on my own, it became a little truer.

Where did her despair come from?

Had I brought it with me?

Was I cold?

Did I only think of myself?

I no longer knew what it would be like when my working day was over and I went to her place. Would she be happy, would it be a nice evening? Would she be angry about something, if for example we no longer made love every night, and so I didn’t love her as much as before? Would we sit in bed watching TV? Go for a walk to Långholmen? And once there, would I be devoured by her demands to have all of me, making me keep her at a distance and have thoughts shooting to and for in my brain that this had to come to an end, it wasn’t working, thus rendering any conversation or attempts to get closer impossible, which of course she noticed and took as proof of her main thesis, that I didn’t want her?

Continue reading “An Excerpt From Karl Ove Knausgaard’s My Struggle II: A Man in Love”

Garbage — Max Ginsburg

Landscape — Qi Zhijia

Milton When a Boy Instructed by His Mother — Henry Fuseli

Blue Night — Edward Hopper

PLEASE HELP WHAT HORROR IS THIS

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Seriously:

What horror is this?

Via frequent commenter Will C., a nightmare image (he linked it, and rightly so, to some other horror).

Posted in Art

St. Augustine Reading — Marco Zoppo

Night Hauling — Andrew Wyeth

The London Jungle Book (Book Acquired, 2.28.2014)

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Bhajju Shyam’s The London Jungle Book arrived a few days ago: Beautiful stuff. Full review to come, but blurb for now:

Hailed as a book that reverses the anthropological gaze, ‘The London Jungle Book’ is the personal story of Indian tribal artist Bhajju Shyam’s first encounter with a western city. Revised & fully updated to mark the 10th anniversary of that momentous journey, Bhajju’s rich art and poignant reflections are as relevant today as they ever were.

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“Modern Love” (From Carax’s Mauvais Sang)

Impressive View of the Go River –Ikeno Taiga

Ash Wednesday — Carl Spitzweg

Portrait of Maffeo Barberini — Caravaggio

The Hands — Edvard Munch