Fishing by Torchlight in Kai Province — Katsushika Hokusai

Vortograph of Ezra Pound — Alvin Langdon Coburn

Ken Russell’s film Savage Messiah

p6634_p_v7_aa

Detail from the Last Judgment — Hans Memling

tumblr_lwbtxkUnqK1qaoswjo1_1280

Untitled (Reader) — José Sobral de Almada Negreiros

untitled

Slightly Open Clam Shell — Georgia O’Keeffe

The Muscles of the Sky — Rene Magritte

Lady Macbeth Seizing the Daggers — Henry Fuseli

His skin awakens in contact with the air — Victor Hussenot

image

Hey — Duck (Krazy Kat)

image

Silent Interior — Carlos Schwabe

The Straw Manikin — Francisco Goya

The artist must not become a storyteller (Balthus)

…the artist must not become a storyteller. The anecdote should not exist in painting. A picture or subject imposes itself, and it alone knows how profound and vertiginous it is. Nothing happens in a picture, it simply is; it exists by essence or does not exist at all. Baudelaire said a poem is there before it is there. Otherwise, it would be akin to something narrative, something inflected, willed into being by the artist. A picture or poem escapes these contingencies, with terrifying freedom and fiercely self-sufficient violence. In this sense, the artists is a mere link in a chain that began long ago. At Lascaux, for example, and even before Lascaux. There is no hierarchy, and Chardin is not better than Lascaux. All these creative connections belong to the same earthly song, from the ancient source of the world that I know nothing about, but which sends me a few messages by flashes of sun—or starlight. The artist constantly seeks to rediscover the illuminating fire, the hearth where sparks are made.

From Balthus’ memoir Vanished Splendors.

Library — Franz Sedlacek

U_60_978524610017_Franz_Sedlacek_Bibliothek_01

The Pool of Tears — Arthur Rackham

The Bus — Paul Kirchner

Von5E7y - Imgur