Film Poster for The Big Lebowski — Tyler Stout

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Sympathy — Remedios Varo

Missed Connection — Adrian Tomine

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Edvard Munch — Peter Watkins (Full Film)

Landscape at Cagnes — Chaim Soutine

“On the Comparative Place of Interest and Beauty in Works of Art” — Arthur Schopenhauer

“On the Comparative Place of Interest and Beauty in Works of Art”

by

Arthur Schopenhauer

In the productions of poetic genius, especially of the epic and dramatic kind, there is, apart from Beauty, another quality which is attractive: I mean Interest.

The beauty of a work of art consists in the fact that it holds up a clear mirror to certain ideas inherent in the world in general; the beauty of a work of poetic art in particular is that it renders the ideas inherent in mankind, and thereby leads it to a knowledge of these ideas. The means which poetry uses for this end are the exhibition of significant characters and the invention of circumstances which will bring about significant situations, giving occasion to the characters to unfold their peculiarities and show what is in them; so that by some such representation a clearer and fuller knowledge of the many-sided idea of humanity may be attained. Beauty, however, in its general aspect, is the inseparable characteristic of the idea when it has become known. In other words, everything is beautiful in which an idea is revealed; for to be beautiful means no more than clearly to express an idea.

Thus we perceive that beauty is always an affair of knowledge, and that it appeals to the knowing subject, and not to the will; nay, it is a fact that the apprehension of beauty on the part of the subject involves a complete suppression of the will. Continue reading ““On the Comparative Place of Interest and Beauty in Works of Art” — Arthur Schopenhauer”

Breathing Space — Driss Ouadahi

Le Touquet — Henry Ossawa Tanner

Encapsulated Man — Chris Scarborough

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Selected Reading (Core of Conviction) — Eric Yahnker

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Umberto Eco — Rudcef

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Hasta su Abuelo — Mircea Suciu

Letter from the Old Country — David Bekker

Maurice Sendak’s Erotic Illustrations for Herman Melville’s Pierre (Book Acquired, 5.09.2014)

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Pierre, Herman Melville’s follow up to Moby-Dick, was, without a doubt, the most challenging, perplexing, befuddling book I read in school. I still don’t get it.

Still, I love Melville, and I love Maurice Sendak, so when I saw this unused copy of the Kraken addition for half-cover price at my favorite local used bookshop, I couldn’t resist.

Sendak’s bawdy illustrations recall William Blake to me—great stuff—although I’ll probably read Moby-Dick or The Confidence Man again before I make time for Pierre.

Read more about this edition of Pierre here.

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20140520-162630-59190560.jpg Continue reading “Maurice Sendak’s Erotic Illustrations for Herman Melville’s Pierre (Book Acquired, 5.09.2014)”

Aeneas and the Sibyl in the Underworld — Jan Brueghel the Elder