Sunday, 14 December 2014

The Lovers by Rene


 Rene Magritte served in the Belgian Infantry for a short time, and worked at a wallpaper company  before he began to paint. He made his living producing advertising posters in a business he ran with his brother, where he also created forgeries of Picasso, Braque and Chirico. His experience with forgeries also allowed him to create false bank notes during the German occupation of Belgium in World War II, helping him to survive the lean economic times.

Magritte’s mother was a suicidal woman, which led her husband, Magritte’s father, to lock her up in her room. One day, she escaped, and was found down a nearby river dead, having drowned herself. History asserts that 13 year old Magritte was there when they retrieved the body from the river. As she was pulled from the water, her dress covered her face. This became a theme for Magritte’s paintings in the 1920s, portrayals of people with cloth covering their faces.

Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Finally then..

Just for laughs!
...it seems, we have lost something valuable. We have to make up for our neglect and acknowledge it in ways that would have seemed inappropriate before…it is only when pressed to the extreme of experience that this least extreme of relations finds its voice, or when we are forced to consider what really matters, do we begin to consider what friendship is.
Everything is true, Aristotle seems to say, so long as it is never taken for anything more than it is.
Perhaps when genuine good feeling rises above jolly camaraderie or devious influence, and an admiration develops for character over professional achievement, then a virtual spiral of regard can blossom into friendship.  - Andrew Sullivan
In conclusion, the bard wishes good luck to the seeker and asks that he keep safe and flourish in another land where other stories await, hopeful of taking shape.