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- Hello Everyone!!!In General DiscussionJanuary 26, 2023Took me several attempts to post and attach art to some of my poems. Artskeepers is great! Cheers, Lorene Rogers00
- Why artists will save the planetIn General DiscussionAugust 31, 2023I probably don't follow science as closely as I should, nor politics or philosophy. However, on a common plane, gadgets in the old Dick Tracy comic strip have become reality, as well as many scientists and philosophers, getting their "inspiration", at least some of it, from science fiction... pulp fiction in earlier decades (my era), and later, Star Trek and the shows it inspired or opened the door for. Now, if we can just nail that "universal peace" thing down...00
- Name the Painting and Year it was CompletedIn What is this?·July 18, 2022The painting was commissioned by Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de’Medici, a cousin of Lorenzo the Magnificent. The theme was probably suggested by the humanist Poliziano. It depicts Venus born from the sea foam, blown by the west wind, Zephyr, and the nymph, Chloris, towards one of the Horai, who prepares to dress her with a flowered mantle. The theme, which can be traced back to Homer and to Ovid’s Metamophoses, was also celebrated by the great humanist Agnolo Poliziano in the poetic verses of his Stanze. The Venus of the Uffizi is of the “Venus pudica” type, whose right breast is covered by her right hand and billowing long blond hair partially shrouds her body. The goddess stands upright on a shell as she is driven towards the shore by the breeze of Zephyrus, a wind god, who is holding the nymph, Chloris. On the right is the Hora of springtime, who waits to greet Venus ashore with a cloak covered in pink flowers. The seascape, stunning for its metaphysical tone and almost unreal quality, is illuminated by a very soft, delicate light. Like Botticelli’s other masterpiece, Pallas and the Centaur, this is painted on canvas - fairly unusual for its time - using a technique of thin tempera, based on the use of diluted egg yolk, which lends itself particularly well to give the painting that aspect of extraordinary transparency, which brings to mind the pictorial quality of a fresco. The figure recalls classical sculpture and is very similar to the famous Medici Venus found in the Uffizi, which the artist certainly knew. The real meaning of this dreamlike vision is still under scholarly debate and investigation but is undoubtedly linked with the Neo-Platonic philosophy, widely cultivated in the Medici court. Nevertheless, the interpretations of this painting of extraordinary visual impact are numerous and diverse. The divine ethereal figure has been viewed as an allegorical representation of Humanitas upon her arrival to Florence, while the nymph holding out the cloak of flowers for the goddess may perhaps be identified as Flora, the same depicted in this masterpiece’s “twin”, the Primavera, where she may be seen instead as the personification of the city of Florence.005
- Happy 116 Birthday, Altina SchinasiIn General DiscussionAugust 4, 2023Sold a few in my years as an optician.00
- WHEN HAPPINESS COST A DOLLAR A GAMEIn General DiscussionNovember 4, 2023Good story!00
- Dance, My LoveIn PoetrySeptember 8, 2022Thank you, Lorene.0
- Night Flower ©In PoetrySeptember 15, 2022Susan, thanks a million for your support!0
- The WrenIn PoetrySeptember 12, 2022Oh, thank you! I sent a video of this friendly wren to George via e-mail...the file is too big to attach to the poem. Hoping his engineer can attach it. You must see it...The loyal little wren sings to me every day! Your comment is deeply appreciated.00
- ForeplayIn PoetryNovember 11, 2023Doesn't ALWAYS have to be a let down... if properly handled... so to speak.0
- First TouchIn PoetrySeptember 15, 2022Thank you. That's the idea. :)0
- The WrenIn PoetrySeptember 16, 2022Susan, I don't see any video - where is it0
- The partingIn PoetrySeptember 21, 2022Lovely00
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