Sunday, March 26, 2006

Dry Hair Olive Oil Menopause

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I chose this picture for several reasons: the main one is that, at this point in my career, I give more attention to substance than form. The aesthetic content of an image I find something as vital as primary, so I find that should be subject (if not complemented) by the message to convey.

This photograph of Joan Fontcuberta could be seen with the naked eye almost like an abstract painting, in fact, has not even been obtained through a camera. This is a drop of blood placed on a transparent glass, placed in the enlarger that serves as a negative. The image is projected on the papthe photographic, being printed on it and suffering the investment process to be converted later into a positive.

I marvel at the texture and color of sedimented blood. I wonder, above all, the formless form, by the multiple readings that can be submitted.

My personal view on it is this: we are facing, through photography, the importance of imprinting. Fontcuberta this series of blood counts performed on blood samples collected from various friends and strangers, so that each of these photographs could be, somehow, a portrait. And here come the game of causation, we could associate each image with one attribute of the person to whom it belongs.

Humans are moving the information stores. Each person is a whole history, experiences, feelings and ideas, absolute - and painfully - unique. Our blood contains our genetic heritage ... and perhaps even learned.

wondered if all that is manifest latent information somehow in the picture. I would think so, despite the difficulty of such a claim. Based on the theory of pars pro toto (a part is everything, and everything is in each party) come to the conclusion that the essence of a person is contained and concentrated in every drop of his body. Then this picture would be an aleph, that and the drop of blood is part of the human being

Monday, March 20, 2006

Learn To Snowboard London Muses of Man Ray

XC

Kees Van Dongen



"It was wonderful to see. As his face naturally pretty, she had become a work of art. She had a wonderfully beautiful and a nice voice ... and indeed, she dominated Montparnasse that was more than Queen Victoria ever dominated the Victorian era "Ernest Hemingway

Image hosting by TinyPic More Kiki (images)



More Kiki (biography in English) Image hosting by TinyPic
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Theodora Markovitch, stage name Image hosting by TinyPic DORA MAAR)


More Dora (paintings by Picasso)

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Mary Benz, baptized and later known as Nusch Éluard Image hosting by TinyPic by her husband Paul Eluard.




Man Ray




Man Ray



Man Ray




Man Ray
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Picasso
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Nusch

feelings apparent.
lightness of approach. 's hairof strokes. Image hosting by TinyPic no worry, no suspicion.
Your eyes are given to what they see:
are seen as they look. Confidence

glass between two mirrors. Image hosting by TinyPic Your eyes get lost in the night insomnia to add to desire. Paul Eluard



Image hosting by TinyPic More Nusch (Mini biography in English)



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LEE MILLER






Man Ray



Man Ray Image hosting by TinyPic



Man Ray Image hosting by TinyPic



favorite model of the surreal. Man Ray photographed her obsessively, often in erotic poses of a mysterious ... Image hosting by TinyPic One day, Miller, working in the darkroom of Man Ray, a negative plate accidentally exposed to light. She and Man Ray were surprised to see the resulting distortion of images, which gave them a power look almost three dimensional. They set about this accidental discovery in a technique called solarization. Man Ray took (but not Miller) to international fame.
Miller was the most uninhibited American woman sexually and artistically he came to Paris for Josephine Baker. Shockingly, topless car drove through the streets of the city. She posed nude for dozens of painters and sculptors

Sunday, March 19, 2006

Brazilian Wax Include Butt Demian (Hermann Hesse)

Anyone who knows me will already know the setting I have with this author. And it is not free, Herman Hesse is one of those writers who make a before and after the reading of one of his books. It is very difficult to remain indifferent to their stories and not be identified to some degree with their multifaceted characters.

something magical happens with books, one can read over and over again on different occasions, and will always be new books. The topics covered are of such depth that mutate incessantly, becoming timeless. Lyrics of the pages they create new configurations as constellations that remain in our mind, always willing to disintegrate and give way to new ideas.

long time, aI months, not my hands on a book capable of being moved to the core from start to finish. Maybe ask a lot. Perhaps what he was telling the photographer Lisette Model "do not squeeze the trigger until you feel a pain in his stomach" was not always able to apply the act of reading. I mean it's not easy to find books that make you feel this pain in my stomach. But it does Demian.

is impossible not made the eternal questions - who we are, "Where we come from, where do we go? - At some point, if not continuously, throughout the trip we made with Sinclair, the protagonist of this novel. And it does not appeal to mystical and philosophical questions far to turn this small resortAnd then discover the wonder, discover that slowly gets control of the situation, that the great force that will drag is a small force of its own, an organ, a rudder ... "


" ... when I find the key and go down to my interior, where, in a dark mirror, lie images of fate, only I have to lean on its dark surface to see full-ya like it, my friend and guide, my own image! " BIOGRAPHY








Hermann Hesse (Calw, Germany July 2, 1877 - Montagnola, Ticino, Switzerland, August 9, 1962) was a German-born Swiss writer.

received the Nobel Prize of literature1946. In his youth

made long journeys to Italy and also India, where his father and grandfather were missionaries. His education was divided between Germany and Switzerland, studied at a college of humanities and a seminar, and for some time was devoted to librarian and free journalism. In 1912 he settled in Switzerland and in 1921 acquired the nationality.

Like many of his characters Hesse took over his life with women problems. His first marriage to Maria Bernoulli, who bore him three children, ended tragically by his wife's mental problems. The second marriage apparently grew from a brief affair with Ruth Wenger ending a few months. Eventually married in 1931 and Nion Dolbin remainedwith him for the rest of his life.

died of a cerebral hemorrhage in his sleep at the age of 85 years. BIBLIOGRAPHY



* 1904 - Peter Camenzind Image hosting by TinyPic * 1905 - Beneath the Wheel * 1910 - Gertrude
* 1914 - Rosshalde
1919 - Demian
* 1922 - Siddhartha
* 1927 - Steppenwolf
* 1930 - Narciso and Goldmund
* 1932 - Journey to the East
* 1943 - The Glass Bead Game


(Biography and Bibliography taken from Wikipedia.org. Text by Nerea Nara)