Tibetan Madonna and Child

Bologna Exhibition


Ipernity Exhibition Bologna, October 2009

31 May 2008

9 favorites

5 comments

1 762 visits

Oriental

Alive Alone - Chemical Brothers Feat. Beth Orton Happy Sunday to all!

17 Oct 2008

10 favorites

12 comments

752 visits

Maiden's Hair

I see a lilly on thy brow, With anguish moist and fever dew; And on thy cheek a fading rose Fast withereth too. I met a lady in the meads Full beautiful, a faery's child; Her hair was long, her foot was light, And her eyes were wild. - John Keats ... and now I must prepare my paper for the conference this weekend - away in Oxford Friday to Sunday.

03 Dec 2008

8 favorites

9 comments

1 046 visits

Unnatural Acts

"Aesthetics owes its name to Alexander Baumgarten who derived it from the Greek aisthanomai, which means perception by means of the senses (see Baumgarten, A.G.). As the subject is now understood, it consists of two parts: the philosophy of art, and the philosophy of the aesthetic experience and character of objects or phenomena that are not art. Non-art items include both artefacts that possess aspects susceptible of aesthetic appreciation, and phenomena that lack any traces of human design in virtue of being products of nature, not humanity. How are the two sides of the subject related: is one part of aesthetics more fundamental than the other? There are two obvious possibilities. The first is that the philosophy of art is basic, since the aesthetic appreciation of anything that is not art is the appreciation of it as if it were art. The second is that there is a unitary notion of the aesthetic that applies to both art and non-art; this notion defines the idea of aesthetic appreciation as disinterested delight in the immediately perceptible properties of an object for their own sake; and artistic appreciation is just aesthetic appreciation of works of art. But neither of these possibilities is plausible." - continues at www.rep.routledge.com/article/M046

28 Dec 2008

4 favorites

6 comments

1 067 visits

Geographic Post

More and more, the creative class is becoming post-geographic. Location-independent. Office-agnostic. Demographers and futurists call this trend the rise of "the distributed workforce." Distributed workers are those who have no permanent office at their companies, preferring to work in home offices, cafes, airport lounges, high school stadium bleachers, client conference rooms, or some combination of what Florida calls the "no-collar workplace." www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_50/b3963137.htm

14 Aug 2005

4 favorites

3 comments

730 visits

Dark Skies

One of those 'stop the car and shoot' shots. Outer Hebrides.

02 Jan 2009

4 favorites

5 comments

778 visits

Pinnacle Inaccessible

... over the sea to Skye (with a bit of Eigg on the way!) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inaccessible_Pinnacle
15 items in total