Showing posts with label Fernand Khnopff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fernand Khnopff. Show all posts

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Tempur-Pedic (2011: A Sleep Odyssey)

  
 


 


         The Tempur-Pedic system (mattress and pillow) is by far the most comfortable bedding I have ever lain awake on all night almost every night.  It makes sleeplessness a restful and infinitely fascinating place on the map, one I always look forward to (re)visiting.  This luxurious product is well well worth the expense.






        I believe that you could actually jump energetically on the Tempur-Pedic memory foam mattress and complete a round of calisthenics without upsetting a glass of red wine as they suggest in their commercials, but I'm not going to try.




    
        But, please, don't take my word for the benefits of Hypnos' and King Croesus' greatest gift to humanity.  

        Consult instead with our panel of sleep experts.





Eddie (l), Felix (r) evaluating




     "Pataphysics is the science." -- Alfred Jarry, Exploits and Opinions of Dr. Faustroll Pataphysician.
 




 King Croesus on the pyre, Attic red-figure amphora, 500-490 BC, Louvre, Paris





Fernand Khnopff, Une aile bleue (A blue wing), 1894, Oil on canvas, Private collection

Painting includes Khnopff's Head of Hypnos, inspired by Scopas' 350 BC sculpture in the British Museum.  Khnopff made several versions of Hypnos, in both sculpture and painting, and included an altar to Hypnos in his Brussels studio.

Friday, December 31, 2010

Why Not Your Baby? (Gene Clark Lyric)









She wore a blue dress when she walked in the room,
And in her eyes the look I saw was filled with gloom.
Is this the question I would answer all too soon?
Come tell your friend what's wrong with you.

Why don't you call me your baby anymore?
Am I so changed from some strange love that went before?
Is this the change of mind that I've been designed for?
Why not your baby anymore?






Those words we spoke they only seemed to block our way.
The truth rang out when you called me and called my name.
I don't know what I can do or I can say.
Your good friends also find a way.


Why don't you call me your baby anymore?
Am I so changed from some strange love that went before?
Is this the change of mind that I've been designed for?
Why not your baby anymore?






Why Not Your Baby? -- Dillard & Clark, 1969


Top:  Fernand Khnopff, The Veil, 1887, Charcoal and graphite 
on stumping on ivory wove paper, laid down on wood pulp board,
Art Institute of Chicago
Middle: Ante-chamber in white marble, Villa Khnopff, 41 Avenue des Courses, Brussels, 1900-2 (demolished)
Lower:  Exterior View, Villa Khnopff, inscribed above doorway "On n'a que soi".

Thursday, December 30, 2010

It's Just Business (New Normal)






Hans von Maree, Self-Portrait with Lembach, 1863
 

      Watching Pierre Morel’s exciting 2008 film Taken (a sort of “emblem movie” for appropriately protective fathers of daughters) two nights ago, I was reminded of what is, for me, the ugliest phrase in the English language when Gerard Watkins, the actor who plays the “white slave” trader Patrice Saint-Clair, explains to Liam Neeson that abducting and selling his daughter Kim wasn’t  “personal”; it was “just business”.



Fernand Khnopff, The Abandoned City, 1904 

 

     The Saint-Clair character soon receives his just deserts, but the dialogue summed up for me our current three-years-and-counting Depression zeitgeist, where what I used to consider normal and acceptable behavior has been abandoned completely and so many people seem to have shed and exchanged their human skin and affect for something rough, horny and caustic.  This “new normal” seems to dominate interpersonal relationships, including especially business relationships, where the former customary courtesies have largely disappeared, as well as attitudes expressed in the media (including, I find, the new so-called “social media”), where snideness, sarcasm and a fixation on the grotesque have become the lingua franca across all genres. 



James Ensor, Intrigue, 1911


     Business cycles work themselves out, of course, over time (the tide does come in, the tide does go out), but I wonder whether this violent, malevolent  and denaturing outlook and approach to life will ever change.   As my  wife sometimes observes, leaving your house often seems like stepping into a wildlife survival show on the Discovery Channel.

     Still, when I pause and try to think calmly, I find that this has been the usual year of miracles for us.  That isn’t an overstatement and I feel blessed to be able to breathe, see, take them in and occasionally appreciate them enough.   To more than compensate for some of the era’s damage there have been some precious new friendships that I know will last me the rest of my life, ones that I really needed to have, and even a couple of old, shattered links that have mended.  There’s more than that, a lot more, but discussing the miracles in one’s life seems and is unseemly, at least in a large group.



Fernand Khnopff, Still Water, 1894


Apart from the pictures that frequently cross my mind, entertain and surprise me, I often find myself thinking of and sustained by these words:

     The first is very short, the few lines that conclude Tom Clark’s poem Nimble Rays Of Day Bring Oxygen To Her Blood, that go:


A leaf spins itself
The leaf's a roof
Over the trembling flower

Everything's safe there
Because nothing that breathes
Air is alone in this world


     The second is the (surprising) conclusion of Claude Levi-Strauss’s Tristes Tropiques, which reads:

“Farewell to savages, then, farewell to journeying!  And instead, during the brief intervals in which humanity can bear to interrupt its hive-like labours, let us grasp the essence of what our species has been and still is, beyond thought and beneath society; an essence that may be vouchsafed to us in a mineral more beautiful than any work of Man:  in the scent, more subtly evolved than our books, that lingers in the heart of a lily; or in the wink of an eye, heavy with patience, serenity, and mutual forgiveness, that sometimes, through an involuntary understanding , one can exchange with a cat.”



Fernand Khnopff, The Sphinx, 1896