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Hubasoc 🎩 👉/timecast

@hasoc

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Hubasoc 🎩 👉/timecast
@hasoc
Leafless flowers (1894). Ramon Casas, Barcelona 1866-1932. At the end of the 19th century, there was a paramedical belief that a person infected with syphilis could be completely cured if he had relations with a virgin, an idea parallel to that which exists today in black Africa regarding AIDS. The spread of this theory resulted in a terrible increase in cases of rape of adolescents. Casas denounces this fact with this work, in which he shows us a naked young woman lying on the ground surrounded by roses with their petals torn off, a symbol of the aggression of which she has just been the victim and which give the painting its title. The zenithal point of view from which she is depicted reinforces the feeling of helplessness that she gives off, further increasing the drama. This point of view is known in painting precisely as masculine-oppressive.
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A seated peasant woman (1885) by Camille Pissarro. 1/ The peasant women painted by Pissarro seem to be always looking into the distance to the infinite. They seem not to understand the world and, maybe, they want to overcome it. 👉
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Return of the Bucentoro to the Molo on Ascension Day (1730) by Canaletto. The Bucintoro was the big ceremonial boat of the Doge, the ruler of the Venetian republic. Once a year on Ascension Day, the Doge and other officials boarded this vessel to participate in a ritual celebrating the marriage of Venice and the sea.
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Time and Eternity, 1908 by Sophie Pemberton Mount Baker is visible in the distance and is not the focus of the composition. Time is the life cycle of the tree. Infinite eternity, the dormant volcano Mount Baker, is presented in contrast to the finite existence of Garry oaks that change visibly over the years.
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Family Picture (1920) by Max Beckmann
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Self-Portrait (1907) Diego Rivera
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Helen and Menelaus, c. 4 Century BC Bronze Mirror 19.7 cm x 28.4 cm British Museum, London. Etruscan art. Etruria, the region occupied by the Etruscans, was rich in metals, particularly copper and iron. The Etruscans were master bronzesmiths who exported their finished products all over the Mediterranean.
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The card players (1890–1895) a series of 5 oil paintings by Paul Cézanne. Cézanne said, “It is not about painting life, it is about making painting alive” This game of cards is still being played simultaneously in Philadelphia, New York, London, Paris and in an unknown location, probably in Qatar.
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The Tree of Life, Stoclet Frieze (1909) Gustav Klimt. Composed of three panels, in the center “The Tree of life” that joints and connects “The Waiting” where the woman appears almost suspended and cold, with the right side “The Embrace”, that represents the two lovers in a moment of realization and peace.
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Boiling point (2021)
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The absinthe drinker (1901) Pablo Picasso. 1/ The absinthe drink was popularized in Paris by soldiers returning from colonial campaigns in Algeria. At the end of the 19th century it had become strong in the cafes of the already hallucinatory and amazing French belle époque. Every day, at five in the afternoon ⬇️
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The sower (1865) Jean-François Millet. Millet sowed talent and inspiration in several generations of painters including Van Gogh, Monet, Seurat and Dalí. /oldmasters sows authenticity in the age of artificial intelligence in arts.
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I just watched “The Zone of Interest” (2023). It is impossible not to think about the life we ​​live and how we manage to ignore the injustices that benefit us and how we complain about everything that harms us. The film takes this absurd and immoral behavior to the extreme.
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The zone of interest (2023) by Jonathan Glazer
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Sudden Shower Over Shin-Ohashi Bridge and Atake, No 58, from One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (1857) by Utagawa Hiroshige. One can almost hear the crack of thunder as the roiling black clouds burst into sheets of heavy rain. This master print had a considerable influence on future artists like we can see 👇
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Poems On Time by Rabindranath Tagore “ The butterfly counts not Rabindranath Tagore months but moments, and has time enough. Time is a wealth of change, but the clock in its parody makes it mere change and no wealth. Let your life lightly dance on the edges of Time like dew on the tip of a leaf”.
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The Final Release (1916) by Abanindranath Tagore in his book “Buddha and the gospel of Buddhism” “The butterfly counts not months but moments, and has time enough. Time is a wealth of change, but the clock in its parody makes it mere change and no wealth. Let your life lightly dance on the edges of Time”
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“The Plains of Heaven" (1851-3), John Martin
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The Abduction of Ganymede by Zeus (1644) Eustache Le Sueur The painting shows the taking of the Trojan prince Ganymede by an Eagle; the eagle was possibly a transformed Zeus. Ganymede would be taken from Troy to Mount Olympus, where the Trojan prince would become a lover of Zeus as well as the cup-bearer of the gods.
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Paradise (1588-1592) Maggior Consiglio Room, Doge's Palace. Jacopo Tintoretto and Domenico Robusti. The painting, 23 feet (7 m) high and 70 feet (21 m) wide, represents the coronation of the virgin surronding the heavenly host and the scales of justice to weigh the souls on the right inspired by Dante’s Paradise.
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