go ahead tell me. I don't speak prick. Only you can so elliauently have your mouth move but the sound comes from your ass. Prick asshole same language. Go ahead go ahead. Weasel don't have to worry about you until u grow your tail back. Till then ur in the black hole
3 notes
·
View notes
Festival Les Émouvantes ( Conservatoire Pierre Barbizet, Marseille -France-) [II/II] Por Joan Cortès [Conciertos de jazz]
Festival Les Émouvantes ( Conservatoire Pierre Barbizet, Marseille -France-) [II/II] Por Joan Cortès [Conciertos de jazz]
Festival Les Émouvantes
Fecha: viernes 23 y sábado 24 de setiembre de 2022
Lugar: Conservatoire Pierre Barbizet, Salle André Audoli (Marseille)
Grupos:
Bruno Angelini Trio
Bruno Angelini, piano, teclados, electrónica y composiciones
Fabrice Martínez, trompeta, fiscorno y electrónica
Eric Echampard, batería
Hélène Labarrière Quintet
Hélène Labarrière, contrabajo y concepción
Catherine Delaunay,…
View On WordPress
1 note
·
View note
Who is your birthday oshi?
Week of August 27 (Part IV) ~Settling it once and for all.~
Week of September 3 ~You're my friends~
Birthdays and Anniversaries ~Week of September 3~
The following ex-members and single releases have birthdays and anniversaries this week.
September 3
Asakura Kiki (ex-Tsubaki Factory; 23)
Ichii Sayaka - 4U ~Hitasura~ (2003)
September 4
Fujimoto Miki - Romantic Ukare Mode (2002)
September 5
Abe Asami (ex-SI☆NA; 33)
Nakano Rion (ex-Hello Pro Kenshuusei; 22)
Matsuura Aya - LOVE Namida Iro (2001)
Melon Kinenbi - Onegai Miwaku no Target ~Mango-Pudding Mix~ (2007)
℃-ute - Aitai Aitai Aitai na (2012)
September 6
Danielle Delaunay (ex-Coconuts Musume; 40)
Kizawa Runa (ex-Hello Pro Egg; 27)
Morning Musume - I WISH (2000)
Tsubaki Factory - Seishun Manmannaka! (2015)
September 7
W - Miss Love Tantei (2005)
℃-ute - Sekaiichi HAPPY na Onna no Ko (2011)
September 9
Morning Musume - Daite HOLD ON ME! (1998)
Morning Musume - LOVE Machine (1999)
THE Possible - Family ~Tabidachi no Asa~ (2009)
Happy birthday/anniversary week!
Subscribe to the main blog | Social Media + RSS Links | M3 Grand Prix page
10 notes
·
View notes
flickr
Tributo A Manuel Cargaleiro (1927 - 2024) - Diálogos Codificados / Tribute to Manuel Cargaleiro (1927 - 2024) - Coded Dialogues by Daniel Arrhakis (2024)
A obra do Mestre Cargaleiro, para mim, são verdadeiros diálogos numa linguagem abstrata complexa e única codificada em cores, formas e texturas que nos contam a História da Humanidade.
The work of Master Cargaleiro, for me, are true dialogues in a complex and unique abstract language encoded in colors, shapes and textures that tell us the History of Humanity.
Tributo a Manuel Cargaleiro (1927 - 2024) - Diálogos Codificados
Manuel Cargaleiro (16 de março de 1927 – 30 de junho de 2024) foi um artista português com uma obra variada maioritariamente caracterizada pelo Expressionismo Abstrato, pintor e ceramista, mas também desenhador, gravador e escultor.
Cargaleiro aprendeu como um autodidata. Apaixonado pelas cores deixa um legado com inspiração no azulejo tradicional português, arte que ainda mantém importância em Portugal, e que foi trazida pelos árabes para a Península Ibérica.
Não por acaso, o arquitecto Siza Vieira chamou-o para escolher a cor dos azulejos do Pavilhão de Portugal na Expo 98. Cargaleiro acabou por levar a cerâmica produzida em Portugal a outros países, nomeadamente França e Itália.
Estabeleceu-se em França em 1957, país que se tornou a sua casa. Foi influenciado por artistas da École de Paris, como Robert Delaunay, Max Ernst, Victor Vasarely e Paul Klee. As suas composições baseiam-se em módulos geométricos e cores primárias, sugerindo movimento no espaço.
__________________________________________________
Tribute to Manuel Cargaleiro (1927 - 2024) - Coded Dialogues
Manuel Cargaleiro (16 March 1927 – 30 June 2024) was a Portuguese artist with a varied body of work mostly characterized by Abstract Expressionism, painter and ceramist , but also draftsman, engraver and sculptor.
Cargaleiro learned as a self-taught person. Passionate about colors, he leaves a legacy inspired by traditional Portuguese tiles, an art that still maintains importance in Portugal, and which was brought by the Arabs to the Iberian Peninsula.
Not by chance, the architect Siza Vieira called him to choose the color of the tiles for the Portuguese Pavilion at Expo 98. Cargaleiro ended up taking the ceramics produced in Portugal to other countries, namely France and Italy.
He settled in France in 1957, a country which became his home. He was influenced by artists from the École de Paris, such as Robert Delaunay, Max Ernst, Victor Vasarely, and Paul Klee. His compositions are based on geometrical modules and primary colors, suggesting movement in space.
(via Tributo A Manuel Cargaleiro (1927 - 2024) - Diálogos Codif… | Flickr)
0 notes