#HourglassandSkeleton
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris
“One day, in retrospect, the years of struggle will strike you as the most beautiful.” ― Sigmund Freud “Well, it seems to me that the best relationships - the ones that last - are frequently the ones that are rooted in friendship. You know, one day you look at the person and you see something more than you did the night before. Like a switch has been flicked somewhere. And the person who was just a friend is... suddenly the only person you can ever imagine yourself with.” ― Gillian Anderson
Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris Dr. Robert Lang
See also: Skeleton and Hourglass, Death does not exist, Time Philosophy
Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris “People say nothing is impossible, but I do nothing every day.” ― A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh
Hourglass ExLibris Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris “Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books that are now written in a very foreign tongue. Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.” ― Rainer Maria Rilke
Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris “Don't say you don't have enough time. You have exactly the same number of hours per day that were given to Helen Keller, Pasteur, Michelangelo, Mother Teresa, Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Jefferson, and Albert Einstein.” ― H. Jackson Brown Jr.
Hourglass ExLibris
MHC Exhibitions – Dynamic Vision Board meta-models
Welcome to Exhibitions at MHC Virtual Museum! Authors: Adam Pierce, Oleg Bazhenov, Lena Rhomberg, Kirill Korotkov, Anton Fokin, Petr Mihailov, Rustam Adyukov and other MHC Exhibitions:Time Shadows by MHCPersonification of Time – Father Time ExhibitionBeauty Bio Net – Dynamic Vision Board Mental ModelHourglass and Cards – Die Welt als Wille und VorstellungArt Glass by Anton FokinThe Full History of Time3D Hand Made – 3DHM ExhibitionHourglass Figure Sophia LorenHourglass Figure Marilyn MonroeDead Sea Collection ExhibitionHourglass – Masonic Symbol ExhibitionTime Machine Structure See also: Skeleton and Hourglass, Death does not exist, Time Philosophy https://www.myhourglasscollection.com/hourglass-209-exlibris/ Read the full article
#Albert Einstein#book#Death#Einstein#ExLibris#Hourglass#HourglassandSkeleton#HourglassandSkeletonExLibris#HourglassExLibris#LeonardodaVinci#Michelangelo#MotherTeresa#Pasteur#Skeleton#ThomasJefferson
0 notes
Text
Hourglass 272 Book and Scull
Time, among all concepts in the world of physics, puts up the greatest resistance to being dethroned from ideal continuum to the world of the discrete, of information, of bits.... Of all obstacles to a thoroughly penetrating account of existence, none looms up more disarmingly than 'time.' Explain time? Not without explaining existence. Explain existence? Not without explaining time. To uncover the deep and hidden connection between time and existence ... is a task for the future. JOHN ARCHIBALD WHEELER, eulogy for Hermann Weyl, 1986 Hourglass 272 Book and Scull Scull and Hourglass Hourglass and Death on St Thomas’ Church Hourglass – symbol of Death Hourglass and Skeleton
Hourglass 272, post card About MHC MHC, My Hourglass Collection – interdisciplinary the Biointernet project about Time and Time-Space relations, established 2008 by Kirill Korotkov My Hourglass Collection – Art, Science and Technologies project Hourglass CollectionArt ObjectsExperimentsExhibitionsMagic JewelryMHC Virtual Museumthe MHC STORE (on GDVPLANET)the Biointernet Hub
See also:
Time symbolism
Time is… The Full History of Time Time in physics and time Science Symbolism of Melencolia I by Albrecht Dürer Time and Text
DADA Time
Text, Time, MHC Extinction Rebellion – Time against Life The End of Time Hourglass and Death on St Thomas’ Church Hourglass – symbol of Death Death does not Exist Hourglass and Skeleton “Hourglass and Cards” Exhibition Father and Mother of Time Time Hub Time Philosophy Time synonyms Time perception and Sense of Time The Hourglass of Emotions Time Travel + Time Management = Time Travel Management The Hourglass, Hourglass History Hourglass symbolism Hourglass Figure Hourglass Tattoo Symbols of Time Beauty Bio-Net Father Time Department Father Time and Mother Nature Lunar calendar and Moon’s phases Time Management Time Management tools Time Travel Management MHC SM: MHC Flikr, MHC Pinterest, MHC Facebook, MHC Instagram, MHC YouTube, MHC Twitter
The Hourglass Figure:
MHC Exhibitions: Hourglass Figure Sophia Loren by Adam PierceHourglass Figure Marilyn Monroe About Hourglass Body or Hourglass Figure Hourglass body measurements – body shape online calculator Hourglass Figure Celebrities on MHC Hourglass Figure, the movie MHC hourglass figure workout by Marten Sport Hourglass Figure Department on MHC Virtual Museum Hourglass 272 Book and Scull Read the full article
#book#Death#DeathDoesNotExist#Hourglass#Hourglass-symbolofDeath#HourglassandSkeleton#postcard#scull#symbolofDeath#Vintage#vintageHourglass
0 notes
Text
Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris
“One day, in retrospect, the years of struggle will strike you as the most beautiful.” ― Sigmund Freud “Well, it seems to me that the best relationships - the ones that last - are frequently the ones that are rooted in friendship. You know, one day you look at the person and you see something more than you did the night before. Like a switch has been flicked somewhere. And the person who was just a friend is... suddenly the only person you can ever imagine yourself with.” ― Gillian Anderson
Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris Dr. Robert Lang
See also: Skeleton and Hourglass, Death does not exist, Time Philosophy
Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris “People say nothing is impossible, but I do nothing every day.” ― A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh
Hourglass ExLibris Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris “Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books that are now written in a very foreign tongue. Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.” ― Rainer Maria Rilke
Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris Hourglass and Skeleton ExLibris “Don't say you don't have enough time. You have exactly the same number of hours per day that were given to Helen Keller, Pasteur, Michelangelo, Mother Teresa, Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Jefferson, and Albert Einstein.” ― H. Jackson Brown Jr.
Hourglass ExLibris
MHC Exhibitions – Dynamic Vision Board meta-models
Welcome to Exhibitions at MHC Virtual Museum! Authors: Adam Pierce, Oleg Bazhenov, Lena Rhomberg, Kirill Korotkov, Anton Fokin, Petr Mihailov, Rustam Adyukov and other MHC Exhibitions:Time Shadows by MHCPersonification of Time – Father Time ExhibitionBeauty Bio Net – Dynamic Vision Board Mental ModelHourglass and Cards – Die Welt als Wille und VorstellungArt Glass by Anton FokinThe Full History of Time3D Hand Made – 3DHM ExhibitionHourglass Figure Sophia LorenHourglass Figure Marilyn MonroeDead Sea Collection ExhibitionHourglass – Masonic Symbol ExhibitionTime Machine Structure See also: Skeleton and Hourglass, Death does not exist, Time Philosophy https://www.myhourglasscollection.com/hourglass-209-exlibris/ Read the full article
#Albert Einstein#book#Death#Einstein#ExLibris#Hourglass#HourglassandSkeleton#HourglassandSkeletonExLibris#HourglassExLibris#LeonardodaVinci#Michelangelo#MotherTeresa#Pasteur#Skeleton#ThomasJefferson
0 notes
Text
Hourglass and Skeleton
“This life therefore is not righteousness, but growth in righteousness, not health, but healing, not being but becoming, not rest but exercise. We are not yet what we shall be, but we are growing toward it, the process is not yet finished, but it is going on, this is not the end, but it is the road. All does not yet gleam in glory, but all is being purified.” ― Martin Luther
Hourglass and Skeleton at MHC
See also: Time Symbolism
MHC Hourglass Figure
Beauty Bio NetThe Hourglass FigureHourglass Figure Marilyn MonroeHourglass Figure Sophia LorenHow to dress an hourglass figureHourglass body measurementsMHC hourglass figure workoutHourglass Figure CelebritiesHourglass figure #101The Hourglass Figure (2013), the movieMHC Dead Sea CollectionTime of LifeHalf an Hour for you :*Time perception or sense of time
Skeleton with hourglass, 17th century Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons Attribution only licence CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
New Times
common time symbol MHC museum News 2020 Really Big Hourglass Father Time and Baby Girl New Year – MHC399 Baby New Year Father Time and Flowers – MHC398 Stork carrying baby New Year – MHC397 Picture showing Father Time – MHC396 Girl and Father Time Z- MHC395 Father Time watching – MHC394 New Year 1910 – MHC293
Time-Space Family
Father Time and Mother NatureMother Earth, Mother Nature, Mother TimeFather Time ExhibitionBaby New YearTime isTime management toolsTime Travel Management
Hourglass and Skeleton See also: Hourglass HistoryHourglass TattooHourglass BodyHourglass on FlagMasonic HourglassHourglass – Torus formMHC PinterestHourglass symbolismHourglass – symbol of DeathHourglass posters
Here’s the full version of the Slate blog post Moving Skeleton: British Library I’ve been reading Charles Burney’s collection of newspapers for close to two decades: first turning fragile pages in the Rare Books and Music Reading Room at the British Library, then dipping periodically into the many boxes of microfilm there, and now online, unfortunately behind the Gale paywall. Charles Burney (1757-1817) was an English clergyman (his sister was the novelist Fanny Burney) who systematically collected old English newspapers, that most ephemeral and perishable variety of print. His collection dates from the early seventeenth century, but its real strength is in the period after 1695, when the expiration of the Licensing Act allowed a sudden rank growth of newspapers, especially in London — dailies, weeklies, biweeklies, fortnightlies. Some historians look at the news stories, since each newspaper had its own political slant. I go for the classified ads. There are ads for lost servants, houses to let, dozens of patent medicines, books, plays, and evening auctions (“For SALE by the CANDLE”) as well as dog fights and bear-baiting. The lady who lost her purse one Friday night in 1720 may apply to a certain Jonathan Wild for its return. Wild, the notorious “thief-taker general,” ran a ring of pickpockets and then demanded a ransom for the return of the goods. He was hanged in 1725, his career documented by Henry Fielding and his body dissected by the London surgeons. His skeleton still hangs in Surgeons’ Hall (more soon on that skeleton). More Skeleton holding hourglass pulling a child away from his family; verses from the Bible below Homo natus de muliere brevi vivens tempore repletus multis miseriis; qui quasi flos egreditur et conteritur et fugit velut umbra Bit later. Etching, platemark 75 x 55mm (3 x 2¼"). Very large margins. Slight surface loss at bottom. Delicate etching with vanitas subject with verses from Job 14.i-ii (Man that is born of a woman is of few days and full of trouble. He cometh forth like a flower, and is cut down: he fleeth also as a shadow). See also: Hourglass symbol of Death and The Death Does Not Exist Read the full article
#Death#HourglassandSkeleton#Hourglassfact#hourglasssymbolism#Skeleton#Skeletonholdinghourglass#skeletonhourglasstattoo#skull#skullhourglassdrawing#skullsandtimer#tattoohourglass
0 notes
Text
Hourglass and Death on St Thomas' Church
“Don’t make the same decision twice. Spend time and thought to make a solid decision the first time so that you don’t revisit the issue unnecessarily.” Bill Gates St Thomas' Church (Église Saint-Thomas, Thomaskirche) is a historical building in Strasbourg, eastern France. Hourglass and Death on St Thomas' Church It is the main Lutheran church of the city since its Cathedral became Catholic again after the annexation of the town by France in 1681. It is nicknamed the "Protestant Cathedral" (la cathédrale du Protestantisme alsacien, Kathedrale der Protestanten) or the Old Lady (Die alte Dame), and the only example of a hall church in the Alsace region. The building is located on the Route Romane d'Alsace. It is classified as a Monument historique by the French Ministry of Culture since 1862. Its congregation forms part of the Protestant Church of Augsburg Confession of Alsace and Lorraine. Hourglass and Death on St Thomas' Church See also: Hourglass - symbol of Death Hourglass and Skeleton Hourglass Symbolism Time symbolism Hourglass – symbol of Death Hourglass and Skeleton “Hourglass and Cards” Exhibition Father and Mother of Time Time Hub The Hourglass, Hourglass History Hourglass symbolism Hourglass Body Hourglass Tattoo Symbols of Time Mother Time Hourglasses Father of Time Hourglasses Contemporary Time Management Lunar calendar Hourglass – symbol of Death The hourglass concretely represents the present as being between the past and the future, and this has made it an enduring symbol of time itself.
Time management is a meta-activity (working with meta-model) with the goal to maximize the overall benefit of a set of other activities within the boundary condition of a limited amount of time, as time itself cannot be managed because it is fixed. Russian Cosmism is a philosophical and cultural movement that emerged in Russia on the Edge of 20th century Russian Cosmism emerged in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century as a tendency in Russian thought to view traditional Russian Orthodox Christianity as a futuristic task of social activism and scientific technology. Read the full article
#HourglassandDeath#HourglassandSkeleton#hourglasssymbolism#Skeleton#StThomas'Church#Symbolism#SymbolismoftheHourglass#Time#TimeofLife
0 notes
Text
Hourglass 146, Johannes Lassenius
Time is a lake, getting deeper year by year, drop by drop. Surface tension, the electric presence of our staccato acts, keeps us scuttling like water bugs on its surface, unmindful of the depths we traverse. We're safe, afloat in the now, until we stop moving and begin to sink into the past. Only then do we realize how important all those yesterdays were, how they hold each present moment to the sun; and how many people we leave behind, stricken in time like ambered insects. MICHAEL MARSHALL, Blood of Angels
Hourglass 146, Johannes Lassenius
Rare Antique Print
REST DOES WELL FOR A HEAVY MOOD Lassenius-1702 This rare plate originates from:Â "Der heiligen Moralien uber die Evangelien und Episteln" / wie die in den recht-glaubigen evangelischen Lutherischen kirchen an Sonn- und Fest-tagen verlesen werden by Jonanne Lassenio, published after his death by his widow in Kopenhagen in 1702. The holy morals from the holy scripts and sermons, as they are read in correct-believing evangelic Lutheran churches on Sundays and days of celebration.
Hourglass 146, Johannes Lassenius Location: My Hourglass Collection
“Hourglass and Cards” Exhibition
Time-Space Interaction
Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung Hourglass – symbol of Time Cards – symbol of Space “Hourglass and Cards” is “Time and Space” meta-model
Hourglass 146, Johannes Lassenius
Artists and Engravers: Johannes Lassenius (1636-1692) was a German Lutheran Theologian and professor at the university of Kopenhagen. He was considered one of the most eloquent baroque pastors of his time. Plate unsigned but one plate in this work signed by Hubert Schaten (German/Danish, active in Danmark 1671-1697), who could be the engraver of other plates as well. 'Einem schweren muht thut die ruhe gut.' (For a heavy mood, rest does well.) This emblem shows a man resting, surrounded by a decorative border reflecting this same theme with scull and hour glass.
Hourglass 146, Johannes Lassenius
Exhibitions on MHC Virtual Museum
Beauty Bio Net Hourglass and Cards Art Glass by Anton Fokin
The Hourglass, Hourglass History
Hourglass – measurement device An hourglass (or sandglass, sand timer, or sand clock) is a device used to measure the intervals of time. The Hourglass, Hourglass History The origin of the hourglass is unclear
Hourglass 146, Johannes Lassenius Condition: Engraved image in fair condition on a sheet in fair condition with text front and rear. Irregular paper edges, with paper loss and small tears, partially from binding. General age related toning, thumbing and light staining. Size (in cm): The overall size is ca. 19 x 23 cm. The image size is ca. 13.2 x 7 cm. Image: copperplate engraving-etching. Text:Â letterpress, relief printing.
Hourglass 146, Johannes Lassenius, back side
Time symbolism
What is the symbol of time?Â
Symbol of Time – The Hourglass
Time and Text – Real Magic
Hourglass and Text Linguistic Time WaveGenetics Korotkov’s images transformation in meta-modeling process:
The Hourglass of Writing The Standard Structure of Academic Papers What is Academic Writing?
Masonic Hourglass – a symbol of the third Degree of Freemasonry peculiar to the American Rite
Hourglass 146, Johannes Lassenius, back side Johannes Lassenius (26. April 1636 in Waldow, Pommern (heute Teil von Miastko); †22. August 1692 in Kopenhagen) war ein deutscher lutherischer Theologe und Erbauungsschriftsteller der Barockzeit. Wiki Today, you can Time travel with the Biointernet Equipment See also:
Time is …
Time symbolism
Time and Text – Real Magic
Hourglass and Death on St Thomas’ Church Hourglass – symbol of Death Hourglass and Skeleton “Hourglass and Cards” Exhibition Father and Mother of Time Time Hub The Hourglass, Hourglass History Hourglass symbolism Hourglass Body Hourglass Tattoo Symbols of Time Mother Time Hourglasses Father of Time Hourglasses Special Equipment on MHC Virtual Museum about Time and Space relations. Welcome to the Biointernet interdisciplinary project! Read the full article
#holymorals#HourglassandSkeleton#Hourglasscollection#Hourglassfact#JohannesLassenius#MyHourglassCollection#Skeleton#universityofKopenhagen
0 notes