#Philippe x renée
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#romance club#vying for versailles#rc vying for versailles#rc vfv#king louie#rc king louis#rc prince philippe#rc renée#rc maria Theresa#rc bonne#king louis x mc#king louise x renée#bonne x renée#Philippe x renée
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🖼️: Philippe basically bailing her out 𓂃🖌
'ask him? no he will hear it from me' LOOOORDDD, twirling my hair as we speak
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2024 – Liste Culturelle
JANVIER
LIVRES
L'art et la psychanalyse de Freud à Lacan par Anita Izcovich
Rêves de paysage par Claudine Bertrand
Flipette & Vénère de Lucrèce Andreae
Lettres à une jeune Poétesse. Correspondance avec Anita Forrer (1920 – 1926) de Rainer Maria Rilke
Le joueur d'échecs de Stefan Zweig
Lettres à un jeune poète de Rainer Maria Rilke
Aurore, Ulysse … Les Centaures N°1 La porte du néant par Seron
FILMS
Diane Wellington d'Arnaud des Palli��res
Rythmasspoetry de Jeremy Deller et Cecilia Bengolea
Les Yeux carrés de Louison Assié et Laure Massiet du Biest
What happened, Miss Simone ? de Liz Garbus
Patinoire de Gilles Carle
10 minutes de vie d'Herz Frank
Le Seigneur des anneaux : La Communauté de l'Anneau de Peter Jackson
Bedtime Stories : Trains de Harun Farocki
Bedtime Stories : Bateaux de Harun Farocki
What Men Want d'Adam Shankman
Bedtime Stories : Ponts de Harun Farocki
Le Passage du col de Marie Bottois
Ballerina de Lee Chung-hyeon
I Don't Feel at Home Anywhere Anymore de Viv Li
Mon beau-père et moi de Jay Roach
They Do Not Exist de Mustafa Abu Ali
FEVRIER
LIVRES
La Magie de la Nature. Se relier au pouvoir des éléments, de la Lune et des plantes par Lindsay Squire
Éditeurs de notre temps. Entretiens réalisés par Nicolas Querci
Mafalda 1 de Quino
Je suis un poltron de Johann Guyot
Mama Elefante es genial de Gabriela Keselman et illustré par Claudia Bielinsky
FILMS
Angle mort de Lotfi Achour
All Inclusive de Corina Schwingruber Ilic
Somme des choses de Mohammadreza Farzad
Indes Galantes de Philippe Béziat
Retour à Séoul de Davy Chou
Afrique 50 de René Vautier
Love, Dad de Diana Cam Van Nguyen
Sans toit ni loi d'Agnès Varda
La Vie sexuelle de mamie de Urska Djukic et Émilie Pigeard
Et les chiens se taisaient de Sarah Maldoror
O saisons, ô châteaux d'Agnès Varda
Plaisir d'amour en Iran d'Agnès Varda
Du côté de la côte d'Agnès Varda
Réponse de femmes d'Agnès Varda
Boy de Yalda Alsah et Ginan Seidl
MARS
LIVRES
Le style dans le cinéma documentaire entretiens recueillis par l'association ADDOC
Réensauvagez-vous ! D'Andreas Weber et Hildegard Kurt
De la tyrannie du cartel de Philippe Comar
FILMS
Un espagnol à Paris, Paco Ibañez de Bernard Bouthier
Hercules de Ron Clements et John Musker
The Silence of The Banana Trees d'Eneos Carka
In Flow of Words d'Eliane Esther Bots
I Don't Feel at Home Anywhere Anymore de Viv Li
Behemoth : or the name of God de Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese
L'indomptable feu du printemps de Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese
Mon beau-père et nous de Paul Weitz
Mobiliser de Caroline Monnet
Cinzas e nuvens de Margaux Dauby
REW-FFWD de Denis Villeneuve
Vampire humaniste cherche suicidaire consentant d'Ariane Louis-Seize
Nos plus belles années de Sydney Pollack
Immaculée de Michael Mohan
AVRIL
LIVRES
Azimut T.1 Les aventuriers du temps perdu par Wilfrid Lupano et Jean-Baptiste Andreae
Azimut T.2 Que la belle meure par Wilfrid Lupano et Jean-Baptiste Andreae
Azimut T.3 Les anthropotames du Nihil par Wilfrid Lupano et Jean-Baptiste Andreae
Sous les Arbres. L'automne de Monsieur Grumpf de Dav
Jade sauve la forêt fabuleuse d'Alexandre Jardin, Fred Multier et Stéphanie Ronzon
Azimut T.4 Nuées noires, voile blanc par Wilfrid Lupano et Jean-Baptiste Andreae
Azimut T.5 Derniers frimas de l'hiver par Wilfrid Lupano et Jean-Baptiste Andreae
Le Dialogue de Simon Johannin
Hallow T.1 La dernière nuit d'Halloween de Cazenove et Ood Serrière
500 affiches de Mai 68 par Vasco Gasquet
Ce monde-là. Voyage aux frontières du photojournalisme des éditions Loco / Emi
Mélusine T.1 Sortilèges de Clarke et Gilson
Intranqu'îllités N°5 Eros par auteurs multiples (magazine)
FILMS
Malcolm X de Spike Lee
Nosferatu, fantôme de la nuit de Werner Herzog
La Demoiselle et le Dragon de Juan Carlos Fresnadillo
Un taxi pour Reykjavik de Damien Peyret
La BM du Seigneur de Jean-Charles Hue
Dune de Denis Villeneuve
Fabbricante di lacrime d'Alessandro Genovesi
8 Mile de Curtis Hanson
Lil' Buck Real Swan de Louis Wallecan
LOL (Laughing Out Loud) de Lisa Azuelos
Pretty Woman de Garry Marshall
L'arrestation de C. d'Arthur Jaquier
Mon voisin Abdi de Douwe Djikstra
Five d'Igor Gotesman
Her Job de Nikos Labôt
Le Barrage d'Ali Cherri
La Grande Vadrouille de Gérard Oury
PODCAST
Dingue. Dépendance affective : attachement et réciprocité du journaliste Adrien Zerbini
MAI
LIVRES
Verdad de Lorena Canottiere
Une vie de Simone Veil
La légende de Saigyô traduit du japonais et présenté par René Sieffert
FILMS
Disneyland, mon vieux pays natal d'Arnaud des Pallières
Sound of metal de Darius Marder
Godzilla d'Ishiro Honda
Brisby et le secret de NIMH de Don Bluth
Madame Lulu de Morgane Lincy-Fercot
JUIN
LIVRES
Laura, Lizzie & les Hommes-Gobelins de Christina Rosseti, Clémentine Beauvais et Digiee
Mes merveilles d'Else Lasker-Schüler traduit par Guillaume Deswarte
C'est comme ça qu'on fait un film de Tim Grierson
La conjecture de Karinthy de Michel Viegnes
FILMS
Grâce à Dieu de François Ozon
Average Happiness de Maja Gehrig
Claire, faire corps d'Arnaud Le Hesran
Mars Express de Jérémie Périn
Nathan, juste là d'Elya Serres
Supervision de Primitivi
JUILLET
LIVRES
Auguste Rodin de Rainer Maria Rilke
Un drôle de truc pas drôle de Giula Sagramola
Une certaine tendance du cinéma documentaire par Jean-Louis Comolli
La Mélodie de l'amour et de la mort du cornette Christoph Rilke par Rainer Maria Rilke
FILMS
Sainte Marie du Mont : kilomètre zéro zéro par Claude Goretta et Gilles Perrault
Non de Didier Nion
Backflip de Nikita Diakur
Letter to a pig de Tal Kantor
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes de Wes Ball
Dune. Part Two de Denis Villeneuve
Pirates des Caraïbes : la légende du Black Pearl par Gore Verbinski
AOUT
LIVRES
160000 enfants. Violences sexuelles et déni social d’Édouard Durand
« On ne peut pas accueillir toute la misère du monde » En finir avec une sentence de mort de Pierre Tevanian et Jean-Charles Stevens
Désobéissance climatique de Sandra Laugier et Albert Ogien
Les écoféminismes d’Élise Thiébaut
FILMS
Pirates des Caraïbes : Le Secret du coffre maudit par Gore Verbinski
Pirates des Caraïbes : Jusqu'au bout du monde par Gore Verbinski
Pirates des Caraïbes : La Fontaine de Jouvence par Rob Marshall
Pirates des Caraïbes : La Vengeance de Salazar par Jooachim Ronning et Espen Sandberg
Super par James Gunn
Furiosa : A Mad Max Saga par George Miller
Doomsday de Neil Marshall
Shrek par Andrew Adamson et Vicky Jenson
Shrek 2 par Andrew Adamson, Kelly Asbury et Conrad Vernon
Pauvres Créatures de Yorgos Lanthimos
Élémentaire de Peter Sohn
Cowboy Bebop : Knockin' on Heaven's Door de Shin'ichiro Watanabe
Discours de bienvenue de Norman McLaren par Norman McLaren
Promising Young Woman par Emerald Fennell
Saltburn par Emerald Fennell
Zoom cosmique d'Eva Szasz
Memories of Murder par Bong Joon-ho
Venom : Let There Be Carnage par Andy Serkis
NDDJ (Notre-Dame-du-Jambon) par Grace D. Singh et Sita Singh
Aquaman et le Royaume perdu par James Wan
Vice-Versa 2 par Kelsey Mann
X par Ti West
MaXXXine par Ti West
Erin Brockovich, seule contre tous par Steven Soderbergh
SEPTEMBRE
LIVRES
L'âge d'or Volume 1 de Curil Pedrosa et Roxanne Moreil
Le féminisme ou la mort de Françoise d'Eaubonne
FILMS
Deadpool et Wolverine par Shawn Levy
Pearl par Ti West
The Witch par Robert Eggers
The Northman par Robert Eggers
Star Wars, épisode V : L'Empire contre-attaque par Irvin Kershner
Sortir de l'amour romantique comme seul modèle de société par la journaliste Salomé Saqué
Star Wars, épisode III : La Revanche des Sith de George Lucas
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone par Chris Colombus
Una volta ancora par Giulia Di Maggio
White power, au cœur de l’extrême droite européenne par Christophe Cotteret
Barbare par Zach Cregger
Jeanne du Barry par Maïwenn
La Terre est habitée !, par Kaj Pindal et Les Drew
The Game par David Fincher
The Crow par Rupert Sanders
Petite Leçon de cinéma : le documentaire par Jean-Stéphane Bron
A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night par Ana Lily Amirpour
Under the Silver Lake par David Robert Mitchell
Strangers par Tony Dean Smith
Blink Twice par Zoë Kravitz
Histoire de mon pays d'enfance par Marine Mabila
L’illusionniste par Alain Cavalier
Outlaw King : Le roi hors-la-loi par David Mackenzie
Under The Lake par Thanasis Trouboukis
God Bless America par Bobcat Goldthwait
King of Thieves par James Marsh
Beetlejuice par Tim Burton
Astartes par Syama Pederson
Lady Bird par Greta Gerwig
The Killer par David Fincher
Finestkind par Brian Helgeland
Wolfs par Jon Watts
Trap par Night Shyamalan
Apartment 7A par Natalie Erika James
SERIE
Godless par Scott Franck
OCTOBRE
LIVRES
Lettres autour d'un jardin par Rainer Maria Rilke
Pour le droit de vote dès la naissance de Clémentine Beauvais
FILMS
Depuis, je vole par Aylin Gökmen
Speak No Evil par Christian Tafdrup
The Wasp par Guillem de Morales d'après une pièce de Morgan Lloyd Malcolm
The Green Knight par David Lowery
Reptile par Grant Singer
Just Mercy par Destin Daniel Cretton
Le Collectionneur par Gary Fleder
Essai de reconstitution des 46 jours qui précédèrent la mort de Françoise Guiniou par Christian Boltanski
Julie and Julia par Nora Ephron
Mindscape par Jorge Dorado
Bloodshot par Dave Wilson
Hellboy : The Crooked Man par Brian Taylor
Fair Play par Chloe Domont
The Highwayman par John Lee Hancock
The Final Girls par Todd Strauss-Schulson
Come to Daddy par Ant Timpson
Spree par Eugene Kotlyarenko
Car Wash de Laïs Decaster
Beetlejuice Beetejuice par Tim Burton
Alien : Romulus par Fede Alvarez
Bad Genius par J.C. Lee
La Famille Addams par Barry Sonnenfeld
Carrie au bal du diable par Brian de Palma
Jennifer's body par Karyn Kusama
I Came By parBabak Anvari
Le Mangeur d'âmes par Alexandre Bustillo et Julien Maury
Addams Family Values par Barry Sonnenfeld
Une affaire de détails par John Lee Hancock
Scream par Wes Craven
Scream 2 par Wes Craven
Halloween : La Nuit des masques par John Carpenter
Massacre à la tronçonneuse par Tobe Hooper
A Nightmare on Elm Street par Wes Craven
La colline a des yeux par Wes Craven
Evil Dead par Sam Raimi
SERIE
Mercredi par Tim Burton, James Marshall et Gandja Monteiro
NOVEMBRE
LIVRES
Les idendités meurtrières d'Amin Maalouf
La haine du poil par Juliette Mancini, Sara Piazza et Alexia handon-Piazza
In Humus par Lina Sterte
Errance par Raymond Depardon
FILMS
The Irishman par Martin Scorsese
Don't Move par Adam Schinfler et Brian Netto
Vole, vole tristesse par Miryam Charles
I Care a Lot par J Blakeson
Halloween par David Gordon Green
Nocturnal Animals par Tom Ford
The Pale Blue Eyes par Scott Cooper
Zombie de George Andrew Romero
Le Comte de Monte-Cristo par Alexandre de La Patellière et Matthieu Delaporte
Vendredi 13 par Sean S.Cunningham
La colline a des yeux par Alexandre Aja
La Mécanique de l'ombre par Thomas Kruithof
Ephémères par Yuki Kawamura
In the Shadow of the Moon par Jim Mickle
Assassination Nation par Sam Levinson
The Substance par Coralie Fargeat
Harry Potter et la Chambre des secrets par Chris Colombus
Harry Potter et le Prisonnier d'Azkaban par Alfonso Cuaron
Harry Potter et la Coupe de feu par Mike Newell
Harry Potter et l'Ordre du Phénix par David Yates
Project X par Laura Poitras et Henri Moltke
Harry Potter et le Prince de sang-mêlé par David Yates
Harry Potter et les Reliques de la Mort, partie 1 par David Yates
Les cow-boys sont noirs de Serge Moati
Harry Potter et les Reliques de la Mort, partie 2 par David Yates
The Lord of the Rings : The Fellowship of the Ring par Peter Jackson
The Lord of the Rings : The Two Towers par Peter Jackson
The Lord of the Rings : The Return of the King par Peter Jackson
La Chapelle du Diable par Evan Spiliotopoulos
The Wonder par Sebastian Lelio
Le Roi Arthur : La légende d'Excalibur par Guy Ritchie
Le Dernier Voyage du Demeter par André Ovredal
Yannick par Quentin Dupieux
The Hunt par Craig Zobel
Elizabeth : L'Âge d'or par Shekhar Kapur
Glass Onion : Une histoire à couteaux tirés par Rian Johnson
Largo Winch : Le Prix de l'argent par Olivier Masset-Depasse
The Gray Man par Anthony et Joe Russo
DECEMBRE
LIVRES
Werner Bischof par Claude Roy
Elégie de Marienbad par Goethe
Le Doudou méchant par Claude Ponti
Histoires pragoises par Rainer Maria Rilke
FILMS
Le dernier des Mohicans par Michael Mann
Time Cut par Hannah Macpherson
SOS Fantômes : La Menace de Glace par Gil Kenan
Venom : The Last Dance par Kelly Marcel
Marie par D. J. Caruso
Sans identité par Jaume Collet-Serra
Heretic par Scott Beck et Bryan Woods
Reminiscence par Lisa Joy
An American Pickle par Brandon Trost
Renfield par Chris McKay
Carry-On par Jaume Collet-Serra
Céline (En français dans le texte) par Louis Pauwels et Yann Jouannet
Cold Blood Legacy : La Mémoire du sang par Frédéric Petitjean
Loups-garous par François Uzan
Le Seigneur des Anneaux : La Guerre des Rohirrim par Kenji Kamiyama
Oppenheimer par Christopher Nolan
SERIE
Stranger Things par Matt et Ross Duffer
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platonic connections wishlist (long)
Jayn: Gotham-based vigilantes especially Nightwing, the Gotham City Sirens*, the Justice League* (DC Comics); Simon Bassett* (Bridgerton); James Valdez* (Queen of the South-US); Alina Starkov, Nina Zenik*, Jesper Fahey, Inej Ghafa (The Grishaverse).
Naela: Tyrion Lannister, Daenerys Targaryen, Rhaegar Targaryen, (ASOIAF/GOT); Chaotic Good & Lawful Evil characters (D&D)
Achilles: gods from Hellenic myth*, Arthurian knights* (Mythology); Kyle "Gaz" Garrick, Captain Price, Johnny "Soap" MacTavish, König (Call of Duty); Astarion or any D&D characters (D&D); Gambit*, Mystique, Wolverine*, Storm, any Avengers (Marvel)
Jasmine: Iron Man, Loki*, Wolverine, Brunhilde (Marvel); Isabelle Lightwood, Alec Lightwood, Magnus Bane*, the half-fey Blackthorns, Kieran Kingson (Shadowhunter Chronicles)
Skadi: Brunhilde, Black Widow, Spider-Man*, Winter Soldier* (Marvel); Simon "Ghost" Riley*, Johnny "Soap" MacTavish, Farah Karim (Call of Duty); Karlach (D&D)
Oraia: Emma Frost, Loki, Iron Man, She-Hulk, X-Men in general* (Marvel); Philippe (Versailles), anyone (The Old Guard), Jack Sparrow* (POTC); most characters (Shadowhunter Chronicles); werewolves, vampires, fey (urban fantasy); Artemis*, Hestia, Bast*, Isis/Aset, sea nymphs, heroes (Mythology)
Hestia: Cyclops, Iceman, Jean Grey, Storm, Wolverine, Spider-Man, Venom (Marvel); young!Coriolanus Snow, Katniss Everdeen, Gale Hawthorne (The Hunger Games)
Rose: Zatanna, Constantine, Dr. Fate, Raven (DC Comics)
Aurelia: The Marauders--especially Sirius & Remus!, Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, prominent Order members and/or Death Eaters, any cool people from the Marauders/Golden Trio eras (Harry Potter)
Rela: Din Djarin*, Grogu, Obi-Wan (Star Wars)
Zehara: Sokka, Suki*, Korra, Tenzin (Avatar: TLA & LOK)
Eugenia: Bonnie Bennett (Vampire Diaries); Hellenic deities (Mythology); werewolves, vampires, fey (urban fantasy); Dean Winchester (Supernatural)
Fantomex: ngl he'll flirt even if it's just platonic but Storm, Wolverine, Monet St. Croix (Marvel)
Renée: Gambit, Mystique, Fantomex, Storm, Quicksilver, Wolverine, Daken, Loki, basically anybody who's had dubious morals from time to time (Marvel); Nightwing, Wonder Woman, Superwoman (DC Comics)
Shayera: DCAU!Wally, Wonder Woman, Black Canary (DC Comics)
Mu Lan: Simon Bassett (Bridgerton); any people who are unfazed by Strong Independent Women 😁 especially those from eras other than the modern one...
Lady Gotham: Gotham vigilantes especially Batman, Red Hood (or Robin!Jason), Nightwing, Batgirl (Cassandra Cain)...also magic users like Swamp Thing, Constantine, Zatanna, The Spectre, Etrigan (DC Comics); wouldn't mind crossovers like something with Doctor Strange, Ghost Rider, Loki (Marvel)
-- an asterisk means "zomg I've been wanting this forever!" --
thanks for reading!
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Typography Tuesday
ROMAIN DU ROI
This week we turn to the development of a typeface that was expressly a product of the Age of Enlightenment: the Romain du Roi, or the Roman typeface of the king. The typeface was commissioned by the Sun King, Louis XIV of France, in 1692 for the exclusive use of the Imprimerie Royale. Based entirely on Enlightenment principles, the type would have powerful implications for later French type designs, and exhibited, as the English historian S. H. Steinberg observes, “the cold brilliance distinctive equally of the absolute monarchy and the logical mind of France.”
The king charged French mathematician and engraver Nicolas Jaugeon, along with a committee of the Academy of Sciences, to deliberately turn away from the principles of calligraphy and epigraphy that had been the basis for previous type designs, and instead develop designs entirely on mathematical principles. The academicians drew up the design of each letter on a strictly analytical basis, using a rectangle subdivided into 2304 squares (64 x 36). The result was an aridity that caused William Morris two centuries later to exclaim that the artist had been ousted by the engineer. Fortunately, the eminent French punch-cutter Philippe Grandjean mellowed this austerity, cutting several sizes over the next 10 years. Although these types remained the exclusive property of the Imprimerie Royale, every French typographer imitated it as far as the royal privilege would permit, and would lead directly to the famous type designs of Pierre-Simon Fournier and the Didot family.
Shown here are pages from the six-volume series Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire des insectes by French entomologist René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur (1683-1757), published in Paris by L'Imprimerie royale from 1734-1742. These pages show the practical use to which the efforts of Grandjean and his shop were put. The image of Charles Louis Simonneau‘s engraved plate of Jaugeon’s designs used by Grandjean to make his punches is from Warren Chappell’s A Short History of the Printed Word. The G and H in the last image was randomly grabbed from the interwebs.
View more posts from our copy of Réaumur’s series on insects.
View our other Typography Tuesday posts.
#Typography Tuesday#typetuesday#Romain du Roi#Louis XIV#Imprimerie Royale#Nicolas Jaugeon#French Academy of Sciences#Philippe Grandjean#French type#René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur#Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire des insectes#Charles Louis Simonneau#17th century type
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HOMMAGE A PHILIPPE PASCAL
Concert hommage Exposition photo de Pierre René Worms
Photo : Philippe Pascal par Etienne Daho
Larmes de joie hier soir pour un concert beau, amical et joyeux en hommage à l’artiste et ami Philippe Pascal, dans la salle mythique de La Cité à Rennes où nous avons presque tous débuté.J’ai chanté avec Marquis la chanson « Je n’écrirai plus si souvent ». Moment gravé dans ma mémoire pour l’éternité. Performances magnifiques et final chair de poule avec tous les artistes liés par une histoire commune et par notre affection pour Philippe, sa compagne Claire et son fils Pierre Jean.
Marquis (Frank Darcel, Eric Morinière, Thierry Alexandre, Daniel Paboeuf, Nico Boyer, Etienne Daho)
Marc Seberg (Anzia, Pierre Corneau, Gael Desbois, J Shulteis)
Philippe Pascale (Pascal Le Berre, Flora Fischer)
Les Nus (Dargelos)
Blue Train Choir (Goulven Hamel, Pierre Fablet)
Fracture (Sergeï Papail) x
Richard Dumas
Jad Wio (Denis Bortek) x
Kas Product (Mona Soyoc) x
Dominique A, Pascal Obispo, Alan Stivell, Fredéric Lo,
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[BAUDELAIRE] -- THÉOCRITE (ca. 315-250 av. J.-Ch.). [Opera] quae extant. Glasgow: Robert & Andrew Foulis, 1746.
Petit in-4 (194 x 143 mm). Avec le faux-titre. (Rousseurs éparses.) Veau tacheté de l'époque, dos à nerfs, tranches dorées (mors frottés et partiellement fendus, usures), chemise en demi-chagrin vert du XIXe siècle, étui assorti. Provenance: Jo. Jacob Trivultius (ex-libris) -- Charles Baudelaire (envoi à Philoxène Boyer) -- Philoxène Boyer (envoi de Baudelaire sur la garde) -- Charles Asselineau (ex-libris) -- Philippe Burty (ex-libris et note contrecollée, portant également une note de Nadar) -- Nadar (ex-libris, et ex-dono de Burty) -- René Choppin (ex-libris) -- Pierre Leroy (vente à Paris le 27 juin 2007, lot 12).
Bonne édition des oeuvres du poète grec. PRÉCIEUX EXEMPLAIRE AYANT APPARTENU À CHARLES BAUDELAIRE. De nombreuses marques de lecture se trouvent en marge de cet exemplaire -- notamment des petites croix à l'encre brune semblables à celle utilisée pour l'envoi de Baudelaire à son ami, le poète et dramaturge Philoxène Boyer à qui cet exemplaire fut offert.
EXEMPLAIRE SIGNIFICATIF ayant appartenu à Baudelaire et à un grand nombre de ses amis proches. Philippe Burty, collectionneur et critique d'art, l'acheta lors de la vente de la bibliothèque de Charles Asselineau et l'offrit à son ami Nadar, ce dont témoigne une note très personnelle contrecollée au feuillet de garde et adressée à madame Nadar: "La veille de Noël 1874. Madame Nadar, Ce soir, vous choisirez une des bottes de sept kilomètres de Nadar; Vous le mettrez dans la cheminée. Vous mettrez ce petit paquet à côté ! Je crois que le lendemain matin Nadar sera bigrement étonné ! Je vous serre les mains, Ph. Burty". Nadar a lui-même ajouté cette phrase en bas de la lettre: "A la vente Asselineau, Burty m'avait devancé pour l'achat de ce volume. - M'en voyant grand dépit, galamment il me l'envoya le soir. Nadar".
LES OUVRAGES PROVENANT DE LA BIBLIOTHÈQUE PERSONNELLE DE BAUDELAIRE SONT DE TOUTE RARETÉ.
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Vivant, il a manqué le monde ; mort, il le possède.
- François René de Chateaubriand (1768-1848), Vie de Napoléon, livres XIX à XXIV des Mémoires d’outre-tombe (posthume)
Of course we don’t have any photograph or film of Napoleon’s death on 5 May 1821 on Saint Hélène. But we do have the next best thing: a painting. Charles de Steuben depiction of Napoleon's deathbed and his faithful entourage that served as witnesses to his dying moments became the one of the most important paintings of the post-Napoleonic era but then faded from modern memory.
I first came across it by accident when I was in my teens at my Swiss boarding school. There were times I found myself with school friends going away on hiking trips around the high Alpine chain of the Allgäu Alps and we would drive through Lake Constance to get there, or we would hike around the Lake itself through the Bodensee-Rundwanderweg.
Perched high above Lake Constance and nestled in large parklands, stood Schloss Arenenberg which overlooks the lower part of Lake Constance. At first, it appears a relatively modest country house. But this was no usual pretty looking house. Arenenberg was owned by well-heeled families before it was sold to Hortense de Beauharnais, the adopted daughter and sister-in-law of the French Emperor himself, Napoleon Bonaparte. She had it rebuilt in the French Empire style and lived there from 1817 with her son Louis Napoleon, later Emperor Napoleon III, who is said to have spoken the Thurgau dialect in addition to French. This elegantly furnished castle then was once the residence of the last emperor of France.
The alterations made first by Queen Hortense and later by Empress Eugénie have been carefully preserved and the house still bears the marks of both women. Queen Hortense's drawing room is perfectly preserved and visitors can still admire her magnificent library (all marked with the Empress' cipher) containing over one thousand books. Likewise, in the room where the queen died, every object has been maintained in its original condition: pieces of furniture and personal belongings are gathered here to evoke her memory in a very touching manner. As for Empress Eugénie's rooms, they too have been very carefully preserved. Her private drawing room is a perfect illustration of the Second Empire style with sculptures by Carpeaux and portraits of the imperial family by Winterhalter.
After 1873, the Empress and the Imperial Prince brought the palace back to life by making regular summer visits, which they continued until 1878. However, on the tragic death of her son in 1879, Eugénie found it difficult to return to a place so full of painful memories. And so in 1906 she donated the estate to the canton of Thurgovie as a testimony of her gratitude for the region's faithful hospitality towards the Napoleon family. And in accordance with the Empress' wishes, the residence was turned into a museum devoted to Napoleon.
In what is now the Napoleonic Museum, the original furnishings have been preserved, and the palace gardens had been fully restored. This in itself might be worth a visit for the view over Lake Constance which is stunning. For Napoleonic era buffs though its the incredible art collection which is its real treasure. It houses an important art collection including works by the First-Empire artists Chinard Canova, Gros, Robert Lefèvre, Gérard, Isabey and Girodet-Trioson, and by the Second-Empire painters and sculptors Alfred de Dreux, Winterhalter, Carpeaux, Meissonier, Hébert, Flandrin, Detaille, Nieuwerkerke and Giraud.
But what caught my eye was this painting, ‘La Mort de Napoléon’ by Charles de Steuben. I didn’t know anything about it or the artist for that matter, but one of my more erudite school friends who, being French, was into Napoleonic stuff in a huge way, and she explained it all to me. Of course I knew a fair bit about Napoleon growing up because my grandfather and father, being military men themselves, were Napoleonic warfare buffs and it rubbed off onto me. I just knew about Napoleon the military genius. I never thought about him once he was beaten at Waterloo in 1815. So I never really engaged with Napoleon the man. And yet here I was staring at his last breath of mortality caught forever in time through art. Not for the first time I had mixed feelings about Napoleon Bonaparte, both the man and the myth (built up around him since his death).
On 5 May, 1821, at 5.49pm in Longwood House on the remote island of St Helena, in the words of the famed French man of letters, François-René de Chateaubriand, ‘the mightiest breath of life which ever animated human clay’ came no more. To the British, Dutch, and Prussian coalition who had exiled Naopleon Bonaparte there in 1815, he was a despot, but to France, he was seen as a devotee of the Enlightenment.
In the decade following his demise, Napoleon’s image underwent a transformation in France. The monarchy had been restored, but by the late 1820s, it was growing unpopular. King Charles X was seen as a threat to the civil liberties established during the Napoleonic era. This mistrust revived Napoleon’s reputation and put him in a more heroic light.
Fascination with the French leader’s death led Charles de Steuben, a German-born Romantic painter living in Paris, to immortalise the momentous event. Steuben’s painting depicts the moment of Napoleon’s death and seeks to capture the sense of awe in the room at the death of a man whose legendary career had begun in the French Revolution. It was this, ultimate moment that Steuben wished to immortalise in a painting which has since become what could almost be described as the official version of the scene.
There is no question that Steuben’s painting became the most famous and most iconic depiction of Napoleon’s death in art history. In another painting, executed during the years 1825-1830, Steuben was to give a realistic view of the emperor dictating his memoirs to general Gourgaud. This same realism also pervades his version of Napoleon’s death, and it is totally unlike Horace Vernet’s, Le songe de Bertrand ou L’Apothéose de Napoléon (Bertrand’s Dream or the apotheosis of Napoleon) which, although painted in the same year, is an allegorical celebration of the emperor’s martyrdom and as such the first stone in the edifice of the Napoleonic legend.
And what a legend Napoleon’s life was turned into for time immemorial. Napoleon declared himself France’s First Consul in 1799 and then emperor in 1804. For the next decade, he led France against a series of European coalitions during the Napoleonic Wars and expanded his empire throughout much of continental Europe before his defeat in 1814. He was exiled to the Mediterranean island of Elba, but he escaped and briefly reasserted control over France before a crushing final defeat at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
Napoleon’s military prowess earned him the fear of his enemies, but his civil reforms in France brought him the respect of his people. The Napoleonic Code, introduced in 1804, replaced the existing patchwork of French laws with a unified national system built on the principles of the Enlightenment: universal male suffrage, property rights, equality (for men), and religious freedom. Even in his final exile on St. Helena, Napoleon proved a magnetic presence. Passengers of ships docked to resupply would hurry to meet the great general. He developed strong personal bonds with the coterie who had accompanied him into exile. Although some speculate that he was murdered, most agree that Napoleon’s death in 1821, at the age of 51, was the result of stomach cancer.
By contrast, Charles de Steuben was born in 1788, his youth and artistic training coinciding with Napoleon’s rise to power. He was the son of the Duke of Württemberg officer Carl Hans Ernst von Steuben. At the age of twelve he moved with his father, who entered Russian service as a captain, to Saint Petersburg, where he studied drawing at the Art Academy classes as a guest student. Thanks his father's social contacts in the court of the Tsar, in the summer of 1802 he accompanied the young Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia (1786–1859) and granddaughter of Frederick II Eugene, Duke of Württemberg, to the Thuringian cultural city of Weimar, where the Tsar's daughter two years later married Charles Frederick, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1783–1853). Steuben, then fourteen years old, was a Page at the ducal court, a position for which the career prospects would be in the military or administration. The poet Friedrich Schiller was a family friend who at once recognised De Steuben's artistic talent and instilled in him his political ideal of free self-determination regardless of courtly constraints.
At the behest of Pierre Fontaine in 1828 de Steuben painted La Clémence de Henri IV après la Bataille d'Ivry, depicting a victorious Henry IV of France at the Battle of Ivry. De Steuben's Bataille de Poitiers, en octobre 732, painted between 1834 and 1837, shows the triumphant Charles Martel at the Battle of Tours, also known as the Battle of Poitiers. He painted Jeanne la folle around the same time and he was commissioned by Louis Philippe to paint a series of portraits of past Kings of France.
Life in the French capital was a repeated source of internal conflict for Steuben. The allure of bohemian Paris and his military-dominated upbringing made him a wanderer between worlds. As an official commitment to his adopted country he became a French citizen in 1823. However, the irregularity of his income as a freelance artist was in contrast to his sense of duty and social responsibility. To secure his family financially, he took a job as an art teacher at École Polytechnique, where he briefly trained Gustave Courbet. In 1840 he was awarded a gold medal at the Salon de Paris for his highly acclaimed paintings.
The love of classical painting was a lifelong passion of Steuben. He was a close friend to Eugène Delacroix, the leader of the French Romantic school of painting, whom he portrayed several times. Steuben was also part of this artistic movement, which replaced classicism in French painting. "The painter of the Revolution," as Jacques-Louis David was called by his students, joined art with politics in his works. The subjects of his historical paintings supported historical change. He painted mainly in sharp colour contrasts, heavy solid contours and clear outlines. The severity of this style led many contemporary artists - including Prud'hon - to a romanticised counter movement. They preferred the shadowy softness and gentle colour gradations of Italian Renaissance painters such as Leonardo da Vinci and Antonio da Correggio, whose works they studied intensively. Steuben, who had begun his training with David, felt the school was becoming increasingly rigid and dogmatic. Critics praised his deliberate compositions, excellent brush stroke and impressive colour effects. But some of his critics felt that his pursuit of dramatic design of rich people also showed, at times, a pronounced tendency toward the histrionic.
The portrayal of key moments in Napoleon’s dramatic military career would feature among some of Steuben’s best known works. But it is this death scene that Steuben is most remembered for.
Using his high-level contacts among figures in Napoleon’s circle, Steuben interviewed and sketched many of the people who had been present when Napoleon died at Longwood House on St. Helena. He wanted to attempt o give the most accurate representation of the scene possible. Indeed, the painter interviewed the companions of Napoleon’s captivity on their return to France and had them pose for their portraits. Only the Abbé Vignali, captain Crokat and the doctor Arnott were painted from memory. The Grand maréchal Bertrand made sketches of the plan of the room, noting the positions of the different pieces of furniture and people in the room. All the protagonists within the painting brought together some of their souvenirs and in posing for the painter, each person can be seen contributing to a work of collective memory, very much with posterity in mind.
Painstakingly researched, Steuben painted a carefully composed scene of hushed grief. Notable among the figures are Gen. Henri Bertrand, who loyally followed Napoleon into exile; Bertrand’s wife, Fanny; and their children, of whom Napoleon had become very fond.
The best known version of “La Mort de Napoléon” was completed in 1828. French writer Stendhal considered it “a masterpiece of expression.” In 1830 the installation of a more liberal monarchy in France further boosted admiration of Napoleon, who suddenly became a wildly popular figure in theatre, art, and music. This fervour led to the diffusion of Steuben’s deathbed scene in the form of engravings throughout Europe in the 1830s. As Napoleon’s stock arose within French culture and arts, so did Steuben’s depiction of Napoleon’s death. It became a grandeur of vision that permeated Steuben’s masterpiece of historical reconstruction.
Initially forming part of the collection of the Colonel de Chambrure, the painting was put up for auction in Paris, on 9 March 1830, with other Napoleonic works, notably Horace Vernet’s Les Adieux de Fontainebleau (The Fontainebleau adieux) and Steuben’s Retour de l’île d’Elbe (The return from the island of Elba). The catalogue noted that the painting had already been viewed in the colonel’s collection by “three thousand connoisseurs” – which alone would have made it a success -, but its renown was to be further amplified by the production of the famous engraving. The diffusion of this engraving by Jean-Pierre-Marie Jazet (1830-1831, held at the Musée de Malmaison), reprinted and copied countless times throughout the 19th century, made the scene a classic in popular imagery, on a level of popularity with paintings such as Millet’s Angelus.
A / Grand Marshal Henri-Gatien Bertrand. Utterly loyal servant of Napoleon’s to the last. His memoirs of the exile on St Helena were not published until 1849. Only the year 1821 has ever been translated into English.
B / General Charles Tristan de Montholon. Courtier and companion of Napoleon’s exile. Montholon managed to ease Bertrand out and become Napoleon’s closest companion at the end, highly rewarded in Napoleon’s will, which Montholon helped write. Montholon’s untrustworthy memoirs were published in 1846/47.
C / Doctor Francesco Antommarchi. Corsican anatomy specialist. Sent by Napoleon’s mother from Rome to St Helena to be Napoleon’s personal physician on the expulsion of Barry O’Meara. Napoleon disliked and distrusted Antommarchi. Antommarchi’s untrustworthy memoirs were very influential and published in 1825.
D / Angelo Paolo Vignali, Abbé. Corsican assistant-chaplain, sent by Madame Mère from Rome to St Helena in 1819.
E / Countess Françoise Elisabeth “Fanny” Bertrand and her children: Napoléon (F), who carried the censer at Napoleon’s funeral; Hortense (G); Henry (H); and Arthur (I), youngest by six years of all the Bertrand children and born on the island. She was wife of the Grand Marshal, very unwilling participant in the exile on St Helena. Her relations with Napoleon were difficult since she refused to live at Longwood. She spoke fluent English. Was however very loyal to Napoleon.
J / Louis Marchand. Napoleon’s valet from 1814 on and one of his closest servants. As Napoleon noted in his will, “The service he [Marchand] rendered were those of a friend”.
K / “Ali”, Louis Étienne Saint-Denis. Known as “the Mamluk Ali”, one of Napoleon’s longest-serving and intimate servants; He became Librarian at Longwood and was an indefatigable copyist of imperial manuscripts.
L / Ali’s English (Catholic) wife, Mary ‘Betsy’ Hall. She was sent out from England by UK relatives of the Countess Bertrand to be governess/nursemaid to the Bertrand children. Married Ali aged 23 in October 1819.
M / Jean Abra(ha)m Noverraz. From the Vaud region in Switzerland. Very tall and imposing figure that Napoleon called his “Helvetic bear”. He was himself ill during Napoleon’s illness.
N / Noverraz’s wife, Joséphine née Brulé. They married in married in July 1819, and she was the Countess Montholon’s lady’s maid. Noverraz and Saint-Denis had a fist fight for the hand of Joséphine.
O / Jean Baptiste Alexandre Pierron. The cook, dessert specialist, long in Napoleon’s service and who had accompanied Napoleon to Elba.
P /Jacques Chandelier. Iincorrectly identified on the picture as Santini who had left the island in 1817. A cook, from the service of Pauline Bonaparte, Napoleon’s sister, who arrived on St Helena with the group from Rome in 1819.
Q /Jacques Coursot. Butler, from the service of Madame Mère, Napoleon’s mother, he arrived on St Helena with the group from Rome in 1819.
R / Doctor Francis Burton. Irish surgeon in the 66th regiment who had arrived on St Helena only on 31st March 1821. He is renowned for having made Napoleon’s death mask (with ensign John Ward and Antommarchi).
S/ Doctor Archibald Arnott. Surgeon in the 20th regiment. Brought in to tend to Napoleon in extremis on 1 April 1821.
T/ Captain William Crokat. A Scot, orderly officer at Longwood for less than a month, having replaced Engelbert Lutyens on 15 April. He received the honour of carrying the news of Napoleon’s death back to London and also the reward, namely, a promotion and £500, privileges of which Lutyens was deliberately deprived by the governor.
#charles de steuben#art#painting#napoleon#bonaparte#st helena#life#death#chateaubriand#french#france#emperor#artist#aesthetics#war#politics#society#culture#arts#personal
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Mapping The World With §ound§ in St-Amand-les-Eaux (Nord) - église St-Martin
Cloche 3
« ECCE DEUM CLAMAT PASTORE RENATA RENATO VICARIX OUAM (ou QUAM) FUGIENS DETRAXIT TEUTON AMANDAM CARITAS Je m’appelle Amanda Je chante le Saint qui fonda la cité. Comme sa voix, ma voix pressante du Christ prêche la charité Familles Victor Dorémieux-Grenier et Lebacoz-Bouchart Fondue en 1852 par Paul Petitfour à Arbot. Maitre Joffrain étant doyen. Nicolle Maire. Brisée par les allemands en 1918 Réssucitée dans les ateliers de la maison Wauthy à Douai J’ai été bénite le 1er février 1925 par Monseigneur E. Lesne recteur des facultés catholiques de Lille J’ai eu pour parrain Jean Dorémieux et pour marraine Marie Lebacoz-Bouchart Pie XI étant pape, Jean Chollet Archevêque de Cambrai, René Behague curé doyen de la paroisse St-Martin à St-Amand-les-Eaux Gustave Micheaux Eugène Vigneron, Alexandre Philippe Vicaires »
Remerciements : Monsieur Degroote
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Master List of Black Creators, Owners, & Public Figures
Master List of Black Creators, Owners, & Public Figures
DISCLAIMER: I am fucking whiter than white. I compiled this list to boost black creators and public figures, but if I am overstepping at all PLEASE let me know!
Also, I tried to research these in a timely manner. If anyone in these lists is problematic or should not be supported, let me know. :)
(Of course, this is only a TINY portion! Feel free to add more names, businesses, and creators!)
——
Activists:
•Naomi Anderson
•Maya Angelou
•James Baldwin
•Lillie Mae Bradford
•Mari Copeny
•Frederick Douglass
•Ruth Ellis
•Erica Garner
•Alicia Garza
•Ernest Green
•Fannie Lou Hamer
•Frances Harper
•Langston Hughes
•Marsha P. Johnson
•Alberta Odell Jones
•Quincy Jones
•Martin Luther King Jr.
•Audre Lorde
•Bree Newsome
•Huey P. Newton
•Rosa Parks
-Bayard Rustin
•Sojourner Truth
•Harriet Tubman
•Madam C.J. Walker
•Ida B. Wells
•Malcolm X
Actors/Actresses & Directors:
•Yahya Abdul-Mateen II
•James Avery
•Angela Bassett
•Halle Berry
•John Boyega
•Levar Burton
•Nick Cannon
•Michael Clarke Duncan
•Zendaya Coleman
•Terry Crews
•Viola Davis
•Idris Elba
•Jamie Foxx
•Morgan Freeman
•Whoopi Goldberg
•Tiffany Haddish
•Skai Jackson
•William Jackson Harper
•Kevin Hart
•Steve Harvey
•Jennifer Hudson
•Ice Cube
•Spike Lee
•Phill Lewis
•Bernie Mac
•Eddie Murphy
•Keke Palmer
•James Pickens Jr.
•Chris Rock
•Will Smith
•Raven Symonè
•Denzel Washington
•Jesse Williams
•Chandra Wilson
•Oprah Winfrey
•John Witherspoon
Authors & Poets:
•Elizabeth Acevedo
•Tomi Adeyemi
•Kwame Alexander
•Maya Angelou
•Rena Barron
•Paula Chase
•Dhonielle Clayton
•Brandy Colbert
•Jay Coles
•Dana Davis
•Tanita S. Davis
•Sharon M. Draper
•Paul Laurence Dunbar
•Akwaeke Emezi
•Sharon G. Flake
•Kristina Forest
•L.R. Giles
•Whitney D. Grandison
•Nikki Grimes
•Justina Ireland
•Tiffany D. Jackson
•Kimberly Jones
•Claire Kann
•Kekla Magoon
•Janice Lynn Mather
•Tony Medina
•Candice Montgomery
•David Barclay Moore
•Britney Morris
•Bethany C. Morrow
•Greg Neri
•Nnedi Okorafor
•Tochi Onyebuchi
•Morgan Parker
•Junauda Petrus
•Ben Philippe
•Jason Reynolds
•Debbie Rigaud
•Ilyasah Shabazz
•Nic Stone
•Liara Tamani
•Mildred D. Taylor
•Angie Thomas
•Brian F. Walker
•Booker T. Washington
•Renée Watson
•Alicia Williams
•August Wilson
•C.E. Wilson
•Ashley Woodfolk
•Jacqueline Woodson
•Nicola Yoon
•Ibi Aanu Zoboi
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•Eso Won Books (Los Angeles, CA)
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•Shades of Afrika (Long Beach, CA)
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•Semicolon (Chicago, IL)
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•Source Booksellers (Detroit, MI)
•Mind’s Eye Comics (Burnsville, MN)
•Eye See Me (St. Louis, MO)
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•The Lit Bar (The Bronx, NY)
•Cafe Con Libros (Brooklyn, NY)
•Megabrain Comics (Rhinebeck, NY)
•The Schomburg Shop (Harlem, NY)
•Sister’s Uptown (New York, NY)
•Fulton Street Books (Tulsa, OK)
•Third Eye Bag (Portland, OR)
•Amalgam Comics (Philadelphia, PA)
•Harriett’s Bookshop (Philadelphia, PA)
•Uncle Bobbie’s (Philadelphia, PA)
•Turning Page Bookshop (Goose Creek, SC)
•Black Pearl Books (Austin, TX)
•The Dock (Fort Worth, TX)
•Loyalty Books (Washington DC)
•MahoganyBooks (Washington DC)
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Book Reviewers:
•Black & Bookish
•Black Books Matter
•Bookaddict4real
•Brazen Babe Reviews
•Doddy About Books
•Fine Point Scribbles
•Kaybee’s Bookshelf, A Literary Blog
•Literally Black
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Models:
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•Liya Kebede
•Jayne Kennedy
•Janet Langhart
•Shakara Ledard
•Precious Lee
•Noémie Lenoir
•Damaris Lewis
•Sessilee Lopez
•Donyale Luna
•Anais Mali
•Eva Marcille
•Denny Mèndez
•Jillian Mercado
•Ariel Meredith
•Lineisy Montero
•Muna
•Katoucha Niane
•Mayowa Nicholas
•Emanuela de Paula
•Lais Ribeiro
•Valentine Rontez
•Shaun Ross
•Kimora Lee Simmons
•Naomi Sims
•Joan Smalls
•B. Smith
•Arlenis Sosa
•Sal Stowers
•Duckie Thot
•Jasmine Tookes
•Eugena Washington
•Veronica Webb
•Alek Wek
•Jessica White
•Slick Woods
•Kara Young
Musicians:
•Aaliyah
•Akon
•Louis Armstrong
•Pearl Bailey
•Harry Belafonte
•Chuck Berry
•Beyoncé
•The Black Eyed Peas
•Blackstreet
•B.o.B.
•The Bobettes
•Soulja Boy
•50 Cent
•Chance the Rapper
•Ray Charles
•Chubby Checker
•The Chords
•Ciara
•The Clovers
•The Coasters
•Nat ‘King’ Cole
•Zendaya Coleman
•The Contours
•Sam Cooke
•Taio Cruz
•Andra Day
•Bobby Day
•The Del-Vikings
•Jason Derulo
•Destiny’s Child
•The Diamonds
•Bo Diddley
•Daveed Diggs
•DMX
•Fats Domino
•Dr. Dre
•The Drifters
•Earth, Wind, & Fire
•Missy Elliott
•Flo Rida
•The Four Tops
•Aretha Franklin
•Bobby Freeman
•Marvin Gaye
•Gloria Gaynor
•CeeLo Green
•Billie Holiday
•Whitney Houston
•Ice-T
•Sharaya J
•Janet Jackson
•Michael Jackson/The Jackson 5
•Kamille
•Alicia Keys
•Khalid
•Sean Kingston
•Eartha Kitt
•Lenny Kravitz
•Patti LaBelle
•John Legend
•Leona Lewis
•Lizzo
•The Marcels
•The Masqueraders
•M.I.A.
•Mickey & Sylvia
•MKTO
•The Monotones
•Nelly
•Ne-Yo
•The Penguins
•Leigh-Anne Pinnock (of the girl group Little Mix)
•The Platters
•Prince
•Otis Redding
•Little Richard
•Rihanna
•The Ronettes
•Diana Ross
•Darius Rucker
•Run-DMC
•Travis Scott
•Shaggy
•Tupac Shakur
•Nina Simone
•Shirley & Lee
•The Silhouettes
•Snoop Dogg
•Jimmy Soul
•Jordin Sparks
•The Supremes
•The Temptations
•TLC
•T-Pain
•Ty Dolla Sign
•Usher
•Bill Withers
YouTubers:
Jackie Aina
Alissa Ashley
Yasmin Benoit
Berleezy
Raye Boyce
Patricia Bright
Marques Brownlee
Alyssa Forever
GlamTwinz
GloZell
Bri Hall
Todrick Hall
Aysha Harun
Alonzo Lerone
Oneika the Traveller
Shanna Malcolm
Shameless Maya
MakeupShayla
Chris Smoove
Nyma Tang
TheAjayII
AdrianXpression
#black lives matter#blm#black creators#black owned#black businesses#black authors#black actors#black activists
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🖼️: “When you speak to him about us”𓂃🖌
THIS MAN IS SOOOO BESOTTED just marry her already ugh <////333
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Des concerts à Paris et alentour en gras : les derniers ajouts :-: in bold: the last news Octobre 21. Pawns + Youth Avoiders + Barren? – Espace B 21. Les morts vont bien + Rivière de corps + René Couteau + Razzle Dazzle (dj) (Obernoir fest.) – L'International 21. Gâtechien + Wallack + Baron Crâne – ESS'pace 22. White Ring + Ghoster + Dalhia – Supersonic (gratuit) 22. Carambolage + Deedee & Tha Abracadabras + Roger de Lille & The Gin Tonics + The Hare (dj) (Obernoir fest.) – L'International 22. Thurston Moore – Trabendo 22. David J – Petit Bain 23. Ecstatic Vision + Les Tigres du futur + Os Noctambulos – ESS'pace 23. Sly & The Family Drone + Stef Ketteringham + Decimus + Dust Breeders – Espace B 23. Plomb + Je t'aime + Electric Press Kit + dj Oxblood (Obernoir fest.) – L'International 23. Tamara Goukassova + Fun Fun Funeral + Kassie Krut – La Station 23. Four Tet – Le 104 ||COMPLET|| 24. Last Night + Negative Space + Pedigree + Buzz Kull + Sydney Valette + dj Dave Rockin (Obernoir fest.) – L'International 24. Çub + Ayya + Radiant – Le Cirque électrique 24. The Necks – La Marbrerie (Montreuil) 25. A Certain Ratio + Empereur – Petit Bain 25. Poutre + OK fdp + Bruant zizi – ESS'pace 25. Fiesta en el Vacio + Axell Larsen + Franz France + Sinead O'Connick jr + Paroi (Serendip Lab fest.) – Jazz y Jazz 25. Catastrophe + Sean O'Hagan + Form – La Maroquinerie 25. Curses + Sophie Morello + Tonn3rr3 + E for Ears & Grāv Jōnz + Trusspe – La Station 25. Dave Philips + Bernardino Femminielli & Thea Govorchin – 3 rue de Tournant (Aubervilliers) 25. Blind Delon + Nick klein + UVB 76 + Dress Rehearsal + Little Nemo + L’An2000 [DaGeist + Outer Limit Lotus : ANNULÉ] (Obernoir fest.) – L'International 25. Automat + Stephanovitch + Cirylux + Worker Poor + Stef Mazet + Taiko Nova – Les 4 éléments 25. Varsovie + Paulie Jan + Blndr b2b Panzer + Mind Matter + End of Mortal Life – Glazart 25. Jozef Van Wissem – Crypte Notre-Dame de la Croix (sur résa : jvwparis[@]gmail.com) ||COMPLET|| 25. Bestial Mouth + Veil of Light – Protocol (Pantin) ||ANNULÉ|| 25. Orphx + O/H + December + Unhuman + Limbus Puerorum – Protocol (Pantin) ||ANNULÉ|| 26. The Monochrome Set + The Last Detail – Petit Bain 26. Nina Harker + Bianca Warlord + Amour Formica – Le Zorba 26. Truckks + Terrier + Achab + Olive Pogo + Car Crash Control (dj) (Obernoir fest.) – L'International 26. The Wheal + Princesse Napälm + L'Orchidée Cosmique + Klymt (Obernoir fest.) – L'International 26. Femminielli + dj Sundae + ANDCL + Oko – Petit Palace 26. Joachim Montessuis + Martin Bakero – Galerie Metanoïa 26. Rouge Mary + Regina Demina + AZF + Léonie Pernet (dj) + Juke + Morello – Point FMR 26/27. Ilya Smirnov + Christophe de Rohan Chabot + nikolaiykm + Natalya Serkova – 3 rue de Tournant (Aubervilliers) (sur RV : nikolaiykm[@]gmail.com) 26. Mørbeck + Philipp Strobel + IV Horsemen – La Machine 26. Alignment + Hadone + UVB + Parfait + Repro – tba 26. Loto Retina + Jakub Lemiszewski + Somaticae + Le Compas dans l'oeil + Ahta Bat + Letal Ataraxia (Serendip Lab fest.) – Le Sultan 27. Laurent Garnier + Deena Abdelwahed – Dehors brut 27. Stephen Mallinder + Laisse Moi + Hexenschuss (Obernoir fest.) – L'International 28. Kate Tempest – Le Trianon 29. Danse avec les Shlags – Le Motel (gratuit) 29. Agent Side Grinder + DaGeist – La Boule noire 29. Pauwels + Mr Marcaille + BOB Cooper – L'ESS'pace 30. The White Screen + Techno Thriller + Novichok – Supersonic (gratuit) 30. Oiseaux-Tempête + Jessica Moss – La Maroquinerie 30. Jenny Hval – Centre Pompidou 30. Battles – Trabendo 30. Dame Area + Slaylor Moon + Noir de Maars– Espace B 31. Skepta + Mura Masa + Hamza + Zola + Ateyaba + Celeste + Duendita + Ezra Collective + Flohio + Kojey Radical + Master Peace + Slowthai + The Comet is Coming + Yussef Dayes + Charlotte Dos Santos + Kojaque (Pitchfork fest.) – La Grande Halle de La Villette 31. Arrington de Dionyso – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 31. Broken English Club + Cabaret nocturne + IV Horsemen + Gil. Barte – Petit Bain Novembre 01. Chromatics + Belle & Sebastian + Primal Scream + John Talabot + Weyes Blood + Barrie + Briston Maroney + Chai + Desire + Helado Negro + Jackie Mendoza + Nilüfer Yanya + Orville Peck + Sheer Mag + Squir + Loving + Nelson Beer + Sons of Raphael (Pitchfork fest.) – La Grand Halle de La Villette 01. Park Hie Jin + HAAI + Afrodeutsche + Nite Fleit (Pitchfork fest. after party) – Trabendo 01. Meconio + Mamachi + Punaises + Areva (LaDIYfest) – Le Cirque électrique 01. Imperial Black Unit + Mekano + CH-01 + Krase b2b Alphonse Fassaert – Petit Bain 01. Under Black Helmet b2b Hadone + Inhalt der Nacht b2b Echoes of October + Danilo Incorvala + Makornik + Félicie – Les Docks de Paris (La Plaine-Saint-Denis) 02. The 1975 + Charli XCX + 2manysdj (dj) + Aurora + Agar Agar + SebastiAn + Aeris Roves vs Jamila Woods + Jessica Pratt + Kedr Livanskiy + Korantemaa + BEA1991 + Caroline Polachek + Ela Minus + KhadyaK + Mk.gee + Oklou + Tobi Lou (Pitchfork fest.) – La Grand Halle de La Villette 02. Volt + Vicious Irene + U.R.S.A + Gertrude + Kalicia Katakov (LaDIYfest) – Le Cirque électrique 03. Whispering Sons – Point FMR 03. Ensemble économique + CIA débutante – Le Chinois (Montreuil) 05. Body of Light + Dead Mascot + Boy Scoot Hopkins – Supersonic (gratuit) 05. Ceremony – Espace B 05. Dear Deer + Traitrs + Men in disorder – L'International 06. The Murder Capital – Nouveau Casino 06. Scattered Purgatory + Qian Geng + UVB76 + ruò tán – Le Cirque électrique 06. Minus Pilot + GNG + Thomas Stone + Kevin Buckland – Café de Paris 06. Mont Analogue + Les Halles + Bravo Tounky – Garage Mu 06. Guitar Wolf + School Disco – Gibus 06. Glacial – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 07. Camilla Sparksss + Hyperculte [+ Xiu Xiu : ANNULÉ] – Petit Bain 07. Kælan Mikla – La Boule noire 07. Randomer + Parallx + Parfait – Glazart 08. Bedroom Community – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 08. Part Chimp + Gnod + Hey Colossus – Petit Bain 08. Sourdurent + Raymonde – Pan Piper 08. Jad Wio + Love in Prague – Gibus 08. Jennifer Cardini b2b Gerd Janson + Mouse on Mars + Fantastic Twins + Oko DJ (10 ans d’Arte concert) – La Machine (gratuit sur invitation) 08. Crystal Geometry + Monya + Size Pier + Kaya + Sina XX – La Station 08. Boy Harscher – Trabendo ||COMPLET|| 09. Trotski nautique (20 ans de l’Omadis) – Omadis (gratuit) 09. Molchat Doma + War Scenes – La Station 09. Fleuves Noirs + Thank + Drive with a dead girl + Panico Panico – Le Rigoletto 09. Leroy se meurt + Staatseinde – Le Zorba 09. Kwartz + ABSL + Toscan Haas – Glazart 10. Amiina : cinéconcert sur "Fantomas" de Louis Feuillade – Le Studio|Philharmonie 10. Ôlafur Arnald + Hugar – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 10. Fontaine D.C. – Bataclan 12. Deerhunter + Moon Diagrams – Trabendo 12. Up-Tight + Officine – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 13. Mick Harvey & JP Silo, Steve Shelley, Glenn Lewis – Les Trois Baudets 14. Dinah Bird & Jean-Philippe Renoult (Inaudible Matters) – La Gaîté lyrique 14. Girl Band + Silverbacks – La Maroquinerie 14. Automatisme + Lacustre (Sulfure fest.) – Le vent se lève 14. Manni Dee + Remco Beekwilder + Mental Infection – Glazart 14. Stella Chiweshe + Is a Fish – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 15. Von Pariahs + Nursery – Point FMR 15. Tendra Ael + City Dragon + Meryll Ampe + Divisas – La Pointe Lafayette 15. Chemical Brothers – Seine musicale (Boulogne-Billancourt) 15. Kap Bambino – La Gaîté lyrique ||ANNULÉ|| 15. Karenn + 16H07 + Antigone... (Big Bang Festival) – Les Docks de Paris 16. Kas:st + Agoria + Bambounou b2b François X + Charles Kenkler + Matrixxman + Remcord...(Big Bang Festival) – Les Docks de Paris 17. Nitzer Ebb + Liebknecht – La Machine 17. Tropical Fuck Storm – Badaboum 18. Omni + The Gotobeds + Pleasure Principle – La Boule noire 18. Surf Curse + edgar déception + Fiasco – Supersonic (gratuit) 19. Earth + Helen Money – Petit Bain 20. Lucy Railton + Sean Baxter + Jessica Ekomane – Instants chavirés (Montreuil) 21. Cate Le Bon + Grimm Grimm – Petit Bain 21. Haco + Emiko Ota avec KiriSute Gomen – Studio Campus 21. Vincent Ségal, Clément Saunier, Odile Auboin, Jossalyn Jessen et Gilbert Nouno jouent des pièces de Peter Eötvös, Yan Maresz, Gilbert Nouno et Fausto Romitelli (fest. Innovasounds) – Le 104 21>23. Nosfell : “Le Corps des songes” (fest. New Settings) – Théâtre de la Cité internationale 22. eRikm + Franck Vigroux & Antoine Schmitt : “Chronostasis” (fest. Innovasounds) – Le 104 22. Rubin Steiner + Dombrance + Ambeyance + Meteo Mirage – La Maroquinerie 22. Nursery + Casse Gueule + Tout de suite – Cirque électrique 22. Kazu Makino (Blonde Redhead) – Les Étoiles 22. Drew McDowall – tbc 23. Franck Vigroux & Kurt d’Haeseleer : “The Island (part. 1)” + Cinna Peyghamy (fest. Bruits blancs) – La Muse en circuit (Alfortville) (gratuit sur résa) 23. Trio Sacher + Ensemble intercontemporain (fest. Innovasounds) – Le 104 23. Billy Childish + Le Villejuif Undergroud + Petausaure (fest. BBmix) – Carré Bellefeuille (Boulogne-Billancourt) 23. 999999999 + Jawbreakrs + Nico Moreno + Perc + Sentimental Rave + Softcoresoft + Trym + Parfait + UR trax – tba 24. TR/ST – Le Trianon 24. Mdou Moctar – La Boule noire 24. Midori Takada + Carla dal Forno + Felicia Atkinson (fest. BBmix) – Carré Bellefeuille (Boulogne-Billancourt) 24. The Young Gods + Les Tétines noires – La Machine 26. Wardruna – Olympia 27. Poly-Math + Bruit ≤ + Maven – Supersonic (gratuit) 27. The Stranglers – Olympia 27. Silly Joy + Raskolnikov + Jupiter Jane – L’International 27. Le Singe blanc + Double Nelson + Putavelo – Le Cirque électrique 27. Hélène Breschand, Tarek Atoui & Cécile Mont-Reynaud : “Pandore” + Ensemble Motus joue Tony Conrad et Elsa Biston (fest. Bruits blancs) – Anis Gras (Arcueil) 28. The Psychotic Monks – Trabendo 28. Artl + Powerdove – Petit Bain 28. Derek Holzer : “Vector Synthesis” + Cate Hope & Lisa McKinney : “Super Liminum” + Antoine Schmitt & Hortense Gauthier : “CliMax” (fest. Bruits blancs) – Le Cube (gratuit sur résa) ||COMPLET|| 29. Scanner – Nouveau Théâtre de Montreuil 29. Ulrich Krieger : “Raw” + Cellule d’intervention Metamkine (fest. Bruits blancs) – La Muse en circuit (Alfortville) 30. Mondkopf – Médiathèque musicale de Paris (gratuit) 30. Donato Dozzy + Max Cooper + Terry & Cyan Riley + Ensemble intercontemporain joue "Drumming" de Steve Reich + Ensemble Social Silence joue "Music for Airport" de Brian Eno + Apollo noir + Récital pour marimbas (Marathon fest.) – La Gaîté lyrique 30. Aidan Baker & BOW Quintet + SEPL (Sulfure fest.) – Le vent se lève 30. Ulrich Krieger + Natacha Muslera + Julien Desprez + Eryck Abecassis + Sylvaine Hélary avec Clyde Chabot, Jean Cagnard, Ismaël Jude, Nathalie Papin et Michel Simonot (fest. Bruits blancs) – Anis Gras (Arcueil) Décembre 01. Motorama – La Maroquinerie 03. White Hills – Supersonic (gratuit) 03. Belgrado – Espace B 06. Phillip Glass Ensemble : cinéconcert sur "Koyaanisqatsi" de Godfrey Reggio – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 06. Answer Code Request + Regis + Raslan b2b Yoannis – La Seine musicale (Boulogne-Billancourt) 07. Phillip Glass Ensemble : cinéconcert sur "Powaqqatsi" de Godfrey Reggio – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 07. Kokoko! – La Gaîté lyrique 07. I Hate Models – tba 08. Phillip Glass Ensemble : cinéconcert sur "Naqoyqatsi" de Godfrey Reggio – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 08. Mark Lanegan Band + The Membranes – Le Trianon 11. Boris – Le Gibus 12. Mono + Jo Quail – Petit Bain 12. Kompromat (Vitalic & Rebeka Warrior) – La Cigale 13. Contrefaçon – La Gaîté lyrique 13. Regards extrêmes + Lisieux + Ascending divers – Les Voûtes 14. Ludwig Von 88 – Le Trianon 18. Amenra – Bataclan 2020 Janvier 04. Rokia Traoré + Ballaké Cissoko & Vincent Segal – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 16. Black Midi – Le Carreau du Temple 17. Edith Nylon – Petit Bain 17. Scratch Massive + Lokier + Cassie Raptor + Faast + Kiddo – Badaboum 18. Lee Ranaldo & Raül Refree – Le 104 18. Franck Vigroux : "Flesh" (Biennale Nemo) – Maison des arts et de la culture (Créteil) 29. Rendez-Vous – La Cigale 30. Editors – Salle Pleyel 31. Tindersticks – Salle Pleyel Février 02. Sunn o))) – La Gaîté lyrique 09. Explosions in the Sky – La Cigale 13. Ride – Le Trianon 16. Orchestral Manoeuvre in the Dark – La Cigale 21. Ensemble Links joue "Drumming" de Steve Reich + Cabaret contemporain : "Détroit" + Molécule – Le 104 24. Sleater Kinney – Le Trianon Mars 02. DIIV – La Gaîté lyrique 05. Orange Blossom : “Sharing” avec les machines de François Delarozière – Élysée Montmartre 06. Frustration – Le Trianon 07. Ensemble intercontemporain joue Steve Reich : cinéconcert sur un film de Gerhard Richter – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 10. Arnaud Rebotini : live pour “Fix Me” d’Alban Richard – Centre des Arts (Enghien-les-Bains) 11. Nada Surf – La Cigale 13. Russian Circle + Torche – Bataclan 17. Chelsea Wolf – La Gaîté lyrique 20. Ensemble Dedalus joue "Occam Ocean" d'Éliane Radigue – Le Studio|Philharmonie 21. Front 242 + She Past Away – Élysée Montmartre 21/22. Laurie Anderson : "The Art of Falling" – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 27. Lebanon Hanover – La Gaîté lyrique 28. Ensemble Links joue "Drumming" de Steve Reich + Cabaret contemporain joue Kraftwerk – théâtre de la Cité internationale Avril 14>17. Metronomy – La Cigale 27. Caribou – L’Olympia Mai 08. Max Richter : "Infra" + Jlin + Ian William Craig – Cité de la musique|Philharmonie 09. Max Richter : "Voices" – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 10. Max Richter : "Recomposed" & "Three Worlds" – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 19. Swans + Norman Westberg – Le Trabendo 23. Damon Albarn – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie 24. Damon Albarn – Salle Pierre Boulez|Philharmonie ||COMPLET|| 26. Minimal Compact – La Machine Juin 14. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Bercy Arena
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Rules: list 10 songs that you’re currently obsessed with and tag 10 people
I was tagged by three exquisite ladies (and my absolute favorites) @dearorpheus, @provst and @echymosis to do this. Thank you, darlings!
i. Vincenzo Bellini’s aria Tu sola, o mia Giulietta ... Deh! tu, bell’anima from I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Joyce DiDonato, Riccardo Minasi, Orchestre de l’Opéra Nationial de Lyon) ii. Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds' God Is in the House from the album No More Shall We Part iii. Lucilla Galeazzi’s Quante stelle nel cielo con la luna iv. Jean-Philippe Rameau’s Prélude from Hippolyte et Aricie’s third act (Christophe Rousset, Les Talens Lyriques) v. The entirety of Ottorino Respighi’s Trittico Botticelliano, and in particular the sensuous third movement, La nascida di Venere (Salvatore di Vittorio, Chamber Orchestra of New York) vi. Claude Debussy’s Mes longs cheveux from Pelléas et Mélisande (Barbara Hannigan, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Philharmonia Orchestra) vii. Roccu Mambrini’s Lamentu di Ghjesu (sopra La Follia) (Barbara Furtuna, L’Arpeggiata) viii. Leonard Cohen’s Joan of Arc from the album Songs of Love and Hate ix. Claudio Monteverdi’s aria Addio Roma from L’incoronazione di Poppea (Jennifer Larmore, René Jacobs) x. Luciano Berio’s arrangement of Azerbaijan Love Song from the song cycle Folk Songs (Anna Stéphany, Labyrinth Ensemble)
Bonus: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Domine Jesu from his Requiem in D minor, K. 626 (recording of my own performance with the Choir and Orchestra Gulbenkian)
I tag: @sainterly, @lessthansix, @parmandil, @barcarole, @mostlydeparted, @likeniobe, @womenlikeher, @abernatty, @mothersofmyheart, @twoclaws, @blazeofgold, @antigonick, @violentwavesofemotion, @objetpetita, @eclogues
#music#tag game#personal#Vincenzo Bellini#Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds#Lucilla Galeazzi#Jean-Philippe Rameau#Ottorino Respighi#Claude Debussy#Roccu Mambrini#Leonard Cohen#Claudio Monteverdi#Luciano Berio#Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
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Conclusion théorique
Pour cette recherche, j’ai pris beaucoup de temps avant de commencer. Je savais que je voulais diriger mon projet vers les relations humaines, mais je ne savais absolument pas quel concept des relations humaines je voulais mettre de l’avant. Pendant mes recherches autour de certains artistes, j’ai commencé à être inspiré et j’ai fait une première idée. Cependant, lorsque j’ai reçu les commentaires de Catherine, je me suis rendu compte que je n’étais pas satisfaite de mon croquis. J’ai donc continué à faire des recherches et ce sont les livres « Fukt, A magazine for contemporary Drawing » et « Renée Lavaillante, une archéologie du dessin » qui m’ont aidé à trouver une deuxième idée, ainsi que l’ajout de mes recherches ultérieures. J’ai donc décidé de faire une série de 3 dessins qui parlent, de manières différentes, des relations humaines. Pour le premier dessin je me suis inspiré de l’artiste James Gallagher, pour la superposition de papier comme support, ainsi que de Renée Lavaillante dans Points de chute n°2 (2 fois 26 galets) pour la trace qu’elle laisse dans les lignes de ses formes. Pour le deuxième dessin, je me suis inspiré des nuages dans l’obscurité de l’une des œuvres de Patrick Nilsson, ainsi que le clair-obscur de ceux-ci. Il y a aussi l’artiste Mikio Watanabé, pour le résultat de la matière noire sur son utilisation du corps de la femme. Ensuite, pour le troisième dessin, je me suis inspiré de Javier Rodriguez et de son œuvre The Stranger Within pour le collage de différente partie du visage de plusieurs personnes, ainsi que l’absurdité d’Erwin Wurm et de Philippe Ramette. Il y a aussi l’œuvre Porte-fenêtre à Collioure de Renée Lavaillante pour la trace des doigts qu’on peut apercevoir.
Mon intention dans ce projet est de mettre de l’avant les relations humaines, et puisque je voulais en parler de plusieurs manières, j’ai décidé de le présenter dans une série de 3 dessins d’une dimension de 40 x 50cm. Le premier parlera de l’influence des relations humaines sur la perception de notre corps et de notre personnalité. Le second aura comme sujet la manière dont je vois et je me sens par rapport aux relations humaines. Le dernier sera sur l’influence et le contrôle que les autres peuvent avoir sur notre futur, ainsi que nos actions. Les dessins seront accrochés l’un à côté de l’autre, au mur, dans un cadre et à la verticale. La première œuvre sera une superposition de papiers de différentes teintes de gris, ainsi que plusieurs cercles positionnés un peu partout sur les feuilles. Ces éléments représentent les différentes personnes, ainsi que les cercles sociaux, familiaux, qui m’entourent. Au milieu, on pourra apercevoir une silhouette de moi dessiner. Ensuite, au haut du second dessin, il y aura des nuages clair-obscur en perspectives. Les nuages sont souvent présents dans nos vies et ce n’est pas nous qui décidons du tempérament qu’ils peuvent avoir, alors pour moi ils représentent les relations humaines. En dessous des nuages, il y a une autre silhouette de moi, dans le noir, qui représentera la manière dont je me sens par rapport aux relations humaines, ainsi que la manière dont je les vois. Pour finir, le troisième dessin sera un portrait de moi avec un fond blanc et au niveau du visage, il y aura détournement avec les visages de mon père, de ma sœur et de ma mère. Ce détournement représente l’influence que ma famille a pu avoir sur mon futur et mes actions. Autour du dessin, il y aura une bande noire avec des traces de doigts et de mains pour représenter le contrôle que les autres peuvent avoir sur mon futur et mes actions.
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Johan Zoffany (1733 – 1810)
Charles Macklin as Shylock, ca. 1768. Oil on canvas 116 x 151 cm. Tate
Antonio’s face and neck, after the restoration, resembles Vitiligo
Other parts of the composition, such as the background and some of the figures, are sketched in with loose brushstrokes barely covering the canvas preparation - Tate restoration
The Merchant of Venice, Act IV, scene i, Antonio, awaiting the knife, has bared his chest for his loan security: 1 pound of flesh - heart).
Shakespeare perpetuates the stereotype of the diabolical and avaricious Jew, involuntarily (?) exposing the prejudice caused by the mechanism of the scapegoat. and the hate propaganda associated.
No excuses for Shakespeare, the play is indeed anti-semitic, says Jonathan Freedland - The Guardian 2004
Francisco de Zurbarán (1598 - 1664)
Zurbarán, Francisco de Fuente de Cantos, Badajoz
Agnus Dei (Lamb of God), 1635 - 1640. Oil on canvas. Museo de Prado
Mimetic Theory, desire and the scapegoat mechanism
René Girard (1923—2015)
Mimetic theory consists of three interconnected movements: Mimetic desire, the scapegoat mechanism, and revelation.
Girard developed a mimetic theory: Human beings imitate each other, and this eventually gives rise to rivalries and violent conflicts, partially solved by a scapegoat mechanism.
According to Girard, just as the theory of natural selection of species is the rational principle that explains the immense diversity of forms of life, the victimization process (sacrifice) is the rational principle that explains the origin of the infinite diversity of cultural forms...
The phrase "scapegoat mechanism" was coined by Kenneth Burke (lifelong interpreter of Shakespeare) in Permanence and Change (1935) and A Grammar of Motives (1940). Girard took Burke’s concept and developed it as an interpretation of human culture, Violence and the Sacred (1972), a work on Fundamental Anthropology -wiki
Mimesis has been theorised by thinkers as diverse as Plato, Aristotle, Philip Sidney, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Adam Smith, Gabriel Tarde, Sigmund Freud, Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, Erich Auerbach, Paul Ricœur, Luce Irigaray, Jacques Derrida, René Girard, Nikolas Kompridis, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, Michael Taussig, Merlin Donald, and Homi Bhabha. -wiki
Plato contrasted mimesis, or imitation, with diegesis, or narrative.
image 4 thnx vivipiuomeno1.tumblr
#Shakespeare#scapegoat#René Girard#Jew#painting#skin#cut#theory#mimesis#iconic#sacrifice#Johan Zoffany
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aight fucker you think you're clever don't you. you think you're Oh-So-Smart because you prance around saying "hnef hnef connect mozart to james charles". as if that's a FUCKING challenge. as if that's not easy as GOD. DAMN. PIE. let's go.
mozart was friends with this bitch
Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor - Wikipedia
who was succeeded at the throne by this bitch
Leopold II, Holy Roman Emperor - Wikipedia
who was succeeded by this bitch
Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor - Wikipedia
who was succeeded by this fucker
Napoleon - Wikipedia
who was succeeded by THIS bitch
Louis XVIII - Wikipedia
who was succeeded by this bitch
Charles X - Wikipedia
who was succeeded by this bitch
Louis Philippe I - Wikipedia
who was KICKED THE FUCK OUT and REPLACED by THIS bitch
Jacques-Charles Dupont de l'Eure - Wikipedia
who was succeeded by this bitch
François Arago - Wikipedia
who was succeeded by this bitch
Louis-Eugène Cavaignac - Wikipedia
who was replaced with THIS MOTHERFUCKER
Napoleon III - Wikipedia
who started a long fucking consistent line that went
Adolphe Thiers (1871–73)
Patrice de Mac-Mahon (1873–79)
Jules Grévy (1879–87)
Sadi Carnot (1887–94)
Jean Casimir-Périer (1894–95)
Félix Faure (1895–99)
Émile Loubet (1899–1906)
Armand Fallières (1906–13)
Raymond Poincaré (1913–20)
Paul Deschanel (1920)
Alexandre Millerand (1920–24)
Gaston Doumergue (1924–31)
Paul Doumer (1931–32)
Albert Lebrun (1932–40)
Fourth Republic (1946–58)
Vincent Auriol (1947–54)
René Coty (1954–59)
Fifth Republic (1958– )
Charles de Gaulle (1959–69)
Georges Pompidou (1969–74)
Valéry Giscard d’Estaing (1974–81)
François Mitterrand (1981–95)
Jacques Chirac (1995–2007)
Nicolas Sarkozy (2007–12)
François Hollande (2012–17)
Emmanuel Macron (current)
according to this page:
list of presidents of France
the previous president before Macaroni boy is Francois Hollande, which seems a little much. like the guy is already the Mot Juste of France and he names himself "France Holland". whatever. here's him with michelle obama
here's michelle obama with zendaya
and HERE
DEAR LISTENER
IS FUCKING ZENDAYA
WITH JAMES CHARLES.
youtube
37
did it in 37.
fucking come at me, bitch.
I wanna play a game
gimme a youtuber and a celebrity and I can connect them
#youtuber to celebrity pseudo bacon game#wild how every single french monarch has the last name Wikipedia#Youtube
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