18th and 19th-century English Romantic painter
POPULARITY
Conférence par Frédéric OgéeLa BnF propose un cycle de conférences pour s'initier aux principaux courants artistiques et comprendre les œuvres d'art en regard de lectures critiques. La quatrième édition a pour thème le paysage.Cette séance interroge le paysage tel que Turner et d'autres peintres britanniques, notamment John Constable, l'ont réinventé en inscrivant la présence de l'homme dans la nature. Par Frédéric Ogée, université Paris CitéConférence enregistrée le 27 novembre 2024 à la BnF I François-Mitterrand Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
In this episode of Danny Hurst´s Bridge History Series, he shares the history of Richmond Bridge. Explaining why despite there being a dire need for a permanent crossing in the area, locals initially objected to the plans drawn up in 1772 and how that was overcome. The way the bridge was funded is also quite unusual, Danny explains why and how the cash to build it was raised. He also shares the connection with The Beatles, John Constable, JMW Turner, a yacht crash and a heron sanctuary. If you can´t get enough of these podcasts, head to https://www.patreon.com/DannyHurst to access my exclusive, member-only, fun-filled and fact-packed history-related videos. KEY TAKEAWAYS Richmond Bridge is the oldest of the Thames crossings that hasn't been replaced in London. The first building to be built in the area, in the 13th century, was Henry 7th Palace, who was the Earl of Richmond. Because the hill at Richmond was too steep for laden carriages to tackle, they had to cross at Kingston Bridge. There is still a warning sign on the bridge that states that anyone caught vandalising Richmond Bridge will be punished by transportation. In 1937 the bridge was widened to accommodate the heavy traffic that used the area. In 1952, Richmond Bridge became grade one listed. BEST MOMENTS “The bridges in Richmond are actually a bit of an anomaly on the Thames.” “Richmond Bridge is the last Bridge on the stretch as the river meanders back westwards.” From above, it doesn't look as confusing as it sounds, but by the bridges on this stretch, nobody actually knows which side they're on.” “Upon her death, all the tolls were abolished.” EPISODE RESOURCES https://www.citybridgefoundation.org.uk Tontine funding explained - https://www.investopedia.com/terms/t/tontine.asp HOST BIO Historian, performer, and mentor Danny Hurst has been engaging audiences for many years, whether as a lecturer, stand-up comic or intervention teacher with young offenders and excluded secondary students. Having worked with some of the most difficult people in the UK, he is a natural storyteller and entertainer, whilst purveying the most fascinating information that you didn't know you didn't know. A writer and host of pub quizzes across London, he has travelled extensively and speaks several languages. He has been a consultant for exhibitions at the Imperial War Museum and Natural History Museum in London as well as presenting accelerated learning seminars across the UK. With a wide range of knowledge ranging from motor mechanics to opera to breeding carnivorous plants, he believes learning is the most effective when it's fun. Uniquely delivered, this is history without the boring bits, told the way only Danny Hurst can. CONTACT AND SOCIALS https://instagram.com/dannyjhurstfacebook.com/danny.hurst.9638 https://twitter.com/dannyhurst https://www.linkedin.com/in/danny-hurst-19574720
While the great Italian renaissance painters and the Dutch masters are world famous, why are there so few British artists from this period leading the way? It's one of the questions the art historian Bendor Grosvenor examines in his new history, The Invention of British Art. From prehistoric bone carvings to the landscapes of John Constable, Grosvenor reassesses the contribution British artists have made at home and abroad.The writer and former curator at the V&A Susan Owens wants to turn our attention to drawing. It is a simpler, more democratic form of art-making, she argues in The Story of Drawing: An Alternative History of Art. And one that is a fundamental part of the creative process. She reveals what can be learnt by looking again at the sketches made by Gainsborough, William Blake and Tacita Dean. The artist Lucinda Rogers specialises in urban landscapes. She immerses herself in her environment and records straight from eye to paper. Her intimate street views explore the changing nature of cities, from London to New York. During the US Presidential election she travelled to different locations as a reportage illustrator. A reproduction of her first sketchbook, New York Winter 1988, has just been re-released. Producer: Katy Hickman
It's devil baby week! Cool of the week includes Grotesquerie, BEAT, and Logan Lucky. Trailers are The Platform 2 and Woman of the Hour. The podcast spotlight shines on The Horror Heals podcast. And we get feedback from I Like it Spooky, John Constable, Rikki Ross, Melinda Smith, Eccentrix, Mark Komarzynski, Rob Hall, Bradley Kooker, Jason Voss, David Gamradt, Matt Wood, Shawn Justice, James M. Pogue, David Barta, Jordan Bennett, and Becca Gomez. AND A VERY SPECIAL SHOUT OUT TO OUR NEWEST SUPER PATRON, MATT WOOD! Thanks for listening! The Horror Returns Website: https://thehorrorreturns.com THR YouTube Channel: https://youtube.com/@thehorrorreturnspodcast3277 THR Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thehorrorreturns THR Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thehorrorreturns/ Join THR Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1056143707851246 THR X: https://twitter.com/horror_returns?s=21&t=XKcrrOBZ7mzjwJY0ZJWrGA THR Instagram: https://instagram.com/thehorrorreturns?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= THR TeePublic: https://www.teepublic.com/user/the-horror-returns SK8ER Nez Podcast Network: https://www.podbean.com/pu/pbblog-p3n57-c4166 E Society Spotify For Podcasters: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/esoc E Society YouTube Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UCliC6x_a7p3kTV_0LC4S10A Music By: Steve Carleton Of The Geekz
This week, Phil's takes leading BBC radio presenter Danny Pike for a trip to the Brighton Pavilion to examine local legend John Constable's stunning work depicting the seafront a stone's throw from our office… Support the Show.
W Szkole Bardzo Wieczorowej Ewelina Sobczyk Podleszańska przypomni życie i twórczość Johna Constable, malarza angielskiego, który był uznawany za jednego z najwybitniejszych pejzażystów XIX wieku. I to nie tylko w Anglii.Malował przede wszystkim krajobrazy angielskie ale też był znany z doskonałego ukazywania zjawisk przyrody. Reprezentował wzorce holenderskiego, tzw. realizmu melancholijnego. Artysta nadał malarstwu pejzażowemu nowy wymiar. Nigdy nie wyjeżdżał za granicę, przez całe życie malował swoje rodzinne strony.Dzisiejszą audycje przygotował Marek Mierzwiak.
“On entering an Underground train it is customary to shake hands with every passenger”
El arte se necesita en el mundo para recordarnos lo que verdaderamente importa. Notas: ✨Escucha el Playbook para desbloquear tu creatividad "Imagina, Crea, Triunfa": aqui
A British parliamentary researcher arrested on suspicion of being a 'Chinese spy' in March has been unveiled as Chris Cash, a 28-year-old who reportedly has links with many Tory MPs. The history graduate has released a statement through his lawyers insisting he is "completely innocent". Matthew Parris tells Kathryn how 'spy-mania' is sweeping UK media. And, a sketch of the Dover coast drawn by landscape painter John Constable more than 200 years ago is going up for auction. It was found in a suitcase during a house clearance.
Today we look at Nathaniel Willis' description of Lake George and the surrounding area and how it leads into the bigger conversation of the picturesque. Dives into the history, definition(s), and examples of picturesque with art work examples from the likes of Thomas Cole, John Constable, and Pietro Antoniani. ...
VYS0023 | Mercurial, Mutable, Mysterious Something - Vayse to Face with Paul Weston - Show Notes It's episode 23 and joining Hine and Buckley to pull that cosmic trigger is none other than author, researcher, lecturer and master of synchro-mysticism, Paul Weston. In the way that only Paul knows how, he spins a wonderful, breath-taking web of strange events, synchronicities and bizarre connections which all emerged in a single extremely powerful month in his home town of Glastonbury - How did he end up scattering Courtney Love's father's ashes in the centre of the Glastonbury Zodiac? How does that relate to a series of macabre and grisly murders? And how did the discovery of a swastika on the threshold of Dion Fortune's former residence trigger a waking-dream-proximity-alert? Paul also talks about how Cosmic Trigger is a psycho-active book (a trip he's taken 29 times!), how you can encourage synchronicities in your own life and how to deal with Chapel Perilous when your time comes... recorded 26 March 2023 Thanks to Keith for compiling the show notes!!! Paul's interview is so reference-dense that we've broken down the links into subject headings to help you find your way around: Paul Weston Links Paul Weston's website (https://www.paulwestonglastonbury.com/) Paul Weston's YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/@PaulWestonGlastonbury) Paul Weston's Avalonian Aeon Publications Facebook page (https://en-gb.facebook.com/AvalonianAeonPublications/) Avalonian Aeon (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25789350-avalonian-aeon?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=nK5vEDt9u5&rank=1) by Paul Weston The Occult Battle of Britain (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/44076194-the-occult-battle-of-britain) by Paul Weston Paul Weston talking about The Occult Battle of Britain (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BkVJpFlezGA) Mysterium Artorius (https://www.waterstones.com/book/mysterium-artorius/paul-weston//9780955769603) by Paul Weston Aleister Crowley and the Aeon of Horus (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/9780955769641/Aleister-Crowley-Aeon-Horus-History-0955769647/plp) by Paul Weston Glastonbury Zodiac and Earth Mysteries UFOlogy (https://paulwestonglastonbury.com/videos/glastonbury-zodiac-and-earth-mysteries-ufology/) by Paul Weston A Glastonbury Abbey Dream (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuXVDeE0IJ4) a series of photographs set to music by Paul Weston Robert Anton Wilson/Timothy Leary Links The official Robert Anton Wilson Website (http://rawilson.com/) RAW fan site (https://rawilsonfans.org/) RAW Wikipedia page (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Anton_Wilson) Cosmic Trigger I: The Final Secret of the Illuminati (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/book-search/title/cosmic-trigger/author/robert-wilson/) by Robert Anton Wilson Wikipedia Article on Cosmic Trigger I: The Final Secret of the Illuminati (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_Trigger_I%3A_The_Final_Secret_of_the_Illuminati) Excerpt from Cosmic Trigger I: The Final Secret of the Illuminati (http://rawilson.com/cosmic-trigger-final-secret-of-the-illuminati/) The 23 Phenomenon, article by RAW, originally published in Fortean Times #23 (of course!), 1977 (https://rawilsonfans.org/the-23-phenomenon/) RAW talking about Aleister Crowley (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qt8TZ0hYHiE) RAW and Timothy Leary at The Bridge Psychedelic Conference 1991 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-uHLy0q9kWA) Wikipedia Article on Timothy Leary (psychologist, author) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy_Leary) Timothy Leary's Eight-circuit model of consciousness (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight-circuit_model_of_consciousness) Prometheus Rising (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=31538633908&ref_=ps_ggl_2039220669&cm_mmc=ggl-_-UK_Shopp_Tradestandard-_-product_id=UK9781561840564USED-_-keyword=&gclid=CjwKCAjwhdWkBhBZEiwA1ibLmHF7z2-sJtnD0IMVFbp08c1vnXIpx9eS8qkKVL_gK8PDvzCOpniN0BoC2oUQAvD_BwE) by Robert Anton Wilson Hank Harrison Links Wikibin article on Hank Harrison (http://wikibin.org/articles/hank-harrison.html) (not up-to-date!) Videos of Paul Weston's tribute to Hank Harrison, and the scattering of Harrison's ashes in Park Wood at the heart of the Glastonbury Zodiac, 2023: here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yS_EE4nIN2U) and here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pjkro8jSTqY) The Cauldron and the Grail (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/9780918501172/Cauldron-Grail-Harrison-Hank-0918501172/plp) by Hank Harrison Love Kills: The Assassination of Kurt Cobain (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13580168-love-kills) by Hank Harrison Author Hank Harrison on his Book "Love Kills" and his daughter, Courtney Love (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ElZ2hSbUQy4) Covert Action article on the Kurt Cobain Suicide/Murder Cover-up (https://covertactionmagazine.com/2021/07/21/u-s-intelligence-coverup-newly-declassified-fbi-file-on-nirvanas-kurt-cobain-compounds-evidence-implicating-his-wifes-role-in-his-murder/) Twin Peaks Links Wikipedia Article on Twin Peaks (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_Peaks) Wikipedia Article on Mark Frost (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Frost) Mark Frost interview, The Independent, 1992 (https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/higher-peaks-in-view-the-man-who-wrote-twin-peaks-has-plans-to-get-weirder-mark-frost-talked-to-kevin-jackson-about-sherlock-and-warlocks-1541807.html) Psychic Self-Defence (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/book-search/title/psychic-self-defence/author/dion-fortune/) by Dion Fortune Twin Peaks Blog Article - All in the Details – The Owls of Twin Peaks (https://twinpeaksblog.com/2020/02/02/all-in-the-details-the-owls-of-twin-peaks/) Katherine Maltwood/Glastonbury Zodiac Links Wikipedia Article on Katherine Maltwood (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katharine_Emma_Maltwood) The Maltwood Moot (https://www.thekatharinemaltwoodsociety.com/the-maltwood-moot) Signs and Secrets of the Glastonbury Zodiac (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/9780955769634/SIGNS-SECRETS-GLASTONBURY-ZODIAC-Leitch-0955769639/plp) (anthology) edited by Yuri Leitch The Glastonbury Zodiac (https://www.paulwestonglastonbury.com/glastonbury/glastonbury-zodiac/) article by Paul Weston Lecture on Earth Mysteries, Ufology, and the Glastonbury Zodiac (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=416-WDw3EQM) by Paul Weston, recorded at Truth, Mysteries and New Frontiers (Glastonbury Symposium), 24 July 2015 John Cowper Powys Links Wikipedia Article on John Cowper Powys (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Cowper_Powys) A Glastonbury Romance (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=31536788218&searchurl=an%3Dpowys%2Bjohn%2Bcowper%26sortby%3D17%26tn%3Da%2Bglastonbury%2Bromance&cm_sp=snippet-_-srp1-_-title1) by John Cowper Powys Wikipedia Article on a Glastonbury Romance (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Glastonbury_Romance) Glastonbury Romance 2003: Daemonic Genius of John Cowper Powys (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRLck9pTZVo) lecture by Paul Weston John Cowper Powys and the Psychogeography of Wearyall Hill (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zL7YdR5-7zE) presentation by Paul Weston Ken Campbell/Daisy Campbell Links Wikipedia Article on Ken Campbell (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Campbell) The Warp (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neil_Oram#The_Warp) (play) by Neil Oram Wikipedia Article on Daisy Eris Campbell (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daisy_Eris_Campbell) Cosmic Trigger (https://cosmictriggerplay.com/the-play/) (play) by Daisy Campbell John Constable aka John Crow/Cross Bones Burial Ground/The Southwark Mysteries Links Wikipedia Article on John Constable aka John Crow (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Constable_(writer)) Wikipedia Article on Cross Bones burial ground (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_Bones) Crossbones website (http://crossbones.org.uk/) The Goose and ‘John Crow' (https://crossbones.org.uk/goose-and-crow/) The Goose Twitter account (https://twitter.com/TheGooseSez) Feature on Cross Bones from Inside Out London, 2011 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEYFicWN7sM) Wikipedia Article on Henry of Blois (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_of_Blois) The Southwark Mysteries (book) by John Constable (https://www.waterstones.com/book/the-southwark-mysteries/john-constable/9781840020991) The Southwark Mysteries (plays) by John Constable (http://crossbones.org.uk/southwark-mysteries/) Feature on John Constable and The Southwark Mysteries (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmqW0odrY7c) (possibly taken from BBC ‘Songs of Praise') James Joyce Links Wikipedia Article on James Joyce (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Joyce) Finnegan's Wake (https://uk.bookshop.org/p/books/finnegans-wake-james-joyce/1579471?ean=9780199695157) by James Joyce Wikipedia Article on Finnegan's Wake (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finnegans_Wake) Ulysses (https://uk.bookshop.org/p/books/ulysses-complete-james-joyce/1536609?ean=9789353361457) by James Joyce Wikipedia Article on Ulysses (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulysses_(novel)) Glastonbury Murders Links ITV News - Glastonbury 2023 murder (https://www.itv.com/news/westcountry/2023-03-08/man-charged-with-the-murder-of-somerset-pensioner) BBC News - Glastonbury yoga teacher jailed for life for lodger murder (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-somerset-63831748) ( ) Dion Fortune/Alice Buckton/Glastonbury Royal Jubilee Links Wikipedia Article on Dion Fortune (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dion_Fortune) Remember Dion Fortune, Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/groups/DionFortune/) Glastonbury: Avalon of the Heart (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/9780850305180/Glastonbury-Avalon-Heart-Fortune-Dion-0850305187/plp) by Dion Fortune Avalon of the Heart Tours (https://www.avalonoftheheart.co.uk/) (Guide: Paul Weston) Wikipedia Article on Alice Buckton (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Buckton) Alice Buckton's Glastonbury Past and Present (https://player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watch-glastonbury-past-and-present-1922-online) - 1922 film Platinum Jubilee Celebrations in Glastonbury, Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/JubileeCelebrationsinGlastonbury/) Pax Cultura, Avalon of the Heart, Glastonbury Royal Jubilee (https://www.paulwestonglastonbury.com/pax-cultura-avalon-of-the-heart-glastonbury-royal-jubilee/) Nicholas Roerich Links Wikipedia Article on Nicholas Roerich (painter, writer, archaeologist, theosophist, philosopher) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Roerich) Nicholas Roerich: His Life and Work (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIlkebwlQSo) - presentation by Paul Weston Cadbury Castle Links Wikipedia Article on Cadbury Castle, Somerset (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadbury_Castle%2C_Somerset) South Cadbury Environs Project, Excavations (https://web.archive.org/web/20151020235302/http://www.arch.ox.ac.uk/scep/Excavation.html) Frederick Bligh Bond/Edward the Martyr Links Wikipedia Article on Frederick Bligh Bond (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Bligh_Bond) The Company of Avalon (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/book-search/title/company-avalon/author/bligh-bond/) by Frederick Bligh Bond Wikipedia Article on Edward the Martyr (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_the_Martyr) Wikipedia Article on Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Orthodox_Church_Outside_of_Russia) Wikipedia Article on Vikings: Valhalla (streaming television series) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vikings:_Valhalla) Wikipedia Article on Edmund Ironside (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Ironside) Wikipedia Article on Yaroslav the Wise (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaroslav_the_Wise) Wikipedia Article on Kievan Rus' (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kievan_Rus%27) The Cumberland Obelisk, Virginia Water (https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4353658) Wikipedia Artiucle on Prince William, Duke of Cumberland (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_William%2C_Duke_of_Cumberland) Other links Andrew Collins' website (https://www.andrewcollins.com/) The Dark Gods (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/book-search/title/dark-gods/author/anthony-roberts/) by Anthony Roberts Wikipedia Article on Glastonbury Fayre (album) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glastonbury_Fayre_(album)) Wikipedia Article on John Michell (writer) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Michell_(writer)) Research Into Lost Knowledge Organisation (RILKO) website (https://www.rilko.org/) Wikipedia Artcile on Dame Francis Yates (historian, writer) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Yates) Wikipedia Article on Newgrange (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newgrange) Gothic Cathedrals: Architecture and Divine Light (https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1649/gothic-cathedrals-architecture--divine-light/) The High History of the Holy Grail (http://www.sangraal.com/histgrail.htm) Yuri Leitch's website (http://www.yurileitch.co.uk/home) Wikipedia Article on Space burial (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_burial) Wikipedia Article on Fellowship of Isis (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fellowship_of_Isis) Dundon Beacon (http://www.palden.co.uk/leymap/compton-dundon.html) The Occult (https://www.waterstones.com/book/the-occult/colin-wilson/9781780288468) by Colin Wilson Jacqueline Haigh (writer, performer) website (https://www.jacquelinehaigh.com/) The KLF and the Toxteth Day of the Dead (http://klf.de/home/tag/toxteth-day-of-the-dead/) Wikipedia Page on Babalon (Thelema) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babalon) The Sacred Prostitute: Eternal Aspect of the Feminine (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/9780919123311/Sacred-Prostitute-Eternal-Aspect-Feminine-0919123317/plp) by Nancy Qualls-Corbett, Wikipedia Page on Discordianism (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discordianism) Thalia Brown, Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/ThaliasArtOfAvalon) The Green Stone (https://uk.bookshop.org/p/books/the-green-stone-graham-phillips/1561262?ean=9781912241095) by Graham Phillips and Martin Keatman Hellier (https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=hellier+season+1+episode+1) - If you still haven't watched, surely now is the time? The Mothman Prophecies (https://uk.bookshop.org/p/books/the-mothman-prophecies-john-a-keel/2074568?ean=9780765334985) by John Keel (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Keel) Cryptid Wiki Article on Indrid Cold (https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/Indrid_Cold) Wikipedia Article on Graham Phillips (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Phillips_(writer)) The Sunderland Family (http://www.ignaciodarnaude.com/revelacion_extraterrestre/Randles-Whetnall,Sunderland%20contacts%201976,Wales,U.K.-1,FSR79V25N3.pdf) - Article by Jenny Randles and Paul Whetnall Mysterious Britain Article on Aveley Abduction (https://www.mysteriousbritain.co.uk/ufos/aveley-abduction-1974/) LightQuest (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=30043957463&ref_=ps_ggl_2039220669&cm_mmc=ggl-_-UK_Shopp_Tradestandard-_-product_id=UK9780940829497USED-_-keyword=&gclid=CjwKCAjwhdWkBhBZEiwA1ibLmF1Q03yg0inXZyqJGviwW_slKDi-iQRJ9dPlqqGsdqilC9EzrqWrqBoC210QAvD_BwE)by Andrew Collins Wikipedia Article on The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermetic_Order_of_the_Golden_Dawn) Wikipedia Article on Samuel Mathers (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Liddell_MacGregor_Mathers) Wikipedia Article on Aleister Crowley (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleister_Crowley) Wikipedia Article on MK Ultra (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MKUltra) Wikipedia Article on Timothy Leary (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy_Leary) Wikipedia Article on Ken Kesey (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Kesey) Wikipedia Article on Charles Manson (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Manson) Wikipedia Article on the Eight-circuit model of consciousness (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight-circuit_model_of_consciousness) Wikipedia Article on Ramana Maharshi (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramana_Maharshi) Book of Lies (https://uk.bookshop.org/p/books/the-book-of-lies-keep-silence-edition-aleister-crowley/4122491?ean=9781646691838) by Aleister Crowley Wikipedia Article on Chapel Perilous (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapel_perilous) BBC News - Q-Anon: What is it and where did it come from? (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/53498434) Wikipedia Article on Donald Trump (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Trump) Wikipedia Article on The Montauk Project (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montauk_Project) Discordia Wiki Article on Operation Mindfuck (https://discordia.fandom.com/wiki/Operation_Mindfuck) The King in Orange: The Magical and Occult Roots of Political Power (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/9781644112588/King-Orange-Magical-Occult-Roots-1644112582/plp) by John Michael Greer The Seventh Sword (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/book-search/title/the-seventh-sword/author/andrew-collins/) by Andrew Collins Beneath the Pyramids: Egypt's Greatest Secret Uncovered (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/SearchResults?kn=Beneath%20the%20Pyramids%20by%20andrew%20collins&sts=t&cm_sp=SearchF-_-topnav-_-Results)by Andrew Collins The First Female Pharaoh: Sobekneferu, Goddess of the Seven Stars (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=31473776289&searchurl=kn%3DThe%2BFirst%2BFemale%2BPharaoh%253A%2BSobekneferu%252C%2BGoddess%2Bof%2Bthe%2BSeven%2BStars%26sortby%3D17&cm_sp=snippet-_-srp1-_-title1) by Andrew Collins Robin of Sherwood (TV Series) (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eIZA-zeEXSQ) Excalibur Trailer (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6QR6_17mn5s) The Green Knight Trailer (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sS6ksY8xWCY) British Music. An Arthurian Landscape Evocation - A Lecture by Paul Weston (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0intmS_EIM) Wikipedia Article on Bohemian Grove (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohemian_Grove) Special Guest: Paul Weston.
Un día como hoy, 11 de junio: Nace: 1776: John Constable, pintor británico. 1838: Mariano Fortuny, pintor español. 1864: Richard Strauss, director de orquesta y compositor alemán. 1899: Yasunari Kawabata, novelista japonés, premio nobel de literatura en 1968 (f. 1972). 1910: Jacques Cousteau, oceanógrafo y explorador francés (f. 1997). Conducido por Joel Almaguer. Una producción de Sala Prisma Podcast. 2023
30!! The Podcast is 30 just like both Books Boys! Join Dean & PJ as we chat all about the books we read in March, and later get a surprise call-in from John Constable (john-constable-author.com)Books discussed include: - The Chanteuse From Cape Town (John Constable, 2023)- Henry Esmond (W.M. Thackeray, 1852)- The Cossacks (Leo Tolstoy, 1878)- The Scarlet Letter (Nathaniel Hawthorne, 1850)- El Palacio De La Medianoche / The Midnight Palace (Carlos Ruiz Zafón, 2011)- The Little Ghost (Otfried Preußler, 1966)- Kensuke's Kingdom (Michael Morpurgo, 1999)You can find our website with links to other content, merch, socials, etc at booksboys.com, and our full catalogue of podcasts for only $3/£2.50 at patreon.com/booksboys: Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
30!! The Podcast is 30 just like both Books Boys! Join Dean & PJ as we chat all about the books we read in March, and later get a surprise call-in from John Constable (john-constable-author.com)Books discussed include: - The Chanteuse From Cape Town (John Constable, 2023)- Henry Esmond (W.M. Thackeray, 1852)- The Cossacks (Leo Tolstoy, 1878)- The Scarlet Letter (Nathaniel Hawthorne, 1850)- El Palacio De La Medianoche / The Midnight Palace (Carlos Ruiz Zafón, 2011)- The Little Ghost (Otfried Preußler, 1966)- Kensuke's Kingdom (Michael Morpurgo, 1999)You can find our website with links to other content, merch, socials, etc at booksboys.com, and our full catalogue of podcasts for only $3/£2.50 at patreon.com/booksboys Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Un día como hoy, 31 de marzo: Nace: 1596: René Descartes, matemático francés (f. 1650). 1732: Joseph Haydn, compositor austríaco (f. 1809). 1872: Serguéi Diáguilev, empresario ruso, fundador de los Ballets Rusos (f. 1929). 1914: Octavio Paz, escritor mexicano, premio nobel de literatura en 1990 (f. 1998). Fallece: 1727: Isaac Newton, científico, físico, filósofo, alquimista y matemático británico (n. 1643). 1837: John Constable, pintor británico (n. 1776). 1855: Charlotte Brontë, escritora británica (n. 1816). Conducido por Joel Almaguer. Una producción de Sala Prisma Podcast. 2023
Esta es una muestra de "Mira lo que te pierdes". La versión completa tiene una duración total de 9 h 18 min. Encuentra este audiolibro completo en https://penguinaud.io/3JCNsvoNarrado por: Javier Portugués (Portu)Los artistas han aprendido a prestar atención. El resto de los mortales, sin embargo, pasamos la mayor parte del tiempo con el piloto automático, corriendo de aquí para allá, y nuestra excesiva familiaridad con lo que nos rodea nos ciega ante el sinfín de maravillosos fenómenos que afirman la vida. Pero no tiene por qué ser así. A su más puro estilo, Will Gompertz nos lleva a la mente de los artistas, desde estrellas contemporáneas hasta viejos maestros, desdelos más famosos hasta algunos menos conocidos, a lo largo y ancho del mundo, para mostrarnos cómo mirar y experimentar el mundo con mayor conciencia. Tras leer Mira lo que te pierdes disfrutamos contemplando el cielo en días nublados como el pintor romántico John Constable; Hockney se convierte en el nuevo guía de nuestros paseos por el bosque; entendemos qué es de verdad una amapola gracias a Georgia O'Keeffe; y Rembrandt nos contagiasu valentía a la hora de mirarnos a nosotros mismos. Este libro nos ofrece la estimulante sensación de estar verdaderamente vivos.© 2023, Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial, S. A. U.#penguinaudio #audiolibro #audiolibros #Gompertz #WillGompertz Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Want to know what goes into crafting a mystery novel? Look no further! In this episode, we sit down with John Constable, author of the upcoming book "The Chanteuse from Cape Town" to discuss his writing journey, the creation of his complex protagonist Sol Nemo, the ins and outs of his writing process, authors that have inspired him, and more. And as always, we've got some book and movie recommendations for you to check out, including some lesser known gems. Tune in for all this and more on today's episode of Books & Looks. _ Produced by the Greenville Podcast Company. Books & Looks is a project of Views on Books.
Recorded on November 29, 2022 https://youtu.be/3d355lK6qkg Episode 68 is another must-listen to PetroNerds podcast and part 2 of the doubleheader on UK, EU, and US energy policies with Trisha Curtis' guest Dr. John Constable. The second half of this conversation gets into China, geopolitical complexities, the importance of energy education, understanding "energy blindness," and the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). John expresses his grave concerns about the cost of the Inflation Reduction Act and how weak this makes America. In essence, the US is handing off geopolitical leverage to China as the US tries to outsource its CO2 emissions. The IRA subsidies on renewables are higher than Europe's green subsidies and will create incredible global dislocations. Trisha and John discuss energy security and European energy and climate change policies in the face of recent increases in coal, oil, and natural gas use - Europe's distressed return to hydrocarbons. Will European energy policies go back to coal and natural gas? Listen on Itunes
"it commands a view unsurpassed in Europe"
Recorded on November 29, 2022 https://youtu.be/GL_qXdPcNwA Episode 67 of the PetroNerds podcast is part 1 of a special doubleheader with guest Dr. John Constable. John is a UK expert on energy and renewables and Director of the Renewable Energy Foundation. This podcast was recorded in person at the Liberty Energy offices in Denver, Colorado. Trisha Curtis and John Constable discuss a range of UK and European energy topics including electricity prices, subsidies, energy crises, and energy policies. Trisha and John cover the problems with UK energy policy, the high cost of electricity in the UK and Europe, the negative consequences of low energy demand in the UK and Europe and the developed world, the increasing cost and opacity of wind power, the limited energy that wind and solar provides with low conversion ratios, and the detrimental impact to the economy and energy security. Listen on Itunes
Here we delve more deeply into the ways our senses and our reason might go wrong in the creation of knowledge. There are no authoritative inerrant sources of knowledge and yet we can nonetheless come to knowledge...by creating it. Unusually for ToKCast we take a left turn into visual arts as Popper refers to some art history and remarks by the British landscape artist John Constable. Constable makes the claim his paintings are like scientific experiments. How? We get through parts 11 and 12 of Popper's lecture and provide further critique of the linguistic approach to philosophy and why this cannot help with the solving of problems either in philosophy or science.
Join Marty as he sits down with John Constable to discuss the economics of renewable energy. John's Quillette article Global Warming Policy Foundation Shoutout to our sponsors: Unchained Capital Braiins HodlHodl CrowdHealth TFTC Merch is Available: Shop Now Join the TFTC Movement: Main YT Channel Clips YT Channel Website Twitter Instagram Follow Marty Bent: Twitter Newsletter Podcast
O pintor holandês Vincent Van Gogh fez quatro pinturas de girassóis em 1888 para decorar a sala do artista Paul Gauguin. O francês tinha uma casa de paredes amarelas em Arles, no sul da França, e as flores de mesmo tom pelas quais ele era fascinado seriam penduradas naquelas paredes. Hoje, uma dessas pinturas, “Girassóis”, é avaliada em 506 milhões de reais e foi parar no acervo da National Gallery, em Londres. Na semana passada, porém, duas ativistas ambientais arremessaram duas latas de sopa de tomate no quadro. As duas são manifestantes do Just Stop Oil, algo como “parem com o petróleo”. Essa não é a primeira vez que pessoas desse grupo atacam obras de arte para chamar atenção e tentar pressionar governos a parar de usar combustíveis fósseis. Obras como "A Última Ceia", "Mona Lisa", ambas de Leonardo Da Vinci, e “A Carroça de Feno”, de John Constable, foram alvo recentes de protestos desse estilo. Com o crescimento da tendência, algumas perguntas pairam no ar: por que ativistas escolheram protestar dentro de museus para reivindicar mudanças ambientais? Será que os museus estão se tornando cada vez mais um palco de discussões políticas, ou devem permanecer como locais intocados, consagrados somente às artes? No Expresso Ilustrada desta semana, Giselle Beiguelman, artista plástica e autora de “Políticas da Imagem – Vigilância e Resistência na Dadosfera”, comenta o fenômeno e explica como os museus se tornaram um espaço de protestos.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Mat eise Sujeten: Adem reorientéiert Leit als Buschauffer, Ausstellung vum John Constable an der Villa Vauban an d'Gromperefest zu Bënzelt.
Mat eise Sujeten: Adem reorientéiert Leit als Buschauffer, Ausstellung vum John Constable an der Villa Vauban an d'Gromperefest zu Bënzelt.
An der Villa Vauban kann een am Moment d'Idyll vum englesche Landliewe genéissen. Mat der Ausstellung "John Constable's English Landscapes" mécht ee vun de wichtegste Vertrieder vun der englescher Landschaftsmolerei seng Première an der Groussregioun. De Ben Kobs huet sech sur Place mat der Angelika Glesius, Conservateur adjoint vun der Villa Vauban ënnerhalen.
John Constable is the director of energy at the Global Warming Policy Foundation, a British public charity. In this episode, Constable (who previously appeared on the podcast on February 1, 2022.) discusses his new report, “Europe's Green Energy Experiment: A Costly Failure in Unilateral Climate Policy,” the staggering sums the EU has spent subsidizing renewables, and why Europe now faces the “worst energy cost and security crisis since the Second World War.” (Recorded July 19, 2022.)
- 1 Jahr Flutkatastrophe Ahrtal - Lord Zentrum für Medizinische Simulation am CaritasKlinikum Saarbrücken eröffnet - John Constable in der Villa Vauban Luxemburg - Wasserknappheit Moselle - Karl-May-Festspiele Pluwig starten am Freitag
Climate change protesters targeted a copy of Leonardo da Vinci's “The Last Supper” at London's Royal Academy of Arts Tuesday, gluing themselves to the painting's frame and spray-painting “No New Oil” next to it.The protest, organized by supporters of the campaign group “Just Stop Oil,” came a day after two activists from the group were arrested after gluing themselves to the frame of John Constable's “The Hay Wain” in London's National Gallery.On Tuesday, five activists went into the Royal Academy and attached a hand each to the frame of “The Last Supper,” a full-size copy of da Vinci's famous 15th-century work.LIKE & SUBSCRIBE for new videos everyday. https://bit.ly/3KBUDSK
Beyond the Noise, which is published on alternate weeks, looks at some of the biggest issues affecting comms and PR. Download the podcast via Apple, Spotify or your favourite platform, or listen in your browser below.Recent weeks have seen a spate of environment protests, not least during the Cannes Lions, where Greenpeace sent a flotilla of kayaks to WPP's rented beach space. On Monday, protestors from Just Stop Oil glued themselves to a John Constable painting in the National Gallery. The group had earlier targeted Sunday's British Grand Prix.Regular host Frankie Oliver and PRWeek UK editor John Harrington examine how the environmental campaign movement has evolved and what it means for PR agencies that work with fossil fuel clients.We also reveal who is 'top' and 'flop' for their comms prowess (or not) in the past fortnight. The Government has been spared inclusion in the latter; the podcast was recorded before the spate of resignations on Tuesday evening.Finally, having reached the halfway point of the year, we look at the best UK communicators of 2022 so far. If you need help and support with anything mentioned in this episode, contact CALM on 0800 58 58 58 or at thecalmzone.net Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Should you paint landscapes from imagination or climb the highest mountains to observe nature from a birds eye perspective? Boris Koller and Jan-Ove Tuv sit down to talk about their experience, how and where the youngsters go wrong, and the quality of painters like Vermeer, Lars Hertervig, and John Constable. Chapters from this episode: 00:03 Symmetry in painting is death 02:25 Paint what you know 06:21 Why not to use mirrors when you paint 14:28 Echoing or repeating certain elements 16:13 Inventing landscapes 19:50 Structure before rhythm and imbalance 22:22 Horizons are the main problem 24:13 Structure before emotion 28:55 Vermeer: the best landscape composer 30:44 Hertervig's "Borg Island": Dramatize and bind together 38:12 Painting from memory, a photograph, or the motif itself? 43:10 Hertervig unifies sky and earth and "flattens" the image 50:26 No sketches beforehand, like Caravaggio 53:08 Place important elements in the dark! 53:48 Animating nature 55:55 How to paint sunsets This episode was filmed and edited by Bork Nerdrum. The centerpiece was a 19th century reproduction of G. F. Watts' Hope. SHOUTOUT to our TOP SPONSORS! Fergus Ryan Shaun Roberts Matthias Proy Eivind Josten Børge Moe Dean Anthony Alastair Blain Anders Berge Christensen Erik Lasky Iver Ukkestad Jack Entz Warner Jared Fountain Jon Harald Aspheim Marion Bu-Pedersen Maurice Robbins Misty DeLaine Richard Barrett Stacey Evangelista Trym Jordahl Yngve Hellan Would you like to get premium access? Become a patron: https://patreon.com/caveofapelles/ Subscribe to our newsletter. It is the only way to make sure that you receive content from us on a regular basis: https://bit.ly/2L8qCNn Check out our other channels: https://www.youtube.com/c/SchoolofApelles https://www.youtube.com/c/CultureWarsNow Podcast available on SoundCloud, iTunes, and Spotify: https://soundcloud.com/caveofapelles https://spoti.fi/2AVDkcT https://apple.co/2QAcXD6 Visit our facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/caveofapelles Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/CaveOfApelles For inquiries — talk@caveofapelles.com
Cordula Schnuer from Delano joined Tom in the studio this morning for Delano's Top Of The Week. Up for discussion was Luxembourg Pride which is taking place this week in Esch Throughout the week, visitors can attend a host of different events including a queer arts festival, a queer movie night screening of Japanese drama “His”, an exhibition on LBGTIQ+ history in Luxembourg, on 4th July at 7pm there is a ceremony to remember victims of social hate and crimes at the national monument of resistance, there will be a conference on LGBTIQ+ activism in Europe at the University of Luxembourg. And of course there's the pride parade, street fest and party on 9 and 10 July, with an appearance by Boy George and Culture Club. Cordula's event picks in luxembourg this week included A John Constable exhibition at the Villa Vauban https://villavauban.lu/en/exhibition/john-constables-english-landscapes/ Luxembourg Street Festival t Philharmonie https://delano.lu/event/2022-07-07-lxb-street And the Blues Express festival happening at La Sauvage https://delano.lu/event/2022-07-09-hop-aboard-the-blues-express Cordula's personal pick was a book: Shortest History of War by Gwynne Dyer.
The minutiae of the everyday frame, shape and colour our lives. Joanna Robertson lives in Paris, and finds that the views from her fourth-floor flat have a real influence on her daily life. Looking out over the neighbourhood of Montparnasse, her windows let her eye and mind wander over the sites of much recent and not so recent cultural history. Former residents whose residences she can still see, range from Irish playwright Samuel Beckett to Austro-Hungarian writer Joseph Roth. And, following in the footsteps of painter John Constable, Joanna too goes "skying", as he called it: observing the sky and its cloudscapes through the window. What's beyond the glass is both separate from, yet also inextricably part of her life. Written and presented by Joanna Robertson Producer: Arlene Gregorius Editor: Penny Murphy Sound engineer: Nigel Appleton Production Coordinator: Janet Staples
John is also known by his shamanic name John Crow and is known to me from attending one of his repatterning workshops and watching him perform some of his poetry at The Find The Others Festival in 2014. He's always been someone I've wanted to invite on the podcast and reading his latest book became the opportunity I'd been waiting for. His story of becoming the custodian of Crossbones Graveyard and his relationship with the Goose and the 23 year magical working and now his move to Glastonbury is amazing. After you've heard the show trust me you'll want to buy the book and I've got to say it's one of the best books on magic I've ever read.Find John You can email via the contact section https://crossbones.org.uk/On Watling Street Podcast https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lu60vQwD0lA&t=1483s&ab_channel=JohnHiggsFind meTwitter and Insta: @JimthediamondBut me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/jimthediamond66640Music: Thomas CrosslandTheme tune: tom baker & Daisy Eris Campbell
Face à la crise écologique que nous connaissons, quel a été le rôle des arts dans notre rapport à la nature ? En réalité, l'artiste a presque toujours reflété la conscience de son époque. Et cette conscience a longtemps été celle de l'anthropocentrisme : voir la nature uniquement par le prisme humain, et pour les besoins humains. L'Antiquité en avait posé les bases, le christianisme l'a renforcé, et le progrès des Temps Moderne l'a parachevé. Et cela se voit très clairement dans le regard que les artistes portent sur la nature… A travers la représentation des mythes fondateurs (Prométhée, le jardin d'Eden), à travers les concepts clés de la culture occidentale (mimesis, anthropocentrisme, rationalisme), partons à la découverte des artistes et des œuvres qui ont façonné notre regard sur la nature... Featuring. Les grottes de Lascaux, le Doryphore de Polyclète, Prométhée, la Genèse, Cranach, Rubens, Léonard de Vinci, John Constable, Claude Le Lorrain *** Retrouvez Art Talks Coffret! Dans des coffrets assemblés à la main, numérotés et signés, retrouvez un livre d'art, le podcast, et dix œuvres satyriques, en lien avec les séries d'Art Talks. Ils sont tirés en 100 exemplaires seulement, et c'est un magnifique objet d'art à offrir, ou simplement pour compléter la découverte du podcast. Rendez-vous sur : https://www.art-talks.fr Retrouvez les œuvres du podcast et suivez Art Talks sur Instagram @art.talks.podcast
The Scottish kitsch-painter Alastair Blain visits The Cave to convey his love for landscape painting and the importance of making it mythical. He is concerned with ancient tales like The Poems of Ossian, and claims they have wisdom or even medicine for us "if we can come to behold them from a universal perspective". Blain will also discuss how historical knowledge of the Western Scottish landscape has opened up its timeless dimension, as well as the challenges of painting landscapes in a studio. The conversation was produced by Bork S. Nerdrum and assisted by Sebastian Salvo. The centerpiece was landscape painting of Glen Rosa by Alastair Blain. 01:33 Introducing the guest 02:12 The Glen Rosa landscape painting 03:36 Life took me to New Zealand 05:21 Hungry Creek Art and Craft school 08:09 Oleg Korolev and the Academy of Visionary Art 17:05 The River Gryffe and the mythic landscape 24:55 Being craft-oriented and making your own tools 27:27 John Constable and painting inside VS outside 30:11 The Apelles palette is so blue! 31:08 Veiviseren (The Path Finder) 32:09 Influence from the poems of Ossian 37:04 Escaping the sad realities of modern life 43:44 Horatio McCulloch and Degas' academy idea 47:03 The joy of grief and The Sick Child by Munch 55:03 Blain's handmade brushes 1:00:25 Beautiful books and James MacPherson 1:05:50 Fionn mac Cumhaill (Finn MacCool) 1:08:05 The tale about the piper called Alastair SHOUTOUT to our TOP SPONSORS! Dean Anthony Jon Harald Aspheim Alastair Blain Anders Berge Christensen Erik Lasky Fernando Ramirez Herman Borge Hårek Jordal Andreassen Iver Ukkestad Jack Entz Warner Jared Fountain Jon Harald Aspheim Jose Luis Marion Bu-Pedersen Maurice Robbins Michael Irish Stacey Evangelista Tonelise Rugaas Trym Jordahl Villiam S-ian Yngve Hellan Would you like to get premium access? Become a patron: https://patreon.com/caveofapelles/ Subscribe to our newsletter. It is the only way to make sure that you receive content from us on a regular basis: https://bit.ly/2L8qCNn Check out our other channels: https://www.youtube.com/c/SchoolofApelles https://www.youtube.com/c/CultureWarsNow Podcast available on SoundCloud, iTunes, and Spotify: https://soundcloud.com/caveofapelles https://spoti.fi/2AVDkcT https://apple.co/2QAcXD6 Visit our facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/caveofapelles BitChute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/caveofapelles/ Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/CaveOfApelles For inquiries — talk@caveofapelles.com
As the politics of energy factor heavily in the Russia-Ukraine war, Dr. John Constable, Director of the Renewable Energy Foundation, shines a light on the faltering illusion that the transition towards an energy paradigm of intermittency can progress without serious upheaval.
Scholar John Constable joins Emmet to discuss his recent lecture given at the Mont Pelerin Society last year entitled, "Misconceptions of the 'Industrial Revolution': Prospects for Individual Liberty in the Post-Pandemic Era." They discuss the discursive fiction of the "industrial revolution" and its uses, the green energy transition's misguidedness, economics' backwardness, why energy is the key to societal wealth and freedom, and more! Subscribe to our Patreon to get 2 exclusive episodes a month (https://www.patreon.com/exhaust). Closing song: Migos - Walk It Talk It (KEIFERGR33N Remix) (https://www.keifergr33n.com/)
"one of the few places where you can see and hear the Westbourne"
John Constable is the director of the Renewable Energy Foundation, a British public charity. In this episode, Constable discusses the ongoing energy crisis in Europe, misconceptions about the Industrial Revolution, offshore wind, why “renewables are a land play,” how increasing energy use leads to greater liberty and freedom, and why “solar and wind energy are a mirage.”
In this episode, Phil and Laura look at one of the greatest of all British artists: John Constable. He is known best for his Suffolk (eastern England) landscapes but this painting is Brighton on the south coast. Why was he there? What does the painting reveal?www.seventh-art.com/podcast
“Sur le motif“ Peindre en plein air 1780 1870à la Fondation Custodia, Parisdu 3 décembre 2021 au 3 avril 2022Interview de Alice-Anne Tod, ancienne conservatrice en formation à la Fondation Custodia et auteure des notices des œuvres du catalogue en ligne,par Anne-Frédérique Fer, à Paris, le 2 décembre 2021, durée 23'05.© FranceFineArt.Communiqué de presseCommissariat :Ger Luijten, directeur de la Fondation Custodia, Collection Frits Lugt, ParisMary Morton, conservatrice et cheffe du département des peintures françaises de la National Gallery of Art de WashingtonJane Munro, conservatrice du département des peintures, dessins et estampes du Fitzwilliam Museum de CambridgeCette exposition , qui réunit plus de cent cinquante études à l'huile appartenant à la Fondation Custodia à Paris, à la National Gallery of Art de Washington, au Fitzwilliam Museum de Cambridge et à une collection particulière, propose une nouvelle approche de la peinture de plein air en Europe entre 1780 et 1870.La pratique est, certes, attestée dès avant le début de cette période. Les expériences italiennes de Claude Lorrain (1600-1682) évoquées par son biographe et le remarquable ensemble d'oeuvres de François Desportes (1661–1743) conservé à Sèvres en témoignent. Ce n'est toutefois qu'à partir de la fin du XVIIIe siècle que l'usage de l'esquisse à l'huile en plein air fit partie intégrante de la formation des paysagistes européens. À la croisée de la peinture et du dessin, ces études de petit format étaient généralement exécutées sur papier. Peintes rapidement sur le motif, elles avaient pour objectif d'exercer l'oeil et la main à saisir les fugitifs effets de lumière et de couleur. Parfois terminées ultérieurement en atelier, elles n'étaient toutefois pas conçues comme des oeuvres finies destinées à être exposées ou vendues. Elles constituaient pour l'artiste de précieuses références sur lesquelles il se basait pour donner à ses travaux plus formels fraîcheur et immédiateté.L'esquisse de plein air à l'huile, sur papier ou sur toile, fut adoptée par des artistes originaires de l'Europe entière, et au-delà. Le visiteur trouvera donc dans l'exposition des oeuvres de Pierre-Henri de Valenciennes, Achille-Etna Michallon, Camille Corot, Rosa Bonheur, John Constable, Joseph Mallord William Turner, Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg, Johan Thomas Lundbye, Vilhelm Kyhn, Johann Martin von Rohden, Carl Blechen et bien d'autres encore. Le parcours n'est ni chronologique, ni organisé par écoles, mais se structure autour des motifs abordés : arbres, rochers, l'eau sous ses multiples formes, volcans, ciels, toits, Rome et la Campagne romaine, Capri. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Canada Mike and Emmet take a look at three pieces to consider different lenses for human development. The first is an essay on Engels by Wolfgang Streeck (https://pure.mpg.de/rest/items/item_3239575/component/file_3329111/content), the second is a lecture on thermoeconomics by John Constable (http://www.libellus.co.uk/uploads/jc_energy_entropy_wealth_2016.pdf), and the third is an overview of arguments for human evolution by Michael E. Mann (https://www.jstor.org/stable/24717534). Emmet and Mike touch on the Meiji restoration, why we should read old thinkers, British coal, why Steven Pinker sucks, what kind of revolution was the Industrial Revolution, civilizational skillsets, and more! Subscribe to our Patreon to get two exclusive episodes a month! (https://www.patreon.com/exhaust) Closing Song: Kids See Ghost - Feel the Love (KEIFERGR33N) (https://www.keifergr33n.com/music) Special Guest: Mike.
John Constable is a British energy analyst and the GWPF's energy editor. Amongst his many energy-related publications are The Green Mirage: Why the low carbon economy may be further off than we think (Civitas: London, 2011), Energy Policy and Consumer Hardship (REF: London, 2011), and Shortfall, Rebound, Backfire: Can we rely on energy efficiency to offset climate policy costs? (REF: London, 2012). Learn more: https://www.thegwpf.org/john-constable-joins-gwpfs-academic-advisory-council/ Marian L. Tupy is the editor of HumanProgress.org, a senior fellow at the Center for Global Liberty and Prosperity, and coauthor of The Simon Project. He specializes in globalization and global well‐being and politics and economics of Europe and Southern Africa. Learn more: https://www.cato.org/people/marian-l-tupy The Human Progress Podcast RSS Feed: https://anchor.fm/s/57f8d78c/podcast/rss Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3bcXVL9iy96dPSJ322CuGj Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-human-progress-podcast/id1583572211
When a collage of digital images was sold in New York earlier this year for £50 million, the art world was convulsed. The reason? The picture couldn't be hung on a wall and was only visible online. What had been bought and sold was the non-fungible token - or NFT - relating to the collage. David Aaronovitch and his guests discover how NFTs work for those who sell and those who buy them and also consider if NFTs are a passing fad or an aspect of our culture that is becoming increasingly common and might lead to the emergence of a future John Constable or Tracy Emin, eventually spreading to and influencing other art forms.Enter the Briefing Room and find out why collectors are investing in NFTs; how easy it is to spot a fake and what you can do about it; and whether non-fungibles will be an enduring part of the artistic - and investment - worlds in the years ahead.Those taking part include: Georgina Adam of The Art Newspaper; investor in NFTs and co-founder and chief executive of the Arts and culture portal Vastari, Bernardine Bröcker Wieder; and the art historian, former art dealer and presenter of the BBC FOUR series, Britain's Lost Masterpieces, Bendor Grosvenor.Producers Simon Coates and Bob Howard Editor Jasper CorbettImage: Visitors to "Machine Hallucinations - Space: Metaverse" by Refik Anadol, which will be auctioned online as an NFT at Sothebys, at the Digital Art Fair, Hong Kong Credit: REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
We discover the world of an incredible artist JESSE MURRY who passed away in 1993 leaving an extraordinary legacy of artwork, poetry and writing. Fusing the Romantic painting tradition of John Constable and J. M. W. Turner with the quality of mind and imagination of Wallace Stevens's poetry, Murry uniquely sought to create a “landscape” within the fiction of painting that could be “more than a place to dwell but a suitable space for dreams.”We meet two special guests this week to remember Murry's artwork and to explore his extraordinary thinking - the artists #LisaYuskavage @LisaYuskavageStudio and @JarrettEarnest - who together have united to curate an extraordinary new exhibition titled ‘Jesse Murry: Rising', curated by Lisa Yuskavage and Jarrett Earnest, at #DavidZwirner's 533 West 19th Street location in New York.Painter and poet #JesseMurry (1948–1993) identified three significant approaches to landscape—'poetic,' 'dramatic,' and 'visionary,' which he aimed to synthesize into abstract paintings. Born in North Carolina, Jesse Murry studied art and philosophy at Sarah Lawrence College before moving to New York City in 1979. His essays on artists including Hans Hofmann and Howard Hodgkin appeared in a range of publications, including Arts Magazine. After two years of teaching art history and exhibiting at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Murry enrolled in the Yale School of Art at the age of thirty-six. ‘Jesse Murry: Rising' brings together paintings from the last five years of the artist's life. This work—made while confronting his impending mortality from AIDS-related illness—testifies to Murry's lifelong belief in the capacity of painting to hold the complexity of human meaning, at the meeting of a material fact and a location within the mind. Exhibition runs from 17 SEPTEMBER – 23 OCTOBER 2021. Learn more: https://www.davidzwirner.com/exhibitions/2021/more-life/jesse-murryForthcoming on September 28, 2021, and titled after a paper the artist wrote while at Yale, Painting Is a Supreme Fiction is an unprecedented collection of Murry's writings. Edited and with an introduction by Jarrett Earnest and a foreword by Hilton Als, the book also includes transcriptions of two of the artist's notebooks, in which the spatialization of the words across the page approaches the condition of thought. We strongly recommend buying this special book!!!Thank you Lisa, Jarrett and the team at @DavidZwirner. #JesseMurry See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In 1815, Mount Tambora in Indonesia erupted, impacting the weather throughout the world. The Year Without Summer imagines its impact on six separate lives, thousands of miles away. They include a fenland farm labourer, a soldier returning from Waterloo, author Mary Shelley and painter John Constable. Laura McMillan talks to author Guinevere Glasfurd about her ingenious and poetic novel, The Year Without Summer. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
John Constable painted this bucolic landscape for Major General Francis Slater–Rebow but it's not what it appears to be! We'll talk about the headaches caused by an overeager client and what one of those cows is hiding. We'll also see how Constable used a technique to conjure up distant figures, just like Camille Pissarro did decades later. And we'll find out how Constable's cheapness and cold feet nearly cost him the love of his life! See the artwork at https://alonglookpodcast.com/wivenhoe-park-essex-by-john-constable/ SHOW NOTES (TRANSCRIPT) “A Long Look” theme is “Ascension” by Ron Gelinas https://youtu.be/jGEdNSNkZoo Episode theme is “Piano Sonata no. 11, K. 331 – I. Andante grazioso” by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Courtesy of musopen.org. Wivenhoe Park, Essex info https://www.nga.gov/collection/highlights/constable-wivenhoe-park-essex.html https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.1147.html https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.1147.html#relatedpages British Paintings of the Sixteenth through Nineteenth Centuries (PDF) Constable info John Constable (Masters of Art Series) by John Walker (Amazon) Slow Art Day The post Wivenhoe Park, Essex by John Constable appeared first on A Long Look.
M. Night Shyamalan discusses his new film, Glass, the third in his comic book trilogy with Unbreakable and Split. It stars Samuel L Jackson, Bruce Willis and James McAvoy. The Sixth Sense director reveals how he storyboards every single shot, how he uses colour to denote character and why it's so important for him to root his supernatural storylines in the real world.D. H. Lawrence is famous for his novels - The Rainbow, Sons and Lovers, Women in Love and, notoriously, Lady Chatterley's Lover. His poetry is admired and he is even known as a painter. But he also, early in his career, wrote several plays. They didn't enjoy much success in his lifetime - The Daughter-in-Law, which Richard Eyre hails as his masterpiece, wasn't performed until 1967, but there have been a number of productions in recent years. As an acclaimed staging of The Daughter-in-Law returns to the Arcola Theatre, Samira Ahmed discusses the work of D. H. Lawrence, dramatist, with the play's director Jack Gamble and the Lawrence scholar Dr Catherine Brown.The abstract painter Bridget Riley has recently completed Messengers, a huge - 30 by 60 feet - work on the walls of the National Gallery's Annenberg Court. It is inspired by something the young John Constable wrote about clouds, but perhaps also alludes to the numerous angels, themselves harbingers, that appear in the skies of so many of the National Gallery's pictures. Bridget Riley explains how she arrived at the title and the critic Louisa Buck, on the spot, reviews the piece.Presenter: Samira Ahmend Producer: Julian May