6/30/10
"From the exhibition “Hans Finsler und die Schweizer Fotokultur,” made in 1958."
via arsvitaest via themagiclantern via rubyglass via stopvoleuse6/29/10
6/28/10
6/26/10
6/24/10
6/23/10
A Political Romance
With the Weight of this Truth, and the great good Sense and strong Reason which accompanied all the Parson said upon the Subject,—poor Trim was driven to his last Shift,—and begg'd he might be suffered to plead his Right and Title to the Watch-Coat, if not by Promise, at least by Services.—It was well known how much he was entitled to it upon these Scores: That he had black'd the Parson's Shoes without Count, and greased his Boots above fifty Times:—That he had run for Eggs into the Town upon all Occasions;—whetted the Knives at all Hours;—catched his Horse and rubbed him down:—That for his Wife she had been ready upon all Occasions to charr for them;—and neither he nor she, to the best of his Remembrance, ever took a Farthing, or any thing beyond a Mug of Ale.—To this Account of his Services he begg'd Leave to add those of his Wishes, which, he said, had been equally great.—He affirmed, and was ready, he said, to make it appear, by Numbers of Witnesses, "He had drank his Reverence's Health a thousand Times, (by the bye, he did not add out of the Parson's own Ale): That he not only drank his Health, but wish'd it; and never came to the House, but ask'd his Man kindly how he did; that in particular, about half a Year ago, when his Reverence cut his Finger in paring an Apple, he went half a Mile to ask a cunning Woman, what was good to stanch Blood, and actually returned with a Cobweb in his Breeches Pocket:—Nay, says Trim, it was not a Fortnight ago, when your Reverence took that violent Purge, that I went to the far End of the whole Town to borrow you a Close-stool,—and came back, as my Neighbours, who flouted me, will all bear witness, with the Pan upon my Head, and never thought it too much."
Laurence Sterne - A Political Romance

The Photography of Jack Délano - the Man who Colored the Forties
via kuriositas
6/22/10

Kurt Schwitters: Das Merzbau
via Ordinary finds
Gus Visser and His Singing Duck (1925)
«This very short Theodore Case sound film is remarkable as an early demonstration of sound technology.»
Ainda o pobre defunto...
Cuidais que só os Tapuias se comem uns aos outros? Muito maior açougue é o de cá, muito mais se comem os Brancos. Vedes vós todo aquele bulir, vedes todo aquele andar, vedes aquele concorrer às praças e cruzar as ruas; vedes aquele subir e descer as calçadas, vedes aquele entrar e sair sem quietação nem sossego? Pois tudo aquilo é andarem buscando os homens como hão-de comer e como se hão-de comer. Morreu algum deles, vereis logo tantos sobre o miserável a despedaçá-lo e comê-lo. Comem-no os herdeiros, comem-no os testamenteiros, comem-no os legatários, comem-no os acredores; comem-no os oficiais dos órfãos e os dos defuntos e ausentes; come-o o médico, que o curou ou ajudou a morrer; come-o o sangrador que lhe tirou o sangue; come-a a mesma mulher, que de má vontade lhe dá para a mortalha o lençol mais velho da casa; come-o o que lhe abre a cova, o que lhe tange os sinos, e os que, cantando, o levam a enterrar; enfim, ainda o pobre defunto o não comeu a terra, e já o tem comido toda a terra.
Sermão de Santo António aos Peixes
6/21/10
6/20/10
Hobbes
"O medo foi a única paixão da minha vida."
Hobbes
A imagem do filósofo medroso teve, tem, uma tradição. Thomas de Quincey, no seu Do Assassinato Considerado como uma das Belas-Artes, zombeteiramente refaz a história da filosofia moderna seguindo o tema, já por si hobbesiano, da morte violenta: foram assassinados Espinosa e Malebranche, foi assassino Berkeley, ameaçado de morte Descartes, e Locke era desinteressante a ponto de ninguém cogitar matá-lo; classifica como "medroso" só a Hobbes, tantas associações cometia sua imaginação fértil: certa vez acabava de banhar-se e aguardava o jantar, quando ouviu uma gritaria e — recordando que "Sextus Roscius fora assassinado depois de cear perto dos Balneae Palatinae" — "perturbou-se".
Renato Janine Ribeiro
6/19/10

Robert Bresson - Journal d'un curé de campagne
Imagem via dias felizes












































