Archive for the ‘culture’ Category

Wabi-Sabi

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

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(Wabi-Sabi: For Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers, by Leonard Koren)

Wabi-sabi is the essence of Japan. The art of finding beauty in imperfection and profundity of nature. It means accepting the life cycle – growth, decay and death. It is simple. It is slow and pure. It reveres authenticity above all. Wabi-sabi are all the changes that appear on things with time and use – crack, crevices, rust, spots, frayed edges. Marks of time are are kind of quiet beauty – beauty that waits to be discovered.

It is a fragmentary glimpse: the branch representing the entire tree, shoji screens filtering the sun, the moon 90 percent obscured behind a cloud. It is a richly beauty that is striking but not obvious. For Japanese it is the difference between kirei – just pretty – and omoshiroi, the interestingness that kicks something into the realm of beautiful (Omoshiroi literally means “white faced”, but it’s meanings range from fascinating to fantastic).

D.T. Suzuki described wabi-sabi as “an active aesthetical apprectation of poverty”, with “poverty” having more romantic meaning like being satisfied with the little hut, a room of two tatami mats, like the log cabin of Thoreau. Wabibito means a person free at heart. Simple, unmaterialistic, humble by choice and in tune with nature.

Wabi stems form the root wa, which refers to harmony, peace, tranquility and balance. A common phrase used in conjunction with wabi is “the joy of the little monk in his wind-torn robe”:) A wabi person is free from greed, indolence and anger and understands the wisdom of rocks and grasshoppers. Sabi by itself means “the bloom of time”. It connotes natural progression-tarnish, hoariness, the extinguished gloss, the understanding that the beauty is fleeting. It is a gift of time, an aching poetry in things that carry their years with grace.

Less is more

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Who originally said “Less is more”? Both Mies van der Rohe and Buckminster Fuller adopted it as a way of life – you can see it demonstrated in Mies’ buildings and Bucky’s geodesic domes – but they got it from a poem.

It’s said by the painter Andrea del Sarto (who was a real person–1486-1531), in Robert Browning‘s 1855 poem by that name. You’ll recognize another well-known line a little later in the same poem. Here’s how Browning had Andrea del Sarto say “less is more.” He’s addressing his beautiful, but somewhat stupid and apparently unfaithful young wife, Lucrezia, for whom he abandoned an important painting commission and – some have said – his true calling.

…I could count twenty such …
Who strive …
To paint a little thing like that you smeared
Carelessly passing with your robes afloat–
Yet do much less … –so much less!
Well, less is more, Lucrezia: I am judged.

There burns a truer light of God in them,
In their vexed beating stuffed and stopped-up brain,
Heart, or whate’er else, than goes on to prompt
This low-pulsed forthright craftsman’s hand of mine.
Their works drop groundward, but themselves, I know,
Reach many a time a heaven that’s shut to me,
Enter and take their place there sure enough,
Though they come back and cannot tell the world.
… Somebody remarks
Morello’s outline there is wrongly traced,
His hue mistaken; what of that? or else,
Rightly traced and well ordered; what of that?
Speak as they please, what does the mountain care?
Ah, but a man’s reach should exceed his grasp,
Or what’s a heaven for? …

Declare interdependence

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

The declaration of cultural revolutionaries for 2009 is an open experiment created, stated and set forth by art-ecology-education.org. It is a “putting in words of what is already in the air.”

The intention is viral, that is, the more these ideas are being read, spoken out, thought and discussed, the more their energy will manifest in our world and in our society. It counts with the participation of everyone with whom it resonates with. To get involved I’m starting to translate it into Polish:)

DECLARATION OF CULTURAL REVOLUTIONARIES 2009

_live, act, work with and not against nature
_know that life is too complex to understand it intellectually
_build and support local, self-governed economies
_value and safe-guard diversity of all kind
_value interdependence, since they know that nothing is separate
_regard themselves as equal to all life forms
_protect and support life
_love and support children unconditionally
_work on themselves towards greater awareness
_know about ecological principles and integrate them into their lifes
_see music and dance as an integral part of their expression and communication
_live on an animate earth and regard it as sacred
_know how to grow their own food
_appreciate their sensory awareness
_celebrate life
_cooperate
_make the shift from thinking ‘either, or’ to thinking ‘as well, as’
_share their knowledge
_understand and integrate process as a way of being
_are not identified with their body, thoughts or emotions
_see the mind as a tool
_realize that there is no right or wrong
_are not identified with any social tag, their past or their future
_are aware that the very essence of who they are is life itself
_take responsibility for their emotions
_are aware of and value their relationships to their living and seemingly non-living surroundings
_value and integrate the wisdom of women
_value and integrate the wisdom of indigenous cultures
_value generalist knowledge
_are aware of change as one of the core principles of evolution
_work towards diversification and decentralization
_engage in and create bonds to the place where they live
_turn from dependent consumers to responsible producers
_are looking for ways so that their interests and talents may unfold
_have the courage to resist and disobey laws that render self-rule, self-provisioning, and self-sustenance illegal
_are informed about the current money system and identify it as a contemporary form of enslavement
_identify and boycott biological, cultural, social and philosophical monocultures
_boycott monopolies of any kind
_question everyone who promotes one solution
_value environmental and human ethics over profit maximization
_boycott corporations and banks operating for profit maximization
_reclaim land and forests as common good
_reclaim water as common good
_reclaim biodiversity and knowledge as common good
_are aware that they participate in the process of co-creation at all time
_allow life to unfold through them

(via socialdesignblog)

Claude Levi-Strauss Turned 100

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

(photo: independent.co.uk)

On 28th of November in Paris, one of the last icons of 20th century French intellectual life turned 100. Claude Levi-Strauss not only reshaped the nature of how anthropologists do their work: he changed the world’s perception of so-called “primitive” tribes in Asia, Africa and America. His structuralism (Structural anthropology, 1967) revolutionized anthropology and sociology and is still considered a foundation for the social sciences, but it was with his 1955 book “Tristes Tropiques,” a sort of anthropological meditation based on his travels in Brazil and elsewhere in the 1930s, when he became world famous. Undoubtedly, one of the greatest minds of humankind!

Some media coverge:
NYT, 100th-Birthday Tributes Pour in for Lévi-Strauss

Open Democracy, Claude Lévi-Strauss at 100: echo of the future

The independent, Grand chieftain of anthropology lives to see his centenary

I’m voting Republican

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Sure, I’m voting Republican. Fun:)

Slavoj Žižek on toilets and ideology

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

I LOVE him! Just check this out:

Yearbook yourself!

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

This tool totally made my day today!

On the site Yearbook Yourself you can download your picture and see yourself with typical haircuts and outfits through the decades. Really wonderful! Enjoy.

Me in the 60′ — like a real The Beatles fan!

Me in the 70′ — Jimmy Hendrix haircut…

Me in the 80′ — my favorite, perfect embodiment of kitsch! Love it!

(via swissmiss)

Time is dancing, living means dancing

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Time is not linear. Time is not singular. Time is not an immutable constant (as Newton supposed). Time is a cluster of concepts, events and rhythms. As people do different things (write, play, schedule activities, travel, sleep, dream, perform ceremonies, meditate), they unconsciously participate in different categories of time. There is sacred and profane time as well as physical and metaphysical time. There is also biological clock – a build-in rhythm of a body. And clock time itself. But in fact – a clock can be anything – the drift of a continent, a chronometer, a calendar of religious ceremonies, or a schedule of production…

The clock one is using focuses on different relationships in our personal lives. Edward T.Hall in his book “The Dance of Life. The Other Dimension of Time.” uses mandala, one of the mankind’s oldest classification devices, to classify different types of time. Each division in mandala represents a radically different type of clock. The rules of one category cannot be applied to another category, because they are different universes with different laws. What is common for them – they are all the rhythm.

We dance our lives according to the rhythms. The light and the dark, the ebb and and flow, seasonal rhythms established by the travel of the earths around the sun – even early life forms on earth adapted and internalized the rhythmic change. From that point on, no form of life could evolve in a timeless nonrhythmic world. All humans are instinctually linked to the rhythm of life and – according to Hall – being unsynchronized can harm us, bring us to depression. Rhythm affects our entire being.

I love the world

Saturday, April 19th, 2008

The world is just awesome!

(discovery channel via chrisglass)

Notebookism

Friday, March 14th, 2008

“We all share a pleasant affliction – the urge to create on paper. The smell of smooth creamy paper sends our hearts aflutter. The delicate tinkling of nib against inkwell accelerates our pulse rate. We stare endlessly at the first blank page.”

Everyone sharing this kind of emotional state (I do) will be excited to visit notebookism site and notebookism flickr pool (and of course moleskinerie).

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(Vincent van Gogh’s moleskine kept in the Van Gogh Museum of Amsterdam: moleskine.it)