Art is a line around your thoughts .:. Gustav Klimt .:.
Ingrandisci questa immagine
William Harvey and Arthur Davidson, two of the founders of Harley-Davidson motorcycles (ahem, and what else?), 1914 #chiaroscuro
 
René Magritte, L’Évidence éternelle (The Eternally Obvious, Oil On Canvas). Paris, 1930 or #lafissa
Ingrandisci questa immagine
Ingrandisci questa immagine
Ingrandisci questa immagine
Ingrandisci questa immagine
Ingrandisci questa immagine
the-eternal-evidence-1930René Magritte
The Eternal Evidence, 5 framed canvases mounted on glass, cm. 22 X 12; 19 X 24; 27 X 19; 16 X 22; 22 X 12
Ingrandisci questa immagine
In the Renaissance, the idea of the painting as a "window open to the world" was introduced into art, that is, a reality of which we are provided with a noteworthy image.

Magritte's art has been an unceasing challenge to this idea through a "distorted" use of conventions.

In "L'Évidence éternelle," Magritte, um, plays dirty, literally applying the metaphor of the perspective window, thus revealing all its conventionality and the implicit deception of this convention.

Presupposing an imaginary plane, beyond which there stands a model, naked.

The five small canvases are as many "windows" open into this imaginary plane and would reveal to us the world that exists behind it, allowing the woman who inhabits it to take a look at ours.

Depending on the open gap, we see different details of the woman such as the face, breasts, pubis, knees, and feet.

Here, Magritte maintains an ironic sincerity, placing all the elements "in their place"; in other cases, the incoherent details will be displaced across the various openings, thus imposing on our brain small corrections that make sense of the image, saving us from the unease generated by the vision of worlds that do not adhere to our usual rules at all.

On the other hand, "L'Évidence éternelle" is also a denunciation of the voyeurism that underlies our image culture, and the very idea of painting as a "window onto the world," Magritte focuses our gaze on the naked body, but at the same time offers us his probing gaze, loading onto us that discomfort of which we are, in part, indifferent culprits.
 
Anna Identici....Era bello il mio ragazzo

- Hosts: Mike Bongiorno, Sylva Koscina, and Paolo Villaggio
- Orchestra: from the Festival; Franck Pourcel (repetition of pieces)
- Total pieces: 28
- Organization: Municipality of Sanremo (Elio Gigante)
- FORMAT: 1 performance per piece, 14 pieces qualified for the final evening.
Di, Preti, Guarnieri
It Was Beautiful My Boy - Anna Identici
ELIMINATED

#sanremo50anni fa
 
One, Two, Three (1961) – Billy Wilder – Communists Another big comedy from Wilder, with him and Diamond here shooting (it's appropriate to say so, the screenplay and dialogues of this film are a red arrow with broken brakes) at capitalism and communism as two hilarious furies. Cagney is outstanding. A very nice film, unfortunate due to timing and extracinematographic reasons, not inferior to the subsequent "Irma La Dolce," in fact, it probably maintains its pace slightly better until the end.
 
Laura Nyro -- Angel In the Dark
Among his latest recordings...
 
Hunters And Collectors - Junket Head
A groove bomb as always...
 
Commodores- Night Shift (1985)

I don't understand why here in Deb nobody gives a damn about them
Commodores (22/25)
 
The Wombats – Everything I Love Is Going To Die (Official Video)

keep your big mouth shut and stop wasting my time
 
Ma tu chi sei (Bad Side of the Moon)
Another cover: not exceptional but interesting...
 
Toe Fat 1970 - Bad Side Of The Moon Ken Hensley, Lee Kerslak, and John Glascock (the best bassist of Jethro Tull and also the unluckiest, for those who don’t know) in one of their very first bands (not the first to be honest, they had already been playing together in The Gods) covering a contemporary piece by Elton John and Taupin, who were also very young and rapidly on the rise. 1970. A classic album of the Rock-Soul-Blues-Pop era, super enjoyable.
 
Il mare d'inverno - Enrico Ruggeri

And I Think of You by Lucio has more or less the same story as this piece. Written by Lucio but first recorded by Bruno Lauzi. The following year it was recorded by Lucio himself. Likewise, The Sea in Winter written by Ruggeri was first recorded by Bertè, and the year after, Ruggeri recorded it for his solo album. Needless to say, I will always prefer the version by the author..... Spectacular, gentlemen.
 
The Searchers "Needles And Pins" on The Ed Sullivan Show

#edsullivanshow

From 1948 to 1971, every Sunday night Ed Sullivan hosted the greatest and most famous artists on his show, broadcast on CBS. About ten years ago, it was re-released in 12 DVDs, and an Italian newspaper published the best performances. I'm sharing them with you; there are truly wonderful things.