Dear Zazie, Here is todays’ Lover’s Chronicle from Mac Tag. Rhett
The Lovers’ Chronicle
Dear Muse,
the only need
it is revelatory
creatin’ what we feel
creatin’ what we see
creatin’ what is real to us
all that matters
is what moves us
you with your voice
me with this verse
this to which we belong
expressin’ ourselves
in our own way,
in our time
© copyright 2021 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved
© copyright 2020 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved
the most i ever knew
upon you, contentment
and still i famish, to ascend
so eminent a sight
and a song for intimate
delight
resume
left behind need
to what purpose
will fate, or luck,
or who knows what,
finally allow
© copyright 2019 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved
the purpose rests
in the ability to see
and express
this vision
cannot be separated
from livin’
it is the only need
it is revelatory
create what you feel
create what you see
create what is real to you
nothin’ else matters
moved or left cold by lines
depends on viewpoints
all that matters
is what moves you
you say, sometimes
you do not understand
the lines
they mean
what you want
them to mean
there is only one reason
expressin’ yourself
in your own time,
and your own way
© copyright 2018 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved
cool night
whiskey for one
torch lit screen porch
sounds… crickets,
waterfall, distant
train whistle
twilight settles in
missin’… you
tired, need sleep
but the night is too nice
to give up on just yet
this moment, this feelin
near about contentment,
reckon, as i can git
if i wrote all night
would you hear it
would you feel it
would you read it
and want more
if i wrote all night
would you believe
tryin’ to learn…
i do not need anything
or anyone that will not
help me be who i need to be
tryin’ to learn to give up
on everything, except
that to which i belong
© copyright 2017 mac tag/cowboy Coleridge all rights reserved
Today is the birthday of Eleanor Norcross (Ella Augusta Norcross, Fitchburg, Massachusetss 19 June 1854 – 19 October 1923 Fitchburg); painter who studied under William Merritt Chase and Alfred Stevens. She lived the majority of her adult life in Paris, France as an artist and collector and spent the summers in her hometown of Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Norcross painted Impressionist portraits and still lifes, and is better known for her paintings of genteel interiors.
During the summers of 1916, 1917 and 1922, Henri went to Santa Fe, New Mexico to paint. He found that locale as inspirational as the countryside of Ireland had been. He became an important figure in the Santa Fe art scene and persuaded the director of the state art museum to adopt an open-door exhibition policy.
Gallery
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Portrait of Carl Gustav Waldeck, 1896 – Saint Louis Art Museum
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Woman in Manteau, 1898 – Brooklyn Museum
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The Blue Kimono, 1909 – New Orleans Museum of Art
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The Dancer, 1910
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Dutch Girl, 1910 (photograph from 1910)
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Figure in Motion, 1913
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Mildred Clarke von Kienbusch, 1914, Princeton University Art Museum
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Tam Gan, 1914. Albright-Knox Art Gallery
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The Beach Hat, 1914, oil on canvas, The Detroit Institute of Arts
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“Edna Smith in a Japanese Wrap”, 1915, Indianapolis Museum of Art
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Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, 1916, Whitney Museum of American Art
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Portrait of Fay Bainter, 1918
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Mata Moana, 1920
Quotations
- “It is harder to see than it is to express. The whole value of art rests in the artist’s ability to see well into what is before him.”
- “Art cannot be separated from life. It is the expression of the greatest need of which life is capable, and we value art not because of the skilled product, but because of its revelation of a life’s experience.”
- “Paint what you feel. Paint what you see. Paint what is real to you.”
- “Different men are moved or left cold by lines according to the difference in their natures. What moves you is beautiful to you.”
- “There is only one reason for art in America, and that is that the people of America learn the means of expressing themselves in their own time, and their own land.”
And today is the birthday of Jean Dominique Antony Metzinger (Nantes, France; 24 June 1883 – 3 November 1956 Paris); painter, theorist, writer, critic and poet. His earliest works, from 1900 to 1904, were influenced by the Neo-impressionism of Georges Seurat and Henri-Edmond Cross. Between 1904 and 1907 Metzinger worked in the Divisionist and Fauvist styles with a strong Cézannian component, leading to some of the first proto-Cubist works.
Metzinger married Lucie Soubiron in Paris on 30 December 1909.
Gallery
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c.1905-06, Nu dans un paysage, oil on canvas, 73 x 54 cm. 2nd Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler Sale of Sequestered Art, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 17–18 November 1921, reproduced n. 162
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c.1906, Femme au Chapeau (Woman with a Hat), oil on canvas, 44.8 x 36.8 cm, Korban Art Foundation
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1911, Nu (Nu debout), oil on carton, 52 x 35 cm. Reproduced in Du “Cubisme”, 1912
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1911–12, Nature morte (Compotier et cruche décorée de cerfs), oil on canvas, 93.5 by 66.5 cm, published in Nya Konstgalleriet, Flamman, Stockholm, 1917
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1911–12, Le Port (The Harbor). Exhibited at the 1912 Salon des Indépendants, Paris. Reproduced in Du “Cubisme”, by Jean Metzinger and Albert Gleizes, 1912, Paris, and Les Peintres Cubistes Guillaume Apollinaire, 1913. Dimensions and current location unknown
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1911–12, Man with a Pipe (Portrait of an American Smoker), oil on canvas, 92.7 x 65.4 cm (36.5 x 25.75 in), Lawrence University, Appleton, Wisconsin. Reproduced on the catalogue cover of Exhibition of Cubist and Futurist Pictures, Boggs & Buhl Department Store, Pittsburgh, July 1913
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c.1912, Paysage (Landscape), location unknown. Reproduced in Du “Cubisme”, 1912
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1912, At the Cycle-Race Track (Au Vélodrome), oil and sand on canvas, 130.4 x 97.1 cm (51.4 x 38.25 in.) The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice
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1912, Landscape (Marine, Composition Cubiste), oil on canvas, 51.4 x 68.6 cm, Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University. Published in Herwarth Walden, Einblick in Kunst: Expressionismus, Futurismus, Kubismus (1917), Der Sturm, 1912 – 1 1917
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1912, Paysage (Landscape), oil on canvas, 59.2 x 73 cm, published in Der Sturm, 5 January 1921, Art Institute of Chicago
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1913, Etude pour L’Oiseau bleu (Study for The Blue Bird), watercolor, graphite and ink on paper, 37 x 29.5 cm, Centre Pompidou, Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris
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c.1915, L’infirmière (The Nurse), work on paper, dimensions and whereabouts unknown. Published in l’Elan, Number 9, 12 February 1916
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1916, Fruit and a Jug on a Table, oil and sand on canvas, 115.9 x 81 cm, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Published in Paul Erich Küppers, Der Kubismus; ein künstlerisches Formproblem unserer Zeit, 1920
Mac Tag
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