Saturday, January 3, 2026

Renaissance

   







 S A I N T    J O H N    T H E    B A P T I S T


D O N A T E L L O               14 3 8


 

For hundreds of years artists were limited

to portraying their gods as divine beauty,

too perfect for this world.  So with this crop

of superheroes running the universe why

bother wasting time depicting anyone else?

It was the gods that determined your fate.

  

John the Baptist was a gaunt ascetic.

His hand to mouth existence living

in the desert was shared by many

of his followers.  They were a dogged

group of scrubs, stubbornly persisting 

about the harsh, skimpy landscape.


Donatello carved his Saint from the trunk

of a poplar tree, one both simple and rough

by nature.  A marble monument was never built 

to describe someone's humility.








 B I R T H    O F    V E N U S


B O T T I C E L L I               1 4 8 5


 Venus, goddess of love, was born from an

ocean's froth.  To see her beauty first hand

was to awaken spiritual ideals that would

otherwise remain dormant. 


Sensual pleasure was given a spiritual formula.


Botticelli painted for us a full-scale nude

to make his point about anatomical beauty.

A more sensual medium than stone would be

needed.  Nothing but luminous paint would do.

His Birth of Venus was an early example of

brushing oil on canvas.  Until now a wood panel

was the preferred surface and tempera the paint. 

Da Vinci's Mona Lisa was painted on a panel of

Poplar wood.








 V I T R U V I A N     M A N


D A   V I N C I               1 4 9 2


We are a microcosm of the universe itself.

The Roman architect Vitruvius mathematically

proved something having to do with perfect

proportions of the human body and how this all

concerned the governing of the stars and nature.


Even scientists read their horoscope.

Da Vinci speculated in all manner of things.

He was a scientist that happened to draw pictures.

His curiosity was expressed in both mathematics

and art.  He was the Renaissance man.








 P I E T A


M I C H E L A N G E L O               1 4 9 9


 Michelangelo was twenty-two when he began

carving a large marble block into a sculptural

centerpiece of St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City.


Mary's face is serene, not contorted with agony.

She is also far too young to be the mother 

of Jesus, her thirty-three year old son.


"Virgin mother, daughter of her son."

Dante, Divine Comedy.


Here was Michelangelo giving himself artistic license

to portray the mystery of baffling contradiction.








 S C H O O L    O F    A T H E N S


R A P H A E L               1 5 1 1


 Raphael painted this monumental fresco for

the private viewing of Pope Julius II, his patron.

Julius was pleased with Raphael's painting

but not enough to distract him from overseeing

Michelangelo's ongoing work on the ceiling

of the Pope's Sistine Chapel. 


Raphael painted the world's greatest minds

of antiquity gathering to share among themselves

their reasoning and philosophy.

The message to Julius was that Classical

learning, pagan though it was, often

harmonized with Christian teaching.


The time was right to read from your 

books by Plato and Aristotle.








 V E N U S    O F    U R B I N O 


T I T I A N               1 5 3 8


This isn't Venus.


It began with Botticelli painting nude women

posed at Venus, Goddess of Love.  Now it's

the lady next door in a pin-up poster

sending seasonal blessings.


The Duke of Urbino commissioned this painting 

to celebrate his marriage, one presumably filled 

with seduction.




*  *  *  *  *











 

OVER   EASY

 


coldValentine




 

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Happy Birthday Frances!

  







 N  E  I  G  H  B  O  R  S



H A P P Y   B I R T H D A Y !


F  R  A  N  C  E  S



love

   grandma and grandpa 



coldValentine




Saturday, December 27, 2025

Winter

  







 G R A M P S    A N D    T H E    S N O W M A N


N O R M A N    R O C K W E L L          1 9 1 9



Rockwell was twenty-five when the popular

Saturday Evening Post magazine chose this

whimsical illustration for their week's cover.

Rockwell would create 321 of these covers

during his forty-seven years with the magazine.







 R O O S T E R    M A N    A B O V E    V I T E B S K


M A R C    C H A G A L L            1 9 2 5



Here is Russian folk art painted by a Jewish

mystic who believed in the logic of sentiment.

You want to know what people are about?

It starts with the heart.


Then find folks that float in the air.

Add rooster heads as needed.








 C A T C H I N G    T H E    T H A N K S G I V I N G    T U R K E Y


G R A N D M A    M O S E S            1 9 4 3



 Arthritic hands forced Grandma Moses to give up

needlepoint and take up painting.  She was 83 when

she painted this "old-timey" memory of rural life.

The painting was country nostalgia minus all the

telephone poles, tractors, cars and assorted other

odds and ends produced from industrial might.

We could do without all that racket.









 J A N U A R Y


G R A N T    W O O D            1 9 4 0


 

One of Wood's final paintings.

A rabbit's tracks are the only sign

of life in this frozen, dormant scene.

Grant Wood spent three years

working on this portrayal of 

snow-laden corn shocks 

before he felt it to be right.








 S L E I G H    R I D E


R U D O L F    K O L L E R            1 8 9 2



 A hurtling mail coach forces an ox-driven sleigh

with its heavy load into the deepest snow.

In close pursuit comes a petulant, dark storm.

Crows swirl about, excited, overhead.


The Twentieth Century approaches.

The Age of Progress is about to begin.








 T H E    F A L L    O F    T H E    C O W B O Y


F R E D E R I C    R E M I N G T O N



 Soon enough railroad tracks were laid 

everywhere, making long cattle drives

to Dodge City and Wichita unnecessary.

Then cheap barb wire became plentiful

and suddenly everyone had their cattle

penned in.  This led to controlled breeding.

People wanted Hereford and Angus beef

in place of the tough but hardy Longhorn.


The frontier was closed.

The cowboy was now legend.


 


* * * * *






©  Tom Taylor







 

OVER   EASY

 

 

coldValentine




Sunday, December 21, 2025

Saturday, December 20, 2025

China

  







S  A  N  X  I  N  G  D  U  I           B  R  O  N  Z  E      H  E  A  D


1 3 t h   C E N T U R Y   B C


Sanxingdui was a highly advanced, Bronze Age

civilization that abruptly vanished about 1000 BC.

A number of heads with mysterious alien-like eyes

have been unearthed at pits associated with ritual

sacrifice.  They may represent deities, ancient spirits

or legendary kings of the Shu Dynasty, such as 

Cancong, the ruler with bulging eyes.








 W  O  M  A  N       W  I  T  H       A       M  I  R  R  O  R


E A S T E R N     H A N     D Y N A S T Y       2 2 0   A D

 

A warm greeting from one that serves the deceased

in the afterlife.  But she is not Cinderella cleaning

cinders from the fireplace.  This is a lady of the 

Han court.  The elaborate headdress, the sophisticated

getup and the very pricey bronze mirror all announce

her elite status in society.  


She is all these things as well as someone's aunt,

delighted by a toddler's first efforts to walk.








 E  N  L  I  G  H  T  E  N  E  D       B  E  I  N  G


S O N G     D Y N A S T Y       9 6 0  -  1 2 7 9   A D


Divinity has come down to Earth and is accessible 

to all.  Still this Buddha is at Royal Ease - relaxed,

but with divine authority.  Here is the Moon-Water 

Buddha, having a compassionate ear but also lost

in contemplation over the illusion of existence -

a glimmering mirage, as is a moon's reflection

over water.






F  L  Y  I  N  G       H  O  R  S  E       O  F       G  A  N  S  U


2 N D     C E N T U R Y     A D


 This mingai, or burial object, resided undisturbed in

the tomb of an army general for nearly two thousand 

years before its discovery in the 1960s.  The vigorous

naturalism of this galloping bronze horse breaks with

the static formalism that ruled over the design of

traditional monuments for hundreds of years.


The weight of the horse is perfectly balanced on a

single hoof.  This cultural icon is on a short

list of artifacts that are far too treasured by the

nation to ever be allowed to leave mainland China.









 L  E  S  H  A  N        G  I  A  N  T        B  U  D  D  H  A 


8 0 3   A D            T A N G     D Y N A S T Y


 Maitreya, the Future Buddha, symbolized happiness

and was carved from red sandstone in the hope this

towering sculpture would calm the confluence of three

rivers that passed by its feet.  It worked.  


The vast amount of rock excavated from the site 

in order to create the statue was dumped into

the river, stabilizing the turbulent currents.






 G  U  A  N  Y  I  N     O  F     T  H  E     S  O  U  T  H  E  R  N     S  E  A  S


L I A O  -  J I N   D Y N A S T I E S           8 0 7 - 1 2 3 4   A D


 The Guanyin Buddha was depicted as approachable,

benevolent, and personally appealing.

What began as a male representation of this form of

Buddha became, over time, increasingly androgenous

as characteristics shifted towards feminine features.

There was no reason to fear this deity of mercy.

This Buddha of compassion would readily tend to

your suffering.  You mattered.

 

Here was a humane expression of values.

The world was growing a heart.




*  *  *  *  *





©  Tom Taylor






 

OVER   EASY

 

 

coldValentine