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PH-585 (1952-A)
PH-585 (1952-A)

CLYFFORD STILL

A field of colour, torn at the seams. The movement is visceral across the canvas, almost ominous as the dark blues seem to grow across the background of brightness and then, in the corner, a flash of yellow comes alive, emerging out of the oppression. Clyfford Still may not be a household name in the way that Pollock or Rothko have become, but it was him who laid the foundations of the entire movement. In 1938, years before his contemporaries, he moved away from figurative work into pure abstraction, allowing colours and the movement of paint to communicate emotion quite unlike any had done before. Dragging palette knives across the paint, the works took on a sense of motion. He combined the two styles of ‘Colour Field’ painting and ‘Action Painting’, to create meditative works that felt tangibly alive, even angry, and this influence can be seen across the movements that followed him.

Pasture
Pasture

ANNI ALBERS

Anni Albers took to weaving reluctantly. As a young woman studying at the Bauhaus, there were few opportunities for her, and the workshops she wanted to attend were not permitted for women. So, out of misogyny and requirement, she took a class on weaving, headed by the school’s only female ‘master’. “"In my case it was threads that caught me, really against my will.”, she said, “To work with threads seemed sissy to me. I wanted something to be conquered. But circumstances held me to threads and they won me over." And the world is indebted still to the threads that tangled her, for Albers revolutionised the world with her art. She blurred the lines between traditional craftwork and fine art, which had long been separated, gendered pursuits. Her marriage to fellow artist Josef Albers was amongst the most consequential partnership of post-war art, and while he redefined the study of colour, Anni revolutionised forms and patterns. Together, they created a new visual language that we still speak today, and Anni’s embrace of craft weaving, giving new dimensions to her work that other mediums couldn’t match, was one of the most consequential reluctant decisions ever made.

Table Tops
Table Tops

HENRI BURKHARD

Like so many American artists at the turn of the century, Henri Burkhrad had to leave his native land for Paris in order to find his painterly voice. Paris was the centre of the avant-garde, a melting pot of radical ideas, experimentation, and wild characters who encouraged each other to push the  envelope further in a single minded journey towards subjective truth. Burkhard had a by-the-numbers artistic education, attending three of the great Académies in the city and honing the traditional skills he had learnt as a young man in New York to novel effect. He returned home shortly before this work was painted, bringing with him the new way of thinking he had learnt overseas, and was quickly celebrated as a leading figure in the American modernist movement, exhibiting extensively at major galleries and museums across the country. Burkhard fell into relative obscurity later in life, and his contribution to a uniquely American painterly style is rarely discussed, but his cubist inspired still lives still retain a sense of potency today.


Featured

Thursday 8th May
Today, the Moon rises in Virgo, offering a sense of quiet order, yet gardening remains unfavourable due to the recent lunar node and Venus crossing the ecliptic—an alignment known to bring confusion and hinder healthy plant growth. It’s a day to hold back from sowing or transplanting and instead turn your attention to organising the garden: tidying beds, sorting seeds, and sharpening tools. In this pause, there is purpose—caring for the space in quieter ways prepares the ground for days of fruitful action to come.

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The Bells
Featured
Screenshot 2025-05-08 at 00.10.47.png
The Magical Path of No Mind

Molly Hankins May 8, 2025

Reaching a state of magical trance, uninfluenced by conscious or subconscious thought, is an essential element of practicing any form of magic. As described by the chaos magician and author Peter J. Carroll, “To work magic effectively, the ability to concentrate the attention must be built up until the mind can enter a trancelike condition…

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David Mamet
David Mamet

1h 42m

7.7.25

In this clip, Rick speaks with David Mamet about motivation to work.

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Screenshot 2025-05-05 at 19.04.24.png
The Slippery Slope from Anger to Rage

Suzanne Stabile May 6, 2025

The Wisdom of the Enneagram informs how I see the world and spurs my desire to have an offering for those searching for greater understanding and peace. After more than thirty years of learning and teaching, I am more aware than ever of our need to accept that there are nine distinctly different ways of seeing and interpreting the world around us. None are right or wrong; they are expansive rather than limiting, and they are nuanced beyond our imagination…

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Film

<div style="padding:41.24% 0 0 0;position:relative;"><iframe src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/1081310502?badge=0&amp;autopause=0&amp;player_id=0&amp;app_id=58479" frameborder="0" allow="autoplay; fullscreen; picture-in-picture; clipboard-write; encrypted-media" style="position:absolute;top:0;left:0;width:100%;height:100%;" title="The Castle of Sand clip 2"></iframe></div><script src="https://player.vimeo.com/api/player.js"></script>

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