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The Artist and His Mother
The Artist and His Mother

ARSHILE GORKY

“I don’t like that word, “finish.” When something is finished, that means it’s dead, doesn’t it? I believe in everlastingness. I never finish a painting—I just stop working on it for a while.” These are the worlds of Arshile Gorky, one of the most enigmatic and influential artists of the 20th century, and perhaps an explanation for why he worked on this painting for nearly twenty years. As a child, Gorky watched his mother die of starvation, ill in health after surviving a death march during the Ottoman Turk genocide of the Armenians. Years later, having left Armenia and changed his name, Gorky found a photograph of himself and his mother taken when he was only eight years old. He laboured that image into a painting, reworking and improving, leaving it for months at a time and then returning in moments of inspiration. In this way, the painting was never finished, and so his mother remained alive, and in a sort of daily dialogue with her son. The double portrait is one of the most revered and admired in modern art, the depths of its sadness only matched by the wealth of its beauty.

Still Life, Fruit
Still Life, Fruit

JOSEPH STELLA

With boundless creativity, and a seemingly endless will to experiment, Joseph Stella felt restrained by every country he inhabited. In his native Italy, he found the shadow of the Renaissance omnipresent, even in the fledgling futurist movement he could feel its presence and its constriction on his desire for the new. His first stint in America was challenging and unenjoyable, he found the land and climate unbearable and the nation not willing to accept the beauty of its modernity. Travels around Europe and time in Paris brought him into contact with increasingly more avant-garde movements, and he absorbed the principles of Cubism, Fauvism, and the now established Futurism. He took these movement with him and returned to America, finding the country more open to his restless mind, and accepting of the radical art he made. Stella is ultimately remembered for his cityscapes, his wild and energetic paintings of New York’s architecture, but this still life is notable for how elegantly it combines tradition, simplicity, with the sharp geometry and abstraction. It captures a man between worlds, who could absorb ideas from across time and place and create something uniquely his own.

Study: Compote
Study: Compote

STUART DAVIS

Stuart Davis was known for his hard edge, lively abstractions that married European abstraction with a distinctly American modernism, creating dynamic works that sung with the tempo of jazz and spoke to urban existence. His work was charged with advertising motifs, sharp corners and graphic displays of color that bring rigidity alive, so to see him so loose with his hand here is both unusual and revealing. Many later artists and critic position Davis as a proto-pop artist, predating the movement by nearly four decades, and despite the simplicity of his drawing here, that remains evident. In so few lines he renders a martini and a plant and imbues them with a sense of style, of American cool. It is hard to look at this work and not see its influence of Warhol’s drawings of the 1950s and 60s, capturing a mood and a time with vivid feeling and minimal detail. 


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Saturday 25th April
Today the Moon begins in Cancer, carrying a soft, watery mood that invites care, nourishment, and attentiveness. We may feel drawn to slow down, to work gently, and to notice what needs holding rather than pushing. In the garden, Cancer supports leafy growth, making it a good time to tend salad crops, herbs, brassicas, and other plants valued for their leaf. Watering, transplanting, and quiet tasks of nurture are well met by this influence. Later, the Moon quickly moves into Leo, and with this the mood can shift quite noticeably. What was soft and enclosing may begin to feel warmer, brighter, and more outward moving. We may feel a rise in confidence, direction, or creative fire, as if the day asks a little more of our presence and initiative. In the garden, the emphasis moves from leaf to fruit, making it a favourable time to work with tomatoes, beans, courgettes, peppers, squash, and other fruiting crops. This change from Cancer to Leo can be felt as a movement from care into expression, from tending what is tender into encouraging what wants to ripen, shine, and come into fullness.

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The Bells
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Brian Hoyer
Brian Hoyer

2h 25m

4.22.26

In this clip, Rick speaks with Brian Hoyer about protecting your body’s delicate electrical balance.

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