PIERRE-AUGUSTE RENOIR
A gentle joy exudes from every brushstroke. The radiance of youth and the calm of a warm summers day wash over us as Renoir’s delicate hand creates an image that seems to exist in both reality and fantasy at once. The central figure gazes absentmindedly into the distance, her face filled with contentment while her younger sister stares at us, rendered in a looser hand to look as if she has just run into the frame. This is at the heart of Renoir’s brilliance; he is able to create scenes that are at once totally accessible, concerned with beauty and leisure, while hiding in them something of the radical. The background, in sharp contrast to the realism of the girls, appears almost as a stage set, lacking focus and depth. Colors dance alongside each other, trees disappear into shimmering rivers and a town emerges like a fairytale across the water. Every element is perfectly balanced, it glows with the light of a dream and exists in a world without worry.
GEORGES ROUAULT
Born in a Parisian cellar to a poor family, Georges Rouault rose through the ranks of France’s burgeoning avant-garde to become one of the most significant figures in Expressionism and Fauvism. At the age of 14, Rouault began an apprenticeship as a glass painter and restorer and his time working with heavy glass bonded by thick lead is evident in his later painting style. The thick black lines and brash energetic brushstrokes speak to both the medieval style of stained glass and the Expressionist movement that sought to capture a human emotion in both medium and content. The painting here, of a court judge, was one of 23 produced when Rouault was invited to observe proceedings in a courtroom. At the time of painting, he had become most known for paintings of Christ rendered in a similar style. He applies here the same generosity to the Judge as he does to religious figures. “If I have made of the judges lamentable figures,”, he said, “it is no doubt because I was betraying the anguish that I feel at the sight of one human being having to judge another. I would not be a judge for all the wealth and happiness in the world.”
JOHN STORRS
An architectural sculptor who, late in his career, began to translate three dimensions into two. John Storrs arrived at a style we would now firmly understand as Art Deco almost entirely independently, predating the widespread consolidation of the movement by nearly a decade. Abandoning his family business and forsaking his inheritance to seek new physical forms in Europe, he studied under Rodin, fraternised with Brancusi, Duchamp, and Man Ray. He translated these ideas and education into sculptural forms that incorporated Native American patterns, Gaelic structures, and Babylonian ziggurats. His work has an architectural eye, and uses the material of American industrialism; steel, brass and vulcanite replace stone in small sculptures that seem to speak to the soaring scale of the skyscrapers he grew up around. Though different in medium, his later paintings manage to bring the same philosophies of sculpture to linen. Interlocking forms and sharply defined colors create a sense of depth and scale that elevates them out of flatness and into a modernist world of dimensionality.
Molly Hankins March 26, 2025
There’s not a lot to hide behind when it’s 114 degrees and you’re sawing reclaimed wood…
2h 20m
3.25.26
In this clip, Rick speaks with Anne Lamott and Neal Allen about how good fiction should be interpreted by the reader.
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Dick Higgins March 24, 2026
Much of the best work being produced today seems to fall between media. This is no accident…
Chris Gabriel March 21, 2026
Purifying but not sacrificing. Have faith in what’s great…
Thursday 26th March
The Moon moves through the constellation of Gemini for the whole day, bringing a sense of lightness and movement to both garden and mind. As an air constellation, Gemini lifts our attention towards the spaces between things, inviting exchange and communication, and offering a particularly favourable time for sowing flower seeds such as calendula, scabious, echinacea, and rudbeckia, preparing blooms for butterflies and bees, rich in nectar for the astral beings to drink from. Today is a day to sow with intention, not just for ourselves but for the wider life of the garden, supporting pollinators and the subtle ecology that surrounds them. As we work, we may notice the relationships between plants, insects, blossoms, and ourselves within the living landscape, and if we remain present within this movement, something meaningful can emerge, a quiet weaving of connections that reminds us we are part of the garden, not separate from it.
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