0
Skip to Content
Tetragrammaton
WATCH
Art
Photos
Booklist
Radio
Podcasts
Playlists
Articles
Poetry
Quotes
Way of Code
JOIN
Tetragrammaton
WATCH
Art
Photos
Booklist
Radio
Podcasts
Playlists
Articles
Poetry
Quotes
Way of Code
JOIN
WATCH
Folder: LOOK
Back
Art
Photos
Booklist
Folder: LISTEN
Back
Radio
Podcasts
Playlists
Folder: READ
Back
Articles
Poetry
Quotes
Way of Code
JOIN
Featured
The Clarac Gallery
The Clarac Gallery

EDOUARD VUILLARD

An artwork about looking at art, and encouraging us to value that experience. Painted from a low vantage point, Vuillard puts us directly in the gallery and at eye level with the other patrons. The painting is unusually matte, thanks to a specially formulated distemper and an unvarnished canvas. All of this contributes to a sense of accessibility, removing the museum from he pedestal and instead inviting us in to a place that feels welcoming and un-intimidating. Painted in the wake of the First World War, the work serves as an ode to museums, to the importance of and necessity for a space to engage with the past so as to remind us of our humanity. One of four works painted of Vuillard’s favourite galleries at The Louvre in Paris, each in its own way speaks to the simple, revolutionary act of looking at art, and the importance of preservation and engagement in a time of destruction.

Sacramento Mall Proposal #4
Sacramento Mall Proposal #4

FRANK STELLA

"After all the aim of art is to create space”, said Frank Stella, “Space that is not compromised by decoration or illustration, space within which the subjects of painting can live" In the 1970s, Stella’s work was becoming, almost accidentally, more baroque, extravagant and figurative than the minimalist work he had begun with. In the light of these newfound flourishes, Stella returned to the simplest format, centering himself in the simplicity which encapsulated his philosophy. "The concentric square format is about as neutral and as simple as you can get," he said. "It's just a powerful pictorial image. It's so good that you can use it, abuse it, and even work against it to the point of ignoring it. It has a strength that's almost indestructible - at least for me.” When he was making work that was trying to say too much, it was a return to the indestructible simple that helped him rediscover his purpose.

The Green Jardiniére
The Green Jardiniére

PIERRE-AUGUSTE RENOIR

Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Aline Charigot had only just begun living together when he painted this portrait of her. Some eighteen years his junior, she had been a seamstress who modelled for the great painter before their romance began, and though he named this painting after the house plant she looks at, we can understand it as a declaration of domestic bliss. With jewel like colors and loose, fluid brushwork, it is the work of a painter totally at ease, both of his mastery of the medium and of his life in general. Charigot’s dress falls provocatively off her shoulder, yet the painting is not erotically charged, instead it is quiet, gentle, and content. The room is imperfect, with flowers laid down atop a credenza awaiting their vase and the table unkept - it is wholly lived in, and comfortable. Charigot is depicted unaware, gazing off to admire the flora ahead of her, we are given a glimpse into the interior life of the couple, our presence unnoticed, or at least unacknowledged. 


Featured

Thursday 2nd April
Maundy Thursday arrives as a quiet threshold within the Easter rhythm, marking the evening of the Last Supper, a moment of humility, service, and inward turning. In the garden, it invites us to work with a similar gesture, to tend rather than to push, to listen rather than to impose. This is a day to be close to the soil, to notice its needs, and to offer gentle care through tasks such as weeding, watering, or applying preparations with intention. As we move through these simple acts, we may also recall the abundance of last summer, the warmth, the fruit, the fullness of life that once moved through the garden, now resting within the soil as memory and potential. Just as this day commemorates the act of washing feet, an expression of devotion and service, we too are called to serve the land with care and reverence. In biodynamic practice, this can be a powerful moment to deepen our relationship with the farm organism, recognising that our actions carry both physical and subtle effects. What we do today, however small, can be held as a kind of offering, a quiet act of stewardship that supports not only the vitality of the soil, but also the renewal of our own inner landscape.

<style>

  audio::-webkit-media-controls-timeline {display: yes;}

  audio::-webkit-media-controls-current-time-display{display: yes;}

</style>

<audio id='a2' style="height: 5vh; width:100%;" controls="" name="media"><source src="https://clyp.it/nrf4rsi4.mp3?token=fdbc1caa0dcbe07afebef66e217e1572" type="audio/mpeg"></audio>

Featured
The Bells
Featured
Screenshot 2026-03-30 at 19.21.17.png
The Book Cover Review: The Chrysalids

Thomas Sharp March 31, 2026

There were two ways that people living a very long time ago would leave handprints on the walls of caves.

Read More →
IMG_7398.jpeg
21 Biting - The I Ching

Chris Gabriel March 28, 2026

Biting is prosperity. Gain by correction…

Read More →
Film

<div style="padding:56.25% 0 0 0;position:relative;"><iframe src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/1178020081?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; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" style="position:absolute;top:0;left:0;width:100%;height:100%;" title="Filming Othello clip 3"></iframe></div><script src="https://player.vimeo.com/api/player.js"></script>

More Like This on TG2

Read More →
Screenshot 2026-03-25 at 21.57.22.png
Otis Black (Lost Songs Project)

Molly Hankins March 26, 2025

There’s not a lot to hide behind when it’s 114 degrees and you’re sawing reclaimed wood…

Read More →

close da box

Your thoughts about

Sign up for transmissions

Thank you!

READ
Articles
Poetry
Quotes

WATCH
Networks

LOOK
Art
Photos
Booklist

LISTEN
Radio
Podcasts
Playlists