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 Immaculate Conception
The Immaculate Conception

DIEGO VELÁZQUEZ

At the age of twelve, Diego Velázquez joined the workshop of Francisco Pacheco, a painter, sculptor, and art theorist. He saw in the young man an irrepressible talent, and spent the next six years teaching him his craft, and his theories. Velázquez spent much of his time in Pacheco’s studio painting the wooden sculptures that were commissioned by various churches and collectors across Spain, and when he left Pacheco’s tutelage at the age of 18, it is unsurprising that his paintings had remarkably sculptural qualities to them. This work, ‘The Immaculate Conception’, is one of the earliest known works by the great Spanish master, and it’s rendering of the Virgin Mary seems to place her across three dimensions. The folds of her drapery seem to be deeply carved, the clasped, praying hands emerging towards us, and her form perfectly balanced atop the moon. Velázquez is able to make her feel at once totally alive, and entirely sculptural, a fitting dialogue for the sinless mother of Christ who balances divinity and humanity upon her shoulders.

Self-Portrait
Self-Portrait

MAX BECKMANN

Of all the artists despised by the Nazi Party in 1930s, Max Beckmann was amongst the most reviled. After the First World War, a boom of intellectualism occurred in Germany, with Berlin as its centre point, and the city became a fertile breeding ground for a new avant-garde that questioned the order of things before. Artists, writers, dancers, performers, musicians, and designers contributed to a culture of the Weimar Republic that was free, wild, and radical at every stage. As Hitler rose to power, he saw these movements as being in direct opposition to his philosophies, decrying it as degenerate art. Book burnings of works of Jewish intellectuals and modernist writers occurred, and the seizing of experimental, expressive, and modern work took place in galleries across the country. Beckmann became a figure head of all that Hitler saw as wrong with the creative culture of the nation, and the artist had to flee the country. This self portrait was his last painted in his home country, and it serves as a defiant declaration of his brilliance, in both skill and composition. He stand atop a staircase, elegantly dressed in a tuxedo, his eyes glancing angrily out of frame while the background behind him descends into turmoil. 

Allegory with Boats
Allegory with Boats

LUCIEN COUTAUD

Dreamlike paintings, exploring the subconscious in beautifully rendered, immaculate detail; Lucien Coutaud had all of the trappings of surrealism and yet never identified with the group. As a young man in 1920s Paris, he found himself at the heart of a the avant-garde, forging friendships with Surrealist founder Andre Breton, fellow artist Paul Klee, Pablo Picasso, and Max Ernst, and writers Paul Eluard and Jean-Paul Satre. Were it not for his constant refusal of the label, anyone would be forgiven for thinking that Coutaud was as much as surrealist as Dali or Magritte. Instead, he called his style ‘Eroticomagie’, translating simply as Erotic Magic. This is a fitting description, for in almost all of his paintings there exists an underlying sensuality. Dreamlike, fairy-tale lands and impossible worlds have this strange duality when pictured with Coutaud’s brush - a sombreness pervades atop a sexually charged energy. Inspired, perhaps, by the fledgling psychoanalytical movement, his paintings seem to marry the two human drives of sex and death in soft blues and beautiful greys.


Featured

Sunday 12th April
The Moon moves through Capricorn, an earth sign that draws everything downward into form, structure, and quiet endurance. There is a seriousness to this gesture, a strengthening from within, where growth is not showy but deliberate, shaping what lies beneath the surface. Capricorn invites us to work with patience and intention, laying foundations rather than seeking immediate results. In the biodynamic rhythm, this is a root time. The forces of the plant are gathered into the soil, making it an ideal moment to weed, earth up, and tend to root crops such as carrots, beetroot, parsnips, radishes, and turnips. By working the ground now, we support the plant in forming strong, clear roots, free from disturbance. There i s a quiet discipline to the day. What is done now may go unseen, but it is this hidden work that gives strength and integrity to all that follows.

Featured
The Bells
Featured
Screenshot 2026-04-10 at 22.16.22.png
23 Stripping - The I Ching

Chris Gabriel April 10, 2026

Stripping, don’t go too far…

Read More →
Screenshot 2026-04-08 at 21.56.34.png
John C. Lilly: Solid-State Intelligence Rebel

Molly Hankins April 9, 2026

Scientist, poet and author Dr. John C. Lilly was a controversial figure, best described in a new documentary as a man “determined to get his hands on the steering wheel of consciousness”…

Read More →
Jeff Harmon
Jeff Harmon

2h 21m

4.8.26

In this clip, Rick speaks with Jeff Harmon about how creativity is inhibited for most people due to the need to work for a living.

<iframe width="100%" height="265" src="https://clyp.it/rxsjseqr/widget?token=82e4c0c2c7fc08320d0efed3156ede01" frameborder="0"></iframe>

Read More →
Screenshot 2026-04-07 at 00.05.33.png
Carnunthum Meditations (167 A.D)

Marcus Aurelius April 7, 2026

Begin the morning by saying to thyself, I shall meet with the busy-body, the ungrateful, arrogant, deceitful, envious, unsocial…

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