Reckon | The Whole World's a Stage

I'm Chris: Poet, lover of academy and porch, sidewalk and turning row. I am looking for everyone discovering her hands and camera trying to overstand the in between.

Reckon

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howdy@reckon.ws

"Civilization is entirely the product of phonetic literacy. As it dissolves with the electronic revolution, we rediscover a tribal integral awareness that manifests itself in a complete shift in our sensory lives....This new electronic environment itself constitutes an inner trip, collectively, without benefit of drugs. The impulse to use hallucinogens is a kind of empathy with the electronic environment." - Marshall McLuhan
history:

“They willingly traded everything they owned…They were well-built, with good bodies and handsome features…They do not bear arms and do not know them, for I showed them a sword, they took it by the edge and cut themselves out of ignorance…They have no iron…Their spears are made of cane…They would make fine servants…With fifty men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want.”

Christopher Columbus writing in his diary upon landing in Hispaniola, from A People’s History of the United States

Fuck him.

(via unburyingthelead)

(via curate)

nickdrake:
The Doors Exhibition,nickdrake:
The Doors Exhibition,

nickdrake:

The Doors Exhibition,
pictografica:


this is pretty great. (tabbed browsing…ha)
chryselephantine: Monticello Image Gallery: Jefferson’s Revolving Bookstand. Tabbed browsing, if you will.
pictografica:


this is pretty great. (tabbed browsing…ha)
chryselephantine: Monticello Image Gallery: Jefferson’s Revolving Bookstand. Tabbed browsing, if you will.

pictografica:

this is pretty great. (tabbed browsing…ha)

chryselephantine: Monticello Image Gallery: Jefferson’s Revolving Bookstand. Tabbed browsing, if you will.

jinon:


planettampon:

via itchyhead

jinon:


planettampon:

via itchyhead

“There’s an old saying that rich people see their servants as “part of the furniture” and it would seem that Kubrick has taken this phrase and manifested it in the Shining’s visual theme structure. The affluent guests of the Overlook (America) see the hotel servants and workers as objects, existing merely for their own pleasure and comfort. Unknown to them these pieces of furniture are living, breathing people with real emotions and a life of their own. The independent movements of these servants is forever destined to haunt the conscience of their masters, bringing unpleasant disruptions to the illusion of ruling class paradise.”

Did you know that Sir Francis Bacon was one of the greatest geniuses of all time, and recognised as such by his contemporaries?

Did you know that Bacon’s philosophy was designed to embrace all three realms of natural, human and divine existence?

Did you know that Bacon taught that philosophy/science was and should be the servant of divinity, the Word of God as revealed to the prophets or inspired into the human heart?

Did you know that Bacon urged us to discover metaphysical as well as physical laws, seeing love as the greatest law of all?

Did you know that Bacon was a master Kabalist and that his Grand Project is designed according to kabalistic wisdom?

Did you know that Bacon set up a treasure trail to help train us in the Art of Discovery?

Did you know that Francis Bacon’s contemporaries identified him as a secret poet, the chief of them all, who wrote stage plays and renovated philosophy using comedy and tragedy?

Did you know that Francis Bacon was referred to as both Apollo and Pallas Athena, the ‘Spear-Shaker’ or ‘Shake-Spear’?

Did you know that two contemporary 16th century poets identified Francis Bacon as the author of the Shakespeare poems, Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece?

Did you know that a 16th century collection of manuscripts that once contained the Shakespeare plays, Richard II and Richard III, names Francis Bacon as their author?

Did you know that Bacon headed a literary studio of poets and writers?

Did you know……?

via The Francis Bacon Research Trust

thepitman:


oldfilmsflicker:quatsch:
(23 April 1564 - 23 April 1616)
Did you know that Sir Francis Bacon was one of the greatest geniuses of all time, and recognised as such by his contemporaries?

Did you know that Bacon’s philosophy was designed to embrace all three realms of natural, human and divine existence?

Did you know that Bacon taught that philosophy/science was and should be the servant of divinity, the Word of God as revealed to the prophets or inspired into the human heart?

Did you know that Bacon urged us to discover metaphysical as well as physical laws, seeing love as the greatest law of all?

Did you know that Bacon was a master Kabalist and that his Grand Project is designed according to kabalistic wisdom?

Did you know that Bacon set up a treasure trail to help train us in the Art of Discovery?

Did you know that Francis Bacon’s contemporaries identified him as a secret poet, the chief of them all, who wrote stage plays and renovated philosophy using comedy and tragedy?

Did you know that Francis Bacon was referred to as both Apollo and Pallas Athena, the ‘Spear-Shaker’ or ‘Shake-Spear’?

Did you know that two contemporary 16th century poets identified Francis Bacon as the author of the Shakespeare poems, Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece?

Did you know that a 16th century collection of manuscripts that once contained the Shakespeare plays, Richard II and Richard III, names Francis Bacon as their author?

Did you know that Bacon headed a literary studio of poets and writers?

Did you know……?

via The Francis Bacon Research Trust

thepitman:


oldfilmsflicker:quatsch:
(23 April 1564 - 23 April 1616)
Did you know that Sir Francis Bacon was one of the greatest geniuses of all time, and recognised as such by his contemporaries? Did you know that Bacon’s philosophy was designed to embrace all three realms of natural, human and divine existence? Did you know that Bacon taught that philosophy/science was and should be the servant of divinity, the Word of God as revealed to the prophets or inspired into the human heart? Did you know that Bacon urged us to discover metaphysical as well as physical laws, seeing love as the greatest law of all? Did you know that Bacon was a master Kabalist and that his Grand Project is designed according to kabalistic wisdom? Did you know that Bacon set up a treasure trail to help train us in the Art of Discovery? Did you know that Francis Bacon’s contemporaries identified him as a secret poet, the chief of them all, who wrote stage plays and renovated philosophy using comedy and tragedy? Did you know that Francis Bacon was referred to as both Apollo and Pallas Athena, the ‘Spear-Shaker’ or ‘Shake-Spear’? Did you know that two contemporary 16th century poets identified Francis Bacon as the author of the Shakespeare poems, Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece? Did you know that a 16th century collection of manuscripts that once contained the Shakespeare plays, Richard II and Richard III, names Francis Bacon as their author? Did you know that Bacon headed a literary studio of poets and writers? Did you know……? via The Francis Bacon Research Trust

thepitman:

oldfilmsflicker:quatsch:

(23 April 1564 - 23 April 1616)

babydeer:


julyshewillfly:
In Love With A. Lincoln - And the Pursuit of Happiness Blog - NYTimes.com
babydeer:


julyshewillfly:
In Love With A. Lincoln - And the Pursuit of Happiness Blog - NYTimes.com
In Love With A. Lincoln - And the Pursuit of Happiness Blog - NYTimes.comIn Love With A. Lincoln - And the Pursuit of Happiness Blog - NYTimes.com
In Love With A. Lincoln - And the Pursuit of Happiness Blog - NYTimes.comIn Love With A. Lincoln - And the Pursuit of Happiness Blog - NYTimes.com
bebelestrange:


hunterstephenson:

spiridakis:
interview magazine has finally put up their archive of covers, so sick.

bebelestrange:


hunterstephenson:

spiridakis:
interview magazine has finally put up their archive of covers, so sick.

bebelestrange:

hunterstephenson:

spiridakis:

interview magazine has finally put up their archive of covers, so sick.

Technology is Heroin »

roamin:

What to Fix

“In 1850 people didn’t know how their favorite symphony sounded.

Back then, it was common for musicians to work hectic schedules and perform multiple shows in a row. Instruments were frequently out of tune and good, consistent timing was fairly new. In addition, going to the symphony was a big deal: you dressed up, you hitched up the horses, you went into town.

You might only hear your favorite symphony 5 or 6 times in your life. Each time it was probably slightly in a different key, with a slightly different tempo, played with slightly different instruments, and each time you actively strained to hear and remember how it all sounded.

You would sit very attentively, absorbing each and every note and drumbeat of the symphony. It was a play, a painting, an imaginary world come to life, and you were living in it. It was magic.

Want some fun diversion? That was different too. You could read, which required an above average education and concentration. The more you read, however, the more you could read, so it was a self-reinforcing pastime. You could perform music, which also took years of study and was self-reinforcing. Then there were games, which mostly either involved physical exercise or concentration.

Everything back then took work and time. In rural America, it wasn’t unusual to walk five miles to a friend’s house to play a few games of checkers. Life was monotonous and physically challenging. In the countryside there was no plumbing and electricity hadn’t been invented yet. You spent a lot of time hauling around water, chopping firewood, planting and tending crops. It took nearly continuous physical activity. Leisure was no different: it took time, work, and active minds.

Want to socialize, hang out with the buds? It was a big deal, a special day…”

Tumblr is a pharmakon.

henryeatspeople:

… Right now I’m looking at a copy of the Phaedrus, a fictional conversation between Socrates and a young Athenian named Phaedrus.
Socrates is trying to convince the young man that speech is better than written communication, or any recorded communication including film. According to Socrates, the god Theuth in ancient Egypt invented numbers and calculations and gambling and geometry and astronomy… and Theuth invented writing. Then he presented his inventions to the great god-king Thamus, asking which of them should be presented to the Egyption people.
Thamus ruled that writing was a pharmakon. Like the word “drug” it could be used for good or bad. It could cure or poison.
According to Thamus, writing would allow humans to extend their memories and share information. But, more important, writing would allow humans to rely too much on these external means of recording. Our own memories would wither and fail. Our notes and records would replace our minds.
Worse than that, written information can’t teach, according to Thamus. You can’t question it, and it can’t defend itself when people misunderstand or misrepresent it. Written communcation gives people what Thamus called “the false conceit of knowledge,” a fake certainty that they understand something.
So, all those videotapes of your childhood, will they really give you a better understanding of yourself? Or will they just shore up whatever faulty memories you have? Can they replace your ability to sit down and ask your family questions? To learn from your grandparents.
If Thamus were here, I’d tell him that memory itself is a pharmakon.

-from Stranger Than Fiction by Chuck Palahniuk

Golden Kate
Kate Moss gets the golden touch as she’s immortalised in gold | Mail Online
Siren is the work of artist Marc Quinn whose most famous sculpture was Alison    Lapper Pregnant which appeared on the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square.
His sculpture of Moss said to be the largest gold statue to be made in the    world since the time of Ancient Egypt. 
Speaking about choosing the supermodel as a subject, Quinn said: “I thought    the next thing to do would be to make a sculpture of the person who’s the    ideal beauty of the moment.”
The 50kg statue will be displayed in the Nereid Gallery of the British Museum,    alongside other statues such as Crouching Venus, a Hellenistic model of    Venus surprised while bathing.
Quinn’s latest work, which shows Moss in a yoga pose, is part of a collection,    entitled Statuephilia, by contemporary artists going on display at the    British Museum.
It is the second time the London-born artist has used the model as his muse.    He previously created Sphinx, a white-painted bronze sculpture of the    fashion icon.
Quinn is also known for Self, a bust of his head made from eight pints of his    own frozen blood.
Other artists exhibiting include Damien Hirst and Angel of the North creator    Anthony Gormley.
Gormley said: “The British Museum is a laboratory of possibility for any    creative mind. It is filled with objects that reach across time and touch us    intimately.
“Seeing as a child the great head of Rameses and the Assyrian winged bulls at    the British Museum was what made me become a sculptor.”
The exhibition will run from October 4 to January 25.Golden Kate
Kate Moss gets the golden touch as she’s immortalised in gold | Mail Online
Siren is the work of artist Marc Quinn whose most famous sculpture was Alison    Lapper Pregnant which appeared on the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square.
His sculpture of Moss said to be the largest gold statue to be made in the    world since the time of Ancient Egypt. 
Speaking about choosing the supermodel as a subject, Quinn said: “I thought    the next thing to do would be to make a sculpture of the person who’s the    ideal beauty of the moment.”
The 50kg statue will be displayed in the Nereid Gallery of the British Museum,    alongside other statues such as Crouching Venus, a Hellenistic model of    Venus surprised while bathing.
Quinn’s latest work, which shows Moss in a yoga pose, is part of a collection,    entitled Statuephilia, by contemporary artists going on display at the    British Museum.
It is the second time the London-born artist has used the model as his muse.    He previously created Sphinx, a white-painted bronze sculpture of the    fashion icon.
Quinn is also known for Self, a bust of his head made from eight pints of his    own frozen blood.
Other artists exhibiting include Damien Hirst and Angel of the North creator    Anthony Gormley.
Gormley said: “The British Museum is a laboratory of possibility for any    creative mind. It is filled with objects that reach across time and touch us    intimately.
“Seeing as a child the great head of Rameses and the Assyrian winged bulls at    the British Museum was what made me become a sculptor.”
The exhibition will run from October 4 to January 25.

Golden Kate

Kate Moss gets the golden touch as she’s immortalised in gold | Mail Online

Siren is the work of artist Marc Quinn whose most famous sculpture was Alison Lapper Pregnant which appeared on the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square.

His sculpture of Moss said to be the largest gold statue to be made in the world since the time of Ancient Egypt.

Speaking about choosing the supermodel as a subject, Quinn said: “I thought the next thing to do would be to make a sculpture of the person who’s the ideal beauty of the moment.”

The 50kg statue will be displayed in the Nereid Gallery of the British Museum, alongside other statues such as Crouching Venus, a Hellenistic model of Venus surprised while bathing.

Quinn’s latest work, which shows Moss in a yoga pose, is part of a collection, entitled Statuephilia, by contemporary artists going on display at the British Museum.

It is the second time the London-born artist has used the model as his muse. He previously created Sphinx, a white-painted bronze sculpture of the fashion icon.

Quinn is also known for Self, a bust of his head made from eight pints of his own frozen blood.

Other artists exhibiting include Damien Hirst and Angel of the North creator Anthony Gormley.

Gormley said: “The British Museum is a laboratory of possibility for any creative mind. It is filled with objects that reach across time and touch us intimately.

“Seeing as a child the great head of Rameses and the Assyrian winged bulls at the British Museum was what made me become a sculptor.”

The exhibition will run from October 4 to January 25.