The Magic of the Cities.

Zen promotes the rediscovery of the obvious, which is so often lost in its familiarity and simplicity. It sees the miraculous in the common and magic in our everyday surroundings. When we are not rushed, and our minds are unclouded by conceptualizations, a veil will sometimes drop, introducing the viewer to a world unseen since childhood. ~ John Greer

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Lost








William Blake’s

Exuberance is beauty.

Art can never exist without naked beauty displayed.

If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to man, as it is, infinite.

No bird soars too high if he soars with his own wings.

One thought fills immensity.

The man who never in his mind and thoughts traveled to heaven is no artist.

The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.

The true method of knowledge is experiment.

You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough.

What is now proved was once only imagined.

To see the world in a grain of sand, and to see heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hands, and eternity in an hour.


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Thursday, September 15, 2011

Borda Garden







The Borda Garden is located near the cathedral of Cuernavaca. Originally, this was a house bought by José de la Borda, the mining magnate of Taxco in the mid-eighteenth century. Later, his son, Manuel de Borda y Verdugo, transformed the grounds of the house into gardens filled with flower and fruit trees to satisfy his passion for botany. These gardens also contain a number of fountains and an artificial lake that were completed in 1783. 
The complex also contains lodgings, offices, a restaurant, and a nightclub. In 1865, this was the summer home of Emperor Maximilian I and his wife Carlota Amalia. It hosted major political soirees in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, such as those sponsored by Porfirio Díaz and Emiliano Zapata.
Today the area is a public park where the gardens have been maintained and it is possible to take a short boat ride on the lake. The house has been converted into a museum. Six of its halls are dedicated to temporary exhibits while the other seven are devoted to recreating the characteristics of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. (Wiki)

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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Whispering


When you realize how perfect everything is,
you will tilt your head back and laugh at the sky.
~Buddha

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Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Leaves




There  Is  another  world  and  it  is  in  this  one.
~Paul Éluard

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Monday, September 12, 2011

Vanishing Colors





Imagination is the beginning of creation. You imagine what you desire,
you will what you imagine and at last you create what you will.”
~George Bernard Shaw

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Friday, September 9, 2011

21st. Century Skyscraper


New York by Gehry at Eight Spruce Street
From the mind of Chicago’s Pritzker Pavilion architect, a sensuous first skyscraper
Frank Gehry’s new 8 Spruce Street apartment tower may be the most delicious piece of eye candy to hit the Manhattan skyline since the Chrysler Building. It is also a very expensive place to live. A 450-square-foot studio rents for at least $2,600 a month, and the asking price for a three-bedroom penthouse apartment is expected to be somewhere around $25,000 a month.

The 76-story high-rise, Gehry’s first skyscraper, is wrapped in a sensuous exterior of stainless steel that ripples like folds of drapery and brilliantly catches the light. There is nothing else quite like it, though the building bears similarities to Jeanne Gang’s spectacularly undulating, 81-story Aqua residential and hotel tower in Chicago.

At 870 feet tall, New York by Gehry is the tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere and a singular addition to the iconic Manhattan skyline. For his first residential commission in New York City, master architect Frank Gehry has reinterpreted the design language of the classic Manhattan high-rise with undulating waves of stainless steel that reflect the changing light, transforming the appearance of the building throughout the day.
Gehry's distinctive aesthetic is carried across the interior residential and amenity spaces with custom furnishings and installations.


Last 2 images by Forest City Ratner Companies

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Wednesday, September 7, 2011

The Flautist




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Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Crash


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Monday, September 5, 2011

Sunday Wheels










Eternity is in love with the productions of time”.
William Blake

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Saturday, September 3, 2011

Transition


Fort Tryon Park Gardens. Manhattan. NYC
-Homage to
Vasarely-
From Carlos Castaneda's Journey to Ixtlan

People tell us from the time we are born that the world is such and such
and so and so, and naturally we have no choice but to see the world
the way people have been telling us it is.
Seeing happens only when one sneaks between the worlds;
the world of ordinary people and the world of sorcerers.
The real thing is when the body realizes that it can see.
Only then is one capable of knowing that the world we look at every day
is only a description.
My intent has been to show you that.

Only as a warrior can one survive the path of knowledge,
because the art of a warrior is to balance the terror of being a man
with the wonder of being a man.


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Friday, September 2, 2011

Sweet Light


The future is always beginning now”


~Mark Strand


"El futuro siempre esta empezando ahora"



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Thursday, September 1, 2011

September 2011 Theme Day : Perspective



The Cloisters—described by Germain Bazin, former director of the Musée du Louvre in Paris, as "the crowning achievement of American museology"—is the branch of the Metropolitan Museum devoted to the art and architecture of medieval Europe. Located on four acres overlooking the Hudson River in northern Manhattan's Fort Tryon Park, the building incorporates elements from five medieval French cloisters—quadrangles enclosed by a roofed or vaulted passageway, or arcade—and from other monastic sites in southern France. Three of the cloisters reconstructed at the branch museum feature gardens planted according to horticultural information found in medieval treatises and poetry, garden documents and herbals, and medieval works of art, such as tapestries, stained-glass windows, and column capitals. Approximately three thousand works of art from medieval Europe, dating from the ninth to the sixteenth century, are exhibited in this unique and sympathetic context.



Click here to view thumbnails for all participantS


Cymbaline

The path you tread is narrow
And the drop is shear and very high
The ravens all are watching
From a vantage point nearby
Apprehension creeping
Like a tube-train up your spine
Will the tightrope reach the end
Will the final couplet rhyme

And it's high time
Cymbaline
It's high time
Cymbaline
Please wake me

A butterfly with broken wings
Is falling by your side
The ravens all are closing in
And there's nowhere you can hide
Your manager and agent
Are both busy on the phone
Selling coloured photographs
To magazines back home

And it's high time
Cymbaline
It's high time
Cymbaline
Please wake me

The lines converging where you stand
They must have moved the picture plane
The leaves are heavy around your feet
You feel the thunder of the train
And suddenly it strikes you
That they're moving into range
Doctor Strange is always changing size

And it's high time
Cymbaline
It's high time
Cymbaline
Please wake me

And it's high time
Cymbaline
It's high time
Cymbaline
Please wake me

Pink Floyd

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Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Manhattan





"Once the amateur's naive approach and humble willingness to learn fades away, the creative spirit of good photography dies with it. Every professional should remain always in his heart an amateur."
Alfred Eisenstaedt

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Saturday, August 27, 2011

The Flatiron Building
























The 22-story Flatiron Building, at the intersection of New York City’s Fifth Avenue, Broadway, and 23rd Street, is instantly recognizable for its triangular shape. At the time of completion in 1902, it was among the first and tallest of New York City’s signature skyscrapers. It has been a National Historic Landmark since 1989. During the US financial crisis, a top Italian real-estate investment firm, Sorgente Holdings, acquired majority stock in the iconic Flatiron Building. Their long-range plan is to turn the building into a luxury hotel. Since many of the current leases will not expire for ten years, this is a long term project. To Americans, weary of the strains of national debt, it is just another signal of the “melting pot” melting. This purchase of yet another American icon did not shock the country as badly as when Rockefeller Center fell into foreign hands in 1989, a purchase of Japan’s Mitsubishi Group. Still, it carries symbolic weight, as international investors take advantage of the upheaval in the real estate market and the weakness of the US dollar. Overseas investors are jumping into Manhattan’s office market as prices fall and landlords struggle to refinance debt, in numbers that stagger the mind. 
(by Rap361)


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Friday, August 26, 2011

Recreation


Centre Georges Pompidou. Paris June 2010.


Fri Aug 26, 2011
This week's challenge:
'Recreation'.



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