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Pastimes : La Galleria -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 2MAR$ who wrote (174)7/12/2002 9:23:12 PM
From: DebtBomb  Respond to of 268
 
For the tongue is a feather
Dipped in egg-yolk.

Oh my. ;-O



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (174)7/13/2002 1:27:01 PM
From: X Y Zebra  Respond to of 268
 
** I know these soft glowing feminine orbs & golden
peaches of the sun
so cheer you up !


Well, thank you, a great cheer it is to read these inspired words, [not that I was in a particular somber mood] --along with others in one of the links provided in the URL you posted !

I suppose in your case, the inspiration must have originated somewhere in the Greek islands or similar in the Mediterranean sea... *wink* -g

I am sure you had a great time, so I won't ask.

and to correspond... here are some more words in the right order from one of the links above... (Which btw... the specific one that hold the words you quoted has some beautiful images, which for me, the images are more impacting than the words already impressive, as we know... an image can hold a thousand words)

These words, following your quote, are from Octavo Paz.

The Human Touch

"My eyes discover you
naked
and cover you
with a warm rain
of glances..."

~ Octavio Paz

Touch

My hands
open the curtains of your being
clothe you in a further nudity
uncover the bodies of your body
My hands
invent another body for your body

~ Octavio Paz

Ah yes, and don't forget the images, they are better than a thousand words...

rjgeib.com

Octavio Paz

nobel.se

One more.... (From Pablo Neruda's Love Sonet XI)

I hunger for your sleek laugh,
your hands the color of a savage harvest,
hunger for the pale stones of your fingernails,
I want to eat your skin like a whole almond.

locus1.com

p.s. I was going to thank you for the URL you provided, however, as I began to explore it, I found that I had already bookmarked it. In one of those endless sessions surfing the web --I do not remember the particular reason for the search-- I found this:

I liked the way Edward Abbey - one of the only truly honest and independent thinkers of our time, hated by the Left and the Right equally - put it:

Fond of America, proud of her, curious and hopeful about her future, I nevertheless renounce America. My loyalties will not be bound by national borders, or confined in time by one nation's history, or limited in the spiritual dimension by one language and culture. I pledge my allegiance to the damned human race, and my everlasting love to the green hills of Earth, and my imitations of glory to the singing stars, to the very end of space and time.


rjgeib.com

So I bookmarked it then...

As I began to explore the url this time around, it began to be déjà vu... Then I found the above reference. So in stead I will thank you for giving me hope to become as great a trader as yourself, as somewhere along the line, we seem to have similar thoughts/wave length. (yes, I know, hope never dies, so one tries and tries -gg)

[I just have to find better timing for the trades --along with greater patience]



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (174)7/13/2002 1:32:44 PM
From: X Y Zebra  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 268
 
One more...

I received another picture of a great painting from the gallery in Argentina, this time around, it is not one of theirs, but a Rubens recently found in a convent in a small town in northern Austria... Someone paid $76 plus Million US for it. The Massacre of the Innocents I have a slightly larger picture than the one in the news article below it.

community.webshots.com

Here is the news article (and a quote from it) The news article does not confirm and even contradicts the gallery's version of where the painting was found... the important thing however is the Quality of the find. Enjoy (a great painting, except not the greatest of subjects though)

_______________________________

Gordon said the painting had been owned by the same family since 1920. They had bought it from a dealer who had acquired it from the royal family of Liechtenstein, which had owned it since around 1700.

It was identified as an early Rubens when the Liechtenstein family bought it, but was later misidentified by their curators and its original attribution forgotten.

_________________________

usatoday.com

I hope the current curator of the Liechtenstein museum is from a different family from the one that... let that one go... ouch.

Somehow... this tells me that we are on a way to [economic] recovery... or at least that the fear mongers don't have it quite right... at least not yet. -g

___________________

Edit: I better copy the entire text of the news:

07/11/2002 - Updated 10:43 AM ET





Rubens painting fetches $76.2 million


AP
Gruesome scene by master fetches record price.

LONDON (AP) — A recently discovered painting by the Flemish master Peter Paul Rubens has sold for more than $76 million — the third highest price ever paid for a painting, Sotheby's auction house said.

The Massacre of the Innocents, painted between 1609 and 1611, was only positively identified a few weeks ago when the owner took it to Sotheby's for examination.

It was bought on Wednesday by an unidentified private collector at Sotheby's in London for $76.2 million, smashing the expected price of $9 million, said Alexander Bell, the head of Sotheby's Old Master paintings department.

He said it was the most expensive painting ever sold at an auction in London. The record was previously held by Vincent Van Gogh's Sunflowers, which sold in 1987 for $35 million, Bell said.

Overall, it was the third most expensive painting ever sold at auction, behind Van Gogh's Portrait of Dr. Gachet, sold by Christie's in New York for $82.5 million in 1990, and Pierre Auguste Renoir's Au Moulin de la Galette, sold by Sotheby's in New York for $78 million the same year, said Matthew Weigman, a Sotheby's spokesman.

Bell said the sale price had been underestimated because it was the greatest painting from that era that has been sold for years.

"This is the most expensive Old Master painting ever sold, by far. It's more than doubled the previous price," Bell said. "This is a truly great picture, the likes of which we haven't seen on the market in a generation."

The Old Masters include the 17th century Dutch painters Jan van Eyck, Rubens and Rembrandt.

Weigman said the bidding opened at $4.6 million, and went on for 10 minutes, much longer than normal.

He said there were still five bidders active above $39 million. By the time the total had reached $62 million, he said, there were still three bidders:

The winner, London art dealer Sam Fogg on behalf of a private owner who he declined to name;
A dealer bidding for an unidentified museum, and
A Sotheby's representative bidding for another unidentified client over the telephone.
For more than 200 years, the painting's owners believed it to be the work of artist Jan van den Hoecke. But Sotheby's senior Old Masters painting specialist, George Gordon, found it to be a Rubens.

"The chance to see this work is extremely exciting for collectors and scholars alike," Gordon said. "For such a work of genius by such a great painter to languish under a false attribution to a minor artist for so long is surely an injustice, but in the end quality will out."

The painting depicts the moment when King Herod ordered the slaughter of all newborn boys to get rid of the Messiah.

It shows a gruesome, action-filled scene in which soldiers begin to slaughter a group of women and children. Babies' bodies litter the ground, one soldier holds an old woman by the throat as he prepares to run a sword through her torso, and blood runs beneath the figures' feet.

Gordon said the painting had been owned by the same family since 1920. They had bought it from a dealer who had acquired it from the royal family of Liechtenstein, which had owned it since around 1700.

It was identified as an early Rubens when the Liechtenstein family bought it, but was later misidentified by their curators and its original attribution forgotten.

"The painting had been lost for hundreds of years," said Weigman. "It really is the most remarkable painting, and the interest in it has grown and grown."

Rubens, a fine colorist who lived between 1577 and 1640, painted many portraits of nobles and prominent public figures in his own country and in Spain, France, and England. His masterpiece, Descent from the Cross is located in Antwerp cathedral, and his War and Peace painting can be seen in Britain's National Gallery.

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