tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post8503947421516379488..comments2024-02-03T16:54:27.992-08:00Comments on Late Braking Gnus: The Mind in the CaveJudith Schaechterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09101849171288268318noreply@blogger.comBlogger11125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-70820306333068672942018-11-18T20:37:55.245-08:002018-11-18T20:37:55.245-08:00This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.dokdokhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08325980699815509385noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-50807121189277096342017-06-05T22:36:07.896-07:002017-06-05T22:36:07.896-07:00thanks for share this post,
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Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00880534172971721680noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-73417995227551150322015-12-04T21:49:42.700-08:002015-12-04T21:49:42.700-08:00Genius is the recovery of childhood at will. I hav...Genius is the recovery of childhood at will. I have wept too much. <br />The dawns are heartbreaking. Love has to be reinvented, thats certain.<br />Being too sensitive I have wasted my life. <br />Im intact, and I dont give a damn...(Rimbaud)<br />-a single person is missing 4 you, and the whole world is empty...(joan didion)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-49565768584626329632015-01-02T11:44:20.381-08:002015-01-02T11:44:20.381-08:00inspired by cat shelter: he was disappointed he s...inspired by cat shelter: he was disappointed he still missed her after years of cruelty terrible unfashionable endlessly waiting always the wrong choices the wrong words doing exactly the opposite brooding unloved still loving her from afar trying and failing again and again with love from love hiding and a meow once in a whileAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-65953566299991614752014-10-26T10:13:10.908-07:002014-10-26T10:13:10.908-07:00Judith, questions, is that your art i have noticed...Judith, questions, is that your art i have noticed shown on a wall in the film blue velvet? Always wondered, as it looks like it might be. Also, in film twin peaks...a monkey takes off a mask as a voice says "judith". Beautiful work. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-1694277617003614242014-05-08T15:21:27.562-07:002014-05-08T15:21:27.562-07:00Dr Nigel Spivey addresses many of these issues in ...Dr Nigel Spivey addresses many of these issues in "How art made the world part 2" which you can find on YouTube. The theory is that the images came from altered states of conciousness from the hypnotic effects of dancing around the fire, and the first paintings came from spiritual experiences from trances. <br />I love your work Judith and as a stained glass restorer- now art student, I appreciate what you doAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02286730481066991938noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-79667662568902277202014-05-03T12:46:01.369-07:002014-05-03T12:46:01.369-07:00I am neither an expert but I visited several Europ...I am neither an expert but I visited several European caves and rock art sites in the SouthLibian desert. I could sometimes enter where other can't, together with someone who had special permission.<br /><br />Cave art has always been very attractive to artists and others. It is so remote in time that we all can project our phantasies, romantic or (semi-) scientific theories on it. <br />Some interpretations are very close to ones subjective ideas, some have an anthropological approach. Being an artist (drawing) I can only give my version: when visiting Lascaux, I immediately felt like being with colleagues. I could see that they must have had fun , exactly in the way I have when I am drawing: little details, clever "finds", all this with the "sauce" of the sensation on the location.<br /><br />Probably they must have had some kind of motivation, apart from enjoying drawing, but that will always be a guess. And a source of inspiration to people that came after them. <br /><br />A few years ago I as looking for a quote to open my drawings book "Meeting the Caveman" with. What I chose was by a French archeologist/friend who said (in French) something that ment: the further we move into the prehistory, the deeper and darker it gets. <br />But when I put this French quote into the Google translator this came out: "Prehistory, it's a free call back!"<br />It just illustrates how impossible it is to get any nearer to the minds of people so far away in time.<br /><br />Hans LemmenAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-78600090987812102722014-05-03T10:19:08.988-07:002014-05-03T10:19:08.988-07:00I am neither an expert but I visited several Europ...I am neither an expert but I visited several European caves and rock art sites in the SouthLibian desert. I could sometimes enter where other can't, together with someone who had special permission.<br /><br />Cave art has always been very attractive to artists and others. It is so remote in time that we all can project our phantasies, romantic or (semi-) scientific. <br />Some interpretations are very close to ones subjective ideas, some have an anthropological approach. Being an artist (drawing) I can only give my version: when visiting Lascaux, I immediately felt like being with colleagues. I could see that they must have had fun , exactly in the way I have when I am drawing: little details, clever "finds", all this with the "sauce" of the sensation on the location.<br /><br />Probably they must have had some kind of motivation, apart from enjoying drawing, but that will always be a guess. And a source of inspiration to people that came after them. <br /><br />A few years ago I as looking for a quote to open my drawings book with. What I chose was by a French archeologist/friend who said (in French) something that ment: the further we move into the prehistory, the deeper and darker it gets. <br />But when I put this French quote into the Google translator this came out: "Prehistory, it's a free call back!"<br />It just illustrates how impossible it is to get any nearer to the minds of people so far away in time.<br /><br />Hans Lemmen<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-68046621513860341082014-05-02T11:56:19.121-07:002014-05-02T11:56:19.121-07:00My totally uninformed theory about the cave painti...My totally uninformed theory about the cave paintings is that they were carried out by rather sophisticated artists with a definite purpose in mind, which was to contribute to a carefully-staged visionary experience. Music, liturgy, performance, and drugs probably contributed; being in a cave shut out extraneous experiences. The show would enhance the repute of the shamans who conducted it and might have been thought to contribute to a good hunt through sympathetic magic.Anarcissiehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01518985369074475618noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1716933964814939778.post-33957483978690756382014-05-02T08:11:19.785-07:002014-05-02T08:11:19.785-07:00I think about the cavemen a lot, and I studied Ant...I think about the cavemen a lot, and I studied Anthropology, but I'm not an expert! I wonder if drawing the whole human form was considered too powerful? Like, if we just show a hand, then the whole body/soul of the subject will not be captured. I may be putting too much emphasis on the urban legend (?) of photographers "capturing the souls" of their subjects. But I have a feeling that our cavepeople ancestors had v. successful spiritual lives, and that what we have "evolved" with is somehow lacking what they had. <3Sally Big Woodshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11227452489512899262noreply@blogger.com