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To: Republicanprofessor
Thx for your comment on my drawing of Churchill. I am a writer, but I find the visual arts a close parallel. Some observers have written on Hemingway's cubism of literature. My style is not visual so much as musical.

But the linkeage to other forms of art (other media) is powerfully helpful...

27 posted on 11/11/2005 6:03:05 PM PST by Dark Skies (" For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also. " Matthew 6:21)
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To: Dark Skies

I'm hoping you're one of the people enlightened enough to consider cartooning a true art form.


28 posted on 11/11/2005 6:13:11 PM PST by pcottraux (It's pronounced "P. Coe-troe.")
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To: Dark Skies
I find the interaction between the arts to be most powerful, and being able to write about art is heaven.

I teach an interdisciplinary course in 19th and 20th century art that mixes visual art, music, literature and philosophy. I do Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls, because I love the intersection of love and war and the cubist and direct way he writes. Did you know that he bought Miro's The Farm when in the first year or two after it was painted, for about $125 or so? He was also inspired by Cezanne's Mt. Ste. Victoire at the Met; perhaps that is the escarpment upon which the character dies (in that saturation bombing...I've forgotten his name) in the book. There is also a musical and very visual quality to his writing.

I love anyone who is inspired by Rothko!!

29 posted on 11/11/2005 6:28:58 PM PST by Republicanprofessor
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