The mystery of life

Poetry Fragments of thought (Catharsis, 2023) the mystery of life VII Portraits (Indonesia, 2023) Like a fire spreading throughout the whole place, burn its house with no hesitation – all comes down when I looked away.     Do we dare to defy fate that is already written and stamped?   “Is there anything that you’re struggling to do with?”       Praying. Praying is not what I am good at but I’m learning to surrender when I do. Read my other post Poetry Quiet Partings Read More Poetry Fading Petals: Soft Departure Read More Load More Stay Connected. Instagram Pinterest

Untold desire

Poetry Fragments of thought (Catharsis, 2023) Take me to -1 where all the sweet memories were safe and locked in before destiny led to calamity and ruin. Is this just another coincidence or God’s plan?   Oh, it wasn’t all sunshine and rainbow. I went through the storms and heavy rain. Untolddesire Unknown (Indonesia, 2023) Whatever. It’s still unfair! “Give it back. Give it back. Give it back.” Read my other post Poetry Quiet Partings Read More Poetry Fading Petals: Soft Departure Read More Load More Stay Connected. Instagram Pinterest

That’s okay

Poetry Fragments of thought (Catharsis, 2021) That’sokay Unknown (Pinterest, 2022) We survive because we almost ‘fuck it’s to every situation. We did most of it, and it’s all cliches But who cares anyway — even little birdie says, “go on, spread your wings. It’s your day!”     We survive because of this, and that’s okay. Read my other post Poetry Quiet Partings Read More Poetry Fading Petals: Soft Departure Read More Load More Stay Connected. Instagram Pinterest

I guess that’s how it works

Poetry Fragments of thought (Catharsis, 2022) I guessthat’showit works VII Portraits (Pinterest, 2022) The world came to a stop one day without a single sign or warning. Time passes all on its own dynamic, without a word of apology or goodbye. I guess that’s how it works. Life goes on. It doesn’t stop for anyone. Read my other post Poetry Quiet Partings Read More Poetry Fading Petals: Soft Departure Read More Load More Stay Connected. Instagram Pinterest

The wanderer

Poetry Fragments of thought (Catharsis, 2022) The wanderer Unknown (Pinterest, 2022) You knocked on many doors, greets them with your pretty smile – I watched from the other side thinking, which one of these neighbors will get you to stay longer and have an actual place that you can call home. Read my other post Poetry Quiet Partings Read More Poetry Fading Petals: Soft Departure Read More Load More Stay Connected. Instagram Pinterest

Or so I thought

Poetry Fragments of thought (Catharsis, 2022) So many times, you tried to keep the line that’s been drawn, not broken into two pieces. You had this thought that you could save it, you thought you could, at least, stop it from falling. You’re trying your best; you do. Or soI thought Unknown (Pinterest, 2022) But sometimes, what is best is not what it is meant to be. Even if you hope it will make things better, clearer — you could not just ignore fate, not always, or so you thought. Read my other post Poetry Quiet Partings Read More Poetry Fading Petals: Soft Departure Read More Load More Stay Connected. Instagram Pinterest

Looking for comfort

Poetry Fragments of thought (Catharsis, 2022) Lookingforcomfort Unknown (Pinterest, 2022) We drove by the night searching for the darkest place to hide.   We stayed up all night yearning for comfort as we were dying inside. Read my other post Poetry Quiet Partings Read More Poetry Fading Petals: Soft Departure Read More Load More Stay Connected. Instagram Pinterest

Man and Woman on Bench Juan Gris

Digital Courtesy Image of Wikimedia

Artist: Juan Gris Title: Man and Woman on Bench Date: 1908/1909 Medium: Charcoal, Gouache, and Watercolor Dimension: Approximate 36.8 cm x 27.7 cm Wikimedia ↗ Digital Image Courtesy of Wikimedia Arts and Culture ↗ Detail information

Helene’s Florist by Richard Estes

Digital Courtesy Image of Google Arts and Culture

HELENE’S FLORIST byRICHARD ESTES 1971TOLEDO MUSEUM OF ART, OHIO, USA Artist: Richard Estes Title: Helene’s Florist Date: 1971 Style: Photorealism Genre: Painting Location: Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio, USA Dimension: 121.9 cm x 182.8 cm Oil on canvas Richard Estes’s paintings substantially celebrate the visual complexity of the urban environment, whereas everything evolves, especially in that era. Though there is no living human in this painting, it describes its surroundings. He used a photograph of Helene’s Florist Shop (back then, it was located on Colombus Avenue at 72nd Street in New York) as his inspiration for his painting. However, much as it may take after the photograph, the painting has qualities not found in photography. Though a traditional film camera captured it, the simultaneous depth of field gave complete clarity at close and far range – it looked the same. REFERENCE · GOOGLE ARTS AND CULTURE

Strolling along the Seashore by Spanish painter

Digital image courtesy of Wikimedia

This painting was created during the summer of 1909 at the beach in Valencia, after Sorolla’s triumphant success and had his first solo art show in the United States. Strolling along the Seashore is one of the artist’s most important works. The woman on the left is his wife, with his daughter on the right side walking along the shoreline. In this painting, his daughter was captured when she steps forward with the form of the dress in the wind and completes the whole artwork with the rolling of the waves that depicts movement and gives this piece a sort of life of its own. The water and the sandy seashore shown in long blue, purple, and turquoise brushstrokes – become an abstract backdrop for the refined figures of its primary subject. The downward angle of the subjects, the absence of the horizon, the empty swathe of sand in the lower foreground, and the cut-off of one of the figure’s sunhats are all part of a technique known as photographic framing. There are also paintings with the same setting and scene at Valencia seashore. However, in this painting, the tone is quite different from others. It perfectly defines the iconographic genre of the ‘elegant promenade’ with well-dressed bourgeois figures strolling along the seashore and enjoying beach life. Strolling along the Seashore is currently in the collections of the Sorolla Museum in Madrid, Spain. Artist: Joaquín Sorolla y Bastida Title: Strolling along the Seashore Date: 1909 Style: Impressionism Genre: Painting Location: Sorolla Museum, Madrid, Spain Dimension: 200 cm x 205 cm Oil on canvas Reference Myddoa ↗ Arts and Culture ↗