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Category Archives: Reflections

Reclining Nudes…

02 Thursday Jun 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Art, Photography, Reflections

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America's Top Model, Art, Degas, Hopper, Israels, Khrystyana Kazakova, Matisse, Miller, Photography, postaweek 2011, Reclining Nudes, Renoir

© Khrystynana Kazakova

…the artist is he who can take a piece of flint and wring out of it drops of attar of roses.  – Walter Sickert

In celebration of the beautiful feminine form, here are my favorite reclining nude paintings – most of them by the Impressionists:

1.  Reclining Nude by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
2.  Reclining Nude by Richard Edward Miller
3.  Reclining Nude by Richard Edward Miller
4.  Reclining Nude by Isaac Israels
5.  Autumn by Frederick Carl Frieseke
6.  Large Reclining Nude (The Pink Nude) by Henri Matisse
7.  Reclining Nude by Jean Frédéric Bazille
8.  Olympia by Edouard Manet
9.  After the Bath or Reclining Nude by Edgar Degas
10. Reclining Nude by Edward Hopper
11. Reclining Nude by Douglas Hofmann
12. The Reclining Shepherdess by Berthe Morisot
13. Reclining Nude by Giovanni Boldini
14. Reclining Nude with Mirror by Delphin Enjolras
15. Reclining Nude by István Szőnyi
16. Reclining Woman Magenta Green and Orange by Beverly Brown
17. Reclining Nude by Amedeo Modigliani
18. Nude with Hands behind Head by Amedeo Modigliani
19. Nude by Salvador Dali
20. Mornington Crescent Nude by Walter Sickert

Women Reading Books…

31 Tuesday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Art, Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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Art, Brooker, Corot, Enjoiras, Fashion, Fragonard, Monet, Orpen, Perugini, Photography, postaweek 2011, Renoir, Sargent, Ukushu Khrystyna, van Gogh, Women reading

© Ukushu Khrystyna

Pierre-Auguste Renoir loved to paint women and girls engaged in everyday activities, especially reading. Below are beautiful paintings of women and girls reading:

1.  Woman Reading by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
2.  Reading Woman by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
3.  Two Young Girls Reading by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
4.  Young Woman Reading By A Window by Delphin Enjolras
5.  A Favorite Book by Delphin Enjolras
6.  A Woman Reading by Claude Monet
7. The Novel Reader by Vincent van Gogh
8.  Reading Lesson by Auguste Toulmouche
9.  Girl Reading or in the Orangery by Charles Perugini
10.  Girl reading by Franz Eybi
11. American Girl Reading by George Cochran Lambdin
12. A Young Woman Reading by Jean-Honore Fragonard
13. Woman Reading in a Landscape by Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot
14. Woman Reading by David Park
15. The Window Seat by Sir William Orpen
16. Grace Reading at Howth Bay by Sir William Orpen
17. The Treasured Volume by Harry Brooker
18. Compagnie by Escha Van den bogerd
19. Reading (The Artist’s Sister) by Berthe Morisot
20. Simplon Pass: Reading by Singer Sargent
21. The Little Convalescent by Eastman Johnson
22. Fire Opal by Laura Coombs Hills
23. Reading on the Rocks by John George Brown

Model: Ukushu Khrystyna

Lady in Red…

29 Sunday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in America's Next Top Model, Art, Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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America's Top Model, Art, Fashion, Khrystyana Kazakova, Photography, postaweek 2011, Women wearing red dresses in paintings

© Khrystyana Kazakova

I want to reach that condensation of sensations that constitutes a picture.
Henri Matisse

I was surprised how few of my favorite artists painted portraits of women wearing red dresses. Here are some beautiful ones I found:

1.  Lady in Red by Murat Kaboulov
2.  La Femme en Rouge by Giovanni Boldini
3.  The Lady in Red by Giovanni Boldini
4.  Madame Juillard in Red by Giovanni Boldini
5.  Mrs. Charles E. Inches (nee Louise Pomeroy) by John Singer Sargent
6.  Portrait of a Lady in Red by Sandro Botticelli
7.  Woman in Red by Jacqui Faye
8.  Portrait of a Woman in Red Dress by Anna Bilińska-Bohdanowicz
9.  Portrait of a Lady in Red by Jacopo Pontormo
10. Study of a Woman in Red by Jean-Jacques Henner
11. The Small Cowper Madonna by Raphael Sanzio
12. Helnwein Child by Raphael Sanzio
13. Portrait of a Woman in a Red Dress – Pierre Auguste Renoir

Model: Khrystyana Kazakova

80 Words Beginning with the Letter “C” (Part 2)…

28 Saturday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Fashion, Photography, Reflections, Writing

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Fashion, Photography, postaweek 2011, Words, Words starting with "C", Writing

© Lauren DiMarco and “Cat”

Although it was difficult to restrict the list to just 80 words, here is Part 2 of my favorite words beginning with the letter “C”…

41. Chivalry
42. Chocolate
43. Chopstick
44. Chutney
45. Cinema
46. Circus
47. Citrus
48. Chalk
49. Chapel
50. Charity
51. Chromosome
52. Chickadee
53. Chinese
54. Cinnamon
55. Cityscape
56. Clandestine
57. Clay
58. Cloque
59. Coastal
60. Cochlear
61. Coffee
62. Cognac
63. Congeal
64. Coniferous
65. Constellation
66. Cornflower
67. Cornucopia
68. Corvette
69. Courageous
70. Cranberry
71. Crater
72. Cream
73. Crepe
74. Crewel
75. Cricoid
76. Crinoline
77. Crocus
78. Croissant
79. Crystalline
80. Custard

Curious Cupid: 80 Beautiful Words Starting with the Letter “C”…

26 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Photography, Reflections, Writing

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80 Beautiful Words, beautiful, Beautiful words, Fashion, Lauren DiMarco, Photography, postaweek 2011, Writing

© Lauren DiMarco

On my walk this morning, I thought of these beautiful words starting with the letter “C”…

1.  Caboose
2.  Cachepot
3.  Cachet
4.  Calcification
5.  Calico
6.  Calligraphy
7.  Calliope
8.  Camera
9.  Campanile
10. Canadian
11. Canterbury
12. Canyon
13. Capillary
14. Cashmere
15. Cassiopeia
16. Castle
17. Cayenne
18. Celebration
19. Celsius
20. Celestial
21. Celtic
22. Cinnamon
23. Chalet
24. Chameleon
25. Chamois
26. Champagne
27. Chandelier
28. Chapbook
29. Chapel
30. Charcoal
31. Charmeuse
32. Chastity
33. Chenille
34. Chevrolet
35. Chiaroscuro
36. Chiffonier
37. Chignon
38. Childhood
39. Chiffon
40. Chime

To be continued…

Model: Lauren DiMarco

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30 Beautiful Portmanteau Words…

26 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Fashion, Photography, Reflections, Writing

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Fashion, Lewis Carroll, Photography, Portmanteau words, postaweek 2011, Through the Looking Glass, Writing

© Lydia Hudgens

 Twas brilling, and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in the wabe:
All mimsy were the borogoves,
And the mome raths outgrabe.
Jabberwocky by Lewis Carroll 

In Through the Looking Glass, Alice asks Humpty Dumpty to explain the meaning of the words in the poem Jabberwocky. She learns that slithy derives from the combination of  lithe and slimy and mimsy from flimsy and miserable. Carroll seems to have been the originator of seemingly nonsensical or portmanteau* words – pairing words or parts of words to express qualities pertaining to both.

Here are my favorites, but for a more comprehensive list see Wikipedia’s. You might also try creating your own!

1.  blog = web + log
2.  bleen = blue+ green
3.  bodacious = bold + audacious
4.  dreambition = dream + ambition
5.  chortle = chuckle + snort
6.  cometeor = comet + meteor
7.  dyellow = dye + yellow
8.  fablegend = fable + legend
9.  glamping = glamour + camping
10. godeity = god + deity
11. grapear = grape + pear
12. hattitude = hat + attitude
13. kingdomain = kingdom + domain
14. koga = kickboxing + yoga
15. knork = knife + fork
16. liger = lion + tiger
17. lurve = love + crave
18. moblog = mob + blog
19. narratell = narrate + tell
20. netiquette = internet + etiquette
21. penvy = pen + envy
22. pleasurejoicing = pleasure + rejoicing
23. pluot = plum + apricot
24. prettiful = pretty + beautiful
25. saintellectual = saint + intellectual
26. smarkitect = smart + architect
27. stitulating = titillating + stimulating
28. tangello = tangerine + pomelo
29. tendernessence = tenderness + essence
30. vlog = video + blog

* A suitcase that has two compartments.

Model: Lauren DiMarco

Short Stories Revisited…

24 Tuesday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Fashion, Photography, Reflections, Writing

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Fashion, Photography, postaweek 2011, Short stories, Short story books, Writing

© Daryl Barko Barnett

The writer should never be ashamed of staring. There is nothing that does not require his attention. – Flannery O’Connor

I loved going to the dentist’s office when I was a child because it was there in the waiting room that I first discovered The New Yorker magazine and the literary short story genre within its pages.

Below are the short story books that I return to again and again:

1.  The Collected Short Stories of Colette, edited by Robert Phelps
2.  The Art of Eating by M. F. K. Fisher
3.  High Lonesome by Joyce Carol Oates
4.  Flannery O’Connor, The Complete Short Stories
5.  The Portable Chekhov, edited by Avrahm Yarmolinsky
6.  The Portable Dorothy Parker, introduction by Somerset Maugham
7.  The Night in Question: Stories by Tobias Wolff
8.  Close Range: Wyoming Stories by Annie Proulx
9.  The Love of a Good Woman by Alice Munro
10. The Complete Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway: The Finca Vigia Edition
11. Six Tales of the Jazz Age and Other Stories by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Model: Lauren DiMarco

Poetry Revisited…

23 Monday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Fashion, Lauren DiMarco, modern poetry, Photography, poetry books. victorian poetry, postaweek 2011, Writing

© Lydia Hudgens

that which we are, we are;
One equal-temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak  by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
from Ulysses by Lord Tennyson 

I recently discovered my high school Victorian poetry book that featured the works of Browning, Tennyson, Arnold, Swinburne, and Rossetti. I could tell from my multiple margin notations that I had no clear understanding about what the poems were about. How could I? What did I know about love, life, and loss at such a tender age?

Over the years I gravitated to the works of the modern poets and when, finally, I revisited the the Victorian giants’ work, I found them to be deeply moving and indeed transformative.

My favorite poetry books:

1.  Ariel by Sylvia Plath
2.  The Colossus and Other Poems by Sylvia Plath
3.  Sailing Alone Around the Room by Billy Collins
4.  Nine Horses by Billy Collins
5.  Collected Poems by Jane Kenyon
6.  To Be The Poet by Maxine Hong Kingston
7.  Modern Poetry edited by Maynard Mack, Leonard Dean, and William Frost
8.  The Best American Poetry 1994, edited by A. R. Ammons
9.  The Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson, Introduction by Billy Collins
10. Robert Frost Poetry & Prose, edited by Edward Connery Lathem and Lawrence Thompson
11. Selected Poems by Pablo Neruda, edited by Ben Belitt
12. The Poetry of Lucy Maud Montgomery by Ferns McCabe
13. The Major Victorian Poets, edited by William H. Marshall
14. William Carolos Williams Selected Poems
15. Dinners and Nightmares by Diane Di Prima and Terry Carr
16. Selected Poems of Erza Pound
17. a selection of poems by e. e. cummings, introduction by Horace Gregory
18. The Essential Haiku, edited by Robert Hass
19. The Penguin by John Lennon
20. The Complete Poetry of Edgar Allan Poe by Edgar Allan Poe, Jay Parini, and April Bernard

Your favorite poets?

Model: Lauren DiMarco

Needlepoint Books…

22 Sunday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Art, Crafts, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Claire Murray, Craft, Elizabeth Bradley, Kaffe Fassett, Needlepoint, Needlepoint books, Photography, postaweek 2011

© Joan Currie

Fassett has successfully challenged the idea that knitting and needlepointing are dull, restrained, and limited to certain subjects or patterns. – Catherine Reurs

I have a penchant for Elizabeth Bradley’s exquisite needlepoint designs and two of her books top my list of favorite pattern books:

1.  Needlework Antique Flowers by Elizabeth Bradley
2.  Decorative Victorian Needlework by Elizabeth Bradley
3.  Kaffe Fassett’s Glorious Needlepoint
4.  Flowers, Birds, and Unicorns: Medieval Needlepoint by Candace Bahouth
5.  In Splendid Detail – Needlepoint Art by Catherine Reurs
6.  Donna Kooler’s Glorious Needlepoint
7.  Glorafilia The Ultimate Needlepoint Collection by Carole Lazarus and Jennifer Berman
8.  Erica Wilson’s Needlepoint (The Metropolitan Museum of Art adaptations)
9.  Jill Gordon’s Needlepoint – Glorious Tapestry Designs
10. American Country Needlepoint by Jim Williams
11. Designer Needlepoint edited by Hugh Ehrman
12. Floral Needlepoint by Melinda Coss
13. Nantucket Inspirations by Claire Murray
14. Victorian Needlepoint by Beth Russell

Stepping Out…

18 Wednesday May 2011

Posted by Satin & Sand in Design, Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Beauty, Fashion, Lauren DiMarco, Photography, postaweek 2011

© Hong An Doan

 Fashion fades, only style remains the same. – Coco Chanel

My maternal aunt was a fashionista in the best sense – she wore what suited her regardless of the trends. She had a penchant for couture clothes and became a great fan of the I. Magnin & Company label when she lived in San Francisco beginning in the late 1950s. Being an accomplished seamstress, she often copied the store’s designer gowns right down to the smallest details of construction, fastening, and underskirting.

She never received guests or left the house without being perfectly attired, coiffed, and made-up. Consequently, all the photographs of her portray a beautifully turned out woman – even as an octogenarian.

Model: Lauren DiMarco

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