Monthly Archives: December 2023

The Most Beautiful Christmas Painting Contest

We are going to start publishing the most beautiful Christmas paintings on December 17th. 

Christmas is the time of enlightenment, inner warmth, and profound joy, and I particularly liked what T.S. Eliot said in “The Cultivation of Christmas Trees”. 

The child wonders at the Christmas Tree:
Let him continue in the spirit of wonder
At the Feast as an event not accepted as a pretext;
So that the glittering rapture, the amazement
Of the first-remembered Christmas Tree,
So that the surprises, delight in new possessions
(Each one with its peculiar and exciting smell),
The expectation of the goose or turkey
And the expected awe on its appearance,

Let’s start growing our Inventory of Light with the most beautiful Christmas paintings.

You can vote for your favorite in a comment below the articles, or on Facebook.

Thank you!

Illustration – Salvator Dali‘s striking Christmas design for ‘Vogue’ 1946. The best, in my opinion.

Taylor Swift has been named Time Magazine’s Person of the Year

Taylor Swift was named as Time magazine’s person of the year. “We picked a choice that represents joy. Someone who’s bringing light to the world,” the magazine’s editor in chief said on NBC’s “Today” program.

Time magazine’s Person of the Year 2022: Volodymyr Zelensky
Time magazine’s Person of the Year 2021: Elon Musk
Time magazine’s Person of the Year 2020: Joe Biden and Kamala Harris
Time magazine’s Person of the Year 2019: Greta Thunberg

Time magazine’s Person of the Year 2018: The Guardians
On the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar’s largest city, two young reporters sit in a prison said to be “the darkest hellhole in Burma.” Millennials, we would call them in America—Wa Lone is 32 years old; Kyaw Soe Oo is 28. The genesis of their arrest, one year ago on Dec. 12, is their reporting for the Reuters news service that later exposed a mass execution of 10 Rohingya Muslims, part of a violent campaign against the minority group by Myanmar’s military. “I never expected he would be arrested,” says Kyaw Soe Oo’s wife Chit Su Win. “I was more concerned about him getting shot.”
It has long been the first move in the authoritarian playbook: controlling the flow of information and debate that is freedom’s lifeblood. And in 2018, the playbook worked. Today, democracy around the world faces its biggest crisis in decades, its foundations undermined by invective from on high and toxins from below, by new technologies that power ancient impulses, by a poisonous cocktail of strongmen and weakening institutions. From Russia to Riyadh to Silicon Valley, manipulation and abuse of truth is the common thread in so many of this year’s major headlines, an insidious and growing threat to freedom.

Time magazine’s Person of the Year 2017: The Silent Breakers
It became a hashtag, a movement, a reckoning. But it began, as great social change nearly always does, with individual acts of courage. The actor who went public with the story of movie mogul Harvey Weinstein’s “coercive bargaining” in a Beverly Hills hotel suite two decades earlier. The strawberry picker who heard that story and decided to tell her own. The young engineer whose blog post about the frat-boy culture at Silicon Valley’s highest-flying startup prompted the firing of its founder and 20 other employees. The California lobbyist whose letter campaign spurred more than 140 women in politics to demand that state government “no longer tolerate the perpetrators or enablers” of sexual misconduct. A music superstar’s raw, defiant court testimony about the disc jockey who groped her.

What do you think?

The Body

“The body is not a thing, it is a situation: it is our grasp on the world and our sketch of our project.”
Simone de Beauvoir

PS: My “situation” has a penchant for grasping more and more of the world in different and divergent sporting circumstances: cycling, skating, skiing, etc. Sketching over one’s limits melts the stresses of fitting an imperfect representation of perfect living.

Art by Evyn Fong.

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