https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6UIxKISZ_yHTFN2aDF6ekJ5ZTQ/view?usp=sharing
in London... Soon I will post an explanation about a painting from the National Gallery !
diumenge, 30 d’abril del 2017
dissabte, 29 d’abril del 2017
Review (In the place of fallen leaves)
In the
place of fallen leaves by Tim Pears is the life
story of a girl call Alison. She lives her life in a western country where inhabitants
are traditional and religious people.
Through the storyline we learn to understand
this little girl that didn’t talk so much at the beginning. Most of the book
turns around the description of what she sees, what she hears and what people
explain to her or answer to her questions. The mentality of this time makes me
think about how a teenager lives nowadays. We are not afraid anymore of older
people. I believe adults are, more than anything else, friends that want us to
grow up in a world we can understand by ourselves. Years ago, what adults wanted
was to have their children helping them with housework. Before, people needed
to work to survive, now we can take time for culture. And you should know that
culture is the future.
In the childhood of Alison, she is a girl
that lives the present. I remember she said something like she doesn’t want to
grow up because then she will be unable to swim with boys in the river without
a swimsuit. If people would live the present many of us would be happier today.
I am sure that the key for happiness is in living the present and leave the
past in the past and what is to come let it come. Sartre says: “the present,
nothing but the present”.
While she grows up and sees her body change
like the one of her older sister Pamela we learn some details of the daily life
of her family. The grandmother has inspired me a lot. She lives the life with
admiration for it. As technology arrives in their little town new things
appeared. For example, the television. For her it is an instrument that shows
us that life is something that goes around and comes around. The future is in
the past and the past will be in the future.
Life is one, and even if you are afraid of
tomorrow you will one day realize that every single problem will resolve itself
one day and that’s why we must know that no one in this world can be one
hundred percent sad. Life is one and life is beautiful!
Alison leaves her country to study, even
though she will lose an important person to her, Jonathan. Her fate was to face
up to the outside world that was waiting for her. If one day I lose a valuable
person, I would smile with sadness. I will be sad because to lose someone we
love is something we are not set up to face. And I will smile to have the
chance to meet this wonderful person. In any case, people make us learn
something about life or make us learn something about us. People are life
because all of us have a different point of view and the build-up of them will
be the answer of life!
diumenge, 23 d’abril del 2017
How beauty feels?
(Abstract)
A story, a work of art, a face, a designed
object — how do we tell that something is beautiful? And why does it matter so
much to us? Designer Richard Seymour explores our response to beauty and the
surprising power of objects that exhibit it.
(Opinion)
A beautiful thing is something that tells us
something. For example, in human’s photography the most important and beautiful
is often the eyes. Why? Because there will be where we can catch the essence of
someone. It is where there is the main message that a person transmits.
“We see things not as they are, but as we
are” says Richard Seymour. He let us understand that things are beautiful
because we see them beautiful. Just trying to find something universally
beautiful for everybody we will find that there are none. That means we see the
only beauty we create by looking at something and not because something it is
really beautiful.
Now we can understand why canons of beauty
through history have changed constantly or why we see something beautiful now
and years after it looks ugly. The true beauty exists in us. In the way we look at what surrounds us.
Is there a real you?
(Abstract)
What makes you, you? Is it how you think of
yourself, how others think of you, or something else entirely? Philosopher
Julian Baggini draws from philosophy and neuroscience to give a surprising
answer.
(Opinion)
“We don't have to find ourselves we have to
create it” says Julian Baggini. I consider his different vision on essence very
interesting.
I used to hear that through our lives we use
to discover ourselves learning about us as we were discovering the history of a
book. This idea is quite a mechanical vision, as we were built with different
kinds of things we still don’t know and which finally define who we are. It is
like history was already previously drawn and the future was not to write but
to discover.
I think everything is the result of
something else. Whatever we chose to do, we are changing something. Why?
Because when energy gives off, it always creates disorder.
Because disorder can be put in order,
ourselves can be changed in what we want to be. We just have to create it.
Therefore, put in order a disorder made of our experiences and knowledge.
Our disorganized choices we have taken in
the past, define who we are in the present order.
diumenge, 16 d’abril del 2017
Are words so important?
In my view, yes they are. Words enable us to
describe what our eyes can see and most of our feelings.
It is said that words are the language of
the spirit. Music is the one of the soul and mathematics is the one of the
mind. This can be true but I don’t have any proof. I just can say that words
explain what we lived and what we are living.
The importance of those words started when
we have invented the way to pass them in writing. At that time our history
began or at least the one we know.
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