Showing posts with label Limitation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Limitation. Show all posts
Saturday, March 30, 2019
Water-Shots
Labels:
Abalone,
Blue,
Free diving,
Green,
Limitation,
Low Viz,
Mendocino,
Perspective,
Self,
Swimming,
Underwater,
Van Damme State Beach,
Water
Wednesday, July 25, 2018
Dickinson: "Exultation is the Going"
Exultation is the going
Of an inland soul to sea --
Past the houses, past the headlands,
Into deep Eternity!
Bred as we, among the mountains,
Can the sailor understand
The divine intoxication
Of the first league out from land?
--Emily Dickinson
collected in
Poems of the Sea,
selected and edited by J. D. McClatchy
Everyman's Library
Labels:
Dickinson,
Empathy,
Eternity,
Exuberance,
Imagination,
Knowledge,
Limitation,
Poetry,
Sea,
Vision
Sunday, December 31, 2017
Chesterton: "Very Big Ideas in Very Small Spaces"
On art and limitation and "very big ideas in very small spaces":
"Meanwhile the philosophy of toy theatres is worth any one's consideration. All the essential morals which modern men need to learn could be deduced from this toy. Artistically considered, it reminds us of the main principle of art, the principle which is in most danger of being forgotten in our time. I mean the fact that art consists of limitation; the fact that art is limitation. Art does not consist in expanding things. Art consists of cutting things down, as I cut down with a pair of scissors my very ugly figures of St. George and the Dragon. Plato, who liked definite ideas, would like my cardboard dragon; for though the creature has few other artistic merits he is at least dragonish. The modern philosopher, who likes infinity, is quite welcome to a sheet of the plain cardboard. . . . .
"This especially is true of the toy theatre; that, by reducing the scale of events it can introduce much larger events. Because it is small it could easily represent the earthquake in Jamaica. Because it is small it could easily represent the Day of Judgment. Exactly in so far as it is limited, so far it could play easily with falling cities or with falling stars. Meanwhile the big theatres are obliged to be economical because they are big. When we have understood this fact we shall have understood something of the reason why the world has always been first inspired by small nationalities. The vast Greek philosophy could fit easier into the small city of Athens than into the immense Empire of Persia. In the narrow streets of Florence Dante felt that there was room for Purgatory and Heaven and Hell. He would have been stifled by the British Empire. Great empires are necessarily prosaic; for it is beyond human power to act a great poem upon so great a scale. You can only represent very big ideas in very small spaces. My toy theatre is as philosophical as the drama of Athens."
--G.K. Chesterton,
--from his essay "The Toy Theatre" from Tremendous Trifles
Labels:
Art,
Chesterton,
Creativity,
Drama,
Essays,
Limitation,
Muse,
Reflection,
Tragedy,
Transformation,
Vision
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