в тени старого дерева на берегу реки приятно наблюдать её жизнь только полный оптимист надеется поймать рыбу в этих мутных водах
Нельзя над старостью смеяться, И плакать тоже не с руки. Ведь всех нас ожидает братство С названием горьким 'СТАРИКИ'. А кажется, еще не жили Всё только собирались жить И так отчаянно спешили Судьбе пытаясь услужить. И всё о будущем мечтали, Всё оставляли на потом, И, как молитву, повторяли З
ночной мрак взрывается уличными фонарями не трудно догадаться, куда приведет эта дорога когда грустные мысли посещают Вас, тогда цена жизни не дороже съеденного апельсина
Для Галины Калининой.
Utagawa Hiroshige: Butterfly and Peonies - Museum of Fine Arts
Left to right: Tsukioka Yoshitoshi Dawn moon and tumbling snow – Kobayashi Heihachirō and Moon of pure snow at Asano river – Chikako, the filial daughter from One hundred aspects of the moon 1885-92. Photo: AGNSW. SYDNEY .- Tsukioka Yoshitoshi’s One...
O MET (Museu Metropolitano de Arte de Nova York) disponibilizou o uso de mais de 400 mil imagens para download grátis, livre e irrestrito.
Kitagawa Utamaro was a renowned Japanese printmaker and painter born in 1753 in Yoshiwara, Edo (present-day Tokyo). Kitagawa's talent was first noticed by the publisher Tsuta-ya Juzaburo, who became responsible for printing Kitagawa's subsequent works. His art education began under Toriyama Sekien, who was rumored to be Kitagawa's father due to the close relationship
The well-known and popular works of Lithuanian artist Stasys Krasauskas (1929-1977) have brought forth a number of studies by art critics and inspired commentaries by writers. During his lifetime the artist commented on his own works, yet the secret of their origin and vitality has not been fully disclosed. Krasauskas's artistic ideas have spread throughout various art contexts, they have been re-created in poetry, music, dance, stage-design, painting and sculpture. The illustrations for the biblical "The Song of Songs" portraying the pure beauty of young figures, intertwined in graceful poses, is a hymn to earthly love. Krasauskas, one of the first Lithuanian graphic artists to begin illustrating world classics, had a perfect sense of interpretation. The elevated and serene spirit of the masterful oriental poetry is revealed quite effectively by the rhythm of flat figures resembling archaic figures cut onto stone slabs. The illustrations evoke associations with the frescoes of ancient Egypt. The motifs of nature are both symbolic and decorative. The metaphorical images of the sun, wings, flowing water, a twig of vine, symbolize love's warmth and tenderness, its vitality and upsurge. Full of serenity, the cycle is composed like a variation of a musical theme, each separate print ever disclosing new sides of the same motif. http://krasauskas.bravehost.com/