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A somewhat chaotic multidisciplinary collection of visual art, photography, design, architecture, poetry, and literature.

Tiny, but cosy discussion group [Not to be taken too seriously!]:
https://t.me/+I522TcNiXNwwYTM6
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Victor Pasmore, β€œLinear Development 2,” 1970

Screenprint, Height: 18.5 in. (46.99 cm), Width: 18.5 in. (46.99 cm)
Marx had drawn a nightmare picture of what happened to human life under capitalism, when everything was produced only in order to be exchanged; when true qualities and uses dropped away, and the human power of making and doing itself became only an object to be traded. Then the makers and the things made turned alike into commodities, and the motion of society turned into a kind of zombie dance, a grim cavorting whirl in which objects and people blurred together till the objects were half alive and the people were half dead. Stock-market prices acted back upon the world as if they were independent powers, requiring factories to be opened or closed, real human beings to work or rest, hurry or dawdle; and they, having given the transfusion that made the stock prices come alive, felt their flesh go cold and impersonal on them, mere mechanisms for chunking out the man-hours. Living money and dying humans, metal as tender as skin and skin as hard as metal, taking hands, and dancing round, and round, and round, with no way ever of stopping; the quickened and the deadened, whirling on.

Francis Spufford, Red Plenty
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Bird Wandering Off, Paul Klee (1921)
The ecocentric argument is grounded in the belief that compared to the undoubted importance of the human part, the whole Ecosphere is even more significant and consequential: more inclusive, more complex, more integrated, more creative, more beautiful, more mysterious, and older than time. The "environment" that anthropocentrism misperceives as materials designed to be used exclusively by humans, to serve the needs of humanity, is in the profoundest sense humanity's source and support: its ingenious, inventive life-giving matrix. Ecocentrism goes beyond biocentrism with its fixation on organisms, for in the ecocentric view people are inseparable from the inorganic/organic nature that encapsulates them.

Stan Rowe, Ecocentrism: the Chord that Harmonizes Humans and Earth
Female Torso, c.1933, Kazimir Malevich
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Hilma af Klint, Tree of Knowledge, No. 1, 1913–15, watercolor, gouache, graphite, and ink on paper, 17 7⁄8 Γ— 11 5⁄8".
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Film poster for La JetΓ©e (1967) dir. Chris Marker