HH 196

An Irving Klaw Photo

Posted in Photography | Leave a comment

Off The Page 7

Posted in art | Leave a comment

The Lickerish Quartet

Posted in art | Leave a comment

Winchester-Thurston ’56

Posted in Photography | Leave a comment

Sally Parks Behrhorst

Fritter and waste the hours in an off-hand way

Posted in art, Things Past | Leave a comment

Antithesis 2

Posted in art | Leave a comment

All the beings of our world are, in the eyes of the Gnostics, the sediment of a lost heaven. — Jacques Lacarriere

Reddish marble carved votive relief of Selene: a female bust to the front in an arched niche, draped in a sleeved chiton, and with her hair parted in the middle and brought down over her ears, nose now missing, surrounded by a crescent on her head, seven stars in the field around and the signs of the zodiac in low relief; inscribed beneath with an unitelligible Gnostic formula

Excavated/Findspot Argos
2ndC-3rdC

British Museum

Posted in art, Goddess, Mythology, The Sacred | Leave a comment

Gnostic Serpent

Oval red-orange chalcedony intaglio: snake with Gnostic inscriptions above and below.

(undated)

British Museum

If a person has eyes that know how to see, he will look upwards to the heavens and he will see the beautiful image of the serpent coiled there, at the place where the great sky begins. Then he will understand that no being in heaven or on earth was formed without the serpent.

— from The Gnostics by Jacques Lacarriere

Posted in art, Books and Art, Cosmic Verities, History, Mythology, The Sacred | Leave a comment

sewickley academy 1983

Posted in Photography, Things Past | Leave a comment

From “The Annals”

But neither human help, nor imperial munificence, nor all the modes of placating Heaven, could stifle scandal or dispel the belief that the fire had taken place by order. Therefore to scotch the rumor, Nero substituted as culprits, and punished with the utmost refinements of cruelty, a class of men loathed for their vices, whom the crowd styled Christians. Christus, the founder of the name, had undergone the death penalty in the reign of Tiberius, by sentence of the procurator Pontius Pilate, and the pernicious superstition was checked for a moment, only to break out once more, not merely in Judea, the home of the disease, but in the capital itself, where all things horrible or shameful in the world collect and find a vogue. First, then, the confessed members of the sect were arrested; next, on their disclosures, vast numbers were convicted, not so much on the count of arson, as for hatred of the human race.

— Tacitus

Posted in Books, History, Organizations, Things Past | Leave a comment