4 hours ago
Monday, December 15, 2008
La Terre est bleue comme une orange
is the first line of a poem by French surrealist poet Paul Éluard, whose birthday was yesterday. Éluard, born Eugène Émile Paul Grindel, was one of the founders of the Surrealist movement in France, but broke from the group when he joined the Communist Party. See the entire poem in its original French, and in English, here, thanks to the University of Toronto. The image above is a photograph entitled "Moonrise over Calder" and was taken by Piero Sierra and posted on Flickr.
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4 comments:
Surreal, indeed!
I"m stunned that that's a photo! In fact, I kept going back to your description of it, thinking you must have made a mistake - it's so obviously graphic design, bold colors, abstract. Then I looked carefully at that little white thing in the middle, and the whole photo (with Calder) came into focus. Fantastic perspective, and perfect for Eluard. Thanks for posting it. (Isn't Flickr wonderful? )
That's cool!
Very beautiful is that blue sky , the beauty we artists try and recreate. That blue is electric with conciousness.
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