Let’s play one more

Okay, we have one more show to show.  See below for details.  More later, but not much later.

In December

Okay, we have a couple things for December. 

First we are having Bob Penny return with his reading of Dylan Thomas's A Child's Christmas in Wales, Sunday, December 5.  Joining him this year will be Marsh Adams to read a Cajun Version of Night before Christmas, music by After Class.  See below for more information.

Also, maybe not entirely holiday oriented, but Diane McNaron's students will be presenting an afternoon of song, Sunday, December 12.

CD Release

Please see below for details on the long-awaited cd release event.

Announcing Monroe Golden’s Performance

Finally, we have an announcement regarding the upcoming performance of works by Monroe Golden.  You can read about it below.

Upcoming events

We start this season with a recital by students of Diane McNaron. See the announcement below. Also stay tuned for the much anticipated CD release for Rosas de Pulpa ... Rosas de Cal.

Motion in the Pictorial Work

The reference to Kant can be explained. There is no motion in the pictorial work. In at least one sense. The object, we think, just stays put. Yet we find motion there. The motion is not just in the depicting of a moving subject in the work. That is sort of obvious and in fact is not any motion at all. The sort of motion in the horses. We notice that they are not moving, in part maybe because we think they should be moving. Kant's lesson, Dufrenne says, is this: "movement in the subject precedes movement in the object."(278)

Read More . . .

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Time in the Pictorial Work

"...the time that animates pictorial space must belong to the structure of the painting."(277) Are we here equating pictorial with painting? I don't think so, at least it needn't be that way.

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The Pictorial Work

Okay, we begin again with our investigation of the aesthetic experience. In particular we consider the pictorial work. I think I am a little out of order from Dufrenne, but we have done the foundational work, and we can pick and choose a little bit. And we may return to the musical work sometime later.

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What are we up to?

Well, we are really not up to anything at the moment, but I think we may need to get another UU Coffee House event going. There must be somebody out there who is interested. Don't you think?
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Dolores Hydock

Dolores Hydock is an actress and story performer, whose work has been featured at a variety of concerts, festivals, and special events throughout the U.S. She is a touring artist for the Alabama State Council on the Arts, a speaker with the Alabama Humanities Foundation, and a member of the Southern Order of Storytellers. Her six CDs of original stories have all received Resource Awards from Storytelling World Magazine. Find out more at her website storypower.org
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Restart

I have been spending some time reading Dufrenne and redesigning the website. I am not entirely happy with the aesthetics of the site, but I am going to leave it for now (if you have some suggestions leave a comment - keep in mind that I am not an artist, nor a graphic designer of any sort).

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Lyda Rose Art Gallery and Frame Shop

Our friend James Wood. Lyda Rose 2817 Crescent Avenue Homewood, AL 35209 He might be moving soon. The new phone number, as of right now, is 205 915-5875 Check his website for more and current information. Hours: Tuesday-Friday 10:30-5:30 Saturday 11:00-3:00

What does the work bring to the spectator?

What does the work of art offer? Remember what we said. We are not arguing the existence of aesthetic objects or works of art. We take as a starting point that there are such things. The preceding entry has been a preliminary investigation into why the work of art needs an audience, why it needs a public. The work of art must be viewed or otherwise experienced by people. That is the sense in which we, as spectators, complete the work, make it possible for it to become what it is. There can be no work of art without an appreciative audience.

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The work and its public

There are objects in my environment. Not all are works of art, but some are. Somehow, my attitude towards the works of art must be appropriate, and if no appropriate attitude from the viewer is to be had, then the work of art suffers.

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The Work and Its Performance

My own view of the work of art is perhaps a bit too static. My paradigm work of art is the painting. Now, of course we agree with Dufrenne that "the work must present itself to perception"(19). The various art forms have their different ways of presentation. For Dufrenne, I think the presentation is key to the being of the work of art. In addition, the paradigm of presentation is performance.

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Aesthetic Experience
Saturday, February 28, 2009 Series on Aesthetics
Sunday, March 01, 2009 Aesthetic Experience
Monday, March 02, 2009 Introduction
Thursday, March 12, 2009 Aesthetic Object and Work of Art
Thursday, March 19, 2009 The Work and Its Performance
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