Embroidered practical bags.
Ina Marx Artwork
Monday 20 March 2017
Saturday 27 August 2016
BLUE HAIR
Blue hair.
'Who did your hair?' She is a middle aged peach blossoming in her own hair salon. Yes. Her own. Shades of black-grey decor sharpened with a little risqué sheer black at one or two discreet eyespots. Her cleaning lady, also washes clients’ hair. Sometimes they give tea, which her clearing lady makes. Despite the medium sized salon, expense covers every gap in accepted glamour. Overlooking all, from the heights of a hill, so did she. Sweeping a brisk broom-glance from my crown to the end of my hanging hair, tinted in peals of blue. Discontent ripples from her still pose, a forced smile in case I noticed. Of course I saw it.
We cannot see it. We can feel it. Our dear small town society, a corset bundling middle-of-the-road agreements, a morphic field that impart rules for living human beings. How hair should be. The iron grip narrowed over a decade or two. Really fast. Our men got captured, not humans now, but a show of prison collective. The soft sometimes, curly beauty of the individual signature of all men are erased. Females willingly urge them, to shave or at least get a haircut. So ugly. Look at the profile of men, young and old. Notice the backhead fleshy bulks of the rear head. See how it screams at the frontview, do not try to be attractive at all.
But Blue hair? For a woman with grays that actually merely dulls any ones luster?
Some questions are not asked inside the pool of our murky collective morphic field.
"Who did your personality?" 'Mmm... you did it all by yourself? No professional to help you? None at all?"
Tuesday 26 November 2013
INNER WORLD AND ANAMALISTIC CONNECTS
Practical items made pretty.
Friday 18 October 2013
Ever flowing of LI
A remark on Li and Chi. Food for thought.
In the West we know what ''Chi'' means. Imagine how it felt to discover an added organizing principle. "Li", misty and dreamy.
What is Li: There is a unifying organizational principle within nature. That principle has been resisted by Western science, but the Confucian Chinese "Li" informs us that Nature is a set of organizing principles, rather than Nature seen as “mathematical "laws".
These networks are special in the sense that they are formed
through "preferential attachment". This means that one pattern
will connect to another pattern only if it wants to do so.
In the West we know what ''Chi'' means. Imagine how it felt to discover an added organizing principle. "Li", misty and dreamy.
What is Li: There is a unifying organizational principle within nature. That principle has been resisted by Western science, but the Confucian Chinese "Li" informs us that Nature is a set of organizing principles, rather than Nature seen as “mathematical "laws".
These networks are special in the sense that they are formed
through "preferential attachment". This means that one pattern
will connect to another pattern only if it wants to do so.
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