In the land of world-famous creative people New Zealand, a land rich in natural wonders, long remained unknown to the West. Not only. Here you can also find some magnificent fruits of human creativity. The intellectual property of the images that appear in this blog correspond to their authors. The sole purpose of this site, is to spread the knowledge …
Read More »DON’T DREAM IT’S OVER – Crowded House
There is freedom within Its Te Awamutu Museum has a number of permanent exhibitions, focusing on the history of Te Awamutu. There is also an exhibition focusing on Tim and Neil Finn, brothers of the band Crowded House. Neil Finn was born in Te Awamutu. The town is located 30 km south, south from Auckland and Hamilton, in the North …
Read More »THE CARPATHIANS – Novel by Janet Frame, the woman who did not want to live the human world under false pretenses
There is no past or future. Using tenses to divide time is like making chalk marks on water This town is home to Baldwin Street, the steepest street in the world. Archaeological evidence, points to the area having been inhabited by Māori, prior to the European arrival. Its urban area lies on the central-eastern coast of Otago, and Its name …
Read More »A FEW RULES FOR BEGINNERS – Katherine Mansfield / When everything in life that we really accept undergoes a change
I want to be all that I am capable of becoming Its oldest building is the 1858 Colonial Cottage in Mount Cook, while the tallest building is the Majestic Centre (on Willis Street at 116 metres high). Wellington it is at the south-western tip of the North Island (between Cook Strait and the Rimutaka Range). You can discover that this …
Read More »FRANCES HODKINGS (1869/1947), NEW ZEALAND PAINTER – A singular artist
I feel that if I had known what was before me, I should never have had the courage to begin FRANCES HODGKINS was born in Dunedin, the daughter of a lawyer and amateur painter. As a girl, she and her sister attended a private girls’ secondary school, demonstrating artistic talent early. After attended the Dunedin School, she became an art …
Read More »RITA ANGUS (1908/1979), NEW ZEALAND PAINTER – Between Byzantine and cubism art
Paintings clear and sharply-defined Her paintings are clear and sharply-defined. RITA ANGUS was influenced by Byzantine and cubism art, and also by the English painter Christopher Perkins. One of the most famous of 1936′ paintings is “Cass“, in which she portrayed the bare emptiness of the Canterbury landscape, using forms and unblended colours in a style remiscent of poster art. …
Read More »AN IDEA CONNECTED TO THE ART – Travel USA following the artistic itinerary of five creative Americans
An travel’s idea connected to the art They have long been global American brands, their images are familiar everywhere, from Apple computers to the hot dogs. Almost everyone on the planet knows something about the USA, even if they’ve never been. The Statue of Liberty and the Empire State, Las Vegas, Golden Gate and the White House waiting for you. …
Read More »WHEN CREATIVITY BECOMES OCCASION TO TRAVEL – The United States
Observe everyday things with new eyes It is something that everyone wants: to know how to look beyond what you see, to feel free inside. A recipe does not exist, but if you are having lunch in a museum restaurant – around you people with whom you share many interests – all this can happen, because together with them you …
Read More »BEST AMERICAN NOVELS OF ALL TIME – The House of Mirth, by Edith Wharton
Discover Creativity, reading best American novels of all time An American author and Pulitzer Prize winner, EDITH WHARTON, is known for her ironic and polished prose about the aristocratic New York society. Her protagonists are most often tragic heroes, portrayed as emotional people. Wharton’s protagonists challenge social taboos, but are unable to overcome the barriers of social convention. From the …
Read More »AFTERNOON RAIN IN STATE STREET – Poem by Amy Lowell
Exploring the Imagist style, mixing formal verse and free forms Her poem “Fixed Idea” was published in 1910, after which she published individual poems in various journals. In October of 1912, Houghton Mifflin published her first collection. She was encouraged to write from an early age, and at seventeen she secluded herself in the 7,000-book library, to study literature. She …
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