#terrarium #nyc #saturday #upperwestside
Seriously. This music is like opium. It’s insane.
Tristan und Isolde - Liebesnacht - Act 2 Love Duet 2/2 (by moltovivace)
Birgit Nilsson sings “Dich Teure Halle” from Tannhauser (by baritonoguapo)
Yesterday was Wagner’s 200th birthday. Yeah, he was insane … but he was also a musical genius. Here is the genius Jonas Kaufmann singing one of my favorite pieces.
Wagner - Lohengrin (3 act) “In fernem Land, unnahbar euren Sghritten” (Kaufmann) (by Евгений Тютерев)
Anselm Feuerbach - (self)portraits - 19th century
Anselm Feuerbach (12 September 1829 – 4 January 1880) was a German painter. He was the leading classicist painter of the German 19th-century school.
Feuerbach was born at Speyer, the son of the well-known archaeologist Joseph Anselm Feuerbach and the grandson of the legal scholar Paul Johann Anselm Ritter von Feuerbach.
After having passed through the art schools of Düsseldorf and Munich, he went to Antwerp and subsequently to Paris, where he benefited by the teaching of Couture, and produced his first masterpiece, Hafiz at the Fountain in 1852. He subsequently worked at Karlsruhe, and then Venice. In Venice, he fell under the spell of the greatest school of colourists, and several of his work demonstrate a close study of the Italian masters. He then proceeded to Rome and then Vienna.
In Vienna, he associated with Johannes Brahms. In 1873, he became professor in the Vienna Academy, but disappointed with the reception given in Vienna to his design of The Fall of the Titans for the ceiling of the new Artists’ House Museum, he went to live in Venice, where he died in 1880. After his death, Brahms composed Nänie, a piece for chorus and orchestra, in his memory.
He is associated with the Düsseldorf school of painting.
Gorgeous (both the face and the painting)
(via misterebby)
Super Moon
— June 23, 2013
Be sure to look out for the Moon these next few months as it approaches Perigee, because the full moons during these times will appear exceptionally large. The Moon will be at its Perigee, or closest approach, in July 23 and it will reach full moon only a few minutes after it passes this point in its orbit.
These ‘super moons’ not only appear larger because they are physically closer but, combined with a full moon, the mind can play tricks on you to think they are much larger. This phenomena is called the Moon Illusion. Try to catch these full moons as they rise/set because the illusion works when there is an object in the foreground, like a tree, building or mountains.
Awesome.
(via myweekinpictures)