-
Grieg, Edvard
- From these few observations we can already conclude that the real is never beautiful. Beauty is a…
Sartre, Jean-Paul
- Everything that moves, is moved by a mover.
Aristotle
-
Xenakis, Iannis
-
Livi, Piero
- The real being of the will hides itself in harmony, as it cannot be expressed symbolically [...].
Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm
-
Stockhausen, Karlheinz
-
Piranesi, Giovanni Battista
-
Carax, Leos
- Everything has two faces.
Franck, Sebastien
-
Kircher, Athanasius
-
Michaux, Henri
-
Wachowski, Lilly & Lana
-
Pasolini, Pier Paolo
-
Kircher, Athanasius
- Contemporary art should have prepared us to stop looking exclusively for harmony, but also to…
Corboz, André
-
Antonioni, Michelangelo
- While men of reason and wisdom see only fragmentary figures that are all the more frightening for…
Foucault, Michel
-
Herzog, Werner
-
Unknown
- I believe that the moment is near when by a procedure of active paranoiac thought, it will be…
Dali, Salvador
-
Wurm, Erwin
- Cities and the Sky .4 … Summoned to lay down the rules for the foundation of Perinthia, the…
Calvino, Italo
-
Masson andré
-
Bufalino, Benedetto
-
Offenbach, Jacques
- A voluptuous vibration constantly stirs Chloe, the most chaste of cities. If men and women began to…
Calvino, Italo
-
GLASS, PHILIP
-
Tschumi, Bernard
-
Tinguely, Jean
-
Charcot, Jean-Martin
-
Weir, Peter
-
Namuth, Hans
-
Alma-Tadema, Lawrence
-
Todd, Phillips
- The ship is a symbol of a sudden unease that appears on the horizon of European culture towards the…
Foucault, Michel
-
Van Haarlem, Cornelis
-
NIH
-
Chassol
- One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman.
de Beauvoir, Simone
- Fantasies and threats, the fleeting fragments of dreams and the secret destiny of the world, where…
Foucault, Michel
-
Magritte, René
- Acceleration (n.) The rate at which something moves more quickly or happens faster or sooner.
Cambridge dictionary
-
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON
-
Judge, Mike
-
Unknown
-
Dong, Song
-
Kaiserlichen Marineluftwaffe
- While men of reason and wisdom see only fragmentary figures that are all the more frightening for…
Foucault, Michel
-
Stanley, Thomas
-
Waynehorse
-
NASA
- There is therefore a critique of language in the form of bricolage, and it has even been said that…
Derrida, Jaques
-
Schneemann, Carole
-
Bosch, Hieronymus
-
Unknown
-
David, Jacques-Louis
-
Cranach The Elder, Lucas
- harmony … . a pleasant musical sound made by different notes being played or sung at the same time…
Cambridge Dictionary
- harmoy (n.) from the Greek ἁρμονία harmonia … meaning “unison, togetherness, a relation of sounds”…
Etymology Dictionary
-
Michelangelo
-
De Loutherbourg, Philip James
-
Abramović, Marina; Ulay
-
Sherman, Cindy
-
Armstrong, Louis
- This is why the imaginary and the real must be, rather, like two juxtaposable or superimposable…
Deleuze, Gilles
-
Banham, Reyner
-
Weaver, John Ernest
- I distrust all systematizers and stay out of their way. The will to a system is a lack of integrity.
Friedrich, Nietzsche
- A living thing seeks above all to discharge its strength - life itself is Will to Power…
Nietzsche, Friedrich
- One thinks; but that this ‘one’ is precisely the famous old ego, is, to put it mildly, only a…
Nietzsche, Friedrich
-
Dayes, Yussef
- God is dead.
Nietzsche, Friedrich
- Les êtres vivants supérieurs constituent un système ouvert présentant de nombreuses relations avec…
Cannon, Walter Bradford
- The observed X is real only insofar as it is the impossible point at which two incompatible…
Žižek, Slavoj
-
Unknown
- Like unto each the form, yet non alike; And so the choir hints a secret law, a sacred mystery.
von Goethe, Johann Wolfgang
-
Delacroix, Eugène
-
Magritte, René
-
Truman, Harry S.
- It is only indirectly, I say, that the individual has this violent craving for existence. It is the…
Schopenhauer, Arthur
-
Muybrudge, Eadweard J.
-
Roth, Dieter
- Neither the space, nor the time, nor the necessity are the fruit of evolution. They are there. They…
d'Ormesson, Jean
-
Matta-Clark, Gordon
-
Cage, John
-
De Chirico, Giorgio
-
Kertész, André
-
Kubrick, Stanley
-
Superstudio
-
Kubrick, Stanley
-
Grasshopper
- La vie (…) tend à la sensation d’un maximum de puissance ; elle est essentiellement l’effort vers…
Nietzsche, Friedrich
- Evolution has no ultimate purpose or goal except survival, and that humans are a cosmic accident…
Bergman, Jerry
- Il n’y avait rien. Et ce rien était le tout. Le tout et le rien se mêlaient l’un à l’autre et se…
d’Ormesson, Jean
-
Mr. Oizo
-
NASA
-
Kandinsky, Wassily
-
Bourgeois, Louise
-
Von Moos, Max