All y’all: Many thanks for your kind comments. It is a great privilege to be part of this esteemed company…
All y’all: Many thanks for your kind comments. It is a great privilege to be part of this esteemed company…
The Kevin Allen piece is for double choir SSAATTBB, with the men singing the first verse and women the second,…
"Alas" is absolutely marvelous! To begin with, the very idea of writing a poem about that word is an extremely…
"A link between things near and things beyond" is my favorite line in this truly beautiful meditative description of a…
These are an excellent trio of poems, looking at death from witty and wise angles.
© 2025 SCP. WebDesign by CODEC Prime.
Yeah…I’ve seen this video a couple of years ago…as he notes, the problem is the people who support this sort of thing, and are willing to pay $10 Million for a rock that perpetuates the problem. Btw, if you know anyone looking to buy a rock for $10 Million, please have them give me a call…thanks…
Hahaha. Love it, Alan.
It’s funny but I was thinking that the only reason I’m not interested in something is because I did not understand it. That’s not the key reason why modern art is awful. But I think it’s the easiest to find.
I think there’s a case for the rock being brought from the wilderness to the city — if that’s where it has come from.
It’s like having petting zoos in cities for children who don’t get out of the city to see cows or rabbits in open country or farms.
People could come to the local academic or municipal site to pet the rock.
— I haven’t looked at this rock. I have looked at rocks in the wild and seen lots of photos and drawings of rocks. I don’t feel I need a rock to be brought near to me but can see that people on low income who are urbanised and trapped by lack of cash, work, or family commitments, and can’t travel — they would benefit from seeing, touching, and maybe climbing a rock.
The best venue would be near their homes. Somewhere they could reach it easily.
— However, would it not be better to take people to see rocks?
That would be cheaper. And more environmentally sound.
That would be more educational. And potentially mind-broadening.
And the rock would remain in its natural habitat.
And be less traumatised.
They should at least bring another rock in to keep it company…this way it won’t feel so lonely…seems only right to me…
Yes, rocks have feelings,
this we all know,
It’s just their reactions
are terribly slow.
Words such as “tired and spent” occupy the Softsoap side of M.A.’s analysis.
“Exhausted, empty, and heaving” form the Clorox triumvirate. Mostly true.
When I hear of such in a fine old building, I think “Well that’s all they have.”
Hi Neal, can you help me?
M.A. = Modern art?
Clorox triumvirate = ??
Thanks in anticipation. D
Robert is so right; there are standards and their absence has led to the crisis we are in. When we worship ugliness, eventually we get round to acting ugly and becoming what we enact.
http://en.minghui.org/html/articles/2016/9/14/158781.html
http://www.thebookoflife.org/gongshi/