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Brooklyn Museum of Art

27 Feb

Today, I publish pictures from the B.M.A.

Serendipité

7 Jun

C’est en 1754 que l’Anglais Horace Walpole créa le mot serendipity en s’inspirant d’un conte persan intitulé Les trois princes de Serendip, conte dans lequel ces princes originaire de Serendip (ancien nom de l’actuel Sri Lanka) sont récompensés de leur sagacité. Apparu en France en 1953, l’anglicisme sérendipité désigne la capacité à faire par hasard, durant une recherche, une découverte inattendue et à en comprendre aussitôt l’utilité. L’exemple donné par le Robert est celui d’un chercheur de la compagnie 3M travaillant sur une colle qui ne collait pas bien et qui créa l’ancêtre du Post-It(R).

The three princes of Serendip, Balakrama, Vijayo, and Rajahsigha, as they traveled “…were always making discoveries, by accident and sagacity, of things they were not in quest of…”

Horace Walpole, in a letter of January 28, 1754, as quoted in “The Three Princes of Serendip”, by E. J. Hodges, Atheneum, New York, 1964.

Olmec art

1 Feb

Olmec

When I was at the American Museum of Natural History, I took a picture of a mask. Well, it looks like another piece of pre-Columbian art… In fact, there is a little notice which explains that’s the only known Olmec object made of wood. It was found in a cave in the Guerrero state (Mexico). It was designed to be worn, probably on ceremonial occasions. The jade mosaic around the mouth, now largely lost, seems to have been added in post-Olmec times.

Arts: a Belgian point of view

10 Jan

For those interested in arts I suggest a visit to the blog of a friend of mine. It’s here: artsandsprouts.com