Studio Wall // Research Wall
Artist: Jean-Léon Gérôme (France // 1824-1904)
The Snake Charmer | c. 1879 | Oil on canvas | 82 x 121 cm
seen from Indonesia
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seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Greece

seen from Iraq

seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
Studio Wall // Research Wall
Artist: Jean-Léon Gérôme (France // 1824-1904)
The Snake Charmer | c. 1879 | Oil on canvas | 82 x 121 cm

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Studio / Research Wall
Artist: Toyota Hokkei (Japan, 1780–1850)
01 | Snake and Melons | c. 1809 | Woodblock print
02 | Head of a Salmon | c. 1815–25 | Woodblock print
Vincent van Gogh | Roses
1890 | Oil on canvas | 71 × 90 cm
Studio / Research Wall
Flies and other insects: indicators of time and stage of decomposition.

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Studio Research Wall
Image: The Three Poisons - Cockerel (greed), snake (hate) and pig (delusion)
“The Wheel of Life stems from the Tibetan tradition and is a complex representation of the constant circle of life, death and rebirth. The hub of any wheel is the part around which everything else revolves. In the hub of this well known Buddhist icon are three creatures, each biting the other’s tail, spinning round and round in a never ending circle. A cockerel, snake and a pig represent what are often referred to as, The Three Poisons. The cockerel is greed, the snake is hatred and the pig, delusion. Each one is driven in pursuit of the creature in front but at the same time is being consumed by the one that follows. The Three Poisons are the root causes of all suffering. Everything that causes us dissatisfaction, pain or outright suffering stems from one of these three elements.”
http://dharmacharibahiya.blogspot.com/2010/08/three-poisons.html
Maybe I identify with the spider. I'm the kind of person who works on something forever and then works on the same image again the next day.
Vija Celmins