Louis Kahan
In 1937, as photographer Ansel Adams recovered from a nervous breakdown, he wrote this beautiful letter to his best friend, Cedric Wright:
“Dear Cedric,
A strange thing happened to me today. I saw a big thundercloud move down over Half Dome, and it was so big and clear and brilliant that it made me see many things that were drifting around inside of me; things that relate to those who are loved and those who are real friends.
For the first time I know what love is; what friends are; and what art should be.
Love is a seeking for a way of life; the way that cannot be followed alone; the resonance of all spiritual and physical things. Children are not only of flesh and blood — children may be ideas, thoughts, emotions. The person of the one who is loved is a form composed of a myriad mirrors reflecting and illuminating the powers and thoughts and the emotions that are within you, and flashing another kind of light from within. No words or deeds may encompass it.
Friendship is another form of love — more passive perhaps, but full of the transmitting and acceptances of things like thunderclouds and grass and the clean granite of reality.
Art is both love and friendship and understanding: the desire to give. It is not charity, which is the giving of things. It is more than kindness, which is the giving of self. It is both the taking and giving of beauty, the turning out to the light of the inner folds of the awareness of the spirit. It is a recreation on another plane of the realities of the world; the tragic and wonderful realities of earth and men, and of all the interrelations of these.
I wish the thundercloud had moved up over Tahoe and let loose on you; I could wish you nothing finer.
Ansel”
(Source: lettersofnote.com)
![Once again…
Emil Nolde
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Romantic Landscape with Fortress
link](http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lxzidzRnMG1qahuhjo1_1280.jpg)





![The British Library
‘King Edgar before the Heavenly King’
This charter, presented unusually in the form of a richly illuminated book, commemorates the introduction of Benedictine rule in 964 at New Minster, Winchester, by King Edgar. Flanked by New Minster’s patron saints, Edgar offers this book to Christ, enthroned above and held aloft by angels. Though the painting emphasises the splendour of the heavenly and earthly figures, Edgar subordinates himself to Christ here and in the accompanying gold-lettered inscription: ‘Thus he who established the stars sits on a lofty throne. King Edgar, prostrate and venerating, adores him.’ The New Minster Charter Winchester, 966 Presented to the nation in 1702 Cotton Vespasian A. viii, f. 2v © The British Library Board
The Christian Monarch 700-1400
The manuscripts in this section span the history of England from a century after the Anglo-Saxons’ introduction to Christianity to the late Middle Ages. [22 items]](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_ly0awnt3Ou1qahuhjo1_1280.jpg)
