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Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Music: The Why and The Dose
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"In the same way that a drug-induced dopamine surge leaves you craving
more, music becomes addictive — the dopamine tells your body it was
rewarded and creates a desire to seek out more."
Published on Aug 7, 2012 by AsapSCIENCE
TWEET IT: http://clicktotweet.com/SR316
"Is music humanity's drug of choice? What is the mysterious power behind it's ability to
captivate, stimulate and keep us coming back for more? Find out the scientific explanation of
how a simple mixture of sound frequencies can affect your brain and body, and why it's not all
that different than a drug like cocaine."
Written and created by Mitchell Moffit (twitter @mitchellmoffit)
and Gregory Brown (twitter @whalewatchmeplz).
TWITTER: http://www.twitter.com/AsapSCIENCE
FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/AsapSCIENCE
Music by Mitchell Moffit
Art by Gregory and Mitchell
Some Sources ---
Dopamine Release during Music:
Emotional Response to Music:
Cocaine and Your Brain:
Do you fell the dopamine surge, I do...
Vladimir Horowitz playing
Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No 3 1st Movement in 1978.
Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No 3 1st Movement in 1978.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Cars
Mining the Archives - Mir Iskusstva 1904 No3 - Maria Yakunchikova
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Mir iskusstva magazine 1904 (issue 3). . |
Photographs of Maria Yakunchikova's Artworks
as published in Mir Iskusstva magazine 1904 (issue 3)
The magazine scanned by Doria: the multi-institutional repository maintained by
The National Library of Finland
(www.doria.fi).
Maria Yakunchikova:
Maria Vasilievna Yakunchikova-Weber (Russian: Мария Васильевна Якунчикова-Вебер) (1870-1902) was a
Russian painter, graphic artist, and embroiderer. In 1896, she married a doctor named L. N. Weber, and
attached his name to hers from then until her death.
Yakunchikova was born in Wiesbaden, Germany and grew up in Moscow, where her family had numerous
artistic connections. Beginning in 1883 she had private lessons in art with N. A. Martynov, and from 1885 she
studied as an external student at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture; she took evening
lessons with Elena Polenova between 1886 and 1889. Through these classes she met artists such as Isaac
Levitan and Konstantin Korovin, among others. She was also associated with the Abramtsevo artists, especially
her teacher Polenova, whose revival of traditional handicrafts inspired her to embroider and to execute
pokerwork. Between 1887 and 1889 she began to collect folk art.
Yakunchikova traveled to Austria and Italy in 1888; the following year she went to France and Germany, and
from then on worked mainly in western Europe. From 1889 to 1890 she attended the Académie Julian in Paris,
studying under William-Adolphe Bouguereau and Tony Robert-Fleury. In 1892 she began to create colored
etchings. Polenova visited her in Paris in 1895. In 1897 she began to illustrate books; from the following year
she also designed textiles and toys. Also in 1898 she was commissioned by Serge Diaghilev to design a cover for
his magazine Mir iskusstva; this was an Art Nouveau image, with folk art stylings, of a swan in a forest pool,
and ran in 1899, from which year Yakunchikova began exhibiting with the World of Art movement
image on this post - ridou>. This she continued until her death. In addition, she directed the embroidery
workshop at Abramtsevo from her teacher's death in 1898, and planned an exhibition of folk art as part of the
International Exhibition in Paris in 1900.
Yakunchikova suffered from tuberculosis, and died of the disease near Geneva in 1902.
--- wikipedia ---
Mir iskusstva - Table of Contents, 1904 No3. . |
Selected Mir Iskusstva photographs relating to the Yakunchikova article:
Maria Yakunchikova. . |
Maria Yakunchikova. . |
"Wikipedia: Also in 1898 she was commissioned by Serge Diaghilev to design a cover for his
magazine Mir iskusstva; this was an Art Nouveau image, with folk art stylings, of a swan in a
forest pool, and ran in 1899, from which year Yakunchikova began exhibiting with the World of
Art movement.":
Portrait of (12 year old) Maria Yakunchikova by Ilya Repin, 1879, as printed in the following issue of Mir iskusstva, No4, 1904. . |
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