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![[votd] James Beard’s Onion Sandwich by Jacques Pepin](https://pixelsatanexhibition.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/jacques-pepin.jpg)
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Jamie Stewart—One of the Thieves Was Saved
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in iPhonismJamie Stewart was a regular contributor to PIXELS until about ten years ago. He was a great guy and I loved his work. He was an actor in England and did a simply amazing job as the voice of the “Secret Smartographer” for the sadly short-lived iPhotographer Magazine circa 2013-14. I will be posting some…
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![[votd] The Girl From Ipanema is a far weirder song than you thought](https://pixelsatanexhibition.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/girlfromipanema.jpg)
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Knox Bronson—René Magritte Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
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in iPhonismErik Satie remains the patron saint of Pixels at an Exhibition.
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![[votd] Why Hitler Was Afraid of Rudolf Steiner](https://pixelsatanexhibition.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/steiner2.jpg)
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![[sunday] Veronica Moloney—My Grace Is Sufficient](https://pixelsatanexhibition.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/veronica-moloney_series-my-grace-is-sufficient-the-supplication-the-lost-soul_130119-copy.jpg)
[sunday] Veronica Moloney—My Grace Is Sufficient
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in iPhonismHear, maker of the heavens, what the poet asks. May softly come unto me thy mercy. So I call on thee, for thou hast created me. I am thy slave, thou art my Lord. Happy Sunday. From ClassicFM.com: A few years ago, an Icelandic indie-folk group walked into a train station in the German city…
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![[votd] Goya’s “Black” Paintings](https://pixelsatanexhibition.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/goya-1.jpg)
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![[votd] The Revenge of Analog: For Those Who Are Sick of the Digital World](https://pixelsatanexhibition.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/polaroid.jpg)
[votd] The Revenge of Analog: For Those Who Are Sick of the Digital World
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The resurrection of instant photography and hand printing and vinyl and more. I’m all for it!
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Paul Éluard and Max Ernst’s Les Malheurs des immortels (1922)
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in ArtIn 1921, the French poet Paul Éluard and his Russian wife Gaya travelled to Cologne where they met the artist Max Ernst, one of the pioneers of the city’s flourishing Dada movement. This encounter marked the start of a tumultuous ménage à trois, which saw Ernst leave his wife and child in Germany to set…
