CharleyH
Curioser and curiouser
- Joined
- May 7, 2003
- Posts
- 16,771
neonlyte said:Sensual
It would almost be stupid to ignore the auditory - but I will for just a moment. My background is visual art, originally architecture, then Fine Art, somehow crossing through the visual and sensuality of food and back to architecture, for the moment, I can take or leave Fine Art, I've reached a comfort zone that I can re-visit for the sensuality embodied in certain works, and artists.
I've never been comfortable with an artist that I couldn't undress (fortunately ms neonlyte obliges). By this I mean a need to take a view across a body of work rather than a single work from a portfolio. This is where the sensuality comes from, it's a refinement of choices, practised, perfected and finally displayed in the right setting, the right lighting, the perfect ambiance, presented for observation - or created by the observer who visits his/her own desires and sensuality on the scene.
I don't need to see my wife - my lover to appreciate her sensuality any more than I need to re-visit Le Corbusiers chapel Notre Dame at Ronchamp to understand the sensuality that a building can possess. Both seduce. They have rehearsed and honed performances, stored in my mind ready for me to activate and condition my perception.
We three grow old together, I see Ronchamp at Easter 1976, the sun screaming of the dewed grass, inside my wife stood bathed in the red reflected sun light staining the side chapel. Outside the choir practised Easter Hymns, the sound of their singing drifting into sanctuary, caressing the silence off the walls.
Sensual - for me it's visual, I locked down my images and bring them out as benchmarks, that's not to say they are not surpassed - but those images, the one's I locked down, are mine.
I find sensuality in many things, but they are nearly always triggers to a past event or experience. It can be a smell, a sound, a sight that issues an avalanche of sensual thought, pleasure taken, in my mind.
"Sensual is slow, loving, savouring, enjoying." I can see that, is it auditory, too? Sexually, is not the voice, the moan the cry, as sensual? Do you not hear the voice, the scream sometimes in an historic setting, architechetually(sp). You responded to the first question emotionally, which is great. Sensual, you said is visual, but do not buildings speak, and alternately, does not the beauty of a form, in architecture, S/m or lesbian, or in anything, speak? A question
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