tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-925549664214256461.post4618493546433023217..comments2024-03-24T17:49:05.886-04:00Comments on The Robert Moss BLOG: Grow your poetic healthMarcia Mosshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04530003059608361331noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-925549664214256461.post-17455019979952291632015-12-19T15:10:21.730-05:002015-12-19T15:10:21.730-05:00In ancient Indian teachings the conceptual mind ha...In ancient Indian teachings the conceptual mind had always been under close scrutiny.It was considered indirect because unlike sense minds, was never able to recognize objects directly. It uses language, names objects nad in that way keeps distance between us and a "real world." <br />Serge Charchoune, one of the French avantgard painters with Slavic roots, somewhere said "I like most to speak languages I don´t speak at all." For me it beautifully resonates with the state of being in which words are not known but flow efortlessly. Charchoune was called by his friends a "modest loner" and he must have been. In his poetic loneliness he could step beyond linear mind and create paintings without words and yet speaking volumes to all who can listen to pure silence.ninahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07681001278538562028noreply@blogger.com