Javascript must be enabled to continue!
‘Not a cherry tree in sight!’
View through CrossRef
Would you have been so very angry? But then again I have already offended in this way, or something like it. Hypothetkally Murdered – or Provisionally Dead or whatever you want to call it – I brought back to life as best I could, trying to clothe your sketches and scribbles in the kinds of instrumental colours that I imagined that you might have liked, or at least that you might have recognized. And this was music for a show which, at the time (in 1931), you described as ‘purely disgraceful’.
Title: ‘Not a cherry tree in sight!’
Description:
Would you have been so very angry? But then again I have already offended in this way, or something like it.
Hypothetkally Murdered – or Provisionally Dead or whatever you want to call it – I brought back to life as best I could, trying to clothe your sketches and scribbles in the kinds of instrumental colours that I imagined that you might have liked, or at least that you might have recognized.
And this was music for a show which, at the time (in 1931), you described as ‘purely disgraceful’.
Related Results
Visual processing abilities associated with piano music sight-reading expertise
Visual processing abilities associated with piano music sight-reading expertise
Visual processing expertise in musicians has traditionally focused on the difference between expert and non-expert music sight-readers. More generally, differences between musician...
Darwin and the Tree of Life: the roots of the evolutionary tree
Darwin and the Tree of Life: the roots of the evolutionary tree
To speak of evolutionary trees and of the Tree of Life has become routine in evolution studies, despite recurrent objections. Because it is not immediately obvious why a tree is su...
The tree as evolutionary icon: TREE in the Natural History Museum, London (William T. Stearn Prize 2010)
The tree as evolutionary icon: TREE in the Natural History Museum, London (William T. Stearn Prize 2010)
As part of the Darwin celebrations in 2009, the Natural History Museum in London unveiled TREE, the first contemporary artwork to win a permanent place in the Museum. While the art...
The tree that responds: taming the rubber tree
The tree that responds: taming the rubber tree
Abstract The starting point of this article is the assertion, common among tappers (or seringueiros) in plantations in the interior of São Paulo, that it is necessary to tame rubbe...
Becoming a tree with a tree
Becoming a tree with a tree
This text reflects on an artistic practice based on repeated visits to chosen trees, performing for camera with them in the context of the project ‘Meetings with Remarkable and Unr...
The Future of Systematics: Tree Thinking without the Tree
The Future of Systematics: Tree Thinking without the Tree
Phylogenetic trees are meant to represent the genealogical history of life and apparently derive their justification from the existence of the tree of life and the fact that evolut...
Herbert Beerbohm Tree's King Henry VIII: Expenditure, Spectacle and Experiment
Herbert Beerbohm Tree's King Henry VIII: Expenditure, Spectacle and Experiment
Soon after breakfast-time on the morning of 1 September 1910 ‘suburban ladies with their camp stools, sandwiches, and crochet work took up position outside the pit and gallery door...
Twilight graphs
Twilight graphs
AbstractThis paper deals primarily with countable, simple, connected graphs and the following two conditions which are trivially satisfied if the graphs are finite:(a) there is an ...