Tag: freedom

The pause

I recently got to know the humanist and existentialist psychologist Rollo May (1909 – 1994) in a post by Brain Pickings. Rollo May was especially interested in the themes of freedom, courage and creativity. “Freedom”, he said, “is the capacity to pause in the face of stimuli from many directions at once and, in this pause, to throw one’s weight toward this response rather than that one. The person becomes able to say, “I can” or “I will”.”

The pause also plays a major part in breathing. It’s one of the three breath phases: inhale – exhale – pause. The pause occurs naturally, at rest, when air has left the body with an exhale and before air comes back into the body with an inhale.  Read More

Breath Myth

This weekend I visited Amy Feldman‘s exhibition „Breath Myth“ at Blain Southern Gallery in Berlin.

Enter – an industrial, rectangular space – large grey-toned canvasses with primal doodles on them. The aesthetic is visceral and abstract, solid and hollow, dirty and clean at the same time. The doodles remind one of intestines but all the formations are complete, and thus unlike intestinal or airway passages. The playful, yet serious character of the images is mirrored in their titles: blatantly as in „Jolly Gloom“, jarringly as in „Chronic Comic“ or subtly as in „Ghost Host“ or, indeed, the title of the exhibition „Breath Myth“. Read More