-
Gallery
Artist’s Quotation
As my artist’s statement explains, my work is utterly incomprehensible and is therefore full of deep significance. ~Calvin and Hobbes (Bill Watterson)
-
Book Recommendations
Sign-up For RSS Feed
Tags
Biblical art Bryce Alan Flurie Nancy Henry MOMA Art Theft. basketry Leonard Cohen Ottawa Michael Kenna memories Girl Africa Paperclay Bob Dylan Portrait Text Art Video Rilke John Leax Sunset Winds Trinity Art Conference musician John F. Kennedy Ann Ginsburgh Hofkin Mark Strand Mixed Media Acadamy Awards Water Hyacinth Dance National Poetry Month Scholastics books Flickr onOne Jane Kenyon Marc Chagall Georges Rouault Photocrati Walker Percy Music Scotland Olivier Beaudoin Americana Christian Rock Makoto Fujimura Boy Ethics in Photography John Bisbee Count To Ten Sunset J Tillman Piano Peter Callesen Poetry Out Loud Old Time Radio Foreign Films Roger Mitchell Sky King PBS Ben Zion Silent Music Animated Short Biscuit And As If The Rain Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens New Water Science A SONNET FOR NAPALM Hearts and Minds Arthur and Yu Reading John Keats Black History Netflix Cowboy Junkies Jon Pineda Ocean Waves Floyd Skloot Webb Sisters Everyman Photo Contest Jewish An Wine Psalm 34:8 Pane e tulipani Random Art Nick Brandt WineKIng Galleries Alela Diane The Streets OTR Shadow art Degas Jack Smart Creative Textures Perfecr Suite 6 Japanese Artist Hiram Larew William Stafford Snow Vespers Love In Black And White Word Robert Frost William Blake Evaporation New Video Sharon Chmielarz Nature Prisoner of words Holbrook AZ Billy Collins Love H. PALMER HALL Rhina P. Espaillat Square Halo Art Conference Kumi Yamashita Philip Larkin Animated Poetry Fleet Foxes Katrina The List They Sit Together on the Porch Troy DeArmitt One Simple Question Glass art Rachel Zucker William Doreski London Bonnie Ferrill Roman New York Silent World Dylan Covers Tina Dico Chip Cain Macmillan Pablo Neruda Green Living Typolution Robert Haas Ed Knippers Pixie Foudre Poetry Facebook Kelli Russell Agodon Terry Evans Wendell Berry Earth Day Ted Kooser Katja Mater Waiting Bird National Geographic Short Film photography Photo Contest sculpture Wendy Cope The search Wordle Monet Larry Norman Self Image Film Posters Art and Christianity Environment Mary Louise Parker Jess Lopez-King Michael Nichols The Shadow Mathew's House Project Poet Laureate Alicia Keys Movie Lightroom 3 Samuel Bak Kindly Cara Barer Van Gogh Pause Otherwise The Air That I Breathe If It Be Your Will Film Nathan Sawaya I See Peggy Noonan Louise Gluck Hardly Art POW Wire Sculpture Sigur Rós John Donne Calvin College NEA Kathleen Adcock Cisco Kid Animals Dillon Gallery Interview Cezanne Lane Smith James Deahl Daniel Hoffman Player Piano Bamian caves by Madeleine L'Engle Word Art I Shall Be Released Math Denise Levertov Fractals Bianca Rossini Seagull.To Win Mark Doty Angela Mellor Carl Sandburg Theodore Roethke Boy and Girl At The End Of Paths Not Taken Family B&W Nail Art White Winter Hymnal Body Image Find Work Pencil Art Arizona Sunsets Alistair Heseltine The Fat Man Ocean WILLIAM AARNES The Shirt Emily Dickinson Robert Burns Flower Poverty Oscars Susan Springer Sunsets Jennifer Maestre Trinity Arts Conference The Lone Ranger Alice N. Persons Brooklyn Paper Cutting White As Diamonds Angela Shaw Olga's Gallery Afghanistan Naomi Shihab Nye Harriet Tubman Bread and Tulips Dale Chihuly Donald Hall Vladimir Tatlin Dennis Sampson weaving Kevin Young Backwards Beach In Camera 50 People New Yourk City paper sculpture Legos Black and White Rita Dove Children in a Field Train Station Color Holocaust Robert Hayden Western Sunsets Camera Toss Art Makato Fujimura 1 Question Ox Cart Man Cristians In The Visual Arts Birthday Flirtation
Tag Archives: Pane e tulipani
Pane e tulipani: Bread and Tulips

A friend of mine just sent me the following:
“If you haven’t seen this movie, you need to add it to your (large) to be seen list. Italian with english subtitles. It was funny and touching. Good for the next cold winter night. If we get any more of those! Maybe you have to be Italian to really understand. But this is a delightfully funny picture with moments of tenderness and pathos, a quintessentially Italian approach to the bored housewife story. It’s also a wonderful view of Venice from an Italian perspective. It’s a bit of a fantasy, a bit of a fem-flick, a bit of a travelogue. I’ve been to Italy several times. This movie makes me want to go back again. Bravissimo!”
The movie she refers to is Pane e tulipan, or Bread and Tulips in English and since we share some of the same interest the movie has now been added to my Netflix queue. Once seen for myself, I’ll let you know what I think; but remember my list is “large” so it may be awhile.

Recent Comments