Pegasus
1945
Leo Katz
This work represents the condition of the creative spirit after World War II. Pegasus, the symbol of creative inspiration, tries to escape the dominion of barbed wires and nets among concrete tank traps, while explosions continue in the distance. The dark mask creeping around the horse suggests a pelvic form, which indicates that the awakening is more like a birth. The artist questions whether the rebirth of Pegasus will be a continual success: “It is not enough to have rockets and bombers flying high in the air while man’s creative soul with its dreams is permanently grounded.”

Emma Johnson. European Cityscape, 2012. Dissected Pocket Road Atlas,(monochrome). Framed in black box frame.
5 Views of the Kremlin in Russian Art Through Time
Cathedral Square in the Moscow Kremlin
19th century
Fyodor Alekseyev
View of the Kremlin from the Krimsky Bridge in Inclement Weather
1851
Aleksey Savrasov
A Muddy Morning in the Moscow Kremlin at the Beginning of the 17th Century
1913
Apollinary Vasnetsov
Domes: The Moscow Kremlin in the 17th Century
1990
Sergei Kirillov
View of the Kremlin from the Old Town Square
1998
Vasily Igorevich Nesterenko
When you are tempted to give up, your breakthrough is probably just around the corner.
“
| — | Joyce Meyer |
In the case of good books, the point is not to see how many of them you can get through, but rather how many can get through to you.
“
| — | Mortimer J. Adler |
You can only lose something that you have, but you cannot lose something that you are.
“
| — | Eckhart Tolle (A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose) |







