Dancer Soul

"Dancer Soul"  |  Anthony Satori

“Dancer Soul”  |  Anthony Satori

“The philosopher’s soul dwells in his head.  The poet’s soul is in his heart.  The singer’s soul lingers about his throat.  But the soul of the dancer abides in all of her body.”

— Khalil Gibran

Jack Kerouac: Beat Prophet

“Vesuvio”  |  (San Francisco, CA)  |  Anthony Satori

Some people say that Jack Kerouac wasted his life.  At some level, perhaps this is true.  I certainly wish that he had lived longer.  I certainly wish that he had achieved more balance in his life while he was here.  I certainly wish that he had found more sustained happiness, experienced more enduring love, enjoyed a more consistent flow of success.  And I cannot help but wish that something or someone might have somehow kept him from drowning in depression and alcoholism toward the end.  

All of that being said, I still believe that it is a vast injustice to say that Kerouac wasted his life.  Because, for me, there is an immense redemption to be found:  it is in his words, in his books, in the substance of his work.  He was a writer, an artist, a poet.  He was given a gift by the universe, and he used it.  He had a true talent and he immersed himself in it.  He had a spark of magic inside of him and he spent every day of his life striving to share this light with the world.  This, in my opinion, is enough.  This, in my opinion, is the opposite of a wasted life.

The image above depicts a bar in San Francisco called Vesuvio, one of the favorite watering holes for the Beat Poets in the 1950’s and 1960’s.  Vesuvio is right next door to the famous City Lights Bookstore, owned and run by the great poet/publisher Lawrence Ferlinghetti.  City Lights Bookstore was the location of numerous live readings by Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder and other members of the Beat Generation, and after these readings they would often walk across the alley and have a drink (or two) at Vesuvio.  If you look closely enough at the picture above, you can see the reflection of City Lights Bookstore in the window.  And if you go inside and listen closely enough, you can still feel the spirit of Jack Kerouac spinning tales of joy, kicks and beatific mad love for life.

So, in the words of the Beat Prophet himself, “Live, travel, adventure, bless, and don’t be sorry.”

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Grand Oak Tree

"Grand Oak Tree"  |  Anthony Satori

“Grand Oak Tree”  |  Anthony Satori

“Everyone who steeps themselves in the spiritual possibilities of their art is a valuable helper in the building of the spiritual pyramid which will someday reach to heaven.” 

— Kandinsky

Mystery

"Mystery"  |  Anthony Satori

“Mystery”  |  Anthony Satori

“A poet’s pleasure is to withhold a little of his meaning, to intensify by mystification.  He unzips the veil from beauty, but does not remove it.”  

— E. B. White

Other Spirits

“Woman Walking on Stone Pathway (Bellagio, Italy)”  |  Anthony Satori

Not long ago, I visited a small lake-side town in northern Italy called Bellagio.  On an early morning stroll, I took a photograph of the rising sun washing over a stone pathway that weaved upward from the main promenade.  As I took the picture, I was struck by how this small road had surely remained essentially unchanged for years, decades, even centuries, and I was inspired by the wonder and romance of this notion.

Not long after returning to the States, I came across a relatively obscure collection of photographs taken by one of the most influential pioneers of photography from the early 20th Century, Alfred Stieglitz.  I already knew a fair amount about Stieglitz’ life and work as an early champion of photography as a legitimate medium of creative expression; however, these particular pictures had somehow escaped my experience up until now, perhaps because they were taken before he ever opened his first gallery, even before he moved to New York.

As I was enjoying the discovery of these remarkable early photographs, I ran across a particular image that caught my eye.  It was a picture that Stieglitz took of a small cobblestone pathway in a tiny lake-side town in northern Italy.  The photograph was titled, “A Road in Bellagio, 1894.”  I was amazed.  Here, over a hundred years before my having explored this small village and having taken a photograph expressing my awe at its beauty and timelessness, Stieglitz himself had walked along this very same cobblestone promenade and felt the very same creative impulse to capture an image of a small road weaving upward from its edge.  It is wonderful how art has the ability to connect us with other spirits, even over the centuries.

Here, then, are both of the images.  The image on the left is the photograph taken by me.  The image on the right is Alfred Stieglitz’ photograph, taken in 1894.

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Reference to the Soul

"Two Horses"  |  Anthony Satori

“Two Horses”  |  Anthony Satori

“I will not make a poem nor the least part of a poem but has reference to the soul.  Because having look’d at the objects of the universe, I feel there is no one nor any particle of one but has reference to the soul.” 

— Walt Whitman

O Night, O Sweetest Time

“Blackfriars Bridge at Night (London)”  |  Anthony Satori

“O night, O sweetest time, though dark of hue, with peace you force all restless work to end.  Those who exalt you see and understand, and he is sound of mind who honors you.  You send to this low sphere the dreams where we ascend up to the highest.”

— Michelangelo

Porcelain

"Porcelain"  |  Anthony Satori

“Porcelain”  |  (Pretty Girls, pg. 78)  |  Anthony Satori

“In one drop of water are found all the secrets of all the oceans; in one aspect of You are found all the aspects of existence.”

— Khalil Gibran