The Voice Under All Silences

“The Voice Under All Silences”   | Anthony Satori

“Love is the voice under all silences, the hope which has no opposite in fear; the strength so strong mere force is feebleness; the truth more first than sun more last than star.”  – E. E. Cummings

Out There

"Beach Rocks"  |  Anthony Satori

“Out There”  |  Anthony Satori

“Look at the world out there, my God, my God, look at it out there, outside me, out there beyond my face and the only way to really touch it is to put it where it’s finally me, where it’s in the blood, where it pumps around a thousand times ten thousand a day.  I get hold of it so it’ll never run off.  I’ll hold on to the world tight some day.  I’ve got one finger on it now; that’s a beginning.” Fahrenheit 451  (Ray Bradbury)  

Animal Spirits

It was suggested to me that a proper introduction was in order for my recent book Animal Spirits: A Collection of Nature Photographs.  So, please enjoy the short film above! (run time: approx. 2 minutes; video has sound)  All of the images in the video are featured in the book, plus many more… in fact, it contains almost two hundred color and black-and-white nature photographs of animals from around the world.  If just for the Emerson texts alone, however, it is easily worth the price of admission: the book features a generous selection of mind-expanding quotes carefully curated from the writings of noted transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson.

To find the book on Amazon, please click the Animal Spirits image in the right hand margin.  Or use the link here:  Animal Spirits by Anthony Satori.

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Dive Bar Messiahs

"Dive Bar Messiahs" | Anthony Satori

“Dive Bar Messiahs”  |  Anthony Satori

The Dive Bar Messiahs headlined last Saturday night at the Lookout Bar and Grill in Channel Islands, California, and they took the house down.  With each individual band member boasting an impressive resume, this newly-formed power trio blew the roof off the place with songs by the Doors, the Beatles and the Animals, and packed the dance floor with tunes such as their unstoppable rendition of Wild Cherry’s “Play That Funky Music.”  Against the backdrop of the Channel Islands Harbor and playing to a diverse crowd, this show was a blast for everyone attending.  Be sure to check out the Dive Bar Messiahs’ Facebook page  and find out where they’re playing next, so you can join the party!   https://www.facebook.com/divebarmessiahs

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Bright Like a Diamond

"Portrait of M"  |  Anthony Satori

“Portrait of M”  |  Anthony Satori

“The light of the sun seems to be poured down, and to be poured, indeed, in every direction, but not poured away; for this pouring is an extension, and that is why the sun’s beams are called ‘rays’ (aktines), because they are extended (ekteinesthai). 

“And what kind of thing a ray is you can readily see if you look at sunlight entering a darkened room through a narrow opening.  For it stretches out in a straight line and comes to rest, so to speak, on any solid body that intercepts it, cutting off the air that lies beyond; and there it rests, neither slipping off nor falling down.

“The pouring forth and diffusion of our understanding should follow a comparable pattern, and by no means be a pouring away, but rather, an extension; and it should not make a forcible or violent impact on the obstacles that it encounters nor sink down, but stand firm and illuminate the object that receives it, for that which fails to welcome it will deprive itself of light.”

– Marcus Aurelius

Magic and Beauty

“Purple Skates”  |  Anthony Satori

“The appearance of things changes according to our emotions.  Thus we see magic and beauty in them, while the magic and beauty are really in ourselves.” – Khalil Gibran

As an artist, my vocation is to create images that reveal to you the magic and beauty that pulses through the world around us.  But perhaps what I am really doing is revealing the magic and beauty in you.

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Icarus

"Icarus"  |  Anthony Satori

“Icarus”  |  Anthony Satori

Whoever said that man was not meant to fly must have never been to a skate park.

To see someone get this kind of air on the sheer force of momentum, wheels and skill is exhilarating.  It brings to mind the oft-quoted words of airman and poet John Magee, “I broke the surly bonds of earth, and touched the face of God.”

John Gillespie Magee, Jr. was an American test pilot who tested fighter planes for the Royal Canadian Air Force in World War II.  His poem High Flight (1941) was inspired by test flights in the U.K. where his task was to fly high-performance planes straight up into the air, as fast and as high as he could, until the engine failed.  He would then recover control of the plane on the way down, restart the engine, and land.  Reaching higher into the sky than probably anyone before them, the pilots who performed these tests certainly had a unique perspective on the heavens.  In fact, the final line of the poem came to Magee just as he was reaching peak altitude of 30,000 feet in a Spitfire Mk1.  Upon safely landing the plane, he returned to his desk and finished writing the poem.  Sadly, only a few months later, during a similar flight test there was a mid-air collision, and, unable to eject because of a mechanical error with the plane’s canopy, Magee died in the crash.  He died doing what he loved, however, and he served the Allies bravely.  He also left us with some immortal lines of poetry.

Interestingly, there is a lesser-known line that Magee also wrote, but which is almost always left out when people quote the poem.  Even though the words as quoted are impactful, the omitted line has always provided an important dimension to the poem’s meaning, for me, so I have decided to include it here for you.  With the additional middle line, Magee’s poem reads,  “I broke the surly bonds of earth, reached out my hand, and touched the face of God.”  [my emphasis]  It seems to me that the reaching out of the hand is a vital part of the act.  We can fly high, yes, but unless we reach out our hand, perhaps we can never hope to touch the face of God.  We should aspire, most definitely, but then we must also take action, take risk, reach out our hand.  It seems to me that there is a very important message contained in this line, namely: the Universe responds to the reach.

So even if we are not leaping through the air on a skateboard, or climbing 30,000 feet in a fighter plane, we can each find inspiration to reach for new heights in our own lives.  And as we do, we should keep this in mind:  It is not the nature of the task, but the quality of the striving, that is of the essence.

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Gentle Beginnings

"Gentle Beginnings"  |  Anthony Satori

“Gentle Beginnings”  |  Anthony Satori

So here we are, approaching the Vernal Equinox, the beginning of Spring.  It is a time for renewal, for re-simplification, for immersing our senses in the vibrancy of life all around us.  It is a time to fall in love, again, with the simple pleasures of being alive: warm air, sunshine, the sky and the sea… music, friends, food and conversation.  It is a time to begin sowing fresh seeds of hope, cultivating nascent sparks of interest and desire, and cherishing the gentle beginnings of robust flowers.

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