Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Art Market: Tidbits From Spring Auctions 2026 @ Sotheby`s New York


 (Drivebycuriosity) -  It`s May again and the world`s largest auction houses have their annual huge spring auctions in Manhattan. This post focuses on Sotheby`s (sothebys). As usual quality & quantity of the displayed art works were overwhelming and admission was free. I display here just my favorites, a very subjective selection.

 


A Rothko is always an invitation to meditate. I start this post with Mark Rothko`s "Brown and Blacks in Reds"
(1957, oil on canvas, 90 ½ by 60 ⅝ in/.229.9 by 154 cm). The extimated auction price is$70.000,000 - 100,000,000. Then follows Jean-Michel Basquiat`s "Museum security (Broadway Meltdown)". 

 




Above follow three of my favorite artists: Mark Tansey with "Continental Divide"; Adrian Ghenie with "The Blue Rain" & Walton Ford with "The Frontier".

 


Above you can sea Anna Güntner`s "Błąd (Error)
". 

 



Above follow Romare Bearden`s "Early Carolina Morning" (collage, watercolor, pen and pencil on paper laid down on board) & Yu Nishimura`s "Leaves Carpet".

 


There was also a Francis Bacon:"Two Studies for Self Portrait".

 


 

Isn`t she lovely: Francis Picabia`s "Téte Femme".

 




 

No art show without nudes: Leonor Fini`s "Portrait de Alida Vall II" plus 2 paintings by Lisa Yusakavage: "Ludlow Street" & "Photoshoot". 


Enjoy! 

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Science Fiction: A Canticle For Leibowitz Revisited



 (Drivebycuriosity) - Decades ago I enjoyed Walter Miller Jr.´s classic novel "A Canticle for Leibowitz". Recently I read it again and enjoyed it less ( amazon). 

The book was published in the year 1960 when the cold war was getting hotter and fostered the fears of a global nuclear conflict. The plot - set in the deserts of the south west of the northern American continent - starts centuries after a devastating worldwide nuclear war that had destroyed the existing civilizations and continues over 600 centuries.

The radioactive deluge, the fallout, destroyed not only the civilization, it also changed the genes of many survivors, causing "grotesque creatures who prowled the fringes of the desert and often wore hoods, masks, or voluminous robes to hide deformity". The apocalypse also inspired a widespread hate not only on technology and scientists, but also on all knowledge.

As a result the northern American continent was "very thinly populated by the people of the forest and the plain, who were, for the most part, not savages, but simple clanfolk, loosely organized into small communities here and there, who lived by hunting, gathering, and primitive agriculture, whose birth rate was barely high enough (discounting monster-births and sports) to sustain the population. The principal industries of the continent, excepting a few seacoast regions, were hunting, farming, fighting, and witchcraft-the last being the most promising “industry” for any youth with a choice of careers and having in mind as primary ends, maximum wealth and prestige".

The novel focuses on the "New Roman" Catholic Church that is working to restore civilization. The plot focuses on the monks of a remote monastery who aim to preserve literacy and learning throughout a black millennium.

"It did not matter to these monks that the knowledge they saved was useless, that much of it was not really knowledge now, was as inscrutable to the monks in some instances as it would be to an illiterate wildboy from the hills; this knowledge was empty of content, its subject matter long since gone. Still, such knowledge had a symbolic structure that was peculiar to itself, and at least the symbol-interplay could be observed. To observe the way a knowledge-system is knit together is to learn at least a minimum knowledge-of-knowledge, until someday-someday, or some century -an Integrator would come, and things would be fitted together again".

 

                   A Flame Of Knowledge 

After many centuries that Dark Age seemed to be passing. A small flame of knowledge had been kept smoldering in the monasteries, confirming proud thinkers that had claimed that valid knowledge was indestructible and that ideas were deathless and truth immortal. But was the consequence?  Does history repeat?

The novel raises the question, are we doomed to do it  (the nuclear Armageddon ) again and again and again? "Have we no choice but to play the Phoenix, in an unending sequence of rise and fall? Assyria, Babylon, Egypt, Greece, Carthage, Rome, the Empires of Charlemagne and the Turk. Ground to dust and plowed with salt. Spain, France, Britain, America-burned into the oblivion of the centuries. And again and again and again".

I liked the early parts of the book better than the finish. The plot starts mysterious, spiced with humor, but later the author focused too much on his doom message. 
 


P.S. I couldn`t help to notice that history as we know it worked quite in the opposite direction. The rise of Christianity helped to destroy the Roman Empire and therefore the civilization in Europe (I explained it here). Europe`s Dark Age, the middle ages, where aggravated by the Roman Catholic Church, that fought violently to monopolize knowledge and blocked any progress with the terror of inquisition. Over centuries religious zealots were hunting down and burning hereditists & alleged witches.