VA - Couple & two teens found murdered, Farmville, 15 Sept 2009 #6

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  • #1,141
Do you guys know Stanislav Szukalski? He's dead now, but was a fabulously talented nutcase who believed in a single source for all the world's languages. His artwork and theories are fascinating, but I'm not sure I buy any of his conclusions. The "flood" figures prominently.

http://unurthed.com/2007/12/23/szukalskis-science-of-zermatism/

Yes! I heard about him through this site: http://www.miqel.com which also has some works of Paul Laffoley who I am a big fan of. Check out Laffoley if you don't already know his work: http://www.miqel.com/laffoley-posters/index.htm
 
  • #1,142
ancestors-stan-szukalski.jpg

Ancestor
 
  • #1,143
I've seen Laffoley's work before. He was trained as an architect, and that just jumps out at me from his work for some reason. It looks like a typical 70's - early 80's postmodernist rendering. Someone gave me a Helmut Jahn postcard a coupe of days ago. I can't find that online, but this is the same sort of thing. You may see the resemblance.
4979_174192.jpg

Modernism has definite roots in eastern European mysticism and early post-modernists would have trained under committed modernists. Jahn's work, at least on paper clearly shows traces of that mystical tradition, but I doubt very much if he would be aware of it or even care. I personally really despise that sort of illustration for some reason that I can't quite figure out myself. It may be it's lack of awareness that bothers me. Earlier architects like Feiniger, Taut, or Scharoun were much more intentional in what they proposed and aware of that history. They also worked at a time when electric light wasn't something to be taken for granted, so that certainly has something to do with their infatuation with light.

Feininger
lyonel_feininger_cathedral_wood-cut_for_the_bauhaus_manifesto_1919-267x4281.jpg


Taut
Taut_3.jpg


Scharoun
Scharoun_13.jpg
 
  • #1,144
Pax, i just want to say, my favorite film is Blue Velvet. We're so similar it's creepy.

Btw, Pax, you're like me.
 
  • #1,145
Yes Laffoley was trained as an architect, but now he is painting the architecture of the mind. I was fortunate enough to see two of his paintings up close in a private collection a few years back and they made a big impression on me. First, they are large. As big as a man in fact. Second, there is something about his paintings that seems to operate at the unconscious level much like a Tibetan thangka. I spent a good part of the evening looking at one painting which describes the construction of a time machine. After looking at this for painting for good while one starts to have the idea that you understand what Laffoley is saying and you want to go and try and build a time machine. But this feeling dissipates as soon as you notice it, like a reflection in a lake disturbed by a pebble. Weird effect.
 
  • #1,146
So for those that weren't fans of the show Twin Peaks, this place is called Glastonberry Grove and the pool of liquid in the center was a sort of portal or entrance to the Black Lodge. The Black Lodge was evil and it spread evil influences in the town of Twin Peaks in the show. This evil influence resulted in multiple murders as well. Some people think the Black Lodge was supposed to be hell or at least that is one possible interpretation of the Black Lodge.

It has been years since I saw this show, but the episodes that involved the Black Lodge were some of the more memorably weird ones. FWIW.

vlcsnap1531307ix1.jpg

Yeah! We have one of these. Some people call it Holiday lake. Happy Holidays everyone. Big month coming up. Anyone want to predict how it is going to go down?
 
  • #1,147
Yeah! We have one of these. Some people call it Holiday lake. Happy Holidays everyone. Big month coming up. Anyone want to predict how it is going to go down?

My prediction: doesn't go to trial, plea deal is life with (edited to add: MAYBE) eligibility for parole in 30 years.
 
  • #1,148
My prediction: doesn't go to trial, plea deal is life with eligibility for parole in 30 years.

I agree. I am having a real hard time seeing them take this to trial.
 
  • #1,149
I don't think anyone on the prosecution side that has to show his face in Farmville is going to leave a possibility for Sam to get out on parole if he can help it. I say multiple life sentences with almost no chance of parole if it isn't a capital murder trial. He gets death if he goes to trial. "Jesus made me do it" just wasn't a very smart thing to say.
 
  • #1,150
Updated: 9:57 PM Sep 18, 2009

Rash Of Dead Cats In Farmville
We're told that four to five cats turn up dead in a week. Many of the cats were on their owner's property when they were mutilated.

Farmville police first thought it was a pack of wild dogs in the area killing cats, then officers realized it's a pet owner, who is letting their dogs out at night. Officers say now, they hope to find the owner responsible.

Chief Greene says if the dog owner is found responsible for allowing the dogs to run free they could face a fine of up to $175 dollars.

http://www.witn.com/news/headlines/59801357.html?storySection=story
 
  • #1,151
I don't think anyone on the prosecution side that has to show his face in Farmville is going to leave a possibility for Sam to get out on parole if he can help it. I say multiple life sentences with almost no chance of parole if it isn't a capital murder trial. He gets death if he goes to trial. "Jesus made me do it" just wasn't a very smart thing to say.

I forgot a very important "maybe" in my prediction.
 
  • #1,152
Yeah! We have one of these. Some people call it Holiday lake. Happy Holidays everyone. Big month coming up. Anyone want to predict how it is going to go down?

In the show the portal was more like a small puddle than a lake. And it smelled like machines or oil if I recall correctly.

As far as Farmville area lakes, I was more interested in the Sandy River Reservoir where an unidentified body was found back in April 2008 but YMMV I guess.
 
  • #1,153
Yeah! We have one of these. Some people call it Holiday lake. Happy Holidays everyone. Big month coming up. Anyone want to predict how it is going to go down?

hmmm....Dangers are you ready?

A "painter's holiday" is a void left when a painter puts on a fresh coat of paint.

a poem on the theme...

A PAINTER'S HOLIDAY

Carman, Bliss, (1861-1929)
We painters sometimes strangely keep
These holidays. When life runs deep
And broad and strong, it comes to make
Its own bright-colored almanack.
Impulse and incident divine
Must find their way through tone and line;
The throb of color and the dream
Of beauty, giving art its theme
From dear life's daily miracle,
Illume the artist's life as well.

A bird-note, or a turning leaf,
The first white fall of snow, a brief
Wild song from the Anthology,
A smile, or a girl's kindling eye,--
And there is worth enough for him
To make the page of history dim.

Who knows upon what day may come
The touch of that delirium
Which lifts plain life to the divine,
And teaches hand the magic line
No cunning rule could ever reach,
Where Soul's necessities find speech?
None knows how rapture may arrive
To be our helper, and survive
Through our essay to help in turn
All starving eager souls who yearn
Lightward discouraged and distraught.
Ah, once art's gleam of glory caught
And treasured in the heart, how then
We walk enchanted among men,
And with the elder gods confer!
So art is hope's interpreter,
And with devotion must conspire
To fan the eternal altar fire.
Wherefore you find me here to-day,
Not idling the good hours away,
But picturing a magic hour
With its replenishment of power.

Conceive a bleak December day,
The streets all mire, the sky all gray,
And a poor painter trudging home
Disconsolate, when what should come
Across his vision, but a line
On a bold-lettered play-house sign,
A Persian Sun Dance.
In he turns.
A step, and there the desert burns
Purple and splendid; molten gold
The streamers of the dawn unfold,
Amber and amethyst uphurled
Above the far rim of the world;
The long-held sound of temple bells
Over the hot sand steals and swells;
A lazy tom-tom throbs and drones
In barbarous maddening monotones;
While sandal incense blue and keen
Hangs in the air. And then the scene
Wakes, and out steps, by rhythm released,
The sorcery of all the East,
In rose and saffron gossamer,--
A young light-hearted worshipper
Who dances up the sun. She moves
Like waking woodland flower that loves
To greet the day. Her lithe, brown curve
Is like a sapling's sway and swerve
Before the spring wind. Her dark hair
Framing a face vivid and rare,
Curled to her throat and then flew wild,
Like shadows round a radiant child.
The sunlight from her cymbals played
About her dancing knees, and made
A world of rose-lit ecstasy,
Prophetic of the day to be.

Such mystic beauty might have shone
In Sardis, or in Babylon,
To bring a Satrap to his doom
Or touch some lad with glory's bloom.
And now it wrought for me, with sheer
Enchantment of the dying year,
Its irresistible reprieve
From joylessness on New Year's Eve.

http://www.songsouponsea.com/Promenade/GnosisB.html

Francis Danby is know for his painting "Painter's Holiday, as well as "Promenade/Apocalypse"
Apocalypse_FrancisDanby.jpg


Which you will find referenced here
http://www.songsouponsea.com/Promenade/GnosisH.html

which leads to
http://www.songsouponsea.com/Promenade/GnosisB.html on the subject of "The Crimson King," which brings it all back home very nicely you will see.
 
  • #1,154
Very interesting....Sinfield's site is full of gems.

crimudra.gif


Not very surprising perhaps, but this is one of my favorite albums of that era. And I've seen these guys play live 3 or 4 times now. Spent a lot of time listening to this album and studying it way back when. What we would have given to have this site at that time.

From your link:

"A hand with index finger extended, middle finger curled to form a "C", thumb crossed over the ring finger and little finger curled into another "C" forms the letters IC XC, an abbreviation for the Greek name of Jesus Christ."

I learned about the meaning of this gesture from a religious studies major at UCSC back before their was an Internet to search for such obscure knowledge.
 
  • #1,155
"And nothing can we call our own but death
And that small model of the barren earth
Which serves as paste and cover to our bones.
For God's sake, let us sit upon the ground
And tell sad stories of the death of kings."

- William Shakespeare, King Richard II
 
  • #1,156
  • #1,157
Very interesting....Sinfield's site is full of gems.

crimudra.gif


Not very surprising perhaps, but this is one of my favorite albums of that era. And I've seen these guys play live 3 or 4 times now. Spent a lot of time listening to this album and studying it way back when. What we would have given to have this site at that time.

From your link:

"A hand with index finger extended, middle finger curled to form a "C", thumb crossed over the ring finger and little finger curled into another "C" forms the letters IC XC, an abbreviation for the Greek name of Jesus Christ."

I learned about the meaning of this gesture from a religious studies major at UCSC back before their was an Internet to search for such obscure knowledge.

I didn't explore to too much, but I figured it was the Peter Sinfield from King Crimson. Dangrs, I took you for more of a Lark's Tongues in Aspic kinda guy. I've always been a little surprised you've never referenced Gurdjieff or Ouspensky too.

A good book on the Orthodox church will have some interesting things to say about iconography if you're interested in that. I think their mental gymnastics to avoid charges of idol worship are very interesting. It's relevant to the discussion of whether symbols retain original meaning that's inseparable from them as they are passed down through history. There have been charges of heresy resulting from very slight changes in icons.
 
  • #1,158
I didn't explore to too much, but I figured it was the Peter Sinfield from King Crimson. Dangrs, I took you for more of a Lark's Tongues in Aspic kinda guy. I've always been a little surprised you've never referenced Gurdjieff or Ouspensky too.

A good book on the Orthodox church will have some interesting things to say about iconography if you're interested in that. I think their mental gymnastics to avoid charges of idol worship are very interesting. It's relevant to the discussion of whether symbols retain original meaning that's inseparable from them as they are passed down through history. There have been charges of heresy resulting from very slight changes in icons.

Well I said this was my favorite record from that era. I believe it was released in 1969 actually but it is the first incarnation of the band. Of the later records, starting with the second incarnation, my favorites would probably be Larks Tongue in Aspic as you suggested and Starless and Bible Black. I also like Red and the much later Discipline.

I read Ouspensky in college because of some of his ideas about the fourth dimension. I was studying differential geometry, relativity and Minkowski spaces at the time. And of course that's how I heard of Gurdjieff.

"Beezlebub's Tales" is sitting on my bedside table.

In fact it was my interest in the 4th dimension that lead me to major in mathematics rather than art as I had originally planned.
 
  • #1,159
16kdjwk.jpg


More info in SickTanick's upcoming release.
 
  • #1,160
I think we've discussed this before I but I didn't recall seeing the People Magazine article if it had been posted. This murder wasn't committed by Sam McCroskey and really the only thing they have in common is the fact they both happened in Farmville.

Tragically, those days came to an abrupt end on the evening of July 5. The first hint of trouble surfaced when Farmville police officer Chris Fishburne pulled over a speeding car—and spotted an ax with drops of blood on it in the passenger seat. At first Fishburne took the unkempt and clearly distraught driver for a stranger. Then he looked at the man's license and realized that the driver, unrecognizable thanks to a bushy beard and Charles Manson hair, was local farmer Reggie Varner, 53, Susan Varner's ex-husband. "I didn't recognize him, and I've known the man for close to 40 years," says Lt. Wade Stimpson, who quickly arrived on the scene.

http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20132143,00.html
 
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