Creamed on the balcony

Creamed on the balcony




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Creamed on the balcony



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James W Singer
25 April 2022 4 min Read

Carl Gustav Carus, Woman on the Balcony , 1824, Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany. Detail.
Woman on the Balcony is an intimate portrait of a person lost in thought. There is no action and no obvious story to interpret. However, its quiet stillness has a magnetic appeal. Meditation and reflection saturate the image. It is a tonic for the modern disease of overstimulation.
Carl Gustav Carus, Woman on the Balcony , 1824, Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany.
Woman on the Balcony was painted in 1824 during the height of Romanticism. Romanticism in the visual arts was from roughly 1800 to 1840. It was an era dominated by a change in attitudes towards life and art. The Age of Enlightenment was on the decline as Western society moved from reason to feeling as the new definition of freedom. Western society was beginning to value more intuition over calculation, and subjectivity over objectivity. Romantic painters like Carl Gustav Carus and Caspar David Friedrich believed that isolated figures in landscapes could evoke Romantic feelings and emotions.
Carl Gustav Carus, Woman on the Balcony , 1824, Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany. Detail.
The painting is a small quiet image. It only measures 17 by 13 inches or 42 by 32 centimeters and is composed of oil on canvas. Within the scene, a single figure sits on the balcony of a Medieval residence. The woman wears a simple black dress with few ornaments. Her head is turned away from the viewer as she faces the many hills receding into the distance. There is no movement or action in the landscape. It is a moment of pause, silence, and mystery. Is the woman waiting for someone or is she lost in her thoughts?
Carl Gustav Carus, Woman on the Balcony , 1824, Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany. Detail.
The woman’s attire is austere and somber through its lack of embellishments and color. Her dress appears to be made of plain but expensive black silk. A cheap cotton dress would not have the gloss and sheen of the woman’s dress. Only a premium silk fabric would give that lustrous effect to its cascades and folds. Around the woman’s neck is a thick black necklace. It appears to be composed of either silk or velvet. The necklace is quite long as it reaches past her shoulders down to her chest where suspends a large silver crucifix.
Carl Gustav Carus, Woman on the Balcony , 1824, Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany. Detail.
Gold hoop earrings adorn the woman’s ears. They are so plain that they are easily overlooked by the viewer as they almost blend into the golden tones of her skin. The understated style of the earrings continues in the hair comb in the woman’s hair. Her hair is modestly coiffed into a bun. The comb holds the arrangement in place at the top of her crown. The comb is dark like her dress and could be formed from cut steel, ebony wood, or jet stone. Overall the woman appears to be modestly dressed but not poorly dressed. Her refined attire adds to her wistful, melancholic, and lonely isolation.
Carl Gustav Carus, Woman on the Balcony , 1824, Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany. Detail.
To the woman’s right is the tower of a Medieval structure. It has two tall narrow windows with pointed arches known as lancet windows. The building also has a low protective wall along the edge of the roof known as a parapet. These two distinctive architectural elements are hallmark signs of the Gothic style spanning from the late 12th century to the early 16th century. Gothic buildings were widely praised during the Romantic Movement. They visually connected present viewers to the distant past. They hinted at forgotten times and lost histories.
Carl Gustav Carus, Woman on the Balcony , 1824, Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany. Detail.
Carl Gustav Carus was a friend of writer-poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and friend-student of painter Caspar David Friedrich. Goethe and Friedrich were probably the most important leaders of the Romantic Era in Germany. Carl Gustav Carus was artistically influenced by them, but he added his own psychological perspective to his paintings through his professional experience as a psychologist and medical doctor.
Carus did not rely on the deep shadows found in Friedrich’s paintings to achieve his psychological element. He relied on the stark isolation of figures and their composition implications. The woman in black is not shrouded in physical mystery, but she is shrouded in metaphysical mystery. Why is she here? What is she thinking? How is she feeling? Viewing Woman on the Balcony is like tasting expensive French vanilla ice cream. At first, it appears deceptively simple. However, there is a delicious complexity to be savored.
Carl Gustav Carus, Woman on the Balcony , 1824, Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany. Detail.
Gardner, Helen, Fred S. Kleiner, and Christin J. Mamiya. Gardner’s Art Through the Ages . 12th ed. Belmont, CA: Thomson Wadsworth, 2005.
“ Woman on the Balcony .” Collection. Galerie Neue Meister, Dresden, Germany. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
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James W. Singer is an art historian and fine art photographer. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in Art History from the University of Florida. Singer has sold works at local galleries and art shows throughout Florida. He currently writes “Masterpiece” articles for DailyArt Magazine.
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1. To be defeated thoroughly or overwhelmingly. Oh man, we got creamed last night. The final score was 17–1!
2. To get totally wrecked or destroyed. Tom's brand new car got creamed by a semitruck last night. Thankfully he's OK, but the car is a goner.
3. To get drunk. Do you remember last night at the bar at all? You got creamed by about 9 PM!
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Home Balcony Gardening Growing Tomatoes on a Balcony


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The fruits come in various colors and sizes–red, orange, brown and yellow, pear-shaped or round and also the tangy aroma of their leaves is amazing. Learn ‘ how to grow tomatoes on a balcony ‘ step by step in this article.
Good news is that all the tomato varieties are suitable for container gardening, but there are limitations like you can’t grow tomato varieties that spread and become too tall (indeterminate ones) on your balcony (don’t blame us, if we believe balconies are small). The best idea is to choose determinate varieties of tomatoes that are locally available and grown successfully.
For example, cherry tomatoes, these are extremely easy to grow, low care and produce lots of fruits in a growing season. Besides, there are many other varieties available. Go to a seed shop, check out in your nearby nursery or buy online!
Although the container size depends on the tomato variety, you’re growing. But it should be a minimum of 12 inches deep and wide in diameter.
Tomato requires full sun so place them in the sunniest position of your balcony.
Plant tomatoes in fertile soil to ensure favorable growth. You can buy a potting mix or make your own. Obtain compost or well-rotted manure, garden soil, and gravel or expanded clay for preparation.
While preparing the soil, remember it should have to be well drained, permeable, slightly acidic (pH 6-6.8) and loamy, tomatoes don’t thrive well in heavy soil. Also, mix slow release tomato fertilizer to the soil so that the plants will receive nutrition from time to time.
Either buy potted plants from the nursery or prepare your own seedlings. Sow tomato seeds when the risk of frost passes and spring arrives. (*If you live in a warm frost free sub-tropical or tropical climate you can plant and grow tomatoes year round) . Seeds will germinate quickly within 5-10 days. Transplant them in containers when two real leaves form.
Tomatoes are heavy feeders, even if you’ve already applied slow release fertilizer you’ll still need to feed them later.
Best time to fertilize tomatoes is when you’ll see a lot of foliage growth but fewer fruits or flowers in comparison or the time when the plant looks leggy and leaves turn yellow.
Fertilize in less amount, but more often, it is the secret of high yield of tomatoes.
Fertilize once in a week or two according to the needs of your plant.
Apply liquid fertilizers according to the packet instructions. Morning time is best.
Be sure to choose a fertilizer with a higher content of potassium and phosphorus. For those who appreciate organic vegetables, use natural fertilizers like well-rotted manure, compost or bio-humus.
Tomatoes on the balcony constantly need moist soil as balconies remain windier than regular gardens.
Regular watering of tomato plants is essential, even twice on a dry, windy day in summer in a hot climate.
Water tomatoes in a way that it’ll not soak their leaves. Wet leaves are the leading cause of blight and other fungal diseases.
1. Remove suckers time to time during growth as they drain the nutrition of plants and prevent fruiting and flowering.
2. If you’re growing tall varieties, you’ll need to support them: use cage or trellis, you can also tie them to railings of your balcony.
3. The best temperature for growing tomatoes is when it ranges between 50F to 95F (10C-35C). Temperature below or above this is not very suitable for growing tomatoes.
What about inderminate variety with cage, trellis or.a stake support in a terrace container?
Would love to have some free seeds if anyone has any.


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He told her the crowds were desperate to see her.
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More details are emerging about the Queen’s final Buckingham Palace balcony appearance to close the Platinum Jubilee last Sunday—and they are heartwarming.
After appearing on the balcony twice on Thursday for Trooping the Colour, Her Majesty was sidelined at Windsor Castle for most of the rest of the weekend due to ongoing physical mobility issues and discomfort. She missed Friday’s Service of Thanksgiving in her honor at St. Paul’s Cathedral, the Derby at Epsom Downs and the Platinum Party at the Palace on Saturday, and the Platinum Jubilee Pageant on Sunday—and we might not have seen her at all on Sunday were it not for eldest son Prince Charles, multiple outlets report.
“The Queen only decided that she would go to London about three hours before the balcony appearance,” an insider told the Mail on Sunday , via The Sun . “She was not feeling brilliant, but the Prince of Wales had called her and told her she really ought to come if she could. He told her there were so many people desperate to see her and he convinced her to come.”
After massive crowds turned out for Trooping the Colour Thursday, they were back in full force for her third and final balcony appearance Sunday, and Her Majesty is said to have had tears in her eyes moments before stepping out on the iconic balcony to close the Platinum Jubilee, as crowds below sang “God Save the Queen” to her.
“The Queen was totally overwhelmed by the number of people waiting to see her,” the outlet reports. “She had tears in her eyes before she stepped out on the balcony.”
The Daily Mail says Her Majesty was “tearful and overwhelmed with emotion” at the public’s reaction to her historic 70-year reign. Dressed in a bright green Stewart Parvin crepe wool dress and coat with a matching hat by Rachel Trevor-Morgan, Her Majesty poignantly stood beside her three heirs—Prince Charles, Prince William, and Prince George—and their families for this moment in history. The Daily Mail reports that “it may be the last time that all four generations are seen on such a high-profile occasion.”
The Queen is expected to spend a long summer break in Scotland, where Craigowan Lodge, a stone cottage on the Balmoral Estate, has been fitted out with mobility aides, including a stair lift, The Daily Mail reports. Tomorrow, she plans to be at the investiture for the Order of the Garter, though she will not join the procession or attend the service at St. George’s Chapel in Windsor.
And, for his part, says royal historian Robert Lacey, Charles’ future role as king was visible throughout the Platinum Jubilee, he told PEOPLE .
“[The Queen]
Jeny Smith - nieruchomość
Rozdzielając dupę tej blondyny na części
Ciemnowłose świnki chętne na figle i seks swawole

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