What Surprising Meaning Is in Reality–& People!

This Dramatic Presentation of Aesthetic Realism, will feature: “Aesthetic Realism Looks at Communication” by Eli Siegel, which has this:“Communication is the way a person makes his or her thoughts part of another person’s life, or thoughts. But people can live together for years and really not transmit what they feel to each other….You have to respect and like what you express yourself to before the job of communication can have a fair chance.”

And—“Do You Think Women Are Facts?” A reenactment of an Aesthetic Realism Lesson.  In it Eli Siegel asks this crucial question: “Do you think, Mr. Byrnes, the reason you suffer from women is, you want to enjoy them but you don’t want to be just to them?”

And “The Surreal Is Everyday: The Art of René Magritte,” by the noted artist Chaim Koppelman (1920-2009). He says: “In Magritte’s The Golden Legend, loaves of bread insist on being looked at anew as they float by a window.  Bread on the table we can take for granted,but bread floating by a window—Voila!  A happening.”

—And there will be more!











When: Sat., Nov. 16, 2019 at 8:00 pm
Where: Aesthetic Realism Foundation
141 Greene St.
212-777-4490
Price: $10 suggested contribution
Buy tickets/get more info now
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This Dramatic Presentation of Aesthetic Realism, will feature: “Aesthetic Realism Looks at Communication” by Eli Siegel, which has this:“Communication is the way a person makes his or her thoughts part of another person’s life, or thoughts. But people can live together for years and really not transmit what they feel to each other….You have to respect and like what you express yourself to before the job of communication can have a fair chance.”

And—“Do You Think Women Are Facts?” A reenactment of an Aesthetic Realism Lesson.  In it Eli Siegel asks this crucial question: “Do you think, Mr. Byrnes, the reason you suffer from women is, you want to enjoy them but you don’t want to be just to them?”

And “The Surreal Is Everyday: The Art of René Magritte,” by the noted artist Chaim Koppelman (1920-2009). He says: “In Magritte’s The Golden Legend, loaves of bread insist on being looked at anew as they float by a window.  Bread on the table we can take for granted,but bread floating by a window—Voila!  A happening.”

—And there will be more!

Buy tickets/get more info now