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@ Of Bookish Things
2025-02-24 04:59:39
YOU prefer to observe the past on which your eyes are already opened.
BUT the Future is only dark from outside.
Leap into it—and it EXPLODES with Light.
FORGET that you live in houses, that you may live in yourself—
FOR the smallest people live in the greatest houses.
BUT the smallest person, potentially, is as great as the Universe.
WHAT can you know of expansion, who limit yourselves to compromise?
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LOOKING on the past you arrive at “Yes,” but before you can act upon it you have already arrived at “No.”
-from #AphorismsOnFuturism by #MinaLoy (born Mina Gertrude Löwy; 27 December 1882 – 25 September 1966)
Loy was a British-born artist, writer, poet, playwright, novelist, painter, designer of lamps, and bohemian. She was one of the last of the first-generation modernists to achieve posthumous recognition.
Loy, a writer was known for her frank embrace of female sexuality and #FeministPolitics, joined the #Futurist movement in 1913, but she quickly encountered conflict regarding the movement’s perception of women. Her manifesto addresses those conflicts within a context of support for the movement’s forward-looking vision. Loy sees the female body as a site of resistance, and advocates affirmation and growth rather than destruction.
By 1915 Loy had left the movement, due to the #Misogyny and #Fascism she encountered there. Loy’s brief time with the futurists marks the greatest creative output of her career as a poet. “Aphorisms on Futurism” was first published in photographer #AlfredStieglitz’s magazine Camera Work in January of 1914
#Futurism #Poetry #Art #Literature #Feminism #Poets #Artists