The Water Urn
Jean-Siméon Chardin


In an era of grandeur, Chardin turned his talents to the mundane. Large, dramatic historical scenes were prized by the academic painters of his contemporary France, and shown across the country by institutions who saw the past as an essential subject matter of value. The works were large, depicting battles, mythologies, and morals meant to stir patriotism and contemplation. Chardin rejected this idea not just in the size of his works, far smaller in scale and presentation, but in his compositional choices and the very scenes he chose to depict. Considered one of the greatest still-life painters of his generation, he was equally regarded in his genre scenes that showed maids, chefs, and the ‘back-of-house’ kept private from the eyes of the aristocracy and artistic elite. His paintings show daily life, paying respect to duty and to labour by depicting it with care and diligence. The scenes are not dramatic, though they are compositionally immaculate, but the figures are beautiful and the reverence to his subjects is clear in each brushstroke.
Saturday 4th July
The Moon moves into Aquarius, bringing air and light forces into the garden. In biodynamic practice, Aquarius is connected with the flower realm, where the plant reaches outward into colour, scent, openness, and form. However, with a lunar node occurring in the morning, biodynamic calendars often advise caution. Lunar nodes are moments when the Moon crosses the path of the Sun, and they are sometimes understood as periods of disturbance or interruption in the usual lunar influence. So today carries a mixture: the airy, flowering quality of Aquarius and Gemini, but also the sensitivity of the lunar node. A day for light, observation, gentle tending, and perhaps a little restraint before the garden’s rhythms settle again.
35 Growing - The I Ching
The potent prince is given horses...
The Infra-Ordinary
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