Passionate Perceptions II: The Evolution of Myth in Poetry and Painting
Judson Scruton
NOTE TIME CHANGE DUE TO PLANNED POWER OUTAGE
Thursday, February 23, 1 pm-2:30 pm.
Myths “those powerful ancient stories” inform and shape our understanding of underlying dynamics in individuals and societies. Poetry and painting are two art forms that have continually interpreted and reshaped those ancient myths. Except for the Bible, Homer’s Odyssey may be the seminal collection of mythic stories in the western tradition. In our presentation/discussion we will focus on four women who profoundly shaped Odysseus’s journey. By looking at these women in their extended presentations by Homer and later by other poets and painters, we will come to see a fuller picture of their mythic significance. We will look at Athena, the goddess on February 2; Circe, the sorceress on February 9; Calypso, the nymph February 16; and Penelope, the wife in Homer’s Odyssey on February 23, as well as in the work of their interpreters — such artists and poets as Klimt, Rubens, Breughel, Turner, Dossi, Lourain, Ovid, Tennyson, Cavafy, MacLeish, Clampitt, Glück and Boland. Copies of the texts to be discussed will be available at the Circulation Desk by Jan. 23, 2012. Donations welcomed. Registration essential.

Children’s Advanced Chess