Red Line Graphic for J. Carduner and D. Tarrow,  Aesthetic Realism Consultants
Jeffrey Carduner and Devorah Tarrow, Aesthetic Realism Consultants
Devorah Tarrow & Jeffrey Carduner
Aesthetic Realism Consultants
Red line
Red line

Aesthetic Realism Explains Matters of Our Time

Red ArrowAesthetic Realism: The Answer to Youth Violence by Jeffrey Carduner

 Like millions of people all over the nation, I have been heartbroken to hear and read about the shootings that have taken place in schools throughout our country, including in Springfield. I agree very much with U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley-Braun and the bill she is co-sponsoring, the Child Firearm Access Prevention Act, a bill that would make it illegal for any person to provide a child with uncontrolled access to a firearm. But this is not the complete answer. We have to educate ourselves and the children as to the cause of these horrible events.  ...more
 

Aesthetic Realism Seminars

Red ArrowWomen's Dissatisfaction--Can It Be Beautiful? by Devorah Tarrow

"If that computer goes down again, I'll scream!" "I never seem to meet the right person for me." I am tremendously grateful to speak tonight about "Women's Dissatisfaction--Can It Be Beautiful?" because I have learned that how we are dissatisfied has centrally to do with whether we like ourselves or not. What is the A work by Beatrice Woodbasis for our dissatisfaction? 

     And read about the ceramist Beatrice Wood, and how her work showed a beautiful dissatisfaction! ...more...

To Part 1 | To Part 2 | To Part 3 | To Part 4 | To Part 5
 

Red ArrowHow Can a Man Be Proud of the Way He Worries? by Jeffrey Carduner
Jeffrey Carduner speaks about the important matter of worry, and the great question Aesthetic Realism asks, "Does the way I worry make me kinder?"  Read about how Aesthetic Realism consultations encourage a man to understand his worries and how he uses them.  And read about how the photographer Lewis Hine used worry in America to see fairly and beautifully. 
To Part 1 | To Part 2 |To Part 3 

Red ArrowWhy Are Young Men Bored? by Jeffrey Carduner

Throughout America there are accidents and tragedies occurring because young people are bored and looking for excitement. There are injuries of young men on skate boards who get a dangerous thrill hanging on to buses; young men dare each other to ride on the tops of elevators; to take drugs. As a young man, I did hurtful and even dangerous things, because I was bored. The thing I learned through my study of Aesthetic Realism is that I had a desire, a hope to be bored, to see reality, as Mr. Siegel once so accurately described in me: "as a sucked orange." ...more
 
  • Part 1: Aesthetic Realism Asks: Why Are Young Men Bored?
  • Part 2: What a Young Man Is Learning about Boredom
  • Part 3: Boredom and Gambling; He's Learning to Like the World Honestly!
  • Red ArrowCan a Woman Respect Herself in Love and Sex? by Devorah Tarrow

    I love Aesthetic Realism with all my heart for teaching me, Yes, a woman can respect herself in love and sex--when we use love and sex as they were meant to be, to know and like the world. "The purpose of love," Eli Siegel writes in Self and World, "is to feel closely one with things as a whole." Every woman--at a health club, a restaurant, or a bar--meeting men, hoping for love--should be able to know this, and what interferes! ...more
    Red ArrowIs a Woman’s Deepest Purpose to Like the World? by Devorah Tarrow
    Aesthetic Realism taught me that the deepest thing in a woman or man is to know the world and to have as much feeling about it as possible.  If we curtail this desire, try to feel less by having contempt, making ourselves superior to people, we hurt our minds and we cannot like ourselves. Greta GarboTonight, I’m going to talk about what I learned, what a woman is learning today in Aesthetic Realism consultations, and about a woman whose great art and the incidents of her life show the debate in all of us between feeling more and feeling less--Greta Garbo. In a talk of 1975, Eli Siegel said of her:
    "When the most esteemed actress of the cinema turned her face at a certain angle, it would make for deep emotion.  She was very strong.  People felt she could handle any emotion coming her way, and then she could be as much affected as anyone has ever been." ...more
     

    Aesthetic Realism Outreach

    Presentations for Senior Women & Men by Anne Fielding & Jeffrey Carduner
    Anne Fielding and Jeffrey Carduner give talks at senior centers throughout the NYC metropolitan area, and in Florida!  See http://www.annefielding.net/Senior-Talks.html

    Also see the Speakers section at  for speakers on education, young people, music, art, anti-prejudice, and more!

    Aesthetic Realism Resources

    Red ArrowLinks to Web Sites We Have Selected

     
    Red line

    Addtional Resources

    The Aesthetic Realism Theatre Company
    Is a Person an Aesthetic Situation?" by Eli Siegel
    The Aesthetic Realism Teaching Method
    "The Ordinary Doom" by Eli Siegel
    The Terrain Gallery / Aesthetic Realism Foundation
    Aesthetic Realism Papers on Art History and Criticism
    John Singer Sargent's Madame X, an Aesthetic Realism Discussion
    A New Perspective for Anthropology: The Aesthetic Realism Method
    Friends of Aesthetic Realism—Countering the Lies
    Photography Education: the Aesthetic Realism Viewpoint
    Self-Expression and What Interferes: An Aesthetic Realism Discussion
    Aesthetic Realism vs. Racism
    Aesthetic Realism and the Answer to Racism, ed. by A. Bernstein
    The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known (TRO)
    A biography of Eli Siegel
    "Is Beauty the Making One of Opposites?" Historic 15 Questions by Eli Siegel
    A New Site!: The Beauty of NYC
    Commentary by Ellen Reiss about what American workers deserve!

    To contact webmaster
    To Aesthetic Realism Foundation Online