Jul 29, 2018

July

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jul 20, 2018

Nature

"Close your eyes, prick your ears, and from the softest sound to the wildest noise, from the simplest tone to the highest harmony, from the most violent, passionate scream to the gentlest words of sweet reason, it is Nature who speaks, revealing her being, her power, her life, and her relatedness so that a blind person, to whom the infinitely visible world is denied, can grasp an infinite vitality in what can be heard." J. Wolfgang von Goethe, cited by Andrea Wulf (2016), The Invention of Nature: the adventures of Alexander von Humboldt, the lost hero of science. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jun 27, 2018

June

Lombardia, september 2017
Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jun 26, 2018

June

“The free-radical theory of ageing is one of those beautiful ideas killed by ugly facts. (…) Not one tenet of the theory, as it was originally formulated, has withstood the scrutiny of experimental testing. (…) The findings are clear. Taking high-dose antioxidant supplements carries a modest but consistent risk. (…) Antioxidants can undermine energy availability.” Nick Lane, 2016. The Vital Question: why is life the way it is? Profile Books Ltd, London. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jun 21, 2018

summer

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

June


"(...) the power for growth comes from the reactivity of the environment,  wich fluxes continuously through living cells  (in the form of food and oxygen in our case, photons of light in the case of plants). Living cells couple this continuous energy flux to growth, (...) through ingenious structures, in part specified by genes. But whatever those structures may be (...), they are themselves the outcome of growth and replication, natural selection and evolution, none of which is possible in the absence of a continuous energy flux from somewhere in the environment." Nick Lane, 2016). The Vital Question: why is life the way it Is? Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

June

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jun 20, 2018

June


"The fact that something so fragile, so unbearably tender had survived, had been allowed to exist, was a miracle." Arundhati Roy, The God of small things. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jun 19, 2018

June


"After all, what can we ever gain in forever looking back and blaming ourselves if our lives have not turned out quite as we might have wished?" Kazuo Ishiguro, 1989. The Remains of the Day. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jun 12, 2018

June

"Over time he had acquired the ability to blend into the background (...) It usually took strangers a while to notice him even when they were in the same room with him. It took them even longer to notice that he never spoke. Some never noticed at all" Arundhati Roy (2017). The God of small things. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jun 1, 2018

June

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

May 24, 2018

success

"To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children; to earn the appreciation of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false friends; to appreciate beauty; to find the best in others; to leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition; to know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded!” Ralph Waldo Emerson. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

May 21, 2018

Day



May 5, 2018. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

May 15, 2018

May

"Photographs were useful, but somehow always confirmed the memory rather than liberating it." Julian Barnes, 2018, The only story. May 15, 2018. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Apr 30, 2018

smoothly overlaying

"(...) there are memories that seem to run like a film, smoothly overlaying all the others, that have such shape and form that you suspect that they are inventions and may have created themselves, and within them your own identity even begins to slide and fade, and is liable to change as in a dream." Georgina Harding, 2009, The spy game. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Apr 21, 2018

time out

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Apr 17, 2018

Agency

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Mar 20, 2018

A new cycle

"We are back to family, to the life cycle, to human fragility and experience (...) above all, the virtues of appreciating relationships with all their attendant conflict, ambivalence, and meaning." Sherry Turkle,  2005. The Second Self: computers and the human spirit. MIT, Twenty Anniversary Edition, 298. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC

Mar 17, 2018

living frame



Doing what I know, the best I can, with what I have, wherever I am. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC).

Mar 14, 2018

diversity

Edible forest: fire prevention, energy production (biomass), carbon storage, growth of local resources (less energy/fuel consumption for transportation of outside resources, conditions to attract workers/residents), earth conservation (reflorestation, soil conservation, increased species, better air quality), carbon negative, odorific, beautiful... Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Mar 12, 2018

creative assemblages

"More than conversation at the interface, it is creative assemblages like these that explore and elaborate the particular dynamic capacities that digital media afford and the ways that through them humans and machines can perform interesting new effects (...) in uniquely particular ways." Lucy Suchman, Human-machine reconfigurations: plans and situated actions, 2009, 281. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Feb 28, 2018

February in the garden

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Feb 22, 2018

connectivity

"How many millions of other activities begin and end at the same time? How many other «facts» converge in just the right way, creating symbolic connectivity?" Noah Hawley, 2017. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Feb 19, 2018

Edifício L

"Life is a series of decisions and reactions. It is the things you do and the things that are done to you. And then its over." Noah Hawley, 2017. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Feb 14, 2018

Feb 13, 2018

living

Life is a distraction from death. Save energy. Adapt fast. Diversity is key for survival. Take some, leave some. Share surplus. Live in harmony. Love. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Feb 10, 2018

mindfulness

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Feb 3, 2018

February in the garden

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Feb 2, 2018

February


"Life is made of this moments - of one's physical being moving through time and space - and we string them together in a story, and that story becomes our life" but, "what if instead of a story told in consecutive order, life is a cacophony of moments we never leave? What if the most traumatic or the most beautiful experiences we have trap us in a kind of feedback loop, where at least some part of our minds remains obsessed, even as our bodies move on?" Noah Hawley, 2017, Before the Fall. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jan 28, 2018

January in the garden

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

January in the garden

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

January

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jan 27, 2018

January in the garden

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jan 15, 2018

January in the garden

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jan 13, 2018

January in the garden

Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)

Jan 11, 2018

Stillness in a mobile world


Stillness:"an ethical choice between stillness as first aid for an overactive world, and stillness as a real slowing down". Bissell, David, and Gillian Fuller (2013). Stillness in a mobile world. London New York: Routledge. Image by Monica Pinheiro, license CC BY-NC-SA (CC)