
Agnes Martin

Agnes Martin
Sylvia Plath


bell hooks from All About Love
H. Giacomelli, L’Oiseau (Bird), 1856, ink on paper
Gaston Bachelard, The Poeticsof Space, trans. Maria Jolas (Boston: Beacon Press, 1964)
Louise Bourgeois, Fee Couturiere, ca. 1963, plaster
“’We bring our lares with us’: Bodies and Domiciles in the Sculpture of Louise Bourgeois” by Elyse Speaks
Andrea Dworkin | Our Blood
Clarice Lispector | The Passion According to G.H.
Anne Carson | Economy of the Unlost
From “Historical and developmental roots of female dependency” by Marcia Westkott
me doing stand up: here’s a funny thing i’ve noticed: sometimes when you’re dreaming, you know it is a dream. you see the precious split right down the middle, between sense and magic, and you can hold there in that wonder before you wake up.
audience: we are dreaming with you.