06/15/2026
How can we care for a world that has pain, including in personal life? On her website, Lynette Abel reports on a lecture by Eli Siegel titled "People Leave Each Other in Poetry." It is, she writes, "a stirring example of the Aesthetic Realism idea that poetry shows what it means to like the world on an honest basis, and that even the most painful, unlikable things can be given honest form in poems."
https://www.lynetteabel.org/Report-Aesthetic-Realism-Leave.html
06/10/2026
What big, important meaning does a story by a beloved American writer have for us now? See the new issue of The Rightness of Aesthetic Realism: A Periodical, titled "Yes, These Opposites Are Ours."
https://aestheticrealism.net/tro/yes-these-opposites-are-ours/
06/04/2026
In "Art As Drama," one of a series of groundbreaking essays about art, Eli Siegel writes that “Art shows the drama in things seen,” and says, “Contrast and harmony, clash and relation, thrust and blending are essential in painting.” Comparing two very different artists, he says, “Constable may seem less dramatic than Turner: but there is drama, contrast and togetherness, in Constable."
https://aestheticrealism.net/essays/art-as-drama/
Image: "The Hay Wain" by John Constable
05/30/2026
Here is the new blogpost, by NYC planner and Aesthetic Realism associate, Barbara Buehler.
“Wonder and Matter-of-Fact Meet—The Imagination of Beatrix Potter”
Aesthetic Realism consultant Marcia Rackow shows how the charming and deep work of Beatrix Potter represents imagination that is fair to the world.
05/26/2026
The eminent printmaker Chaim Koppelman—a founding member of New York's School of Visual Arts Printmaking Department and an Aesthetic Realism consultant—writes on René Magritte's works and life. In this tour de force of kind comprehension, we learn what Magritte as artist was going for, and how it differs from a lesser way of mind in the artist and in oneself.
https://aestheticrealism.org/terrain-gallery/art-history-criticism/the-surreal-is-everyday-the-art-of-rene-magritte/
05/19/2026
Streamed more than four billion times on one platform alone, Ed Sheeran’s “Thinking Out Loud” is one of the most loved songs of recent years. Why do so many people choose, for instance, to have it played at their wedding? Writer and rock ‘n’ roll critic Kevin Fennell explains what makes the song beautiful—and shows it represents what we are hoping for in our own lives.
Intensity and Ease in Ed Sheeran's "Thinking out Loud" - Rock and Roll — and Life
Like millions of people, I am very taken by Ed Sheeran’s giant hit record of 2014-15, Thinking Out Loud, and I believe the reason for its tremendous popularity is the way it puts opposites together—specifically, casualness and passion, intensity and ease, large feeling presented within a careful...
05/13/2026
Here, with the most important and hopeful understanding of love, is the May issue of The Rightness of Aesthetic Realism: A Periodical.
https://aestheticrealism.net/tro/what-is-love-about/
Image: Shahnameh, Ardashir and Gulnar,1527 (detail)
05/07/2026
It's easy to feel the world is badly made, unkind, and things get in one’s way. The poem "Meant To Be" by Eli Siegel, founder of Aesthetic Realism, asks us to reconsider that popular opinion—through its logic, warmth, and charm.
"Meant To Be"
Consider, friends, how lovingly,
One thing meets another:
As for instance, kitten a kitten,
Leaf a leaf,
Book a book,
Or planet a thing...
You can read the whole poem at the Online Library.
Meant To Be
Eli Siegel’s poems, wrote Selden Rodman in the Saturday Review, “say more (and more movingly) about here and now than any contemporary poems I have read."
05/03/2026
Registration is now underway for the summer semester of online classes offered by the Aesthetic Realism Foundation — classes in music, the visual arts, film, poetry, anthropology, and more. Not only do you learn centrally about the subject — these classes also have you authentically see the world as more friendly and understand yourself better.
Image: Scene from one of the movies taken up in the cinema class: "Casablanca," starring Ingrid Bergman & Humphrey Bogart.
“If It Moves, It Can Move You”: Opposites in the Cinema
This series shows how the art of the cinema, in its technique and meaning, and in all its diversity—from slapstick to spectacle, cinema verité to the fantastic, tragedy to comedy—is a oneness of the permanent opposites in reality. We study how such opposites as rest and motion, light and dark, ...
04/29/2026
Here is the new blogpost, by Richita Anderson, Aesthetic Realism associate and former New York State employment interviewer, on a subject everyone has feelings about.
“Work”—an Essay for Children
Richita Anderson, Aesthetic Realism associate, says: Eli Siegel presents a new seeing of this subject. He says, “The chief thing in work is its being useful.”