Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by Location (Oslo) Matches
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- Title: Lecture: On the Reality of Higher Worlds
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- pain; but such experiences are essential and the Spiritual Scientist
- something like deep pain, universal privation.
- against this pain, be ready to bear it valiantly and resolutely.
- What, then, is this pain that is experienced in all reality? It is
- the pain experienced by the spiritual investigator. And precisely
- involved, including his feeling and willing, this pain is an
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 9
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- was painted for man by the Initiates in the picture of the ‘Twilight
- Title: Lecture: The World Development in the Light of Anthroposophy
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- objective. When I look upon a wonderfully painted picture, it
- face one of Raphael's Madonnas or one of Leonardo's paintings
- as a reflection of the real feeling, though it is painful enough
- particularly hurt and pained at reproaches made to him on account
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 3. The inner Life of the Folk Spirits. Formation of the Races.
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- situation, namely, the severance of Portugal from Spain, where a
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 11. Nerthus, Freyja and Gerda.
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- Christianity has passed through its growing pains, it will develop
- Title: Fifth Gospel (1950): Lecture III
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- unceasing pain becomes aware that the body is steadily
- Title: Fifth Gospel (1950): Lecture IV
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- through any gateway that was either painted or had images in
- certain extent recognised by the outside world, unpainted gates
- enter the city. If an Essene came to a painted gate he must
- Title: Eternal Soul of Man in the Light of Anthroposophy
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- will experience something like a deep pain of the soul. And the
- true higher knowedge is actually born out of this pain.
- is born out of pain. And you must gradually acquire the
- endurance to win against this pain.
- against the pain, then he will learn as a spiritual researcher
- pain, to do without this physical-sensory world. Then you get a
- You have to be a painter to paint a
- beautiful picture, but you do not have to be a painter to judge
- little as one needs to be a painter in order to judge the
- Title: Cosmic Forces in Man: Lecture III: The Mission of the Scandanavian Peoples
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- the modern world this is a cause of deep pain to anyone who
- British Isles, France, Spain, Italy, Sicily and North Africa.
- Title: Colour: Part Three: Colours as Revelations of the Psychic in the World
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- Steiner's insights into the nature of color, painting and artistic
- presses on one as light and colour; one becomes a painter. The source
- of painting is opened of its own accord by means of such a view. And
- of colour, one becomes a painter, who paints with his inner soul, for
- the luster of the psychic. When we paint a surface blue, we are
- satisfied only if we paint it strong at the edged and weaker in the
- produce the form out of the colour, that is, to paint out of the world
- occur to use to paint the soul element in a picture otherwise than by
- If you appreciate from this standpoint the painters of the
- And, above all, there was present something else. In the painting
- echoed in the Renaissance painting, there was that inner perspective
- takes the object it represents into the distance. We paint
- in the material element in space, wanted to paint in it also.
- the natural element in painting. For the surface belongs also to the
- materials of a painter, for he works upon it. But an artist must
- fact that the painter's material is the surface. And the surface can
- and indeed added something powerful to the old aesthetics of painting.
- return to a more spiritual interpretation of painting also, so that we
- Title: Foundations of Anthroposophy: Lecture II: Man in the Light of Anthroposophy
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- through pain, sickness, and so forth. This is the case when the
- only dives down as far as the point where pain arises in the
- our happiness and unhappiness, our joy and pain in life
- Title: Foundations of Anthroposophy: Lecture III: World Development in the Light of Anthroposophy
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- are objective. When I look upon a wonderfully painted picture,
- paintings with a purely analytical artistic understanding,
- is painful enough for many people, becomes immeasurably
- particularly hurt and pained at reproaches made to him with
- Title: Lecture I: Man in the Light of Occultism
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- come forward among mankind have had to take pains to make themselves
- any man who has sound and healthy judgment and takes pains to master
- Title: Lecture II: Man in the Light of Occultism
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- of consciousness even the memories and the symbolic paintings of the
- Title: Lecture III: Man in the Light of Occultism
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- it gives us pain and pleasure that it begins even to sting and burn
- Title: Lecture VII: Man in the Light of Occultism
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- characteristic. You have a dream and wake up with a pain in your head;
- perceives in dream? then we must answer: Whatever is painful or out of
- knowledge of the ordinary external painful conditions of his inside,
- Title: Lecture VIII: Man in the Light of Occultism
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- of a kind to occasion joy or pain, can never be trusted as guides. The
- the founder of any religion and take pains to understand him, you will
- Title: Lecture IX: Man in the Light of Occultism
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- the movements that take place within him. The pupil must take pains to
- Title: Lecture X: Man in the Light of Occultism
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- took pains to describe more especially scenes that are less remote
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part III: Christiania, 10-5-'13
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- they were too weak. But a modern exoteric is strong. He paints a
- or fast-living men. Such thoughts give him a pain, because he feels
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part II: Oslo, 6-16-10
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- the rest of mankind to ease their soul pains as torture, as a result
- means to anesthetize physical pains to make them disappear. But they
- that no force is lost, and the force of pain doesn't get lost
- either — it just has an effect in other regions. The pains come
- back as soul agony. Men will have to go through strong soul pains,
- Title: Lecture III: WORLD-PENTECOST: The Message of Anthroposophy
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- can truly be called great is born from pain, from inner travail. When
- the higher worlds, the goal can be reached only by experiencing pain.
- free from the oppression of pain, no man can come to know the
- their sight. And out of this pain, out of this infinite sorrow, there
- sorrow, through pain.
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture VII
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- Steiner's extraordinary insights on architecture, sculpture, painting,
- artistically in sculpture, painting, music, poetry.
- painters gave Mary Magdalene a color of gown different from that of
- perceived by a painter living wholly in his medium.
- painters. The very source of painting opens up. With great inner joy
- we meet architecture, sculpture, the art of costuming and painting when
- architecture, sculpture and painting, we now penetrate into his
- to fashion it artistically by means of architecture, sculpture, painting,
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture VIII
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- Steiner's extraordinary insights on architecture, sculpture, painting,
- I went on to explain the experience of color in painting, and took pains
- and white. Indeed, we become painters through a soul experience of the
- each individual color tries to convey. When we paint with blue we feel
- satisfied only if we paint it darker at the edge and lighter toward
- we learn to paint sensitively.
- than paint it a yellow which decreases in strength toward its edge.
- its center. From this point of view one can appreciate the painters
- paintings of earlier periods one finds the inner or color-perspective
- blue retreats into the distance. When we employ red and blue we paint
- into account sizes in space. Now distant things were painted not blue
- to paint in those elements.
- of painting. The plane surface is a vital part of the painter's media.
- is true of color. The painter feels the plane surface only if the third
- an important element to the ancient art of painting. But today it is
- time for painting to return to a more spiritual conception, to return
- the sculptor in three-dimensional space and the painter on a
- a parallel transition: on the one hand, in painting the spatial perspective
- art of costuming, sculpture and painting, to those of the inner world,
- Title: The Fifth Gospel: Lecture III
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- who sees his body weaken and die under extreme pain, so the
- That pain
- poured out on the apostles at Pentecost. From that pain was
- Title: The Fifth Gospel: Lecture IV
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- which had been painted or were even close to graven images.
- of recognition, unpainted gates were made in Jerusalem so
- they could enter the city. If an Essene came to a painted
- Title: The Fifth Gospel: Lecture V
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- pains to investigate this temptation scene and would like
- profound pain came over him in the last year due to being
- accepted. We must paint this picture in our minds if we
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Five
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- then spread from Spain into Europe. This science is outstanding with
- Arabism. It comes from Spain. However, it cannot rise above a pantheism
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Eight
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- feel pain; this shows us the bearer of feelings, the astral body. Earlier,
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Ten
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- 12:2 And she being with child cried, travailing in birth, and pained to be delivered. \
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Eleven
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- paintings of the Madonna are falling to dust, even though the external
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