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         Couteau Rob:     more books (31)

21. Starcats: Rob Couteau, Astrocartography, The Least Aspected Planet In The Birth
Astrology 2000. Comprehensive astrological studies. Hot Site per Mountain Astrologer Magazine. Top articles by famous astrologers, Resource and Teaching centers, info on politics, planets, moons,
http://www.starcats.com/rcnations.html
The Role of the Least Aspected Planet in the Birth of Nations
American astrologer Robert Couteau lives in Paris where he paints, writes, and contemplates the mysteries of under-aspected planets. Referring to astrocartographpy maps as examples of "intelligent images," he was immediately drawn to their visual as well as conceptual dimension when he first started researching the biographies of notable personalities. Couteau has published essays, fiction, poetry and reviews in such publications as Astrolore; The Bloomsbury Review; Chrysalis; The European; The Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy; and James Hillman's annual collection, Spring: A Journal of Archetype and Culture. The full text of his book, The Role of the Least-Aspected Planet in Astrocartography," is available on-line at: Couteau
Please note: The Introductory essay to "The Role of the Least-aspected Planet in Astrocartography" should probably be read as a primer to what follows. The Role of the Least Aspected Planet in Astrocartography
In the chart of Israel, a state which has always suffered from economic inflation (Secondary Leader, Jupiter) we have a rather amazing portrayal of the entire recent history of this nation: The seemingly unending "spiritual yearning" (the nature of the Transcendental Planet in general) for "a homeland"; for "peace / with security" (Secondary Transcendental Moon / Primary Transcendental Venus / Tertiary Transcendental Saturn). In its Leading or most-aspected planets, we have: "The obsession with war, secret intelligence and terrorism" (Leading Pluto); as well as what might be termed an obsession with "religious / and ethical matters" on a state level (Tertiary Leader, Neptune / Secondary Leader, Jupiter).

22. Rob Couteau - Artist Portfolio At Absolutearts.com
Fine Art rob couteau contemporary arti - Painting at absolutearts.com and World Wide Arts Resources. Return to rob couteau s Main Portfolio Page
http://www.absolutearts.com/portfolios/c/couteau/artist_statement.html
Return to Rob Couteau's Main Portfolio Page Contact Information:
Rob Couteau
New York, NY
United States Send the Artist an Email
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Coming Soon! Artist Galleries:
http://ninety_seven.tripod.com/homepageenter.htm... Further Information Artist Reviews: Coming Soon! Collections: Coming Soon! Commissions: Coming Soon! Artist Statement for Rob Couteau Indepth Arts Search: Please Select A Database By Name - Artist Portfolios Title, Description - Portfolios By Location - Artist Portfolios Art News Search the Web / Websites Free Arts News Subscription Browse the Arts Artist Portfolios International Arts News ... WWAR.COM Services

23. Paul Klee's 'Lost In Thought,' By Robert Couteau
Very short essay by author rob couteau, published in The Croton Review, 1986.
http://members.tripod.com/more_couteau/klee.htm
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Paul Klee Painting Fine Art Paul Klee "Reflections on Paul Klee's 'Lost in Thought.'" by Robert Couteau
Published in: The Croton Review. R. Couteau "Lost in Thought," 1917. Lithograph Reproduction. Private collection.
Reflections on Paul Klee's "Lost in Thought"
The most unusual portrait I have ever studied is that of a tiny lithograph entitled, "Lost in Thought," a self-portrait created by the artist Paul Klee in 1919. It is unlike any other self-portrait in that, with eyes more sealed than shut, with mouth not just closed but pensively clamped, it is a visage which looks completely inward. This powerful rendition is not simply the image of a man withdrawn from the world. It is, rather, the only portrayal of man, seen from the exterior, wholly experiencing the inner world. The emphasis is so much on the world within that the outer facial facade has begun to transform into those odd forms of inner anatomy: symbol, sug­gestion, nuance. The overall feel of this bust resembles that of a well-shined bell: one poised grandly and immobile yet about to swing into clamorous revolt. In outer appearance the face is highly symmetrical, reflecting the contents of a psyche precariously balanced in the center of the world. This inner psychic symmetry is fixed between two opposites: one seeking calm, the other about to explode …

24. Love In The Time Of Cholera By Garcia Marquez: Review By Rob Couteau
Gabriel Garcia Marquez 'Love in the Time of Cholera' book review links to Marquez sites and books, complete bibliography, interviews, etexts, ebooks, by robert couteau Book review by robert couteau. Published in Arete Magazine between the fanciful flights of uncaring youth and the irrevocable termination of death. Visit rob couteau's fine arts
http://more_couteau.tripod.com/marquez.htm
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Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Book review by Robert Couteau Published in: Arete Magazine Dec. 1988.
(San Diego, CA: Alden Mills.) Robert Couteau
Love in the Time of Cholera Gabriel Garcia Marquez (Knopf)
As its title implies, Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s widely acclaimed Love in the Time of Cholera is a creative amalgam of two starkly contrasting elements: the sacredness of love and love’s embodiment in often horrific, everyday experience. Ultimately, the transcendental power of spiritual love emerges as the beautifully rendered theme of this evocative, paradoxical masterwork.
Marquez has always displayed great fortitude in his willingness to experiment and expand his stylistic repertoire. While Love in the Time of Cholera has formal similarities to his two other great fictional works - One Hundred Years of Solitude and The Autumn of the Patriarch - it avoids an exclusive reliance on either the stunning hallucinatory quality of the former or the lush density of the latter. Instead, maintaining an almost folktale quality grounded with the feel of everyday gossip, it incorporates images of love that hover midway between otherworldly beauty and netherworld terror.

25. The Female Nude: Contemporary Fine-Art By Rob Couteau
The Female Nude Oil Painting, Drawing, Digital Arts, and Literary Publications by rob couteau. rob couteau Finearts Publications.
http://www.tygersofwrath.com/art.htm
Rob Couteau
Contact Rob Couteau: here
Robert Couteau
and cannot be used without the written and expressed
consent of the artist. Updated: March 28, 2004. photos publications dr pluss back to top
art,Female Nude,Portraits,Online,art gallery,thumbnails,Oil Paintings,Charcoal and Ink,Pastels,Drawings,Digital Arts,Photos,photography,expressionism,Americans in Paris,contemporary art,Artists, Fine Art, Oil Painting

26. Astrocartography Of Helena Blavatsky's Least-aspected Neptune
Biography of Madame Helena Blavatsky, focus on how the planetary metaphor of Neptune was reflected in her life and work, by astrocartographer rob couteau.
http://www.dominantstar.com/b_blav.htm
Astrocartography,Astrology:Madame Blavatsky:Helena Blavatsky: Theosophy and Astrology:Biography:Theosophical Society The Role of the Least-aspected Planet in Astrocartography New Insights into the Spirit of Place by Robert Couteau Astrocartography home
Neptune = 011
Mercury = 030
Mars,
Saturn = 111
Venus = 141
Jupiter,
Pluto = 212
Sun = 222
Moon = 320
Uranus = 400 Madame Blavatsky [Least-aspected Neptune] I was in search of the unknown. If I began to speak to you of alchemy, of union or ‘mar­riage of the red Virgin’ with the ‘astral mineral,’ of the philosopher’s stone (union of the soul and the spirit), would you send me to the devil? Yet, when I expound a subject, surely I must use the appropriate terms befitting that subject? — Madame Blavatsky, in a letter to Prince Dondoukov-Korsakov. He then recalled that in the early days of his lifetime of discipline in the Himalayas, a lady had found the high teachers and received the Ancient Wisdom. Going back through his memory, he ultimately recalled that she was not British, but Russian, and he finally remembered her name — Blavatsky. He had not himself met her, but had heard her achievement spoken of by fellow ascetics. — Margaret Cousins, describing her conversation with a prominent

27. A Conversation With Hubert Selby, Jr.
Hubert Selby, Jr., author of 'Requiem for a Dream', interviewed in Paris in September 1999. Tell me when this page is updated. rob couteau. Interviews, Poetry, Fiction, Reviews Interviewed by
http://hubert_selby.tripod.com/hubert_selby.htm
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Hubert Selby, Jr. / Last Exit to Brooklyn /Requiem for a Dream / interview / literature
Rob Couteau Interviews, Poetry, Fiction, Reviews Defining the Sacred: Author Hubert Selby on Spirituality,
the Creative Will, and Love.
Interviewed by Rob Couteau Photo of Hubert Selby
Couteau: You’ve just returned from Europe, where you gave a series of readings in Germany and attended the Paris premiere of the documentary, A Couple of Things About Hubert Selby . Would you care to relate some of the highlights of your recent trip?
Selby: Oh, gee, I don’t know if there were any highlights, to tell you the truth. It was all very exciting. I enjoyed all of it. And after the people down in the breakfast room at the hotel saw me on television, I got extra croissants in the morning. So that was kind of nice. Well, the people were all so wonderful, the reception was so enthusiastic, that I can’t think of anything that stands out more than anything else. Other than some of the scenery. Berlin was incredible, there are forests and lakes all over that city; it was just amazing.
Couteau: In that film you were asked about your belief in God, and you said that it all depends upon one’s definition of God: that you didn’t believe in most of the conventional definitions, the way that most people define God. Now, my question is, do you have any spiritual beliefs? I’m not going to ask, “Do you believe in God”; that’s not really how I would phrase it, perhaps. But do you have any specific spiritual beliefs and, if so, what is your definition of the sacred?

28. Digital Art Portraits By Rob Couteau
Visit rob couteau s
http://www.tygersofwrath.com/digital_art.htm
Digital Art,computer art Robert Couteau:
Digital Art Collection All images were created with a computer-graphics
program and a Logitech mouse.

click on thumbnails to enlarge
Visit Rob Couteau's:
fine arts publications dr pluss
Amazon.com
back to top
Digital Art,computer art

29. Starcats: Rob Couteau, Astrocartography, The Least Aspected Planet In The Birth
The full text of his book, The Role of the LeastAspected Planet in Astrocartography, is available on-line at couteau. Copyright © 1998 by Robert couteau.
http://starcats.com/rcnations.html
The Role of the Least Aspected Planet in the Birth of Nations
American astrologer Robert Couteau lives in Paris where he paints, writes, and contemplates the mysteries of under-aspected planets. Referring to astrocartographpy maps as examples of "intelligent images," he was immediately drawn to their visual as well as conceptual dimension when he first started researching the biographies of notable personalities. Couteau has published essays, fiction, poetry and reviews in such publications as Astrolore; The Bloomsbury Review; Chrysalis; The European; The Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy; and James Hillman's annual collection, Spring: A Journal of Archetype and Culture. The full text of his book, The Role of the Least-Aspected Planet in Astrocartography," is available on-line at: Couteau
Please note: The Introductory essay to "The Role of the Least-aspected Planet in Astrocartography" should probably be read as a primer to what follows. The Role of the Least Aspected Planet in Astrocartography
In the chart of Israel, a state which has always suffered from economic inflation (Secondary Leader, Jupiter) we have a rather amazing portrayal of the entire recent history of this nation: The seemingly unending "spiritual yearning" (the nature of the Transcendental Planet in general) for "a homeland"; for "peace / with security" (Secondary Transcendental Moon / Primary Transcendental Venus / Tertiary Transcendental Saturn). In its Leading or most-aspected planets, we have: "The obsession with war, secret intelligence and terrorism" (Leading Pluto); as well as what might be termed an obsession with "religious / and ethical matters" on a state level (Tertiary Leader, Neptune / Secondary Leader, Jupiter).

30. Astrocartography Of Simone De Beauvoir's Least-aspected Saturn
Biography of Simone de Beauvoir, focus on how the planetary metaphor of Saturn was reflected in her life and work, by rob couteau.
http://www.dominantstar.com/b_bea.htm
Astrocartography, Astrology, Astrology and Saturn, Simone de Beauvoir, Biography Existentialism Jean Paul Sartre The Role of the Least-aspected Planet In Astrocartography New Insights Into the Spirit of Place by Robert Couteau Astrocartography home Saturn = 101
Jupiter = 110
Venus,
Mars = 131
Pluto = 200
Moon = 221
Mercury = 301
Uranus,
Neptune = 302
Sun = 332
She [de Beauvoir] presupposes that a writer can actually convey pure facts without a viewpoint. — Melinda Camber Porter, Through Parisian Eyes Of all French writers, she alone ... noted the passing years with such insistence, ever con­scious of the ticking clock, of life’s running out and slipping away. — Claude Francis and Fernande Gontier, Simone de Beauvoir Always the same faces, the same surroundings, the same conversations, the same problems. The more it changes, the more it repeats itself. In the end, you feel as if you’re dying alive. — Simone de Beauvoir, The Mandarins Simone de Beauvoir Simone de Beauvoir was born in Paris, west of her Primary Saturn, which runs over the eastern border of France in a vertical midnight position. Along with her lifelong compan­ion and fellow philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, de Beauvoir promulgated the “Existentialist / philosophy” (Primary Saturn / Secondary Jupiter) in works of fiction, philosophy, essays, and autobiography. Evolving out of the sense of the “hopelessness, alienation, meaning­lessness, and despair” (Primary Saturn) that characterized the intellectual spirit of the World War II era, Existentialism conceived of humanity as existing in a “soulless uni­verse” (Primary Saturn): one bereft of any absolute value or meaning. Faced with such cosmic emptiness, we are left only with the choice of creating our own sense of personal “responsibility” (Primary Saturn).

31. Starcats Astrology 2002: Anima Mundi Magazine
Watergate by Claudia Dikinis. The Royal Family. Princess Diana by Claudia Dikinis; Prince William by Claudia Dikinis; Princess Diana by rob couteau. The Kennedys.
http://starcats.com/anima2.html
Anima Mundi, Article Archive
Site Map

Vols I-V, 2000 Anima Mundi

32. Astrocartography Of Claude Debussy's Least-aspected Pluto
Biography of Claude Debussy, focus on how the planetary metaphor of Pluto was reflected in his life and work. By renowned astrocartographer rob couteau.
http://www.dominantstar.com/b_deb.htm
astrocartography astrology horoscope Claude Debussy chart symbolism planets Pluto biography of Claude Debussy astrocartographer Robert Couteau The Role of the Least-aspected Planet in Astrocartography New Insights into the Spirit of Place by Robert Couteau A strocartography home
Pluto = 011
Sun = 130
Mercury = 140
Jupiter,
Neptune = 210
Mars
Saturn = 211
Uranus = 222
Venus = 230
Moon = 232 [Least-aspected Pluto] Claude Debussy French composer Claude Debussy was born in St. Germain-en-Laye, just east of his Pri­mary Pluto, which runs in a vertical Midheaven position along the western border of France. Debussy’s Primary Pluto is also involved in a narrowly focused Transcendental Midpoint-Field over Europe: both his Secondary Sun and Tertiary Mercury rise over west­ern Italy and central Germany. When Debussy was only seventeen years old he commenced his travels through Europe as the “musical companion” of Mme von Meck, the latter a friend of Tchaikovsky (1879). After returning to Paris and continuing his studies in musical education at the Paris Conservatoire (1873-1884), he won the Prix de Rome (1884) for his cantata, L’Enfant Paradise . This permitted him additional travel through Europe and granted him a resi­dence in Italy, at the very heart of and completely framed by his Transcendental Midpoint-Field. While there, he composed

33. Astrocartography Of James Dean's Least-aspected Sun
Biography of James Dean, focus on how the planetary metaphors of the Sun and Uranus were reflected in his life and work, by astrocartographer rob couteau.
http://www.dominantstar.com/b_dean.htm
astrocartography astrology horoscope James Dean chart symbolism planets Sun Uranus biography of James Dean astrocartographer Robert Couteau The Role of the Least-aspected Planet in Astrocartography New Insights into the Spirit of Place, by Robert Couteau. Astrocartography home
Sun = 042
Uranus = 100
Mercury = 101
Mars,
Jupiter = 112
Saturn,
Pluto = 120
Venus = 220
Neptune = 221
Moon = 400 Jimmy was completely unprepared for success and its by-product — fame. Fame, of course, was exactly what he wanted; considering all the photographs he had taken of him­self, he had always acted like he already was world famous, but now he truly was.... At parties, people would follow him from room to room.… The attention he received was overwhelming, and he wasn’t equipped to handle it. If nothing else, he had no real family, no real love for anyone else, and thus no strong backup support — he could not withdraw anywhere to be himself. — Joe Hyams, with Jay Hyams, from Little Boy Lost James Dean was unquestionably the first star of the pop culture.

34. Wuup.de - /Reference/Biography/C
CouchJareb, Annette L.@; Couples, Fred@; Court, Alyson@; Courtenay, Bryce@; Cousins; couteau, rob@; Covito, Carmen@; Cowlin, Dorothy@; Cox;
http://wuup.de/index.php/Reference/Biography/C

35. Astrocartography Of Emily Dickinson's Least-aspected Saturn
Biography of Emily Dickinson, focus on how the planetary metaphor of Saturn was reflected in the poet's life and work, by astrocartographer rob couteau.
http://www.dominantstar.com/b_dickin.htm
astrocartography astrology horoscope Emily Dickinson chart symbolism planets Saturn biography of Emily Dickinson astrocartographer Robert Couteau The Role of the Least-aspected Planet in Astrocartography New Insights into the Spirit of Place by Robert Couteau Astrocartography home
Saturn = 021
Venus = 110
Mars = 201
Uranus = 210
Sun,
Neptune,
Pluto = 211
Jupiter = 221
Mercury = 230
Moon = 321 [Least-aspected Saturn] She never ceased to hope one day her cage door would open, her prison door unlock, her coffin lid rise. — Professor Ruth Miller, on Emily Dickinson. I do not cross my father’s ground to any house or town. — Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson was born almost precisely under the vertical Midheaven line of her Pri­mary Saturn, in Amherst, Massachusetts, where she lived for most of her “reclusive” and “solitary” (Primary Saturn) life. One of the most important poets of modern times, she is renowned for the unusually “constricted, self-imposed lifestyle of exile, deprivation, and severity” (Saturn) that characterizes both her poetry and her life. Emily was the daughter of Edward Dickinson, a lawyer known for his “austere” and “remote” nature (Primary Saturn), who was said to have laughed only once in his life and whose heart Emily called “pure and terrible.” Her mother, Emily Norcross Dickinson, was also characterized as “emotionally distant” (Saturn). In addition, Emily had to contend with her family’s “strict, post-Calvinist Puritanism”1 (Saturn): influences that she reacts to and addresses directly in her verse.

36. Astrocartography
Biography of Karl Marx with a special focus on how the planetary symbols of Mercury and Neptune were reflected in his life and work, by renowned astrocartographer rob couteau
http://www.dominantstar.com/b_marx.htm
astrocartography astrology horoscope Robert Couteau The Role of the Least-aspected Planet in Astrocartography New Insights into the Spirit of Place by Robert Couteau I. Introduction II. Transcendental Biographies III. Transcendental Events
IV. Psychic inflation
... FAQ Postscript:
I. Interview in Astrolore
II. Transcendental Nations IV. World Events V. Numinous Consciousness ...
VIII. Complete Index of Names and Events
Robert Couteau astrocartographer horoscope astrology astrocartography

37. Role Of The Least Aspected Planet In Astrocartography
Awardwinning site by astrocartographer rob couteau, includes over 350 charts and astrocartography maps with extensive biographical analysis of historical
http://www.dominantstar.com/astro02.htm
Astrocartography: The Role of the Least-aspected Planet in Astrocartography
New Insights into the Spirit of Place,

by Robert Couteau
A New Look at Planetary Symbolism in Astrocartography and Transcendental Astrology. March 2004 UPDATE:
Rob is now available for consulations Order a COMPLETE ANALYSIS
Pablo Picasso relocated directly under the line of his Least Aspected planet Primary Transcendental Sun positioned precisely above Paris in its Transcendental Imum Coeli position where he became the most celebrated painter in modern history. Contents: I. Introduction
I. Introduction

(See the new Preface material
II. Transcendental Biographies: The effect of the Transcendental Planet in the lives
of historical, cultural and artistic personalities Joan Baez biography + astrocartography
Ethel Barrymore biography + astrocartography
Clara Barton biography + astrocartography Otto von Bismarck biography + astrocartography William Blake biography + astrocartography Helena Blavatsky biography + astrocartography Marlon Brando biography + astrocartography Louise Brown biography + astrocartography Elizabeth B. Browning

38. A Sort Of Visitor In Life
rob couteau's biographical essay on the author, published in West Hills Review, 1985, explores the poet as an American ideal, focusing on his spirituality and politics.
http://members.tripod.com/more_couteau/whitman1.htm
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Walt Whitman
"A Sort of Visitor in Life: Some Autonomic Thoughts on Walt Whitman," by Robert Couteau.
Published in West Hills Review: A Walt Whitman Journal , Vol. 5, 1985. (Walt Whitman Birthplace Association.)
ROBERT COUTEAU
“At all times, perhaps, the central point in any
nation ... is in its national literature, especially its
archetypal poems.” Democratic Vistas Reading Whitman prompts the question: How could he have been an American? For he emerges from America’s history as her most anomalous character, and yet, with the sole exception of Thomas Paine, he alone embodies all that is American in the ideal and original sense of the word. Without these two figures, everything delineated in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and later on in the Bill of Rights remains an abstraction, a mere potentiality.
I invoke Paine at the inception of an essay on Whitman not because of any direct influence of Paine on the poet but rather because of the direct link in spirit these two share. However, that Whitman was more than just aware of Paine’s historical significance is revealed in his speech “In Memory of Thomas Paine,” delivered in Philadelphia on Paine’s 140th birthday: “I dare not say how much of what our Union is owning and enjoying today... is owing to Thomas Paine.” The confessionalist Frank Harris attended the event in the role of a reporter and wrote in his

39. Phonograph Makers: Rob Lomas
couteau x-acto effilé, cutter ou lame de rasoir;
http://members01.chello.se/christer.hamp/phono/fra/lomasstyl.html
Version: 8 septembre 1999
par Rob Lomas, 1999 Pointes 2 minutes instructions Pointes 4 minutes
  • lunettes ou loupe de joaillier, ou toute autre loupe laissant les mains libres
  • cure-dents en bois
  • feuille d'aluminium
  • planchette ne craignant pas les coulures de colle
doucement

40. Astrocartography Of Eleanor Roosevelt's Least-aspected Saturn
Brief biography of the First Lady, with special focus on how the planetary symbol of Saturn was reflected in her life and work, by renowned astrocartographer rob couteau.
http://www.dominantstar.com/b_e_roo.htm
astrocartography astrology horoscope Eleanor Roosevelt chart symbolism planets Saturn biography of Eleanor Roosevelt astrocartographer Robert Couteau The Role of the Least-aspected Planet in Astrocartography New Insights Into the Spirit of Place by Robert Couteau Astrocartography home Saturn = 110
Jupiter,
Uranus = 220
Mars,
Neptune = 221
Venus = 230
Mercury = 231
Sun = 241
Moon = 350
Pluto = 420 Photo of Eleanor Roosevelt [Least-aspected Saturn]
Evenings were the only moments away from war pressures, but whenever Eleanor was around, she pressed Franklin with unceasing demands. “Mother,” Anna curtly told her at one dinner, “can’t you see you are giving Father indigestion.” As Roosevelt aide Rexford Tugwell recalled, “Really serious talk at table was avoided if Roosevelt could manage it. Eleanor, so humorless and so weighed down with responsibility, made this difficult.” “If I feel depressed,” Mrs. Roosevelt said, “I go to work.” — Carl Sferrazza Anthony

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