Skip to content
Ars Notoria
Ars Notoria

The Art of the Noteworthy — Bimonthly

  • Home
  • About
  • Humane Socialism
  • Contributors
  • Contact
  • Original Books
  • Checkout
0
Ars Notoria

The Art of the Noteworthy — Bimonthly

April 2026 Issue



The late peace campaigner Brian Haw. Photograph Andy Hall

EDITORIAL: THE HORROR OF WAR

The most important thing at this point in time is to say that the mask of the global corporate capitalist empire centred in the United States has slipped. And we all see them nakedly for what they are: a small group of wealthy people, roughly concentrated in Europe and the United States, with their branches set up as little outposts in the rest of the world – against the majority, against the whole of Asia and the whole of Africa, and the whole of Latin America. There is no nice capitalism and there is no nicer imperialism.

Having said that, ordinary people like me and you live our lives. Most of these lives are full of neighbours and family, and friends, and work. We’re humans, not transhuman ghosts in machines. We are connected to nature. We stand on the earth. We don’t live in tin cans in space. And we are members of the same body called Gaia.

So when we talk about humane socialism, we don’t mean it in that aspirational sense where humanity is explained by some theory that is a parody of the physical sciences. Humane socialism encompasses the wissenschaft of humanity in its entirety: life as we know it; food, philosophy, love, art, music, friendship, solidarity, work and effort, excitement, enjoyment, contemplation. The humane socialism of our magazine is very much in harmony with, for example, the Quaker testimonies of peace, sustainability, truth, simplicity, and equality, and we emphasise the idea of the inotic – a word coined by Tony Hall. Inotic means the opposite of the exotic: wherever we go, no matter how different everything seems ultimately, we are the same human beings. And whether you or I am cleverer, stronger, prettier, taller, more efficient – whatever it may be – that does not give us privileges or rights over those of other people.

So the arch enemy of humane socialism is the inhumane, embodied in the many forms of Malthusianism and social Darwinism, the philosophy and language of the colonialist, the exploiter and the conqueror.

And if you need to ask why a humane socialist magazine is full of stories and poetry, and emotions, and commentary and discussion – it is because we are human before we are dogmatists. And therefore what we say can take many forms, and does. You don’t need a PhD to have a useful thought or an insight, or an appreciation of what is happening in the world. Not many novelists are nuclear physicists and yet people sit at their feet and ask them what they think of nuclear war.  

We are all affected by what happens. And so, for example, we will all die, and therefore we all can have an opinion on euthanasia. We all must face death. We’re all affected by the destruction of the environment, by pollution and house prices and crime and exploitation, and ultimately by the mass murders conducted by terrorist states. Isn’t it obscene that Iranian schoolchildren die and all some people do in response is complain about increases in the price of petrol?

We will not apologise for the tone of this editorial when the President at the head of the pirate ship has just suggested he might destroy Iranian civilisation with nuclear bombs, potentially making the United States far more more evil than the German Fascists themselves. When it is revealed that US strategists are contemplating a nuclear exchange understanding full well that it would be at the price of 100 Holocausts, and they say so qitado de la pena.

So we offer you this issue of our magazine in this spirit: in the spirit of the celebration of the human, and in resolute opposition to the inhuman.


In this issue

We have been privileged to showcase the work of many valued and talented people.

We headline in April with an interview with Les Branson, the guerrilla filmmaker, interviewed by Paul Halas and associates, who is making waves in film festivals in Texas and further afield. Les has gathered around him an enthusiastic and hard-working team of actors and filmmakers, and on less than a shoestring produced three films that embody his love of the art.

We feature the photography of Inge Colijn, who must be one of the most talented travelling photographers alive in 2026. The colours of her photographs are astounding, the subjects and the stories she tells are powerful and the portraits endearing.

We have a diamond in our midst: Norman B. Schwartz. The sound editor who has worked on many famous films and is in the Hollywood Hall of Fame gives us his 17th article, this time on Darryl F. Zanuck. Mixing politics with observations and insights that you won’t get from anyone else, Norman brings precision of language and unequalled powers of analysis and observation to dissect the characters and politics of Hollywood.

Arun Kapil is a punk food poet about to revolutionise cooking in the West with his new book. He is the Spice King, and every week gives us his punk version of cooking. This week, he writes about foods with dubious reputations that are still enjoyed by many people. The word “Spam” features prominently.

The polemical and polarising Richard Steinhardt attempts to burst the bubble of Zack Polanski and Zohran Mamdani, calling them “hollow men”, and claims that Putin is implementing the Dzerzhinsky Solution for Ukraine: identifying, neutralising and integrating.

Phil Hall writes about euthanasia, angels, the Tarot, and imagining the future. His excuse is that he taught strategic foresight at university for two years, that he has used the Tarot for forty years, and that he has been intensly political since his parents were exiled from South Africa in 1963.


Poetry

We are graced by the presence of great poets.

Roger Murphy, who just appeared in the International Colloquium of Poetry and Philosophy organised by Ulises Paniagua Olivares, introduces us to his reflections on the ode as a poetic form, gives us an example of one of his own odes, and discusses how difficult it was to write.

Dustin Pickering in Texas is a turbine of creativity – writing about politics, publishing books, appearing on podcasts, and writing poetry for our times. Here, he offers us his War Poems.

Hugo Giovanetti Viola, another influential, multifaceted artist whose work spans poetry, narrative, popular song, essays, theatre, film, journalism and cultural production – and who is also a guitar teacher – gives us three of his poems.

Tina Bexson, who has just flown back to the Sinai which she loves – a brave journalist of some standing who writes to defend her confrères and has been published in The Guardian, The Standard, The Times and many other publications – sends us a story about the thin human film between two cultures as they rub up against each other.

David Yip is cool, and he looks cool, but he’s not too cool for school. For the last seven months, he has given us episodes of his story: from being a boy who worked in a garden to help his mum and from working in Chinese restaurants alongside his father, to being a top chef and then catering manager up in that paradise called the Lake District. If you’ve read Anthony Bourdain, you’ll know the catering industry can be a rollercoaster ride.

From Poland, we have fantastic poets introduced to us by Richard Reisner: Jan Twardowski, Ewa Lipska, and Czesław Miłosz. Richard, who is an accomplished poet himself, fills in this gap for those of us who have only Miłosz on Polish postage stamps. Miłosz wrote poetry about the conflagration of war. Richard Reisner is the respected translator of Ewa Lipska’s work. Lipska writes metaphysical and social poetry. Richard’s third poet is Father Jan Twardowski – is he really underrated? I don’t see how. If you have bronze statues of the man placed in different parts of Poland, that means he’s popular, influential. Richard points out he was honest about the failings of the Church.

Carmen Nozal, the Spanish-Mexican poet, head of a writers’ school with an extremely distinguished career and winner of many prizes, who works as a coordinator at the National Museum of Arts in Mexico City, gives us her poems on water. Here is her poem:

INSTRUCTIONS FROM WATER LOOKING AT THE CEMETERY

Do not drink water from a plastic bottle:
for that you have your hands
with their lines of destiny perfectly traced
and their mounts to see Venus
fill the world with lovers
through which life passes in the form of organisms.

Do not drink water from a plastic bottle
because the water that comes from the clouds
likes to faint into the oceans,
returning to the ground after a long journey,
to seep into the brown earth that groans
for one drop, one tear, one crystalline river formed on the surface,
a nourishment that feeds the deep heart.

Any animal, even the beasts,
returns what it consumes,
in the form of secretions,
and even in its decomposition
adds to existence the joy of plants.

Do not drink water from a plastic bottle:
let it run over your palms,
rock it in the hollow of your hands, kiss it like a virgin bride
and do not disturb it, do not stain it, do not dishonour it,
do not fill it with sins built with your hands
and do not wash your hands with it
because one day it will abandon you.
Therefore you must not drink water from a plastic bottle.

We republish Sudeep Sen’s article Rabindranath Tagore as the Intimate Other in the light of his forthcoming participation in the International Colloquium of Poetry and Philosophy. It is an essay that has been read many times in many places, and it is worthy of rereading. Notably, Sudeep Sen was a friend of Raghu Rai, the famous photographer who has just died. Sen himself is a photographer and took a sequence of four different photographs of Rai, which reveal Rai’s warm and kind character beautifully. As Sudeep took his pictures they talked together over a glass of an 18-year-old Macallan. Sen shares the poem he wrote in honour of one of his friend’s famous photographs.


The Writers’ Group (New Malden)

Last but not least, we have the New Malden Writers. Some of us have published our poems previously and some of us haven’t. We sit together in New Malden, a dozen of us, and read each other’s poems and discuss book projects and academic articles for journals. We even have a composer among us – the fantastic Laurentiu Gondiu. Last week we sat around listening to his latest composition, which he introduced like this: “These are my feelings as I walk around London.” Just tremendous!

So this week, we introduce the poems of Tom, John, Patrick, Phil and Karl. All of the poems are accomplished and life-affirming, the highlight being, of course, Patrick’s couplet:

“the early worm catches the bird.”

Unfortunately, this month Ars Notoria was not an early worm.


Features


LES BRANSON:GUERILLA FILMAKER

Interview

READ

Inge Colijin

BIHARIS IN GENEVA CAMP

READ

a diver in the ocean

ROGER MURPHY

DISCOVERING THE ODE

READ

American Poets

FOUR POEMS ABOUT OCEANS

Carmen Nozal

READ

Dustin Pickering

WAR POEMS

READ

woman with her head on the nape of her neck

HUGO GIOVANETTI VIOLA / 3 POEMS

READ

Food & Drink

A Rogue’s Gallery of Edible Reputations

Arun Kapil

READ

Film / Short Story / Memoir

17 Cleopatra On Denial

Norman B. Schwarz

READ

I DON’T UNDERSTAND

Tina Bexson

READ

David Yip

7. Keeping my Promise

READ

Sudeep Sen

Raghu Rai (Dec 18, 1942 — April 26, 2026). R.I.P.

READ


TAGORE AS THE INTIMATE OTHER

Sudeep Sen

READ

3 Polish Poets

INTRODUCING 3 POLISH POETS

READ

Politics / Geopolitics / Futurology

Philip Hall

It’s Capitalism, not Israel

READ

forest fire and environmental disaster

Scorched Earth: The Policy of the USA in the Middle East & Central Asia

Phil Hall

READ

The Dzerzhinsky Solution for Ukraine: Identify, Neutralise, Integrate

Richard Steinhardt

READ

Polanski and Mamdani are the Hollow Men

Richard Steinhardt

READ

tarot reading for the future of the world

Phil Hall

READ

Phil Hall

REIMAGINING THE FUTURE

READ

grayscale photo of laughing old man

is Legalising Euthanasia Under Capitalism Mass Murder?

Phil Hall

READ

woman with wings statue grayscale photo

ANGELOLOGY

Phil Hall

READ

New Malden Writer’s Group

TO THE LIBRARY

NEW MALDEN WRITERS

READ

CONCLAVE

Karl Rutlidge

READ

Past issues

march

READ

january-february

READ

DECEMBER

READ

NOVEMBER

READ

OCTOBER

READ

SEPTEMBER

READ

AUGUST

READ

JULY

READ

JUNE

READ

CONTRIBUTORS

WITH MANY THANKS

READ

BOOKS FROM AN EDITIONS

RIGHTS OF MAN AND FISH

OSCAR: THE SECOND COMING

CAPTCHA THIS!

THAT WAS HUGO BLYTHE MP

POSTS


  • SMOOTH OPERATOR: taking on the biggest poker game in the world

    SMOOTH OPERATOR: taking on the biggest poker game in the world

    30th October 2021

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Grand Lisboa and Wynn buildings in Macau. Photograph Da Na Pexels Macau ‘whales’ are the biggest fish in high stakes poker by Thomas Levene This article is, in part, my personal poker journey and, partly, an insight into the mysterious and secretive world of nose-bleed cash games that just get bigger and bigger. The…

  • Sonnet Mondal: Poems From the Heart

    Sonnet Mondal: Poems From the Heart

    16th March 2021

    •

    Yogesh Patel

    Ever since I stumbled on Sonnet Mondal’s poems, I have been captivated by their stunning simplicity and words evoking a magical experience. That he achieves this consistently is breath-taking. In this occasional series, our aim is to connect you with some of these exceptional beauties I come across. These are rare, as they don’t…

  • EXHIBITION AMEN

    EXHIBITION AMEN

    5th July 2023

    •

    Ars Notoria

    by Zeek Fharkha Zeek Fharkha is an artist, musician, punk, with 2 masters and an honours degree. Fine arts, digital arts and an MBA. He is reading for a PhD at wits business school in Design thinking.

  • GOATS FOR THE PEOPLE OF PASHTUN ZARGHUN

    GOATS FOR THE PEOPLE OF PASHTUN ZARGHUN

    13th June 2023

    •

    Ars Notoria

    By Inge Colijn During my 27 years of work for United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, I lived in many countries and they all became special to me. But some places like Afghanistan mean more. I was told at our headquarters in Geneva that people from abroad working in Afghanistan would either love being…

  • DANCING TO THE BEAT OF MY ART

    DANCING TO THE BEAT OF MY ART

    12th June 2023

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Detail from Pure Bliss, Tasneem Shaikh Exhibiting at the World Art Fair in 2022 and 2023 by Tasneem Shaikh My heart races unusually fast. My joy has no bounds. For the first time, I am exhibiting my paintings at a major event, at World Art Dubai (WAD). It is March 2022. So far, I…

  • SAINT JOHN OF THE RABBITS

    SAINT JOHN OF THE RABBITS

    26th April 2023

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Paricutín erupting, by Dr. Atl by Philip Hall I married into a large and regionally important Mexican family, and so got to know some parts of Mexico quite well. I lived there, first as a student at the university of Vera Cruz in the early eighties, later in Mexico City as a teacher, and…

  • OPEN LETTER TO THE ALIENS

    OPEN LETTER TO THE ALIENS

    26th March 2023

    •

    Ars Notoria

    From July 12 to 29, 1952, a series of unidentified flying object (UFO) sightings were reported in Washington, D.C. and later became known as the Washington flap You aliens are sociopaths – Interstellar Jeremy Clarksons by Phil Hall If you come to Earth, into our communities as a guest, then you must give an account of yourselves. If you don’t…

  • 1. ISOBAL & HENRY

    1. ISOBAL & HENRY

    11th March 2023

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Picture of Isobel and Joseph by Margaret Yip  I was born in the middle of Clement Attlee’s term as prime minister in 1949. I was the fourth child born to my parents. My mother, Isobal, had been in service before marriage, and my father, Henry, was a miner. After my birth, they went on…

  • CON’S SHAKESPEAREAN GARDEN

    CON’S SHAKESPEAREAN GARDEN

    11th February 2023

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Visits to the Merlin of Coombe Hill by Phil Hall Con lives in the house he was born into more than 60 years ago. Everyone notices it from the street; partly because it looks run down and partly because there are sometimes cats in the front garden. One of the cats was bitten by…

  • Tagore Prize Awarded to Sudeep Sen

    Tagore Prize Awarded to Sudeep Sen

    20th December 2022

    •

    Peter Cowlam

    The cover of Anthropocene, by Sudeep Sen Review by Peter Cowlam All of us here at Ars Notoria are delighted at the news that our poetry editor, Sudeep Sen, has been awarded the prestigious Tagore Prize for 2021–22. The Rabindranath Tagore Literary Prize, a literary honour in India conferred annually for published works by…

  • HAMBA KAHLE, HARRY

    HAMBA KAHLE, HARRY

    2nd November 2022

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Harold Voigt, South African Painter 1st May 1939 – 9th October 2022 by Leigh Voigt How does one give an unbiased, honest appraisal of one’s own husband and have the gall to call it an obituary? Does one resort to clichés? Borrow words from the pens of others? No, one hones in on an…

  • KING CHARLES III HAS A SACRED TASK

    KING CHARLES III HAS A SACRED TASK

    12th September 2022

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Dissolve the institution of Monarchy! by Philip Hall The idea that Charles III is divinely appointed to rule over us is ridiculous! Yet, ultimately, it is the metaphysical idea of the divine right of kings that gives King Charles III his legitimacy as the head of state. Ordinary British people are not citizens, but…

←Previous Page
1 … 45 46 47 48 49
Next Page→

Ars Notoria
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

© AN Editions 2025. All rights reserved. Materials on this website are free to download for personal use but must not be publicly disseminated, re-published or broadcast without permission. To seek permission, please use the Contact page of this website, or contact the author, artist, or photographer directly. No representation, warranty or  covenant, whether express or implied, is made as to the accuracy of any information or statements contained in the Ars Notoria Magazine and AN Editions shall have no liability of any nature whatsoever for any inaccuracies.

Opinions expressed in any content apart from editorials or the mission and vision statement are solely those of the author’s and do not reflect the opinions or beliefs of AN Editions / Ars Notoria Magazine

Copyright © 2023 | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • More
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Like this:

Like Loading…
©2026 Ars Notoria | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes

Loading Comments...

You must be logged in to post a comment.

    %d