Thursday, July 17, 2014

Dog Days of Summer - Day 4

Today Yay - the week is well on it's way to the week's end.  For some of you that's a good thing, for some of you it is a bad thing, for artists it is a mixed bag really.  Today though - OUR BOOK!

It is.......The Art of Power by that rascal Thich Nhat Hanh

An images google search brings up many images after the entry ZEN POWER ART - but one that I really liked was this one:


This is a painting done by Marcia Baldwin called Power Inside of You.

And - as for our book quote today:

.....from page......112

At first, people are infatuated with an image they see as beautiful.  They want to possess this image, and they suffer because of this.  But after they wake up and see that it is a deception, they push away this image to look for another object of infatuation.  They may wander their whole lives, from lifetime to lifetime, unable to find the real object of their love.  But if we can find someone who has a steady faith in her own goodness, beauty, and truth, we can look at this person as a reflection of ourselves in order to return to ourselves and be in touch with the basic goodness, beauty and truth in us."
And, I think with all we create too.

Thank you for reading today and I hope your day is full of the steady faith of your own goodness.

'Til tomorrow!

~Alex

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Dog Days of Summer - Day 3

Oh  -  this is just so darn much fun - a book - and image search based on it's title - and a random page transcribed from the book.  If you have just landed on this page - you may want to go back to the beginning of these posts...which would be Monday, July 14.

Today's book is one of my very favorite books, A New Earth written by the indomitable Eckhart Tolle.  First a visual.  I will put in Google Images search, NEW EARTH ART.  Let's see what happens....

 
 
This is known as the Star Tetrahedron or mystical merkaba.
 
Let us now open our book!
 
....and I find that the book is opened to page 77 and here is what is written there:
 
"You want peace.  There is no one who does not want peace.  Yet there is something else in you that wants the drama, wants the conflict.  You may not be able to feel it at this moment.  You may have to wait for a situation or even just a thought that triggers a reaction in you;  someone accusing you of this or that, not acknowledging you, encroaching on your territory, questioning the way you do things, an argument about money....Can you then feel the enormous surge of force moving through you, the fear, perhaps being masked by anger or hostility?  Can you hear your own voice becoming harsh or shrill, or louder and a few octaves lower?  Can you be aware of your mind racing to defend it position, justify, attack, blame?  In other words, can you awaken at that moment of unconsciousness?  Can you feel that there is something in you that is at war, something that feels threatened and wants to survive at all cost, that needs the drama in order to assert its identity as the victorious character within that theatrical production?  Can you feel there is something in you that would rather be right than at peace?"
I just love ET.

Time for me to get on with the day and I hope your day is bright and beautiful and peaceful.

'Till tomorrow!

~Alex

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Dog Days of Summer - Day 2

Okay - you may be surprised to know that I don't just read art books.  '*GASP!*" you say? 

No - it's true.  My book library grows smaller these days though because nowadays I am working on art most all the time and have to use my hands to hold tools instead of books...but thank you books on tape.  Audible loves me.

Today's book is called "Growing a Business." by Paul Hawken.  So, of course - starting with a related Google Images search...I shall see what typing in "Growing Art" will...well let's see what that gives us?

Oh well!!   This is just too cool! 

I found this!  GROWING ART! 

It's from the My Modern Met website. 

Growing grass sculpture from artist Mathilde Roussel:








That is just amazing.   AMAZING!   Sorry - I'm a bit blown away.  Takes chia pets to a whole new avant garde level....

Okay - back to the book opening....what will it be???  ah...page 150...
"If you are fearful or grasping of money, your customer, the bank vice president, or the investor will spot this immediately, and the task of securing support will become immeasurably more difficult.  In order to be a growing business and attract capital, you must project a sense that the world is expansive.  Generosity, ampleness, and abundance draw money to ideas, people, and businesses.  This is not a mandate for waste or glitzy promotion.  It is simply knowing that your product or service touches a rich, fertile vein in the marketplace.  In other words, have confidence in yourself and your business.  This feeling will come through clearly in your dealings with people who have money, and they'll respond."
So what do you think?  Does that resonate with you??  How does that make you think about how your represent yourself and your art?  Interesting concept to think about, yes?

Okay - it is time to go on to other things...  TTFN :)

~Alex

Monday, July 14, 2014

7 Dog Days of Summer Inspiration

Every summer I marvel at how incredibly busy my life becomes and were on one hand I wouldn't trade it for the world, on the other hand I just want winter to be here NOW so I can hibernate and relax and languish in art once more.

Perhaps you are feeling the same way.  So I have broken out 7 books from my library to give us all some good thoughts to ride the wave of the remaining months of summer with our sanity somehow in tact.

I am just going to open each book each day to whatever page it opens to and write down the paragraph my finger lands on and the rest of the writing below that paragraph and we'll see what happens.  It may not mean a darn thing to me, but it may mean a whole heaping lot to you.

But first - a photo of a work of art.  Since the book I am opening is The Courage to Create by Rollo May I will do an image search for courageous art and see what comes up. 

Here we go....

Ha ha ha....See there?  This is EXACTLY how I've been feeling these last few weeks!

Ferdinand Hodler-The Courageous Woman
 
Ferdinand Hodler - his paintings are very illustrative and art nouveau surrealistic-ish.  (Take that artspeak!)  I like them.  The woman in this picture has much bigger biceps than I do, but otherwise the similarities are spooky...
 
But I digress.  Rollo May.  Drum roll please....and I'm opening randomly.....ah no.  I don't like that one...something about Stalin.  I'm going in again....ah yes.  Much better.  This is from page 21:
 
"Paul Cezanne strongly believed that he was discovering and painting a new form of space which would radically influence the future of art, yet he was at the same time filled with painful and ever-present doubts.  The relationship between commitment and doubt is by no means an antagonistic one.  Commitment is healthiest when it is not without doubt, but in spite of doubt.  To believe fully and at the same moment to have doubts is not at all a contradiction:  it presupposes a greater respect for truth, an awareness that truth always goes beyond anything that can be said or done at any given moment.  To every thesis there is an antithesis, and to this there is a synthesis.  Truth is thus a never-dying process.  We then know the meaning of the statement attributed to Leibnitz:  "I would walk twenty miles to listen to my worst enemy if I could learn something."
Paul Cezanne
 
 
Day One is done.  Check out day two tomorrow.  We will be opening a completely different kind of book :)
 
"Till then
 
~Alex

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Baring your Soul as an Artist

I know - it's supposed to be Inspiration Sunday.  I don't think I did Inspiration Sunday last Sunday either.  But maybe this WILL be inspirational to you.  I hope so.

The very act of creating art is an act of vulnerability.  This means an artist has to be careful.  It is important for the support group of someone who is a professional artist, particularly, to be ...well.  Supportive.  And this is more that just words.

An artist doesn't need to hear..."oh you make such wonderful art" as much as an artist needs to have time and quiet.  These are the most precious gifts because without them an artist cannot effectively create. 

It is easy for an artist's support group to misunderstand what an artist is doing often times.  It doesn't always look like we're creating when the fact is the act of creating takes an enormous amount of mental and emotional energy.

When we make whatever this something is that we make - that something comes from deep inside us and is most a manifestation of something resonating within our souls and spirits.  It must be so very genuine and authentic so it resonates with the same soul stuff of others.

 

Making that unique elusive expression of the world through ourselves is incredibly taxing.  Space for that must be attainable. 

Even more confusing to the people around us is that when we aren't in the process of conceptualizing we may be experimenting or transitioning or researching or educating ourselves and when doing those things - it can look (to someone who is not an artist) an awful lot like goofing around...or wasting time...or lack of focus...or procrastinating.

I particularly love nurturing the people and friends that I care about.  I enjoy spending time with them.  But I must know, even on a daily basis, when the time with them will begin and when it will end. 

I think this is because to do something other than make our art, we must detach from an intrinsic  part of ourselves to do it - this is as tangible to us removing an arm or a leg - to be in with you in a particular place ...in a particular period of time.  

Or put another way - whereas many must leave home to go to work and then feel typically happy to be returning home.  When I put down a part of myself to be with someone or do something else, I have left my house and I want to know when I can go back home.  There is only one person that can be there with me and he understands this and knows the best ways to for us to be together and to keep me with me in tact at home.  I love him for that and I try to do that for him too. 

Until we artists are at a point in our careers when we have staff...most all of us do all the work that goes into each original piece of art.  We answer the phone.  We file paperwork.  We maintain websites.  We write all our marketing material.  We sell ourselves to galleries.  We are in direct contact with our potential critics and clients.

We are baring our souls when we are making our art...a privilege, an adventure...we must do this though and it is hard work.  Most everyone has to walk through the world keeping their spirits protected and hidden away.  Artists gift light to many souls when they create a work of art that transmits the light of their own.

That's my deep thought for today..the seconds that are left of it.
Hope you had a great day today. 

~Alex


Saturday, July 12, 2014

Julie Mehretu

Julie's work is very amazing.  Huge huge canvasses filled in with layers of drawing and color and fluid motion filled with definitive lines and small details.  You can gaze at one of her works for a long time and never discover everything.  Here is the entry about her (in part) from Wikipedia.

"Mehretu is known for her large-scale paintings and drawings and her technique of layering different elements and media. Her paintings are built up through layers of acrylic paint on canvas overlaid with mark-making using pencil, pen, ink and thick streams of paint. Her canvases overlay different architectural features such as columns, façades and porticoes with different geographical schema such as charts, building plans and city maps and architectural renderings for stadiums, international airports, and other public gathering hubs, seen from different perspectives, at once aerial, cross-section and isometric. Her drawings are preparatory to her large paintings, and sometimes interim between paintings...

In 2000, Mehretu was awarded a grant from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award. She was the recipient of the 2001 Penny McCall Award.  On September 20, 2005, she was named as one of the 2005 recipients of the MacArthur Fellowship, often referred to as the "genius grant."

...In 2007, while completing a residency at the American Academy in Berlin, Julie Mehretu received the 15th commission of the Deutsche Bank and Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. The body of work she created, Grey Area, was composed of six large-scale paintings, completed between 2007 and 2009 in a studio in Berlin.


Mehretu's painting Untitled 1 sold for $1.02 million at Sotheby's in September 2010.  It's estimated value had been $600–$800,000. 


At Art Basel in 2014, White Cube sold Mehretu’s Mumbo Jumbo (2008) for $5 million. 


Mehretu is represented by Marian Goodman Gallery in New York and by White Cube in London as well as by carlier gebauer in Berlin."

Okay - we will talk about something completely different tomorrow (I know, it is technically tomorrow right now) - but this has been an interesting investigation into the art world, I think.

~Alex

Friday, July 11, 2014

Julie Mehretu

Julie is the number five on my list.  I cannot say more about her tonight though...due to extenuating circumstances.  Sometimes - as for anyone who runs their own business - real life intervenes from time to time and I have no time for anything else but a picture.

But a picture is worth a thousand words, right? :).   This image is courtesy of art21.org and Marian Goodman Gallery.

'Til tomorrow

~Alex