Monday, June 23, 2008
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Why make art?
Making art takes up space, it is perhaps the ultimate act of self involvement to ask people to stop what they are doing and look at artists' work.
I think there is another possibility. As artists and performers, we are exposing something that would not otherwise be seen or experienced. Whether it is ultimately of importance or necessary, externalizing ideas in a form that can be experienced by others is how we, as interdisciplnary artists are known to each other and to the world. It is a way to enter into a shared experience without language, to find community more directly.
I desire balance and harmony. My studio work demonstrates a commitment to producing images that replicate this experience for the viewer. It is not possible for me to know how or if my work effects other people until it is experienced.
The response places the work beyond my personal voice. It enters without words and joins community in the experience or recognition by another person. Some of the first commissions I did in 1980 were for waiting rooms in Boston Hospitals. My work was placed where it would be experienced by the families who waited for loved ones. I finally understood the impact of my work when my son hospitalized at Children’s Hospital. The work becomes a healing, meditative space, where order is restored. In the abstract space I found some rest while I waited, helpless to do anything but wait. Art in this place says, you can wait here where there is light and color, order and space.
I think there is another possibility. As artists and performers, we are exposing something that would not otherwise be seen or experienced. Whether it is ultimately of importance or necessary, externalizing ideas in a form that can be experienced by others is how we, as interdisciplnary artists are known to each other and to the world. It is a way to enter into a shared experience without language, to find community more directly.
I desire balance and harmony. My studio work demonstrates a commitment to producing images that replicate this experience for the viewer. It is not possible for me to know how or if my work effects other people until it is experienced.
The response places the work beyond my personal voice. It enters without words and joins community in the experience or recognition by another person. Some of the first commissions I did in 1980 were for waiting rooms in Boston Hospitals. My work was placed where it would be experienced by the families who waited for loved ones. I finally understood the impact of my work when my son hospitalized at Children’s Hospital. The work becomes a healing, meditative space, where order is restored. In the abstract space I found some rest while I waited, helpless to do anything but wait. Art in this place says, you can wait here where there is light and color, order and space.
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
packet one
I managed to send out the first 40 pages of my thesis. People ask me what it is about. I hardly know myself. Contextualizing my practice, articulating some personal theory of art, my understanding of interdisciplinary art.. GOD knows what....else..
I feel like my passion for the moment is lost in this process. I am my own archeologist, art historian. diggin around. Trying to remember why I think this or when I saw this...
Last night I was showing the self portraits of an Alzheimer patient to my drawing class at CSMD. This artist continued to make images of himself after his diagnosis, and as he deteriorated.. so why do I like the ones at the end of the series? They are so clear to me.. in their abstraction, they have more room for possibility.. the more academic work has answered any questions I might have, where the later ones leave a lot of room for thinking about the nature of identity.. What does it even mean to make self portraits if we do not go beyond what we know about the face?
I feel like my passion for the moment is lost in this process. I am my own archeologist, art historian. diggin around. Trying to remember why I think this or when I saw this...
Last night I was showing the self portraits of an Alzheimer patient to my drawing class at CSMD. This artist continued to make images of himself after his diagnosis, and as he deteriorated.. so why do I like the ones at the end of the series? They are so clear to me.. in their abstraction, they have more room for possibility.. the more academic work has answered any questions I might have, where the later ones leave a lot of room for thinking about the nature of identity.. What does it even mean to make self portraits if we do not go beyond what we know about the face?
Saturday, February 9, 2008
portfolio
My brain feel is like mush. A small thought begins to form, charged by a some insight, seems to have some promise but then its gone. The underpinnings are missing, erased, maybe part of the ADD, the substantive or supportive stuff is just not there.
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
changes in density, shift in the field
(Click on images to enlarge)
I probably worked on this for about 8 hours yesterday and then 2 this morning. I think I am at the edge of knowing something about shells, piles of shells, allowing thoughts to come and go, watching my attachments to something and getting past boundaries.. or at least having a different way of approaching the edges while fighting the mind's need for discrete borders as my tired eyes blur in relaxed confusion.
We operate knowing about the edges of things. I wonder what we are actually perceiving and rely on in the expected perception of an edge?
I have had the experience of knowing that a step ends here, but then finding out that I am very wrong. Free falling, even an inch or two can be very disturbing. I think if we had to consciously relearn what we know about space, it would very interesting. Getting it wrong is stranger that not knowing. In the dark, we 'know' we have to be careful. Getting it wrong, thinking we know something that is not true, wakes us up to something else.
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
into the piles
detail
I have added more and yet less seems to be apparent... the more I add, the harder it is for me to see what is different? I work for hours putting in shells, piling them, lighting them, turning them around in my hand. I feel like I can’t quite draw them, and my hand feels like a club. I use only mechanical pencils with a #2 graphite, the disposable Bic kind.. The marks feel awkward in the face of this luminous form. When I dig for a definition of the space, the pencil feels like a dental pick. I am sure this imposition is elated to my anxiety regarding my molar that wants to become a crown for $1200. The replica of the forms has a distance that does not easily convey what I see, but records my labour of looking: dissecting the space, ordering the marks, fracturing the forms, selecting the one and then embedding it in the field to relinquish its one ' ness.'
I have added more and yet less seems to be apparent... the more I add, the harder it is for me to see what is different? I work for hours putting in shells, piling them, lighting them, turning them around in my hand. I feel like I can’t quite draw them, and my hand feels like a club. I use only mechanical pencils with a #2 graphite, the disposable Bic kind.. The marks feel awkward in the face of this luminous form. When I dig for a definition of the space, the pencil feels like a dental pick. I am sure this imposition is elated to my anxiety regarding my molar that wants to become a crown for $1200. The replica of the forms has a distance that does not easily convey what I see, but records my labour of looking: dissecting the space, ordering the marks, fracturing the forms, selecting the one and then embedding it in the field to relinquish its one ' ness.'
The next morning, all that I have done seems always to have been there, as effortless as breath.
So what am I really doing? I should leave room for speculation..well, that will come in the next series. Maybe that is what I am doing, setting up the question for the next series?
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