Monday, February 28, 2011

Stumblings

Finding Inspiration

There are days when I am able to go to the studio and work a solid five hours on a project, then there are the days when I sit there and stare at the piece wishing it would just make it's self.

I found myself sitting in the studio this weekend at the end of my creative thinking rope, my sketchbook remained blank and the machines in the shop sat there silently. I probably sat there for an hour trying to think of a new direction for my next project in Metal Fabrication involving sheet metal.

I eventually realized staring at the machines and the blank walls weren't getting me anywhere, so I decided to hunt down some visual inspiration! I went to the library! First I googled anything and everything on sheet metal projects. A few images kept coming up and I found them interesting enough to click on and investigate further. They were images of kinetic mobiles! I loved the idea of a hanging mobile that moved. I ended up sketching a few mobile ideas and looking up books on Alexander Calder.


mobile by Alexander Calder


In my online search of inspirational metal sculptures, I also stumbled across an interesting contemporary sculptor, Sam Spiczka. Spiczka's work is comprised mostly of giant cor-ten steel forms resembling bones in abstract ways. I stumbled first stumbled across an image of his Relic II, 2005 sculpture which led me to his website, then to his blog! I read some of his blog and was actually quite inspired not only because his work is amazing, but that he seems like a normal person too, who also has a life outside the studio. Reading about artists, I usually only hear about their professional life as an artist, how it developed and what their inspirations were, but not too much about their personal lives. Reading his blog gave me a new perspective as a developing artist, and that successful artists can lead a somewhat normal life and not live entirely out of a studio or car.

Accretion IV, 2008
Sam Spiczka

Monday, February 21, 2011

Week 4 Readings

The Enveloping Air by John Berger

"Sometimes he was satisfied, often he was frustrated. Nevertheless he continued, searching for something more, determined to be more faithful, but to what?" -John Berger, page 48, Harper's Magazine, January 2011

This article discusses the manner in which Monet describes painting his work. How Monet painted the air that enveloped the scene he was capturing. Monet worked to capture a moment in time, a bird about to take flight from a fence, a particular time of day in a particular setting, all different details in how the air would touch the tings around it.

The Magpie
Claude Monet,
1869


Walter Gropius from Art in Theory

"Schooling alone can never produce art!"
- Walter Gropius, page 310, Art in Theory

Gropius first talks about how the talent of an individual cannot be taught or learned, rather it's something that comes differently to each individual. However, the knowledge and understanding of design basics and nature of materials can be taught. The Bauhaus was an art school which covered all basis of what Gropius believed was the ultimate education for a schooled artist to live, work, and thrive under; even the architecture of the building helped to unite everyone within it, forming a community of artists. The Bauhaus not only schooled artists with technical details but helped artists express themselves in many creative ways, giving the artist the basis of visual vocabulary with which to work from.

Model of the Bauhaus

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Week 3 Readings

Downtown's Daughter by Rebecca Mead

This article brings to light the eclectic and quirky life of Lena Dunham. Dunham, directer, producer, and star actor in her movie, Tiny Furniture, won the narrative-feature prize at South by Southwest Film Festival, and is now working on a new film project for HBO.

The first thing mentioned in this article was the youtube video posted of Dunham stripping to a bikini and bathing then brushing her teeth in a school fountain before getting the boot by a security officer. The video got a million and a half views and pages of comments of viewers critiquing Dunham's "looks". So, she's a bit on the chubby side, however Dunham jokes about the insults, comments, and judgments provoked by her physical appearance, praising her pudge and how it's apart of her silly personality , she says, "it's not the jiggling flesh; it's the attitude. I'll always have a fat attitude. I'll always have a chubby attitude."
Here is a trailer of her film, Tiny Furniture, a movie with very similar characteristics of her life, family, and personality.



Between the Lines by Peter Schjeldahl

"One idea is key: Kandunsjy's proposition that a line is a point set in motion." - Peter Schjeldahl, page 84, The New Yorker, Nov. 29, 2010


What is art? We all ask this question and many answers can arise from it. Many artists of the 20th century have stepped out of the rigid boundaries classic traditional art. Artists such as Picasso, Giacometti, Duchamp, Pollock, Kandinsky, and Agnes Martin have stepped 'outside the lines' of art, changing the idea of lines and perspective into a whole new cup of soup for viewers to sip on.


The Rope Dancer Accompanies Herself with Her Shadows
Man Ray, 1916


Louise Bourgeois: Statements from and Interview with Donald Kuspit

"Art is a privilege, a blessing, a relief." -Louise Bourgeois, page 1089, Ideas of the Postmodern

Louise Bourgeois mentions how art is a privilege, and it very much is so. The production of art usually requires pricey materials, a lengthy devotion of time, a creative mind to pursue an end result. An artist must pursue the task and create art, a painting or sculpture won't drop out of the sky.


Paul Cezanne Letters to Emile Bernard What Passes for Art- by Walter Pach 1940

"Get to the heart of what is before you and continue to express yourself as logistically as possible..." -Paul Cezanne, page 34, The Legacy of Symbolism



The first part of this reading contained excerpts from letters from an ill and aging Paul Cezanne to Emile Bernard. Cezanne's letters repeatedly discuss the importance of studying from nature while strongly emphasizes a painters use of his own sensations and perceptions. Cezanne also mentions the uselessness of talking about art, encouraging Emile Bernard to become a painter, not an art critique.

The second part of this section contained letter excerpts from Rainer Maria Rilke to his wife describing Cezanne's work displayed in Paris. Rilke finds himself absorbed in the colors and the simplicity of the form in one particular painting, Madame Cezanne in a Red Armchair(pictured left). Rilke describes the bold vertical stripes on the dress of the woman sitting in the painting, the vibrant red fabric of the arm chair and the patterned wallpapered background with a sense of awe and excitement like a kid would describe his first visit to Disneyland.

Madame Cezanne in a Red Armchair
Paul Cezanne, 1877

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

UNH Faculty Series: Jenni Cook and Arlene Kies

The "Other" side of the PCAC

Sometimes I forget the PCAC has two sections in the building, Fine Arts and Music. Huh, who would have thought they were in the same building, I always wondered where those strange sounds were coming from. . .

After attending the UNH Faculty Series with soprano Jenni Cook and Arlene Kies playing the piano, I am definitely ashamed to have not attended m
ore shows. I also couldn't help but notice the attendance around me, mostly other faculty members or friends of performers, possibly some Durham community members, but other than the door ushers and the 2011 Sophomore Seminar class, few students showed up. I took a sheet with show times for the semester and plan to hang it on my door, maybe to at least inspire my roommates or hall friends to attend an upcoming show or two.

This is Nora, she likes to play the piano! Here is a video of her playing.

Frank

Meet Frank

This is Frank (left), I name my sculptures after the person they were modeled after. Frank was also the first ceramic portrait I made from a model. I had previously experimented with portraits and masks from images I found, but I had never worked with a model before Frank.

My family moved around quite a bit when I was younger and each time we moved I would find some sport or activity to keep myself busy and meet new people. When I was in 4th grade, my family moved from North Carolina to Chicago, and I picked up painting and drawing at a local art studio. Halfway through 6th grade my family moved again, from Chicago to Northern California, this time I picked up sculpture while taking classes with a local artist. I made Frank when I was fourteen years old, so I like to say we have a long history together.


Frank
Margo Belisle, 2004

Friday, February 4, 2011

Week 2 Readings

Blue of Distance by Rebecca Solnit

"The painters seemed to be smitten with the blue of distance, and when you look at these paintings it is easy to imagine a world where you could walk through an expanse of green grass, brown tree trunks, and white houses, and then suddenly arrive in the blue country where grass, trees, houses are blue, and perhaps if you looked down, you, too, would be as blue as the Hin- du god Krishna." -Rebecca Solnit, page 14

Rebecca Solnit discusses painters use of blue as a background hue to express the distance behind a subject. I like how Solnit discusses how children and adults seem to react differently to what is displayed in the foreground and background. Children tend to view things in the distance as intangible and are more interested in the things that are displayed directly before them, that they can touch and look at up close. Adults tend to take a liking to scenic distances and quaint horizons, as if seeing into a distant future, dreaming of possibilities.






Ginevra de'Benci
By Leonardo DaVinci


A Painter's Wisdom

"The best thing an artist can do, of course, is to die." -Max Beckmann, page 32 of Harpers Magazine, 1998

I found this article pretty amusing. It basically says, to be a great artist you must: have a wealthy patron and hot girlfriend/wife, not go over board on religious references(too old school), don't be the creepy anti-social neighbor, critiques are allowed to say whatever they want about your art, and you will only become a noteworthy artist once you are dead. Yea, real inspiring, but I can certainly agree with most of these depressing statements.


Tradition & Identity by David Smith

"I found that painting was made with anything at hand, building board, raw canvas, self-primed canvas, with or without brushes, on the easel on the floor, on the walls, no rules, no secret equipment, no anything except the conviction of the artist, his challenge to the world and his own identity." -Davis Smith, page 2

David Smith mentions how "sculpture can be painting and painting can be sculpture", implying how both the 2D and 3D arts are very similar in that they can come from the simplest of tools and found objects to create a beautiful vision. That all artists share a "visual heritage" that comes from each individual artist connecting to his or her inner self in a "declaration of purpose" through the journey of creating art.


Frank Stella & Carl Andre

"There are two problems in painting. One is to find out what painting it and the other is to find out how to make a painting. The first is learning something and the second is making something." - Frank Stella, page 820

I liked reading these short passages because I could connect to it. I don't paint much, and I think that might be because I have a hard time making it into something I find like able. I love observing other paintings and how the painter makes use of colors, materials, and brush strokes. However, I still have a hard time interpreting my ideas on the canvas. I generally use a palette knife, so I'm kind of sculpting with the paint, pushing it this way an that.


Still Life by Mary Gordon

"I wonder if Bonnard could do anything with this lightless room. If he could enter it, see in these suffering people, including my mother, especially my mother..." -Mary Gordon, page 49 of Harper's Magazine, 1998


Mary Gordon writes this memoir mostly about her obsession to the colors and "lightness" she finds most appealing in Pierre Bonnard's paintings. Gordon discusses her relationship with her ailing mother(who forgets she even has a daughter) and how she imagines Bonnard could paint a picture of her mother's sad life with it's glum surroundings of old age, fear, and emptiness, and change it to something bright and colorful; breathing life into objects and people that would normally be seen as dull, boring, or dead. Pictured right is a painting by Bonnard, Bowl of fruit. He had let the flowers in the bowl wilt and die before painting them, so "they would have more of a presence".