Monday, December 7, 2009

Process and Production


Fractured, Oil and Graphite, 36" x 24"

Another month, another painting.  I think that this one is nearly complete.  I might go back into the shadow on the face and decrease the contrast between it and the light a little..  But part of me likes the heightened confusion too.
 
I'm concerned that I don't make enough work.  I know if I were ever to reach a more professional level, I would need to produce work more quickly, but I don't know how to speed up my process.  My ideas just take a lot of time to consider because the initial images I start with are much more complex and full of superfluous forms, relationships, etc..  I have to pare those ideas down to only keep the essentials that support the feel of the painting as a whole.  It takes a while for me to decide what is essential, and to let go of anything I might have initially had my heart set on.

Any ideas?  I know this is just shop talk for artists, but I'm curious if anyone has any artistic process time savers or other ways of upping production without compromising genuine intent in their work.

As always, feel free to leave your comments.  I welcome anything! 

Saturday, November 7, 2009

thought provoking ideas and other redundancies

i have "finished" another painting that i wanted to share with everyone.  i think i'll call it timeline.  i welcome any comments, or criticisms of course.
  

appx. 4' x 3'





detail


on a different note, i wanted to share some interesting ideas and quotes that i have come across in the past month.  for me they relate to my own insecurities as an artist.  these insecurities manifest themselves in the constant dialog in my head, where i find myself repeatedly trying to validate what i am working on to myself.  but i found these quotes from louise bourgeois helpful in their dismissive manner and unwillingness to have other agendas imposed on her through insinuation.  i came across these quotes while reading a compilation of interviews and writings called destruction of the father, reconstruction of the father:
          on materials being the subject of the work --  "the material itself, stone or wood, does not interest me as such.  it is a means; it is not the end.  you do not make sculpture because you like wood.  that is absurd.  you make sculpture because the wood allows you to express something that another material does not allow you to."
          on art history --  "i am not interested in art history, in the academies of styles, a succession of fads.  art is not about art.  art is about life, and that sums it up.  this remark is made to the whole academy of artists who have attempted to derive the art of the late 1980's, to try to relate it to the study of the history of art, which has nothing to do with art.  it has to do with appropriation.  it has to do with the attempt to prove that you can do better than the next one, and that a famous art history teacher is better than the common artist."
          i think i like these words because it helps me to feel like it's okay to simply explore materials, images, and composition intuitively without feeling the need to justify what i'm doing with reasoning based on what i anticipate others are looking to hear.  it's ok to simply work on art as my own means of dealing with being human.  to borrow an idea from contemporary art historian michael paraskos, who, while i don't fully subscribe to his contemporary art movement (due mainly to my objection to art historians, critics, and curators attempting to artificially co-opt starting art movements to bolster their scholarly kudos in the art world) put forth an idea that i find a satisfactory way to describe art and art making.   
           
             One last point, I would also want people to recognise what I mean by the word aesthetic. I do not mean the popular definition of the term as meaning 'beauty' (which is a misunderstanding of Kant). I always take aesthetics back to its Greek origin, where it meant to experience through the senses. To me this suggests a material and physical engagement with the world by the artist, which results in a material and physical response in the production of the art work, which is then experienced as a material and physical phenomenon by the viewer. That is an extreme simplification, but I would always base aesthetic art on this at least as a starting point.    (this quote is taken from a discussion thread on his review of damien hirst's recent painting exhibition.  to read the full thread, http://www.facebook.com/topic.php?uid=2497595668&topic=13527#topic_top)


              It shouldn't be necessary to point out that art must be material and transformative. It never illustrates ideas or holds a mirror to the world. But these concerns are now offered as art, whereas in fact they belong to the disciplines of politics or philosophy or anthropology. Such dialogue may be of interest but it should never be confused with art.
Art offers an alternative to this dialogue on the actual world. Through a creative process of thinking through the manipulation of material, the artist makes a new world governed solely by an aesthetic totality. The world on the other side of the picture plane is not subject to the rules of our world. It may remind us of our reality, but re-presents it in terms that are unique to art. To make art and to view art requires faith in this alternative reality. Without this faith we would read the work of art as a narrative on our world. In this, there is no greater purpose in art than any other form of social dialogue in which we enter on a daily basis. If art is just about communicating an opinion, we could all be artists and everything could be an artwork.   (from artist clive head on the same thread listed above)


           i think this is a good way to go about looking at and understanding art.  at least for me, this makes sense and seems very inclusive.  let me know what you think about any of the quotes above, if you agree, disagree, or just have something more to add.  

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Starting Up.


my first post.

i feel quite self conscious about what to say in my first post as it will sit, lonely, on the page until i find the time again to add anything else of interest. so, please, don't judge this lone little post too harshly.

the point of my blog is, initially, to function as an interim website until i can finish an actual professional artist website which is currently in the idea stage... so this is a fast and dirty way for me to showcase my work. it's a step in the right direction at least. my secondary intensions include possible delusions of me maintaining this as a place of interest for other artists and art lovers. perhaps as a place to encourage emerging artists going through similar struggles, or a place to share recommended shows, good books, new or old favorite artists, etc...

in keeping with the first reason for my blog, here are some of my most recent works that i've completed since returning home from my year in cyprus. please don't hesitate to comment or ask questions about any of them.





i dont have a title for this yet..   appx 2'x3'





this one is called groundless.  1.5'x3'







this is called time well spent.  3'x1.5'