Well, I'm putting this painting up here, but, like I seem to say about all my work, it isn't done. But this one really isn't done because there are specific things that bug me about it. I am putting it up just to get it out there - and if there are any suggestions I would love to hear them!
In it, I am playing with how to break up the image - to divide it, and in doing so, hopefully try and break down the inherent hierarchy of importance of 'figure in a random space'. I guess I am experimenting with how to disintegrate the hierarchy without giving into the obscurity and scholarly disengagement of abstraction. I've been looking a lot at Peter Doig, a painter who has also attempted this in some of his paintings. He chooses images that don't necessarily have any personal meaning though, so while they convey meaning to an audience, they are not loaded with meaning for him. I think I may try this tact next because my work of late has started to come off a bit... 'emo', if you will.
So, I also wanted to talk about one of my random ideas that crossed my mind, mostly to get some responses. I recently watched this lecture on the brain, synæsthesia, and art. (The full lecture can be seen at http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=0NzShMiqKgQ). The lecture was a bit scattered, but there were some very interesting bits. Synæsthesia is the condition in some people's brains to experience one sensory experience simultaneously with another, ie. seeing colors when you hear particular sounds or reading the number seven as blue. He goes on to say that there are many degrees to which people experience this, and that some great artists, poets, and scientists are actually synesthetes (Kandinsky and Hockney to name some painters). But from there he goes on to discuss what he calls 'metaphorical thinkers'. I believe many artists think in terms of metaphors. They might not be synesthetes, but they strongly feel the correspondence of different senses and use it to help them understand the world. While I don't physically see colors that correspond to sounds, I can certainly empathize with what it must be like, and while I don't involuntarily attach personalities to numbers or colors, I can see how one could. Sounds definitely can have shapes, stormy weather is angry, and the light on a late summer's afternoon can taste like honey. In my mind at least. When you have a good metaphor in your mind to correspond with a feeling or an idea, it seems like a very earnest way to express your thought without using out and out narrative or simply using art to illustrate your concept. The art actually becomes your idea. There is a trans-formative experience (as Michael Paraskos might say).
So now I've been wondering about everyone else. I know I've had conversations touching on this with a few close friends, but I'm wondering how many people out there -- if not synesthetes -- would consider themselves metaphorical thinkers, and if so, do you use this way of thinking in your art making? I'd love to hear your thoughts and experiences!
For some reason blogspot isn't letting people post comments, so here are a few that I have copied and pasted from facebook.
ReplyDeleteFrom Jayne Lawless: Fascinating stuff Erin, I reckon I'm deffo one of those thingymebobs you talk about, I imagine/describe everything as another thing! To describe anything, a smell, taste, feeling etc I almost always try to explain it with something else. It's like the thing itself isn't enough even though the thing could be used to explain something else! You get in my head Erin!! I have no idea how to explain what I'm trying to say, it's like a scribble in my brain! Hahaha, I get you though!
From Ellie Letterman: your work has progressively gotten more heavy-if you will...since you got back from cyprus. it had been disarranged-but intentionally and light-heartedly. it seems more disconcerted now. like the figures are having a difficult time connecting to-or being in- the weight of the landscape. whereas before they were trying to drift off into the clouds, bounce about and float away...i'm seeing some parallels in your life. you use wind sometimes and it shows this....i can explain when i see you next.
ReplyDeleteFrom John Sims: Hi Erin...I get it..as you might imagine...90% of my stuff is about all that shit. So much so that I do not question it...my dreams are metaphors for life, these maps I am doing are metaphors for reality, like dream landscapes...you know the way a dream has just enough reality in it to make it feel real and convincing...I think its trying to visualise and explain this, make sense of this, is what keeps me doing this shit and not give up and be a errrr postman..yeah I like what you are doing here as well x
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