Hello everybody--I just fell in love with Wordpress.
It has been almost exactly a year since I started Visual Influence, and I have learned a lot about blogs since then. Wordpress just fits my needs better and so I am headed over there now.
I've imported this blog onto the new one, so all of the archived posts will still be available. I also will not be deleting this blog, but it will not be updated anymore, so please click here for new posts.
"Fontana...called himself a "spatialist, " his gouging holes in his canvases had always seemed to me a Dadaist nose-thumbing at the formalist dogma of "preserving the integrity of the picture plane." With his punctures Fontana transformed his paintings into a species of relief (they are sometimes referred to as sculptures)."
I just talked to Jennifer Marsh on the phone--so exciting! She runs the International Fiber Collective, you may have heard of her gas station wrapping project which she got a lot of press for, including a feature in FiberArts Magazine. Jennifer's current project is Interdependence. Participants will create a full-sized tree for display in April 2009 in Huntsville, Alabama. The concept is, "much like a live tree is interdependent on its leaves and roots for survival, societies are interdependent on the greater whole, family units, communities, and countries."
Participants from around the world are invited to create leaves to contribute to the creation of the tree. In total, up to 30, 000 leaves may be used. For more information on how to participate, click here. This is open to all age groups and levels of artistic ability.
Jennifer's next, highly ambitious project after the tree is wrapping a NASA rocket! But she needs help raising the money to rent the expensive crane required to install the artwork. Click here to see how you can help and become involved. She needs your help!
Jennifer will be representing Alabama and Community-based medium for my 50 Artists, 50 States, 50 Medium exhibition at The Eclipse Gallery in October 2009. I am still accepting submissions from artists, crafters, and designers. Click here for more info.
I am also working with her to plan a solo show for her amazing sculpture.
I love Blu--artist behind the famous MUTO animation. The image below are his drawings that were included in 25 Disegni, a publication of artists drawings. Each soft-cover, 48-page flip book features two artists, one going in either direction. Alas, the one seen here, featuring the work of Blu and Eric Ailcane, is sold out...but there are other interesting books to buy here.
Sunday mornings for me are all about settling down with a cup of coffee and chilling out for a second...this morning I happened to turn on the Travel channel, which is one of the few TV stations I actually watch once in a while.
There was a guy talking about art! I watched it for awhile, thinking this was just a little blurb as usual, and soon they would be on to a different attraction--but no--he was discussing art and only art. It took me a couple episodes to believe this was true.
See, I've said for years that there should be a show about fine art on mainstream television. If anything, simply to expose more people to art. Bring art to the masses. The show is Art Attack with Lee Sandstead, an energetic art historian.
Not saying that the show is perfect--I would quibble with some of his remarks. And he buys into "rumors" a bit too much. But for what the show is trying to do---bring art to a wider audience--overall I was really happy to see it.
I'm reading Art on the Edge and Overby Weintraub right now--I find Koons to be one of the most interesting artists in this book, as he explains that his work, "is about embracing guilt and shame and moving forward instead of letting this negative society always thwart us--always a more negative society, always more negative."
Koons' artwork is based on the following Tenets:
Tenet 1: Sex is not embarrassing, private, illicit, or sinful
Tenet 2: Egoism and exhibitionism are prerequisites of fame
"I was there with two pigs--a big one and a little one--so it was like breeding banality. I wanted to debase myself and call myself a pig before the viewer had a chance to, so they could only think more of me."
Tenet 3: Fine art is a commercial enterprise. (Koons is not a hypocrite)
Tenet 4: Kitsch is captivating.
"I try not to use it in any cynical manner. I use it to penetrate mass consciousness--to communicate to people."
Tenet 5: Price determines desire and merit.
"What I'm saying is that the seriousness with which a work of art is taken is interrelated to the value that it has. The market is the greatest critic."
Tenet 6: Art is a luxury item.
"I'm...trying to capture the individual's desire in the object, and to fix his aspirations in the surface in a condition of immortality."
I rather enjoy egotistical artists, probably because I am one myself. You have to be at least a bit narcissistic to be a great artist, I think.
Peter Plagens is a painter and critic in New York. What is unique about his website compared to other artist websites is the slideshow of the above work in progress, "A Painting as it's Painted." You can also read his essays and see examples of his other work. And make sure to read his artist statement while you are there--since he is a writer it's quite good.
I came across Peter Plagens because he reviewed the book, Seven Days in the Art World by Sarah Thornton in the current Art in America. The review was so good I had to see who this guy was. I do think his work is really interesting.
As far as said book, here is a quotation: "In [an art] world that has jettisoned craftsmanship as the dominant criterion by which to judge art, a higher premium is put on the character of the artist. If artists are seen to be creating art simply to cater to the market, it compromises their integrity and the market loses confidence in their work."
These images from Michael Neff's Chalk series really intrigued me. One of those times where I stop everything and say--I need to buy one of those photographs right now. Unfortunately, I can't--because if I had all the artwork I wanted my kids wouldn't eat--but this work definitely made the top of my list.
Street art in cross stitch is the latest in subversive cross stitch. How cool is it to be able to cross stitch a Banksy - rather than picture of a kitten holding some flowers?
The patterns are provided free and are surprisingly simple to do (although it’s a whole world of pain reading the charts).
I would recommend doing your street art cross stitch with a bottle of Jack Daniels next to you. It will help the hours fly by.
Also if you are not a fan of Banksy then this cool site also offers patterns in guns, Michael Jackson and for those with a fetish out there people wearing gas masks.
The talented Lazerian duo of Liam Hopkins and Richard Sweeney continue to amaze with their exquisite ‘Light Modulator.’ Certainly not content with being called a mere lampshade, this computer-generated form is carved from birch plywood using a CNC router. The construction is composed of 26 individual units to create its lace-like symmetry.
Lazerian works out of their studio in Manchester, UK, which used to be a hat factory.
I love chain reactions. They are fun. And hard to do. My favorite is The Way Things Go by artists Peter Fischli and David Weiss. This link is a little bit of it, but the entire video is really worth watching. I had to do a chain reaction for an art course and I thought it was completely pointless at the time...but now I get it.
About this magazine Each month or so, we release a new issue of "i left this here for you to read." We then leave them in public places (such on park benches, on buses, in airports and dentists' offices...) for anyone to take--free of charge.
Currently, we distribute our magazine in Boston, New York, and LA. We only print about 50 copies of each issue, and don't reprint any past issues. Sorry, we can't mail you any copies--we only send them to contributors.
Email us at i.left.this.here@gmail.com
They accept submissions of writing, art, and even objects. And they automatically include every single thing they receive. Of course I sent them something! Go here for more info.