Friday, December 22, 2017

Chuck Close Allegations

I read an article last night about two women coming forward to accuse Chuck Close of sexual harassment.  He did not touch them, he commented to the one that her "pussy looked delicious."  Most male artists are not that bad.  I can think of one guy I went to school with venting that his non art friends thought he drew with a hard on in that class.  I have also done a little nude modeling.  For two main reasons.  One, I wanted to see what it was like on their end.  I was still holding out hope then to be an art professor, and I thought it would be good to have some clue on that.  The second reason being did I really want to come to the end of my life and not be able to say that I had.  None of my experiences were as bad as what the women described with Chuck Close.  The one though said she was operating on the assumption he was just going to do his typical face portrait thing of her.  Never assume, always ask to see their work and what exactly they want you to model for.  Yes, I did decline on a couple modeling gigs because I didn't like the answers. Not condoning what Chuck Close said, but a woman has to look out for herself.  In my mind that is part of the responsibility of a free adult woman.  The alternative in my mind is the old patronizing thing.  That women can't look after themselves and need men to protect them from these situations.  It is also perplexing to me why when she first got there and he started talking about a nude photo he had on his wall and how he fucked that model why she didn't leave then.  Instead she went on to take off her clothes, and she only left after the pussy comment.  Part of what needs to happen with this Metoo thing is education for women on warning signs, when to leave, when to punch, when to call the cops.  This movement will be for naught if these things don't happen.  Finger pointing is not enough.

Thursday, December 14, 2017

Beige bathrooms

I really hate beige or brownish bathrooms.  It is a trend I cannot stand.  The two main reasons as I see it for why people go there are one: many people are afraid of or don't like color, and two: because it hides shit really well.  In public spaces I suppose designers have to try to go with a color everyone will like.  As an artist this fear of color drives me nuts.  When I watch the home design shows when I work out it is a lot of grey and beige.  This one Great Course I took on the psychology of color said that grey is the color depressed people gravitate to.  I am not sure how correct that is that course seemed a little wooish to me.  If it is right what does it say about our obsession with grey and beige right now.  Speaking as a cleaning lady I dislike beige bathrooms because I know how well the color hides things.  Personally I would rather be able to easily see and do my job.  I really like the older bathrooms at work with the blue tile work.  Bits of wet paper towel do not blend in on those floors.  Beige bathrooms just feel gross dirty to me.

Saturday, December 09, 2017

Brain Imprintations

 
                                        This is a painting of the founding doctor where I work.  Him and the doctor who lured him to La Crosse were really the first doctors in the area with bonafide medical degrees.  There were lots of docs running around then who were really just quacks.  Anyways this guy when he took charge of the newly built hospital had an instance where a quack doctor put a scalpel through a patient's eye.  This pissed him off and prompted him to take lengths to ban unqualified doctors from his hospital.  The quacks came after him with lawsuits, like around 100 lawsuits. They used to have a book with all of the original court documents in the main lobby.  He won every single case.  Later when the Great Depression hit the hospital was struggling to stay open, so he put what would be the equivalent of one million dollars today of his own money into it to keep it going.  He also had fantastic taste in artists.  Unfortunately it is not known who painted it.  This painting is fascinating to me because it tends to illicit strong reactions from people, and it comes off differently to different people.  Some of the other cleaning ladies are scared of it.  In their defense he was also a strict if he caught workers talking it was automatic termination.  One floor guy Richard thinks he looks like a condescending prick.  Although it should maybe be noted Richard hates it there and views the hospital as being like the Twilight Zone.  My Dad, who has never been an employee there, thought he looked benevolent.  I fall in between if it is a slow day and I am being a lazy cleaning lady he looks majorly pissed off to me, but if I am having a hectic one break have to stay late kind of day he looks sympathetic to me.  I am sure a lot of this is in my head, but I think there are some artistic tricks here as well.  I think it is kind of like implied line where the artist doesn't fully draw things in because human brains will fill it in.  Only I think this is imprinted emotion.  Because really the doctor's face in the painting is neutral, so I think that our monkey brains imprint whatever emotional biases or whatever onto the painting. In contrast to this painting there used to be another of a different doctor with a very big smile.  That one didn't have quite the same effect because that one the expression was definite.  I think part of the mystique surrounding the Mona Lisa is due to her fairly neutral facial expression, and people imprinting onto her.

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Veteran's Day

My grandpa served in WWII in the Philipines.  I guess he had three purple hearts.  I asked Mom, but she won't tell me what they were for.  I think one actually had to do with blood donation.  Grandpa was O- (as am I).  A little fuzzy on the details, but I guess they needed blood to save another soldier's life.  Grandpa said they could take what they needed from him.  They took quite a lot and almost killed granpa.  That is why I like to donate blood sometimes when I feel like I can.

Friday, November 03, 2017

Daguerreotypes

Maybe I am kind of a weird archaeologist.  The pyramids are cool and all, but I do view bread as one of world's wonders.  Just all the steps involved, it is amazing to me that someone way back when figured all that out.  No I am not going to claim that aliens really invented bread.  Learning how to make bread is on my list for things I want to learn though.  Anyways I also view Louis Daguerre's invention of the daguerreotype in the same way.  I don't think most know photographs started out as metal plates not paper.  In school they warned against the process as being too dangerous.  Mercury vapor is used to develop the image, and from what I understand many of the first photographers went insane from those vapors.  In perusing youtube though I have found some demonstrations.  One guy in Buffalo, NY appears to have a studio devoted to making them.  I am currently typing this on my phone, which has limited ability, but when I get a chance I will add a link.  I am curious what sort of safety precautions the youtubers are using, hopefully something.  In the one I watched it just showed the person's hands.  The Buffalo guy just showed a blacked out screen with an explanation of what he was doing (that vid said the vapor exposure had to happen in complete darkness.)

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Rob Hay and Lessons in Being Prepared

I probably maybe should have done this a long time ago, but I went to school for a bit with Rob.  Hopefully he won't mind me talking about him.  I don't agree with him on politics, but I would rate him as one of the smartest men I have met in my life.  He was in the graduate painting program at Marywood while I was in the printmaking.  He was one of the older ones there, but it also gave him more insight than some of us.  He went through various phases in his life.  I knew him as a staid bankerish looking guy, but I guess he went through a spiked dog collar phase.  Anyways his first try at a MFA program he said he really didn't care about anything.  He knew they were coming to fail him for his candidacy review, so he waited until they were there and about to open their mouths to critique him to tell them "I dropped out this morning, get the fuck out."  He then went on to get a MA.  He obtained his MFA from Marywood. 


Anyways Rob was also a boy scout, and he took the lesson of being prepared to heart.  Just as we were about to finish up and graduate Rob was informed that the school had lost his transcripts, and he had to get them official sealed transcripts within a very limited amount of time.  Otherwise he would have to stay another semester.  Amazingly he had sealed official transcripts in the glove compartment of his truck, which was a very good thing as I don't know if he had had to request transcripts from his old schools if they would have gotten there in time.  A little lesson in being prepared.


This is a link to examples of his work.


https://www.artsy.net/artist/rob-hay

Thursday, October 19, 2017

Jose Trujillo

Speaking of buying art this is my newest acquisition.  It is by Jose Trujillo.  I found him on ebay; he seems very prolific.
  He sets his auctions quite low, although expect to get into a bidding war.  I tried to get two other pieces, but was outbid.  He has 100 percent positive feedback.  He has an excellent sense of color, and he has good brushwork.  Granted I am not a painter, but his brush work is loose not tight.  This is something I struggle with sometimes.  Iwould describe looseness as being sort of an ease or confidence in the brushwork.  Being tight can lead to distortions.  Tricks to help combat this is initially start out holding the brush on its far distal end from the brush end.  Good brushes are long for a reason.  I've read Gainsborough had a 7 foot long brush for this purpose.  I've also had a professor recommend standing when drawing or painting because it inreases your range of motion.  At any rate his work is quite affordable, and I am quite sure it is a real painting (not the tricks I talked about in On buying art).  I can really smell the oil paint on it.  I would have to say that part of what fascinates me out Jose Trujillo's work is how he simplifies and breaks down his landscapes into color. 

Monday, October 16, 2017

9 In Hand Press 2018 Print Exchange


Hopefully I can keep focused and complete this one, but 9 In Hand Press has put out their call for entry for the 2018 print exchange.


http://www.9inhandpress.com/print-exchange-2018.html

Sunday, October 15, 2017

On Buying Art

Awhile back I read a little article on collecting art.  I think the best point the article made was that you don't need to be super rich to collect art, and a collection is technically more than one piece.  Although then the article went into what sizes you should buy.  I also saw a Better Homes and Gardens article where they said people should be buying more modern art to bring vitality to their homes.   I guess this is all well and good.  In my mind the main rule is buy what you like, and don't worry about investment value.  After all if it is going to be hanging on your wall it should be something you enjoy.  Most of the art I buy tends to be smaller.  It accomodates my budget and small apartment.  Other thoughts on buying art.  I would be wary of buying big name artists on ebay, or there are some on etsy too.  There are a lot of knock offs out there, if you are going to spend a lot of money you should be sure.  There are a lot of fake Chagal prints out there for instance.  I doubt most could afford a Corot, but he was a bit of a trickster too.  To help out his struggling artist friends he would sign their paintings for them.  Then they could go off and sell their Corot more easily and for more money.  Unfortunately today when these paintings surface they do not retain their value.  Part of why I like to buy from living artists.  I will not lie when I heard that an artist I bought from had a Milwaukee PBS special done on them I was pretty happy.  In my mind that is more rewarding than spending a lot of money on a fake big name.  Although that said living artists can be tricksters too.  I have heard of artists at fairs faking their painting ability by having photos printed on canvas, and then painting over with clear varnishes to make it look painting.  This in my mind could also cross over to less realistic art.  Many artists sell giclee prints, or printed canvas reproductions of their work.  This is all well and good but they should be upfront about it.  I could see someone doing brush work on a canvas reproduction and selling it as original.  A lot of the printed canvas ones I have seen have a plastic quality to them.

Tattoos

I've been thinking about this a bit lately.  At the opening for the Banned exhibit the thing that really struck me was that pretty much all of the attendees were older; I think maybe I saw one younger guy.  It bothered me at first, but I've thought on it some more.  I said in a previous post that I thought Contemporary art was more about experience than ownership.  I think tattoos are a perfect example of this.  I don't think that interest in art has really faded, more that it has shifted.  I looked a bit online for articles about tattooing and art.  Most were a debate about is it an art, or looking at the cultural history.  I guess I am more interested in the commercial aspect of all this.  What I mean is that a lot of the time people buy art not only for the enjoyment of it, but also as an investment.  A guy I went to grad school with said he had had people who had purchased work from him get in his face.  They wanted to know what he was up to, and why he was not exhibiting.  His work was more of an investment to them.  I have had this a little bit too.  The thing that is of interest to me about tattoos is that people pay to have them done, but there is no potential for reselling them.  They are from an investment point of view valueless.  So maybe tattoo culture is a little bit purer art appreciation.

Saturday, October 14, 2017

Friday, October 06, 2017

Thoughts on Guns

I have schizophrenia and I do not own a gun.  I am more than happy to give up my rights to own one.  I know what really bad is like for me, and I am very glad that I did not have access to a gun then.  I don't think people always appreciate the anger level that can happen with this disease.  Most people have a hard time with comprehending that when I am really bad I hear them constantly.  No privacy no matter what I am doing.  As angry as I was though I never took it out on another human being.  I broke things, and I took it out on myself.  Really the main part of why I don't own a gun is because I would probably use it on myself.  I have had a Republican guy (mom would term him a shooter) at work argue with me about this, which I do not understand.  He says I seem normal, and tells me my experience was not that bad.  Inspite of me showing him the scars on my arm.  He was also not around me when I was fully unmedicated.  I don't get why you would push guns on people like me.
 
       That guy my Mom would classify as shooter.  Mom says there are two types of gun people.  Hunters and shooters.  Hunters understand that guns are tools used to kill.  They use these tools to feed their families, and they don't need assault weapons or machine guns to do it.  Those would only ruin the meat.  Mom's idea of a good hunter was grandpa.  She said she was always amazed because she would examine the deer he brought back.  Every single one only had one shot in them through the heart.  My Grandpa and great uncles had the policy of only shoot if you are one hundred percent sure you can make the shot.  A good hunter does not allow an animal to suffer. Shooters on the other hand are more childlike, they view guns as toys.  Most shooters I know tend to look down on hunters because they kill things.  My Mom has the opposite view of the shooters; hunters are to be respected and shooters should be reviled.  After all the Sandy Hook guy was a shooter prior to his rampage, not a hunter.

Thursday, October 05, 2017

I've been looking around on ebay at art.  Kind of the interesting thing to me is that it seems like maybe landscape art does way better than nudes.  Although a lot of the nudes were bad.  I don't think I saw any bids on the nudes actually.  Also saw quite a few gay oriented pieces, actually most of the male nudes did have "gay interest" as a descripter.  Nothing wrong with the gay part, but they should really do a better job on the art.  Someone should introduce them to Mapplethorpe and composition.         Figure drawing is such a maligned thing.  As professor Joel told us humans are at once attracted and repelled by the human body.  I love it though.  I have gotten some nasty reactions.  One guy imagined a porno shoot.  I also know a female artist whose husband will not allow her to work off of male models.  For me that would be the end of the relationship.  I don't think most people realize that female artists in the past were not permitted to work off of live models.  That is for sure on male models, but I also seem to recall hearing they couldn't even work off other women.  Actually even viewing female nudes.  The cliche of the artist drawing back the curtains on their work has it's origins in curtains that would be placed on nudes to hide them from the women and children.  Goya's paintings of the nude maja and clothed maja sort of ran along those lines.  Originally the nude maja hung behind the painting of the clothed maja.  The clothed maja painting was attached to a pulley system that with the flip of a switch would move that painting away to reveal the nude.  That situation had more to do with hiding the nude from the Spanish Inquisition.  Unfortunately the Inquisition did find it, and Goya had to go before them for it.                                            Due to work I have not been able to go to figure drawing sessions like I used to.  What strikes me when I have is how predominatly male the artists are.  One time the guy who organizes it was stoked because there were two female artists who showed up to draw.

Sunday, October 01, 2017

Knitting

These days my great preoccupation has been knitting.  It relaxes me.  I am embarking on a new pattern full of challenges.
                                                  The pattern is from Kate Atherley's Custom Socks: knit to fit your feet.  It is a toe-up pattern, I am usually a cuff-down girl.  They are knee highs, which gives some fit challenges.  Years ago I tried making a pair of knee-highs without a pattern and without any idea of negative ease.  They totally wouldn't stay up.                                                            Atherley came up with how to do sizing by having people from all over send her their foot and ankle measurements.  She found that circumference of the ball of the foot was pretty much the same as the circumference of the ankle.  Prior to her book I don't ever remember seeing these sizes listed on patterns.  In my case I have long skinny feet; the ball of my foot is smaller than my ankle.  So that comes out to the fourth size on this pattern, but I have big I guess I have big calves, it was not listed as a size option.  So I guess it remains to be seen if I can figure this out.  This is as far as I have gotten.  

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Contemporary Art

Contemporary Art is the art going on right now; I think most people get confused and think it is Modern.  Anyways there are people still doing more formalist based art, but there has been a push back away from formalism.  The idea is now the thing of most importance to avant-garde artists.  Damien Hirst for example does no physical work to produce his art.  He has ideas, which he pays other artists to execute.  ORLAN whom I have written about before has stated that the idea is the most important thing to her in her work.  I would also say that there is something of a trend away from ownership, and more of an emphasis upon the experience.  After all you can not own ORLAN's face.  I am also thinking in particular of the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei and his art installation Kui Hua Zi.  In Kui Hua Zi he buried the floor of the Tate Modern Art Gallery in London with sunflower seeds.  Initially art patrons could walk on them and bury themselves in them if they wished.  The installation was meant to be a commentary on China's mass production of products done for Western countries.

Saturday, September 23, 2017

Modern Art

This is a big topic to cover in one post.  Before I go anywhere though, years ago a guy I went to college with upon his graduation put out a reading list of books for artists.  One of those books was Bluebeard by Kurt Vonnegut.  Bluebeard is about a geriatric abstract artist who did hit it big.  He hit millionaire status from sales of his work, but the glue he had used crumbled and all of his work fell apart.  So he is left with money, but no real legacy.  There is a lot going on in this book, but I am going to sum it up as a warning to artists not to take themselves too seriously.  I want that thought firmly implanted.                                                                                                
   I am writing this in response to youtube videos where contestants play "kid art or modern art."  I may seem to contradict myself from the previous paragraph, but in my mind these videos are symptomatic of a bigger problem, a lack of intellectual curiosity.  To me these videos say "I don't understand this.  I can't be bothered to understand this.  It must be garbage because I don't understand it.  I will make fun of it and dismiss it."  Now as said art should not be taken too seriously, but anti-intellectualism does lead to things like the anti-vaccine movement or the flat earth people.  These videos are also demeaning towards children.  Yes, some artists were trying to mimic children's art because they recognized a vitality before the science got there.  Little kids who are learning to walk can create fractal patterns.  It is the only time in a typical human life when we can do this.  So yes little kid art is special.


Art is a many headed hydra.  Anymore I like to think of it as being like the Room of Requirements in Harry Potter.  It can be anything the artist wants it to be.  There are lots of different kinds of art and lots of different kinds of artists.  Add to that the different areas of art criticism/philosophy, this is the branch that helps to process what the art is about.  To some extent art criticism could be looked at as political agendas in art.  The branch that tends to hold the most sway is formalism.  In formalism the appearance and composition of the piece is all that matters.  Hardcore formalists chuck idea content out the window.  In my undergraduate experience of art form and content were given equal importance, and we were encouraged to write about our art to help shore up our ideas.  In grad school two of the professors on my review panel were formalists, and they did not appreciate that I was writing about the art I was making.  I remember one of them told me that when he was younger he was more content oriented and out to show off how smart he was, but then he realized he didn't have to prove that.  The most important and controversial art critic of the 20th century, Clement Greenberg, was a formalist.  He had strict ideas for what painting and sculpture  should be.  The most famous example is his notion that color should not be used in sculpture.  The sculptor Henri Moore pretty much only produced white sculpture.  He did do some in color, but unfortunately he gave them to Greenberg, who painted them white.  Anyways that is what formalism is.  There are also avenues of critical thought in feminism, and actually even for science.  It does take work, but I would recomend reading multiple sources to better understand modern art because people do have their biases.  A formalist will focus on compostion, whereas post modernists will look more toward content and context of work.


To begin with Modern Art is typically defined as stretching time span of 1860-1970.  So I don't think the people who malign Modern Art even realize that the Impressionists are included in the scope of Modern Art as is Vincent van Gogh.  People tend these artists, or at least I see their work reproduced on lots of various items in catalogs.  Covering the full scope of Modern Art would probably be to time consuming for this post, so I am going to talk about the two artists I most often hear maligned: Pablo Picasso and Jackson Pollock.      
Image result for Demoiselles d'Avignon
  A formalist professor thoughts on Picasso (if I am remembering what he said correctly) was that he was using compositions from the Renaissance, getting rid of the true to life rendering.  In the book Colliding Worlds Miller lays out more of the social context.  The intellectuals at that time were fascinated by the fourth dimension and trying to figure out what it was.  Mystical significance was even placed on it.  Some believed it was G-d's dimension, and only G-d could see all four.  Picasso had a book by the mathematician Poincare he was studying.  Incidently Einstein was studying the same book, and it helped him produce the theory of relativity.  Picasso did not understand the math, but it had lots of geometric drawings which he studied.  He took the line about not being able to draw four dimensions as a personal challenge.  This was his inspiration for Desmoiselles d'Avignon.  Incidently Einstein ruled that the fourth dimension is time.  This is why I said reading multiple sources is a must.     


Image result for Jackson Pollock                                                                           
 Jackson Pollock was a force of nature in art, literally.  I have written elsewhere about how Pollock so far has been the only human adult capable of producing fractal patterns, but things could have turned out very differently if Clement Greenberg had not taken an interest in him.  Pollock was Greenberg's ideal painter.  His paintings were non representational, they were flat, and lots of color.  Greenberg did not just recommend Pollock to potential buyers.  Remember that the Cold War was going on, and that extended into the art world as well.  So he was promoting Pollock and the other American Abstract Expressionists as American champions against Russia.  He even conferred on them god-like power.  He said that artists who do non representational work were creating ex nihilo (creation from nothing) a godly attribute, not a human one.  Greenberg's argument was really the artists finally making a retort going all the way back to Plato.  Plato summed up his estimation of visual artists in an analogy about a bed.  The best bed was G-d's bed, the second best bed was the one the carpenter made in imitation, the worst bed was the artist's rendering because you could not sleep in that bed.  It took a long time, but Daguerre's invention of photography freed artists from the chore of realistic rendering.  Remember what I said in the beginning about the book Bluebeard, this is where that comes in.  I have never seen or heard any data to this effect, but I would speculate that this is when the price of art really sky rocketed.  Inflation would have to be taken into account, but I wonder how what an Impressionist artist got for a painting would compare to what American Abstract Expressionists got for theirs.

Saturday, September 16, 2017

Thoughts on the Feminine Mystique

Okay so this isn't art related, but I thought I would talk about it.  Years ago I tried to read the Feminine Mystique it was going good until I hit the section on the 1950's.  It seemed like the author was presenting a stereotype to me; it didn't fit with either one of my grandmothers.  The FM presented women of the 50's as bored housewives who ate nutritionally fortified chalk to keep their hourglass figures.                      Well to begin with my grandma on Dad's side had a bit of a very human wild streak and bad luck with men.  For awhile anyway she was a single mother and a far cry from the bored stay at home woman.  She had a teaching certificate, so she did teach for awhile.  She also worked for awhile as an accountant, which is how she came to own and run a chicken-egg farm.  She had been keeping books for the original owner who decided to get out of it and gave her the business.  After she died I guess the city of Janesville dedicated a tree or bench to her in one of the parks.  As an older woman I can think of one example where she tried to help a woman out of a domestic abuse situation.                                                                  My grandma on my Mom's side is very much a fighter.  To her Dad's credit he did not tell her "Good girls don't fight!"  Instead he laid down some ground rules.  If she was fighting in defense of herself, or family, or someone who needed help that was fine.  If she was bullying or starting fights then she would get in trouble.  His other rule was that if she was going to fight she had to win.  Unfortunately he was gored to death by a bull he was helping another farmer transport.  Things went to pieces.  Fast forward a bit she ended up getting pregnant before she finished high school, but she refused to allow them to remove her from school.  She was determined to get her degree.  I believe protocols then and to some extent still are to get the pregnant girls out of sight.  She did get her degree and she was also valedictorian.  She did marry grandpa, but she was still a working woman.  She ended up going back to school to be a machinist.  She got to work on the engines of the Navy's wolf class submarines.                                                    So neither one fits the FM idea of 50's women.  Kind of a side thought is that I have always felt fortunate to be alive at the time I am for lots of reasons.  One reason in particular though sex ed was part of my education.  I can't help but wonder how things would have been different for my grandmas if safe sex would have been taught then.  This is something the religious right likes to go after, but lets be honest it is a myth that this stuff did not happen in the past.  Abstinence classes are bullshit, and organizations like Planned Parenthood are important services, and no they do not just do abortions.

Flattening

Maybe my understanding of flattening in schizophrenia is off.  My understanding of it is kind of a lack of emotion where the person does not get happy excited or as much to the opposite extreme.  I think it is typically described as a symptom, but I think it is more of a way of coping.  Again I am not sure if this counts for flattening, but I do better when I keep things as even keel as possible.  At first the emotional upheaval can be terrible to deal with.  I have found that my reaction matters because to some extent they mirror me and my reaction.  If I take their bate and respond all crazy they get worse.  Wants and desires will also mess a person up.  In my experience they would use them against me, so I do better when I let some of that go and focus on what is within my easy reach.

Sunday, September 10, 2017

The Things I do for Work

I pick up a lot in the hospital on weekends.  One of the bad things about this is my normal shift is 4pm-12:30am Mon.-Fri.  If I want the overtime though I have to pick up first shift.  I suppose this all sounds very boring, but to do it I have to not take my schiz meds.  The most aggravating side effect is how long they make me sleep.  I have been doing pretty good lately, normally every few months I would end up talking to them.  It has been kind of a long stretch without them.  This year I have done better with sticking to two days of cardio a week.  I think maybe that has helped.  I am having dim voices right now, though.  If it was during the week I would for sure take my meds, but I have to get up early for work.  They aren't at a level where I feel compelled to talk to them.  This is mild compared to where it can be.  At its worst fully unmedicated extreme it can also include smell hallucinations and sensations as well.  I haven't had the smell one a lot.  Early on they told me they had replaced the water coming out of my shower with bleach.  When I turned it on I could smell bleach, which is weird because I don't use bleach at home.  Maybe it was just power of suggestion.  The sensation thing they were trying to express the level of control they had over me by telling me where I would be experiencing pain.  Not sure if power of suggestion, or just aches and pains my brain latched onto.  It seemed like visual hallucination were more linked to reading.  Remember one time leaving paranoid line of questioning about soy in resident doctors lounge.  At the time I was delighted to see a reply on the paper.  I read it once, and then I read it a little later and the handwriting seemed to have changed as well as the message. A year or two later I am medicated and cleaning my apartment when I find it, and there was no reply whatsoever on it.

Wednesday, September 06, 2017

Laughing Venus on the Naked Beast

As I have said before I don't like cluttering the Naked Beast with words. I thought I would talk about the Laughing Venus.  I don't know if the drawing fully conveys this, but she is an older model (I think 40's).  I liked the idea of getting away from teenage Venuses and portraying her as a mature woman.  I exhibited this at a Greenbay Street Studio exhibit.  It was paired with Herpes and HIV.  I did not plan this with one of the artists, but Lisa Lenarz had a video on a loop of a closeup of mouths kissing.  So my stuff went next to that.

Sunday, August 27, 2017

Art and Science

To most people art and science are completely different topics, but in my mind there are similarities.  Both rely heavily on observation and both rely on experimentation.  A difference is science has an obligation to stick to the truth whereas art can fudge reality and make it into what they wish.  I remember BPJ in one of his lectures telling us that we as artists need to lie to our viewers and fool them into thinking that 2D space actually has 3D depth.               Perhaps it is cliche to bring Leonardo da Vinci into a discussion of art and science.  He never wanted to be a painter.  He wanted to be a man of science, he wanted to be a medical doctor.  Unfortunately for him the way Italian society worked at that point in time a male had to have noble lineage on both sides to be a doctor.  Leonardo's father was noble, but his mother was a peasant.  A painting apprenticeship was the best Leonardo's father could do for him.  Really I think it should be stated that history owes Leonardo's father a debt of gratitude.  It would have been easy for him to be a dead beat dad, but he wasn't.  He took him into his household and saw to it he was educated.  I don't know what sort of education he would have received as a peasant.  Although he did not know Latin, which was required in advanced studies.  Anyways his desire to be a medical doctor was what fueled his anatomical studies of cadavers.  He believed his powers of observation he had gained as an artist were better than the rote memorization of misinformation going on in medical training at that time.  His work predates Vesalius, the doctor who first published an observation based anatomy book.  Galen was still the rule of the medical land at that time.  In other words his anatomical drawings were his fuck you to the medical establishment of that time.

Saturday, August 26, 2017

Dr. Ionat Zurr and Oron Katts

I did some further digging on ORLAN's harlequin living skin coat project and found that she had worked with the duo of Dr. Ionat Zurr and Oron Katts, the master minds behind SymbioticA.  Dr. Zurr received her doctorate from the University of Western Australia.  Her thesis was "Growing Semi-Living Art" done under the faculty of architecture. The two are pioneers in the field of biology based art.  They are perhaps best known for coming up with Victimless Leather.  The project being to grow a seamless leather jacket.  They based the jacket on a biodegradable polymer, coated it with 3T3 mouse cells, and then overlayed that with human bone cells for added strength.  My understanding is that they are able to combine between different species because there is no immune system.  The work was presented at the MOMA, but it didn't go over particularly well, and they ran into technical issues.
Victimless Leather

  Other projects include their Pig Wings project, where they grew pig bone cells into wing shapes.  They also did a project where they grew frog steaks in their lab/studio, and gave them to exhibition attendees to eat.

                      Pig Wings

Friday, August 18, 2017

Thoughts on Neo Nazis

Years ago when I was working my way through my undergraduate degree I met a neo nazi.  We were both working at the local convention center.  I had no clue until she invited me back to her place.  Shocker of shocker she had a big nazi flag hanging in her room.  She was actually kind of apologetic about it.  She said she joined because she was scared of black people.   Admittedly at this point I should of confronted her then about it, but I was in dumbfounded shock.  Awhile later around Valentine's Day a women's group on campus were selling white and milk chocolate vulva lollipop.  I bought a mix and took them into work.  It was the neo nazi's turn to be shocked.  I let people pick which they wanted.  In hindsight maybe it would have been better if I had presented her with a milk chocolate vulva.  Then again maybe her seeing the supervisor she most liked go gaga over a milk chocolate vulva was worth something too.

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Lady Chatterly at the Pump House

This is just an update.  The Lady Chatterly Print did get into the Banned Books exhibit at the Pump House Regional Arts Center.

Friday, August 11, 2017

INTP

I took the Myer Briggs thing last night.  I got INTP.  It said only about 3 percent of the population are this personality type.  Maybe this is a weird place to go with this info, but a few years ago I tried to do the eHarmony thing.  I say try because after I went through the trouble of filling out their personality profile they told me there was not a match for me anywhere in the country.  That being said I was an unmedicated schizophrenic at the time, and they did also say they thought I might be mentally ill.  I wonder how much the INTP thing was a contributing factor, though.  Considering what a small segment are INTPs.

Monday, August 07, 2017

Chine cole for a print about Uncle Joe

I was going to print a woodblock over this.  I kind of liked it how it was though, and this view was corroborated at an art critique.  It is supposed to be a jellyfish.

Saturday, August 05, 2017

Bird? Print

I am pretty sure I did this at Marywood, but I do not recall where I was going with it.
I am trying to find a viscosity print by my Dad that he had given me.  It is in my flat file somewhere.  So far I have found some stuff I don't think has been posted before.  For a few years I was very prolific; maybe that is why I am so lazy now.  So some new old stuff here, some much older new stuff on the random beastly undergrad things, and possibly new old things on the naked beast.
                                            I don't think I posted this before.  This was from when I was at Marywood.  I didn't have a camera then, so I was unable to post larger pieces.  I was messing around with doing two colors at once on a lithograph as a single run.

Friday, July 14, 2017

Lady Chatterly Censored

Okay, so I guess I should give my artist statement on this one.  It has been awhile since I read Lady Chatterly's Lover.  This may sound like kind of a weird correlation, but I kind of relate it to the Jewish book The Thirteen Petall
ed Rose.  In particularly the section where the Rabbi explains why people should obey the Sabath and not work.  It is meant to be a reminder that humans are not machines.  It is meant to be a break from our daily routine to remind us that there is more to our identity than what we do for a living and the daily chores we perform.  I think Lady Chatterly's Lover also deals with some of this.  She finds herself stuck in this routine of a sexless marriage, and she is wasting away from it.  She is censored by the whiring cogs of moral protocals and the cultural routine.  She has to, as we all periodically should do, take a look at our life, and decide if we are really happy with the routines it can be so easy to get trapped in.

Preview of Lady Chatterly Censored

Well my photo isn't right side up, I'll figure out how to fix it later.  I got the chine cole done, and I am happy with how it turned out.  Hopefully the printing turns out.  This is for a call The Pump house put out for art based on banned books.  It's due like tomorrow so I have to hustle.

Sunday, July 09, 2017

More Diversity in Figure Models

I guess I am being critical of art education lately, but this is what I am thinking about today.  In my mind there is definitely a need for more of diversity in figure models in art education.  In my experience the models were typically thin white women in their 20's.  To some extent this may be a reflection of the people who tend to gravitate towards modeling.  I mean society tends to have a stigma against heavier peope.  I could see how heavier women may not even apply because society has drilled into them that they don't have the body for it.  Speaking as an artist I can think of two instances after college where I was presented with models who deviated from 20 year old thin white women.  Admittedly both instances were more of a struggle to me.  The first was a heavier Native American woman.  The struggle being how to deal with her proportions.  The second model being black; the struggle being getting her skin color right.  I do not think I was the only person struggling.  I heard other artists at that session making comments about her skin color, not negative comments.  It was more of a how do I handle this.  In my mind this is not a good thing.  A person coming out of an art program should have had more exposure to a variety of models.  It will only make stronger artists.

Sunday, April 30, 2017

MSDS

It is funny how one thought leads to another.  This is probably my job rubbing off on me, but I have to know how to access the MSDS for the cleaning chemicals we use.  MSDS stands for material safety data sheet.  They tell you possible health concerns about the chemical, and what protective precautions should be taken.

Well I was thinking about how I have never come across MSDS for artist supplies.  I guess in my mind suppliers should have them listed and available for print out on their web sites.  I was looking around in Health Hazards for Artists and it said while manufacturers are required to have a MSDS they are not required to give them to people buying their products.  I am hoping this has changed; my edition of Health Hazards is from 1985.  Perusing Dick Blick's catalog I did see an attempt at a warning system.  I guess I am confused though as to how flake white in one brand of paint has a warning mark, but not in a different brand.  I guess my primary concern is for the person looking to pick up a hobby and assumes it is safe to use without any safety precautions.  I have also heard of art majors eating art supplies before.