Showing posts with label my make believe collection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label my make believe collection. Show all posts

my make believe collection :: 13 :: andrea higgins

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my make believe collection :: 13 :: andrea higgins


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https://charlotte-lifesaboutthejourney.blogspot.com/2011/09/my-make-believe-collection-13-andrea.html


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my make believe collection :: 12 :: hannelore baron


    Contributor post by Lisa Solomon

    standing and ooohing and ah-ing and sighing at a flat file, opening drawers one by one, in new york upper east side private gallery with fellow artist jay kelly the dealer smiled, remarking "hannelore is such an artist's artist".


    CONTINUE READING...

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my make believe collection :: 12 :: hannelore baron


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https://charlotte-lifesaboutthejourney.blogspot.com/2011/08/my-make-believe-collection-12-hannelore.html


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my make believe collection :: 11 :: Nina Katchadourian

    Contributor post by Lisa Solomon


    the artist with caterpillar mustache
    i was lucky enough to see nina katchadourian speak once at catherine clark gallery in san francisco [which by the way is consistently one of my favorite galleries in the city]. i love me some conceptual art that has a sense of humor - and that is exactly what katchadourian provides.


    nina katchadourian - from the shark journal - sorted book project
    sorted books is a perfect example of this. the arranging of book titles - in various collections, and photographing them, so that their meanings are altered.

    nina katchadourian - from "composition" - sorted book project
    deceptively simple i like thinking of the book as an art material, not just as an object in and of itself. i find myself interested in the size and shape and arrangement of these besides just the humor that the titles invoke.
    nina katchadourian - map dissection 1
    i'm also a fan of maps. and the idea of mapping. a map is such a functional - and in this day and age almost antiquated - thing. there is something intriguing about trying to depict a 3 dimensional place on a 2 dimensional plane - and i like how a map simultaneously does and doesn't make sense.  here katchadourian took a AAA map of the united states removing all the land and leaving just the roadwork.

    it's interesting to think about how the roads connect us - and that even with the land removed the overall shape of the united states is still discernible. [i'm also rather amazed at the intricacy and delicacy and beauty of this as a cut piece of paper]

    nina katchadourian - map dissection ii
    then she took the same map and put areas of road that formed clusters together and sandwiched them in slides - like specimens. what do our roads say about us? she was interested in how some of them started to look figurative when removed from the whole....

    nina katchdourian - genealogy of the supermarket
    always interested in systems and family trees she's also done funny things like a genealogy of supermarket products/characters. who/what is related to who/what and what kid would they have ? [oh mr. clean and mr. brawny - i had no idea you were responsible for the gerber baby cuteness].

    nina katchedourian - lichen moss map

    born in the states, but raised in finland, katchedourian always saw familiar shapes in the moss by the rocks in her family's summer home. rubbing letters onto places she recognized she created about 20 moss maps... funny, right?

    nina katchedourian - mended spiderweb 8
    but i have to say - the pieces that really really speak to me are from her mended spiderweb series.
    here's what she says about the project:
    The Mended Spiderweb series came about during a six-week period in June and July in 1998 which I spent on Pörtö. In the forest and around the house where I was living, I searched for broken spiderwebs which I repaired using red sewing thread. All of the patches were made by inserting segments one at a time directly into the web. Sometimes the thread was starched, which made it stiffer and easier to work with. The short threads were held in place by the stickiness of the spider web itself; longer threads were reinforced by dipping the tips into white glue. I fixed the holes in the web until it was fully repaired, or until it could no longer bear the weight of the thread. In the process, I often caused further damage when the tweezers got tangled in the web or when my hands brushed up against it by accident.
    The morning after the first patch job, I discovered a pile of red threads lying on the ground below the web. At first I assumed the wind had blown them out; on closer inspection it became clear that the spider had repaired the web to perfect condition using its own methods, throwing the threads out in the process. My repairs were always rejected by the spider and discarded, usually during the course of the night, even in webs which looked abandoned. The larger, more complicated patches where the threads were held together with glue often retained their form after being thrown out, although in a somewhat "wilted" condition without the rest of the web to suspend and stretch them. Each "Rejected Patch" is shown next to the photograph showing the web with the patch as it looked on site.

    nina katchedourian - mended spiderweb #14
    i think in many cases kathedourian's art works on a conceptualal level really well - it holds my attention, makes me think, points out the absurd and interesting in the everyday - but it doesn't always hold my heart. it doesn't make me long to own it. interact with it YES. have it on my wall, NO. but these pieces. these i want.


    just brilliant, right? the red thread is beautiful. the fact that the spider rejects the mending and yet it stays intact, fallen, is beautiful. watching the video of the spider rejecting the red thread is pretty amazing. and the photos they are lovely to look at. a moment before destruction.

    i love the idea of this human intervention, with the best intentions, just not working out. a metaphoric example of us, as a human race - meaning to do good, but still failing.

    nina katchadourian - mended spiderweb #19

    this is the one that i would like to own. it's complicated web. i love the tiers of mending and how the move away from and toward the tree. the laundry line is beautiful with those 2 clothespins catching the light and the dark cabin in the woods in the background. yup. this is the one for me.

    until next time.... follow my collection on pinterest

    ..................................

    lisa solomon is a mixed media artist who lives in oakland, CA with her husband, young daughter, a one eyed pit bull, a french bulldog, a cross-eyed cat, a 3 legged cat, and many many spools of thread. she moonlights as a college professor, a graphic designer, and is a partner in MODify/d a crafty biz that up/cycles and re/purposes discards from the fashion industry.


Post Title

my make believe collection :: 11 :: Nina Katchadourian


Post URL

https://charlotte-lifesaboutthejourney.blogspot.com/2011/07/my-make-believe-collection-11-nina.html


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my make believe collection :: 10 :: cy twombly

    Contributor post by Lisa Solomon


    from the new york times: Cy Twombly at Cy Twombly Gallery in Houston in front of the gallery's largest painting, "Say Goodbye, Catullus, to the Shores of Asia Minor."
    cy twombly passed away the other day at 83. and it got me thinking. i have been lucky enough in my lifetime to view several of his works in person. and really to understand and really inhale the nuance of these works you have to see them in person.

    untitle, 1996
    night watch 1966
    there is a part of me that is so inherently drawn to abstract expressionalism. the energy of it. the surrender. its complete and utter ability to express joy, pain, freedom, release in dynamic strokes of pens, pencils, paints, chalk...  and what i love about twombly is the frenetic nature, the nod to expressionalism, but what really gets me is his concern and ability to marry the confidence and engagement of expressionalism with the familiarity and comfort of representation.

    estate 1993-95
     his works hint to things we all know - flowers, boats, shapes, a made up alphabet, sometimes i feel like he is writing us a letter. one we can't really read, but whose content we understand in our hearts.

    untitled 1974
    i admire his ability to combine media. his fearlessness. it is rare that i sense a moment of doubt or indecision in the work. i have spent hours in discussion with students and fellow artists about the power and intoxication of confidence in art. twombly's work exudes it in spades.


    untitled 1954
    thicket 1992
    he also made beautiful sculpture. i love the fact that you can often recognize the elements in the sculptural works, but that they seem transformed - altered - content with and excited by their new found life in the world.

    epanto iii 2001
    truth be told i'm more drawn to his "quieter works". the ones that don't have really thick paint or an expanded palette. i think the beauty and drama of his hand is more evident and easily read in the pieces that show color restraint.

    the italians 1961
    some people try to denigrate twombly's work by saying it's like a children's scribbles. sure. i wouldn't argue with that. it's said a lot about contemporary art work. and i think we should start to see it as a compliment. because for my money many children make incredible works of art. i do think one thing to consider is intention and control. i sort of think of it like this: kids say really really funny things - but would we consider them all professional comedians? also, i don't know any child that makes work THIS BIG [many of his works are room size] and there is power, intimidation, command in work that big.

    ideas of march 1962
    untitled 1970

    there is also a serious personal investigation. can't you feel twombly creating his own visual vocabulary? hunting for the means and ways to express something? there is meaning in these scribbles i tell you :) ! [some of my favorite works of twombly's are the simple white scribble "erased" on black - the rhythm of them is hypnotizing]. i always tell students it's REALLY hard to make GOOD abstract work. and they don't believe me until they try it.

    3 studies from temeraore

    there is SO MUCH of twombly's work to look at. prolific through out his entire life [ah such an honorable trait], there are many many pieces of his i would be proud to own [but of course couldn't even scratch the surface of owning for real]. above is one of my absolute favorites and something i wish i could see in person for sure. i'm a fan of odd numbers so 3 canvases appeals to me. i love how the boat/bugs shift in number in each panel 3...2...1 [and how they shift in scale and location as well]. i love the simplicity. the bold strokes. the variation in texture the drips create. i love the negative space [you've heard this from me before]. 

    i am sad that we lost such an inspiring soul, but am grateful for his long and productive art making career. thank you mr. twombly for making your work. be sure and visit his site as it is FULL of images and texts.

    and keep track of my collection on pinterest. till next time. happy july [wait it's july? how did that happen?]

    ..................................

    lisa solomon is a mixed media artist who lives in oakland, CA with her husband, young daughter, a one eyed pit bull, a french bulldog, a cross-eyed cat, a 3 legged cat, and many many spools of thread. she moonlights as a college professor, a graphic designer, and is a partner in MODify/d a crafty biz that up/cycles and re/purposes discards from the fashion industry.

Post Title

my make believe collection :: 10 :: cy twombly


Post URL

https://charlotte-lifesaboutthejourney.blogspot.com/2011/07/my-make-believe-collection-10-cy.html


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my make believe collection :: 9 :: masao yamamoto

    Contributor post by Lisa Solomon

    masao yamamoto, box of ku 154
    masao yamamoto, box of ku 246

    back in the 90's i worked for braunstein/quay gallery [a contemporary art gallery in san francisco that will be closing its doors soon - after 50 year !]. the gallery was housed in a building that had several other galleries. one was michael shapiro gallery, he specialized in photographs.

    masao yamamoto, nakazoro 1082



    masao yamamoto, 1651 
    to be honest, photography is not my strong suit. sure there are photographers i admire and respect. and i dabble in polaroid and other types of photography myself - although i would NEVER consider myself a "real" photographer. but i don't really know or understand a lot about photographic history [not in the same way i relate to the history of painting and drawing]. i don't really know how cameras work - or the fundamentals of aperture, ISO, bokeh, etc. i just shoot by trial and error, and i know when i like a photograph. for whatever reason.


    masao yamamoto, 1213
    i also have to say that i'm often attracted to photos generated in a more analog way. that's not to say i don't adore some digital imagery - or to detract from the skill or beauty that digital photos can hold, but usually when i fall in love with a photograph it's roots lie in film [of any sort], and it's often printed in an alternative or antiquated method/process.

    masao yamamoto, 1175
    but i digress. back in the 90's mr. shaprio had a show of masao yamaoto's works. a show entitled box of ku. and because that show was next door to where i worked i was fortunate enough to live with it. i visited it almost every trip to the bathroom. every time i had to go out of the gallery for lunch or run an errand i would pop in. i kept the announcement card in my desk for eons. until it was falling apart and dusty and dirty from years of sitting there.

    masao yamamoto, box of ku 140
    masao yamamoto, 1409

    there is something so deceptively simple about yamamoto's photographs. they imply a narrative - but never tell a whole story. the feel incredibly nostalgic, and immensely personal. it doesn't ever feel like there is a completely random image - sure some things are caught by luck or chance as that seems to be part of the magic of photography, but then there is a larger force at work. a sense of thought and purpose and hunting for that image. knowing that a particular image belongs in the group with the others....

    masao yamamoto, kawa/flow 1606
     they also feel inherently japanese to me. you might say DUH he's japanese, but no - i mean more than just that. his images really embody something about the culture, the aesthetic - they obviously contain landscape and characters that are distinctly japanese, but there's also a sense of composition, of restraint, of quiet that seems to be relayed in a particular way . in fact it is often said that his work is like haiku poetry and i couldn't agree more.

    masao yamamoto, box of ku 67
     to help make that point: here's what he says about his latest body of work: KAWA=FLOW
    is about the world where we are and the world where we go in the future.
    Although we seem to be connected continually there is a rupture between us in the present and those that went before us or that come next.
    I tried to perceive this rupture as a KAWA (FLOW, river) that divides a plain and expressed the resulting reflexions in this works.


    think, though, that one of the things that REALLY attracts me to this work is the way that he often installs his photographs.


    instead of simply framing them and lining them up in perfect rows he often creates installations out of them. groupings of images that then become more powerful and poignant as they ebb and flow against one another. love that there are different scales, different tones, different frames, different methods of printing all living with one another. sometimes he hand colors an image or repeats an image in different saturations.






    i think i would be hard pressed to simply choose one image. i would definitely want a grouping [any of the ones i've posted would be A-OK with me !]. in my dream collection i would have mr. yamamoto come and install a whole wall. in any way he'd like - would that be amazing?

    until next time - you can follow my collection as it grows on pinterest !


    ..................................

    lisa solomon is a mixed media artist who lives in oakland, CA with her husband, young daughter, a one eyed pit bull, a french bulldog, a cross-eyed cat, a 3 legged cat, and many many spools of thread. she moonlights as a college professor, a graphic designer, and is a partner in MODify/d a crafty biz that up/cycles and re/purposes discards from the fashion industry.

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my make believe collection :: 9 :: masao yamamoto


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https://charlotte-lifesaboutthejourney.blogspot.com/2011/06/my-make-believe-collection-9-masao.html


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