Monday, April 26, 2010

Red

I went to NYC on the weekend and saw "Red" a play about the artist Rothko. This was a beautifully sculptured extremely contemporary rant by the renowned artist Rothko played by Alfred Molina. The bearer of Rothko's constant rages and musings is the thoughtful yet feisty studio assistant Ken played by Eddie Redmayne. I am not an art critic but I come away from this play with a few personal insights spurred on by this interesting performance.
One. Red is one of my favorite colors and I use it as much as possible when I paint. I derive great joy from the color red and get extremely happy when I buy a new tube of red paint. It always reminds me of kindergarten where the red, blues and yellows were stored in plastic cups and issued along with big brushes for liberal and sometimes diabolical use. Throwing great globs of red paint on a paper pad along with paste eating are probably the highlights of my elementary education.

Two. My mother and grandmother insisted on painting their kitchen cupboards enamel red. Grandma Black embellished her cabinets with a jungle scene complete with spider monkeys and my mom stuck to the brightest china berry red she could find. I think both of them used the red color to jolly their selves into the room that demanded they exercise the most constant boring daily cooking chores and to make a statement about the importance of their domains.

Three. I have tried really hard to wrap my head around Rothko's majestic sense of himself and his art. I have tried by taking off my glasses and squinting, by taking deep breaths and finally facing the damn paintings down. I have also tried comparing his work to the old masters and looking for clues of luminosity, color and tone. In the end I bless him for his efforts and wish him great attention in the after life.

Four. He simply reminded me of Rudy, my last boyfriend's grandfather a sweet man when he wasn't screaming about life in a abrupt Austrian Viennese accent. Rudy would also rant about social injustice and the perfection of his ecology based poetry. Somehow I couldn't buy his greatness then and I suspect if I had known Rothko..... well who can say? I still love red.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Video from the Industrial Strength Opening

Artists have celebrated landscapes since the first chunks of charcoal were rubbed on cave walls. Through history artists have tried, with varying degrees of success, to capture the bucolic and stunning views of nature -- mountains, trees, the sky -- that surround them.

Today, artists are often confronted with a very different kind of landscape, the post-industrial urban landscape of the 21st century. But inspiration remains the same.

In cities like Bridgeport, Connecticut, we are surrounded by the remnants of a once-thriving manufacturing community. All Bridgeporters can resonate in some way to the towering red and white-banded United Illuminating smoke stack, or to the crumbling hulks of once-thriving factory buildings that, in their prime, made Bridgeport one of the Northeast’s greatest industrial cities.

It is easy to vilify the industrial landscape as ugly or depressing, but through the eyes of an artist the sights that are so repellant to some, emerge with hidden, sometimes breathtaking, beauty.

The show features several of my "Steel Mill" paintings.

The process of making art is akin to being "swamped"

Art making can be complex but it is not necessarily for all artists an overwhelming proposition. I would like to believe that there must be creative people out there with uncluttered minds. "sigh"
I happen to be the owner of a cluttered and swollen heap of embedded images that swim and and bang around in my head. I constantly collect images, information and ideas and need to purge them on a daily basis.
Fortunately, sketching early in the morning leads me to a drainage site that gives access to my most immediate particulates of subconscious and conscious debris. It is during the early hours that I am able to download new material for my paintings. Sometimes these are in the form of pencil sketches, and at other times full blown mini paintings.

4- Definition of Swamp- Webster's Dictionary

To overwhelm numerically or by an excess of something.

3. Swamp Definition- Oxford English Dictionary

Attributes and comb. as swamp dweller, earth-land lover, muck, mud, peat, shell side soil, water.