Great expectations

I painted this week and the time was not short and succinct like usual but long and enjoyed checking the clock only in amazement that the alarm was still set. The creative process always surprises me.

I dropped off some paintings at a local coffee shop Tuesday they had room for two pieces for 2-3 months and will call me to rotate the work unless they sell first. It was one of those spontaneous decisions to go there where I had not showered and was wearing a pair of ripped jeans. I have been told that’s the way I’m suppose to look you’re an artist. As artists do we sometimes live by different rules?

I love this line ‘What could it mean that picture of the world. But when it’s true, we recognize it in ourselves, in others. We recognize it, like love, completely undeserved.  ‘From the movie: Great Expectations. He’s in New York and the curator tells him to paint something or go back home.

This is going to be a significant year for me.

I have this artistic and personal freedom.

My goal is and always was to have a paragraph written about me in the art history books.

I have a plan and through this blog it will unveil step by step the life of one artist.

What the modernists rejected can we get back?

I’m blogging because of a comment I got lately from a realistic artist about Jackson Pollack and his drip paintings. I am an artist well trained and I am fairly knowledgeable with art history or at least interested enough to check out my facts and read into it some more. I felt the need to write more than just a reply about the discipline and undisciplined of individual artists.

My concern is not what the Modern artists did like Pollock or Picasso but my issue is with what the MODERNISTS did? And who were they? The fact of the matter is you don’t become aware of things until they relate to you once you start having kids you start thinking more about the family unit, traditions, and of course religion.

In retrospect it was during the 20Th century that they believed if it was not modern it will be rejected. So what did they do? They rejected traditional forms of art, architecture, literature, religious faith, and social organization ( like the family).

I have issues with some of the above.

I understand that art is a reflection of our society and our life. and that art, science, and history have this universal connection.  It couldn’t be more true today than ever.

So my question is what do we do as 21TH century artists to turn it around and bring back what the modernists took away (or rejected). Are we past the point of no return as a society and is the theory that we are not evolving but degenerating coming true.

Brice Marden respectfully copied.

Brice Marden the artist did a pose like this for an ART news magazine.  Having great respect for him I tried to reposed this picture using myself as the artist. This is a tribute to him and all that he did to the art world and to artists that followed.”Working on these paintings, there’s always an idea which is an ideal. It’s always impossible… But I think every time, maybe, I just get closer to some impossible thing… ”   Brice Marden

Brice Marden was a Minimalist painter. He worked with these amazing color combinations. The first series that caught my attention was the  “Annunciation” series in 1978.  Five paintings where the artist tried to interpret the various stages of the virgin Mary response to the archangel Gabriel. Then there were the paintings that followed using the tau cross as a motif that emphasized the suffering, agony and death of Christ. The paintings were done with a mixture of beeswax and oil. He worked with two three and then four single color panels joined vertically or horizontally together and he would create these subtle color combinations using greens, blues, reds,and blacks. I was lucky to see him talk at The Milwaukee Art Museum during the late 90’s while I was attending school.

Picasso sucks!

I laugh every time as I remember that line from the Jackson POLLOCK movie “Picasso sucks!” I was so surprised that someone would have the audacity to say that about Picasso.

Pollock overturned tables of tradition and old ideas with his drip paintings and he opened the possibility of freshness.

It’s noteworthy that one of Pollock  paintings No. 5, 1948 was auctioned off at record sales of 140m more than any Picasso or Van Gogh.

http://www.karemar.com/blog/top-ten-10-most-expensive-paintings-all-time-w-pics

” The strangeness will wear off and I think we will discover the deeper meanings in modern art. “Jackson Pollock

My question is:  Was his self destructive nature necessary? Did it add to the creative process and validity of  his art work????  

“In the world of modern art is sadness a given.” 

The excitement comes and goes in painting.

I’m really excited about my painting that I am working on at this time. I have pushed it passed the point of no return and brought the painting to a level where anyone whose looking at it understands what’s going on and where it’s going. There are different moments of excitement that occur in a painting, seriously painting can be such manual labor whereas it gets mundane, boring, and tedious so it is at this point one has to remember the fireworks, and spontaneity and why you started painting in the first place otherwise paintings will just sit and never get finished.

When I first start a painting after the conceptual ideas are placed there is a joy of  just covering the white canvas half hazardously with cool and warm blues and variations of sienna’s and umber’s that in the end nothing is left uncovered and it all gives way to space and composition and form a real raw under painting of what it’s going to look like when it’s done. It looks rough at this stage but not to an artist this is where decisions are made and changes are implemented it’s fun, new and exciting. This is a segway into visually determining what really matters what”s the value scheme, shadows and where’s the light and seeing and knowing  how this is going to set the whole composition of the painting. Although you need to paint what you see over all, detail is not so important at this stage except as maybe a smug or a blurb. Unexpected things come into play here and I always ask myself where did that come from? So as a licenced artist I make these decisions intuitively and intellectually knowing what is best for the painting as for what to keep in and what to omit or what color to change. Tough decisions from my perspective but it’s all about painting what you see, what you think and what you know so changes can happen.

Checking and rechecking that the shapes and lines are where there suppose to be in reaching distance of one another to the right, left, north or south can get tedious and keeping my attention can be frustrating and keeping my chair occupied hard because I can think of a million things that I should be doing right now so if I can just be persistent and concentrate during this process I’ll get it done and move on. Once I have this area secured problems are less likely to happen like distortions.

The paint is next now that I’ve laid the foundation with the under painting keep in mind I’m not here to cover up the under painting  I am only here to add to the painting this is not secondary this is where it all begins this is where it comes to life. This is where the magic happens and it’s fun once again. This is a process I do in my paintings although some artists don’t go this route and just go straight to laying down color but both ways are acceptable and very successful. It’s a personal preference I have been trained to paint both ways and depending on the painting I may do things differently. Another thing is that some artist draw first and then paint second whereas some just start painting from the start. The question may be are you a painter or a drawer? But it’s all good there is no right or wrong process I’ve seen it all done many many diferent ways although it brings up a lot of discussion that as artists we can talk about for hours. 

To continue I add paint and I mold this three dimensional form onto a two dimensional canvas knowing in the end when it’s finished when it’s right and every area of the canvas is working together well and nothing else can be done. There’s this excitement of knowing it’s finished Some will say their muse showed up, others will chalk it up as talent but if we are wise we know we are only an instrument of God and only hope to do it again and only better.

Internet going places where no artist has gone before

I was told if you want to be a great artist go to New York City, but the way it looks now you don’t have to go to New York City, the world can come to you. Virtual galleries and virtual art shows are the vehicle of the future. There is a lot of good information covered in this book. As Artists we are all at different stages in our careers and in our lives I’m writing this as it unfolded for me. What I have recorded here is what I discovered and learned and I want to share this information with people who are interested in becoming a successful artist, it’s valuable for everyone who wants to get exposure as an artist on the internet. The internet is the future. It has not been around as long as one may think. A successful internet business has been around maybe seven years not very long when you really think about it. The internet is still new and cutting edge.

Here’s a place where artists are coming together, talking, sharing their ideas and creativity. A new movement, a universal global salon, all you have to do is log on and your there. Easy! Come visit http://stores.lulu.com/store.php?fAcctID=4097877
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http://www.cedarlodgeportraitstudio.com