Friday, August 28, 2009

Organize and focus

Flowing into the black hole...nature collapsing onto itself, this nature work by Andy Goldsworthy...speaks to the time and gradation of fall in nature...these changing leaves are carefully arranged around an organic, circular form in the center of the picture plane...a strong central image, implying all things focus on this point...the emptiness of time and space...

This centrality is pushed farther by having the lightest leaves surrounding the edge, sharpening and defining the round shape...the movement visually, from yellow to orange to red and finally back to darkness...Goldsworthy is a master at arranging these simple, natural relationships...organizing what we already know into a context we may never have seen...

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Marmite as Contour Line Drawing

Okay, follow me on this...it's a little out there, but this image is interesting and possibly, "visually fulfilling" on several levels...you have to appreciate the designers pushing of material possibilities (even though it may be digitally enhanced), this material forces the artist to contend with continuous contour line, flowing from the bottle...these kinds of marks are appealing and energetic because of their spontaneity...there is a balancing act going on visually, between the active mark making on the left hand side, the open space to the right and the colorful, three-dimensional form in the lower right hand corner...the "product."

Conceptually, I couldn't help myself...looking for more bullfighting references...the idea of "thematic connections" changes the context of a one image format...moving the daily posts into an exploration of implied, related images...works that can be looked at juxtaposed, one against the other...confronting the viewer with relationships inside the picture plane and outside the borders...I am ever more amused by the spaces between these rigid borders...I often play in this archaic space...

As a design, the point is made...not a fan of either, the Mermite or the bullfighting, but isn't that what makes the world a place worth living in? Who wants a black and white world? I prefer brown, messy and uncontrollable! Wet too!

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Evidence of a happening


"This anti-bullfighting protest took place in Las Ventas, Spain because there are a large number of bullfighting events taking place there." Source - Equianimal.org

A happening, is an event with symbolic and visual meaning...these individuals have used visual language to convey meaning...the remaining artifact is the image, video and/or audio...these documents only hint at the actual event...on the continued theme of bull fighting I thought this was an interesting counter point to the more direct paintings of earlier in the week...

The rhythmical and decorative nature of the black, red and flesh...from a distance, the physical structures organically flow into each other...they could be an abstract painting, a piece of carpet or fabric...not the ideal conceptually, but why not? Pushing the boundaries of design...no fear...what makes it a pattern is the repetition, the overall distribution of color, line, shape, shadow and scale...

Now the issue of documentation...these images are removed from the premises, taken artfully, but not a "total "re-presentation of the happening...the photos can only be a "RE"of the event itself..re-done, re-enactment, re-imagine...the protest is over...spread out amongst the collective memories of the participants and on-lookers...the artifact exists on its own, for its own sake...and what of their value? Value to the protesters? Artists? Organization? Industry? Culture?

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

The last spot on the horizon

The view of what the broken bull sees...out in the bleak distance...a competitor in a ring, alone...reminds me of the fighter paintings of George Bellows, this work by Eric Fischl...the action has already happened...the pain is setting in as the adrenaline runs out of the beast...bloody...not the heroic painting we have seen in the past, two equally matched foes, standing toe to toe...

The posture of the bull is down, merging into the dark of the ground...becoming part of the environment, flowing down...the attention is on the bull form...it is articulated with defined brush work, developed and clear...the background is washed out and hazy...are these conceptual choices? The angle of the background crosses the angle of the bull...an "X" is marking the spot...the end.

Monday, August 24, 2009

A moment that cannot be undone

The Friday blog of Francis Bacon, pushed me in the direction of one of my favorite Picasso paintings, the twisted and exaggerated movements of the battle between man and beast...the congested space in the front of the picture plane...color is writing boundaries between forms...the movement of the flowing legs, cape and body...

The back of the stadium moving the space out and far...the intensity and action of the fight...the horse form, the lightest value in the foreground, straining in pain, the animals and figure interact in a brutal way...each led in their own direction, playing their own role...moved forward by the mob, cultural influences...they are lost in a moment that cannot be undone.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Bull in an oval world

Building on the machismo tradition - artists like Picasso and Goya, elaborating on the sport of bull fighting...this work by Francis Bacon takes this them in his personal direction, where elements are in action, blurred...next to a backdrop of stability...he keenly balances his picture plane through color and neutrals...marks and shadow...motion and stillness...the figure and bull paired with the small elements behind the white wall...

The oval repeated in the line at the bottom and curve of the wall; the back of the bull, the sweep of the bull fighters cape; the end of the white mark in the front of the picture plane...it is in these common visual cues we connect the dots...The way Bacon develops his space is so simple, but powerful in its execution...clearly defining his characters in the narrative, each having its own unique persona and each filling a function, conveying a meaning.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

The expulsion or explosion?


Adam and Eve were expelled from the a chaotic, confusing city...the overall rhythm of this piece by Keith Tyson is layered and complex...if Jackson Pollack could drip type, he might have created something similar...the obvious, representational objects act as a visual oasis...allowing the viewer to grasp onto something familiar...they also carry us around the picture plane so we take advantage of all its congestion...

Many artists are working in this saturated, commercial way...using the metaphor of television, denture creme adds running side-by-side to the latest murder and war footage...this piece speaks beyond these coincidences...the forms move smartly and cohesively through the picture plane, repetition to the point of meanings annihilation...the format is convincing and the forms push the viewer's knowledge of art history and visual language.