I came across this whimiscal, but very perceptive diagram on the facebook page of artist Hugo Porcaro by way of High Existence — see what you think:
Category: New Paltz, NY
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Far Beyond
In a recent CHRONOGRAM book review of David Rothenberg's "Survival of the Beautiful" the reviewer closes with the author's intriguing conclusion:
"There is meaning in nature far beyond use; there is form and beauty far beyond function."
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No Reason
If you could say it in words, there would be no reason to paint
Edward Hopper
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Discovery
A few weeks ago I posted an excerpt from a column by the TIMES Frank Bruni about appreciating the world at hand. After Bruni's piece was published, he writes in his blog that a reader sent in passage from T. S. Eliot that makes a similar observation:
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time. -
Time, Distance and Clarity
Frank Bruni's excellent op-ed column in today's TIMES is about his regrets for not being fully present as he made his way in the world. As one year ends and a new one is around the corner, it's an opportune time for all of us to consider his call to be more aware and appreciative of our surroundings. He writes:
"… it’s also true that we’re often just plain oblivious to the scenery right in front of us. By being closest, it’s farthest away."
Very true…
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Inexplicable
I was leafing through the second edition of MOMA Highlights – 350 Works From the Museum of Modern Art New York and came across the early (1943) Jackson Pollack painting, "The She Wolf." It's a very layered, busy and disturbing image in which the editors claim "… [Pollack's] focus is a compound of mythology and an iconography of the unconscious."
However they go on to note that Pollack himself made no such assertions:
"She-Wolf came into existence because I had to paint it. Any attempt on my part to say something about it, to attempt explanation of the inexplicable, could only destroy it."
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Images are…
The December 5th issue of the NEW YORKER features a column about the new film "The Artist" — a silent film.
"People come nervous to it," the film's writer-director, Michel Hazanavicius, said recently … "They're afraid it's going to be intellectual. But it's language that is intellectual — images are about feelings."
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… set it aside.
Marketing guru and generally wise human Seth Godin has a great post today on his blog entitled "Tools vs. Insight" in which he makes an important distinction:
Knowing about a tool is one thing. Having the guts to use it in a way that brings art to the world is another. Perhaps we need to spend less time learning new tools and more time using them.
Every week I speak with someone in the gallery who has conflated the tool – in this case the camera – with the creative process and is convinced they need the newest one to allow them to adequately express themselves. I often suggest that Keith Richards (or any legendary guitarist) could go down the street to the Salvation Army store, purchase a guitar for $25 and make you wish you could find a guitar as good as that one.
Vasari's "Lives of the Artists," contains the observation: "Learn the craft, then set it aside." Exactly.




