No painting finished for today, but check out these awesome sculptures made with paint and sound waves!
Pretty cool stuff! Paint always looks better when it’s still wet…
No painting finished for today, but check out these awesome sculptures made with paint and sound waves!
Pretty cool stuff! Paint always looks better when it’s still wet…
Filed under Art
Had an idea to do abstract photography of abstract paintings. So “Independence” here thus started with photographin’ of a composition of Andlega Landslagi and Movement had Burgeoned. Intrigued by all the reflective surfaces sbmacinnis has been using in his daily studio photographs lately, I incorporated a small concave mirror for additional reflectitude. Took a bunch of photos of this and other compositions of my other paintings. Last I finished it with some digital collage, using clippings from another photo of Movement had Burgeoned. I named it for the best word on page 42 of the 12th book on the 4th shelf, 12 and 4 being random numbers.
Quite the technicolor puke, eh? 🙂
I spend a lot of idle moments pondering the nature of creativity. I don’t think creativity is an ‘instinctive’ capacity, or maybe ‘innate’ would be a better word. It’s not innate, like breathing is. Breathing is something we’re born with the ability to do — it does not have to be learned. Creativity is more like thinking, something we naturally start doing at some point in childhood, but that we can improve by learning. We can learn to think “better” by learning reasoning, logic and critical thinking, for example. Creativity is not just a “talent” in other words, I think it can be learned. And if you do have creativity as a talent, you can learn to do it better. Though of course what is “better” creativity has got to be one of the most subjective things ever.
What I also mean by saying creativity is not an instinctive or innate capacity is that creativity is not a ‘thing’ in itself, but is built from other, more basic things the brain does. I’ve often said that creativity is knowledge, memory, and experience put in a blender, and spiced with inhibition. You can hit “mix” or you can hit “puree”. The above is closer to a “puree”. 🙂 Creativity is the arbitrary recombination of ideas. Previously separate ideas that before may have had little to nothing to do with each other, like photography and painting perhaps. Though both creative visual arts, the execution of each it seems could not be more different. Composition is about the only thing they have in common — their processes and technical considerations are otherwise utterly foreign to each other. And yet, they can be arbitrarily combined… photographs of paintings, or paintings of photographs, or painting on photographs… or collage with paint and photographs, or sculpture using camera optics and paint, or painting cameras…
So thinking of creativity as the arbitrary recombination of ideas, seems to make it something you could improve at by practice. If you’re looking for a theme for abstract art, maybe you could just pick two words at random from the dictionary and just run with them. “Initial prow”, or “Djibouti madrigal” (ooh that’s a good one), or “loquacious Tam-O’-Shatner”.
Creativity is also usually directed at a purpose, which may seem antithetical to notions of ‘pure’ creativity (whatever that is), but if this were not the case creativity would never leave the mind to find manifestation in the physical world. In visual arts creativity is most often directed at producing something that is in some way beautiful, or cool looking, or expresses an idea or a feeling, or is thought-provoking. Innovation on the other hand, is creativity bounded much more by practicality and directed at producing something useful or better than what came before. The proverbial ‘better mouse trap’ in other words. Paintings don’t trap mice! Paintings are mouse-friendly. Paintings may even help mice sharpen their teeth or serve as luxuriant nesting material.
Well anyway, that’s what I’ve been trying to do at least since Horizons — improve at being creative, and ‘Independence’ and these thoughts about creativity are just where I am today.
Filed under Art, Paintings, Photography
Had another abstract photography idea. I have this blue drinking glass my daughter gave me one Father’s day. It’s clear glass speckled with spots of blue glass, that slowly twist from top to bottom, as if the last step in making it was to twist the top about 60º. The other day as I was walking from the man cave back to the kitchen for a refill, I was finishing the last of the water in it as I turned the corner in front of the floor lamp. I saw the lamp through the bottom of the glass and was struck by the incredible play of the light. So there you have it, that’s what you’re looking at here — photos of light through the glass.
Fin.
Filed under Photography
Last weekend I did somethin’ weird. With my camera. When my daughter asked me what I was doing, I said “Something weird.” She needs to get used to the fact that her dad does weird stuff. Thinking back on that now though, I think she already knows this. Anyway, now I’m calling it ‘abstract photography’.
Four things came together that led me to this particular weird activity, though I am definitely not the only one doing this sort of thing. First, reading Aaron Leaman’s awesome blog lately has given me a new-found artistic appreciation of ‘blurry photos’ if you will, or what I’m now calling abstract photography. He’s really good — you should check out his work. Second, I’ve been thinking lately about something I read years ago that some of the Dadaists — I can’t remember who or where I read this — wanted to incorporate random elements into their work. As part of the Dadaist rebellion against the limited scope of what was at that time considered art, and more to the point what was not, they wanted their work to in some ways happen by itself, or at least to some extent be created not by the artists direct control in making the work. They wanted it to be literally spontaneous — self-generated — not of their own doing. Taken with this idea, I’ve been thinking of how I might do, or should I say cause, something like that. I mean, I could pour and drip paints or washes onto canvas à la Jackson Pollock and let them run around as gravity and the terrain of canvas texture wills… but that just doesn’t interest me.
Then, third, I remembered this photo that spontaneously sprang into being on my phone about two years ago. I do not remember taking it, do not remember ‘messing up’ a photo, and have no freakin’ idea what it is… but I love it. It’s bright, blue and glowy.
Last, I remembered an idea I had when I was first messing with video cameras as a teenager. I wanted to tie the camera to the branch of a tree and suspend the camera just above the ground and swing it. This I thought would make an effect of dizzying speed as the camera flew just above the grass and spun around. Back then though, the camera I’m talking about recorded on full size VHS tapes and you had to carry it around on your shoulder it was so big. And it was borrowed. So I did not attempt this. Later in life when I bought my own 8mm camcorder, I still did not want to risk it to this half baked idea. But then last weekend! This idea fell into place with the other three and I thought heck — my digital camera is not that heavy and it’s getting old anyway. I wouldn’t be too broken up if I had to buy a new one. So I strung it up and set it spinning and swinging from the branches of various trees in my yard, using the auto-timer to attain the total Dadaist randomness of me having no idea or control over the composition of the resulting photos, beyond swinging the camera initially.
What resulted was even more awesome than I hoped, even from the first shot:
And the string did break towards the end, but the camera is ok. It landed in the grass…
Filed under Photography
I’ve made a little more progress on these paintings. I added a gold circle and some yellow oxide-cadmium orangey blobs. This painting is becoming like a home improvement project — the next two things I want to do with it require a trip to the hardware paint store.
The other one is all but done. I need to decide if I’m going to paint the remaining blocks blue… or not. They were going to be blue, then I paused to reconsider at the last minute. Like Slartibartfast (or was it Arthur Dent during the Paleozoic?), I’m still paused. One or two more elements to add, then everything just needs another coat of paint. Blegh.
I also did some dabbling in experimental abstract photography:
But that is a subject for another post…
Filed under Paintings