Thursday, March 18, 2010

Excerpts from Autoethnography Assignment

Winter term I had an assignment called an autoethnography, in which I wrote about my culture and where I come from in the form of an essay for my class in Modernist Literature. The essay I wrote was comprised of scene sketches and I thought I'd post two of them.

Summer 2009, School of The Museum of Fine Arts Pre College Program


It’s a kind of talent show, but with artists everything is homely and there’s a kind of scotch tape patch work dead serious but pretty dumb feel in the air. There are maybe 60 of us in the room, a large space with high ceilings, industrial carpet and white walls where student work is often displayed. There is everything from expressionist spoken word to the acoustic covers of 3OH!3 to “Fiddle Disobedience,” a one night only duo to R. Kelly’s “Ignition Remix.” There is no definitive fashion, the only constant is that no one is wearing anything considered normal, many things are bought from secondhand stores. The group is congenial and extravagant.


Frank has wild eyes, a wholesome goofy smile and unruly unshampooed hair. He meanders onto the impromptu stage, nerves non-existent, a beautiful lack of consciousness.


“I’m going to do a scene from a movie, uh, you might know it.” He is drawl, blatant but sincere. “It’s called Blood Diamond.” His clothes are worn and smeared with paint, they hang loosely off his thin build as he moves two chairs to one end of the stage, lining them up to make a bench.


I have never seen Blood Diamond.


He clears his throat, and moves to the left side of the stage, turns faces the chairs and begins the interrogation abruptly in a low African accent; “Where is the diamond?” He crosses the stage and lies on the bench, clutching his side as if he is in pain. “I don’t know!” In the same accent, looking back at where he just stood. He gets up and crosses back and asks again “Where is the diamond!?” His face scrunches up as he yells at the empty chairs, voice slow and grating. He stays perfectly in character and continues this back and fourth for a solid minute and a half, escalating the feud between his two selves, which causes him to need to begin to switch from character to character faster and faster. Just as he looks as if he is about to crescendos into some sort of twisted emotional peak, his whole body sinks and he looks, instead, at the audience, and asks dejectedly, if he can start over.


After this turbulent scene, I am not sure what to expect. I look on with the rest of the group, incredulous as Frank proceeds to repeat the entire scene, exactly as he had before. After about two minutes of the threatening banter between the two men, he comes back around to the peak of the conflict; “WHERE IS THE DIAMOND? WHERE IS IT? ARGAHHH!” Frank’s whole body simply explodes with anger as he lets fly a deranged scream. In the midst of his overflowing, turbulent fit, arms flailing, his hands find their way to the bottom of his shirt and he rips it off in awesome fury which he carries with him as he brings his hands right back around yanks his pants down, resulting in his brazen near-nudity; he is left, mentally, somewhere between the two characters, screaming, facing the audience in the middle of the stage, in very tight, small red underpants with white trimming. I didn’t think he wore underwear, so I’m pretty sure he planned it.


I have still not seen Blood Diamond.


When it comes to life... I think it’s more about quality than quantity.

-Frank, after expressing his desire to die at 30

Frank performing, photo by Luna Goldberg




26 February 2010, Proctor Academy Wise Center at night


The disco ball above me has one green square, the rest are varying shades of silver, some red. I have no idea what I’m listening to but it’s slow, quiet and unassuming. The floor has some sand on it prickling into the soft undersides of my arms, my shirt sticks to my lower back with sweat, my pulse is slowing down. I feel where my the backs of my ankles touch the floor, and the bottoms of my feet are starting to hurt, the space between my shoulder blades that doesn’t hit the floor. My stomach pangs.

I haven’t been this comfortable lying down in a month, relaxed and wide eyed and free feeling and maybe a part of something. When the night is over, and the lights are bright again the feeling will be gone.


But I’m here tonight.


All of the heat in the room is within two feet of the ground, bodies splayed out in front of the pseudo-stage. There are at least 20 of us. We are rays, streaks panning out from a single source of connectivity.


And the heavy green double doors behind us are open, letting in cold air that flows sharp over the tip of my nose and into my mouth.


I stare up at the ceiling of the Wise Center, and my mind slows down; losing track and letting go of everything and nothing in particular. Eventually the music shifts back and we dance again.


Everything is moving through me, the low lights and careless movements and feeling whatever is there to be felt. The music is fast, but I keep up with the beat like I’ve got to. I’m hot and sick, and I stopped caring. I stopped meditating. And this is so easy to follow if you just let yourself pay attention, so I let myself pay attention, and even though I don’t think these people like me or worse, that they don’t care either way, it’s nice to pretend I’m a part of it at least for the night. Tomorrow I’ll be too nervous to talk to them again, anyway.



Pill Bug Light Reaction's logo, the band playing in the Wise.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Empathy

This is one of my favorite pieces.

This Is My Child, I Love My Child
oil paint, thread, and clothespins on canvas
14" X 18"
March 2010

Fuck The Ephemeral


Fuck The Ephemeral
mixed media on canvas
February 2010
16" X 20"

This piece is about sentimentality. The muddled, chaotic upper right corner is about attachment to the past and past objects and memories. Most of the material used in this portion of the piece is sentimental to me; I printed an old necklace string and dried flower chains and used sand from Cape Cod and old film. The streaks are linseed oil, which enhance the intertwining and unsure nature of the 'past' section of this piece.

The bottom left was sued to counter act and ground the other half. It is about trying to move on and live presently, even when it's difficult. The first layer if text is gold glitter glue and reads 'this shit is all sentimental' the second layer is oil paint marker.

Monday, March 8, 2010

First 5 from New Series

These are five pieces from an unfinished series that I've been working on from January to the present. About half of them are based from still life compositions. Motifs include red X's, bones, skulls, dripping, childhood toys of mine, glitter, and lyrics from contemporary popular music. Almost every piece has song lyrics on it, which also serve as the title. The strong symbols, words, and images in these paintings create interesting dialogues between different stages of my life and growth.


I Brush My Teeth With A Bottle of Jack
still life of block and bone cross section
oil paint, marker on canvas

lyrics from:



Something Gertrude Stein Would Say

still life doll, horse and dollhouse

oil paint, pencil, glitter glue, spray paint on canvas

no lyrics

24" X 30"







(detail)































I'm a Vegetarian and I ain't Fucking Scared of Him

oil paint, glitter glue, charcoal dust, glitter modge-podge, paint marker, fixative on canvas

lyrics from:



Have You Ever Made Love in the Club With a Thug?
oil paints, glitter glue, marker on canvas


lyrics from:

20" X 16"


(detail)



Cause If You Liked It, Then You Should've Put a Ring On It

oil paint on canvas

lyrics from:

24" X 36"












(detail)

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Keeping Up

I looked over Self-Reliance last night and I was simply melting over Emerson's genius, again.

"Whoso would be a man must be a nonconformist. He who would gather immortal palms must not be hindered by the name of goodness, but must explore if it be goodness. Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind."

-Ralph Waldo Emerson

It's the kind of essay you can just read over and over again and always get more out of it. Go read it, right now. Seriously, go.

Another great quote I've been mulling over recently is from a peer of mine, Will Henriques:

"Counterculture will die with Gary Snyder!"

I certainly hope not. I'm going to see him speak over break, which will be simply wonderful. Yes, that's right, I am going to see Gary Snyder speak. I am off very soon. I have been working relentlessly and should have some new work up soon.

Anyway, just a lighthearted update.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

quintessential senescence

quintessential senescence
(detail) January 2010
nest, sea glass, plaster

full sculpture, from above


plaster detail


This piece is about how things come to pass. It is about deterioration and detriment, of both man and that which man makes. The sea glass were likely mass produced products, products of the industrial age which were worn down, each picked up by my grandmother. The nest I found when I was younger in the summertime, making it relatively older than the sea glass. The plaster was molded specifically for this project, and then crumbled away in a matter of minutes with a mallet and chisel.

In a way, this piece shows three generations. It is an argument between times and between the natural and industrial worlds. I wanted to highlight the insignificance of solidification.

Sculpting implores contact and experience. As one of my few sculptural pieces, I felt connected to the cool temperature as well as the density and weight it carried. I could describe working with it best as an ironically heavy piece of transience.

Kitten I
2" by 2"
kitten sticker and glitter glue on canvas.
January 2010

It's art if art was by definition beautiful, and beauty was defined by myself when I was 7. Specifically.

Photographs from Summer 2009

These digital photographs were taken as an exploration in designed and controlled compositions as well as light and color. They are about attention to detail and perspective, as well as the implied relationships between objects.

Excerpt from Untitled series I





Excerpt from Egg series I




Excerpt from Egg series II


Deer Skull



(detail) Deer Skull January 2010. Oil on wood.

I've been working with this skull for just over a year. I've also been working a lot with bones, and more recently some of my old childhood toys. A plastic gun, a doll, my dollhouse, etc. This is one of the few paintings I've done of the skull without the antlers. I've been putting antlers in a lot of my work.

I did a drawing over the summer of my skull using red, green, white, and black chalk pastels. It was a color study, more than anything, but I (being the obsessive painter I am) added some water to the black and got this fantastic drippy charcoal effect. I lost it. Such is life. Anyway, I thought it would be interesting to use similar colors with the same subject in oils.

Here's the full thing...

"I felt all Ansel Adams"




Mount St. Helens and the surrounding area. November 2009. Digital photos.

Stunning. When it comes to photography, I'm much better with micro compositions than sweeping landscapes but I like these. The last one is my favorite; I like how the whole photo is cut in half by the diagonal line. I felt all Ansel Adams.


I love the colossal scale, the simplicity...there are only a few plains in each photo. This place was gorgeous.

Then From The Devil

"And if I am the devil's child, I shall live then from the devil."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson

What can I say? I'm a huge fan. This is taken from Self-Reliance, one of my favorite pieces of writing. I thought it was simple and appropriate.

I'm interested in authenticity. Philip Whalen describes poetry as 'a graph of the mind moving'. I hope to illustrate an open, observant and kind mindset translated in words or images.

I've always been told I need to have goals in life. So here goes. I believe it is of the utmost importance to be empathetic, and to try to understand and respect all parts of life and the physical world. My goals extend thus far; gain empathy and understanding for the world in which I live. My vehicle is observation, and my observation is in the form of a pen, a paintbrush, etc. Words and images.

Just wanted to give a little orientation before I delve into my art and writing, and anything I find from others worth relaying.
That's enough for now.