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Pearls from artists* # 26
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
* an ongoing series of quotations – mostly from artists, to artists – that offers wisdom, inspiration, and advice for the sometimes lonely road we are on.
Beauty is made up of relationships. It derives its prestige from a specific metaphysical truth, expressed through a host of balances, imbalances, waverings, surges, halts, meanderings, and straight lines, the peculiar quality of which, as a whole, add up to a marvelous number, apparently born without pain. Its distinguishing mark is that it judges those who judge it, or imagine that they possess power to do so. Critics have no hold over it. They would have to know the minutest details of how it works, and this they cannot do, because the mechanics of beauty are secret. Hence the soil of an age is strewn with a litter of cogs that criticism dismantles in the same way as Charlie Chaplin dismantles an alarm clock after opening it like a tin can. Criticism dismantles the cogs. Unable to put them back together or understand the relationships that give them life, it discards them and goes on to something else. And beauty ticks on. Critics cannot hear it because the roar of current events clogs the ears of their souls.
Jean Cocteau in Andre Bernard and Claude Gauteur, editors, Jean Cocteau: The Art of Cinema
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Posted in 2013, Art in general, Bali and Java, Creative Process, Inspiration, Pearls from Artists, Quotes
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Tags: "Jean Cocteau: The Art of Cinema", add, age, alarm clock, Andre Bernard, balance, Bali, beauty, born, Borobudur, Charlie Chaplin, Claude Gauteur, cog, criticism, critics, current events, derive, detail, discard, dismantle, distinguishing, ears, editors, express, halt, hear, hold, host, how it works, imagine, imbalance, Java, judge, know, life, line, litter, mark, marvelous, meander, mechanics, metaphysical, minute, number, pain, peculiar, possess, power, prestige, quality, relationships, roar, secret, soil, souls, specific, straight, strewn, surge, tick, tin can, together, truth, understand, wavering, way, whole
Q: What would you be if you were not an artist?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: I honestly have no idea, but whatever it might be, there is a good chance that I’d be bored! In my younger days boredom was a strong motivator. I left the active duty Navy out of boredom. I couldn’t bear not being intellectually challenged (most of my jobs consisted of paper-pushing), not using my flying skills (at 27 I was a licensed commercial pilot and Boeing 727 flight engineer), and not developing my artistic talent. In what surely must be a first, by spending a lot of time and money training me for jobs I hated, the Navy turned me into a hard-working artist! And once I left the Navy there was no plan B. There was no time to waste. It was “full speed ahead.”
Art is a calling. You do not need to be told this if you are among those who are called. It’s all about “the work,” that all-consuming focus of an artist’s life. If a particular activity doesn’t make you a better artist, you avoid it. You work hard to nourish and protect your gifts. As artists we invent our own tasks, learn whatever we need in order to progress, and complete projects in our own time. It is life lived at its freest.
My art-making has led me to fascinating places: Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, France, England, Italy, Bali, Java and more; and to in-depth studies of intriguing subjects: drawing, color, composition, art and art history, the art business, film and film history, photography, mythology, literature, music, jazz history, and archaeology, particularly that of ancient Mesoamerica (the Olmec, Zapotec, Mixtec, Aztec, Maya, etc.). And this rich mixture continually grows! For anyone wanting to spend their time on earth learning and meeting new challenges, there is no better life than that of an artist.
I SO agree with this exchange that I read years ago between between Trisha Brown and Mikhail Baryshnikov in the New York Times. I wrote it on a piece of paper and taped it to my studio wall:
Trisha: How do you think we keep going? Are we obsessed?
Mikhail: We do it because there’s nothing better. I’m serious. Because there is nothing more exciting than that. Life is so boring, that’s why we are driven to the mystery of creation.
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Posted in 2012, An Artist's Life, Art in general, Bali and Java, Creative Process, Guatemala, Inspiration, Mexico, New York, NY, Photography, Quotes
Tags: "full speed ahead", "the work", active duty, all-consuming, archaeology, Argentina, artist, Aztec, Bali, Boeing-727, bored, boredom, boring, Brazil, challenge, commercial pilot, creation, earth, England, exciting, film history, flight engineer, Flying, focus, France, gifts, Guatemala, Italy, Java, keep going, learn, Maya, Mexico, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Mixtec, motivator, mystery, Navy, New York Times, nourish, obsessed, paper, photography, progress, protect, serious, Studio, time, Trisha Brown, Uruguay, Zapotec
Q: Are you close to finishing any pastel paintings?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: I’m putting finishing touches on a small one, “Absence,” which is 26″ x 20″ unframed. It depicts paper mache figures that I bought some years ago in Oaxaca and Mexico City. I added those two blue and white “volcano” shapes on the left after my recent trip to Bali. Check out the dust (and torn pastel wrappers) on the easel. That’s what inspired the name of my blog.
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Posted in 2012, Art Works in Progress, Bali and Java, Inspiration, Mexico, Pastel Painting, Studio, Travel
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Tags: "Absence", Bali, dust, easel, figures, Mexico City, Oaxaca, paper mache, pastel painting, volcano


