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Pearls from artists* # 139
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.
Leaving a show of Pat Steir’s work called Winter Paintings at Cheim & Read Gallery, I thought back some years to when the Walker Art Center’s then curator Richard Flood was walking us through the Center’s collection and we came upon an abstract expressionist painting by Joan Mitchell that was so striking I asked him why it had taken so long for her to be recognized. He answered with a wry expression: “It’s the problem of beauty!”
A few days earlier our friends Kol and Dash came to lunch at our home, and Dash said at this time most visual art is conceptual. “It’s a way of thinking,” she said.
Story/Time: The Life of an Idea/Bill T. Jones
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Posted in 2015, An Artist's Life, Art in general, Black Paintings, Creative Process, Inspiration, Painting in General, Pastel Painting, Pearls from Artists, Quotes
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Tags: "Broken", "Story/Time: The Life of an Idea/Bill T. Jones", "Winter Paintings", abstract expressionist, answered, art, asked, beauty, Cheim & Read Gallery, collection, conceptual, curator, days, earlier, expression, friends, home, Joan Mitchell, leaving, lunch, painting, pastel, Pat Steir, problem, recognized, Richard Flood, sandpaper, show, soft, striking, thinking, thought, time, visual, Walker Art Center, walking, work, wry
Pearls from artists* # 90
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.
While it is not true that only artists understand art, for there are in every generation some people who not only understand it but also enhance its reach by appreciation, there is a freemasonry among us. We stand shoulder to shoulder, generation to generation.
Anne Truitt in Turn: The Journal of an Artist
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Posted in 2014, An Artist's Life, Art in general, Inspiration, Pearls from Artists, Photography, Quotes, Travel
Tags: "Turn: The Journal of an Artist", Anne Truitt, appreciation, art, artists, enhance, freemasonry, generation, Great Salt Lake, reach, shoulder, Spiral Jetty, true, understand, walking
Q: Can you speak about what draws you to the Mexican and Guatemalan figures that you collect?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: I search the markets and bazaars of Mexico, Guatemala, and elsewhere for folk art objects – masks, carved wooden animals, papier mache figures, children’s toys – to bring back to New York to paint and photograph. Color is very important – the brighter and the more eye-catching the patterns are on these objects the better – plus they must be unique and have lots of personality. I try not to buy anything mass-produced or obviously made for the tourist trade. The objects must have been used or otherwise look like they’ve had a life (i.e., been part of religious festivities) to draw my attention. How and where each one comes into my possession is an important part of my creative process.
Finding, buying, and getting them back to the U.S. is always circuitous, but that, too, is part of the process, an adventure, and often a good story. Here’s an example. In 2009 I was in a small town on the shores of Lake Atitlan in Guatemala, called Panajachel. After returning from a boat ride across the lake, my friends and I were walking back to our hotel when we discovered a wonderful mask store. I spent some time looking around, made my selections, and was ready to buy five exquisitely-made standing wooden figures, when I learned that Tomas, the store owner, did not accept credit cards. I was heart-broken and thought, “Oh, no, I’ll have to leave them behind.” However, thanks to my good friend, Donna, whose Spanish is much more fluent than mine, the three of us brain-stormed until finally, Tomas had an idea. I could pay for the figures at the hotel up the block and in a few days when the hotel was paid by the credit card company, the hotel would pay Tomas. Fabulous! Tomas, Donna, and I walked to the hotel, where the transaction was made and the first hurdle was overcome. Working out the packing and shipping arrangements took another hour or two, but during that time Tomas and I became friends and exchanged telephone numbers (the store didn’t even have a telephone so he gave me the phone number of the post office next door, saying that when I called, he could easily run next door!). Most surprisingly, the package was waiting for me in New York when I returned home from Guatemala.
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Posted in 2013, An Artist's Life, Black Paintings, Creative Process, Guatemala, Inspiration, Mexico, New York, NY, Pastel Painting, Photography, Travel
Tags: accept, across, adventure, animals, arrangements, attention, bazaars, behind, better, block, boat, brain-stormed, brighter, buy, buying, called, carved, children, circuitous, color, company, creative, credit card, days, discovered, Donna Tang, draw, easily, elsewhere, exchanged, exquisitely, eye-catching, festivities, figures, finding, fluent, folk art, friends, Guatemala, heart-broken, home, hotel, hour, hurdle, idea, important, lake, Lake Atitlan, leave, life, looking, markets, mask, masks, mass-produced, Mexican, New York, objects, obviously, otherwise, overcome, owner, package, packing, paint, Panajachel, papier mache, pattern, pay, personality, phone, photograph, possession, post office, process, ready, religious, returned, returning, ride, search, selections, shipping, shop, Spanish, speak, spent, standing, store, story, surprisingly, telephone numbers, Tomas, tourist, toys, trade, transaction, unique, United States, waiting, walked, walking, wooden, working
Q: Have you ever worked outside?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust

Reproductions of “Cardinal Rule” (top) and “Blue Ego,” originals are soft pastel on sandpaper, 30″ x 38″
A: As a pastel artist I’ve never worked outside – with so many pastels, it’s just not practical – but early on in the “Domestic Threats” series, I created two outdoor setups. Works in the series derived from elaborate scenes that I arranged and then photographed.
I used to take long walks along the Potomac River in Alexandria, VA, and there was a tree stump that was fascinating. It was mostly twisted roots, knotty branches, dark hidden spaces, etc. (top painting in photo). One morning I took several hand puppets and stuffed animals (my subject matter at the time) and carefully arranged them on the tree. Around me people were busy exercising their dogs. Soon I attracted quite a bit of attention – a tall blonde woman playing with puppets on a tree stump! Dogs came over to sniff. Their owners came over, too, and I was pressed into explaining, again and again, that I was an artist, that I was photographing this scene so I could paint it, etc. The interruptions were very annoying.
The second time I tried an outdoor setup was again along the Potomac River, but this time I selected a secluded strip of beach where I was undisturbed. I had forgotten to consider the light and inadvertently chose a cloudy day. I remember being disappointed that the light was flat and lacking shadows. The painting (bottom in photo) turned out to be one of my least favorites.
I resolved from then on to focus on interiors. Alfred Hitchcock famously used rear projection so that he could work in a studio rather than on location. One reason, he said, was that in a studio he had total control. I know what he meant. When I set up an interior scene and position the lights to make interesting shadows, indeed, I have control over the whole look. No aspect is left to chance. The accidents – improvements! – happen later when I work on the painting.
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Posted in 2013, An Artist's Life, Creative Process, Domestic Threats, Pastel Painting, Photography, Working methods
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