I've been very gratified and delighted by the positive feedback from the wee change I made to the snowmobile piece. Thank you all! I have to admit that despite my initial trepidation, that piece now makes me smile. :-)
Coincidentally, the reaction to 'Snowmobiles', as well as the experience I had at the presentation in Calgary last week, added to my ongoing pondering about the nature of art.
A couple of weeks ago I listened to an interview between Krista Tippet and the late John O'Donohue. I was intrigued by him and wanted to read some of his writing; Beauty was available at the library so I sent for it and it arrived at my local branch last week.
The text is rich, poetic and complex, so it's rather slow reading; however, very early on -- actually, in his Introduction -- O'Donohue quoted James Hillman, thus:
The arts, whose task once was considered to be that of manifesting the beautiful, will [now] discuss the idea only to dismiss it, regarding beauty only as the pretty, the simple, the pleasing, the mindless and the easy. Because beauty is conceived so naively, it appears as merely naive, and can be tolerated only if complicated by discord, shock, violence, and harsh terrestrial realities. I therefore feel justified in speaking of the repression of beauty. (emphasis mine)
How interesting to read this in the wake of that Calgary experience, where the artist admitted that she and her colleague found some of the embroidered images "cliche" -- pretty? Naive? Uncomplicated? Even beautiful? -- and took steps to provide "discord, shock, violence [and a reflection of] harsh terrestrial realities" by cutting into the quilt top, leaving the holes, and appliqueing the cut shapes randomly around the "cliche" image in an attempt to make the piece more 'edgy'.
In the same vein, I recently received an e-note from someone who commented that she'd seen several of the pieces for the upcoming SAQA "Santa Fe Spotlight" fundraiser -- and that mine stood out as more 'traditional'...the gist of her thought being that she wondered how it would fare in the auction, given the nature of the other contenders which are (apparently) less so. She didn't elaborate on what she meant, and I didn't pursue it, but the implication is that my piece was perhaps too 'pretty'...didn't have an edge, didn't make a statement...
In describing my work to the Calgary couple who purchased "Prairie Autumn", for perhaps the first time I confidently articulated my objective with these sorts of pieces: to touch someone's heart, to awaken a memory, to recall a simpler time in life, to provide an opportunity to pause and reflect or simply delight in the moment.
Yes, I have had my share of hardship and darkness -- and I have come to agree with Hillman. I believe that behind his words is the thought that there is so much darkness, disillusionment, resentment, fear, anger and cynicism in our world that in order to cope with it, many in the arts have elevated the expression of those emotions to a level of sophistication unworthy of them, allowing no room for the beautiful, the peaceful, the loving, the miraculous and the mysterious.
If we let it, our rampant social media can be filled with this same dark view. Blessedly, to date, we have the ability to filter it in favour of the inspirational, the joyous, the lovely, the light-hearted. And I do so choose.
Et tu?
Showing posts with label simplicity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label simplicity. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Tuesday Thoughts
Labels:
beauty,
James Hillman,
John O'Donohue,
Krista Tippett,
On Being,
simplicity,
tradition
Monday, February 04, 2013
P.S.
In the aftermath of yesterday's post,
this morning I read
from cyber friend, Macrina, Benedictine sister, poet and author.
SIMPLIFY
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Friday, January 28, 2011
More Snow...
...is not surprising, this last weekend in January, here in Central Alberta. Heading into evening, the snow has been joined by the wind, and drifting. On the menu: Comfort Food in the form of home-made tuna casserole: whole wheat fusilli noodles (cooked), water-packed tuna (drained), condensed mushroom soup, and frozen mixed veggies (about a cup) -- all mixed together in a trusty Corning Ware (r) casserole dish. Maybe some shredded cheese, melted and golden, on top.
Dr. Oz, eat your heart out! ;-) I'm taking his 11-week challenge, which is going to take me and my 58-year-old, post-menopausal, mid-winter body at least twice as long. Yes, I am moving more; I am eating less (snacking less); I do appreciate the awareness that the special website has created...but it is what it is!
Stormy weather enables more studio time, too. I am contentedly working on several things:
- This morning I quilted the first of 2 new pieces. These are going to be my submissions to "In the Red", a juried show to be held from early April through early July at the Alberta Craft Council Feature Gallery in Edmonton. The show is intended to express how artists feel about a recent 16% cut-back in Provincial funding. Let me introduce you to:
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"Make Do" and... "Mend" (pre-quilting) |
- This afternoon I put 3 new dye packs aside to 'percolate': an even bluer purple (more Sky Blue, less Fuschia); a green-green (Lemon Yellow and Turquoise -- who knew?!); and a red orange (Scarlet, Golden Yellow and a touch of Lemon Yellow). I've included skeins of white perle cotton in the first two...the better to stitch with, my dears!
- Also this afternoon, as things began to 'perc' in the dye pot, I began to hand-stitch on the first of my "Abandoned" series, which I hope to have ready to exhibit at the Lacombe Art Fair in April. I bought some wonderful Sulky 'Blendables' in "Milk Chocolate" (#4011) and "Soft Blacks" (#4034) with which to stitch down the 'siding' on a building. I bought 30 wt, because I knew I could use it for both hand and machine stitching, but they have the same in heavier weight for hand-stitiching only. I am lovin' the way this is coming together and will provide a photo before too long...
For much of the afternoon, once the CBC shut down it's classical mode, I've been listening to an audio-book I got Monday from my LL (Local Library): Matthew E. May's In Pursuit of Elegance. Fascinating...but it's going to take me a while to digest. (I've just finished Chapter 2). I commend it to you, whether you're an artist, a designer, a writer, a physicist, a scientist...or just plain curious. Here are some of my notes:
"What isn't there can often trump what is."
"Doing nothing isn't easy."
Prioritze goals -- then eliminate the bottom 20% forever.
Elements of elegance: surprising power;
simplicity; 'less is more'; changes our view of things; clever; concise; symmetrical; pleasingly memorable; spare...
Appreciate, embrace -- and travel beyond complexity.
Not everything simple is elegant, BUT everthing elegant is simple.
*****
Labels:
art quilts,
comfort food,
elegance,
Matthew E. May,
simplicity,
snow
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