Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Reflection
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Knotweed Stalks

Knotweed Stalks
Andy Goldsworthy (British)
1988
First Impressions:
This is a really cool sculpture. To me it reminds me of a window or a hole. The scene looks really spectacular and the background compliments the sculpture. This sculpure looks like it is sticking into the ground out of the water. When I first looked at it, I thought it was an "impossible" sculpure. I could not seem to figure out hiw Goldsworthy had made it. Then after looking at the discription (my bad) I found out that the bottom part was really the reflection of the stalks above the water. This three-dimensional object truly amazes me as the thought of using the reflection of the water to create symetry was truly brilliant and inspirational. It is also really cool how the whole makes the sculpture look as if it concaves in, towards the hole. The hole draws an incredible amount of attraction (to the eye). I am inspired by this sculpture and the way the Andy Goldsworthy used nature to create such a magnificent masterpiece.
What I Have Learned:
As mentioned above, it is really neat how Andy Goldsworthy used the reflection of the water to "complete" the sculpture. Andy is an artist that uses and "collaborates" with nature to create his creations. He features his art work as "momentary" or "ephemeral"1. He photographs his creations as soon as they are finished. As said by morning-earth.com, "His goal is to understand nature by directly participating in nature as intimately as he can." Andy will use whatever he has (nature wise) to create his amazing and beautiful works of art.
Here are some of his words about his art work:
"I enjoy the freedom of just using my hands and "found" tools--a sharp stone, the quill of a feather, thorns. I take the opportunities each day offers: if it is snowing, I work with snow, at leaf-fall it will be with leaves; a blown-over tree becomes a source of twigs and branches. I stop at a place or pick up a material because I feel that there is something to be discovered. Here is where I can learn. "
"Looking, touching, material, place and form are all inseparable from the resulting work. It is difficult to say where one stops and another begins. The energy and space around a material are as important as the energy and space within. The weather--rain, sun, snow, hail, mist, calm--is that external space made visible. When I touch a rock, I am touching and working the space around it. It is not independent of its surroundings, and the way it sits tells how it came to be there."
"I want to get under the surface. When I work with a leaf, rock, stick, it is not just that material in itself, it is an opening into the processes of life within and around it. When I leave it, these processes continue."
"I enjoy the freedom of just using my hands and "found" tools--a sharp stone, the quill of a feather, thorns. I take the opportunities each day offers: if it is snowing, I work with snow, at leaf-fall it will be with leaves; a blown-over tree becomes a source of twigs and branches. I stop at a place or pick up a material because I feel that there is something to be discovered. Here is where I can learn. "
"Looking, touching, material, place and form are all inseparable from the resulting work. It is difficult to say where one stops and another begins. The energy and space around a material are as important as the energy and space within. The weather--rain, sun, snow, hail, mist, calm--is that external space made visible. When I touch a rock, I am touching and working the space around it. It is not independent of its surroundings, and the way it sits tells how it came to be there."
"I want to get under the surface. When I work with a leaf, rock, stick, it is not just that material in itself, it is an opening into the processes of life within and around it. When I leave it, these processes continue."
"Movement, change, light, growth and decay are the lifeblood of nature, the energies that I try to tap through my work. I need the shock of touch, the resistance of place, materials and weather, the earth as my source. Nature is in a state of change and that change is the key to understanding. I want my art to be sensitive and alert to changes in material, season and weather. Each work grows, stays, decays. Process and decay are implicit. Transience in my work reflects what I find in nature."
"The underlying tension of a lot of my art is to try and look through the surface appearance of things. Inevitably, one way of getting beneath the surface is to introduce a hole, a window into what lies below."
Sources: http://www.morning-earth.org/ARTISTNATURALISTS/AN_Goldsworthy.html
Picture: http://prettisculpture.typepad.com/photos/other_artists_3/goldsworthy2.html
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Portrait of Chess Players

The players are shown in different positions, suggesting the passage of time. Duchamp gave Cubism an idiosyncratic twist by introducing duration.
The players are weighing their options. One potential outcome results in the capture, by the player on the left, of an opposing piece, held in his hand near the bottom of the painting. A picture of minds engaged in the calculus of chess, this is an early exercise in another continuing interest in Duchamp’s art: depicting the intangible."www.understandingduchamp.com
In the 1968, Marcel Duchamp unfortunately died. Understandingduchamp.com did an excelent "summarization" of Marcel Duchamps' life.
Marcel Duchamp showed the way to a new kind of art. Compared with the varieties of visual expression that came before, this new art seeks to to engage the imagination and the intellect instead of just the eyes, embraces humor as a valid aesthetic component, and strives to portray invisible worlds instead of just visible ones.
Some of the most fruitful influences in modern art, from Surrealism to Abstraction to Pop to pure Conceptualism, have a common forefather in Marcel Duchamp.
Duchamp died peacefully in 1968. His ashes were interred with other family members in the Cimetière Monumental in Rouen. He wrote his own epitaph:
D’ailleurs, c'est toujours les autres qui meurent
Anyway, it’s always the other guy who dies.
Sources: http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/permanent/51446.html
Quotes: 1. http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/permanent/51446.html
2-4. http://www.understandingduchamp.com/text.html
Zoom Painting: http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/permanent/51446.html
Monday, February 2, 2009
Lady Agnew of Lochnaw

Lady Agnew's personality engages in endless elusive play against her social type. Sargent has made her face almost schematic, yet within the regularity there is slight departures, nuances whose faintness blends nicely with the sitters languid pose. Lady Agnew's face seems all possibility, and consciously so. The moment of the right side of her lips look slightly drawn back, as if in doubt or weariness, the left side seems almost to smile. And, as if to insist on her control of this ambivalence, her eyes are oddly calm."
(Ratcliff)
This Portrait gives the viewer a clear look at Lady Agnew.
Sources: http://jssgallery.org/Paintings/Lady_Agnew.htm