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Sunday, April 19, 2015

Photorealism




When a photo is taken in a studio, some elements are crafted. Will it make us understand photorealism better that it is an inclusion of everything in daily life without craft?

Paintings of still life that at once look real and as a photograph are very often in your mailbox forwarded by friends who cant believe that paintings can be done so realistically. Photorealism is one subject which divides a clear line between those who get it and those who dont. For one side if its skill and tradition, for the others it lacks artists perspective. For such a disputed topic, 'Photorealism: Beginnings to Today" has a great section of Artists Biographies which summarise the artists view of why they do photorealistic paintings.
For one artist, "changing the size of an object lets them explore its reality" like Georgia O keefe's flower paintings, for another, "cropping of the subject enforces tight composition", yet another shows "how people need chrome in a painting to see themselves". One artist convinces himself that he is creating everything he is painting.
For such a divisive topic, I would have liked more essays than available in the book.

In 'the Ignorant Maestro', Itay Talgam asks "How would you like walking into a Van Gogh exhibition in which all the paintings had recently been "upgraded" so the gaps between the painter's view of the landscape and the "real" view we know from everyday experience has been eliminated?". Perhaps the photorealistic is to show that there is always a gap, even if the painter tries to make the painting seem real, as there is his interpretation present in it always. Zeno's paradox.


poetry prompt:
1. Aging, Beauty and Appearance
Find groups of three words from dictionary that make for an interesting beading.

2. "By radically changing the size of everyday objects we can get into them and more easily explore their surfaces and construction -their reality" - Charles Bell

3. Black Glass Still Life with Fish, Pear, Skeleton
What are you likely to compose in your still life?

4. The cropping of the subject enforces a tight composition ..  according to Gus Heinze. What would you choose to crop out?

5. It isnt the reflective quality of chrome as a painting that interests me - its the evidence that they need a certain amount of chrome in their lives, in a figurative sense, in order to see themselves"
What else do people need to see themselves?

6. When I paint water, rocks, sky, trees, chairs, etc., I must imagine touching them, convincing myself, as it were, that I am creating these things in a very real sense. The magic occurs when I believe I have done this
What would you paint to create?

Map


Ballad
Understanding Wislawa Szymborska
Conversation with a stone

".. lake
that goes unnamed
and doesnt exist on this earth, just as the star
reflected in it is not in the sky."  - Water

Fish to Fish
Inventor of Zero

"The boat from which he stepped into the world, into un-eternity" - Born

Census

The legend of Owl was a baker's daughter in Beheading

children of  Vietnam

Thomas Mann

The Cave

Map Collected and Last poems of Wislawa Szymborska begins with her work from 1944. I am glad I stuck to the book. From Salt 1962 is when I started reading the book with fire. From then on, each poem had something to offer.
If the poet Wislawa Szymborska were a painter, her painting would be a montage that morphs from a hyperrealistic painting to a revelatory painting, retaining only the necessary objects.
Her poems deal with plain opposites - In 'To My Heart, On Sunday' - its the restlessly working heart on Sabbath rest day.
Her poems deal with movement - In 'The Acrobat' - movement in time (present and future) and space. Sometimes calculated like this and other times, its a huge push to future of

"Nothing - but after us,
who were here before
and ate our hearts
and drank our blood" - Cave poem

Her poems, zoom in on a single in a multitude in 'Snapshot of a Crowd'

Her poems use literary devices like alliteration, string of words
"Moraines and morays and morasses and mussels,
the flame, the flamingo, he flounder, the feather-" - Birthday poem
Her poems usually a page and a half long arrive by the end of the page, the next half is a bonus. Unlike some poets, you dont have to wait
till the end.

poetry prompt

1. write an  Inverted poem
2. write a Soliloquy
3. I prefer earth in civvies. Write a 'I prefer' poem.
4. I am Tarsier. Write from a different point of view.
5. To my heart on Sunday. Heart works endlessly even on Sabbath rest day. Any such opposites strike you?
6. The Acrobat places the performer in time and space, weaves through it as he moves. Are you amazed by any movement?
7. Snapshot of a Crowd. Multitude to a single. Can you zoom in on a tree in  a forest, grain in sand?
8. Dinosaur Skeleton. Addressing in many different ways, mocking the addressed.
9. Pi



Night walk

A walk in the stars
Orion, Polaris
spiders and crickets

The Lost Perfume

Did you get the whiff of
gift perfume that
cleaved from its companion
traveled in my pocket
and went back with me

Months and years later
its gone


Ten Windows

From the New world

Saturday, April 18, 2015

The last two seconds




Lions and Tigers

Excerpt

ivory figurine lady doctor

Poetry Prompt.

1. Both these poems below have their first lines as a rephrase of their titles. As if it were a question- answer response type or title standing out as something that came into place after the poem has happened.

The perpetual night she went into
Except for being it was relatively painless

2. Look at long explanation of words and see if they strike a chord
Close Observation Especially of one under Suspicion is from the dictionary's meaning of Surveillance

3. In Had there been, there is a corner, a murder takes place. Poets have a thing for corners.
In Sketching for poets, robert hass talks of a corner as an inspiration for a poem.
Do you have a corner like that?

4. What do you think of anything?
since a symbol is nothing but an illustration