Tuesday 16 November 2010

The Press --Austin

It dawned on me last night that Absinthe Spoon Press is not a real press. That is to say that we do not have a printing press. Will Holbert helped me figure that out last night, and steered me in the direction of some typeset printing methods and where to procure a real press. I guess we will keep this Pinocchio thing running until we can became a real press.

COMING SOON!!!

Printed material that you can hold in your hand!

Hopefully, all of my friend's rejected work can find life with our brilliant idiotic ink.


Wednesday 10 November 2010

"Distant Clarity" A visual Timeline on the Coming of Age

Hello Absinthe Spoon Press followers!

Although concepting for my senior show started this past summer, I had somewhat of a clear direction of what I wanted the senior show to comment on; and that was coming of age. Being married this past summer and concentrating on the ideas of what it means to be an adult, along with the ramifications assumed as being a women, I started questioning and thinking how I wanted to portray these ideas in paintings. Having an illustrative-background, and my love for the fine-art and the 'lowbrow' genre, I wanted to combine the two in a set of paintings.


The project is far from done, but I've finished the three defining paintings of the series. They each represent a stage of life: childhood, adolescense, and transition to womenhood and adulthood. Although the pieces were inspired and driven from my personal experiences, I did not want to limit the experiences to my personal outlook alone.


I have many smaller paintings that will describe and portray the feelings and narrative of the protaganist, who the audience sees as a young girl in the first section of the narrative, and experiences her growth as the paintings progress.


As far as material, the paintings started off as oil paintings. For the sake of meeting a deadline, I've finished the three paintings digitally, which you will see in the progress shots. My final intention for these pieces are to finish them in oils, even though they are finished in a different sense digitally. I feel that this progression will enhance and be incorporated in the final oil paintings.


Without further ado!


"Distant Clarity"
A Visual Timeline of Coming of Age


"The premise of my paintings is based on the exploration of vulnerability and experiences portrayed in symbolic characters and environments.


The appearances of women, creatures, vanities, and ghostly figures are enigmatic representations and symbols of vulnerability.


I am attempting to question, record, express, and relieve experiences and responses of the self by representing them in tangible yet fantastical environments. The distance between the enigmatic and personal experiences describes the mundane nature of vulnerability."


"The Red Apples" | saraholbert.com

"Distant Clarity" | saraholbert.com

"The Wise Owl Prowls" | saraholbert.com







Friday 5 November 2010

Le Crimp --Austin Givens

I was sitting down on a plaid couch trying to find something interesting to do on a plaid couch. I had media running on the television via Netflix. The machine was telling me interesting things that I would certainly be interested in. One of them was an origami documentary and I thought to myself "interesting."




I recommend the film to everyone! Our entire world is an origami canvass. The cosmos are a single sheet, just like our souls.CHECK IT OUT HERE!!




Anyways....I got inspired the most by these French origami artists who call themselves "Le Crimp." Their work is deconstructive, yet so God-like. Just beautiful. I studied their work a lot and tried to join their art movement with a poem which I will share after a few shots of their origami.






This one is by Alain Giacomini






A giraffe by Victor Coeurjoly



Vincent Floderer




To me, their work represents platonic hope. Segmented beauty. Something that hits puberty in compartments of light. It feels as if this is the soul of things as they consume life. Nothing robotic or mechanical exists in this work. I tried to squeeze this into the first oragami poem, which I modeled as a "Crimp" poem. Here it is:




Le Crimp.doc


Le Crimp!






I fold my soul rapidly,


through America--


never been out west though,


my soul is east and eats jewish pastrami and


jewish beards.


Wednesday 3 November 2010

The Modern Art Review: Art Nouveau

Much absinthe was consumed in the service of this visual enterprise. Heavily influenced by Japanese woodcuts and neoclassical sensibilities, Art Nouveau enjoyed a fifteen year reign during the Bohemian revolution of 1890-1905. Their concepts were simple: art must be a component of everyday life; it must infuse furniture, architecture, instruments, china, sidewalks and bathroom stalls. They called for utilitarianism as well as florality (in fact, a leading inspiration of the movement was the behavior, character and design of flowers). Their style--large planes of color and stark contours--was bred for lithography, and most of their creations were rendered as posters. This added to the utilitarianism of their school, for posters were an everyday art that hung on alley walls outside the Moulin Rogue as well as in the marble halls of the Louvre. And they did.

Henri Marie Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec-Monfa is the poster child of Art Nouveau, quite literally. His Japanese-style prints were formed of brilliantly balanced planes of negative and positive space, sculpting three dimensions out of two through erotic reds, smoldering blacks, and blazing whites, constantly evoking either the scalding emotions of passion or the alarming disgust of the underworld through phantasmic greys, cadaverous greens and lycanthropic browns. This is wonderfully accomplished in "Queen of Joy with Victor Joze," where the cherry red is catapulted to the foreground by the ponderous blacks. She is forward, agressive, and alive, leaping past the white table cloth into the viewers' laps. The flame-colored chair and hair flank her lilly-colored caress, forcing the kiss, and filling it with sparking energy. The unshaded areas of postive space are manipulated in such a way that the frantic angles invest it with awkard, even threatening veracity, and it is only with deliberate observation that the illusion is broken and the two dimensional contours fall flat.

 Apart from his poster-work, Toulouse-Lautrec was a brilliant post-impressionistic draftsman, pouring the rabid vibrancy of impressionistic detail into the solemn misery of
deep moments of humanity. His paintings depict suspicious lesbians, solitary absinthines, and anxious performers. He subject matter was largely collected from the halls of the Moulin Rogue, where the freaks and bohemians found escape at night and despair in day. This colorful depiction of Van Gogh contains the contrasts of livid violets, scarlets and goldenrod, and the plaintive, lonesome posture of its famed sitter, three years before his suicide.


The Austrian, Gustav Klimt, is notable for his emphases on design, pattern and ornamentation. His works, such as Judith Holding the Head of Holofrenes and The Kiss, are comilations of 3D figures emplanted in 2D worlds. Judith is larger than life, towering and potent, draped in bizarre jewelry that reckons distant and forgotten--potentially dangerous--cultures. Her necklace enthrones her head, and the arabesques that flourish, plantlike, in the brilliant gilding behind her give the impression of semetic antiquity, perhaps implying her divinity in a mystic sect. Her ornamentation draws us in, both surging ahead of her and retreating behind her, causing her image to flicker like a fish's lure. But the dark head which she obscures in the corner, warns of the cost for living in her gilded web.

Likewise, the two lovers appear fossilized in their two dimensions, but their arrested nature is simultaneously fluid and frozen, another example of Klimt's obsession with the coexistence of nurturing and destructive poles. They are glitteringly awake, but like insects fossilized in amber bulbs, they are quiet and  unmoving. Their liquid ecstacy is crisp and brittle.


Aubrey Beardsley's work is succinctly florid. It is founded on sweeping contour, but is infused with a throbbing sensation of horror. It is no surprise that his interpretation of Art Nouveau--in typical utilitarian fashion--was often enlisted for to illustrate Poe, Nordic myths, and gothic tragedies. His illustration for "The Pit and the Pendelum" is grotesque. It looks nothing like most depictions. The blade, unlike most masculine sickles, is a modest twist of metal, flying coolly by, hardly distinguishable from the time mechanism. The victim, swaddled in dark strands of fabric, is more disturbing than a man strapped to a board. His hanuted gaze seeps from the page, and his limp, packaged figure recalls the exhausted resignation of a moth in a spider's web. It rejects all previous depictions and shocks with its nihlistic passivity.


His illustration of Isolde, from the Franco-Germanic myth, turned Wagnerian opera, is dominated by a red drape. It is the drape, not the heroine, which is important. Again, Beardsley disappoints traditional expectations, causing seething anxiety and brutal confusion. The scarlet is not erotic or violent, it simply is. It throbs watchfully from the background, like the fateful doom that hovers over she and her lover Tristan. It awaits in the background, aware and profound. It is not tense, as if ready to pounce, but relaxed and reassured. The Japanese planes of red and white flow into one another with certainty, and her doom is not quick or shocking, but like the agony of Poe's protagonist, it is docilely certain, mocking the romanticism of past illustrators with a nihlistic construct of a certain demise. Appropriately, he died of consumption.

Review by Michael Kellermeyer


Tuesday 2 November 2010

Reversed songs

It's fun to hear your own songs reversed.  You can reverse your songs on Audacity (free).  I wrote a song based on the reversed melody and words of one of my songs.  The new song is called "Be Nice."

Be Nice