Sunday, February 26, 2012

Moving On … New Directions …


The Art Beat has run its course. I’ve published twenty-three posts throughout 2011, and it has been very rewarding, but it is time to move on, in new directions. Many thanks to all for your interest over these past months, and I hope to continue seeing you as the new months unfold, principally at


      

  • ScreenHeads   Explores Cyber-absorption, a serious theme yet lighthearted treatment. The See Dick Click post will be of interest to anyone who has ever used a Dick and Jane reader, and ScreenHeads: A Story for Children (and Adults), which See Dick Click introduces, will be of interest to everyone else (and available as a free download in an innovative “You are the Illustrator” format which encourages (but does not require) artistic exploration of the story’s Human and Cyber themes. 15 story pages, 19 pages total).


  • Zen Clock   A long term project focused on meditation, awareness, mindfulness, etc.


Before leaving though, let me indicate my very favorite Art Beat posts, primarily for those who might have missed them or for new visitors to this site. Indeed this is the last Art Beat post, but many if not most of the posts are far from dated, and these are the very best:
·         New Year Resolution
·         The Art of Seeing
·         Phantom Galleries

Garrett Museum of Art
photo courtesy of
Kent Sweitzer
Finally, just so you know, I have taken my own advice from December's New Year Resolution post, and submitted two resulting works to the Garrett Museum of Art’s Fourth Anniversary Member Show, March 16 through May 4:
        Homo Cyberius: Cyber Man #2


both related to the ScreenHeads blog noted above.
  

Thursday, December 8, 2011

New Year Resolution

I come to write December’s post, mind not yet clear, too many ripples and eddies in the wake of so many summer and autumn words … must settle, look ahead … and there it is: a vast expanse of white space … I page down, again, and again, nothing below the cursor but potential, possibility …

And so the New Year ... Time to settle, reorient, reboot … time to RESOLVE: “In the white space of the new year, I will either: (1) Begin a new personal artistic practice of some sort; (2) Or act as an Art Missionary to a child in my life!”


So, dear reader, might you … and here are some suggestions to make it easier:


Cave painting
If you resolve to learn and practice an art, especially if it will be your first serious such effort, you might use January to explore the many, many options – there is so much that others do that you can learn: assemblage, ceramics, collage, computer art, drawing, jewelry, macramé, painting, photography, sculpture, sketching, and more. Your library will have more books than you imagine – just leaf through them and note what resonates with you. The internet will have more yet, so do look there, but a book in hand generally communicates the feel of an art more immediately than jumping through a series of internet hyperlinks and search results.


Willendorf Venus
sculpture 22,000 BCE
But don’t stop there, talk to people – tell friends of your resolution, they will often know normal, everyday practicing artists who will be happy to share thoughts and experience with you. And don’t pay any attention to the artificial and insidious distinction in some minds between fine art, folk art, and craft. Unless you have it in you to be Van Gogh, Picasso, or some other such genius, it matters not a whit – and I guarantee that 99.6% of all fine art snobs are nowhere near that kind of genius. Do what moves and gratifies you, and do it for that and for no other reason.
Easter Island sculpture, 1500 CE


Once you have chosen your personal art, you need only dive in. Start with books and librarians, internet, friends, friends of friends, classes [many are offered at little expense], etc – and perhaps join or attend Angola Regional Artists’ Guild meetings, free to the public, usually the second Tuesday of each month [except December] at the Angola Carnegie Library, 6:30-8:00.



Picasso, collage 1912
Diving in, don’t expect to be “good” anytime soon, and don’t worry about it, just get wet. Experiment, muck around, explore, and get better each year without worrying about the months between. The good news is that immature and technically poor works can still be enormously gratifying. The creative experience is far more important than the end result. I promise you this is true … The problem though is that so many people are too insecure to tune in to and to value their experience, hence are crushed by the devil INGE: “It’s not good enough.” Of course it isn’t good enough, but that doesn’t matter … you WILL improve, so just enjoy the creative experience, not to mention all the new acquaintances and friends you will meet along the way. And know that This is your one and only, individual, original, real life – so superior to mass market entertainment or Cyberspace!


Robert Frank, photography 1954




A final note on these directions: look for books and classes that emphasize experimentation with the medium over technical skill. A really great example is “Water Paper Paint: Exploring Creativity with Watercolor and Mixed Media” by Heather Smith Jones. This is a wonderful book, even if you have no intention of painting, for its emphasis on exploration and mixed-media integration into projects. I can’t explain that satisfactorily in this post, but ask for it at the library, request interlibrary loan if necessary, or buy it on Amazon [often very low prices on many used books in excellent condition].



Now, if instead [or in addition] you resolve to be an Art Missionary to a child in your life: make a written list of potential enrichment activities and pencil in 4-6 approximate dates for action. For example, art-related birthday and Holiday gifts; a trip to local or regional gallery or museum in March; summer art camp at local library in August; an overnight with Aunt Julie [who practices collage or whatever] in October; etc. And consider giving your special child a copy of this list as a Holiday or a New Year present – this will help keep you on track.

Contemporary, popped up from a Google Image search on Child Art
There are other Missionary activities you can do together. A well-known local artist I know watches YouTube “time lapse” art videos with a special thirteen year old [just search Google on time lapse art]. Or search Google on any word, but instead of a Web or News search, do an Image search and see what comes up … which often leads to other interesting sites to explore … good time together!

Sometimes I’ll send an experiment to a grandchild in the mail: for instance, once I colored a blank paper with crayons, mixing red, orange, violet, yellow, blue, and green lines into an abstract sun, field, and sky … then severely crumpled the paper several times, unfolded the crumples, and cut a large circular disk out of the page. The result was a really interesting mix of texture and volume effects. Just trying to communicate to a 9 year old that there are no rules in Art except to Experiment and Explore!

That's all for now ... Thanks for your company throughout 2011, and please do consider taking that New Year Day polar bear plunge [the new Art or Art Missionary resolution]: it may be icy cold at first, but such new waters are always invigorating! And best wishes for a brave New Year, with all my heART!



Stephen Rowe currently serves as the Angola Regional Artists’ Guild publicity chairman and welcomes correspondence of all sort per StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com




Friday, November 18, 2011

Ruben Ryan on Songwriting


This is the Art Beat’s second experiment featuring a guest column written by a regional artist. The objective is to let you hear the artist’s words directly without my intermediation. Though most artists are not writers as well, all are expressive, so there is value and interest in hearing their own thoughts in their own words. The last such Art Beat post featured Holly Dowidat, an on-her-way ceramic artist whose most notable works have been relatively large ceramic dogs. Today we will hear from Ruben Yves Ryan on Songwriting.

Ruben is a well-known local figure, at least in some circles ... And if never knew him personally, still you have surely seen him, or his friends, or others in his cast [superficially that is, the ‘real’ Ruben definitely is one of a kind]:

I jammed regularly with a group of friends through the years 2000-2003, playing piano, guitar and singing. These friends included Jason Black (guitar and vocals) Noah Parnell (guitar and bass) Brant Miller (guitar, bass, piano), Wes Bickford (guitar and vocals) and Alan Garrard (hand drums)..We called ourselves variously Ripple. as well as The A-Town All Stars. Our tastes were very eclectic, ranging from The Grateful Dead to Radiohead as well as original material contributed by Wes, Brant, Jason, and myself.  The focus of our collective was Wednesday night gatherings at the house I grew up in at 601 E. Broad St. We called it music night...There was generally a lot of youth passing through, playing an extra drum or singing along, hackey-sacking and frisbeeing in the front yard while the music spilled outdoors and in..Thanks mom!

Later ’03 brought a move to Olympia, Washington for a year, and in 2005 Ruben left Angola again for Bloomington, Indiana before returning to Angola in 2009.

I have listened to several “Ruben Yves” CDs, where I heard a man living close to his feelings and impulses … nothing commercial, trite, or formulaic there at all. And I love his closing words below:

The written word provides a powerful means of touching base with your self.  One’s imagination is given liberty to mingle with the hard facts of life, but also the soft breath of dreams.  You are worthy of words.
Now I present Ruben Yves Ryan:

A Prescription for Verse
By Ruben Yves Ryan
I believe songwriting is a craft that many a man, woman, and child could benefit greatly from if they found the nerve to TRY.  Indeed, many do.  But many more could; even you!  “Why?” you ask. How?  To answer the first, the “why,” it boils down to expression.  Life is complicated.  As adamantly as human beings seek to make rules with which to live by, change IS still inevitable.  For proof of this look no further than the process of aging, or the churn of the seasons.  Songwriting, like any art form or craft, is a way of relating to and communicating both the delicacy and violence of this constant state of flux.
Where am I? Where have I been? What do I love, hate, value, respect, fear, or envy?  The answers to these questions no doubt change more often for some than others, but EVERY individual has a valuable and unique perspective.  When you rack your heart and brain for words or phrases, notes, chords, and rhythms with which to embody these sensations you do by necessity draw on what you have been exposed to; BUT, you also CREATE! 
            There is absolutely no need to condemn yourself for not being a master or genius.  You are you! Even if you never share your songs with anyone; by attempting to bring out of your own depths an element or compound that is unique to you, the choice is made to live more fully.  In the same way that a conversation with a loved one can relax and nourish a person at the end of a hard day, so can writing a song fulfill the need we all have of communication.  Where it differs, (and the difference is good!) is that as the creator of the song, your audience is perpetually captive.  Revising and refining your first draft allows a songwriter control and subtlety that rarely exist when trying to recreate a conversation, save for those held with the most steadfast and trustworthy of confidantes.
How to begin?
            If you’ve never journaled or kept a diary before it could well be a valuable way to get the lyrical juices flowing.  For a person who isn’t used to putting their feelings, opinions, passion, and prejudice to the page, the freedom from meter available in this exercise is likely a good starting point.  On the flip side however; ALL THAT FREEDOM, in the initiation of a completely open-ended journal, may seem overwhelming and stifling in and of itself.  In this case, an attempt to write a few rhymes or pursue a topic lyrically could be a preferable avenue for your entry into songwriting.
            The next fork in the road, so to speak, is To Theme or Not to Theme.  By this I mean whether you are beginning your song with a specific subject, idea, or feeling which you wish to elaborate via words and/or notes and rhythm, OR, elect to go the steam-of consciousness route.  Assuming you are starting with lyrics (which is by no means the “correct” thing to do; merely an option), think about whether there is an overriding feeling or idea you are dealing with today, or lately.  Happy, sad, good, bad: all are worthy of expression.  Perhaps just write the very first sentence that comes to mind relating to this feeling or idea.  Try not to be too long-winded if it is your first shot.  Work into increasing the length as you improve your craft; should you wish.
In Search of a Muse
            Romantic interests are unquestionably fertile ground when pondering what to write about.  Inspiration need not come exclusively from this sphere of your life, however.  Desire in its broader sense is a primary factor eclipsing all parts of our life in one way or another.  I find that writing about what I want and feel that I need often brings me closer, if not to attaining my desire, at least to enhancing my understanding of it.  This understanding can be constructive or destructive in regard to the satisfaction of the desired for.  Art can bring resolution to the dynamics together which decide whether or not to continue to hold to that wish, hew to that line, or let sleeping dogs lie.

            The written word provides a powerful means of touching base with your self.  One’s imagination is given liberty to mingle with the hard facts of life, but also the soft breath of dreams.  You are worthy of words.
Ruben Yves Ryan is a local singer/songwriter whose latest album “Résistance Renaissance” is available at Sticks & Stones (208 W. Maumee St., Angola) as well as Three Sisters (223 W. Maumee St., Angola) Tracks from this album as well as previous albums may be listened to and/or downloaded by visiting www.soundcloud.com/ruben-yves. His email address is rubenryan@live.com







Until the next post, know that the Angola area lakes region is an Art Region, and its towns are Art Towns!

If you would like direct email notification of new Art Beat posts, simply send an email with the words “requesting Art Beat notification” in the subject line to StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com
Stephen Rowe currently serves as the Angola Regional Artists’ Guild publicity chairman and writes two additional blogs:

Stephen welcomes correspondence of all sort per StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com

Friday, November 4, 2011

Steve Smith, Primal Potter and Entrepreneur

Some fine news for Steuben-area arts: Steve Smith, an accomplished sculptor, potter and ceramicist, is “retiring” from thirty years as an Art Professor at Defiance College, to open a new business venture: 4 Corners Studio, Gallery and Pottery, just south of Tom’s Donuts at Lake James/Jimmerson Lake near Angola. Initially the gallery will open for special events, and eventually will sell paintings, prints, pottery, sculpture, glass, and jewelry made by select artists throughout the Midwest, in addition to Steve’s pottery and other ceramics.

Steve is already known here to many in connection with his much smaller outlet, Lake Gage Pottery, from which he sold pottery over many holiday weekends the past years, but this new studio and gallery manifests as a larger, long term financial commitment to regional art, informed by a lifetime of work in the field.

Certainly interesting … but more so yet is the man and artist behind this venture, Steve Smith himself. His work has won many awards, and even made the November 1991 cover of House Beautiful, yet underlying his obsession with pottery is the “soul of a cave man.” Understand what this means – it is not a cartoonish jest, but reflects a profound and direct apprehension of and connection with nature and natural forces.

We talked for a couple hours - his love of clay and the process was obviously intense - but never having “thrown clay” myself, I really struggled to fathom the appeal. “It’s so primal,” he would say, but what did that really mean? Coming back to the question several times finally teased out these paraphrased  insights:


“Clay itself is primal – it comes from the earth, it is damp, it contains rock and minerals, it is tactile; and working with clay brings out the cave man in me. My favorite “book” is Forbes Studies in Ancient Technologies. If I were on an island alone, that’s the one book [actually nine volumes] I would want. And then there’s the fire: you have to fire the clay in a kiln. Different kinds of wood have different properties affecting the ‘burn’ and ultimately the ceramic’s texture, appearance, etc. And finally there is vessel itself: it encompasses space, has volume, internal and external curvature, mass, glaze, design … it is art!”


These explanations, especially hearing them from the man himself, helped a lot, and at this point I thought I had it. But a few days later I watched a 9 minute YouTube video of “throwing clay” on a potter’s wheel, which provided yet additional insight. If you have never seen it done, check out this clay-throwing demo. Otherwise you will never imagine the fluid, dynamic, nuanced interactions between the spinning clay and the artist’s hands, Zen-like when the artist is a master. Another YouTube video, Steve Smith--Clay Dancing in Flames, centers on the wood-firing kiln process. This video is considerably longer, but just a couple minutes suffice to capture the ineffable but enveloping mood conjured by the long firing. If you watch just part of these videos, I guarantee you will see pottery henceforth with very different eyes.

What does the pottery actually look like? You have to see it yourself – no couple photos can do justice. Pieces may be expected to range from $12 to $1,200, so just come in and look. And don’t forget about the other artwork: paintings, prints, sculpture, glass, and jewelry as well.

Welcome to the Steuben/Lakes region Arts, Steve Smith and 4 Corners Studio, Gallery and Pottery! And at the same time, let’s not forget the many other artists of all sorts working here amongst us: this is indeed a very special place.

Speaking of such, note for your calendar: Nov 25/25 is the Old Mill Shoppes and Art Gallery Christmas Artisan Show:  East on 120 through Fremont, left on North Ray Road past the Wild Winds Buffalo Preserve to the 3-way stop, right onto 750 N about two miles to Old Mill on the left. Or from the Clear Lake Marina, turn north onto 700 E then left onto 750 N at the cemetery, Old Mill just ahead on the right. Lots to see and buy from many regional artists, and a wonderful alternative to the Black Friday shopping crush.


On another note, I’ve written a “You are the illustrator” story about two schoolchildren, Hillary and Humphrey, who feel very inferior to their more evolved, so sleek and so smart ScreenHead classmates. ScreenHead children have sleek flatscreen monitors for heads: Jennifer, a FacebookHead, has 1,097 Facebook ‘friends’, while Jared, a GoogleHead, can find 21,654,021 references to nuclear radioactive, in less than one second!

But as the school year unfolds and the seasons pass, Hillary and Humphrey discover important differences between the wonderful things HumanHeads do, and the relative sterility of ScreenHead experience.

Check it out at ScreenHeads: ScreenHeads: A Story for Children (and Adults), and if you or the children (or adults) in your life submit one or more illustrations, I will publish them (with credit) in a 2012 ScreenHeads follow-up post.


Until the next post, know that the Angola area lakes region is an Art Region, and its towns are Art Towns!

If you would like direct email notification of new Art Beat posts, simply send an email with the words “requesting Art Beat notification” in the subject line to StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com


Stephen Rowe currently serves as the Angola Regional Artists’ Guild publicity chairman and writes two additional blogs:
     ArtMissionary.blogspot.com
     OriGraphics.blogspot.com

Stephen welcomes correspondence of all sort per StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com

Friday, October 28, 2011

Holly Dowidat: Self Portrait of a Young Ceramic Artist

Holly Dowidat is the young ceramic artist who created the several dogs that received SO MUCH attention throughout the August 2011 Angola Phantom Gallery Renaissance – I myself witnessed many people stopping to point, stare, comment, and take photos. In this post you will see Holly through her own words as she responds to a set of Art Beat questions tailored for self-portraiture. This is an experiment: most artists are not writers as well, but seeing them directly per their own raw thoughts and words can be revealing and worthwhile. Holly’s art is very expressive, so let’s give audience to her literary self-portrait.

First though, get some coffee or tea if you like, no need to hurry. Take your time, absorb her words and expression … get to know her! And if you haven’t seen Holly’s work yet, check out her web site at www.dowidat.mosaicglobe.com.

Now, I present Holly:

Art has always been part of my life, from my parents to my other siblings, we would spend hours drawing.  Zachary my older brother would spend hours on his projects from school and I would try to learn everything he knew...we would talk about owning an art business together and running it as partners.

My formal art education started young in school, and after graduating from Angola High school in 2003 I decided to on college at Indiana Purdue University of Fort Wayne for elementary art education, inspired by my own past teachers who helped me express myself as a child and gave me the tools and knowledge to do so.

Freshman college year I landed an internship at Walt Disney Resort’s Entertainment department. There I spent free time at MGM Studios talking to the artist and gaining knowledge. Returning to Indiana, my college studio classes took off: Printmaking, Painting, Sculpture, Metal Smiting, and Ceramics. Excited by so many different media, I opted for a Bachelors in Fine Art instead. A workshop at the Le Meridiana in Certaldo Italy changed my life, as I came back to the states very enthusiastic about Ceramics.

Regarding awards and recognition, I won a “peoples’ choice” at Fort Wayne’s Artlink, and at the end of my senior year received a solo Winger Award, a Merit of Recognition Award at the Guilford Art Center in Guilford Connecticut, a “Library's Choice” award at the Garrett Museum of Art, in addition to exhibiting in galleries within Indiana, Connecticut and Ohio. Since graduating from college in 2009, I used some of my award money to outfit a home studio, and I am now thirsty to continue in my studies at a Masters Program. 

People often ask "Why dogs?" and "How do you come up with the ideas?" My audience seems to be very interested in my concepts and ideas. I created the dog series in my senior year of college for my thesis show. I choose dogs because of my great love for them, they are all different with their own personality and they express so much. Before doing any form of clay sculpture I do a lot of research to back up my imagination.

One of my favorite dog works is titled "Edgar, Time is a Wasting," which I created early in the Italy workshop without much experience, this piece was the beginning of the dog series. Another favorite is "Autumn, Changing Monochromatic," one of the series’ largest. She has stunning detail and always prompts questions on her construction, because of her wood carving with leaves.

I get excited when an idea comes. The first steps are research and concept drawings. Even if the drawings are not correct they give me a chance to push the idea from my head onto paper, so not to lose any concept. Then it is to the clay, and that's when my imagination takes over on detail, position, and theme. Unlike many media, ceramics go through a “firing” process, and which can destroy a sculpture, so I take extra time to make sure that my sculptures never endure that. Even then, a successful first firing doesn't necessarily mean the sculpture is completed, as I then have to choose how to apply color, glaze, under-glaze, or acrylic paints. Most of my sculptures use acrylic paint, which avoids the necessity of high temperatures that might cause cracks. Once finished I look forward showing the piece to others, in galleries, museums, and through my website.

 I market most of my sculptures through galleries and museums, and most of these buyers are dog lovers, I want them to go to a good home and I know that they will be shared with others.  Some of my other “functional” work sells at art fairs for everyday use.

There are some new directions on my horizon. I am currently creating a body of work along the same direction of the dogs but using the Cheshire cat face and a playful side to express my own child like personality.  I have already created one and currently have another in the process a little on the darker side of my personality, but the idea is a very rich one.

As for advice to relative newcomers in Ceramics: Never give up! It’s not easy to pursue your dreams but working at it and always creating something new will help. I try and get in the studio every day. Sometimes art turns into a business and you can always find new networks to establish your artwork in.

Back to Stephen:

Since Holly wrote the above, I learned more about her new, in-progress cat which she said is a little on the dark side but very rich [in concept]: The cat, menacing but famished, ribs showing white through midnight fur, has just now caught in its sharp claws a plump mouse [or rat?]. Feline fangs gleaming, the ravenous cat is poised to …  The cat is the American body politic, and the mouse is the gluttonous governing class grown fat at the national expense while America has wasted. Despite its hunger the cat is far more powerful, the rat completely at its mercy. But what indeed will the cat do … ? Let the rat go to gorge yet more …  Or … ?

Good questions, Holly.

Until the next post, know that the Angola area lakes region is an Art Region, and its towns are Art Towns!

If you would like direct email notification of new Art Beat posts, simply send an email with the words “requesting Art Beat notification” in the subject line to StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com

Stephen Rowe currently serves as the Angola Regional Artists’ Guild publicity chairman and writes two additional blogs:

Stephen welcomes correspondence of all sort per StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com

Friday, October 14, 2011

Art Missionary: Cultivating Poetic and Artistic Imagination in Children




An Art Missionary is anyone with a burning desire to foster interest and participation in the arts. I am an Art Missionary, and there is a good chance you are as well. Different Art Missionaries will have different priorities, favor different artistic modes, different audiences, etc. In this post, I want to share my particular desire to stimulate children’s and adolescents’ interest in practicing art.

Why? Because it really disturbs me how oppressed children are today, by the relentless commercialization of every aspect of childhood. Commercial saturation is so intense, information bombardment so high, continuous internet/texting/etc … it must be terribly hard for today’s kids to get to know their true center. These youngsters desperately need a more genuine, authentic way of experiencing the world, and art practice is an avenue toward that personal center. Children who do not live from their center will miss the greatest joys in childhood, and will live adult lives slave to artificial desires and aspirations while their souls suffocate in the ‘noise’ of our day. Hence I am an Art Missionary.

But that's just me. Other Art Missionaries will have their own special, more equanimous motivations - perhaps just the pure and simple desire to share a joy in and love of all art forms with all living people!

No matter your philosophy or place in society, if you are or want to be an Art Missionary, please stay with me here just a little while longer …

Imagination is the root of art, so I want to share a letter I wrote this past March to my grandchildren, with the objective of cultivating poetic and artistic imagination. While the method will suit adults just as well [I practice this myself], the presentation is especially designed for children. If this resonates with you, please pass it on to a child in your life:

*******************************************************

Dear Children,

I know you like art, so I wrote a poem especially for you. Thinking about the questions in this poem may help make you better artists:

See yon tree –
How looks it to thee?
Yet how must it seem to a bird?

Or a squirrel?
Or a deer?
Or a worm?
Or a bug?

And how to the wind and the rain?

The idea is the tree you see may look very different, depending on how you look at it … So in thinking about how a bird or a squirrel may see the tree, you start to see it differently yourself – and then you can draw or paint it differently. The more you think in this way – say by imagining how wind or rain might see a tree – the more you will begin to sense things that others haven’t thought about, and as your artistic imagination grows, you will be more and more able to show some of your new ways of seeing to others, through your art.
 
Stephen and grandson under Chicago Art Institute's
traditional Christmas-wreathed
 lion some years ago

Once you understand this method, you can practice it on other subjects: for instance, how might different people see your dog? Some may see a fun pet, but others may be scared of its teeth or its bark – and these different people will actually see your dog differently from each other. Especially if they should later dream about your dog – imagine drawing or painting how your dog may look in different peoples’ dreams or nightmares! That might inspire some very creative art.

**************************************************************
That's it - just a simple exercise that really can stimulate imagination if whole-mindedly engaged by a child or an adult. One of my grandchildren really loves and practices the idea – I hope other children might as well.

Until the next post, know that the Angola area lakes region is an Art Region, and its towns are Art Towns!

If you would like direct email notification of new Art Beat posts, simply send an email with the words “requesting Art Beat notification” in the subject line to StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com


Stephen Rowe currently serves as the Angola Regional Artists’ Guild publicity chairman and writes two additional blogs:

Stephen welcomes correspondence of all sort per StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Cubism, Facebook, and Cyber-Cubism

When I worked in Chicago I would joke that Cubism, born of Picasso and Braque circa 1907, used to be an artistic avant-garde movement but is now the corporate way of life. Life moves on though, my engagement with corporatism a fading memory, spending far more time engaged with nature than submerged in Cyberspace, just some light blogging and even lighter traipses through Facebook these days … yet am evermore possessed by an eerie sense that Cubism has been resurrected … its apotheosis is … Facebook! And this time I am not joking.

The following exploration of the above thesis will say nothing new about Cubism per se and nothing new about Facebook per se. What is new is the metaphor of Facebook as a Cubist apotheosis, which then suggests “Cyber-Cubism” as an historically informed foundation for the artistic exploration of Facebook and Cyberspace.

After developing these themes, we will conclude by outlining a feasible computer-art installation which would present an accessible, fascinating, and profound exploration of Facebook renderings within various social strata: What does the Cyber-social space look like to people who are very different from me?

Given the millions of hours devoted to social media each day, these and other such explorations might someday inform a very important body of art.

Cubism

Cubism presented an entirely new way of “seeing,” its ultimate premise being that perception involves “more than the eye can see.” Consider looking at a woman. There are the “raw visuals,” yes, but how you process that visual information, hence what you really perceive, is very much shaped and colored by all sorts of additional influences and information such as:

Pablo Picasso: Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, 1907

·    Your own lifetime experience of seeing, encountering, and interacting with women.
·    Cultural expectations and norms of feminine beauty, roles, behavior, etc.
·    Your lifetime personal and cultural awareness of all other things feminine.
·    The context in which the woman appears: what is she doing, where is she doing it, who else is or isn’t playing what role in the scene, etc.


 By representing its subjects per multiple intersecting and overlapping facets, Cubism was “constructive” in rendering a perceptual complex rather than the oversimplified raw visual.

Facebook
Pablo Picasso: Portrait of Ambroise Vollard, 1910


A typical Facebook account contains a multitude of “subject” [the account holder] “slices” within an Information page and a personal Wall: a list of interests, attitudes, photos, a gallery of “friends,” several Wall posts written by the subject or by various friends. Each post reflects by the author’s “icon,” generally a photo or some kind of graphic. These “slices” function similarly to the Cubist painters’ various facets in projecting various aspects of a perceptual complex. As everything said here pertains to the rendering of any given subject, call it Cyber-Subject-Cubism.



Small slice of Stephen Rowe’s Facebook
Stream at a moment in time –
many more posts below
 
Then stepping further into Cyberspace, beyond his own rendering, each subject encounters a stream … actually a torrent of posts made by or to his friends or friends of friends: status updates, comments, inquiries, declarations, “Likes,” cloned content, links to web sites, new friend suggestions and invitations, reports on friends’ new friend formations, social games, etc. This Cyber-stream is managed by Facebook algorithms based on friend network architecture, expressed interests, recent subject behavior, etc. Beyond this managed Cyber-stream, a subject may often choose to peruse the data and graphics within various friends’ and friends’ of friends Wall and Information pages. Viewing each such information packet as a representational facet of the external world, we again see the parallel with Cubism. As this Cyber-Cubist rendering pertains to what the subject [account holder] sees looking out into Cyberspace, call it Cyber-Object-Cubism.

To summarize, Facebook offers a Cyber-Cubist rendering of each subject [account holder] which we call Cyber-Subject-Cubism, and a Cyber-Cubist rendering of each subject’s view of the external world which we call Cyber-Object-Cubism.

Implications for Artistic Exploration

The foregoing discussion has been metaphorical, but clearly suggests artists might explore Facebook [and more generally Cyberspace] through a Cyber-Cubist lens. What might that mean in practice? It is easiest to imagine two opposing viewpoints:


Georges Braque: The Candlestick, 1911

  1)  Whereas Cubism was constructive in augmenting its painted subjects’ renderings, the Cubist aspect of Facebook is destructive, its renderings tending to diminish one’s experience of the underlying human and social content. Facebook’s superficial Cyber-friendship interactions utterly pale beside “real life” social intercourse. Young people in particular are apt to know less and less of the difference, while excessive Cyber-social activity consumes time and energy otherwise available to more edifying human interaction and experience.
        In this case, facets of typical Facebook intercourse might be used as were the Cubist planes, to define subjects and objects, but negatively, in ways that suggest limiting the subject and his social experience.

2)       Facebook expands and enriches the subject’s universe. In this case, facets of typical Facebook intercourse might be shown as magnifying and illuminating the subject and his universe.

For (1) and (2) above, the most obvious applications would be in graphic art and sculpture, where most historical Cubist work resides, but one could imagine employing these elements along with other Facebook conventions in performance art and in conventional installations.

A more immediate application is to directly utilize unmediated Facebook renderings. The computer-art installation outlined below would present an accessible, fascinating, and profound exploration of Facebook renderings within various social strata: What does the Cyber-social space look like to people who are very different from me?
a.       Set up a bank of five computers, each offering direct access to a different Facebook account with but one limitation [see (f) below].
b.      The five Facebook account holders would have been solicited by the computer-artist so as to span demographic cross-sections. For instance, the computer artist might enlist a young urban working-poor mother, a top-tier university student, a middle aged middle class small town representative, a Christian preacher, and a Muslim professional.
c.       These five “subjects” do not participate in the installation or viewing in any way whatsoever.
d.      Instead, installation visitors sit down at the computers and surf each subject’s Facebook Wall, Information page, Facebook stream, and the subject’s friends’ and friends’ of friends Wall and Information pages.
e.       The five computers then constitute a virtual, dynamic gallery of the five Cyber-Subject and five Cyber-Object Cubist renderings: What does the Cyber-social space look like to people who are very different from me?
f.        It is absolutely vital that each computer session be engineered so that visitors can navigate and view its “Facebook space,” but cannot execute any change: i.e., cannot add or drop friends, post comments or links, etc.
                                                               i.      The five volunteer subjects’ accounts must be protected …
                                                             ii.      as well as the artistic experience: after all, the point is to see someone else per the Facebook lens, and visitor input would denigrate the integrity of the renderings.

In summary, this section suggests some ways in which Cyber-Cubism might manifest as an historically informed foundation for the artistic exploration of Facebook and Cyberspace. Given the millions of hours devoted to social media each day, these and other such explorations might someday inform a very important body of art.


Until the next post, know that the Angola area lakes region is an Art Region, and its towns are Art Towns!

Stephen Rowe currently serves as the Angola Regional Artists’ Guild publicity chairman and writes two additional blogs:
     ArtMissionary.blogspot.com
     OriGraphics.blogspot.com
Stephen welcomes correspondence of all sort per StephenRowe.OriGraphics@yahoo.com