December 22, 2012

Painter's Path






Along one of our regular walking trails.
Eastside, North side of Ladybird Lake.

November 17, 2012

E.A.S.T.


Nice kick off to my bike tour of E.A.S.T. at Big Medium.



Looking forward to seeing her solo show at Co-Lab's downtown space.


Drew Liverman at Co-Lab


A backyard brimming with work by Texas State students.


I think this is Articulture Designs...?


Full house and yard!


An off-tour space somewhere along East 5th.

Stopped by to see friends along the way too, 
but didn't snap any shots as I was too busy chatting.  
Stella Alesi (#181), Leon Alesi (#183), Shawn Camp (#140) and Caroline Wright (#182)! 

October 25, 2012

Jessie Henson @ Texas State!


Flyer designed by Jessica Kreinhop.

So excited that my dear friend, Jessie Henson
will be giving a lecture at Texas State as a visiting artist on Monday!

October 21, 2012

The Queen of Punk and Poetry


 Tony Shanahan, who plays with Patti Smith on Banga
backed her up on guitar and piano. 


A vision.

My hands and mouth and ears and eyes were surging with a force to find expression as I left the Paramount the other night.  Patti Smith's down-to-earth and brilliant performance made me want to make something.  She read from Just Kids in between songs, and somehow managed to pick out the passages that touched me the most when I read it.  Her humor and smile and light were mesmerizing.  Her voice was the rock and the river.  And, she spit on stage, like the Queen of Punk can and should.

Bikes and Beer @ Tour de Fat












October 16, 2012

Found


Found painting in a parking garage,
one strange night in September.
Downtown, across from Antone's,
Chris Robinson Brotherhood.
An owl on stage smoking incense.

October 14, 2012

Katie Bell @ Okay Mountain



Yesterday was a nice day for abstraction.  Day Dusting, an exhibition by Katie Bell at Okay Mountain, is a celebration of materiality and experimentation that alludes to a mysterious interiority through the use of interior building materials, such as laminant, linoleum, plaster, vertical blinds, and paint.  Perhaps that is too obvious an interpretation on my part, but I can't help but think about the private interior space that is the site of all the choices that the artist makes in order to push this work out into a public space.

Now What It Never Was


Anne Riley


Nick Griffin, Philip Harrell, Anne Riley


Nick Griffin, Philip Harrell, Anne Riley


Philip Harrell

Now What It Never Was, an exhibition at UT's Visual Arts Center that closed yesterday, was a show about abstraction and painting, although I think I glimpsed something that said, "this is not a show about painting."  Did I see that on a wall text?  Whatever it was or wasn't, the painterly abstract mark coyly asserts itself in the works of Nick Griffin, Philip Harrell and Anne Riley.  I was most drawn to the collaborative works, where visual decisions become anonymous.  

October 13, 2012

Colby Bird @ Texas State University





In the gallery next to Tucker's work at Texas State, is a show entitled House Lamps by Colby Bird.  All of the students in my 2D Design class agreed that it is beautiful.  It consists of 100 handmade lamps from found objects and found materials that light your way back and forth along a path, emphasizing the glowing wholeness of the room as much as each inventively designed lamp.  There is a great interview with the artist by Katie Geha in Glasstire, where Bird talks about the comfort he found in going to the studio each day to make one of these lamps.

Both of these shows are worth the trip down to San Marcos!

W. Tucker @ Texas State University



We had a spirited debate about W. Tucker's show, to stand in a boat that floats at The University Galleries at Texas State, in my 2D Design class a couple weeks ago.  Tucker makes drawings and paintings directly on the gallery wall and on weathered surfaces like old doors.  His imagery is childlike, in this case primarily depicting line drawings of figures and boats.  He makes his markings with his non-dominant hand, which was unknown to the class when we talked about it.  Tucker writes, "The use of my left hand allows me to draw in an unpracticed manner, and often rescues me from over thinking the work."

About half the class was really frustrated by what they perceived was a lack of skill or refusal to use one's skill, and the other half was very curious about the choices the artist made and the layers of meaning embedded in his seemingly innocent approach.  It did for us what good art should do: inspire dialogue.

September 1, 2012

Art and Activism

"Maybe to be powerful is to be fragile."  -Ai Weiwei


Ai Weiwei flipping Tiananmen Square the bird.

The recently released documentary Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry, a film by Alison Klayman, is a brave and inspiring portrait of the artist and his pursuit of social justice in his home country of China by means of art and activism.  Through photography, video, sculpture, architecture and, perhaps most importantly, social media, Ai cracks wide open a critique of the Chinese government and the motherland's relationship with her people. 

Of course, this was and is very dangerous.  Transparency is his mission, while opacity is the mission of those on the receiving end of his critique.  Ai's widely publicized disappearance for 81 days in the spring of 2011 was a wake up call for the world, as he had already gained international acclaim before his arrest and disappearance, and we recognized him.  Thank god, because that means that he had and still has a lot of support.  How many other political dissidents, in China and elsewhere, go unrecognized and their disappearances unnoticed?  

A fellow Chinese artist in the film talks about how Ai is considered a hooligan by the government and by supporters of the current regime.  He says that it is the government that is the hooligan and Ai is working to bring this to light.  Of course, hooliganism is exactly what members of  Pussy Riot, the Russian feminist punk rock collective, were arrested and convicted of this past month.  These brave women made enormous sacrifices to stand up to an oppressive government, with a song, in a church, singing "Virgin Mary, Mother of God, become a feminist, become a feminist, become a feminist."    

See this film!  Support Ai Weiwei!  Free Pussy Riot!