March 14, 2013

Wall Space



New hand-painted mural going up on the side of Hillside Farmacy 
by brother and sister duo 
Joe Swec and the very prolific Jana Swec!

March 11, 2013

A Clean, Well-Lighted Place


I don't know who took this, but it's awesome.   
I pulled it from acwlp's twitter feed.
You can see Shea's reflection in his perpetual motion.
(update: photo by Virginia Rutledge)

The Texas Biennial is hosting a truly engaging event in the spirit of intellectual public discourse called A Clean, Well-Lighted Place, a nod to a little bit of Austin art history, referencing the short-lived gallery by the same name that was a Dave Hickey project here in 1967.  The performance happening at an open street level space on Congress is a chance for the Biennial to kick off its 2013 season with SXSW presence.  Artists, writers and curators are reading texts of their choice in a little glass box with high end recording equipment and talented operators who are sending their voices and faces out into the world via the internet while art folks and supporters mingle about outside listening to the live readings and sipping on cocktails.  It's like the perfect college classroom.  

I had the honor of reading two texts by Agnes Martin yesterday: Reflections and The Current of the River of Life Moves Us.  What's interesting to me is that so many people are reading texts that I love and connect with, like a letter from Sol Lewitt to Eva Hesse and Italo Calvino's Six Memos for the Next Millennium.  And, of course, Dave Hickey.  

Virginia Rutledge and Shea Little are the brains behind this operation, with lots of volunteer help as well.  They will be out there again tonight until midnight and again tomorrow night from 6pm to midnight.  Stop by, read, listen, tune in!

March 2, 2013

Quotable Kiki


God, I love Kiki Smith.  Betsy Lewis of Glasstire captures some of her honest and hilarious quotes from a recent lecture at UNT in The Quotable Kiki Smith.  Here are some of my faves.

"I made it then I thought, 'you are ridiculous'."

"People say, 'Oh you're moving around too much in your work,' but I'm not trying to get anywhere."

"I went back to a super-hippie phase, which I'm in now."

"It's not to be read in some linear way that these are ABOUT things.  They just ARE things."

"You don't need to know what you're doing in the slightest."

"It completely changes a neighborhood if you put a sculpture in it."

"I love honey, and I love bees, and I love making things."

Beili Liu @ Texas State


Feeling a little tense?
Amass by Beili Liu at Texas State through March 8.

One Billion Rising!





One Billion Rising on the Texas State Capitol steps!

Two weeks ago, on Valentine's Day, I participated in the "biggest mass global action to end violence against women and girls in the history of humankind"!  This dance revolution was brought to you, the world, by the inspired folks at V-Day, who are doing really important work.  Let the healing begin!

February 7, 2013

Studio Visit!






It was such a pleasure talking with Andy Campbell, a writer, curator and lecturer, about my studio process, his writing projects and our teaching strategies.  You can read the studio visit interview in today's Chronicle!

February 1, 2013

The Mystical Arts of Tibet







Texas State was the lucky host to the Tibetan monks from Drepung Loseling Monastery on their Mystical Arts of Tibet tour this week.  I stopped by to see them working on the mandala sand painting yesterday afternoon as they were getting close to the end.  They worked in silence, but for the hustle and bustle of the student center and the clanking of their tools. Amazing to watch such a fluid and intricate collaboration in action.

The ephemeral mandala was destroyed in a ceremony today, and followed by a procession to the San Marcos river for a blessing by the monks with sand from their week-long work.

The students had an opportunity to collaborate on their own sand painting at a table near the mandala.

Last night the monks performed Sacred Music Sacred Dance, a healing blessing for the environment and for us.  It was beautiful.  The costumes were spectacular.  The movement of their bodies and deeply felt sounds of their chants and instruments (horns, cymbals, drums, bells) were full of vibrations of drama, humor, peace and loving kindness. 

January 13, 2013

Memorials




"The material falls away in onrushing experience.  It peels off like skin from a molting snake.  Of course to forget the past is to lose the sense of loss that is also memory of an absent richness and a set of clues to navigate the present by; the art is not one of forgetting but letting go.  And when everything else is gone, you can be rich in loss."   
                                                            
                                                            Rebecca Solnit from A Field Guide to Getting Lost

When Adrienne told me she was deconstructing fabric objects (a painting on canvas by a friend, her dad's Hawaiian shirt, a collection of sweaters) and rebuilding them into spherical sculptures, I offered up my wedding dress.  I loved my wedding dress.  It was shimmering mint green, subtle and elegant.  And in the wake of the most transformative event of my life, the break up of my marriage, I couldn't think of a better way to honor the memories embedded in the loaded threads of my dress.  

Adrienne wrote to me to share her photos of the works and she describes them as "quiet, humble, pretty memorials."  I couldn't agree more.      

December 22, 2012

Painter's Path






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