Monday, January 10, 2022
Sunset Textures
Sunday, December 5, 2021
No Such Thing As Too Many Books
Thursday, November 18, 2021
Fall Storm Moon
Monday, November 8, 2021
Forest Skylight
Wednesday, October 20, 2021
Passing Through
Monday, October 18, 2021
The Troll In The Tree
The troll face peeking from the tree stump is by beloved Swedish artist and illustrator John Bauer. Born in 1882, the third of four children, Bauer left home at 16 for Stockholm, studying classical art at the Royal Academy of Art. In 1904, he was commissioned to do a book about Lappland and spent a summer following the Sami reindeer herders on their migrations.
Later he lived in southern Italy for two years and was struck by the beauty of 14th Century art and artifacts. His most famous work, the illustrations to the first of eight volumes of Bland Tomtar och Troll (Among Gnomes and Trolls), a collection of fairy tales written by Swedish authors, was published in 1907. It was hugely successful.
(information from https://www.artpassions.net/bauer/bauer.html)
Monday, September 6, 2021
In A World Of His Own
Monday, August 9, 2021
Ghost Raven
Saturday, July 31, 2021
Forest Pool
For someone with no education in art and only a smattering of knowledge, I yet still manage to be an art snob. One definition of art that I absolutely love is that "Art communicates with other people. And great art communicates something universal about the human condition." If you look at the greats of painting, you understand their works without needing words. That's why I don't consider abstract art to be "real" art. Each person perhaps - perhaps! - can find meaning in it for themselves. If they want to. If they bother. But there's nothing universal about it. There's nothing about squiggles and lines that speaks to all people equally. There's no substance there that is capable of moving people emotionally.
The attraction of abstract art, then, is that it's tremendous fun to create! It's playtime, an unabashed return to the childhood joy of finger-painting. The fun is all for the painter, and not so much about the viewer.
And that's all right. Nowhere is fun actually against the law. (Although, a toilet displayed in a museum??? Ick. That should carry a substantial fine, at the very least.)
So in the spirit of fun, I dabble in abstraction myself. I'm a great believer in fun. To my mind, there's far too little of it around today. So whatever I can do to find it, and even spread it about, I'm game. May I suggest that you dabble too? Doodle, splash, whatever. There is a lot to be said for spending some quality time with yourself, quietly indulging your creative side. And there's no down side. So have at it. Create. Seek joy. You won't be sorry.