Monday, January 26, 2015

Artists can collaborate too.


Lately it seems I have been having lots of conversations with artist friends about the need to support one another. Share ideas. Show work together. Cheer each other’s’ successes. Hang out more often.

We often note that while the performing arts are by nature, collaborative, visual artists tend to be lone wolves working in isolation. Yet when we come together we have such a good time and thoughts practically bounce off the walls. Inevitably we ask one another why we don’t come together more often.

So, in view of the desire of many of us to mutually support each other I have been toying with a name for our endeavor. Artists Rallying Together? Artists Collaborating Together? (Redundant I know, but maybe that’s okay). Artists Supporting Each Other? Creative Collaborative Arts Collective? Greater Dayton Artists’ Collaborative?

Help me! Send me your suggestions for a group name that defines artists in support of each other. I will list them in my blog!


And, I am happily noting one artist’s accomplishment. Doug McLarty, scanographer extraordinaire, is currently featured in the Ohio Governor’s Mansion! Check out his work: doug@signaturefocus.com, or check http://www.ohiochannel.org/MediaLibrary/Media.aspx?fileId=145673.

Monday, January 19, 2015

ART SPEAKS FOR PEACE


On this Martin Luther King Jr. holiday we think not only of the great man’s work on behalf of justice, but also of the fact that pursuit of justice and peace is an ongoing process. Recent events only emphasize the truth that there is still much work to be done.

Today I am thinking of artists across the centuries who used their artmaking skills to call attention to injustices of many kinds. Picasso was incensed at the unprovoked bombing of Guernica in 1937; this led to his creation of the great painting of the same name.

Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937

Goya used his printmaking skills to document the Inquisition; Turner made paintings about the atrocities of the slave trade in Britain, as did William Blake. Benny Andrews, Elizabeth Catlett, Edward Kienholz, David Hammons, Jacob Lawrence, Robert Indiana, Norman Rockwell and many others all made work having to do with civil rights.

 Education Quest #1 by Benny Andrews    Benny Andrews, Education Quest #1 (Migrant Series), 2004

My point is that art can speak for peace. Art can speak for justice. Art can direct our attention to wrongs that need to be made right.

Art is image. Images can be seen. Images have voice. Images have sound. Images have IMPACT. Art. Image. Impact. Peace. Justice. Right. Martin Luther King, Jr.


Monday, January 5, 2015

NEW YEAR, NEW STUDIO!


Starting 2015 in a beautiful new studio with great north light and lots of storage. This is a  panoramic view. Is there a better way for an artist to start the new year? I think not.

Monday, December 1, 2014

MANUFACTURING IDEAS...AND MORE

Artists are typically viewed as living somewhere on the edges of the labor/work community. After all isn’t the making of art often considered by others (non-artists) as a hobby? “Oh he/she is “artsy”, or she is an art “teacher”, or worst of all, he’s so “artsy-fartsy” (I HATE that one!). Many people cannot seem to utter the statement “This person is an ARTIST”. Instead, they qualify it with the addition of other adjectives. It’s as if by making that simple statement, “Joe is an artist” they are stating an untruth. To be an artist – as opposed to “Joe is a lawyer” – is somehow not legitimate. It’s certainly not viewed as a profession that makes and sells a commodity.
Yet an artist is part of the economy, and not just what we know as the creative economy, but part of the real work a day world. Most artists do not sit around hoping for inspiration to strike. They work. Like the woman who reports to her office job every day at nine am the artist reports to his or her studio and simply gets to work. If we waited for inspiration to strike we might never create anything.

Which brings me to the title of this post. Artists are in the business of manufacturing ideas, taking those ideas and turning them into tangible objects, available for purchase, thank you very much. They take the ephemeral and turn it into the tangible, put a price tag on it, market it, and by doing so, fuel the economic community in which they live. And work. Just like everybody else. 

By the way, here is one of my "manufactured ideas": 

This collage is titled "King Billy", the slang name for the Monarch butterfly. It is my interpretation of the monarch feeding on the milkweed pod. 

Monday, November 24, 2014

IN PRAISE OF LIGHT

Sometimes I grouse. Sometimes I gripe. Sometimes I gripe and grouse about situations I could change with just a little effort but instead of doing so, I gripe and grouse. When I do this, my husband accuses me of “cursing the darkness’, saying I would rather do that than light a candle. Sadly, I have to admit that over the years I have realized that often, he is right on the money. I do have a tendency to curse the darkness when it would be so easy to light that darn candle!
I am making a concerted effort to change that habit. When I consider all the blessings and good things in my life past and present I understand that gratitude is not just an attitude, it is a continual state of feeling. Even difficult times can contain a spark of light, and it is the hard times that make us grateful for the blessings.
Therefore I have decided not to curse the light under the barrel but to praise it. Mightily. And to release it as well. Instead of meeting life’s challenges with a curse at the dark, I plan to sing mighty praises to the light.


On a different note, I have moved to a beautiful new studio, and am seriously praising the light there! Hurray! Take a look:






Oh happy days! Ready to get back to work.

Monday, November 17, 2014

Silver poplars...

So I have been absent the last several weeks. Much has been happening in worlds both personal and art and I will be elaborating on that in posts to come. However, this week I have decided to post the homework assignment I am giving my Intro to Art Media class. I will be introducing them to assemblage and the work of both Louise Nevelson and Joseph Cornell. They will be creating small assemblages themselves. Because this is the week before Thanksgiving, their sketchbook homework has to do both with creating assemblages and giving thanks.

HOMEWORK TEN, DUE MONDAY NOV. 24, 2014

Introduction to Art Media
Monday evenings 5:30-8:20 p.m. Room G-34   Instructor: Marsha M. Pippenger

“Drawn” to Assemblage: a Cornell Thanksgiving Box

1. This is a very straightforward assignment. In your sketchbook draw a large box. It can be a 3D box or a simple square or rectangular shape.
2. Inside your box, place those things you are thankful for this year. Do this by drawing images of those things inside your box.
3. Spend some time on this drawing. Be mindful as you do this. It is more than a drawing exercise.

Indeed, it is more than a drawing exercise, and I hope they understand this. I am giving thanks all week and next, thinking of George Orwell’s thought as he lay near dying on a stretcher in 1936: “Isn't it wonderful to live in a world where silver poplars grow?” It is.