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Guiding Star Designs 15 March, 2008

Posted by StingWriter in Art, Guiding Star.
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As you’ve seen, I haven’t been around much.  Big surprise there.  Well, lately I have been busying myself with the Beatles and my shop on etsy, Guiding Star Designs.  I won’t go into my whole pitch right now; I will save that for a later post.  Anyway, since I felt I needed to post before my blog dies altogether, I thought I would share with you all my latest piece of painting (seen below).  I wanted a hand painted banner for my shop and so I got out my Setacolours and a strip of black silk noil (one of my favourite canvases to paint on) and just started painting.

Ship Banner

Ship Banner

If you’re just being eaten up by the curiosity, then by all means take a look at my shop. I don’t have much on there, pretty much it’s just some stuff I had lying around, but I’m working on it.  There is a link to the right or you can click Guiding Star Designs (gudingstar.etsy.com) for your convenience.  When I get the energy and have done to proper research I’ll do a write-up here about it, including an additional page and a page on my website.  And now, I’m off to Kalamazoo for the evening.  Night, y’all!

Art Cannibalism 16 October, 2007

Posted by StingWriter in Art, Education, Writing.
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Well, well. So I kept my promise (for the most part) and came back for another treatise on the wonderful world of art.  Brownie points for me. Today’s topic: Artists and the consumption of art. Inspiration: a conversation with my father, painter Tom Jensen. I love my father, I honestly do (and nothing good ever follows those words, no matter who is saying them), but we have very different approaches to art. This past summer we got into a debate over whether or not artists should bother exposing themselves to their forebearers’ and contemporaries’ work. My father would have it that no, one should not bother. In his opinion it not only wastes time but is, in fact, counterproductive in that it invokes a feeling of inadequacy and redundancy. He tells me that he often comes out of museum or gallery saying to himself ‘I’m no where near as good as Sargent or Klimt. So why does the world really need another one of my paintings?’ All right, I confess, I go to the theatre or just sit in workshop to critique the work of a certain friend of mine (who shall, at this time remain anonymous as he is very shy) and say to myself ‘Well that just blew me out of the water. Besides, only an argued 1% of America actually attends the theatre, so why bother?’ And then I shake that sort of defeatists attitude and go home and write. Along with a string of other arguments which did not hold much water with me and therefore I cannot remember, his side of the argument came to an end. I love you, Dad. Every offense meant.

And now my side. Yes, seeing a fellow artist’s work that is far superior to your own does hurt. It can be disheartening. We have all experienced it, as well as experience abject failure on a daily basis (not by any outside source but our own harsh criticisms, don’t you dare lie to me and say you’re haven’t). This is, in fact, incredibly important in our area of work because it urges us to improve. It also helps to remember that each of us has a unique style which suits the taste of difference audiences. Even if you don’t know what your style is, yet, it’s still your own.

Apart from competitive reasons to consume the art in your field, it can also be quite therapeutic. Without constant stimulation our work becomes stagnant. We simply produce the same thing over and over with a little variation. To speak to a problem we all face, we all get stuck. Muse is finicky at best, down right stubborn at worst. Mine has learned to answer to ‘You Bastard.’ Perhaps the composition isn’t right here; there needs to be a point of light there; the staging isn’t engaging enough; these notes are discordant but can’t be any other way; the description is cumbersome in this paragraph; the stitches are too bulky and give the whole thing a rather lumpy quality. Well then, go out and explore. Your answers are somewhere, and they will come unexpectedly. One of my favourite lines in Stranger The Fiction is from Emma Thompson’s character, when asked how she came across the solution to the key problem in her novel, says “like anything worth writing it came inexplicably and without method.” For no better reason can I stress the importance of consuming art. For that matter, don’t limit yourself just to your own area. All art evokes emotion; that’s what it does. That’s what makes it art (granted my philosophy of art class would debate this point for hours while congratulating themselves on being insufferable know-it-alls). Every piece of art has a story to tell. It is up to the individual to interpret that story through the filter of his or her emotional state, background and own demented mind (once more, a debatable point). I had no idea how to start a play I was working on until I was reading a short novel, an bit of fluff reading between Faulkner and Hemingway (sorry, I don’t even own a Tolstoy), when the answer just hit me in the single sentence I had just read. It wasn’t a replica of the situation or the dialogue–it barely resembled it in fact–but it was there. The fact that I have thrown the play out entirely is irrelevant.

The only reason these two things occur is by the simple fact that in consuming art, we learn. With an analytical mind one can discover new techniques and make them his or her own, not simply emulate an example. That is how our work escapes stagnation, that is how we find fresh ways out of the pratfalls we stumble into.

So once more I have taken up an entire page to say one little thing: we as artists must expose ourselves to as much art as we can to become better artists.

Words Well Spoken 1 August, 2007

Posted by StingWriter in Art, Writing.
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Greetings all! Still on holiday here in lovely Seattle. Just arrived yesterday from my family in Portland. Remind me when I get back to dreary ol’ Michigan to gush about the Decemberists.

I’ll make this one brief, as I don’t have much internet time available to me. I was flipping through the news section in the latest edition of The Dramatist, which mum was kind enough to send along from home, when I came across a quote that I thought I just had to pass along, especially considering my rant from a couple weeks ago.

“What disturbs me is a perverse and ever increasing populism that sabotages the specialist expertise on which any art form is built. … One of the most dismal public statements made in British Life was by Richard Luce, a Thatcherite minister, who said of the arts that ‘the only test of our ability to succeed is whether we can attract enough customer.’ … While ultimately the arts are answerable to the public, I think it highly dangerous if creators and critics surrender to the capricious tyranny of popular opinion.”
– Michael Billington, The Guardian (21 Feb. 2007)

I know I already went into detail on that argument but I felt this quote summed it up in a way I couldn’t. So with that I will leave you until a week and a half from now when I get home. Until then, dear readers, good night.

Music, the insult of ‘Indie,’ and the art of Art 16 July, 2007

Posted by StingWriter in Art, Music, Technique, Writing.
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Well, just like me.  I start a blog and then I go on holiday for a month.  What will you all do without me?  All one of you that reads this, that is.  Live in quiet, I would assume.  Anyway, I leave tomorrow to drive to Chicago, the first stop in my summery ventures.  Why Chi town?  The Decemberists concert.  Why am I seeing two?  Because this one comes with a full orchestra. Now you will witness me melt into a shivering pile of jelly.  However, before I go, I would like to engage in a small tirade on indie rock.  Or indie anything, for that matter.  Writers, do not immediately discredit this entry as having nothing to do with our favorite topic, I assure you it has words of wisdom for all artists!

Once a very long time ago ‘Indie’ was a respectable word.  All it referred to was one’s label or production company.  And let’s face it, mainstream anything, be it music or movies, is just plain terrible.  It spends too much time pandering to critics and audiences.  While yes, we must sometimes bow down to the powers that be because, let’s face it, they pay our bills, we must not make art for them only.  In comes Indie.

Too oft do I read a new play or see an indie movie or listen to some hip new indie group and they are all trying too hard to be as unconventional, off-the-wall and/or existential as they possibly can be.  I think I hit an all time low when I was handed a play that actually spelled out ‘this is an existential play.’  We had a student being quizzed on schools of thought from Keirkegaard to Camus and then later were all reenacted to the last dotting of the ‘i.’  Another great example would be music that tries so hard to be different that it usually ends up sounding like a toddler let loose in the instruments room.  If I were a music group I would be insulted if anyone called me ‘Indie.’  Now there are some categorized in this group (a lot of people still call the Decemberists indie even though they are now on a major label) who are perfectly wonderful and I find them a joy to listen to.  These are all groups who don’t try.  They just are.  They have found a sound that suits them, something they like, something that impassions them, not something they think is going to be the next big thing.  They are creating something that moves them and have allowed us to be a part of it.  We should be so blessed.

I implore each and every one of my fellow artists to follow this example.  Too often I come across plays that could have had magnificent potential if they’d been approached from the right angle.  ‘Message plays,’ are a common term for these.  They are plays that try to be an allegory, try to make you listen and learn.  Okay, it’s an admirable thing to teach through art, I’ll admit that’s one of its functions.  Just don’t do it consciously.  I promise you if you just write your story, pay attention to your characters and your plot rather than your message, it will all come out they way you’d hoped it would.

 

Just create.  Don’t try to make something, and for the love of the deity of your choice don’t try to make something unconventional or poignant, just create.

 

Side note:  This has nothing to do with The Decemberists, if I have given the impression I was complaining about their style.  The Decembersits are gods.  They are the perfect example of what I have been trying to illustrate art should be.