Sunday, September 23, 2012

please join us



Design Philadelphia is an annual event that celebrates the work of designers and fine artists that live and work in Philadelphia. I have participated in past years with an installation at Artemide Lighting in Old City , and with my tyler foundations class pop up drawing event at the Welcome House project by Marianne Bernstein.

 This year, I invited 3 artists to join me in a panel discussion and conversation. 

Friday October 12
6:30 reception
7-9 discussion
Thinking in Space: Thinking In Form

Crane Arts Old School White Space
1417  North 2nd Street.
Philadelphia Pa 19122
The places that we carry inform the way that we approach our work and site responses- from visualizing a place where sculptures either disrupt or enhance the atmosphere, to creating a space that is compelling. This session will explore how art and design alters the perception of space- both inside and out. Philadelphia based artists and landscape architects will share projects and discuss inspiration and approaches to an engaged studio practice. 
Participants: Artists Beverly Fisher, Eve Mosher and Jury Smith, Landscape Architect Sara Pevaroff Schuh.

I have been so inspired by the many conversations I have had over the years with artists and designers about the nature of work, the projects that stay with them, or the ones that got away. I wanted to open it up a little more, and share that conversation with my friends, students and peers. Please join us.


thinking in space: thinking in form






Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Nourish



bowl by Neville French





bowl by Neville French


"These are rare bowls; words like tender and generous like temperate and powerful, spring to mind. They need to be absorbed slowly, and still they challenge summation. They are lovely empty; they would be just as lovely filled, say with lemons, in the afternoon light. I suspect that they will surprise and nourish again and again. Like good friends, like oases."
Gwynn Hannsen Pyggot
Ceramics Art and Perception

Saturday, June 30, 2012

sheep consciousness

I'm not even sure what that means, but it was happening... 

Day 1: evening slides.  something about how things that we are touched by have been touching us for a long time. Artists are always going in as thieves. What is the vitality that speaks to me? 
gustin
twombly
rembrandt
mondrian's tree
piero della francesca
giotto

stillness
quality of touch
geometry of seeing
art is not a linear progression
lala
daisy youngblood
Katherine Kieoh

what is the subjective doorway?
they hunger to live more deeply.
gustin's place is pretty close to the ground.

pay attention to the incidental.









get gone on the investigation


old pond
frog jumps in
water's sound
 Basho translated by R. Aitken

Workshop with Timothy Hawkesworth and Lala Hull
Spring Hill Farm

Day one: 
( notes from the morning talk.)  Tim was talking about work, how to get started, and about the pond, - the energy of the grasses at the edge, that we look at it like a hard horizon line, but it's actually an incredible intersection between the growth of the grasses and bulrushes up and down, the roots heading down, bringing water up, the tree energy, the silence of the land.   That you could just start with being in your body, and being in the landscape, and listening and looking with full attentiveness. So that your fingers and eyes and skin were listening with as much intensity as your ears... Start by listening and the instructions will come, follow the leads, it happens in real time. It's no small matter-- falling into the nature of things. Sometimes you can approach things as a lover, not just as a seeker. 

the ride up was exhilarating, so happy to be on the road. I love driving away, thinking about everything, everyone, singing...
dark woods,
cycles and seasons.

Thunderstruck, I am one of the youngest ones here, which suits me, except for all of the questions and positions to navigate. I just want to retreat and be quiet. Lying in the grass in the afternoon, looking up at the clouds and blue sky, with sheep cropping grasses, electric fences, wanting to go in with them, but not. Remembering parts of my childhood, hours and hours of my life outside. Reading interviews with Cy Twombly. I love hearing the laughter and talking in the distance. Who am I? Remembering that time is the most important thing.

Being here, I remember what this rhythm is like, the languorous quality of time. Like the heat wave in the city. I was reading books all day, under a fan in a cool, darkish space. It may have been the perfect segue way here. Like "oh yeah, this too..." It's always here, I can go to it at any time, in any place. We have such funny rules and assumptions for how our lives need to function. I sometimes feel guilty for spending my days and hours alone. Maybe it's the city effect. So much to go and do and see. 

Making art is like managing a farm. Hours and hours of solitary work that could be swept away by one false move, by one storm. (and the quiet too, seems similar, a way of working, attending to things.)
Even the butterflies feel fast. Don't limit yourself. Be as spacious as possible. Spend more time outdoors. Walking around, taking it all in. Just ride every where, you can do it. Take your time. Make stops, have snacks, watch the river flow...
" by the banks of Manhattan, flower...") (from the poem of Ted Berrigan "doing not enough"

I hope I get that look of a person who spends a lot of time outside. I want to know things actually. Seasonal changes, Birds in flight, trees, wind, water, range gauge. Taking notes will help. Camping always thrusts you into those circadian rhythms.














I started out on a drawing table near the pond, after looking at the sheep barn (too many people) and the big barn wall, (too exposed.) I told T. I was going to start there, and he said, "of course you are, why would you want to be anywhere else?" But the pond was so overstimulating that I could barely even move. That's where the thunder struck quality came in. I could not believe the fecundity, movement, buzzing quality of that site. Bees, frogs, blue tipped dragonflies, woodpeckers, butterflies, the linearity of the rushes above and the rippling reflection on the surface from a slight breeze or a swallow coming in for a drink.

The pictures above are a record of the dappled leaf light, and it was another layer of visual phenomena that I paid attention too. I sat for long periods of time, jotting notes, looking at things- feeling  overwhelmed and in awe.

Monday, June 25, 2012

chai cups

this image has been haunting me for the past several weeks. I love the way that the people are holding the cups, and the way that the cups frame the liquid. I am working on some open cups for chai, and maybe a smaller version for espresso.



 
photo by Patrina Tinslay

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

inspired by...

I have been working on plans for redesigning a spray park in the Fish town neighborhood of Philadelphia. As a result, I have been looking at many books and images of water parks, water gardens, rain gardens and other means of conveying water. From classic Islamic gardens, to paintings of Indian Miniatures, and many other Asian and European designs. My studio practice invariably reflects the distillation of all of that imagery. Here are 2 drawings from a series of 50 (in progress) that are inspired by landscape architectural drawings of plan and elevation sketches. 
All works are available through my etsy site, please take a look. 


Drawing 1
india ink 
pen and brush
8" x 8"




Drawing 2 
india ink
pen and brush
8"x 8"


Wednesday, May 30, 2012

the desert Series

When I finished the Spring semester of teaching, I was eager to head into the studio, for pure looking and silence. I often  think about the time that I camped in the desert, the macro and micro levels of experience- the landscape, plants, the close palate, the stripped down feeling of it. I have not been there since September, but I was inspired to make small drawings as meditation, as exploration, as memory and hand work. For this series of 50 I used walnut oil and prussian blue water color. This series is available on etsy. Enjoy




rip rap and lichen
walnut ink 
watercolor 
pen and brush
8" x 8"




pool and needles
walnut ink 
watercolor 
pen and brush
8" x 8"




fish hooks
walnut ink 
watercolor 
pen and brush
8" x 8"



arch and drag
walnut ink 
watercolor 
pen and brush
8" x 8"

Saturday, April 21, 2012

work






Every thing that you do will be insignificant 
it is important that you do it
Ghandi

transitions


El Paso to Marfa




flying into Nevada


Marfa, Tx


"We live as separate beings, especially in the Western culture, separate from each other and separate from the earth. We may even believe that we can discern the boundaries between  the material world and ourselves, between the visible and the unseen. But none can say where the line is that divides inner from outer. Where do I begin? Where do I end? Where do I belong?
My life is made of countless journeys from 'here' to 'there'--- from this step to the next step as I walk across the room, from parents hearth to other shelters and commitments,  from one segment of time to another. Every displacement reveals an intermediate zone, which because it is neither here not there, is an encounter with the unique. In this place the extraordinary may touch the ordinary, but the opportunity has to be recognized. What is the experience of that transition? What do I leave behind and what do I discover on crossing the thresh hold from this moment, this place, to the next moment, a new place?" R Solnit from Wanderlust

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

windswept

Drawing 36 square charcoal on paper 2011

March is starting to show some force, spring trees are flowering, the snow drops beneath the pine trees are almost finished, and daffodils are unfolding everywhere I look. My dad and I happened to work in our respective gardens on March 1st. The need to plant feels pretty strong right now, but I'll order some arugula and spring mix soon. I just found the National Gallery of Art podcasts, and am slowly going through them. Today it's Jim Dine. Drawings are underway in the studio, and I'm trying to reclaim a lot of clay to start making sculpture. I am also thinking about a kite project that seems pretty irresistible right now with these spring winds beckoning...

Friday, February 17, 2012

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

in scale

It is a common mistake to think that being in proportion means being small. Rather, it means being in scale, in making either a large or modest gesture, but doing it in a manner that lets us see the scale of our bodies embedded in its structure.
From Patterns of Home
The ten essentials of Enduring Design.
M. Jacobson, M. Silverstein, B. Winslow

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

from the archives


patch, lancaster pa

(excerpts from a letter to a friend...) creativity is giving, but it's not just defined in terms of a physical manifestation- it's how you see the world, how you move through it, and how you live your life. Making things is over rated. To me it really is how you shape your life and how you are shaped by it... be curious about who you are and how you are. give yourself time to read and rest... find ways to be anonymous. it can be really simple.
and don't make anything if you don't want to- just listen.

in Japan, there are mountains and rivers that are unpopulated, but i will probably be in cities like Osaka and Kyoto, and in the pottery villages. ( i hope) There won't be the same vastness and expansiveness (of the american west) but the cultural and language differences will make me feel isolated in the same way. There is no way to insert yourself into that culture, but i am somewhat used to that. What i hope to experience is the aesthetic of the everyday that my friends talk about. How beautifully the food is presented, at home, for every meal-- for the gardens and temples and ubiquity of clay in the realm of the everyday. We experienced a taste of it in Cyprus. the pithari, the roof tiles, plants in terra cotta on every corner. (you must have some of that in Israel?) Where i live, almost everything is plastic, utilitarian in the worst and ugliest sense... Japan is going to amaze and confound me. that is what i loved about the West, and that is what i love about traveling. It wakes me up in a way that nothing else does. it reminds me of how little i need to live and be content with. If i could figure out how to do that in my studio and my life, then we would be getting somewhere... i want time more than anything. I want to slow down. I want to have my solitary time. I want to go camping and hiking and be outside as much as possible. I don't want to work so hard for so little satisfaction... and when you go to your work, filled with ancient broken pots, look at your beautiful, slender, sensitive fingers and thank them for all that they know and do while your mind floats above.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

attentiveness

"attentiveness is the only means by which we can know the nature and qualities of our moment by moment existence. the entrance gate through which a person can not just be in his or her life, but know it, taste it, consider it. attentiveness is what opens us into a conscious human experience. i do see the development of a continually deeper and more clarified and refining attentiveness as the path through which art and craft, as well as life are more fully revealed."

"...we seek in art the elusive intensity by which it knows..."

Jane Hirshfield

Saturday, January 28, 2012

sidelong glance

notes on Christopher Wilmarth




Long Memphis 1973

image from
http://art.1stdibs.com/art_detail.php?id=14124


"an artist is entrusted with an access and required to keep it clear and the tools change with the obstructions but the place is always the same... ungraspable phantom of life..."

"obliquity is essential to Wilmarth's metaphorical imagination- at first literally, when he shaped his lights to make oblique shadows, and later, in a more arcane way, when he thrust out into real space with standing pieces that played upon the convention of perspective and its misleading illusions. The sidelong glance of a sculptor given to reverie is indispensable."

From the catalogue: Christopher Wilmarth: Gravity and Light

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

memory





"how do you make memory? What is the relationship between memory and anticipation? Can you make something that is physical which at the same time evokes the process of remembering? Is it possible to do this and make something fresh? Like dew or frost- something that just is, as if its form has always been like this?"
Antony Gormley about Domain Field


Sunday, January 8, 2012

practice

practice
practice
practice
practice
practice

i n s p i r a t i o n

Slowly getting acquainted again. When it is unknown, be still and alert. From David Garrigues "...Be on the scent of it. That's eno...