Sunday, May 30, 2010

Visual Vocabulary

I'd like to take a minute here and talk about visual vocabulary.  It's an idea that most artists are familiar with.  The visual tools by which they express their thoughts and concerns.  Sometimes visual vocabulary is pointed, specific and purposeful, or self-aware or pretentious.  Sometimes it feels arbitrary and random but may really be an unconscious expression of the artist. 
As I venture into this new chapter of making art for myself, I am finding myself contemplating my own visual vocabulary; what it means, where it comes from, how it's formed.  I'm also finding that I'm observing other artist's vocabulary. I'm going to post a few pictures of artists that I'm looking at so that you can see who I'm influenced by.

This is artist Yvette Kaiser Smith.  I met Yvette randomly at my place of work.  She and her husband came in to eat and we got to talking.  Turns out her studio is down the street and I had been intermittently admiring her work for years with peaks through the crack in her door as I walked past.  She's an awesome artist and a really cool person to boot.  She has some upcoming shows this year, including one opening Friday June 4th at the David Weinberg gallery here in Chicago.


I have always loved the artist Lee Bontecou's work.  Particularly her early 1960's pieces that won her international acclaim.   But I also love her slightly more recent work.  Using ceramic balls and thin wires, her work has the essence of otherworldly pirates benignly cruising through the the dreamlike ocean of outer space.

Here's an artist who revels in visual vocabulary.  He plays with it, makes tongue-in-cheek statements with it, laughs with it.  We, the viewer, in turn can laugh back, engage and almost converse with the art.  I am constantly amazed and inspired by Mark Newport's art.


                           



Here is a great image and caption that I think many of us knitters and crocheters can relate to.



By studying other artist's vocabulary and taking note of what they are saying with their art, I'm hoping to understand my own vocabulary.  I feel, right now, like my art is a pack of wild dogs, running wildly, loosely grouped, foraging, barking, snapping, lolling in the shade, basking in the sun.  I'd like to harness that energy that is buzzing in my knitting needles and silk patches and embroidery threads and translate it into a readable visual language.  One that slices neatly like the trails of sled dogs through the snow, like the aforementioned artists that I admire so much. 

I invite you all to talk about your own experiences with visual vocabulary.  I'd love to hear what you have to say. 

Monday, April 19, 2010

Graduate School

As many of you know, I'm researching and getting ready to apply to Graduate school.  I've given this many years of casual thought and a couple months of serious thought.  I've narrowed it down to 5 schools in 5 different states.  Seems like a fair number but it is misleading.  There is only one school whose program feels like the right fit.  Biggest problem so far?  Convincing G that it's a good idea to incur lots of debt and move North for a few years.  Biggest problem that I see coming?  Fear of not getting accepted.  I'm getting ready, scheduling the GRE, studying, reading dry essays on commoditization and proto-industrial cloth production, organizing binders full of information about deadlines and researching grants.   But my biggest obstacle is analytical writing.

 I need to strengthen my writing skills.  And I need your help.  This blog has previously been a casual commentary of my thoughts and actions but will now serve as a tool for college preparation.  I will be writing short essays or even just quick paragraphs of observations.  You will be my honest, hard-nosed critics.  None of those silly, 'that's so cool!' type of comments will be accepted.  I need to be schooled before I get accepted into school.  I need help with vocabulary, grammar, punctuation, sentence structure and not writing in an oratory manner.  These practice essays will be about all sorts of ideas, not limited to art and textiles.  I'm hoping to appeal to a broader audience but I don't expect to be writing any riveting storylines just yet. 

I look forward to your comments and thank you in advance!