This painting travels up and down your spine and massages all of your brain. That’s the highest assessment I can give to any work of art. What does this painting embody?
Order + Chaos
Rationality + Emotion
Calculation + Spontaneity
The Golden Section
The Enso
Color + black/white
Notice the literal references to calculation and geometry at 1,2,and 3. Very witty.
The enso and Japanese calligraphy can be seen at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VPGIUk-24dk
Once you’re on that page, you’ll find other demos. One calligraphy artist says, calligraphy lives in the moment. Birth and death, all in one stroke. Powerful.
Painting by Jane Donaldson, 30”x 40”, acrylic on canvas.
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Posts Tagged ‘chaos’
Order and Chaos
Posted in abstraction, Achievement, Color, Composition, inspiration, Technique and Demo, tagged calculation, chaos, enso, golden section, Jane Donaldson, Japanese calligraphy, Miyu Tamamura, rationality, spontaneity on October 19, 2015| 1 Comment »
Finding Order in Chaos
Posted in Color, Composition, Failed Effort, inspiration, Seeing, Technique and Demo, tagged Bruce Boyer, chaos, golden section, order, structure on March 27, 2015| 1 Comment »
Look at this. What a mess, you say. One color blotch after another, no repetition of forms, no pattern, no order of any kind.
Look again. There’s a black vertical line right in the middle(yellow arrows) If you draw a horizontal line through its top end, you get a golden section (green). If you draw a line through the bottom end point of the black line, you get a golden section (purple). You have to be pretty desperate to find some structure here to do this exercise and you have to be fond of the golden section. I happen to enjoy looking for structure and I’m besotted with the golden section. But that’s all I can come up with here.
Now, aside from the hunt for the golden section, reconsider the mess. Look yet again. If you look closely, if you zoom in, you can find exquisite passages. Here are some. Imagine each as a new painting.——————————————————————————
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The painting as a whole was incomprehensible and hard to look at—as a whole. But it consists of potential paintings that are quite dynamic and, at the same time, orderly.
Painting by Bruce Boyer, oil on canvas, 40” x 30”
All contents copyright (C) 2010 Katherine Hilden. All rights reserved.
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Order Interrupted
Posted in abstraction, Achievement, Color, Composition, Seeing, Technique and Demo, tagged Bruce Boyer, chaos, depth, illusion, life, primary colors, stable composition on March 26, 2015| 1 Comment »
Primary colors are pleasing. Look: red, blue and yellow. Plus two secondaries, orange and green. Plus black and white. This is a pleasing painting. The colors are luminous and the composition is stable and orderly. What more could you want!?
Well, you might want some chaos to liven things up a bit, because our experience of life is, dare I say it, a bit chaotic. Our rationality only covers so much territory in our inner lives. If you think chaos belongs to a truthful look at life, painting may be your medium. Paint welcomes chaos. Dip the brush into some paint on your palette and whoosh. Chaos comin’ right up, sir.
This is exiting to look at, way beyond just pleasant. Notice how things overlap and fade. Notice how your eye is constantly moving through this thing. You cannot rest any where, even though you can see that the underlying structure is rectilinear and stable.
The painting appears to have multiple layers, but actually it only has four. The top layer consists of two rectangles, neatly outlined: one black and one smaller one in yellow. These two rectangles cover very little surface, but isn’t it uncanny how they contribute to the illusion of depth in the painting?
Painting by Bruce Boyer, oil on canvas, 30” x 40”
All contents copyright (C) 2010 Katherine Hilden. All rights reserved.
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Beyond Realism
Posted in abstraction, Achievement, Composition, Illustration, Imagination, inspiration, literalness, Negative space, Roundness, Still life, tagged attention, canisters, chaos, drapery, ellipse, invention, Maggy Shell, still life, triangle on April 9, 2013| 1 Comment »
The merit in this drawing lies in the fact that the artist/student, Maggy Shell, went beyond the literal depiction of these still life objects. The realistic depiction of the canisters and the drapery is skilled enough, but that’s not what makes this drawing interesting.
What makes it interesting is that there are three distinct motifs: ellipse, chaos and triangle. The ellipses form a nice rhythm on the top layer. Under the ellipses comes the chaotic, cloud-like, wafting swoosh of the cloth. (Green) The precision of the ellipses and the indeterminacy of the cloth make for a dramatic contrast, one highlighting the other. The cloth, furthermore, is ambiguous: is supports the solid cylinders but at the same time appears to be insubstantial and not supported by anything. Ambiguity adds tension and tension is a good thing in art.
Enter the triangle, always a provocative shape. (Pink) Where does this come from? Two sources: 1) Among the cylinders there was a box with a partially open lid and under the white cloth there was some triangulation of additional fabric. 2) The imagination.
You guessed it, I’m rooting for #2. The dark triangles at the left and right edges of the drawing are pure invention. Notice how the triangles, pointing toward the center, focus your attention and keep you IN the composition. And it’s in the center that the geometry of the cylinders meets its opposite, the amorphous drift of drapery. We have a little drama here. So, of course, we pay attention. And paying attention is what the whole thing is about.
All contents copyright (C) 2010 Katherine Hilden. All rights reserved.
Leonardo da Vinci and Urban Decay
Posted in abstraction, Composition, Imagination, inspiration, tagged chaos, composition, drips, ideas, imagination, Leonardo da Vinci, photography, urban decay on October 5, 2011| Leave a Comment »
In “The Blot and the Diagram,” Kenneth Clarke talked about Leonardo’s intellectual range. His formidable brain loved to analyze systems (diagrams); but he was also fascinated by chaotic forms (blots). In his notebooks Leonardo tells us that he often would stop to look at a wall that was water stained, cracked or peeling. He writes, contemplating such chaotic forms stimulates the imagination.
I think of Leonardo as one of us, he shared our sensibility, with his insatiable curiosity and courage, his scientific approach; his playfulness; his openness to possibilities; his skepticism; his use of inconsistencies; his caricatures; and for the purpose of this post, his embrace of accidentals. In this sense, Kenneth Clark says, he anticipated modern art. About 120 years ago, when paint started dripping on a canvas, it was sometimes allowed to do so. By the 1940’s dripping paint had come to represent an aesthetic in itself, with Jackson Polack it’s most famous representative. An aesthetic of chance occurrence was edging out the old aesthetic of control.
If you’ve ever seen Urban Decay Photography, you know that it speaks to the modern sensibility. At first, it may be shocking (never was to me, though) but then it sinks in and reaches you at a very deep level of your life experience. Where the old sensibility measured time teleologically, this new sensibility embraces time– how shall we say—mystically, as an element of constant surprise and potential. And isn’t that where we live, from one moment of consciousness to the next and to get to the next moment, we have to let the previous moment die.
Decay. Urban Decay.
What other kind of decay is there? Well, obviously, rural decay. But that’s too fast and predictable, since in a season or two the new crop grows out of the compost of the old. But Urban Decay is slow and it’s not predictable, because it’s about ideas. What we see crumbling is not just that wall, that arch, that mural, that tracery, that tile floor, etc, but the ideas, values and hierarchies these things once defended.
My shot of the CTA tracks at Wabash and Madison (above) has some of that reflection in it. It has that reference to crumbling urban structures and the reminder that these structures are inventions, as man-made and ephemeral as the ideas and hopes from which they sprang. But that shot illustrates one other element we find in Urban Decay Photography: severe composition. In this case, it’s three horizontal stripes, progressing from narrow at to top, to wider in the middle, to widest at the bottom, creating a progression.
This emphasis on form is what distinguishes Urban Decay Photos. It is well worth your while to study this genre. Here’s a link, for a start:
http://www.pics-site.com/2010/07/11/urban-decay-photography/
All contents copyright (C) 2010 Katherine Hilden. All rights reserved.