Sunday, February 15, 2009

Week 3

Very busy week! I don't know if I got exactly my 20 hours in the studio, but I will have more time this next week to make up for any time I missed. Spent an inordinate amount of time working on the first research paper (omniousness in David Lynch and Alfred Hitchcock.) Got a rough draft finally out so on to the fun stuff. Visited the Walker with Jeffrey this week. We heard a lecture about Elizabeth Peyton. I thought I didn't like her until I walked through the retrospective and I think I do now. Well, I hate her of course because it's "easy" and she's famous, but I do like the shiny, pretty, fuzziness of the paintings. Even more excited by the exhibit of Japanese artist Tetsumi Kudo. A LARGE retrospective! Radioactive penises were every where!



The two works above are from my new Pond series for which I've done a few already. Not much to say yet, it's early...



Starting 2 works for my mentor. Cutting up parts of photographs as starts in paintings. Each had to have an item and a piece of landscape. I need to paint to match that landscape. This piece had the photos placed intentionally. The other arbitrarily. 


This is the first painting in response to Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds. I like it a lot. Not my usual. Moved the horizon. Changed the paint a little. Out of focus. Eerie. So far, so good. I think the summation of the paper and the movies is this. There's the scene where the Crows start landing on the kids' playground. There's no music. When there are 4 or 5 and they keep landing slowly 1 by 1, it's scary. When we look and there's 500 of them on the playground I don't think it's quite as scary. The scariness/eerie part comes not knowing when exactly or if we've crossed over into the absurdity of the dream, when we ask ourselves, "is this real or am I dreaming?"


This seagull one is odd. I don't think I'm painting it.  It's sort of painting itself. I spent about 10 hours this week continuing to work on the background. I started it at the end of January. Don't know why exactly, but I had a clear idea of it in my head coming out of the residency. Hadn't even thought about my Alfred Hitchcock assignment yet. On 2/2/9 my Grandfather died. I was much closer to him than any male in my life. He was a big squawky bird, but strong and majestic. I guess this has sort of turned into an elegy for him.

2 comments:

erin said...

I love the seagull image and am so sorry to hear about your grandpa. There's something wonderfully haunting and lovely about that painting. Nice work!

eliza b. g. said...

Wow, this bird/scape is a powerful image. It is strange and beautiful. I am sorry to hear about your grandfather.