Untitled (Susan Sontag 1933-2004), 2004, HTML, 500 x 460 pixels
Untitled, 2004, HTML, 500 x 460 pixels
Sometimes it just feels good to give in to the designer-ish inner-pattern maker and not think about subject matter.
A stack of small paintings: acrylic on wood, in progress, with a red ground color.

Untitled (12 panels), 1982, acrylic on paper, 12 x 108 inches
This was made in October 1982. I found it the other day when going through some boxes. Twelve 9 x 12' pieces of paper were painted separately, some with brush, most by pressing 1 x 2" painted with black, white, or gray acrylic onto the paper; a kind of printmaking. The the twelve pieces were arranged and glued together in a long scroll; at each seam between sheets a narrow strip of paper is glued on the back to hold the edges together. Because this is actually four photographs joined together there is a little color difference where one set of three joins another.
At this time I was doing a numer of these kinds of long, multipanel pieces; I posted another example back in August, but since it wasn't dated I could be sure of the year, and so dated it circa 1981-84. But now that I have an October 1982 date for this black and white one I can better narrow down the date for the first example.
Bill 1-9, 2004, HTML, 320 x 280 pixels each
Maybe it's not always such a good thing to describe one's sources, but regarding Bill 1-9:
Boxing Day (Blue & Green), 2004, oil on canvas, 10 x 10 inches
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| Four studies (in progress), 2004, oil on canvas, 16 x 12 inches each | |||
I am pleased and honored to be listed in Tom Moody's Weblog Top Ten 2004. Pleased because, well, it's great to be singled out. And honored because, having followed Tom's weblog since August of 2003, I've enjoyed and appreciated his critical insights, breadth of interests, and his computer-based printed art and forays into animated gifs. It's extra sweet to get a little recognition from someone who really gets it.
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| Six studies (in progress), December 2004, oil on canvas, 16 x 12 inches each | ||
The Sleeping Spinner 1-6, 2004, HTML, dimensions variable
Agnes Martin
March 22, 1912,
I learned about Agnes Martin as an undergraduate in the San Francisco Bay Area, around 1976. I had an early, natural attraction to abstract art, even as young as 11 or 12; on a trip to the Oakland Museum with my grandmother around 1968 I was as interested in Albert Bierstadt, as, say, Hassel Smith. I thought that a painting is a painting: they all deserve to be looked at, and they aren't that easy to make. Adults said, “A child can make that,” but I didn't agree; I couldn't make one, and I thought there was something going on there besides the skilled (or unskilled) representation of a person, tree, cow, or table top. I don't know why I knew that so young.
At age 18 I suddenly had access to a college library and freely available
back issues of art magazines, which I studied pretty closely in the stacks.
I particularly liked Art International and Artforum. This, combined with
access to SFMOMA, the de Young and Legion of Honor, the
I became really intrigued by what was usually called minimalist painting:
Ryman, Marden, Novros, Berthot, Humphrey, etc., in NY; Charlton and Greene
in the
The problem was that in the San Francisco Bay Area I found little exposure to this work (this would change around 1979-80 when two SF galleries- Modernism and Shirley Cerf- began actively showing artists like Simpson, Saxon, Hayward, Tchakalian, Marioni, Hafif, Gimblett, Sims, Lawson, and others). I was trying to figure it out through reproductions, all the while still looking closely at artists grouped as Bay Area figurative painters like Diebenkorn, Park, Bischoff, Brown, and Neri.
I recall buying a copy of Art News (vol. 75, no. 7, September 1976!) at the
The article detailed Martin's history, described how she quit painting and left New York for new Mexico 1967, touched on the film she made called Gabriel, and discussed the new paintings she began making in 1974, the exhibition of which prompted the article. Interviewed for and quoted in the article, they way she wrote and spoke made an enormous impression on me. I had just read Alan Watts' The Book, and I think I'd also begun Suzuki's Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind. Martin's thoughts and ideas were in this realm, but she spoke very clearly as a painter, as someone who was working towards visual clarity. I was immediately struck by her statement, "Anyone can look at a waterfall all day." Having read that, I had just then learned a new way to approach a painting and to understand and talk about looking.
I first saw an actual painting by Agnes Martin in 1977. I vividly remember
the moment. I walked into a gallery at SFMOMA, at the old building in the
Veteran's
Falling Blue, 1963, is six feet square, oil and pencil on canvas which actually looks like coarse, dark linen. Horizontal pencil lines perhaps half an inch apart are ruled to the edges of a framing border of bare canvas perhaps two inches around all four sides. In between the penciled horizontal lines long strokes of dark violet-blue are painted with a small brush from one side to the other. Each blue line is brushed horizontally as far as the paint that the brush carries can lasts, and then the brush is loaded with more paint to continue the line. Each horizontal band of blue paint spanning the painting, then, isn't completely continuous: you can see places in each band where the stroke starts, fades out, and continues with a fresh load of paint. Up close you can see the movement, the labor, the patience in these repeated thin stripes. However, I didn't see these details immediately. I remember first stopping at least ten feet away and seeing and taking in the whole painting. The thin stripes of paint turning thick and thin because of the starts and stops of the horizontal strokes looked something like thin, soft, slowly undulating corduroy, and the painting shimmered and waved. It gave off and took in light.
Multiple kinds of space could be seen. There was a deep space, difficult to pin down, fuzzy, wavy and distant, somewhat like a mirage. There was an intimate space, enveloping and up close, where the painting could be seen as a real thing, handmade in small sections like weaving. Finally, there was a formal space made by the border around the canvas that framed the inner painted area, which made more obvious a kind of architectural space between the painting’s edge and the wall on which it hung.
The dark brown canvas and the dark blue paint were basically the only two colors in the painting, but they simultaneously projected a brilliant image while also collapsing into a mud that couldn't be unmixed by the eye. The painting wavered in and out of sight, not always easy to see, but this process of continual, adaptive looking was a constant and steady experience. Finally, I began to see how so little could do and mean so much. I gave myself to the painting, looking at it at every opportunity on successive visits, and I ultimately learned a lot from Falling Blue: how to look at a painting not only as a critical observer, but also as one who experiences the painting emotionally and intellectually, both consciously and intuitively.
It's much harder to say, however, what I learned about making a painting, because the entire painting is there before me- canvas, pencil lines, strokes of blue paint- and the entire act of its making can be deciphered. Why can't this be easily repeated? I can look at the painting almost as a recipe, but I can't make it.
I also learned from Agnes Martin something to do with intention (having an idea, following through on it, and staring down the results to decide whether or not to keep it) and contrivance (acting on a bad idea, illustrating an idea, losing sight of or failing to follow the idea, or bad editing of work). Falling Blue, and successive paintings by Agnes Martin I've seen, taught me about using materials directly, finding and committing to a vision and voice, avoiding illustration, and the power of distillation. I think these are some of the strengths of her work. Happily, she was able to work for a long time, and I believe her example and body of work is important.
The Sleeping Spinner, 2004, HTML, 540 x 460 pixels
The Sleeping Spinner, 2004, HTML 600 x 500 pixels
The Sleeping Spinner, 2004, HTML, 540 x 460 pixels
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The Sleeping Spinner, 2004, HTML 549 x 489 pixels
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The Sleeping Spinner, 2004, HTML, 420 x 460 pixels
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The Sleeping Spinner, 2004, HTML, 380 x 390 pixels
"About a leaf from Tao-chi's "Album for Taoist Yü" was written for and published in the latest issue of Rudolf's Diner: Search.
About a leaf from Tao-chi's Album for Taoist Yü
In a deep sleep, my eyes sunk into their sockets, hands palm-down by my side, my deep, loud breathing powered by a heaving chest moves me forward, climbing over crags, peering over rough edges, pulling myself up through the cold air, looking for a place to rest, to live, to leave behind my life of schedules, chores, conflicts, things.
I am driving a busy street, and at a red light my mind wanders to a foggy mountain retreat. I inhale the crisp, moist air, smell the dirt at my feet, peer across a valley, look at my legs crossed before me, hear nothing but the wind, maybe a bird.
Standing at the sink washing dishes, I am alone in my actions, step after step, thinking of the mountains, of a place that is whole and perfect. The light late in the day lingers, fades slowly. I sit, my thoughts turn inward, I am far away, I am small.
I cannot stop looking at a small landscape by Tao-chi. It is one of twelve small paintings made in in the late 17th century and collected in an album called An Album for Taoist Yü. It is an astonishing painting.
Roughly eleven inches square, it is made using a very small amount of water, ink, and color that is dabbed and brushed onto paper. Pale liquid red and blue freckles of paint give the painting atmosphere, and dry, scratchy black strokes, almost crudely built up over two or three passes, give the painting structure and texture.
As my eye wanders over the painting I feel as if I have found a place of contemplation and purpose. I look at and around the rocks, and I feel their rough edges, and the spaces in between. I look out over the edge, down into the canyon, feeling the distance. I look at the stack of horizontal rocks piling above the small retreat building, and feel their shelter.
My eyes are continually drawn to the lines, dots, colors, spaces, and light. I marvel at how contemporary an image this seems by its few dots and lines all over the surface. The rocks aren't really solid at all, they're just outlines over a bunch of almost random dots of color.The faceless figure sitting in the pavilion is barely there, insignificant, merging with the mountainside. The red peaks in the left background show us just how far away and isolated this place is, yet I am startled to realize that this painting is three hundred years old; it seems so contemporary, and speaks to me across all these many years.
I see the blacker lines- squinting helps them stand out a bit- that curve around and support the small pavilion in the middle of the painting. I notice how these darker lines form a staccato snaky chain that starts faintly in the top middle of the sheet, lazily drops down and arcs over to the left, then at the midpoint bumps up and down back across to the right of the painting, finally spreading out in veins like roots to the bottom center.
This densely woven line of black shapes is like the spine of an animal, and the outcropping to the right, darker and sharper than any other single part of the painting, heavily hangs off the side of the mountain, like a hand or foot grasping or pointing the way, but also leaning and vulnerable, as if it could fall away at any moment, a reminder of time and impermanence.
The color is applied so casually, and the dry, craggy, feathery brushstrokes build up through repetition into black lines that seem almost living. The entire mountainside itself is a large figure; there is an aspect to it that is something of a multi-limbed, multi-fingered being that wraps its fingers around the hut, cradling the sitter. Or, the mountain also resembles a large head tilted back with a wide-open mouth carefully holding a small shack and sitter: this is either an affirming or terrifying situation to be in..
Tao-chi (1642-ca. 1708)- also known as Daoji, Shih-tao, Shih-T'ao, Shitao, and Yuan Ji- was born into a family of royal lineage during the Ming Dynasty (1368 - 1644), but the family's fortune turned with political overthrow and the beginning of the Qing Dynasty (1644 - 1911). Tao-chi was forced to hide, entering a Buddhist monastery. He became a bit of a nomad before settling in Yangchow in 1687. He is known for his varied, wild, individual style, and for incorporating past painting styles as he desired and saw fit. Tao-chi wrote a treatise on painting, the Hua Yu Lu; he emphasized the concept of "i hua," or one line, which is translatable as line, unity, or a sense of oneness with nature[1]. In one oft-quoted statement, Tao-chi said:
I am myself because my Self naturally exists. The whiskers and eyebrows of the Ancients cannot grow on my face, nor can their entrails exist in my stomach. I have my own entrails, and my own whiskers and eyebrows. Even when there may be some point of contact with another master, it is he who approaches me, and not I who seek to become like him. I have been taught directly by Heaven, how could I learn from antiquity without transforming it?[2]
This example of the painter's work, with which I am most taken, is the result of a profound self-recognition and decisive action, as evidenced by a sure hand and strong composition. It is also a work from someone fully aware of history and their own time. I am awed by the power of this compact image and dazzled by its abstract quality; no matter how much I look at it I cannot quite take it all in, I can't fully understand it. I keep walking through the landscape, crawling over the rocks, peering over the edges and into crags, and trying to look beneath the surface. I keep looking to see how it is made. And I can't get over how something so complex as this painting, such an enthralling little world, is made using a little pigment and water, a piece of paper, and some hairs attached to a stick.
Pictured: Tao-chi, (1642-1708), Leaf from an Album for Taoist Yü, Ink and colors on paper, 23.75 x 27.5. C. C. Wang Collection, New York. View larger version.
[1] http://www.bartleby.com/65/sh/ShihTao.html
[2] http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0422/is_4_84/ai_95679867
Posted by chrisashley at 01:33 PM
Zen Arcade 1-23, 2004, HTML, dimensions variable I finished a short group of four drawings, each representing one of four sides of the LP of Husker Du's Zen Arcade, on 20041128, and at that time wrote a fair amount about how they were a reaction to a previous series in terms of size and effects. I said that I had thought of, but had decided against, doing twenty three drawings, one for each of the songs on the album. Having written that, however, of course the next day I decided to do the twenty three drawings, at a pace of three drawings a day, rushing through the series in eight days instead of my normal practice of one drawing per day, which would've made this series over three weeks in length. I needed a gimmick for these drawings. I knew that each day I would consider three song titles and try to respond with an HTML drawing, but I felt I needed something else: a system, a conceptual anchoring, a contextualizing visual cue. So here's what I did:
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Zen Arcade 13-23, 2004, HTML, dimensions varied
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Zen Arcade 16-23, 2004, HTML, dimensions varied
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Zen Arcade 19-23, 2004, HTML, dimensions varied
Blue/Green 1-6, 2004, acrylic on wood, dimensions varied (approximately 12 x 8 inches), click each for larger view
Chinese Painting Genres: Blue and Green Landscape
The landscapes painting which executed in mineral green and azurite colors was called as Blue and Green Landscape.It divided by Big Blue and Green and Small Blue and Green.On the base of ochre color,Small Blue and Green executed mineral green and azurite colors;on the base of outline,Big Blue and Green executed arranging colors with decorative atmosphere. (Evidence)
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Zen Arcade 22-23, 2004, HTML, dimensions varied
Byron Kim: At the Threshold of Painting?
I have had a hard time beginning to write about Threshold: Byron Kim1990–2004 (at the Berkeley Art Museum from September 15 to December 12[1], 2004, after which it tours Seoul, South Korea, and other museums across the United States). I've looked at the show three times, and I know I have something to say, but I was taught that if you can't say something nice, don't say... actually, I do have a few nice things to say about the work, but I'll get to that by saying a bunch of other things, some of which maybe aren't so nice. 
Glen Helfand writes in Artforum, "this lean, effective mid-career retrospective shifts the focus squarely to the artist's identity as a painter, tracking Kim's evolving use of single hues to encapsulate personal memory and his own take on art history[2]." Okay, yeah, I guess. As in the picture to the right, which accompanies all of the exhitions promotional materials, two different blues above or below a horizontal line are sea and sky. For Kim, they're a specific sea and sky, and for me another sea and sky. I can associate sea and sky with the two blues without any help at all, but Kim's' titles make sure I don't make other associations: tell me what it means, and I'll have no reason to look any further. There is one thing that I do like about this image: it shows the artist looking at and being involved with his work. I don't dispute that there is a real involvement here, and I sympathize with Kim's impulses, but I'm not sure the work is really enough about looking.
And the San Francisco Chronicle's Kenneth Baker writes, "A triptych called "1984 Dodge Wagon" similarly commemorates a family car in three abutted, evenly colored panel-mounted canvases that openly pay homage to Brice Marden's early work. Just by how he titled works such as these, Kim inverted the received equation of subjectivity and surface energy in abstraction[3]." Translation: a work comprising three panels indifferently covered in paint is given meaning by its title, because the actual way the painted surface is handled doesn't tell us much of anything at all. How Duchampian, I suppose, and all well and good as long as I keep reading the wall labels.
The fact that this is referred to as a painting show is what bothers me most. Two galleries in the museum are filled with about forty painting-like objects, many quite large. I know that these objects are supposed to be paintings because, a) they're all on canvas, except for one on plywood; b) they all hang on the wall, except for the plywood work, which leans against the wall; c) each "painting" is covered in some pigmented material, formerly liquid, now dried, that is brushed or knifed on the surface with minimal incident and gradation; and d) all the texts associated with this exhibit tell me that these are paintings: the catalog; the wall texts; the promotional materials; the media.
But my question is, Is paint on canvas hanging on a wall meeting enough criteria to be called a painting? Is any surface evenly coated with paint a painting? What criteria makes one painted surface a painting and another painted surface merely a painted surface? Is it intention? Is it context? Is it the title? Is a small canvas plainly painted with crisp horizontal stripes really a painting when I need the label to tell me that it is supposed to represent a t-shirt Kim wore as a boy during a time he had a crush on a teacher? Are these the sorts of questions Kim intends me to ask when I consider his work?
It is somewhat sad: resources are allocated to give an artist the opportunity of a traveling retrospective exhibition, yet the show is so thin. The alleged focus on painting is on painting as mostly a conceptual object, not so much, with a few exceptions that I'll discuss later, as a rich visual object worth looking at more than once. The indifference of these paintings, evident in the flat surfaces and, especially in the most recent work, the uniform canvas sizes and tidy clean edges, is appalling. Not only is this not great painting, it is barely on the threshold of painting to begin with.
Now, there is very little paint on some of Kim's paintings. Of course, as we know from, for example, third generation Abstract Expressionists, thick paint is no indication of quality. And the realist-conceptual-process (whatever) painter Chuck Close is said to have painted his early black and white gargantuan portraits with literally teaspoons of paint. But Kim's paintings, for the most part smoothly painted monochromes neatly covered from side to side, top to bottom, many in the eight foot range, don't even seem to address the concerns of so-called monochrome painters who are still actively working with surface, color, light, touch, scale, and edge. They're just bland.
It has been said that even a blank canvas is a painting; it just may not be a very good one[4]. And the French painter Maurice Denis (1870-1943), wrote that " a painting is essentially a flat surface covered with colour assembled in a certain order." So this begs the question: is any painted surface--canvas or prepared panel-- a painting? Are Kim's paintings really paintings?
By that I mean, are they visually engaging objects, do they go beyond being a painted surface, is their existence actually core to the meaning of Kim's work? This is arguable; I believe that these painted surfaces are in service to the titles, which are more central to the artist's conceptual program than the painted surfaces, and so since these painted surfaces are not the primary point of experience or carrier of Kim's identified meaning they don't qualify as paintings. They instead are backdrops, scenery, stage sets.
This is not to say that Kim's work is absolutely all bad. Much of the work, once you know what it's about, takes on the aura of a kind of gentle tenderness, fond memory, and presence in the moment. His oeuvre includes a number of site-specific works and installations, the inclusion of which might make this an exhibition of a very different kind, but none are included here.
There are a few works that conceptually and visually are interesting as paintings Emmet at Twelve Months (left: 1994, Egg tempera on wood, 25 panels, each 3 x 2 1/2 in.; 17 x 4 1/2 in. overall, Collection of Dolores and Byungseol An) records colors from different areas of Kim's son's body in creamy paint smoothly knifed on small panels. A slightly larger painting, Please Do Not Touch, 1991, is covered in an even dark purple-brown made silvery and tactile by light caught in a scattering of fingerprints across the surface. Through the Night, 1997, a larger canvas, appears to be an all-black painting until after sustained viewing a faint image emerges, Ad Reinhardt-style (an example of which is on the top 6th floor gallery), of a view towards the night sky through tree branches. Oddly, this is the only painting that is guarded by a knee-high railing project out from the wall a couple of feet in front of the painting; the one work that requires the viewer's presence and close looking is put at a distance from the viewer.
Twenty three Sunday Paintings are hung across a single wall. These small panels, paintings of the sky from a larger series made each Sunday, include a short diaristic or observational text handwritten across the bottom.
Painted quickly and just well enough to evoke the weather and time of day, these really are, individually, merely Sunday paintings fortunately made more meaningful by the fact that they have accumulated over time into a poignant body of work.
Finally, Kim's masterwork is Synecdoche (right), which I have written about earlier and will repeat here[5]. Synecdoche is a project to describe something very specific: the color of each panel is an attempt to match the skin color of someone who sat for him. Each 8 x 10 panel, in size, shape, and color, is obviously a portrait. Numbering around 300, the painting is a record of social interaction, of a network of people, of an understanding or partnership and consent. Together the paintings, in order alphabetically by first name, are a chart, a record, a graphical plotting of individuals, their colors, their names, a demographic tool to describe a particular milieu. Each panel is a face in a crowd, part of an audience, part of a group of witnesses to the viewer. Synecdoche is a reification of de Kooning's comment that, "flesh was the reason oil paint was invented."
Is this really a retrospective? Are we really getting a full view of Kim's project and accomplishment? Two thoughts: this exhibition doesn't advance painting, and it doesn't serve the artist's best interests.
[1] http://bampfa.berkeley.edu/exhibits/byronkim/index.html
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Blue & Green 7-9, 2004, pastel and water on paper, 12 x 9" each (scanned)
1-3 in this series posted 20041121
4-6 in this series posted 20041121
Zen Arcade 1-4, 2004, HTML, dimensions variable (view
full HTML version, 197kb)
1 (top left): 594 x 575; 2 (top right): 555 x 574; 3 (bottom left): 500 x 580; 4 (bottom right): 500 x 660
I finished a series a few days ago, Black/Red, and in writing about the series a number of ideas about those drawings and my choices and non-choices emerged; Zen Arcade is in part a reaction to myself:
Amazon.com essential recording
Even when this Minneapolis trio dabbled in familiar sounds, such as the strummed folk of "Never Talking to You Again" or the Bo Diddley-style R&B of "Hare Krsna," what came out on this swirling 1984 double album was clenched, emotional, and intense. Over 23 short songs that helped define the still-thriving punk subgenre known as hardcore, leaders Grant Hart and Bob Mould screamed their alienation in the fastest language they could possibly produce. Though Mould is the more personal songwriter, lashing out at liars and (presumably) lovers, both Hüsker heads come up with psycho-depression choruses like "What's going on inside my head?" --Steve KnopperAmazon.com
They didn't yet have terms like "alternative rock" when Minneapolis's Husker Du made their mark as one of the 1980's most influential bands. With two skilled songwriters--guitarist Bob Mould and drummer Grant Hart--the genre-bending trio (bassist Greg Norton completed the lineup) juxtaposed hardcore punk speed and aggression with pop-leaning melodies. Add their uniformly thoughtful, introspective lyrics, and you've got this stunning 1984 double-length release, a semi-concept album...
Eveyday when I post an entry I use a feature in Moveable Type called Categories, which allows me to assign to each entry one or more labels so that archives of posts by category are automatically generated. Although I've faithfully and fortunately assigned a category each day during the life of this weblog I've pretty much ignored the category archives. But they're there, and I didn't have to do anything to make these compilations besides assigning a category each day. So, here they are, the five most commonly used categories:
Zen Arcade, Side 4, 2004, HTML, 500 x 660 pixels
Zen Arcade, Side 3, 2004, HTML, 500 x 580 pixels
Zen Arcade, Side 2, 2004, HTML 555 x 574 pixels