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Happy Holidays from June

Our Sunday contributor says her blog was eaten by a four-legged creature with a big red nose and some suspicious antlers; she (our colleague, I mean) will return next month, after the elves have left her home and she’s able to find the computer again.

In the meantime, if you are really really hungry for some blog talk, check out Art and Perception. Last Friday I posted a long tome on one of my residency projects. It’s painting, not textiles, and it was a failure, but an interesting one. And even if you don’t want to read my usual extensive maunderings, you might like the photos.

So enjoy yourselves, don’t eat and drink too much, but do eat and drink just the right amount. Tip the barrista (Maggie and her cat) and in general have yourself a merry one.

rcctrees.jpg

Some notes for the day

bigraven31.jpgEmily Carr, Big Raven, 1931 Continue reading ‘Some notes for the day’

RePost: A Question of Originality (by Clairan Ferrono)

A Question of Originality (by Clairan Ferrono)

Originally Published August 26th, 2007

June asked me to repost this because somehow the comments got locked out the first time, and Jeanne Beck, scheduled to post today, has been called away by a family emergency. So comment away!

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Lavender Mist 1953

I have been enjoying Ann Eden Gibson’s book Abstract Expressionism Other Politics. Early on she makes the point that originality was a key element for these artists: “‘Derivative,’ mused Louis Bourgeois. “That is the worst word, just about the worst.” (p 24). However, as Gibson points out, “The criterion of originality was so arbitrary, so contradictory and so subjectively applied that it could boomerang . . .” (p. 22). This set me on a path of thinking about my own perspective on originality, and how complicated and difficult it seems to me to assign originality to an artist. Continue reading ‘RePost: A Question of Originality (by Clairan Ferrono)’

Note from June

Jeanne Beck’s postings, on Terry Barrett’s Interpreting Art, will return next month. In the meantime, Kristin Freeman has agreed to substitute. Her post should appear soon.

A Look at Outsider Art, by Kristin Freeman

As the quilts of Gees Bend gathered interest from many quarters of society other than quilters, the term “outsider art” was used again and again in the media. Many years ago as a college student I took studio art classes and did not take any art history courses so this term intrigued and fascinated me as if it were a foreign language. I used Google and began a search that took me on many roads of exploration. The images presented on those pages of Google were as varied as the works of art in any major museum collection. There was not one form, style, media used nor distinctive coloration that flowed through the works pictured on those pages. One after the other I clicked and was drawn into the history of the creator of the art and gained a beginning of understanding of this genre or classification of art.

From a visit to the pages of “Raw Vision” came a definition that felt appropriate to me based on my beginning meanderings through this art form. Take time to visit the pages of information about outsider art on line and discover a world of variety and many delightful and well regarded works of art.

From the pages of Raw Vision on-line comes the following:

“Michel Thevoz, Curator of the Collection de l’Art Brut in Lausanne has written the following:
<”Art Brut”, or “outsider art”, consists of works produced by people who for various reasons have not been culturally indoctrinated or

A firm distinction should be made between “art brut” and what is known as “naif art”. The naif or primitive painters remain within the mainstream of painting proper, even if they fail ingenuously to practise its style. However, they accept its subjects, technique (generally oils) and even its values, because they hope for public, if not official recognition. “Art brut” artists, on the other hand, make up their own techniques, often with new means and materials and they create their works for their own use, as a kind of private theatre. They choose subjects which are often enigmatic and they do not care about the good opinion of others, even keeping their work secret.”

At www.tracymckay.us the phrase “visionary or intuitive” art is used to describe outsider art that has as the subject matter of the works images of a spiritual or religious nature. I was attracted to the image, Logo, on the Google page, although I cannot say that image would be described by me as religious or spiritual. The nature of the design was similar to what I have seen in textile works, textured background with minimal inscribing on the ground.

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Yesterday Pamela Allen wrote on the Quiltart list that she was inspired by outsider and subscribed to “Raw Vision”. Her work, in printmaking and in her work with fiber, inspires me to work from my own muse and explore my personal style more and more. Reading her post while I was preparing to put an article on the pages of Ragged Cloth was synchronistic, to say the least. Continue reading ‘A Look at Outsider Art, by Kristin Freeman’

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