I took a little mini trip recently and visited some artists who I've known for a very very long time - since the beginning of what we might call "my art career." It's always a good recharge to the batteries to go back and have a talk about art with people who know you very well, and whose aesthetic is both familiar, and similar to your own. One of my artist friends teaches in an even more remote location than I do. He used to have a lot of time to make art up there, but lately has been distracted by just generally life. I could say the same for myself. Anyway, after I left the artists, and came home, I realized I had not shared with any of them some of the great stuff that I've been finding lately and that has me often thinking of each of them individually. So here's a quick tour of a few things that make me want to call other artists up and share. (Even though, with my aversion to telephones, I don't.) I'm not advocating any retail therapy or endorsing any product - these suggestions are just for Idea Harvest (i.e. inspiration.)
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Gyongy Laky's wooden typography sculpture |
Gyongy Laky. She's wonderful.
"Man Shops Globe" on Sundance Channel (or from
Yidio /Netflix),
jewelry from the Sundance catalogue (not all of it, but certainly some of it),
Habu Textiles (yarn).
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The darling goat farmers, Josh and Brent |
The Fabulous Beekman Boys on PlanetGreen (Discovery) for their goats, cheese, and connection to both Martha Stewart AND "Farmer John," cover tunes EP from the Old '97's, Raphael Saadiq, felt, Selvedge Magazine.
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Bunsen, a Berner, looking for treats |
Old letters as raw materials for art, and my dog. Yes! My dog. He's authentic, visually compelling, intense, and has a real attract/repulse aspect to himself that is something I think more artists should aspire to in their works.
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Little Peregrine drawing with caption |
On the curious to see what happens list of interests we have Work of Art contestant
Peregrine Honig (I like her pre-Bravo work, eg. image left of the donkey - and am curious about her sculpture now that the bastard Jerry Saltz has suggested that work was more compelling. Since Peregrine is a successful lingerie store owner from Kansas City, I can see the 3-d thing happening, and if they let her near a sewing machine...well, I'm interested to see what happens next, as they like to say at Bravo.) Also, I think baskets are going to break in the craft world in a minute. The last contemporary basket book was published about 9 years ago, as far as I can tell, but they just finally came out with 500 baskets. And there's an
important basket show of selected works from the Lieberman's collection at MAD Museum thru Sept. 12 in NYC. That usually heralds a big re-awakening. I'm a little ahead of the curve on that one, having found an old copy of Ed Rossbach's "The New Basketry" last winter and well, you know what happened there.
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