photography and art

Coincidences posted an interesting article about “Big Prints, the Art-Making Impulse, and Time-Motion Panoramas” that has prompted me to add some comments on his blog and here.

The extra large digitally printed photographs that we now see in galleries have become possible with the growth of very large, high quality archival inkjet printers at a more reasonable price (though still not cheap) compared to the original giclee printers of a few years ago. It has really opened up immense possibilities for artists as well as photographers.

As mostly a photo-based printmaker, I find I am more interested in the photographers that have a unique way of “making” their images, whether it’s with an unusual camera technique or with PhotoShop or something else. While I don’t question the artistic vision of many realistic photographers, my own personal aesthetic, perhaps now a little old-fashioned, is to see the hand of the artist at work in some way, using the camera as a tool amongst many others.

Hmm, this has led me back to some recent discussions about “true” vs. manipulated photography.

Thanks to Coincidences for mentioning my blog regarding conversations about the art-making impulse.

ADDENDUM April 25.04:
Talking about Big Prints, Caryn Coleman wrote a great commentary in The Art Weblog about whether big prints are better….recommended reading!

on creativity

As mentioned in a couple of my recent posts, there has been a lot of discussion on why we make art, and this has led me to think more about creativity. Cassandra wrote a few days ago (scroll down to April 14th entry) about her thoughts on writing letters, books and blogs, and about creativity. I like these wise words:

“There’s also another side to how we view creativity, and the way we put certain types of achievement up on a pedestal. If we insist on seeing creative work as heading toward specific public goals, and Art as being defined by these big monolithic accomplishments – the book, symphony, masterpiece painting – we will not only set ourselves up to fall short, but we run the risk of being blind to the art that exists in everyday creation, in the thoughts and creative acts that arise when we lift our eyes from a book, or making a meal, or stop to hear a bird song. All those things need to go into our “big art”, if that’s where we’re headed, but they are also important ends in themselves, as blogging and letter-writing remind us. I think we need to remember that, not only to validate what we are doing but because so many people are also doing this process — of perceiving and thinking and expressing or remembering — everyday, without ever writing anything down. It’s important to remember that their thoughts and perceptions also layer throughout life to create masterpieces: wise, perceptive, interesting people, without whom the world would be so impoverished.”

more on Why Make Art

A few days ago I posted a discussion about why artists are compelled to make art. It’s certainly a popular subject. Artist Danny Gregory posted in his blog today “The fundamental question: Why do you do it?”, asking his artist readers to reply. When I last looked there were 31 replies, all very well worth reading.

UPDATE: (April 16/04) So many comments on this subject, and I also want to add more, slightly off the topic but still relevant, I hope:

I believe every human is born creative, look at children! Somewhere along the way, some lose that natural drive; sometimes it’s killed by uninformed teachers who insist on colouring-inside-the-lines-of-photocopied-colouring-book-pictures etc. Partly, the education system is at fault in the teaching of the teachers, but it really is a lack in our society that would need a revolution to change. Of course, not everyone needs to be a professional artist, but creativity is, I firmly believe, an important part of every wholesome well-rounded person. An appreciation for and support of the arts also helps those artists who are trying to make a living.

Life as an Artist

I have just found an artist’s blog that has really piqued my interest. Ivan Pope in the UK does multimedia installation work that is very different from my printmaking, but his clear descriptions of his life as an artist who blogs, mirror much of my own. I like this Dear Diary:

“It occurs to me that this blog is like a Diary […] purely a look at the stuff that I do, the work that I make and the things that surround me.[…] I’ve spent the last week recoiling from making work. I think I burn myself out in phases, then some consolidation. Plus, there is always a lot of other stuff around to get on with, paperwork, kids, work, school.[…] My mind goes on making work, but my body sort of abdicates. It tries to get back to it, but there are too many things in the way. And some big fears.”

And Doing the art thing :

“This blog is supposed to get me thinking about, considering, the minutae of my life as an artist.[…] I intend to have a career in art myself,[…], I know the value of the market, the PR expert, the phone-pickerupper, the booster. Up to a point artists have to be all of these things to themselves, and its a very hard trick to play. Almost the best that you can hope is that you have such a belief in your work that boosting it, telling the world about it is easy and first nature. If this is true and it works, then someone will come along to pick up the job. Oh, and to do the paperwork. Please.”

CARFAC supports artists

The latest newsletter CALENDAR from CARFAC arrived in my mailbox last week. Its arrival reminded me how important this organization is to Canadian artists.

The first article, “A Living Income for Artists: a proposal for a significant increase in artists’ fees” is well worth reading. “It was just over 35 years ago that the first artists’ fees were paid for the public exhibition and use of an artwork. While fees are a welcome addition, they are still not considered to be a significant source of an artist’s income. Many artists still use their fee to help offset the costs of the exhibition for which they are being paid. It would seem that it’s time that fees began to be considered a significant source of income and formed the basis of a ‘Living Income for Artists’.”

Read all about this and more in the Calendar: Download pdf file

There’s lots more interesting reading: reports about CARCC’s (the copyright collective) move to Ottawa, and from the provincial affiliates, other artists’ organizations, plus lots of membership information.

And, in the “From our ARTchives” column (page 14) is an article written by Jane Martin, “Why Does It Make a Difference? Reactions, Myths and Reality”, referring back to one published in Feb.1981 that discusses how women artists were funded substantially less than their male peers. “…in this country the visual arts field is dominated by men”.

In this follow-up report 23 years later: “2004 Update: Has it Made a Difference?”, some improvement was noted. For example, the Art Bank jury “bought more works by women than by men. But when we did the math, we saw that most of the money was going to male artists who were a whole lot less timid when it came to pricing their work. […] it’s important to note that what I was arguing for in the “Why Does It Make A Difference?” section was not the substitution of a female boss bunch for the reigning male one, but for a lot of different ways of looking at art, of doing art, for the little streams of excellent and exciting work. I was challenging the incestuousness of the jury and recipient pool, the idea that there was a Mainstream, and that it was Excellent. While back then, most of the Big Fish in the pool were male; most male artists weren’t in the pool with the big fish either.”

Why Make Art?

Anna Conti in her Working Artist’s Journal (April 7/04 entry) brings up this perennial question that we artists are always asking of ourselves:

“Why make art? What is it good for?”

She writes: “I don’t think we’ll ever know. The compulsion to make pictures, sculptures, stories, or music has been part of being human since prehistoric times. What changes are the explanations we come up with to explain or justify our behavior. We have to come up with an explanation that will convince people to leave us alone so that we can keep making art. Or better yet, an explanation that will convince people to support us in making art.”

I particularly enjoyed all the quotes from many well-known artists answering this question.

UPDATED Jan.2014: Anna Conti started a new blog in 2006, and we lost her older pages and comments. Hence the link no longer works and has been removed.

I am also sorry to have lost the excellent comments I received here as they did not transfer with my blog’s recent move to WordPress. Time takes its toll even in the blog world.

Miksang and the art of perception

As a newcomer to blogging, my recent explorations have been through the immense jungle of blogs on the internet. Chandrasutra’s blog* is one of the interesting finds in this online journey. Particularly fascinating is an item about Miksang photography in the art category, Jan. 13th entry. This is a partial quote:

The inspiration for Miksang images is very different than traditional approaches to photography. You do not, for example, spend time ‘thinking’ about what you will photograph or go off into your day with a ‘plan’ about what you will photograph. You don’t “compose” the photo in anyway. It’s about looking but not looking ‘for’ but looking in. Experiencing, rather than thinking, about the world around you and being alive to all the textures, surfaces, colours. There is an avoidance of that which is narrative or relates to a generated thought. It is actually not simply a form of photography but part of a practice of contemporary Buddhist meditation. Miksang translates as “Good Eye” in Tibetan.

According to Toronto’s Society for Contemplative Photography, Miksang involves “the synchronization of eye and mind. When eye and mind are in the same place the moment by moment vividness of the visual world manifests and is appreciated fully. This manifestation is spontaneous – a flash of perception – the ordinary magic of the phenomenal world. When one connects with pure perception there is no struggle in making a heartfelt and brilliant photographic image that one can share with others […]. These moments of pure perception and appreciation happen all the time but we often ignore and devalue them. However, it is worthwhile to recognize and cultivate these moments because they recollect the inherent openness and goodness of our being.

What a lovely name for this vivid experience that all visual artists at some points have felt, not just in photography. Thanks, Chandrasutra!

*Update Dec.14, 2013: Sadly, this blog is no longer in existence.

Human Marks

For the past decade now, my work has largely been concerned with the marks left by humans and their art upon their environment. It is also about nature’s marks on humankind’s traces and upon nature itself.

My ideas come from a gathering together of experiences, particularly SEEING images that have a kind of pull or tug for me, with a sense of time, history, weathering, and aesthetic qualities. Some important places have been Italy, Germany, Finland, and Hornby Island, Alberta hoodoos and Royal Tyrrell Museum in Canada, and research on rock art from books and the internet.

Taking photographs when possible is a way of gathering materials and archiving images for possible future use in artmaking. Later, in the image-making process I respond again to certain collected photographs with a flash of intuition and excitement (inspiration?) when I see the connections between seemingly disparate imagery and discovering serendipitious things.

These works rarely show human figures except as indirectly represented, as in some rock art images, but there is a strong sense of human presence in the work. For example, this presence is very strong in Nexus IX & Nexus X.

“Nexus” means connections. I am intrigued by the multitude of connections between the past and present, between places, and even within my own work over many years of artmaking. I often reuse my past images in new combinations as I keep discovering new threads.