Just a virtual filing cabinet of the things that amuse and interest me and by default you should appreciate too damn it.
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
World's Largest Drawing
Friday, June 20, 2008
Solar Powered Modern Stonehenge
Full press release...[link]
See more photos of the Solar Collector ...[link]
Saturday, June 14, 2008
The Art of David Macaulay
Saturday, June 7, 2008
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Damn Another One
It's artist like Alton Kelly or Rick Griffin who made album covers so wonderful. The art just doesn't translate the same on five inch square CD cases.
Legendary artist Alton Kelley created a graphic style that rocked the world beginning in the psychedelic Sixties. His concert posters, logo designs, LP album covers, and fine art have forevermore defined that time. Kelley, born June 17, 1940, passed away peacefully at home June 1st of complications from a long illness.
More to read here from the New York Times.
Sunday, June 1, 2008
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Arthur Ganson - Kinetic Sculpture
Arthur Ganson's moving sculptures are fascinating and whimsical. He has a gift of a incredible engineering mind and a sense of humor about his artwork. Arthur Ganson's kinetic metal sculptures mix high art with gearhead humor. He's also the inventor of the kids' construction toy Toobers & Zots.
The following is an excerpt from TED TALKS:
Arthur Ganson
Why you should listen to him:
A modern-day creator of "twittering machines," Arthur Ganson uses simple, plain materials to build witty mechanical art. But the wit is not simply about Rube Goldberg-ian chain-reaction gags (though you'll find a few of those). His work examines the quiet drama of physical motion, whether driven by a motor or by the actions of the viewer. Notions of balance, of rising and falling, of action and reaction and consequence, play themselves out in wire and steel and plastic.
Ganson has been an artist-in-residence at MIT (where the Lemelson-MIT Award Program named him an Inventor of the Week, and where his show "Gestural Engineering" is ongoing) and has shown his work at art and science museums around the world -- including a current, held-over show at the phaeno in Wolfsburg, Germany.
"Ganson's work isn't ruled by a clockwork philosophy; it is open to whatever truths about life and motion his wires, motors, oil, and chains will lend themselves to. His pieces are not, like de Vaucanson's duck, scrupulous mechanical copies of living things, but are instead suggestive -- or, as Ganson puts it, "gestural," frequently grounded in biological and bodily processes but never limited to them."
Harvey Blume, the Atlantic
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Drop Everything & Draw
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
The Joy Of Painting
I think Bob would have had enough of a sense of humor to have enjoyed the following video's. I hope you laugh as much as I did.
Sarah Oppenheimer
Check out the following video from KETC News in St. Louis.
Then read more HERE about her most recent installation at the Mattress Factory.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Making Sense of Modern Art
San Francisco's Museum of Modern Art website has a informative flash presentation showcasing the fourteen Robert Rauschenberg works in the museums collection.
Rauschenberg Case Study
Challenging the Limits.
click on this link.....HERE to go to the site
then click on the red arrow to the left.
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008)
...more from the New York Times
...even more at ARTdaily
Monday, May 12, 2008
Whew!
I have not had time to update this flock'n blog in a while.
I have been busy with school and kids and kids school and oh yeah,
occasional I work to make a buck. I'll get some new and interesting things for you to peruse soon I hope. I have lots to share with you just no time to do it. In the meantime the girls and I of the GirSwirlS website have begun a new creative endeavor and we invite you to join us. Go to www.girlswirls.blogspot.com to find out more.
Sunday, April 6, 2008
King Tut tours the U.S.
"Tutankhamun: The Golden King and the Great Pharaohs," a new exhibition featuring more than 130 treasures from the tomb of the celebrated pharaoh King Tut and additional ancient sites, will begin a United States tour this fall. Read more at Art Daily.TUTANKHAMUN CANOPIC COFFINETTE - Each of the four miniature coffins of Tutankhamun held a different internal organ, and this one originally contained the stomach. Guarded by distinct gods, this container had the protection of both Duamutef and the goddess Neith, deities named in the inscription on the front. The goddess also appears on the underside of the lid, along with a spell inscribed inside the coffi nette from the Book of the Dead. Traces around the name of Tutankhamun suggest that the king appropriated this exquisitely inlaid golden container. Photo © SANDRO VANNINI
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Friday, February 22, 2008
Design and the Elastic Mind
Peter Frankfurt (American, born 1958) of Imaginary Forces (USA, est. 1996), Greg Lynn (American, born 1964) of Greg Lynn FORM (USA, est. 1994), Alex McDowell (British, born 1955) of Matter Art and Science (USA, est. 2001), New City Concept. 2008, Images by Peter Frankfurt/Imaginary Forces, Greg Lynn/GL Form, and Alex McDowell.
NEW YORK.- Design and the Elastic Mind is an exhibition about the latest developments in design, and a glimpse into what the future holds. It explores the reciprocal relationship between science and design in the contemporary world, bringing together more than 200 objects, installations, and concepts that marry the most advanced scientific research with attentive considerations of human nature, limitations, habits, and aspirations. The exhibition shows designers’ ability to grasp momentous revolutions in technology, science, and history that demand or reflect major adjustments in human behavior, and to convert them into objects that people can actually understand and use. The objects in the exhibition range from images of nanoscopic devices to vehicles, from appliances to interfaces, and from pragmatic solutions for everyday use to provocative ideas meant to influence our future choices. The exhibition, on view from February 24 to May 12, 2008, is organized by Paola Antonel...More
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Frida Kahlo Exhibition
Monday, February 18, 2008
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Louis I. Kahn: Architect as Artist
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Action Jackson
This is a except of the Hans Namuth 1951 film documenting Jackson Pollocks technique coined "action" painting. Truly one of my biggest influences. The understanding of his philosophy and technique helped me come to the realization that the art of creation is the true artists art.
The finished result is for everyone else.
and then there's this guy...
Now I won't say he's an idiot, others have.
I like him....his art is............interesting.
(thanks Art Bell for that lesson)
...and hes damn funny too.
Robert Rauschenberg - Erased De Kooning
...and the guy is damn funny really.
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Horns & Atlers
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Junk-A-Doodles
With terms like Woogie Wedsday and Junk-a-Doodles, Holli Conger's website A Girl Who Creates was one worth bookmarking. I recently had time to revisit it and really explore it and her other sites. All Great! Fun for artists of all ages. I'm glad to have something to call my found object art other than found object art. Junk-a-Doodle is so much more fun to say and describes them better, they really are much more like little doodles.
http://www.agirlwhocreates.com/
http://www.thetypejunkie.com/blog/
http://www.junkadoodles.com/
http://www.holliconger.com
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Friday, January 11, 2008
In the Beginning...
....there was empty space. Like a goldfish I grew to fill it.
Give me a soap box and I'll Stand on it.
Don't give a soap box, and I'll kick you in the nuts and take it from you.
No not really, I'm passive....
....aggressive. AH HA!
Now let me explain, I'm not gonna preach from that soapbox or anything, I don't care enough about you to tell you what to do.
I'd rather watch you flock up on your own then to tell you how you were wrong.
That's how you learn right? I want the box to keep you off it. Why stand on the box when I can put stuff in it? I always have stuff that needs boxes to be inserted into.
I won't laugh at you, really. I'll laugh with you... later...when you reflect on your own stupidity.
My point is......not really a point at all...in fact, it's more of an oval.
Oh yeah, this site might have the occasional rant. However I'm not witty enough or interested enough (just keeping it real) to do it on a regular basis. What you might find here is some of my favorite paintings or creations of other sorts and links to others I find interesting and, by default, you should too. Ultimately I hope you might see something you like that I've done and like it enough to donate me some of your hard earned cash (or your drug money obtained in dubious ways and laundered thru your Canadian mob connections). You know, like you do at church. Just think of me as your reverend. Instead of salvation, I offer you ART in exchange. My absolution comes at a much higher price. (Can Canada claim to have a mob? I've never heard of one.)
Look. Buy More Art! Thats what I'm saying, and hey why the flock not mine!
Buckle up the captain has just turned on the fasten seatbelt sign and suggests you start smoking, It's makes the turbulence more enjoyable.