Friday, March 28, 2008
show and tell
after cecille / prismacolor / 5" x 6"
© 2007 gordon fraser. all rights reserved. www.gordonfraserfinearts.com
I posted the above drawing to a drawing forum on artreview.com and received a number of replies from the impassioned defense, to the legitimate questioning, to the ridiculous dismissal/panning by the court jester. I then posted the following reply. [see the whole conversation here...]
Byron, Alaleh and Jonathan all raise some interesting questions, establishment vs. anti-establishment, abstraction vs. realism, illustration, decoration, basically the stuff we as artists (an the non-artists critics) have been tangling with for the last 150 years! I started to jot down some notes and realized I have a lot to say about all of them. At this point I will have to sidebar those discussions to a different forum so as not to take away from the art being shown here. That being said, given that this is "Show and Tell" I will offer a few comments. For the purpose of the discussion I will try to separate formal questions from questions of content, but in reality in the process of drawing, the concerns interpenetrate and cannot be separate. First, in terms of content, this painting is about desire, pretty straight forward establishment content going back hundreds/thousands of years, so to byron's point I do not view this piece as anti-establishment. It is a question/conversation/meditation I have been engaged with for about six months and it offers one viewpoint among many. The brief history is that this project began as 5 minute poses in the studio with a clothed model, who happens to be a dancer, over a two week period back in october. The initial studio sketches were executed in watercolour and I have carried on this work in oil, watercolour, collage, and prismacolor pencils, using both the sketches and memory of some poses as inspiration. This is one example.
Now to the more formal issues:
1) Mark making - I have used gestural marks and scribbles to convey the energy and excitement of desire, which often can feel uncontrollable and overwhelming when it is being experience.
2) colour - the dominant colour of the piece is red, chosen first off because the model has red hair and there was red fabric hanging on the wall behind where the model was posing. I then pushed and changed the hue, layering different reds (which unfortunately can't be seen so well on the computer screen) in order to develop a sense of the warmth, heat, and excitement of desire. The red moves very quickly toward the viewer and allows me to pull the background right to the surface, compressing the space of whole composition. Secondarily, the two blue planes sandwich and squeeze the red plane, creating a dynamic tension and opening up the space of the composition.
3) composition - the compositional structure is very simple, built on a tilted plane, stolen from the italian masters such as Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese, etc., to provide a dynamic structure to both house and convey energy and excitement. It helps create the movement and space in the drawing.
Friday, March 21, 2008
work in progress - 3/21
Thursday, March 13, 2008
introversions closing get down!!!
Join us next Friday March 21st for some great music and of course my paintings!!!
For location and directions see map
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Monday, March 3, 2008
Saatchi Showdown - Latest Head to Head | the blind swimmer
Check out the latest Saatchi Showdown head to head, but be forewarned...Mores Rabenstern's paper collage "Searching for New Ways" certainly looks like a search and an unfruitful one at that, as he seems to have stumbled upon creating a fashion ad circa a few years ago and if there is a concept in there i'm at a loss...and Erik Weiser's piece looks like a sorry excuse for a Dubuffet. Sorry guys, no offense to the artists who no doubt work hard, but this is bad student work. Hopefully these two artists are students with a drive to grow and develop further as artists. But at this point I have to ask, where is the craft and where is the concept? From a visual analysis, both compositions are built on circles situated dead center on the surface and bisect with strong verticals. This creates static compositions that lock the eyes in place in the center. Despite the busy surface design in both pieces, neither one creates a sense of movement or tension, thus failing to create any visual interest. In terms of color, both artists are working with gray palettes that fail to capture the mystery, emotional subtlety, and nuance of gray. Instead the grays used here hit the viewer as dead on arrival, which, if its any consolation is the same effect as the use of gray by art market hero Jasper Johns, as currently seen at the Met.
Unfortunately, I have to imagine that these two artists made it here to the head to head, because they have the biggest email lists. And of course, in this forum that is how it works. (In the nature of full disclosure...I have participated in three Saatchi Showdowns and have gotten creamed, the first one I sent out to my list and had a large response, but still scored below a 6 out of 10, the other two I didn't send to my list and did not see that many people view and voting for my pieces and average was below 5.) I don't expect the best artwork to emerge from this kind of forum, but I have to imagine that there are a lot of emerging artists producing serious painting, sculpture, installation, etc., that show both strong craft skills and conceptual frameworks, that have their work posted on Saatchi. One would hope that those voting could be a little more discriminating.[...more]
View Saatchi Showdown
Read more at the blindswimmer.com
Unfortunately, I have to imagine that these two artists made it here to the head to head, because they have the biggest email lists. And of course, in this forum that is how it works. (In the nature of full disclosure...I have participated in three Saatchi Showdowns and have gotten creamed, the first one I sent out to my list and had a large response, but still scored below a 6 out of 10, the other two I didn't send to my list and did not see that many people view and voting for my pieces and average was below 5.) I don't expect the best artwork to emerge from this kind of forum, but I have to imagine that there are a lot of emerging artists producing serious painting, sculpture, installation, etc., that show both strong craft skills and conceptual frameworks, that have their work posted on Saatchi. One would hope that those voting could be a little more discriminating.[...more]
View Saatchi Showdown
Read more at the blindswimmer.com
JC Fridays - March 7, 2008
Art House Productions presents
HUDSON COUNTY ART SLAM!!
A powerful exhibition of over 20 contemporary artists with
live music, visual inspiration & interactive creativity.
FRIDAY, MARCH 7TH, 2008 * 7:30PM-12AM * FREE!
A JC Fridays Event
Art House Productions
at Hamilton Square
1 McWilliams Place, Roof
Jersey City, NJ
(SE Corner of Hamilton Park near Erie/8th)
Barrier-free
Additional viewing hours:
Saturday, March 8th * 2-6pm
Join us for a SLAM! of astronomic proportions
Hosted by Roland Ramos
MUSIC BY:
Terrence McManus (8:00- 9:00)
Dave Calamoneri (9:15 - 9:45)
Sailors in Rags (10:00 - 10:45)
Lloyd United (11:00 - 11:30)
Bioluminessence (11:30 - 12:00)
VISUAL ARTISTS: Gordon Fraser, Sauman Choy, NuKeM, Christine Goodman,
Felix Gosse, John Ruddy, Chris Kappmier, Ali Brief, David Ribyat, Robert
David, hyphen-One, Roxana Marroquin, Wase, Leo Genese, Gene Wisniewski, David
Calamoneri, Amy Bauer, Ramon Arcadio, Camilo Godoy, Henry
"quester" Hechavarria, "Saint" Marcelo Dos Santos, K. Shelton, Vanessa
Corranza, Laura Stagnaro Martinez, Rodolfo Diaz, Scet, Cristina Villaflor,
Support provided by LaOla.org
***ALL ARTWORK FOR SALE***
***Cutting edge artwork at unoppressive prices***
We now accept all major credit cards
For more information, please contact
info@arthouseproductions.org or call (201) 915-9911
www.arthouseproductions.org
for more information visit www.jcfridays.com
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