Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Still Life with Life Still? (Poem and Photograph)



Still Life with Life Still?

Not for long. The blossoms
Soon will discover their blood
Miraculously has changed
Itself to tap water. And their roots
Have voted to remain
Behind w
ith their own kind.

The fruit, fortunately,
Does not yet know how to scream.
Yet, if you listen very carefully,
You may hear it attempt

To sing.

                        -- Si Dunn



From the forthcoming book of poems and photographs by Si Dunn:
The One-Trillionth Picture of the Eiffel Tower
(Copyright 2010. All rights reserved.)

Now at the Louvre (Poem and Photograph)




Now at the Louvre

What does art see
When it stares back at us,
Sculpting its own blindness
With framed eyes?

Are we the vision
Or merely the stone?
The murderous paintbrush
Or the reticent chisel?

What does art see
When we blink? When
We think we understand
Yet never listen

To the endless shapes
We incessantly create?

               -- Si Dunn



From the forthcoming book of poems and photographs by Si Dunn:
The One-Trillionth Picture of the Eiffel Tower
(Copyright 2010. All rights reserved.)

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Art & Fear: Don't Let Worries Stop Your Creativity

The book Art & Fear is a compact work with only 122 pages. But it lives up to its tagline, "An Artist's Survival Guide," and to its official subtitle: "Observations on the Perils (and Rewards) of Artmaking."

The book's co-authors, David Bayles and Ted Orland, describe it as "a book about making art. Ordinary art." Their work is not aimed at the Mozarts of the world. Instead, it is written for "the rest of us" who strive to create works of art in many different forms on a daily basis.

"We're all subject to a familiar and universal progression of human troubles -- troubles we routinely survive,but which are (oddly enough) routinely fatal to the artmaking process," the co-authors note. The challenge for artists is to learn how to continue working and creating in the face of these unavoidable troubles. We must learn "how to not quit," the writers point out.

"Fear that your next work will fail is a normal, recurring and generally healthy part of the artmaking cycle," they emphasize.

"Artists quit when they convince themselves that their next effort is already doomed to fail. And artists quit when they lose the destination for their work -- for the place their work belongs."

Art & Fear seeks to help artists understand the sources of their fears. And it offers ways to try to overcome those fears and keep working even when an artist has no no clear idea what he or she is trying to create.

The $12.95 paperback is now published by Image Continuum Press, and it has been reprinted at least 19 times since it first appeared in 1994. Clearly, a lot of fearful artists have been reading it and recommending it to others.

-- Si Dunn

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