Aster + Sage
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Posts Tagged ‘artist’

Daydreaming about Doodling

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

I’ve been thinking about all the drawing I’ve been doing since May 1 for The Doodle Off [goal: 150 doodles by July 1] and I’m surprised by how much I’ve learned in such little time. Something about being involved in a contest has encouraged me to be so much more creative. It became obvious pretty early on that 150 is not a lot of doodles if you’re not interested in the quality of your work. So that begs the question: what’s going to make 150 drawings important to me? I’ve tried out a bunch of media: colored pencils, fountain pens, pencils, crayons, markers and pens. Even though I’ve used a lot of them before, I’ve used the Doodle Off as an opportunity to be more experimental.

The most poignant realization I’ve had is that I’m probably drawing more now than I have in years. Considering I think about drawing all the time, how could I have fallen so short? Now I remember! Silly me, I had a baby. And when she was an infant there wasn’t  any time to draw… and now that she’s 2 there’s more time for drawing, even if I’m just sketching cars when I’m stuck in traffic.

I’m hoping my enthusiasm for drawing can stick with me past July 1 because I’ve found my rediscovery of drawing to be so rewarding. Drawing can be meditative and thereputic when I’m absendmindedly doodling with markers and crayons. I could be drawing my design ideas for new products before I commit to making samples with fabric and a sewing machine. The act of capturing my ideas on paper ignites some sort of magic and I want to make that happen over and over again.

Makes me think: Agnes Martin

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

A recent trip to MOMA in NYC had me looking more closely at Agnes Martin. Agnes Martin (Dia Foundation) has a great selection of Martin’s paintings and drawings and as well as essays by various authors discussing Martin’s life.

Agnes Martin book

Agnes Martin was originally from Saskatchewan, Canada. She lived mostly in New Mexico but studied at Columbia University and lived for a little while in NYC when her work became popular. Martin was enthralled with nature, especially the landscape of New Mexico, and that’s where she lived an isolated existance for the majority of her life.

I read that Martin sat so still that birds would land on her.

I love the idea that Martin  loved the outdoors passionately and yet her paintings seemingly have nothing at all to do with nature. In fact Martin used her art work to explore her theories about reality, beauty and happiness. Isn’t it kind of awesome that Martin could translate nature into drawings and paintings that are defined by grids and lines?

I’m intrigued by artist whose works are straightforward at first glance but are in fact realizations of a personal manefesto.  Barnett Newman is another artist that comes to mind– he used solid colored canvases with a single stripe to explore ideas about art as an integral part of our life experience.

I’m now thinking about contemporary artists as philosophers with very specific and self-defined views of the world. It seems to me that we are missing an opportunity to incorporate their insight if we look at contemporary paintings without learning about their historical context.