Tag Archives: art

My Fotos and Paintings are Love Stories

by Peter Seelig
 

My fotos and paintings are love stories.
They are the music of my eyes and the colors of my ears.


 
The Rite of Spring (Photomanipulations)-current exhibition in Vienna

the rite of spring #1

the rite of spring #1

the rite of spring #5

the rite of spring #5

 

“You would like to see more, where hermetic boundaries of signs have their limits and start to try to
interview them“ (Maria Männig)

“By luxurious digital posttreatment he reaches the alienation of the material which is accompanied by an estrangement of the originally photographed object. The reality in its deformed shape wins distance, coagulates to a visual concentrate, in the felt becomes visible.“ (Maria Männig)

 

Digital Art

Bluebirds In My Mind

Bluebirds In My Mind

Beating the sky, for what, for more of  what - For more truth From what

Beating the sky, for what, for more of
what – For more truth From what

 

Paintings

four o clock in the morning

four o clock in the morning

Nina

Nina

 

“The relinquishing of man in music and dance, in colour and painting, in rhythmic movement and
swinging lines constitutes the theme of Peter Seelig’s work. He circuits his subject in drawings and
paintings obsessively. Figures and faces allure in an expressive decidedly modern picture language
presence.” (Prof.Ulrich Gansert)

 

Family Group UP-UP-DOWN

Family Group UP-UP-DOWN

Lilith

Lilith

 

“In his painting the human form acquires a sketch like forcefulness. In a picture group one linear
formulation dominates against a black background. Symbols of elementary simplicity emerge. The
lines are like simultaneously those in a test arrangement , the tracks of racing electrons, becoming
visible is a black eternity, and real figures of Lillith or the flowers for Alice. Strange spirals or the form of an angel flying through the dark room.” (Prof.Ulrich Gansert)

 

Oil Pastels

The Key of Eros

The Key of Eros

on the traces of Claude Monet and Joan  Mitchel #1

on the traces of Claude Monet and Joan
Mitchell #1

 

Drawings

Boattrip

Boattrip

Myself In My Head Out My Head In My  World

Myself In My Head Out My Head In My
World

Looking Right Top To My World

Looking Right Top To My World

On The Top Singing With Mozart

On The Top Singing With Mozart

 

“Peter Seelig’s artistic work grows out of a debate with modern art and a wide range of interests
including music, theatre, ballet and literature. His lovely Vienna atelier apartment is full of books.
Numerous visits to Switzerland and France, where in 1968 he experienced the enthusiasm of the
students in Paris, belong to his personal biography. In philosophy, this sphere of positive energy
would be described as Dionysian. The presentation of this possibility of human being is the program
of his artistic work.” (Prof.Ulrich Gansert)

 

Peter Seelig in the theater Espace Marais Paris  Photo by Maia Citterio

Peter Seelig in the theater Espace Marais Paris
Photo by Maia Citterio

Links
Homepage: www.peterseelig.com
Twitter: www.twitter.com/peter_seelig
Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/peterseelig
Facebook: www.facebook.com/peter.seelig.arte

Formerly Blocked Artist

by Anne Flournoy

TLL COMPOSITE PIC S1-3

For decades, I lived a life of intense frustration as a blocked artist, only occasionally able to get past my inner critic to finish a project.  Ambition and high expectations combined with the fear that I was ‘not quite ready’ kept me in a state of almost perpetual hemming and hawing.  Instead of working, I usually found a million ways to distract myself and became increasingly jealous of artists who were working and making names for themselves.  I heard the suggestions that ‘perfectionism’ and ‘procrastination’ might be my problem but knew that wasn’t it.  I had standards for God’s sake.

And then, in 2007, Delta Airlines gave me my lucky break.  A suitcase, filled with all the notes for the final rewrite of the feature film script I’d been rewriting for 17 years, vanished.  I didn’t know how to proceed without the notes collected from the best scriptwriters I knew.  And in that moment, I remembered that the only reason I had ever wanted to make a feature was to have a career.  Shorts were where my heart had always been and I’d recently heard that this might be a new golden era for short films- that they were even starting to make money on the internet.  With some regret and even more relief, I put the script for my second feature on the shelf.

It was 2007 and YouTube was teeming with videos of cats on skateboards.  No self-respecting filmmaker was putting their work on YouTube but I was going to do just that.  Picking up a camcorder, l began shooting everything in sight.  Birds, cats, my kids…  I’d seen Charlie Bit My Finger with its 50 million plus views and knew that I could match that.  Three months later, embittered by a summer of just-missing every great moment, I heard a producer-friend’s suggestion: “It’s easier, Anne, with a script.”

And so, my 17-year effort went under the knife.  I gutted it of its juiciest moments and began shooting Season One with friends.  Seven years and three seasons later, we have forty two episodes online for free and without ads, with three more launching before December.  It’s called The Louise Log, and it’s a comedy web series, the story of an insecure New York City wife and mother who’s an emotional train wreck.  Her over-active inner voice keeps you up-to-the-minute on her anxieties, resentments and over-the-top expectations which, of course, alternate with doomsday scenarios.  If you like it, please subscribe at http://thelouiselog.com and or on youtube at https://www.youtube.com/user/anneflournoy  Here are some of my favorite episodes so far:  

#4

#8

#13

#29

#30


#37

#39

#40

#41

#42

 

BIO

Before making her award-winning, crowdfunded, comedy web series The Louise LogAnne Flournoy wrote and directed shorts and a feature film which played in festivals from Sundance to Berlin. She’s a Guggenheim Fellow and can be found on twitter as @anneflournoy and at http://thelouiselog.com.

social media links:

The Louise Log website         http://thelouiselog.com

The Louise Log on facebook  https://www.facebook.com/TheLouiseLog?ref=ts

The Louise Log on twitter          https://twitter.com/TheLouiseLog

Anne on twitter       https://twitter.com/AnneFlournoy

tumblr        http://anneflournoy.tumblr.com/

Shifting the Landscape

by Karen McRae

About this series:

Landscape is everything – I think it shapes who we are in many ways, and how we perceive the landscape affects how we ourselves shape it in return.  The images I make, for the most part, are focused on our relationship with our ‘natural’ world. For me it is a relationship of deep love and respect but, of course, there is also the tension that comes from the challenges of actually living on that landscape. When I am making photographs it has often occurred to me that it would be difficult to make an image of place that hasn’t been manipulated by humankind in some way. Often I consciously make an effort to leave out those human traces but they are still there. There are footprints, ghosts, and bits of plastic in all of these photographs. There are probably gas fumes still floating in the ‘Shifting the Landscape’ series because they were all made from a moving car or while traveling on a train.  But there is something very beautiful about gazing out a window while traveling and watching the landscape slip by. It feels like an in-between sort of place full of possibilities and expectations. Those moments pull me back to those childhood experiences where exploring the landscape was pure adventure. Those places are still there to find and to connect to.  And these connections shape our world.

 

Wildflowers

Wildflowers

Wild Grasses

Wild Grasses

Queen Anne's Lace

Queen Anne’s Lace

Etched Autumn

Etched Autumn

Spring Blossoms

Spring Blossoms

Amaranthine & Green

Amaranthine & Green

Part of the Landscape1

Part of the Landscape 1

Part of the Landscape 2

Part of the Landscape  2

Taking Off

Taking Off

 

 

Karen McRae-TrichotomyKaren McRae is and artist and photographer working in Ottawa, Ontario. She graduated from the Ottawa School of Art with a Diploma in Fine Art.

Paintings: http://www.saatchiart.com/karenmcrae

Postcolonial Thoughts: Review of Simon Schama’s Power of Art series: Picasso

by Christopher Hutchinson

Mr. Schama justifies the title of his series by showing how these artists transformed and transcended their times; he rests his case with “Guernica.” That painting shatters even the thickest complacency and breaks what he calls “the habit of taking violent evil in our stride.” Mr. Schama is a passionate and persuasive docent, but unfortunately there is no “we” in art appreciation. Plenty of people can remain unmoved by all kinds of great work. “Power of Art” succeeds not because of the power of the chosen masterpieces but because Mr. Schama masterfully weaves engaging mysteries around each artwork. And he walks and talks viewers through it all in a “History Boys” style that is so chatty and disarming that even the flintiest museumphobe wants to stick around to find out what happened next-Alessandra Stanley http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/18/arts/television/18stan.html?_r=0

Simon Schama’s documentary on Picasso’s Guernica 1937 was 59 minutes hero worship claiming that Guernica 1937 to be Picasso’s finest achievement. In this wasted hour, Schama uses intimate detail to add to the fictitious legend of Picasso. These details that Schama is so excited about are exactly the details that prove how remedial Guernica 1937 is.  The 59 minutes mainly state that  Guernica 1937 is genius because it is large and familiar. Large scale and familiar icons are common tools uses in the infancy painting. Large scale paintings and icons are used by painting infants to hide the obvious flaws present in the painting. This trick works mostly on non-art folk who value scale and equate that with enormous labor that they could never achieve, but Schama is an art historian who should know better. Art work qualified as genius often has nothing to do with how large it is.

“Pablo Picasso’s Guernica is so familiar, so large, so present. It’s physically bigger than a movie screen. But what is the painting about? Is it an account of the Spanish town obliterated by Nazi warplanes – a piece of reportage? Is that why it’s in black and white?

This is the reason why the painting has such an impact. Instead of a laboured literal commentary on German warplanes, Basque civilians and incendiary bombs, Picasso connects with our worst nightmares. He’s saying here’s where the world’s horror comes from; the dark pit of our psyche.” http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/powerofart/picasso.shtml

Probably Picasso’s most famous work, Guernica is certainly the his most powerful political statement, painted as an immediate reaction to the Nazi’s devastating casual bombing practice on the Basque town of Guernica during Spanish Civil War. http://www.pablopicasso.org/guernica.jsp

History paintings

A ‘history painting’ is one which has a serious narrative, or includes exemplars of actions which are intended to have didactic overtones. In this sense the word history relates to the Italian istoria, meaning narrative or story (and not the accurate or documentary description of actual events). History paintings are often large in scale. Their subjects can be taken from the Bible, from mythology or other forms of secular literature, from historical events; or they can be allegories. Noble themes are seen as being particularly worthy of depiction. History painting was viewed as the most important of the genres from about the 16th century, and the climax of an academic painter’s training. It was the equivalent of Epic or Tragedy in literature. http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/glossary/history-painting

The Third of May 1808 Francisco Goya 1814 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco_Goya

The Third of May 1808
Francisco Goya
1814
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco_Goya

At every level Picasso’s Guernica 1937 is an appropriation of the past, a past mainly embedded in Romanticism. Being a romantic isn’t a problem, except that Schama repeated over and over again that Picasso is a Modernist. Modernism and Romanticism are definitely not the same things. Modernism did its best to destroy the narrative of the history-painting genre. Schama tries to smooth this over by calling Guernica 1937 a “modern history-painting.”

After a conversation with Professor Jason Sweet, Sweet pointed out that Guernica 1937 has the same composition of Delacroix’s Liberty Leading the People 1830. It is obvious that Picasso is appropriating famous history-paintings to create Guernica 1937. The outstretched hands present in Goya’s The Third of May 1808 are in the right hand corner, the dead standing underfoot is also present in Liberty leading the people 1830, the terrified horse in David’s Napoleon crossing the Alps 1801. Guernica 1937 amounts to a hodgepodge of icons present in art history roughly 100 years before Picasso. Schama wants us to believe this is Genius. Schama wants us to believe that Guernica 1937 is more present, terrifying and had more of an impact than Goya or Delacroix-Why? What is the motivation behind this? Is this true?

Schama, in the documentary, makes reference to the fact that Guernica 1937 was on display at MOMA in NY for 30 years as validation to its genius, to its significance. There is a fact that Picasso is still the most paid artist due to labels such as genius still heaped upon him. Schama is among many who believe Guernica 1937 is Picasso’s most important piece. Guernica 1937 is actually a 100year step backwards from modernism. Not genius.

Genius & Modernity

Modern Art painting, sculpture, architecture, and graphic arts characteristic of the 20th century and of the later part of the 19th century. Modern art embraces a wide variety of movements, theories, and attitudes whose modernism resides particularly in a tendency to reject traditional, historical, or academic forms and conventions in an effort to create an art more in keeping with changed social, economic, and intellectual conditions. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/modern+art

Guernica 1937’s step back into history painting is an indicator of how much Picasso actually believed in modernity in the first place. It is easy, comfortable and ultimately conceptually lazy to appropriate history the way Guernica 1937 does. Modernity does its best to get rid of narrative and genius, both of which served God, supremacy, and innate ability. Modernism reduces to formal elements, where we can now just focus on the artwork, allowing anyone to attain “genius.” Schama is using “genius” in Picasso the same way as God, supremacy, and innate ability.

The Formal Elements are the parts used to make a piece of artwork. The art elements are line, shape, form, tone, texture, pattern, colour and composition. They are often used together, and how they are organised in a piece of art determines what the finished piece will look like. http://hardleyart.wordpress.com/the-formal-elements-in-art/

The moment that formal analysis is applied to Guernica 1937, the piece crumbles as it relates to genius. When we evaluate Guernica without the sympathy of war, sympathy acceptable in romanticism, it is a remedial painting.

Generic Icons & Universal symbols

The use of the many generic icons and universal symbols is a catchall tool used by artists that are not confident in there own statement. If the viewer does not appreciate the painting, maybe they will like the horse, or the bull, or the crying woman, the obvious universal pyramid right smack in the middle of the piece. Guernica 1937 is just a bad painting, where these icons are cut and paste images surrounding the image without interaction.

Schama makes reference to the history of the icons present in Guernica 1937. Schama explains the use of the iconic imagery is related to the subjects that Picasso has doodled his whole life, which is now galvanized in this triumph of a painting Guernica 1937. Here again Schama is reaching. There are many artists that use popular subjects, especially animals. Using Schama’s rubric all the artists that paint chickens, horses, flags, are now eligible to be genius if those subjects responded a sympathetic political event like 9/11. Is the Mike Brown mural in Ferguson, MO genius? No, neither is Guernica 1937.

A mural in memoriam of Mike Brown, an unarmed black teenager shot by police in Ferguson, Missouri was painted on the side of a business in North St. Louis. The tribute was done by artist Joseph Albanese and commissioned by Signature Screenprinting according to the St. Louis Dispatch. It’s a “dedication to the Mike Brown tragedy and awareness of injustice in our communities,” wrote the custom t-shirt maker on its Facebook page. Funeral services for Brown will be held at the Friendly Temple Missionary Baptist Church on Monday. (Photo: Aymann Ismail/ANIMALNewYork) http://iamturbo.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/ferguson-mike-brown-mural_-600x3371.jpg

A mural in memoriam of Mike Brown, an unarmed black teenager shot by police in Ferguson, Missouri was painted on the side of a business in North St. Louis. The tribute was done by artist Joseph Albanese and commissioned by Signature Screenprinting according to the St. Louis Dispatch. It’s a “dedication to the Mike Brown tragedy and awareness of injustice in our communities,” wrote the custom t-shirt maker on its Facebook page. Funeral services for Brown will be held at the Friendly Temple Missionary Baptist Church on Monday. (Photo: Aymann Ismail/ANIMALNewYork) http://iamturbo.com/mike-brown-rip-mural/

 

Christopher HutchinsonChristopher Hutchinson is an Assistant Professor of Art at Atlanta Metropolitan State College, Archetype Art Gallery Owner in Atlanta, Ga, and Smoke School of Art Founder. He received his Master of Fine Arts Degree in Painting from Savannah College of art & Design, Atlanta and his Bachelor of Arts Degree from the University of Alabama in Huntsville, Alabama. He lived in Alabama for 10 years before moving to Atlanta in 2008.

Learn more about Christopher and his work at Black Flight 144.

 

 

 

 

when love blooms, a visual poetry suite for Tom & Charles

by Amanda Earl

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Amanda_Earl_September-2014_smallAmanda Earl is an Ottawa poet, publisher & pornographer who also noodles around with visual poetry. Her first poetry book, “Kiki,” is out with Chaudiere Books this fall & her first collection of short erotic fiction, “Coming Together Presents Amanda Earl,” whose proceeds go to GMHC, the world’s leading provider of HIV/AIDS prevention, care & advocacy, has just been published. Amanda is the managing editor of Bywords.ca, Ottawa’s literary hub & the fallen angel of AngelHousePress and its transgressive imprint, DevilHouse.

Main site: AmandaEarl.com
Kiki: KikiFolle.com
AngelHousePress: AngelHousePress.com
DevilHousePress: DevilHousePress.com
Literary Blog: amandaearl.blogspot.ca
Tumblr: amandaearl.tumblr.com
Vispo blog: eleanorincognito.blogspot.ca
Twitter: @KikiFolle

Coded Textile Design by Michelle Stephens

This is textile artist Michelle Stephens’s most recent work. She’s written computer code to manipulate traditional textile patterns into new reanimated patterns for print and weave.

The images show how the work started from a traditional pattern,  changed to a coded print design–and then changed back into woven cloth that appears to be ‘glitched’.

The videos are of the woven cloth made only a few weeks ago and is due to be exhibited in the next month.

Michelle Stephens IMG_1

 

Michelle Stephens IMG_2

 

Michelle Stephens IMG_3

 

Michelle Stephens IMG_4

 

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Michelle Stephens IMG_6

Coded Jacquard Design 1:

Coded Jacquard Design 2:

Coded Jacquard Design 3:

Coded Jacquard Design 4:

Coded Jacquard Design 5:

Coded Jacquard Design 6:

Coded Jacquard Design 7:

 

A&B NI Michelle Stephens Dec '122 copyArtist: Michelle Stephens

BIOGRAPHY:

Michelle Stephens graduated from the University of Ulster, Belfast with First Class Honours from her B.A. (Hons) in Fine and Applied Arts, specialising in Textile Art in 2010. Following this, Stephens was offered a place on the “+1 Hons “ Programme at the University – an artist in residence programme.

Upon completion of this Stephens was accepted onto the ‘making it’ programme with Craft NI 2011-2013 and as a result of the work completed on this programme she is now a member of internationally recognised ‘Sixty Two Group of Textile Artists”.

CURRENT PRACTICE:

A defining characteristic of her work has been the sustained commitment to the conceptual synthesis of contemporary technology and historical textile sources. Currently her work involves the examination of technology as a design tool by using the coding language of processing as a method of reanimating the traditional textile patterns of Paradise Mill, Macclesfield into woven jacquard cloths.

Website: www.michellestephens.co.uk

Twitter: MStephensArtist

Facebook: Michelle Stephens Artist

Email: mail@michellestephens.co.uk

 

Old School Game Hacking as Inspiration

by Ryan Seslow

Ryan Seslow 1

 

Ryan Seslow 2

 

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I created the pieces in this post all in immediacy. I’m inspired by the content so things happen fast in that energy. The works in this post have all started off as still images, mostly as manual collages, but I knew that the end result would be a series of GIF animations and Vine pieces. These are still being generated as we speak. As a kid in the 1980’s I always loved the graphics that nintendo had in their video games. I am not a big gamer in terms of actually playing video games. Especially the way I did as a kid, but I absolutely love the art, the art development process and overall visual video game art aesthetic. I love the fact that I can evoke the fun and reflective childhood emotions as I search for my favorite old games on youtube and other sites dedicated to this art form (there are tons of them.) My #GIFIFGHT collaborator General Howe’s recent work has inspired me to take more action on this new series. If you haven’t seen his hacks into the GI Joe animated series, it’s a must see. Check it here.

 

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This first series of work brings together elements of super mario world, megaman 2, graffiti and my own characters and  figures. This process will continue to slowly bring in more of my own content to reinvent it and allow me to relearn about it. I find this to be a fun way to start. This seems obvious to me as the artist, but I am interested in feedback from the viewer as well. These pieces are light, fun, and colorful. It is my intention to evoke memories and inspire others with this body of work. So what happens next? Well, this blog post will expand, and expand. Im working with the presentation idea of where these pieces will be shown. Im not thinking 100% of traditional gallery spaces, but more along the lines of displacing the works in areas where you would least expect to see them. Of course I am not going to give this away completely right now so stay tuned. I view this post as an ongoing thread that I will continue to add the new works to.

 

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 More to come.

Ryan Seslow is a visual artist, independent curator, graphic designer, and professor of fine art living and working in New York. Working in a variety of mediums, Seslow shows his work both nationally and internationally. He teaches various fine art graduate and undergraduate level studio courses simultaneously between four colleges in the metropolitan NY area.

Find him on Social Media

Flickr -View the Art of Ryan Seslow:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/rmsmovement

Twitter – @ryanseslow – http://twitter.com/#!/ryanseslow

Tumblr –  http://theartofryanseslow.tumblr.com

Linked In– http://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanseslow

Facebook – http://www.facebook.com/ryan.seslow

Instagram – http://instagram.com/ryanseslow

TechnophemeraRyan is currently working on a project called Technophemera. Technophemera is a technology-inspired installation by street artists Leon Reid IV and Ryan Seslow. Check out the details at Kickstarter.

Concept: Technophemera highlights the speed of technology’s evolution. With new digital devices produced every minute, technology both reinvents itself and renders obsolete at an exponential rate.

Technophemera 2Installation: The installation will be an archaeological site filled with dated computer equipment appearing as a graveyard of old hardware. The technology will be cast in concrete and burrowed in sand suggesting a fossilization process. In adding to the effect are dig site tools such as shovels, brushes, magnifying glasses and caution tape.

Creative Remix – Word in Sound and Image

Marc Neys-Ladder 3

One of the hopes of Creative Thresholds is that different art forms and genres meet and that the convergence inspires creatives of all types, resulting in dialogue and possibly collaboration. In this post, a poem, which had been inspired by a painting, in turn inspires a film. The process and the individual works are…magical.

Watch the film, “Ladder Our Boat,” and read about the process from both the poet, Maureen Doallas, and the filmmaker, Swoon (AKA Marc Neys).

The video is best seen on full screen with good volume.

Enjoy!

Melissa, curator and editor

Creative Remix – Word in Sound and Image

by Maureen E. Doallas and Swoon (AKA Marc Neys)

 

 

The Poem:

A Ladder Our Boat

after Holly Friesen’s Warrior Canoe

When we make a tree a ladder, we climb
out of the flaming fire, through our fear.
We are each from earth’s guts spilled,
Persephone rising, wild mint lacing
loose braids, sheaves of grain in hand,
spring’s re-welcoming cheered.

When we make the ladder our boat, we sail on
a kiss of wind above the Hades of our making,
spirits water-rocked in Zeus’s arms, seeds
of the pomegranate bursting, our offspring
full-disgorged.

We strike our fevered blessings on the wood,
water-tight, wave at the moon we circle twice:
the light, our safe harbor, shore.

© Maureen E. Doallas
Printed with Permission of Author

Marc Neys-Ladder 1

The Process:

Maureen: Nic Sebastian, an excellent poet herself, is the founder of The Poetry Storehouse, which is dedicated to promoting “new forms and delivery methods for page-poetry”; the site has become a terrific repository of poems in text, audio, and video. I submitted five poems, which Nic accepted, with the understanding that any and all would be made freely available for creative remixing. Among the selections is my poem “A Ladder, Our Boat”. The poem first appeared in the Image-ine series at TweetSpeak Poetry; Image-ine, to which I’ve contributed numerous ekphrastic poems (including a series inspired by Lisa Hess Hesselgrave‘s paintings), is a place for discovering and learning about and sharing poetry that is inspired by paintings or other media. “A Ladder, Our Boat” was inspired by Holly Friesen‘s exquisite painting “Warrior Canoe”; I shared the poem with Holly after I wrote it, and she was kind enough to allow us to use an image of the painting at Image-ine.

Marc Neys-Ladder 2Marc Neys aka Swoon, who is a tremendous talent, first sent me a message via Facebook to listen to a soundtrack he’d composed for my poem “A Ladder, Our Boat”. I expressed my delight, and was thrilled Marc was setting my poem. Marc continued developing his concept for the poem, incorporating images from footage he collected.  Unlike some of Marc’s other remixes, this one has no narration. Marc’s completed videopoem is “Ladder Our Boat”. Marc is entirely responsible for concept, camera, editing, and music. I am very pleased with the result.

Ladder 4Swoon (Marc): For my latest video for a poem taken from The Poetry Storehouse I went back to my early days. That is to say, there was a need to create a videopoem without a voice again (and I hadn’t done that in a long while).

I started with collecting a series of images that could either tell a new story or create a different path to go on when combined with a certain line from the poem. Once I had collected the footage and paired them with certain lines, I needed a timeframe. So I created a soundtrack with a lot of background noises (breathing, scratching, squeaking,…).

With these sounds I started editing the chosen footage. I combined the lines of the poem with the images. Giving the words space and time to take root in or react to the images. I love this way of working and I wonder why I don’t use that technique more often… Yes these works need to be played on a larger screen for full effect!

Maureen E. Doallas

Maureen E. Doallas is the author of Neruda’s Memoirs: Poems (T.S. Poetry Press, 2011). Her work has appeared in the anthologies Open to Interpretation: Water’s EdgeOpen to Interpretation: Love & Lust, and Oil and Water…And Other Things That Don’t Mix; and in Felder Rushing’s book Bottle trees. Her poems also have appeared in Every Day PoemsThe Woven Tale Press MagazineThe Found Poetry Review (special David Foster Wallace edition), The Victorian Violet Press & Journal, The Poetry Storehouse, VerseWrights, Escape Into Life, Poets for Living Waters, Red Lion Square, The Beautiful Due, the sad red earth, The Poetry Tree, and Englewood Review of Books. Her interviews and feature articles have appeared at TweetSpeak Poetry and The High Calling. Maureen writes daily at her blog Writing Without Paper, is an Artist Watch editor for the online arts magazine Escape Into Life, and a contributing writer to Manhattan Arts and TweetSpeak Poetry. An art collector, she owns a small art-licensing company, Transformational Threads.

Social Media: I’m on SheWrites, FaceBook, Twitter, Goodreads, SoundCloud, and LinkedIn.

http://twitter.com/Doallas
https://www.facebook.com/maureen.doallas
http://soundcloud.com/mdoallas
http://www.linkedin.com/in/maureendoallas

Transformational Threads:

Another collaboration of mine: http://juancarloshernandezphotographe.blogspot.com/2011/07/night-stalkingcollaboration-with-poet.html

Marc NeysSwoon (AKA Marc Neys) (°1968, Essen, Belgium) is an artist who works in a variety of media; he’s a video-artist / soundscape-constructor. 

“His work is provocative, beautiful and disturbing. Using poems as guidelines, Swoon (Marc Neys) creates video and soundscapes that is instantly recognizable for its dreamlike quality as well as the skill with which the artist extracts new meaning from the poems he illuminates.” (Erica Goss)

Swoon’s work has been featured at film and video-art festivals all over the world.

In 2014 Swoon released his first album of soundscapes ‘Words/No Words’ on Already Dead Tapes. He curates, gives workshops and writes a monthly column for Awkword Paper Cut.

swoonbildos@gmail.com
http://swoon-videopoetry.com/
http://vimeo.com/swoon
https://soundcloud.com/swoon_aka_marc_neys

 

 

Ensorcelled Moments

by Axel A.

“What inspires and motivates me to paint is exploring, enjoying the world, and telling those ensorcelled moments I experienced using different Art Forms. I’m Caribbean (from FWI) but live in France, and belong to these two places. So I try to find this kind of sense of belonging through my artwork.”

 

Axel A 1

 

Axel A 2

 

Axel A 3

 

Axel A 4

 

Axel A 6

 

Axel A. is a Caribbean / French artist who lives in Paris.

His very personal work is characterized by a very bold use of color and imaginative abstract figures. These colors and figures interact, forming a work of strong visual impact. Axel wants his Art to touch our feelings and brighten our enthusiasm.

Axel wasn’t schooled in painting; he learns while he is discovering the world.

He works in acrylic, oil, and collage. His artwork is based on the “movement” by a cardboard end by way of instruments of paint.

 

Axel A 8

 

Axel A 9

 

Axel A 10

 

Axel A 11

 

Axel A 12

 

Axel A 13

 

Axel A 14

 

Axel A 15

 

“Art gives us a gift into creating, thinking differently, and expressing ourselves–providing others an insight into and appreciation of different cultures. That’s why wherever life takes me I will follow and continue with my Art.”

 

For more information about Axel A.:

 

Sonoridad

by Julio Mejia

Artist Statement

My work is interested in the willful contrast of paint, which mirrors the narrative of an exemplar inherited lineage.  This lineage of unconventional risk-takers reflects the uncomfortable uncertain outcome of each painting.  These paintings are uneasy gambles of a romantic life.  The directional effort of paint unveils the visceral tension of beauty found in the forces of nature.

 

Conflict

Conflict

 

Confrontation

Confrontation

 

Contemplation of Divine things

Contemplation of Divine things

 

Creole

Creole

 

Descent

Descent

 

Intensity

Intensity

 

Rapture

Rapture

 

Warmth

Warmth

 

Julio MejiaProfile2Artist: Julio Mejia

Born in New Orleans, Louisiana 1965 to Peruvian/Chilean parentages, Mejia is an abstract expressionist that uses archival oil, solvent and acrylic, as an alchemist that focuses in the application of paint. He has exhibited at the 3rd Bronx Biennial-New York, Latino Art Museum- California, Rialto Art Center-Georgia State University, Roy C. Moore Gallery-North Georgia University, Art Takes Times Square, New York, Auburn Avenue Research Library, Atlanta, Boricua College, Manhattan, New York, and the Aaron Davis Hall of the City College of New York in Manhattan, New York, New York.

Mejia is represented in the collections of the Cultural Patrimony of Peru, Latino Art Museum, and The Tubman African American Museum.

Documentary link:

http://www.juliomejiaart.com/#!video/c4m7

Facebook page:

https://www.facebook.com/JulioMejiaArt

Website:

http://www.juliomejiaart.com/#!home/mainPage

ZuCot Gallery:

http://zucotgallery.com/