Friday, July 27, 2012

John Murray classes week of July 30, 2012


from Cabbage Gardens

By Susan Howe b. 1937 Susan Howe
The past
will overtake   
alien force   
our house   
formed
of my mind   
to enter
explorer
in a forest   
of myself
for all
my learning   
Solitude
quiet
and quieter   
fringe
of trees
by a river
bridges black   
on the deep   
the heaving sea   
a watcher stands
to see her ship   
winging away   
Thick noises
merge in moonlight   
dark ripples   
dissolving
and
defining
spheres
and
snares

             Place of importance as in the old days
stood on the ramparts of the fort
                                                 the open sea outside   
alone with water-birds and cattle
                        knee-deep in a stream
grove of reeds
               herons watching from the bank
henges
      whole fields honeycombed with souterrains   
human
                        bones through the gloom
       whose sudden mouth
surrounded my face
                      a thread of blue around the coast   
                                                         feathery moon   
eternity swallows up time
                                     peaceable as foam
                        O cabbage gardens
summer’s elegy
                        sunset survived


Welcome to the first week of  Late Summer Supercharged Painting.
Here's a Summer-ish poem in the postmodern genre of poet Susan Howe. It is full of imagery.
I wonder if you can find a painting here. An unfamiliar picture that explores the surprising world of visual juxtaposition and Postmodern surrealism. 

Friday, July 20, 2012

John Murray classes week of July 23, 2012

547 West 21st Street, Chelsea
Through Aug. 3
This inspired show is accompanied by a brochure that mimics the cover design of “October,” the left-leaning bible of art theory, and has a title to match. But the ideas therein are derived from the brothers Chico, Groucho, Gummo, Harpo and Zeppo.
Organized by Jacob and Jens Hoffmann, the exhibition is partly a sincere tribute; ample space is devoted to Marx Brothers films, photographs and ephemera. In the entrance corridor are two paintings by Harpo, including a charmingly folksy view of a bullring.
Also here, however, are wisecracking works by four contemporary artists and one modern one (Duchamp, naturally). Some of these figures, like Rodney Graham, are known as pranksters in their own right; others merely share a target with the Marxes, as is apparent when Jack Goldstein’s looped film of the MGM lion, “Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer” (1975), is screened opposite the classic bit in which Groucho, Chico and Harpo roar and squeak.
In Richard Prince’s painting series “You Bet Your Life,” mustaches, noses and eyebrows become floating compositional elements: Groucho glasses envisioned by Malevich, perhaps. They’re joined by Duchamp’s well-known Mona Lisa with a mustache, “L.H.O.O.Q.,” which in this context looks more goofy than ribald.
The youngest artist here, Tim Lee, made a two-monitor video installation specifically for the show. Based on the mirror scene in “Duck Soup,” it shows Mr. Lee mimicking his own movements from one screen to another and is a wonderfully subtle bit of slapstick. It reminds you that humor is an underrated ingredient in Conceptual art, as does a quote from Groucho that’s stenciled on the gallery wall: “If any form of pleasure is exhibited, report to me, and it will be prohibited.”
Next week  try a painting of the Marx Brothers or Uncle Karl. See you then, john.

Friday, July 13, 2012

John Murray classes week of July 16, 2012

Next week my wife, Mary, and I have tickets to Cirque Du Soleil on Wednesday night, so Bill StGeorge will be covering the class for me that night.
Monday I will be there and thought a Picasso acrobat idea might interest you. The stark and simple figure I uploaded is a great minimalist example of how complexity can be handled and composed. The incredible positions that gymnasts and acrobats can achieve are beautifully expressed in a compressed black and white design.
Next week try a simplified picture of a complex subject: a car, a person, a face, a figure, an animal and do it in black and white. See you next week. john. 

Thursday, July 5, 2012

John Murray classes week of July 11, 2012

It's Summer! I've always loved this 1939 Picasso painting, "Night fishing at Antibes". A great description of a spooky activity with all the beauty and terror of a Summer adventure. Of course while Picasso was painting it, Hitler was invading Poland and the Holocaust and the world were about to explode. Life is beyond the artist's control but our work is ours...next week try a picture of a powerful (to you) Summer experience...don't be literal, take the concept and describe it in PAINT. See you next week, john.