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Art and life connect - all kinds of art

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Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Beatrice Wood

...the potter/artist who said "I owe it all to Art Books, Chocolate and Young Men."

Here's a snippet of her life. https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-the-forgotten-legacy-of-cult-artist-beatrice-wood

Wood was a member of the New York Dada group and a pioneering sculptor. As a woman artist primarily working in ceramics, she also represented a demographic and a medium that were both marginalized during her lifetime. “More people know her for sleeping with  than for making her own work,” the artist  told me when we discussed Wood’s legacy. “That needs to be rectified.” 

Though a 1993 documentary later dubbed Wood the “Mama of Dada,” she is rarely listed among the movement’s pioneers. But in 1917, both she and Duchamp submitted works to the Society of Independent Artists’ first exhibition, which would double as Dada’s coming out.

“She was sort of the sensation of the show,” explains Francis Naumann, a Dada scholar, dealer, and dear friend of Wood’s. “Her work was attacked by the press.” The offending painting showed a woman’s naked torso with a real piece of soap affixed “at a very tactical position,” Wood would later explain



In the last 20 years of her life, between the late 1970s and her death in 1998, Wood’s work did receive attention, thanks to support from several influential dealers—namely Naumann, who was based in New York, and Garth Clark, in L.A. Her prices rose, and for the first time since relinquishing her family’s fortune, she was making a healthy income. “In her diary, up through her 70s, she worries about infrequent sales, even having enough money for groceries,” explains Kevin Wallace, the Director of Beatrice Wood Center for the Arts, a small museum run lovingly out of Wood’s former Ojai home and studio. “But, by the time she passed away, her estate had about $3 million in it.” It was during this period of prosperity that Midler paid her visit, and that Jasper Johns bought one of Wood’s works.

But the momentum wouldn’t survive the artist’s death. After her passing, the prices of her work plummeted. “The success was great for Beatrice, but it also encouraged speculation,” explains Naumann. “Amateur speculators realized that she would soon die, so they just kept buying her work. Then of course, they flooded the market as soon as she died, and the prices went down staggeringly. In fact, I bought one of her chalices at auction for less than $10,000—the same type that were sold for over $100,000 during her lifetime.”

It isn’t easy to see Wood’s work in person these days. The trip to Ojai is a long one for most, and the museums that do own her work rarely show it. But Wood’s passionate tribe of supporters, like the Wallaces, Naumann, Shechet, and many more, are committed to resurrecting her legacy—as a Dadaist, a pioneering sculptor, and an irreverent feminist of her own design.


Did I mention she lived to be 105 and was working in her studio even then! That's why there were vultures circling to acquire her work, and too bad, they were just greedy and smashed her market value.

She was quite an artist, and I love her experiments with glazes, which aren't really mentioned much in that article.

Chalice by Beatrice Wood


Figurative sculpture by Beatrice Wood

 

Todday's Quote:

Just as cultivating a garden requires turning over the ground, pulling weeds, planting, and watering, doing the work of love is all about taking action.

BELL HOOKS

Monday, February 26, 2024

Dali' and the Impressionists - 26

 







Thank you for looking over my shoulder as I wandered through this exhibit in December 2023. It was a very inspiring time. 

Friday, February 23, 2024

On Henri Matisse

 Heron Dance Journal has been sending out weekly publications for a while, since I signed up for them. He also writes "A Pause of Beauty" where I recently read this as part of his article about gratitude. It kind of goes astray from that topic, but I enjoyed the information on Matisse, which I had forgotten (or more likely was omitted) from Art History classes.

"The life of Henri Matisse, one of the most controversial artists of his day, is an interesting example [of gratitude, as more common as we approach the later stages of life.] Matisse went through a major life change in 1939 at the age of 69. He was diagnosed with colon cancer, underwent a major operation and separated from his wife.

As a younger man his paintings, in particular Woman with a Hat, were the subjects of widespread condemnation and ridicule, mostly because of the use of wild, unorthodox colors. A reproduction of his 1913 Nu Blue (Blue Nude) was burned in effigy at the Armory Show in Chicago in 1913. (It is interesting to compare that painting to one he did toward the end of his life, Nu blue II.)

And in his personal life too he was controversial. He was prone to sexual humor and to songs that made fun of the church. Once he broke up a café concert because, he said, the idea seemed fun at the time. He had a hard time keeping models because of his inclination toward profanity. His first child was born out of wedlock. As he aged though, he seems to have mellowed. The illness in particular seems to have inspired a change. During his recovery, much of which he was confined to bed or a wheelchair, he wrote:

I have needed all that time to reach the stage where I can say what I want to say. . . Only what I created after the illness constitutes my real self: free, liberated.

The book Jazz, based on his cutouts, was written during the first years of his recovery. He particularly labored over the words — although only six or seven typewritten pages, he continued to revise them for three years after the images were finished. Much of his writing in that book and in subsequent years related in some way to love, gratitude and spirituality.

During the last fifteen years of his life, he developed close, long-lasting friendships with his models including one who became a nun. That friendship led him to create the stained glass windows of Chapelle du Rosaire de Vence on the grounds of the convent where she lived. And, after years of rivalry, his friendship with Picasso deepened. They frequently exchanged gifts, including of each other's art.

That image — of an aging man, a gentle man, at peace with life — reveling in the beauty around him and in his friendships, is an inspiring one. A good end to a courageous, creative life.


Here's an interesting short video of him at work."




Thursday, February 22, 2024

Gustav Klimt

 A fun GIF from Facebook, if it works...

https://i.giphy.com/l46C91vROkPpt6fv2.gif?fbclid=IwAR2dATttfRc1RDR-k_xMtXUHffuP2fDeSl80LJH3K_rCadTyvIJj960Bug8



And while we're being somewhat disrespectful of the artist, I just saw that Feb. 17 was World Cat Day. So I missed it this year!

But you probably would prefer to see something he painted without it being adjusted.


The Kiss


Death and Life, 1915



Today's quote:

"Truth is like fire; to tell the truth means to glow and burn." -Gustav Klimt"

Saturday, February 17, 2024

Second dragon

 




The reason it has shiny places is that I brushed some liquid was there to retard drying. That way the thinner pieces will dry slowly as the more bulky parts dry...and hopefully they won't shrink apart. Sometimes it works.


Today's quote:

It is through our connection to our light that we know things beyond what the visible world can tell us.

Friday, February 16, 2024

Playing with dragons again

 There are many potters working in the studio to hone their talents in order to make a special something.

I'm just there for the pleasure of exploring what I can do. It's the process not the product that I'm interested in.

Here's my first try at dragon making. Many many problems with it, so it shall be tossed soon. I am curious if it will even stay together during a bisque firing.



As always I get carried away with the heads.

Number two is in process now.



And while I was at it I made a little ruin of a castle tower. No dragon. Just playing around.

We learned in  counseling that the "process" was the important part of talking with clients...not a goal. Unfortunately all insurance and medical files insist on setting goals and measuring progress toward them. That's why I gladly went over to being an Activity Director. Many happy times shared with many people. But do you know what I remember most? The bad things that happened.

With clay I don't. I just toss things away when they fail. The "thing" isn't as important as what I've learned from it.

I always used to say with pottery "everything is sacred (thus the act of creation flowing through a potter's hands) but nothing is sacred (thus it is not to be cherished as an item of worship!)


Today's quote:

It is easy to laugh when we feel good, but it is when the world appears dim that we most need laughter in our lives

Thursday, February 15, 2024

Dali' and the Impressionists - 22

 






Sorry for blurry description: Paul Gauguin, Entrance to the Village of Osny















Wednesday, February 14, 2024

In celebration of the Year of the Dragon -3

 



Another one finished, no wings.

Beginning stages of dragon girl


Finished dragon girl which then was destroyed, due to that cracking along the side of the dragon. That sometimes happens with pottery!


Dragon girl with bird.

I think this one sold.


Today's quote:

My friends, love is better than anger. Hope is better than fear. Optimism is better than despair. So let us be loving, hopeful and optimistic. And we'll change the world. —Jack Layton

Monday, February 12, 2024

In celebration of the Year of the Dragon -2

 

The back side of a winged dragon with a horsey face


Front side of dragon with horsey face. As you can see, I was working at home on this one, which was always a transportation headache to get it to the studio to be fired in one piece.

A tiny dragon

The hungry dragon-like bird, or bird-like dragon!


I did another version of this strange critter with 3 little ones...but didn't get a photo of it!

Today's quote:

The foundation of the quality of your life resides in how you engage with the present moment each day.

SHANNON ABLES