At the National Gallery of Art's
East Wing two years ago, I saw this
Max Ernst sculpture and told J that I'd once sat on it. Back when I was a student in Germany, at big art exhibit in Kassel, Dokumenta 3. I thought. And somewhere there is a picture of me on it. Maybe. Possibly it was just a similar piece. I was tempted to sit on it again and have her take my picture, but the guard was watching me.
Today, June 9, 2012, I have been cleaning up downstairs. Throwing away old papers I no longer need, resorting the ones I'm not ready to toss, and thinking about converting some old papers into articles.
When I ran across, finally, this picture.
OK, so this isn't such a big coincidence. Eventually I was going to find this picture.
BUT, then I looked up Documenta. This exhibit happens every five years. And it turns out, (
from the Daily Beast):
The twice-a-decade show is launching Saturday, June 9, in Kassel, Germany, in its 13th incarnation.
From Deutsche Welle:
The German President Joachim Gauck has opened one of the world's
biggest contemporary exhibitions of modern and contemporary art in
Kassel, central Germany.
The thirteenth edition of one of the world's biggest and most ambitious
contemporary art fairs opens in Kassel on the Fulda River in the
northern part of the state Hesse in Germany.
Held every five years since 1955, the fair exhibits works by artists
over a period of 100 days. This year's event features works by nearly
300 artists from 56 countries. Exhibits include cottages brimming with
strange objects, sounds of the Brazilian jungle and a West African
theatrical performance.
Artistic Director, Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, a US-born
Italian-Bulgarian, explained the festival's role at the opening:
"Documenta is dedicated to artistic research and forms of imagination
that explore commitment, matter, things, embodiment."
And here's a video from Documenta 13 from
Newsweek and Daily Beast art critic Blake Gropnik:
This is EXACTLY the kind of post I adore reading first thing in the morning.
ReplyDeleteI now see you don't post daily, as you have a (rich outer and inner) life. Still, each post is so nourishing I don't think I could eat them more often.
As a found-object/digital graphics artist and conceptual artist (I wrote The Pocket Lint Chronicles -- 450 pages about pocket lint), the sound piece in the German Documenta video ...until I get it right ...struck a real chord (ha.).
My husband is an en plein air oil painter and has thrown out more paintings that most artists do in a lifetime. Every day (year round in the woods around Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) he comes back with 2 or 3 paintings and says, "Tomorrow I'll get it right." He has sold 400 paintings since he started 4 years ago -- they are very, very beautiful -- yet he is unsatisfied with most of them.
Your photo of yourself is wonderful. I do not think it at all odd you found it
when you did. It just means you are in the right place at the right time, doing what you should be doing. Centered.
Barbara, thanks again. I'm glad the blog has made such a good impression. I hope it lasts over time. :) Actually, I've been posting pretty much daily, but the last couple of weeks I'm having some tension between writing at the level (see the post on blog quality standards) I want and enjoying the summer.
ReplyDeleteFound object artist. I love it on so many counts. The serendipity, the recycling, the creativity of seeing new purpose is trash . . . I know an artist here who has focused on found objects on one particular stretch of beach.
Tell your husband hello. 400 sold in four years - that's close to a painting sold every four days. That's pretty good.
This found object into art has been called "upcycling". I like that.
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