Archive for December, 2007

three amigos

Monday, December 31st, 2007

landmarks_far21.jpgA thick blanket of harmless clouds hangs low over a rigid belt of green trees. Yellow explodes to life in the highlighted edges of sprawling palms. Receding lines of a fence trail off out of view creating an exaggerated sense of perspective. Trees remain in the background while others leap forward like an excited grasshopper. The aqua pool sits alone like a grumpy drunk surrounded by the the motionless stories of gray barflies. Each drink is encouraged through the glassy eyes of a once playful summer day. High above the chilly water of the pool and inter mixed in the glowing palms, sits three steadfast landmarks, each very similar to the eye, narrow and tall, but also extremely different in meaning. The dark plump Juniper tree (or maybe Cypress) stands strong with rarelythree_landmarks-copy.jpg noticed functionality. Slightly behind, the steeple and cross of the St. Patrcks’ Church reaches skyward with accentuated holiness. Far in the distance stands the hot smoke stalk of the Encina Power Plant like the tip of an iceberg above the smoldering components of a tired machine.

Directional lines and patchy colors create a composition which represents a map for the viewer’s eye. The focus is on the piece as a whole as well as the individual components. Shapes might be positioned where they seem as if they sit nervously on a loaded spring, able to leap off the canvas or out of a page at any moment. This kinetic rue animates stagnant shapes through juxtapositions of its surroundings. The direction of lines have a similar effect where a series of flowing marks can create a sense of motion like the steel track of the Surfliner. The viewers eyes might ride the lines across a figure’s back or over the green hills of the French countryside, finding the edge of a canvas and ultimately falling onto the paint splattered wood planks of the floor below. Along with pulsating shapes and guiding lines, colors campaign for dominance of a canvas or work in unison, harmonizing a well balanced visual experience. When these components work as a team, the outcome is truly a visual masterpiece.

Though a visual experience can be as sensual as a lover’s massage or as maddening as a nervous breakdown, the eyes are not the only vehicle which guide you through an artistic experience. The cognitive wheels of the mind analyzes what your eyes see. Like reading a magazine, the meanings of arranged shapes and photos on a piece of paper are translated into an understanding. Art is read the same way, but like a young child, you first have to learn the sound each component and combination makes. When this is learned, like a new reader’s found interest in the words of each passing sign, the visual elements and meanings of everyday sights sing to you with unavoidable interest.

Let your eyes take you on a voyage through the above photo. What stands out and where do your eyes end up? How does your mind interpret the three landmarks?

Hold the Bacon

Thursday, December 27th, 2007

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Creativity can be expressed in in a variety of ways, only limited by one’s lack of ideas. Paint can be meticulously applied to a canvas or aggressively splattered on cardboard. Clay can be caressed with sensual strokes or beat into abstract clumps. A visual display might occur on a gallery wall or within one’s mind narrated lt_close.jpgby the soothing sound of music. A jumbled arrangement of letters might tell a story as romantic as a first kiss or as haunting as dark forest. Creativity becomes limitless once one has given up the inhibitions of failure. Criticism is always positive because a golden ribbon is as meaningful as a rotten tomato. A canvas can be a flat piece of paper or the high cheek bones of a woman’s face. It can be a rock, a stage, a noise or an idea. Creativity can be limitless…

lt_back.jpgScreen printing or silk screening began as an industrial technology. It is currently popular both in fine arts and in commercial printing, where it is commonly used to print images on t shirts, hats, CDs, DVDs, ceramics, glass, polyethylene, polypropylene, paper, metals, and wood. Many believe that screen printing is the most versatile of all printing processes. Since rudimentary screen printing materials are so affordable and readily available, it has been used frequently in underground settings and subcultures. This form of expression has become an important vehicle for cultural expression seen on movie posters, record album covers, flyers, shirts, commercial fonts in advertising, and elsewhere.

NOW AVAILABLE:
Hold the Bacon t shirts

Inquire if interested!

A Visual Tradition

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

A fascination with the visual may come from the invested hours in search of Waldo, the bright colors of Sesame Street or from the influence of your family.

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For those who seek visual entertainment, Christmas time is a jackpot of brightly colored nuggets. As the sun recedes and the chimneys smoke, festive decorations awaken with the vibrancy of the Vegas strip. A dinner table chat continues into the family wagon as the slumbering streets of Carlsbad are navigated by families in search for their favorite decorations. Wide-eyed children awe at clumps of color, each individual to the owner’s taste. Scouring parents drive the streets of sprawling residential areas looking for clumps of blinking lights which would rival a techno beat driven ecstasy party. Along with the mental notes and nominations, an ongoing tally of Christmas light presentations are mentally recorded by each competitive child. A rubbernecked glance creates an explosion of alertness prompting another frenzied scan. Long episodes of silence are accompanied by the introverted screams of a sibling competition. A delayed stoplight is like a paused video game, but the anticipation of a distant glow is like a Christmas Eve peek under your parent’s bed. The silent drive continues until a shooting star is mistaken for Santa’s sleigh, prompting a childhood desire for slumber. The family tradition comes to an end as the wagon turns its last corner and slowly rolls down the street of lights which began the hunt. Unable to wait, erratic numbers are announced and bluffs are called; favorites are described and secrets are shared; smiles are smirked and laughter explodes. Another yearly drive brings all to hugs while hand clasped parents glow as bright as the lights which surround them.

Christmas comes and goes, but holiday traditions stay forever. What memories do you have and what traditions do you plan on continuing?

Candice George Spotlight

Friday, December 21st, 2007

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Where most people have gone abstract, Candice George has remained loyal to the hand of an artist with experience and skill in the traditional art of Representational charcoal and oil paints.

Click HERE or click on her tab under local artist to read her interview and to see some of her work!

Let’s here what you think!

Vegas Tripped

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

vegas2007.jpg Tired tourist and disgruntled employees meander through the brightly colored hallways of the many themed casinos of Vegas. The fake sounds of winning jackpots seduce each new wave of eager gamblers. Women in short skirts waddle up and down the narrow walkways, bouncing off each drunk like a pinball who has had one too many knocks. A smile is as rare as a row of lucky sevens sleeper.jpgand a tip is given only when you are on top. As your wallet shrinks, your bladder aches and you eyes burn, the seldom seen sun dips below the dominating glow of the strip. At any given hour, the pulsating casino rooms are alive with chaos and mopey patrons. Happy is a word rarely used and hour is just another nickel dropped into an unforgiving machine. Along with smoke and the stench of booze soaked carpet, heavy eyed addicts overflow into the streets in-route for their next fix. A variety of themes loom over the strip using super deals and mimicked cultural gimmicks.ex_sunset.jpg The Bellagio boasts its ceramics by Picasso and the Venetian’s Grand Canal snakes around the priceless collection of the Guggenheim Hermitage Museum. Paris showcases the Eiffel Tower and Caesar’s Palace gets historical with the Arc de Triomphe. New York, New York replicates the tiny cafes and restaurants of city life along with reproducing NY’s cityscape and Statue of Liberty while real live lions tear plastic bones and bounce punctured balls at The Mirage. Each casino is surrounded by those of the side streets who force porn into your hands like the young kids slanging chicle in the streets of TJ.

Priceless art hangs in the casinos, but the real art lives in the streets, works in the bars and drives the taxis. Each local performs their daily routine with dreadful anxiety. Nothing is candy-coated, seen in the homeless with “why lie, I need beer” signs and escort ladies with beaded Rockstar slogans on the back of their jean jackets. The pain and hardship of Vegas explodes in your face like the emotional struggle of a Van Gogh painting.

My goal of observing the true emotion of the strip, finding a Van Gogh painting and experiencing Cirque du Soleil’s LOVE theatrical show was completed by the third day. Vegas is a trip!

Art at Hensley’s

Sunday, December 16th, 2007

oct.jpgEager artist, bouncy socialites and town drunkards met up for a day and night of creative expression at Hensley’s Flying Elephant Pug & Grill. The dining and billiard room was packed dining.jpgwith talent exhibiting acrylic and stencil icons, surreal landscapes, goofy characters, mixed media, simple tryptics and lively pen drawing portraits. A variety of bands filled the opposite dart room with sobering melodies and pounding riffs as paint covered enthusiasts brushed and sprayed color on a band van owned by the San Diego based psychedelic rock band Red Octopus. back2.jpg The bare white van slowly rolled into the fenced off outside area. The worn out emergency break clattered to a grip, inviting hungry artists to erupt in an explosion of creativity and vision, each showcasing their individual style while uniting in a group project. Hats off to Red Octopus for allowing their van to be the night’s main canvas. Large scale canvases lined the edge of the newly decorated van and into the back of the lot where other artists planned and executed their graffiti and illustration influenced pieces.
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A culture grows by the creative nutrients of an artistic collective. Today’s gathering was a giant leap in a direction lots of local artists want to see Carlsbad progress towards.

Who was inspired? How many people went home and dug out their supplies and got into a piece with newly found motivation? Lets hear your stories! What were your favorites? Contact the event’s sponsors for artist info.

Thanks again to all who worked so hard putting this event together!

Carlsbadcrawl will be on a short hiatus. Coming soon…Local artist interviews, the Art of the Pit and more…

Have you seen me?

Friday, December 14th, 2007

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My mind putters to a hold as my truck spits its first cloud of smoke. My eyes break the bond between them and my brain and become, like insect antennas, more reactive than visual, only awoken by the possibility of confrontation. While driving down the lively streets of the village, a foggy cloud clutters my thoughts and dulls my view like the last moments of a livid dream. While approaching a destination, I am awoken by the realization that my entire drive was overwhelmed by a zombie like trance while my body safely guided me. My antennas are released and drop into my lap as my eyes blink back to a visual state of musing.

What if your eyes created your route rather than the destination; if each turn was provoked by a visual stimuli calling your name like a thick painting in a dully lit window of a dank antique store. How often do you use your eyes for motivation and inspiration? An insipid drive only lacks entertainment when your eyes are lazy and unwilling to search for appeal. Imagine all the things you missed which could provoke a thought, a story or simply would look amazing on your livingroom wall. Have you walked around the block filling pages of ideas in a small black book which constantly rests in the back pocket of your worn out jeans? Do you crave splintery lightpoles for flyers of the weekend’s events. Are your fingertips gray from browsing the pages of the local Reader? Can you draw and shoot your camera at moment’s notice, rivaling the Western speedshooters your childhood stories immortalized? How many sidewalk doodles have you missed? How many clouds have you ignored and how many opportunities have been lost?

Try opening your eyes a bit wider. Look for colors and juxtapositions, reasoning and symbolism, inspiration and motivation. Look on the ground and in the sky, on walls and in bushes, inside and outside. Scribble ideas and observations or take a picture. There is an endless amount of creativity in the streets of our village waiting for attention and criticism.

Where is the location of the above photo? Test your awareness! Let me know if you find it!

the Art of Childhood

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

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Once upon a time life was simple. Each day started with morning cartoons and yawns which seemed to last ages. Our minds were stimulated by the back of cereal boxes and comics; our bodies strengthened by long games of tag and schoolyard sports. The word “responsibility” was still a foreign term adults used when their voices raised and their brows frowned. Our planner consisted of 12 pages hung on our cluttered bedroom wall which included a handful of important dates: Christmas, Halloween, Birthday and the last day of school. Our office was a room of bunk beds with He-Man or My Little Pony sheets. The foundation of our business was a thick layer of colorful legos ziggrind.JPGrandomly stacked like a loose after-school dog pile. Our vehicles ran as fast as our legs could pedal and were fueled on stiff quantities of sweets and soda. A domestic partner was a teammate and a crush was a tightly folded note passed to someone you wanted to share a fruit-roll-up with. As the sun sank and your belly rumbled, you sat eagerly at the family dinner table ready for Tuesday Tacos or Friday French-Fries. Your brother’s farts didn’t smell and you sister still had bangs. Your mother still sang and your father still played. Your imaginary friend was one of playful rues rather than neurotic torments and the only worry you had was what to do once Saturday morning came. Everything was slow and effortlessly simple.
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As adults, we reminisce the days without schedules and responsibilities. When playful laughter was universal. Today obligations replace unpredictability and playtime is just another word for a fifteen minute break. The realization that life was once simple might be a key to adulthood happiness. Remember the things that made you happy and the games that made you a winner. Go out and play in the rain, dance like no one watches and play with friends because they are fun. You might find fun in a picnic park, a beach sand castle, a neighborhood bikeride or a Sunday skateboard session at the local highschool. Think back when life was simple and relive it as an adult!
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photos by Anthony Donez

What do you miss about your childhood? Do you still act like a kid?

the Main Stage

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

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A city by the sea with scattered hills and steep beach front cliffs is ideal for breathtaking views. Palm trees thrust upward radiating yellows and greens while blue skies cradle fluffy patches of cloud. The sun is tossed through the sky like a spiraling football, slowly transitioning the foreground icons into solid black silhouettes. The day’s opening act of vibrant color makes way for their nightly slumber as the upcoming show slowly approaches the main stage. As the fiery curtain recedes towards the glowing sea, the flat sky in transformed into an explosion of pink, purple, orange, yellow and red. Trees, light poles and houses, once highlighted with detail and clarity, now bow as marveling spectators. The community eagerly returns from the pulsating translucent lights of their cubicles and enjoys a quick visual display of nature’s generosity before finding the warm arms of their loved ones. Cars reflect the day’s rage with wild red and oranges, but easily find slumber as the sky darkens.

Have you seen a stunning Sunset lately? Where were you? How did it make you feel?

RGB

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

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The battle of green and red is never-ending. This eternal headbutt lasts as long as your eyes stare and your mind winces. As your white flag waves in the smoky sky, you retreat, allowing the next passer to feel the visual agony you once loathed. Will these colors ever hold hands in harmony? If so, who would have the strength to moderate a feud more romantic than the Montagues and Capulets, more ruthless than Itchy and Scratchy and more stubborn than a heated Homeowners Association debate. What are the psychological effects of these colors? When used, can they provoke ill effects? Van Gogh used them to express the terror of humanity. The predicament of Adam golden-gate-bridge-9.jpgand Eve began by an ill-mannered bite from a brightly colored red apple accessorized with a lush green leaf. The Golden Gate bridge is generally considered to have had more suicides than any other in the world and from afar, can stage a visual battle between the rich red of the bridge and the rolling green in the surrounding hills.

Out from the setting sun; galloping on a horse of the color of all colors combined, emerges a crisis counselor pigmented in blue. It is the color of the sky and sea and is often associated with depth and stability. It symbolizes trust, wisdom, loyalty, confidence, truth and intelligence. Blue may be capable of defusing the weapons of red and green. A treaty is spoken of in a voice as relaxing as the sea’s rolling waves and as soothing as the winds of the sky. The relationship between red, green and blue (RGB) is witnessed everyday in a harmonic dance of color interlaced on our hypnotizing computer screens.

Who knows what street this flying red horse lives on?