Wednesday 6 November 2013

Charitable Donations

I am often approached to donate my art to local charities.  Generally I am happy to do this as I see it as a way of supporting causes that are important to me and giving back to my community.  But I also have misgivings.  These misgivings stem from a growing concern that my charitable giving is helping add to the devaluation of artists' work.  Particularly since more and more organizations seem to be turning to art auctions and more and people seem to think that this is the best way to buy their art.


To be clear, in a community, participating or not participating in a charity auction is not so much an option for many artists as it is a responsibility.  We participate because as artists we are generally (and I do mean generally) more attuned to community needs given that many of us work to explore and express these ideas in our work. The challenge is that there are so many charities and the difference between an artist donating and other businesses is that the work we offer is generally one of a kind and original work.  It is not mass-produced and therefore not just one of many items we have purchased at wholesale prices that we can easily replace.  It represents a true investment of time, creative thought and materials.  Therefore when an artist donates their original work, they aren't just donating an auction item, they are truly donating their time.   This is the time that they take from their business.  How many other businesses can afford to donate so much time without being compensated? And, by charities raising their money more and more through art auctions are we furthering the notion of art as a give away commodity therefore devaluing the time that artists have invested?

Thursday 13 June 2013

It has been said that life is what happens when you are planning other things.  Never has there been a truer statement for me than these past few months. 

I have been juried into a number of shows and have been very busy preparing for them.  But, in the midst of preparing for these, family illness and parental responsibility have conspired to test my wife's and my stress levels along with our time management skills. We feel like we have been traveling at warp speed accelerating through one problem or another.  As things begin to settle I find myself reflecting on the challenges of being an artist and entrepreneur and balancing other needs.

Why post this here?  Because this is my life and my art comes from my reflections upon these things.  I had always felt that in as much as this is my artist's blog, that it should be about more than painting and sculpting and should perhaps offer some insight into the distinction of what is an artist.  You may read this blog and say he is no different than me, or this is just what I would have expected or even, marvel at the crazy eccentricities of the life of an artist.  All or none of this may be true for you.

To me artist is more about an aspect of me than my whole identity.  It would be safer to say that I am me and artist is one of many portals through which I express my inner self to the outside world.  And through that expression I look for connection and common ground.

If you want to see these expressions.  The next opportunity will be July 5, 6 and 7th at the Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition.

Saturday 16 March 2013

Elasticity of thought

It is a strange thing to talk to technology after you have shuttered it away for 4 weeks.  The past 4 weeks have been a wonderful break from cell phones, internet, emails and telephones.  The only technology that I allowed myself was my camera.

It was not an intentional retreat from technology, but a focused effort on being in the here and now, as I explored new directions in a fabulous photo workshop with +Trina Koster in Cuba, and spent some quality family time on vacation after. 

As I reflect on the past 4 weeks, I am reminded that the mind is an elastic thing that looses its flexibility if stretched too long in one direction without break. I am feeling more flexible and am anxious to reengage my works in progress at the studio.

Thursday 15 November 2012

Technogical not Patriarchol control

I have always had a love/hate relationship with technology and the changes it effects in society.  I remember when first encountering the idea of public, online journalling that my first thoughts were positive and negative.  On the positive side, here was a use of technology which opened up the possibility of engaging in larger scale dialogues so that ideas and other perspectives could be presented and explored beyond your close circle of friends.  Surely this form of mass dialectic would direct us in a more positive direction quickly. Cool!  But then, any written diary is already a suspect document.  After all when we record an event, who hasn't fantasized about "some day when I am dead and gone, they will find this letter, or this journal or this picture and then they will know the truth or know how brilliant I truly am/was."  The truth?  Or the truth as the chronicler wants it remembered or sees it.

Fast forward to today and it would seem that most of the positives and the negatives have been magnified.  We have visual and written diaries like Facebook, and Twitter where our every moment is captured in a film script like sort of way, that exaggerates reality and promotes a surreal drama or pastiche of a life lived.  Hmmmmm?  Negative or positive?  We all want our 15 minutes of fame don't we.

So here I write in "my" blog knowing that everything is preserved on the internet and that someone will read this (even before I am dead and gone).   How then can that even be interpreted?   Ironically, I worry about that.  My intention with this blog is to give some insight into my artistic practice and yet this doesn't seem to be an artistic discussion.  I know for me, that everything comes out in the art some how.  And, one of my chief concerns about the world today, is the lack of ability of humanity to communicate and connect, notwithstanding the explosion in the technology to facilitate just that.  We are more and more disconnected and alone.

Even this blog is evidence of that.  I wanted to write on this more from the perspective of how technology has become the centre of all our work, community and family.  As an artist I must share with the public or they do not know I have created work.  More and more of my time is eaten up with websites, Facebook invites, etc.,  so that there is a real risk that my day to day becomes more about the technology than the art.  Beyond art, families use Facebook rather than getting together, text rather than call, and call rather than visit. If you are not on the net, you are more out of the loop than ever.  If technology is not the centre of your focus you are unconnected to a larger community and you are alone.  But then with technology it is like sharing a kiss through a glass wall and we are still alone.

just a thought.

Thursday 8 November 2012

Promotion or Dignity in Art

A fellow artist posted a link to the article that follows on Facebook and I was immediately conflicted.  My wife and I have been looking forward to going to see Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera's show at the Art Gallery of Ontario ever since it was announced.  And now because they have engaged in a form of marketing that denigrates the artist herself, I feel that by attending I may be complicit.  As much as I want Frida and Diego's work to be seen, I would almost rather see this blow up in the AGO's face and have no one go.  Almost.

It has also occurred to me that as a member, whether I go or not they already have my support.  Sometimes the best way to protest is with your feet.  So  I have called Andrea Seaborn in the marketing department at the AGO.  I did not speak to her directly because she was unavailable.  I did however leave a voicemail.  The basic message that I left was that I was disappointed that an institution such as the AGO was taking a position that denigrated an artist whose work they were promoting.  I further stated that I would not be renewing my membership unless the promotion ended and a formal apology went out.  I suspect that little ol' me will have little impact, but then at this point it is a matter of conscience.

To see the article that I read follow the link:

An Open Letter to the AGO About Frida Kahlo’s Unibrow - Shameless Magazine - your daily dose of fresh feminism for girls and trans youth

Wednesday 7 November 2012

Art and Politics or Shut up and Paint

So earlier I posted a letter to the editor relating to an article in the Guelph Mercury.  Without delving into that dialogue again, I have rediscovered that one of the outcomes of speaking out is that you draw both wanted and unwanted attention to yourself.  For the most part I have received a cascade of responses from those in the Guelph arts community, thanking me for my comments and generally applauding my letter.

And now for the downside. :-(   At least one gallery that I have been interested in for some time has decided that for an upcoming show (which I was to be invited to participate in) that they cannot now show my work.  The reason being that they feel there would be a conflict of interest if they show my work so soon after this recent article.  Sigh.

What does that mean to me?  Well first thoughts were....."shit"  all that hard work down the drain.  But then upon reflection, part of my decision to be an artist was to have a voice and to explore that voice through my work.  It was for this very reason that I responded to the article.  So lesson learned - Keep your voice in your art not in the press.  Am I likely to learn this lesson?  Nahhh. ;-)