A Mosaic of Ideas About Life, Art & Superfluous Adornment.
Showing posts with label Benjamin Lambright. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Benjamin Lambright. Show all posts

Saturday, October 15, 2011

The Potential To Create

"There are two basic motivating forces:
 fear and love. 
When 

we are afraid, we pull back from life. 
When we are in love,
 we 

open to all that life has to offer 
with passion, excitement, and 

acceptance. 
We need to learn to love ourselves first, 
in all our 

glory and our imperfections
If we cannot love ourselves, we 

cannot fully open to our ability to love others 
or our potential to create. 

Evolution and all hopes for a better world 
rest in the 

fearlessness and open-hearted vision 
of people who embrace 

life." 


I was allowed to let my creative juices flow today when I learned how to 
cut linoleum and make a print from my pattern. It is my new
favorite potential art form.
John Bergmeier, a very talented lino cutting print artist, 
came all the way from Pontiac, MI to teach this awesome class in my shop.
Here is John's artist statement from his website: www.johnbergmeier.com,

ARTIST STATEMENT


Piece by piece, the experience of each real or imagined person is depicted by certain icons left behind in time, such as images from old children's books, passages from Sunday School, photographs of family, farm tools or other implements, and more.  While referencing familiar or traditional themes, these images, as applied in each piece, become intriguingly profound and layered in meaning.  These narrative works reflect my fascination with choice and how coincidences converge in our lives to comprise the personal path each of us ultimately walks during our lifetime.



  This is one of John's beautiful prints. He brought several to show as examples. This one has several
overlays of different cuts to give it an awesome layered effect. He quite often glues other mixed media to his prints in order to make a more textural statement. John was such a patient and informative
teacher that I credit him with my ease of taking to the craft.  
 Here is an example of the many "cuts" John uses to create his amazing prints. He quite often
uses plexi-glass to mount the lino cuts to for ease of placement when printing.
 Here is John illustrating how to make the cuts on a piece of linoleum.
 After using a brayer to spread some black water soluble ink on a piece of plexi-glass, he is rolling the ink on to his lino block and then checking to make sure it is evenly covered.


 Here are the lucky students cutting away on their lino blocks.




 And here is my lino block after inking it up; this was so much fun that I was giddy!
 This is Tillie, one of John's very talented daughters, who is currently getting her Art degree with a minor in lino cutting and block printing. You can see some of her wonderful prints behind her hanging in my shop.Read more about her work here: 
She is also a very talented musician, listen to her perform here: http://www.reverbnation.com/tilliebergmeier
 And the great Ben Lambright, who taught writing classes at the shop earlier this year.
Read his beautiful writings here:

 This is what Ben's inked block looked like. Very apropos for the upcoming "Dio De Los Muertos", otherwise known as Halloween. This was Ben's first lino cutting experience also. I get to hang with such a talented bunch of peeps!
And this is my lino block and the print that came from it.
I can't tell you how gratifying it was to carve on this block; way better than peeling old wallpaper off the wall.
Thanks again to John Bergmeier (and his lovely family) for coming to the shop today; what a great pleasure to spend the afternoon with such a talented bunch.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Belly Up!

The last few weeks I had the pleasure of taking part in a Creative Writing Class @http://aworkofartstudio.blogspot.com/2011/03/write-on.html
and was asked to write a 'short story'. I don't know that I achieved that end
but my instructor, Benjamin Lambright (Writing Guru Extraordinaire)
thought it had possibilities as a poem. I will be tweaking it in the next couple
weeks but here is my first draft for your gastronomic enjoyment.





Ode To A Sagging & Musical Mid Section

    It precedes me wherever I go, my protuberant and melodious mid section. 
   Such a sad state of affairs and quite nonsensical to dwell on in the big scheme of things. 
   It seems to be one of the many female concessions to producing offspring and growing older. 
   Imagine releasing the air from a very large balloon and being left with the flaccid remains.
   My children pat my belly like it is their personal fetish and enjoy a good laugh when we settle down after dinner and my gut starts its own rendition of the "Flight of the Bumblebee".
   I always prided myself with the gift of resiliency and good digestion.
   Then welcome baby one, baby two and what all have to deal with eventually, gravity, and the mid section chorus. 
   No amount of exercise or stretching will reshape skin that has been stretched ten times its original size back to Barbie doll tautness. And no amount of food enzymes will keep the intestinal racket from occurring. Eat a bowl of 'Kashi' cereal and let the composition begin.
   Just the other day, I invited an attractive twenty-something male client to be shampooed after his haircut was finished. As he swiveled in the chair he instinctively reached to brush his clippered hair from my protruding belly where it had landed. 
   Awkward.
   Good thing a healthy dose of apathy and resignation come with the beginnings of middle age as well as the tendency to say whatever comes to mind. But that is another story altogether.
   I am learning to love my outer innertube.
   I feel a song coming on.


I was trolling the net for pictures of a sagging midsection and came across this amazing artist, Federico Uribe. Give yourself a visual feast and check out his incredible works of art @http://www.federicouribe.com/.