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http://www.etsy.com/listing/66353482/child-ballad-111-t-shirt |
Thursday, January 20, 2011
The Crow Bites Everyone Eventually, Or Dawna Summers Eat Your Heart Out
Sunday, January 16, 2011
The Ship of So Long Farewell
I suppose that history itself can not save a thing but can only aid in giving a thing added value. History can comfort us in that we are connected to something larger than our time and lives, and it can fade away. Who knows when structures will show their imprint on us in the future. In the distant future some satellite taking pictures of vegetative growth through infrared sensors may reveal clues to who we are to who we will be. We march through time because our 5th dimension self manifests itself in 3 dimensions as what we experience in our comprehension. Or something.
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Neither Dead Nor Slow
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Salad Days: Yokohama and A Different Floating World
After many valiant harumpfings about visiting the Yokohama print exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, I finally made the 5 minute trek to enjoy some great prints. After the ports of Japan were pried open to the west in 1859, cultural entanglements including misunderstandings and misinformation along with the flow of goods and money poured and flowed like the sailors' libations that had just arrived in town. Originally intended to be viewed by Japanese people to learn and vicariously experience foreigners some of the specifics of the cultures depicted were lost in translation due to the hurry meet the demand for the prints. Russian sailors next to Italian flags in front of French buildings is just one example. Seeing how the artists were coping with depicting the new textiles and animals coming into the island was very consoling as I struggle with painting and other works from time to time. These guys who were making these prints were masters of their trade and its always reassuring that no matter how long one works at their trade new things and changes will bring challenges. Unfortunately the museum decided not to print a book of the work so I've tried to cull some images that are close to what they have.*
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Americans in front of a steamship |
It was nice to see and be introduced to these prints as so many that I've come across are of "The Floating World": Japan's aristocracy and pleasure gardens. If you are interested in the floating worlds and are in Philadelphia this weekend you should stop by the banks of the Schuylkyll River to view and interact with "Light Drift". Parker Lee of Parker Lee fame, has been in town working to install these works for Meejin Yoon of Boston so stop by and support their efforts to put some magic in your fall evenings. I bet you it will be better than an Applebee's Magician Night. Believe me no strings are attached, its free. More info can be found HERE. Time to get back to sailboats. . .
*After writing this and not wanting to take the effort to rearrange things once again HERE is a link to all 90 images in the exhibition on the Philadelphia Museum of Arts website. I guess I'll have to print my own book now, huh? Only $150 if you want a color print from the museum and a 4 week wait.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Confirmation Bias: Koans
Another Etsy print utilizing "children's" art tools consists of MechaGodzilla getting a girlfriend as the readers of "The Inquirer" keep an eye on the relationship. It’s amazing to see how quickly ideas, archetypes, songs; well culture has morphed in the past century. I suppose we (the royal human we) have always acclimated quickly. I don't have as large a grasp on language as I wish I did, but am still enthralled with shared cultural words. Most times being used in mixed language sentences they lose a . . . je ne sais quoi. And yes, we do have to thank the French for the feminine blonde, while the rest of the English language is neutered. Like spoken English I've been interested in appropriating for a few reasons. It creates a dialogue with the past along with paying tribute it. Building upon ideas of the past is how we've advanced to the technological/digital age. I enjoy seeing things morph, figuring out (or at least creating my own theories) how they connect to the next gestation and adding to it. It is an instant personal gratification becoming part of something larger than myself. If it wasn't for a personal enjoyment I may even associate it with the loss of self. What is that anyway? "Is it alive, does it writhe? Can it survive under the sun?" The closest thing I equate to a gnostic experience is losing myself to the act of painting and becoming lucid to the fact that I'm awake and dreaming.
A question was asked of a Zen master, "What is the meaning of the ancestral teacher's (i.e., Bodhidharma's) coming from the west?" The master answered, "The cypress tree in front of the hall." But this is about transformations of ideas, traditions, and art. Knowing what has been is a good clue of what is and will be and like any good lie should be studied. The variations, the small differences are what have become interesting. How many times are you going to watch the same movie? I bet it was based on a play that was performed over two thousand years ago. There is some funny stuff in transitions for those of us caught in the middle. In a way, it’s like being aware of puberty, being in it, past it, and aware of it from the other gender's view all at the same time - and the whole time daises that grow from our ancestor's corpses towards the sun, bending in the wind laugh along. Oh, wait . . . we embalm and encase our dead like they are pharaohs. No wonder we have movies like "Night of the Living Dead". No, that doesn't make sense enough . . . let’s go with Brandon Frasier’s "The Mummy" as reference instead, using a shot of Brock from "The Venture Bros." fighting a mummy, even though "Night . . ." is much cooooler.
My third wish is there to be no more 1970-1990 horror movie remakes. We're supposed to change things, make them better damn it. I mean look what happened with Gojira. Someone transformed two Japanese words (and the Japanese do love to abbreviate/transform their words) for gorilla and whale and made up Gojira. Then it’s misinterpreted to Godzilla for the U.S. release. That is a radical name, and besides who would have wanted to go see a movie about a gorilla whale? It was something new [(ish) I'm not forgetting "The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms" or earlier stories dating back to St. George]. And then there was the 1998 U.S. Godzilla release promoted by Taco Bell. Hell, Taco Bell started out as a hot dog stand. What was my point with this? Ah yes . . . The Child Ballad Show. Having expressed the need to recognize the importance of "tradition" I think it’s fair to impose one's own will upon its impending change. The streets don't change but maybe their name . . . The only fear/sin against tradition is the same for history: forgetting it. Maybe forgetting should be replaced with "not learning". To do either would be missing a hold on it. "Is it numb? Does it glow, will it shine? Does it leave a trail of slime?" The most important thing to do with tradition is to play with it. Game the sh*t out of it. Most of the time all its doing is pointing out that you’re alive.

Speaking of transformations. . . I'm happy to be sharing wall space with Bart Lynch (image above) in September. In the past I've had the chance to visit him in the studio and its mind boggling how he works. To see these seemingly spontaneous calligraphic marks converge into an overall composition consisting of stories within stories within stories is something to behold. I highly recommend viewing his work when you get the chance. That's at least one thing that I'm doing at the Child Ballad Show in Baltimore. I just finished the painting for the show, and believe me I played the sh*t out of it. To answer some of you all's first questions reading this, "No, when making the print I was not consciously thinking about "Bambi meets Godzilla". Someone pointed that out to me the other day and I almost threw up in my mouth because I had forgotten about it. I'm more optimistic and think the relationship in my print will turn out better." Have I learned anything?
Don't forget the 5th law: A Discordian is prohibited from believing what he reads.
If you are having trouble with that, consult your pineal gland.
Time to get back in the studio.
Jiun, a Shingon master, was a well-known Sanskrit scholar of the Tokugawa era. When he was young he used to deliver lectures to his brother students.
His mother heard about this and wrote him a letter:"Son, I do not think you became a devotee of the Buddha because you desired to turn into a walking dictionary for others. There is no end to information and commentation, glory and honor. I wish you would stop this lecture business. Shut yourself up in a little temple in a remote part of the mountain. Devote your time to meditation and in this way attain true realization."
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Flying in the Face of Tradition a Two Way Monologue
Lois Lane: Oh, gee, I embarrassed you, didn't I?
Superman: Oh, no, no, not at all, it's just that this planter must be made of lead.
Lois Lane: Yeah, it is. So?
Superman: Well, I sort of have a problem seeing through lead.
Lois Lane: Oh, that's interesting. [writes] Problem seeing through lead. Do you have a first name?
Superman: You mean, like, Ralph or something?
Lois Lane: [walks away from the planter] No, I mean like -
Superman: Pink.
Lois Lane: Hm?
Superman: Pink. [Lois walks back to the planter.] Sorry, Miss Lane, I didn't mean to embarrass *you*.
295A.1 ‘I am as brown as brown can be,
My eyes as black as a sloe;
I am as brisk as a nightingale,
And as wilde as any doe.
295A.2 ‘My love has sent me a love-letter,
Not far from yonder town,
That he could not fancy me,
Because I was so brown.
295A.3 ‘I sent him his letter back again,
For his love I valu’d not,
Whether that he could fancy me
Or whether he could not.
295A.4 ‘He sent me his letter back again,
That he lay dangerous sick,
That I might then go speedily
To give him up his faith.’
295A.5 Now you shall hear what love she had
Then for this love-sick man;
She was a whole long summer’s day
In a mile a going on.
295A.6 When she came to her love’s bed-side,
Where he lay dangerous sick,
She could not for laughing stand
Upright upon her feet.
295A.7 She had a white wand all in her hand,
And smoothd it all on his breast;
‘In faith and troth come pardon me,
I hope your soul’s at rest.
295A.8 ‘I’ll do as much for my true-love
As other maidens may;
I’ll dance and sing on my love’s grave
A whole twelvemonth and a day.’
Saturday, July 17, 2010
Beneficial Conflict
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Your story is like a mountain of . . .

Saturday, July 10, 2010
Is There Anybody Out There? No(H)Va

Continuing to work with “children’s” art tools and Yuzen, this print is entitled No(H)Va. It plays with the archetypes of American Steel and Japanese wood. The Chevy is a masculine form that we American’s love to see women drive, this particular Noh mask is feminine in form and is used by male only theatre groups.
What I’m interested in right now (concerning Child Ballad #278) is “Woman” on par with “the gods”, meaning that a western cultural perception of Woman is as the Greeks perception of Love, War, or Nature. Love is like a god, war is like a god, etc. etc. The pervasiveness of the representational sexuality of the sexes in our culture surpasses any cult of the ancients. We pick out 14-15 year old girls for Pop Stars because we have a need to watch a metamorphosis of innocence into a fully sexually charged thing that we eventually want sacrificed to purify our collective guilt. See South Park season 12 on that one. Bacchanal revelry usually doesn’t end well; it’s like a lot of hangovers and personal moral questioning about the dead hooker on the floor. But let us not get too sober in the midst of it. With all this in mind I’ve been trying to break down the aspects of the song. . . It presents itself through humor (most times sung that way too), and gives you the story of a woman more powerful than the Devil. She did not defeat the Devil by resisting temptations in life, but subdued him by force alone. In effect she has put herself outside of the realm of consequences and has made God and the Devil as irrelevant to her as her husband’s emotions: someone needs a spanking. Maybe I should paint a fish riding a bicycle in the background. Humor is definitely one of the best ways to disarm and bring someone in on a serious matter. And this is life or death. Well, more so afterlife intruding on real life. To think this is a song the Irish gave us and was given an African back beat in the Appalachians and made some inroads into indie-pop and grunge. So the strong Irish woman of John Wayne movies meets Foxy Brown meets Courtney Love. Let the wine flow. I’m not the only person in The Child Ballad Show to associate these stories and songs with modern film and music, just check out some of Jeremy Hughes work, and don’t forget that you can find my “Child” Prints over at my Etsy shop HERE.
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Whip It Up

"The wind blows and the sales of baskets go up," is an old Japanese saying meaning that some cause and effects are not always direct or visible. Bob Dylan wrote, "The answer, my friend, is blowing in the wind." I've always had a penchant for secret histories, micro histories, and generally the way things work. At times, the challenge for artists is to find a specific subject or theme. Its always nice when someone approaches you and starts a conversation about a subject that jives with your line of thinking, as happened with the invitation to "The Child Ballads" show curated by Teddy Johnson at the G-Spot Gallery in Baltimore. I had a chance to visit the location a couple of weeks ago and was impressed with the space and am looking forward to the event on the 11th of September. There is a great collection of painters that are exhibiting and musicians to perform the songs as well, included in both categories is Grammy award winner Art Rosenbaum. Art has been an inspiration, for many of us in the exhibition, to delve into the history of American music as well as learn and perform it.
