...Answer in a few days. CulVul
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
When art makes you giggle...
Friday, October 9, 2009
Where Science and Art Find Common Ground
Water on the Moon
By Richard Friswell
By Richard Friswell
*Art by Roxanne Farber Savage
Water is heavy. Anyone who has traipsed a 24-pack of bottled water from the driveway to the house knows just how heavy water can be. Water is essential to this planet and life-sustaining for those of us who live on it.

The recent indignity suffered by the moon at the hands of scientists attests to how important finding water on a distant planet or moon is to our chances of successfully traveling there and thriving once we arrive. Astronauts can recycle their waste water on the way but lugging a supply of H2O across the vast expanse of space to meet our needs for months or years is both costly and cumbersome (imagine the fuel costs and handling issues if you carried a 400-gallon drum of water in the trunk of your car!). An elementary problem like sustained hydration becomes a major concern for NASA scientists.

The recent indignity suffered by the moon at the hands of scientists attests to how important finding water on a distant planet or moon is to our chances of successfully traveling there and thriving once we arrive. Astronauts can recycle their waste water on the way but lugging a supply of H2O across the vast expanse of space to meet our needs for months or years is both costly and cumbersome (imagine the fuel costs and handling issues if you carried a 400-gallon drum of water in the trunk of your car!). An elementary problem like sustained hydration becomes a major concern for NASA scientists.
Our recent high-altitude bombardment of the south-polar reaches of the moon was our primitive attempt to answer the question: Is there water on the moon? The world waited and watched in breathless anticipation as this ‘non-event’ took place; but scientists insist that key questions about the moon’s inner core will be answered over the next few weeks. 
For those of us who are earth-bound and plan to continue to be so, what can the quest for water on the moon teach us about ourselves? As artists, we hope to communicate vital information through our work across the seemingly boundless void between ourselves and the ‘dark side of the moon’, called, public perception. And what constitutes sustenance for artists while they work? Sure, food, clothing and shelter—the wellspring of life as we know it on this planet. But, what else drives us to create as a means to those practical ends?
Our own personal version of a moon probe happens when we send our latest work on a trajectory out into the world. And, for the artist, analysis of the ‘six-mile high spray’ at point-of-impact takes t
he form of the response of critics, gallery owners, collectors and editors who stand by, binoculars and notes pads at the ready. Everyone watches and waits to see if there are life-giving elements in the work and whether a spur of interest can move the viewer to explore, in depth, the various complexities of the piece and their meaning. For a few lucky artists, pioneering colonies of believers may soon set up encampments over these small, life-emitting oases of earnest intentions, known as the 'artist's vision!'
For artists of any stripe, we harbor a shared belief in the universe of ideas. All things are possible in the world of the imagination. There is no out-there, out there. It is all in here. The studio version of a moon probe is wet paint poised on a brush before a blank canvas; a pencil hovering above a clean sheet of paper; or restless hands poised on the silent keyboard of a grand piano. Through our creative effort, we hope to find water, insuring that our journey can be sustained. We are hoping against hope to find signs of life.
'The Journey'
My tiny capsule

For those of us who are earth-bound and plan to continue to be so, what can the quest for water on the moon teach us about ourselves? As artists, we hope to communicate vital information through our work across the seemingly boundless void between ourselves and the ‘dark side of the moon’, called, public perception. And what constitutes sustenance for artists while they work? Sure, food, clothing and shelter—the wellspring of life as we know it on this planet. But, what else drives us to create as a means to those practical ends?
Our own personal version of a moon probe happens when we send our latest work on a trajectory out into the world. And, for the artist, analysis of the ‘six-mile high spray’ at point-of-impact takes t
he form of the response of critics, gallery owners, collectors and editors who stand by, binoculars and notes pads at the ready. Everyone watches and waits to see if there are life-giving elements in the work and whether a spur of interest can move the viewer to explore, in depth, the various complexities of the piece and their meaning. For a few lucky artists, pioneering colonies of believers may soon set up encampments over these small, life-emitting oases of earnest intentions, known as the 'artist's vision!'For artists of any stripe, we harbor a shared belief in the universe of ideas. All things are possible in the world of the imagination. There is no out-there, out there. It is all in here. The studio version of a moon probe is wet paint poised on a brush before a blank canvas; a pencil hovering above a clean sheet of paper; or restless hands poised on the silent keyboard of a grand piano. Through our creative effort, we hope to find water, insuring that our journey can be sustained. We are hoping against hope to find signs of life.
'The Journey'
My tiny capsule
tumbles end over end,
flung into darkness,
charting the empty void.
Skirting the edge
flung into darkness,
charting the empty void.
Skirting the edge
of pumice moon
held by pull of orbits,
to pass behind its sheltering face.
to pass behind its sheltering face.
Man-in-the-Moon stares
with indifference.
Curled like a fist,
wide-eyed,
shallow breathing
and pounding heart
give voice to the fragile life within.
Only the pulse of suns
Curled like a fist,
wide-eyed,
shallow breathing
and pounding heart
give voice to the fragile life within.
Only the pulse of suns
and velvet depths of universe
hold me
for God's own hand to safely deliver.
-rf
*Original art by Roxanne Farber Savage:
Lunae 6, mixed media, 2008
Plastic Moons 1, mixed media, 2008
Swimmer 3, Monotype, 2008
Read more observations on the art world at: http://www.artesmagazine.com/
Labels:
2007,
Lunae 6,
mixed media,
Roxanne Savage
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
OPINION POLL
The New Cyber Realm
by Richard Friswell
I have come to the realization that the world is not round as once believed; or flat as purported by Thomas Friedman in his recent book by the same name, describing the new seamless global economy.

The world is, in fact, concave!
It is shaped like a basin or bowl, similar to the one that might collect rainwater if left on the picnic table on a rainy day. What pools in this receptacle, gathering volume and power as the rain of information pours in, is the collective wisdom of much of humanity—and this receptacle is the Internet. The Internet is a mere 15 years old and already this egalitarian electronic tool is amassing information (most useful, some not) at a startling rate. It is said that, since its inception in 1795 the U.S. Copyright Office contains 10 Terabytes of information (10 trillion, trillion bits, or a 1 with 19 zeros after it!). The Internet, with all of its component parts is estimated to be growing at that rate per day. With entire libraries going virtual and vast warehouses of information standing by for digital conversion, the web promises to play an even more important role for amateurs and professionals, alike, who are discovering that they can track almost any slender thread of information imaginable to its source.
I discovered this for myself when I was recently asked to address a professional group on the merits and features of a second-generation Frank Lloyd Wright property that had recen
tly come on the market. I say second-generation because the principle architect for this 1983 property was John Howe, Wright’s protégé, who worked for years as his principle draftsman. Howe continued his own architectural practice and to embody the Wrightian spirit, if not elements of his style, for many years after Wright’s death in 1959. I toured the property with the current owner prior to framing out my comments and found a property that still possesses all the elements of balance, form and function that can best be described as, ‘sculptural’. The power of Wright’s design influence is in its apparent simplicity and close connection to nature---You can’t go wrong with Mother Nature as your guide!
My search for information took me to the Internet and ultimately to the University of Minnesota’s architectural archives, where I found a helpful archivist (Barbara Bezat) and the entire collected works of John Howe-- including photographs of the Connecticut property-- known as the Bowen residence. The collection included memos, photographs by the architect, renderings and blueprints…the works! In a data- swap gesture aimed at keeping their records current, I sent a couple dozen digital shots of the property today (which has undergone two expansions in a manner very true to the Wrightian spirit). My modest contribution to their database helped to expand their Howe files and they, in turn, provided me with information that would have been lost to the exigencies of time and ‘progress’, had it not been for the beauty of the Internet and its search capabilities. The seek-and-find capability of the web seems self-evident until it plays itself out on an actual project—and then it
is nothing short of a technological miracle!
Photo montage by John Howe (1983) of home he designed in the Wrightian style (Collection, University of Minnesota)
In his recent book, Collective Intelligence*, author Pierre Levy describes a new “knowledge space”, or cosmopedia, that will emerge as people become truly aware of the power that technology has placed in their hands. He predicts that, while still unfolding, this potential to form a collective knowledge base through shared information has the potential to transform existing structures of social influence and empowerment. With institutional and regional boundaries removed, individual participation in all forms of social, political and intellectual activities become possible. We have seen in a recent presidential election the Internet’s power to rally people to a cause and facilitate their involvement at both micro and macro levels. This is just one example of many current web-based initiatives that draw direct links between knowledge, power and influence. Interest groups, like FaceBook, Twitter and SimCity replace real-life interaction with virtual connections between people (overheard in a teenage conversation recently, “The last time I saw him was on MySpace!). Count on the power of the Internet to continue to evolve!
Compare this reality to the experience of a group of academicians and philosophers in 18th century France, who anonymously published a multi-volume work called, the Encyc
lopédia, expressing their views on matters of political and social importance. Fearing that if their identities were known, this now-famous group of intellectuals could have been sent to the Bastille, or worse—guillotined—for their bold action. Consider now, projects like Wikipedia serve as a global, self-directed and virtual compendium of knowledge accessible to all.
It has been said that the Internet was ultimately responsible for the fall of the Soviet Union, whose premium on secrecy and the control of information flowing to the population was undone by the readily-available content and unfiltered reality that the Internet-driven, global arena had to offer. This, and other more recent examples in China and Iran are proof that knowledge is power and that oppressive regimes around the world consider the Internet a major threat to their ability to rule and therefore, they continue to attempt to limit access to it.
A R T E S and its right-hand man, the Culture Vulture Blog are powerful tools for you and for me. I can put information in your hands instantaneously and you can respond in real time. It can serve as a reality check, a stimulus, an evolving intellectual organism. Every month, we shape a publication that is designed to challenge, excite and appeal to our readership. We make a point of including sources and contacts at your very fingertips, so that your search for information can continue beyond the ‘pages’ of this site. Our hope and expectation is that the reader will treat the information presented here as a first step in the search for understanding, not the final word.
Utilize thoughtful sites like A R T E S as a tool to seek and discover…and that’s the final word!
Read more about the world of art and design at http://www.artesmagazine.com/
*On Amazon, find, Collective Intelligence: Mankind’s Emerging World in Cyberspace, by Pierre Levy, Plenun Press, New York, NY ISBN 0306456354
The New Cyber Realm
by Richard Friswell
I have come to the realization that the world is not round as once believed; or flat as purported by Thomas Friedman in his recent book by the same name, describing the new seamless global economy.

The world is, in fact, concave!
It is shaped like a basin or bowl, similar to the one that might collect rainwater if left on the picnic table on a rainy day. What pools in this receptacle, gathering volume and power as the rain of information pours in, is the collective wisdom of much of humanity—and this receptacle is the Internet. The Internet is a mere 15 years old and already this egalitarian electronic tool is amassing information (most useful, some not) at a startling rate. It is said that, since its inception in 1795 the U.S. Copyright Office contains 10 Terabytes of information (10 trillion, trillion bits, or a 1 with 19 zeros after it!). The Internet, with all of its component parts is estimated to be growing at that rate per day. With entire libraries going virtual and vast warehouses of information standing by for digital conversion, the web promises to play an even more important role for amateurs and professionals, alike, who are discovering that they can track almost any slender thread of information imaginable to its source.
I discovered this for myself when I was recently asked to address a professional group on the merits and features of a second-generation Frank Lloyd Wright property that had recen
tly come on the market. I say second-generation because the principle architect for this 1983 property was John Howe, Wright’s protégé, who worked for years as his principle draftsman. Howe continued his own architectural practice and to embody the Wrightian spirit, if not elements of his style, for many years after Wright’s death in 1959. I toured the property with the current owner prior to framing out my comments and found a property that still possesses all the elements of balance, form and function that can best be described as, ‘sculptural’. The power of Wright’s design influence is in its apparent simplicity and close connection to nature---You can’t go wrong with Mother Nature as your guide!My search for information took me to the Internet and ultimately to the University of Minnesota’s architectural archives, where I found a helpful archivist (Barbara Bezat) and the entire collected works of John Howe-- including photographs of the Connecticut property-- known as the Bowen residence. The collection included memos, photographs by the architect, renderings and blueprints…the works! In a data- swap gesture aimed at keeping their records current, I sent a couple dozen digital shots of the property today (which has undergone two expansions in a manner very true to the Wrightian spirit). My modest contribution to their database helped to expand their Howe files and they, in turn, provided me with information that would have been lost to the exigencies of time and ‘progress’, had it not been for the beauty of the Internet and its search capabilities. The seek-and-find capability of the web seems self-evident until it plays itself out on an actual project—and then it
is nothing short of a technological miracle!Photo montage by John Howe (1983) of home he designed in the Wrightian style (Collection, University of Minnesota)
In his recent book, Collective Intelligence*, author Pierre Levy describes a new “knowledge space”, or cosmopedia, that will emerge as people become truly aware of the power that technology has placed in their hands. He predicts that, while still unfolding, this potential to form a collective knowledge base through shared information has the potential to transform existing structures of social influence and empowerment. With institutional and regional boundaries removed, individual participation in all forms of social, political and intellectual activities become possible. We have seen in a recent presidential election the Internet’s power to rally people to a cause and facilitate their involvement at both micro and macro levels. This is just one example of many current web-based initiatives that draw direct links between knowledge, power and influence. Interest groups, like FaceBook, Twitter and SimCity replace real-life interaction with virtual connections between people (overheard in a teenage conversation recently, “The last time I saw him was on MySpace!). Count on the power of the Internet to continue to evolve!
Compare this reality to the experience of a group of academicians and philosophers in 18th century France, who anonymously published a multi-volume work called, the Encyc
lopédia, expressing their views on matters of political and social importance. Fearing that if their identities were known, this now-famous group of intellectuals could have been sent to the Bastille, or worse—guillotined—for their bold action. Consider now, projects like Wikipedia serve as a global, self-directed and virtual compendium of knowledge accessible to all.It has been said that the Internet was ultimately responsible for the fall of the Soviet Union, whose premium on secrecy and the control of information flowing to the population was undone by the readily-available content and unfiltered reality that the Internet-driven, global arena had to offer. This, and other more recent examples in China and Iran are proof that knowledge is power and that oppressive regimes around the world consider the Internet a major threat to their ability to rule and therefore, they continue to attempt to limit access to it.
A R T E S and its right-hand man, the Culture Vulture Blog are powerful tools for you and for me. I can put information in your hands instantaneously and you can respond in real time. It can serve as a reality check, a stimulus, an evolving intellectual organism. Every month, we shape a publication that is designed to challenge, excite and appeal to our readership. We make a point of including sources and contacts at your very fingertips, so that your search for information can continue beyond the ‘pages’ of this site. Our hope and expectation is that the reader will treat the information presented here as a first step in the search for understanding, not the final word.
Utilize thoughtful sites like A R T E S as a tool to seek and discover…and that’s the final word!
Read more about the world of art and design at http://www.artesmagazine.com/
*On Amazon, find, Collective Intelligence: Mankind’s Emerging World in Cyberspace, by Pierre Levy, Plenun Press, New York, NY ISBN 0306456354
Friday, August 14, 2009
Why Art Matters
Art is all about transformation and illusion.
The artist transforms inanimate materials such as canvas, pigment stone, paper and wood
into representations of apparent three-dimensional domains
seemingly inhabited by people, places and things, but, most importantly,
by ideas and emotions.
The magic
is to watch the viewer respond to the illusion created by the hand, heart and mind of the artist,
in this often brief encounter between the viewer and the object;
attempting to understand the artist’s intentions in their own unique way,
by constructing a visual and visceral bridge to the subject matter
and emotion being portrayed.
We care about art...
because we can choose to act in collaboration with the artist,
however anonymous or far removed from our daily lives he or she might be
and allow ourselves to be transformed into believers by their creation.
Visual art is theater, suspended in time.
We are converted by this encounter
because we soon understand how beauty, essential truth and purity of form can anchor our lives
and reaffirm our human spirit.
Works of art can serve as signposts
to places of enlightenment and emotional well-being in our culture,
pointing to a locus in our consciousness where we can allow ourselves to believe,
in spite of everything,
that there is balance and harmony in the world
and that life can be good!
Art may be illusion but,
when you surround yourself with its message,
sooner or later your psyche will commit to it and, given time,
art will make a believer out of you.
Richard J. Friswell
Art is all about transformation and illusion.The artist transforms inanimate materials such as canvas, pigment stone, paper and wood
into representations of apparent three-dimensional domains
seemingly inhabited by people, places and things, but, most importantly,
by ideas and emotions.
The magic
is to watch the viewer respond to the illusion created by the hand, heart and mind of the artist,
in this often brief encounter between the viewer and the object;
attempting to understand the artist’s intentions in their own unique way,
by constructing a visual and visceral bridge to the subject matter
and emotion being portrayed.
We care about art...
because we can choose to act in collaboration with the artist,
however anonymous or far removed from our daily lives he or she might be
and allow ourselves to be transformed into believers by their creation.
Visual art is theater, suspended in time.
We are converted by this encounter
because we soon understand how beauty, essential truth and purity of form can anchor our lives
and reaffirm our human spirit.
Works of art can serve as signposts
to places of enlightenment and emotional well-being in our culture,
pointing to a locus in our consciousness where we can allow ourselves to believe,
in spite of everything,
that there is balance and harmony in the world
and that life can be good!
Art may be illusion but,
when you surround yourself with its message,
sooner or later your psyche will commit to it and, given time,
art will make a believer out of you.
Richard J. Friswell
Read more artful opinoions about the art world at: http://www.artesmagazine.com/
*Art: Thomas Cole, Falls of the Kaaterskill, o/c, 1826, The warner Collection of Gulf States paper Corp., Tuscaloosa, AL
Transformation (a short story)
By Richard Friswell
All day long I dreamed of what I would do when I got home. School, recess, lunch and homework were small obstacles on my way to the adventure that awaited me each day, just a few backyards away from my own.
I would not allow for any distractions- the Brooklyn Dodgers-Yankees game droning on Mr. Hill’s radio just inside his open kitchen window on the walk home from school; the household chores that always awaited me there; my heavily-perfumed Aunt Ethel, sitting at our kitchen table drinking pale tea out of a too-fancy cup and eating Lemon Coolers, dusted with white confectionary sugar that stuck to my face when she kissed me.

I was on a mission! I ran to my room where I strapped on my guns (matching 6-shooters with white pearl handles), pulled on my boots, cocked my cowboy hat jauntily to one side of my head and, hopping on my red Schwinn Hornet complete with handlebar streamers, I galloped off to… THE WOODS.
Entering the woods held all the transformative power of a magic spell for me. I left the boy behind and became the western hero of my Saturday morning, grainy, black and white television world. This place was filled with all the props a hero needed: rocky outcroppings; low-slung tree limbs for spying over the ridge; bad guys just around the bend; the forbidden railroad tracks bordering the woods that rumbled with the clattery sounds of late-night freight trains. But as dusk settled in, even busy cowboys keep an ear tuned for the dinner bell and a brisk gallop home to the chuck wagon on ‘Charger’.
I remember lying in my bed late each night, listening wide-eyed to the mournful whistle of the Boston and Maine locomotive as it crept along the moonlit rails, ever imagining the dangers my cowboy hero would have to confront tomorrow…
Read more free-lance exerpts @ http://www.richardfriswell.com/
Or go to http://artesmagazine.com for cogent opinions and observations about art and design
By Richard Friswell
All day long I dreamed of what I would do when I got home. School, recess, lunch and homework were small obstacles on my way to the adventure that awaited me each day, just a few backyards away from my own.
I would not allow for any distractions- the Brooklyn Dodgers-Yankees game droning on Mr. Hill’s radio just inside his open kitchen window on the walk home from school; the household chores that always awaited me there; my heavily-perfumed Aunt Ethel, sitting at our kitchen table drinking pale tea out of a too-fancy cup and eating Lemon Coolers, dusted with white confectionary sugar that stuck to my face when she kissed me.

I was on a mission! I ran to my room where I strapped on my guns (matching 6-shooters with white pearl handles), pulled on my boots, cocked my cowboy hat jauntily to one side of my head and, hopping on my red Schwinn Hornet complete with handlebar streamers, I galloped off to… THE WOODS.
Entering the woods held all the transformative power of a magic spell for me. I left the boy behind and became the western hero of my Saturday morning, grainy, black and white television world. This place was filled with all the props a hero needed: rocky outcroppings; low-slung tree limbs for spying over the ridge; bad guys just around the bend; the forbidden railroad tracks bordering the woods that rumbled with the clattery sounds of late-night freight trains. But as dusk settled in, even busy cowboys keep an ear tuned for the dinner bell and a brisk gallop home to the chuck wagon on ‘Charger’.
I remember lying in my bed late each night, listening wide-eyed to the mournful whistle of the Boston and Maine locomotive as it crept along the moonlit rails, ever imagining the dangers my cowboy hero would have to confront tomorrow…
Read more free-lance exerpts @ http://www.richardfriswell.com/
Or go to http://artesmagazine.com for cogent opinions and observations about art and design
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
The crisis for museums today
OPINION POLL
by Richard Friswell
Museums Adjusting in a Changing World
In a 1999 New York Times report on museum attendance for the previous decade, increases of 20% were reported in the U.S., Europe and Australia. Based on a survey by The Art Newspaper, blockbuster exhibits by the likes of Monet, van Gogh, Gauguin and Winslow Homer’s private collection drew thousands of eyes and millions of dollars to some of the most established museums in the world. Shows featuring the ever-popular Impressionists (both F
rench and American) appeared to be a can’t-miss formula for art institutions, both large and small. One spokesperson interviewed for the piece proclaimed that, “The museum plays an incredible role in American cities: it’s a focal point, a place for entertainment, for shopping [my italics-- no mention of the actual art that these buildings house].”
So what has happened in the last ten years? Why is museum attendance down by 5-15% since the publication of that study 10 years ago?
Some would argue that 9/11 instilled a fear of open and very-public venues (particularly those with exhibitions that might seem to carry a charged political or social message). Another is the state of the economy; but rates of attendance were dropping prior to the down-turn in the global financial markets. Some would argue that increased ticket costs are to blame, rising to cover increased costs of staff and building maintenance; but even free museums like the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C., and many no-cost museums in the mid-west report decreased attendance.
With more families electing to vacation closer to home, why wouldn’t museums be at the receiving end of the tourist dollar largess? The answer may be found in the changing demographics of the population and the discretionary capital (dollars, yen, euros or pesos) devoted to cultural venues . As an example, I sat at the back of the room at a recent presentation at The Yale Museum of Art (another free museum) for a presentation on Picasso’s relationship with the writers of his time. Except for a handful of eager, bright-eyed undergrads, with notebooks in hand, the crowd appeared from my vantage point to be largely gray-haired and/or balding. Dismissing, for the moment the esoteric nature of the topic, I believe that I was seeing a trend that is the root of the problem with museum attendance in this new century: the younger generations are largely missing from the roles of the committed!
For the majority of the population, aged 25-45 (and certainly for the real youth of the country—aged 12-25), there is no real perceived sense of the past and the role it can play in our future. Funding for a
rt and culturally-based curricula in schools has been slashed. In too many homes, books have been replaced with cell phones and laptops, home libraries with flat screen TVs and video games. First-person, content-rich cultural pursuits (art, literature, music and theater) are being displaced by MySpace, Google and Twitter.
How many times have you spotted a minivan on the highway, with video screen cartoons or movies playing for the benefit of young back seat travelers (and for the peace-of-mind of their front seat parents, I assume). Belted in, they sit glazed-eyed and enthralled while the big, bright, interesting world that we once studied as it whizzed by the car window has all but disappeared from the awareness of these children and their impressionable, expanding minds?
Antique dealers report a similar drop in sales for the under-45 set (artifacts of the past have less meaning when the historical context of their creation is missing). Without naming names, many experiential museums, where history and architecture comes to life through a first-person experience of the time and place they specialize in are struggling to survive (the exceptions would be Disney World, with its glitz and myriad ready-made events and Williamsburg, where commerce and history have been so effectively co-mingled (coincidentally, you don’t have to wait to get to the gift shop to spend money in either of these destinations).
In response to this growing trend, some museums have attempted to reinvent themselves with bold and beautiful additions to their existing buildings (The Chicago Art Institute, MOMA, The Guggenheim’s Frank Gehry structure in Bilbao, Spain and Yale’s restored wing, by architect Louis Kahn, for example). In these cases, art and architecture work together (or not!) to draw the eye and hopefully, boost attendance. Others, with less money to spend on brick
and mortar are mounting shows with a decidedly non-artistic message: the successful Treasures of the Titanic show and the once-controversial Human Body Show have toured the world and called attention to the museum as an institution that can flex its message to accommodate diverse tastes and interests.
There is more hope on the horizon. The Brooklyn Museum is one good example of an art institution that sees its role and responsibility to its surrounding community to assume an active, outreach role, with dozens of events each month. Categories as varied as modern dance in the lobby, film festivals, children’s art classes, jazz concerts, to overnight stays for the more adventurous (think: “Night at the Museum”) are regular features of this and other active institutions, which see aggressive community outreach as the antidote to ailing attendance.
Institutions are also finding new ways to solicit and commit harder-to-find funding to more-targeted new acquisitions. At a recent opening for an emerging artist, I was asked to cast my vote for which piece from the show the museum should acquire (American Idol and Dancing with the Stars meets the New Britain Museum!). Strategies like these work because they promote involvement and introduce an entire segment of the population to the museum as a place to go and have fun—a place to begin to believe that their opinion and non-monetary contribution may help shape what the museum can become. That’s a basic public relations lesson that much of the business world learned eons ago.
In this new era, where an economic crisis has leveled the playing field for many, museums are no exception. Once the hushed ivory-tower bastions of good, but inaccessible, taste for the few, museums have had to get creative and reach out to the many. This can only have a positive impact on the place our museums occupy in our cultural landscape and will serve to introduce a whole new generation to the idea that art and the historical context in which it was created can have direct and immediate meaning in their lives.
What’s your opinion? Contact us at http://www.artesmagazine.com and share your thoughts are on matters of art and design!
by Richard Friswell
Museums Adjusting in a Changing World
In a 1999 New York Times report on museum attendance for the previous decade, increases of 20% were reported in the U.S., Europe and Australia. Based on a survey by The Art Newspaper, blockbuster exhibits by the likes of Monet, van Gogh, Gauguin and Winslow Homer’s private collection drew thousands of eyes and millions of dollars to some of the most established museums in the world. Shows featuring the ever-popular Impressionists (both F
rench and American) appeared to be a can’t-miss formula for art institutions, both large and small. One spokesperson interviewed for the piece proclaimed that, “The museum plays an incredible role in American cities: it’s a focal point, a place for entertainment, for shopping [my italics-- no mention of the actual art that these buildings house].”So what has happened in the last ten years? Why is museum attendance down by 5-15% since the publication of that study 10 years ago?
Some would argue that 9/11 instilled a fear of open and very-public venues (particularly those with exhibitions that might seem to carry a charged political or social message). Another is the state of the economy; but rates of attendance were dropping prior to the down-turn in the global financial markets. Some would argue that increased ticket costs are to blame, rising to cover increased costs of staff and building maintenance; but even free museums like the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C., and many no-cost museums in the mid-west report decreased attendance.
With more families electing to vacation closer to home, why wouldn’t museums be at the receiving end of the tourist dollar largess? The answer may be found in the changing demographics of the population and the discretionary capital (dollars, yen, euros or pesos) devoted to cultural venues . As an example, I sat at the back of the room at a recent presentation at The Yale Museum of Art (another free museum) for a presentation on Picasso’s relationship with the writers of his time. Except for a handful of eager, bright-eyed undergrads, with notebooks in hand, the crowd appeared from my vantage point to be largely gray-haired and/or balding. Dismissing, for the moment the esoteric nature of the topic, I believe that I was seeing a trend that is the root of the problem with museum attendance in this new century: the younger generations are largely missing from the roles of the committed!
For the majority of the population, aged 25-45 (and certainly for the real youth of the country—aged 12-25), there is no real perceived sense of the past and the role it can play in our future. Funding for a
rt and culturally-based curricula in schools has been slashed. In too many homes, books have been replaced with cell phones and laptops, home libraries with flat screen TVs and video games. First-person, content-rich cultural pursuits (art, literature, music and theater) are being displaced by MySpace, Google and Twitter.How many times have you spotted a minivan on the highway, with video screen cartoons or movies playing for the benefit of young back seat travelers (and for the peace-of-mind of their front seat parents, I assume). Belted in, they sit glazed-eyed and enthralled while the big, bright, interesting world that we once studied as it whizzed by the car window has all but disappeared from the awareness of these children and their impressionable, expanding minds?
Antique dealers report a similar drop in sales for the under-45 set (artifacts of the past have less meaning when the historical context of their creation is missing). Without naming names, many experiential museums, where history and architecture comes to life through a first-person experience of the time and place they specialize in are struggling to survive (the exceptions would be Disney World, with its glitz and myriad ready-made events and Williamsburg, where commerce and history have been so effectively co-mingled (coincidentally, you don’t have to wait to get to the gift shop to spend money in either of these destinations).
In response to this growing trend, some museums have attempted to reinvent themselves with bold and beautiful additions to their existing buildings (The Chicago Art Institute, MOMA, The Guggenheim’s Frank Gehry structure in Bilbao, Spain and Yale’s restored wing, by architect Louis Kahn, for example). In these cases, art and architecture work together (or not!) to draw the eye and hopefully, boost attendance. Others, with less money to spend on brick
and mortar are mounting shows with a decidedly non-artistic message: the successful Treasures of the Titanic show and the once-controversial Human Body Show have toured the world and called attention to the museum as an institution that can flex its message to accommodate diverse tastes and interests.There is more hope on the horizon. The Brooklyn Museum is one good example of an art institution that sees its role and responsibility to its surrounding community to assume an active, outreach role, with dozens of events each month. Categories as varied as modern dance in the lobby, film festivals, children’s art classes, jazz concerts, to overnight stays for the more adventurous (think: “Night at the Museum”) are regular features of this and other active institutions, which see aggressive community outreach as the antidote to ailing attendance.
Institutions are also finding new ways to solicit and commit harder-to-find funding to more-targeted new acquisitions. At a recent opening for an emerging artist, I was asked to cast my vote for which piece from the show the museum should acquire (American Idol and Dancing with the Stars meets the New Britain Museum!). Strategies like these work because they promote involvement and introduce an entire segment of the population to the museum as a place to go and have fun—a place to begin to believe that their opinion and non-monetary contribution may help shape what the museum can become. That’s a basic public relations lesson that much of the business world learned eons ago.
In this new era, where an economic crisis has leveled the playing field for many, museums are no exception. Once the hushed ivory-tower bastions of good, but inaccessible, taste for the few, museums have had to get creative and reach out to the many. This can only have a positive impact on the place our museums occupy in our cultural landscape and will serve to introduce a whole new generation to the idea that art and the historical context in which it was created can have direct and immediate meaning in their lives.
What’s your opinion? Contact us at http://www.artesmagazine.com and share your thoughts are on matters of art and design!
Monday, August 10, 2009
Doud Akhriev Exhibition, Rockland, Maine
Department: SPEAKING OF ART
For immediate release
Catching the Light: The Frenchboro Paintings
Works by Daud Akhriev
At the Archipelago Gallery, Rockland, Maine
Through September 20, 2009
Nature and the
human spirit
come face-to-face
in this exhibition that
explores island life,
Down East
At the narrow margin where land meets sea, beauty and ruin co-mingle. The source of inspiration for so many artists and writers, the waterfront can also stand as a symbol for despair. At once the Giver of Life, Ocean can be a cruel taskmaster, exacting a dear price from those that labor on or near its shifting tides.
In an exhibit entitled, Catching the Light: The Frenchboro Paintings, at the Archipelago Gallery in Rockland, Maine, artist, Daud Akhriev, captures in his paintings and pastels the contradictions and hardships of Maine coastal living in a collection of powerful and compelling images. Sponsored by the Island Institute, a non-profit organization dedicated to cultural awareness, conservancy and research along Maine’s island-rich coastline, the show features both portraits and landscapes by this Russian-born artist, now residing in Tennessee.
In one riveting work, scaled to life-size, Danny, 2007-2008 (left) a mixture of hardship and determinatio
n is writ large on the weathered face of a native Frenchboro fisherman. In this work, based on a series called, Weathered People, completed in Russia years before, Akhriev’s impasto style imbues the canvas with the same rough-hewn texture that makes the subject appear both vulnerable and indestructible. He wears his sweat shirt like fragile armor against the ravages of his occupation; his face at once care-worn and intrepid.
In the intimate and touching portrait, Clearing, 2007, (below), a unassuming goddess arises from the broken shells and detr
itus of the inner harbor. And much like Botticelli’s, Birth of Venus-- the embodiment of female perfection—Akhriev’s twenty-first century version stands at water’s edge, nightgown clad. She radiates beauty and self-confidence as she appears to step from the sea, hem lifted in a modest but poignant gesture of her womanhood. Newly awakened, she appears slightly dazed and disheveled-- as surprised to see us standing before her as we are to witness her emergence from this unlikely Eden.
Inspired by Andrew Wyeth and following in the footsteps of Winslow Homer, Rockwell Kent, Marsden Hartley and the many others who have come to call Maine their home-away-from-home, Daud Akhriev has spent many summers on the small island of Frenchboro. While there, he has integrat
ed the colors and moods of the island and its inhabitants is a way that is both direct and respectful.
Akhriev’s landscapes, Clarity, 2008-9 (left) capture the timeless quality of the island village and the often rough-cut boundary between civilization and the forces of nature. Piers and wharfs teeter like broken monuments in the struggle to exact a living from the surrounding waters. Like poet, Percy Shelly’s fallen and once powerful king, Ozymandias, whose emblematic remains are slowly reclaimed by shifting desert sands, Akhriev’s shoreline is littered with arrays of pillar and post, coiled and tangled lines, stacked lobster pots and gray-shingled sheds—symbols of the uneasy bond between the cold North Atlantic and its coastal villages. Floating serenely in these settings however, are the ubiquitous harbor craft—principle tool of the fisherman’s trade—sleek and well-ordered as they swing on their moorings in the saturated colors of Frenchboro’s late summer afternoons.
Akhriev’s waterfront scenes are complex and meticulous studies in color and form—a gigantic game of Pick-Up-Sticks, gone array. In each of his works, the docks, like the island inhabitants he portrays, appear to have reached an uneasy truce with a world where the power of nature is relentless and the flesh endures against all odds.
by Richard Friswell
Read more reviews and opinions at: http://www.artesmagazine.com/
For immediate release
Catching the Light: The Frenchboro Paintings
Works by Daud Akhriev
At the Archipelago Gallery, Rockland, Maine
Through September 20, 2009
Nature and the
human spirit
come face-to-face
in this exhibition that
explores island life,
Down East
At the narrow margin where land meets sea, beauty and ruin co-mingle. The source of inspiration for so many artists and writers, the waterfront can also stand as a symbol for despair. At once the Giver of Life, Ocean can be a cruel taskmaster, exacting a dear price from those that labor on or near its shifting tides.
In an exhibit entitled, Catching the Light: The Frenchboro Paintings, at the Archipelago Gallery in Rockland, Maine, artist, Daud Akhriev, captures in his paintings and pastels the contradictions and hardships of Maine coastal living in a collection of powerful and compelling images. Sponsored by the Island Institute, a non-profit organization dedicated to cultural awareness, conservancy and research along Maine’s island-rich coastline, the show features both portraits and landscapes by this Russian-born artist, now residing in Tennessee.
In one riveting work, scaled to life-size, Danny, 2007-2008 (left) a mixture of hardship and determinatio
n is writ large on the weathered face of a native Frenchboro fisherman. In this work, based on a series called, Weathered People, completed in Russia years before, Akhriev’s impasto style imbues the canvas with the same rough-hewn texture that makes the subject appear both vulnerable and indestructible. He wears his sweat shirt like fragile armor against the ravages of his occupation; his face at once care-worn and intrepid.In the intimate and touching portrait, Clearing, 2007, (below), a unassuming goddess arises from the broken shells and detr
itus of the inner harbor. And much like Botticelli’s, Birth of Venus-- the embodiment of female perfection—Akhriev’s twenty-first century version stands at water’s edge, nightgown clad. She radiates beauty and self-confidence as she appears to step from the sea, hem lifted in a modest but poignant gesture of her womanhood. Newly awakened, she appears slightly dazed and disheveled-- as surprised to see us standing before her as we are to witness her emergence from this unlikely Eden.Inspired by Andrew Wyeth and following in the footsteps of Winslow Homer, Rockwell Kent, Marsden Hartley and the many others who have come to call Maine their home-away-from-home, Daud Akhriev has spent many summers on the small island of Frenchboro. While there, he has integrat
ed the colors and moods of the island and its inhabitants is a way that is both direct and respectful.Akhriev’s landscapes, Clarity, 2008-9 (left) capture the timeless quality of the island village and the often rough-cut boundary between civilization and the forces of nature. Piers and wharfs teeter like broken monuments in the struggle to exact a living from the surrounding waters. Like poet, Percy Shelly’s fallen and once powerful king, Ozymandias, whose emblematic remains are slowly reclaimed by shifting desert sands, Akhriev’s shoreline is littered with arrays of pillar and post, coiled and tangled lines, stacked lobster pots and gray-shingled sheds—symbols of the uneasy bond between the cold North Atlantic and its coastal villages. Floating serenely in these settings however, are the ubiquitous harbor craft—principle tool of the fisherman’s trade—sleek and well-ordered as they swing on their moorings in the saturated colors of Frenchboro’s late summer afternoons.
Akhriev’s waterfront scenes are complex and meticulous studies in color and form—a gigantic game of Pick-Up-Sticks, gone array. In each of his works, the docks, like the island inhabitants he portrays, appear to have reached an uneasy truce with a world where the power of nature is relentless and the flesh endures against all odds.
by Richard Friswell
Read more reviews and opinions at: http://www.artesmagazine.com/
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