Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Art in Public Places: Planning the Creation Installation

Reaching across thirty feet of Agalma Virtu Gallery space, the “zero” explosive composition of my painted mural Vortex, has inspired the Steinman Art Trust to promote the work as the Creation installation for the lobby of a performing arts center in Asia.



Plans for the theater resemble the Academy located at 99 Wong Chuk Hang Road in Hong Kong.



For this project, I am in the process of exploring the transposition of my elongated painting into the medium of a large-scale woven tapestry. Such a transformation of my mural would utilize expert weavers such as Flanders Tapestries. The Flanders group, located in Belgium, executed the tapestries that line the sanctuary of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles. They employ specialized computerized looms to precisely render original paintings. Most notably, they use Dornier Rapier looms, the largest in the world, that are able to handle large formats, employing 20,000 hooks. Indeed, most contemporary large-scale tapestries have been woven through technical computer programmed loom applications.



Even with the power of the calibrated loom, a certain amount of painstaking handwork would still remain in such a project. In the case of the Creation mural, heavy linen linings would need to be sewn into place by hand in order to reinforce and complete the weaving.



Fixtures and other hanging devices would lend weight and stability to the tapestry that would greet visitors in the immense glass paneled foyer of the theater.

In the weaving of this work, I would want to precisely capture the pure teal color and sense of light-stuck aquamarine that wicks out of the heart of Creation’s fiery ring. I imagine that the deepest hues of burning cadmium orange, umber and black might very well lend themselves to textural inclusions that would add depth and dimension to the woof and warp of the weave. Choosing the right custom dyed threads is key.



The mural’s ivory ground would translate well in a pure wool, linen and silk blend. Above all, I would want the light pearl color of the background to intensify the energetic and kinetic effect of my interpretation of the BIG BANG. My goal is to impart a sense of floatation, emphasizing the disembodied “O” of my color composition. The Director of the Steinman Art Trust recently wrote, “The Zero Creation Tapestry will shape the conceptual entrance to a creative stage that awaits in the interior of the performing arts center.” All that said, I look forward to leaping from handmade paint to computer-generated cloth!♦

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Pageflake Tour



Welcome to my Pageflake! Now at my fingertips, I can get the news I want about what’s happening in the contemporary art scene backed by world news and entertainment. It’s all about up-to-date content pulled from the web onto my Pageflake.

First stop on top at the left is my RSS Feeds (Art) section that accesses the international art community. The upper left-hand corner features Art Limited, a gallery that gives me instant access to changing visuals from top photographers. I enjoy these photos because they keep my eye fresh for the abstract murals I construct. Located just below Art Limited, I depend on KRCW’s Art Talk to keep my ear close to the dialogue going on with current national arts events and happenings. Through the week, Pageflake will give me pieces like the Museum Scene in LA or link a story on Art in the White House. Since a painting of mine was added to the collection at the White House, I’m always searching for updates on what’s going on in the Washington arts scene. Below, I added a Flickr flake to receive photos tagged with Los Angeles. Finally, there’s YouTube: Featured, which gives me access to the latest art videos from YouTube. All of this adds up to very cool visuals and art info!



Going down the line and keeping things current, RSS Feeds (News) brings me highlights from BBC Entertainment, top news stories from USA Today, the Los Angeles Times, CNN.com Economy, and BBC News. Lifehacker provides current tech news.

RSS Feeds (Entertainment) puts a smile on my face with a pithy Quote of the Day, a Joke of the Day, and crazy cat pictures from I Can Has Cheez Burger. Garfield Cartoons rounds out my entertainment content.



At the top of the page, taking central position is my Twitter flake. Just below this we find live updated podcasts from the Art Institute of Chicago. Ever since I attended art shows in Chicago, I’ve wanted to keep as current as possible with events filtered through this great art hub. Now it’s totally convenient on Pageflake.



Taking central stage just below the podcast is Searches that provides a broad range of content to my Pageflake. There is a Universal Blog Search with an “Arts” search that combs international arts coverage; Universal News Search “Arts” which also links to arts news features; and there’s Universal Video “Arts” Search that displays a smorgasbord of video content. Pageflake is a tailor-made resource; it’s been great to put together a unique arts roster that’s always current.

At the top right hand of the Pageflake, we meet Bibliographies that features 14 sources with 8 annotated art books and articles I’ve reviewed, together with six citations for books on sculpture. Anyone accessing my Pageflake might be interested in these recommendations for personal reading as well as scholarship. Through the summer, I’ll be adding more reading recommendations in this area to keep it fresh.

Last but not least on the bottom right are Bookmarks that feature my own Jack’s Del.icio.us Bookmarks that access Vandeley Design, news from Iran, and other personal interest topics from my Del.icio.us bookmarks. Andrusca’s Del.icio.us Bookmarks underscore and conclude the page with links to international art forums, including Frieze Magazine, from my “social bookmarking soulmate.”

Well, that’s it – a personally tailored live reading experience on my Pageflake that gets constantly updated as the world and the global arts community continues to go forward!♦

Friday, June 19, 2009

Commentary: Color as Construct and the Evanescence of Landscape

One of the great resources of Yale University is its Yale Center for British Art founded by Paul Mellon. The Center hosts permanent exhibitions of English landscape and equine artists of the 18th and 19th centuries, including paintings by Constable and Stubbs.

Accessing the quiet galleries located on the upper floors of the center designed by Louis I. Kahn, one enters into an altered sphere in coming face to face with the disembodied color reveries of Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851). In these pictures largely evoking landscape and maritime subjects, the treatment of substantive form dissolves into tenuous and haunting nuances of color and light.



The experience of coming into an almost touchable proximity with Turner’s surfaces allows one to study the artist’s brushwork. Close scrutiny reveals that Turner juxtaposed discordant abstract warm and cool color value gradients, subsuming them in washes of sheer oilated color. The result is a sense of quiet glitter and scintillation. Orchestrating a darkened Payne’s grey palette, Fingal’s Cave, painted in 1832, is a lustrous example of how Turner captures landscape and subsumes its structure through muted color to become an embodiment of atmosphere.

We meet this same sublimation of landscape overtaken by atmosphere in the sun stroked canvas Pinion Hills at Dawn, painted by California plein-air artist Clinton Johnson in 1926. I was immediately attracted to this canvas that glittered on the grass at a lawn sale a few years back. Bringing it back home, I was interested to find the artist’s name in my reference edition of Artists in California, 1786-1940, Vol. II, Hughes Publishing Company, 288. As an artist who enjoyed setting up his paintbox outdoors in the manner of Edgar Payne, Johnson was a resident of Los Angeles from 1922 through 1928, from where he traveled to painting sites in the Mojave and the San Bernadino Mountains. Johnson’s technique was marked by his ability to trowel on delicate rifts of blue and yellow paint using a palette knife. His work pays homage both to nature and to Turner through creating a sense of insubstantiation, transforming structure through color.



I admire Turner and am glad to find myself in possession of a small Johnson. Yet in my own work, I have been in pursuit of something different than these artists' objectives. In my large scale painting, Diptych I, I wanted to investigate a radical reduction of program and intention and concentrate on the mediation of colorants on a surface. For this work, I compounded paint as a means to explore optical reactive variants of close-knit color wavelengths. It was exciting to finally apply the paint after so much work was involved in achieving the correct chemistry, density and consistency.



In this work, horizontal and discrete color bands of cool green glazed malachite, lapis ultramarine and purple compounded with cochineal, recessively juxtapose and optically interact with aggressive hot ribbons of pure madder red.



After so much personal involvement with the work, it was something of a surprise to hear comments on how the vibration of color in this mural seemed to promote a sense of atmosphere and landscape in the minds of viewers. Nevertheless, the canvas remains a flat flag, composed of a set of broad color lines that interact on a stark pearlized canvas. Painted bands of color constitute its structure rather than any overt attempt to construct a landscape. Despite my intentions for this work, the collector of Diptych characterizes the canvas as his favorite view of “the torrid sunset one often sees on the Gulf of Aidan.”

Ars Ipsa Loquitur
Art speaks for itself.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

(COMMENT) REFLECTIONS ON GREEN


Color is a way to contemplate, feel and live every experience. Color is vibration.


My canvas Hebrides was glazed with a rare aqua verde paint through the sweep of a brush. For me, the work evokes the dark organic heart of growing things that rise toward light.


The “S” signature of light waves, the “S” of my signature, and the “S” of universal growth patterns permeate the canvas. When viewed through the computer screen, green becomes living and electric.♦

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Social Bookmarking Soulmate

Del.icio.us, Diigo along with other sites, exponentially facilitate social bookmarking. Joining Del.icio.us, I was able to locate a number of people who share my interests in culture, art, contemporary art and history. I was able to narrow my search down to “Andrusca,” who evidently shares my desire to stay up-to-date with the contemporary art community.

Clicking on Andrusca’s art, music, and film “tags” revealed an interesting and exotic international roster of art communities and events from France, Spain, England, Romania and other nations. Andrusca’s bookmarking practices are not particularly thorough since he has failed to post any comments; looking over his account did not reveal any art community contact connections. However, Andrusca is a heavy user; I noted his Del.icio.us account posted 999, almost 1,000 bookmarks.

In an attempt to determine bookmarking content, I was able to ascertain that Andrusca’s first subject preference is “art” with the category of “contemporary art” ranking second amongst his top ten tags in a field of 184 tags. The tags are sorted by art, art mags, biennale, evenimente, gallery, magazine, portfolio, street art, TV and video art. Looking over dates of usage, I was able to determine that Andrusca averages access to about six sites a week. While Andrusca’s tags are not overtly well organized, you get the feeling his main goal with Del.icio.us is to keep posted about what’s up and hot.

Again, Andrusca is probably located in Spain or continental Europe and enjoys staying connected to the international art scene, which includes the latest museum shows being staged around the world. I found Andrusca’s bookmarking to be extremely interesting in this regard in discovering the Museum of Online Museums, a very convenient site that provides a prominent museum line-up from the Rijksmuseum to the National Gallery (who is posting a spectacular bust of Lorenzo di Medici on their homepage), Russian museums and other institutions. Coagula.com presents the postings of the Coagula Art Journal. Spike presents perspectives and calendar comments on Eastern European art including what’s going on in Vienna. To say the least, Andrusca’s sites are eye-opening.

Discovering Andrusca is the equivalent of climbing on his back and looking over his shoulder as he checks into international art doors. One of these places is Foundation Cartier, that features film, on-line video, music and art. That these famous jewelers are getting into the business of contemporary art sponsorship is quite a revelation – they must be trying to keep up with Rolex who sponsored Coleman’s “Ashes” photography extravaganza. One can see an enterprising Andrusca, who is very likely an artist, keeping current with where up-to-the-minute patronage of art is taking place. He’s marking the shows, the newest art coming out of schools and the critical commentary getting published. He very well might be a collector who is trying to psyche out the latest emerging sphere for his next investment. All that said, it was great to tap Andrusca’s Del.icio.us account, a not-so private line into how someone perceives the world of contemporary art.♦

Friday, June 12, 2009

Paintings of My Own Vintage


I have been surrounded by a sense of living history through art. Art and the active craft of art is as much a part of myself as breathing. For the past six years, it has been my passion to paint. I have engaged in painting on my own terms, approaching the malleable liquid and grit of paint in ways that are quite different from the works in the wide ranging collection of art I mentioned in the poem introducing my blog.

Standing alone in my work space, I have felt at times that paint can become the color of the human soul. My private paintings began in a solitary room, but these works have managed to come to notice, one of which was added to the Presidential Collection at the White House. Encouraged, I was accepted to Yale University where I pursued formal studies in painting at the Yale School of Art, along with independent art studies at the Whitney Museum in New York.

In deciding what to select from the wide-ranging art collection highlighted in ABOUT THIS BLOG, I’ve thought deeply about what is most personal to me. I’d like to open a post on what I’ve created, with a private journal entry on the subject of Paintings of My Own Vintage. The paintings imaged on this site that intersect the above Trifecta of posts are murals that are part of a larger collection. In time, I would like to reflect upon the profound beauty of other artist’s works within my care and keeping, but for now, I feel closest to the murals that have been generated from my own hands. These installations are my passion, since I feel driven to complete the cycle of my present work.

REFLECTIONS ON PAINTING AND LIGHT

Light is a door. The open ceiling well of an art studio sky-light is not just an aperture of luminosity but a deep energetic connection that permits an artist to see into emotion, into love, and into places that become expressed from deep within one’s being. The casual onlooker might simply acknowledge that visible light is optical illumination, but as a form of energy, from my own experience, I believe the quality of light falling on one’s work and the artist’s perception of light has the power to shape artistic direction. The murals I paint are complex webs that mark the moments I have lived working in lighted spaces. Their innumerable networks of markings sign a private language best left to the translation of viewers coming into an illuminated gallery space.

My interaction with painting became came clear to me in the second floor art studios of the Yale School of Art. I remember how my paint brush dripped with red paint and how the tip suddenly shone bright in a beam of light that was bouncing through the art room windows facing Chapel Street. The light was streaking off the windshield of a slowly passing car onto my canvas like a refracted laser. In those moments, paint was no longer paint, but the blood of lighted and living substance. In those moments, I wanted to more fully explore the chemistry of color, to get beneath the mystery of color. Art in those moments was an epiphany that came closest to enlightenment.

From that moment, I embarked on researching hand-ground pigments that had been formulated since antiquity. I located two natural gemstone paint sources in India that purvey natural minerals that would form the basis of paint I would make for specialized passages of my work. Utilizing these resources, I began to grind my own pigments in a mortar. I toted my bag to London. I located binding mediums to make paint from L.Cornelissen & Son, an art supply house near the British Museum.

I became particularly sensitive about the condition of my canvases before beginning work. White or light backgrounds have been important to artists ever since the early cave paintings on light colored stone at Lascaux, and continue to provide painters working with traditional media the equivalent of radiant light filled windows. A brilliant and bleached artist’s ground has the power to ignite the picture plane with light. When an artist touches his blank canvas, his hand touches not just flat white, but a field of possibility for light and inspiration. The inculcation of light that infuses F.R. Church’s glowing work, is replete not just with the illusion of light, but the artist’s conception and interpretation of abstract shapes of light. Indeed, the brilliant areas on the picture plane create a dramatic visual pattern. Church’s work remains as much a portrait of the outer world as an inner world of light devised of his own thinking and desire for luminosity.



Pursing my own desire to impart radiance, I became intrigued as to how thirteenth century stained-glass artists achieved their peculiar sacramental ruby panes in the Sainte-Chapelle. The exquisite cobalt blue glass from this time period remains a marvel.



I found that compounding color and judging its interaction with light across various radiant sources engaged a transformational study. Computer monitors are our present-day sun behind all graphics on the web. Indeed, our visual perception of art has changed via our tech medium that has transformed all images to uncalibrated virtual stained-glass.

When I step away from the virtual world, when I stand in front of my installations, their pearl powder-coated handmade canvases serve as the light behind the paint. The antique Fedoskino Russian painting technique that adorns luster of mother-of-pearl imparts a visual electrical sheen to paint and functions internally within my painting like the light of a screen–saver. The graphic of my mural, Shalom: Stars of David on a Sapphire Field, that was added to the collection of the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia, utilizes an archival clay paper that was coated with nacre and encaustic, enriching the effect of ink deposited from my Epson 4800 series graphic printer.



Standing in the studio in a wash of light, one realizes that illumination is not just an optical quantity or a technique of craft, but a motion of spirit that connects the artist and the viewer to the roots of creative energy. Every brush stroke of a painting imparts energy in discrete bursts of an application that remains in place as an expression of combustion. Whenever our eyes contemplate an original work of painting, absorbing the color and lines of an artist’s signature, no matter how smooth the surface, we link to that energy. We join a river of connection. For some standing in this sacred sphere in a museum, in experiencing admiration for the work of an artist long passed, that connection might best be described as a state of light.

On a walk around Yale and the environs of New Haven, I noted that many of the buildings were marked with dedicatory engravings, some of which were placed above stairwells, above colonnaded arches, and on the lintels and architraves of entrances. I encountered an engraved block of sandstone mortared into the wall of a building. Running my hand over the grooves of its lines, the words spoke to me, and I felt the living light of its authorship:

ARS PERENNIS/IN LUCE VIVE, VIVE IN AMORE
Art is eternal - live in light, live in love.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Hello World-Duchamp's Fountain




DUCHAMP'S FOUNTAIN

Trifecta


ABOUT THIS BLOG:


When I speak about fountains, I think of a pour-out; Not just that clear liquid that everyone washes in but that dark water from subterranean wells that comes from deep bedrock and carries traces of gold.

Art and art finding is connected to fountain work. Art is made in the light; it sometimes gets buried and then comes to light again. The small pieces of paper borne art in our care - we might take them for granted. They grow faded in a sunny window without a Venetian blind; we sometimes shelve them unappreciated if they no longer fit in with the new sofa. If we wait long enough, two inches of meteor fall-out will cover the wreckage of pots we cook in. Our world is destined toward the incline of subterranean Rome.

I am an old man in a young man’s body who wants to overeat but somehow stays thin. I can’t get young again or get enough of art. I’m an art lover; an international traveler who sometimes rides a soccer field. I appreciate my treasures found on the urban lawn; from uptown galleries to de-accessioning museums; from family and friends to mystery finds. My valuables like yours from other lifetimes, all have lives quite separate from the beds they sleep in. We’ll go together and wake some of these dreaming things. Some artifacts and the art we’ll look at won’t need any more light than they illumine themselves. Ars Ipsa loquitur – Art speaks for itself.

This site is my private journal, weblog, discovery space and scrapbook. Deco, Chinese and Japanese art, unmanned art, monuments, the American Academy in Rome; the eternal paper trail, 19th to 21st American sculpture; Egyptology; 21st century paintings of my own vintage, history along with rare first edition books and poetry will probably grab my attention as I pour through my belongings and photograph them here by the sea. But there is more, a lot more, and we’ll discover it here. Wittkower, Hegel, Lord Carnarvon, Fu Hao, the Holy Bible as an art form; Dali, Der Kunst; Hannah Glasse on cooking; Japanese woodblock Prints; 1920’s antiquarian Paris booksellers; Persian manuscripts; the art of Bonsai; Stanton Macdonald Wright: We’ll turn on the fountain and see what pours!♦

Voice Critique



Charlie Finch wields one of the sharpest art critic pens on the planet. He is the Columbo of the art world, mercilessly extolling and skewering his subjects with his sardonic voice. Remorse is not his style. Schelpping across the New York art scene in soiled sneakers and a frayed dinner jacket, his arrival at upscale artist receptions and scene fests results in admixtures of dismay and embrace. As the rotund co-author of “Most Art Sucks” and monthly contributory critic to artnet; his articles are stand-outs in a landscape of art that might otherwise implode on its own self-congratulation. His voice largely comments on art shows and shenanigans staged in brick and mortar galleries as well as museums. Not shy or backward, Finch’s voice reviews the art scene blogsphere with his own kitchen-made brand of creative acid.

His presence on Artnet comes in the shape of monthly articles that have been posting for a decade. While not an actual blogsite with room for commentary, Charlie gets his Artnet feedback from the street. A lot of dealers, curators, artists and patrons in downtown Manhattan cower if they spot him coming and a random pick of any of his posts will get us closer to how Finch achieves this effect. Webbies from Taipai to Paris googling his “blogs” probably feel they know him when they read something like his article, “Assuaging the Anxiety of Art.”

How do these people get to know Charlie so well through his writing? First of all, no one gets sticker-shock when scanning Charlie’s articles before reading them. All his posts are narrow two inch bandwidths, divided into short paragraphs of just two or three sentences each. Plenty of white double space between short texts shortens the reader’s personal investment in perusing Charlie’s posts. Thus, the format says “Hey, read me! I’m not heavy.” In his article, “Assuaging the Anxiety of Art” Charlie lampoons museum staff cutbacks due to budget cuts. He opens with a rhetorical self-referential voice that makes him sound like he’s on a shrink’s couch:

“Ever since we first became disoriented at the Metropolitan Museum as a boy in the 1950’s, we’ve been acutely aware of the anxiety of art appreciation. All that knowledge, all that money, all that skill. Hand me a pillow, please!”


Yes, that’s Charlie’s first paragraph. Right away, Charlie cuts to the kernel of his emotion and thought. He doesn’t over or under-build his communication. In such short-circuited prose, particularly in the second sentence that pitches staccato phrases like, “all that skill,” word choice and punctuation stand out. Just image the effect of “please” with a period instead of an exclamation! Charlie goes on to mention the distinguished Director of the Whitney, whom everyone tiptoes around and handles with white-glove reverence:

“This is why Adam Weinberg is onto something with his introduction of yoga to the staff of the Whitney, but he hasn’t gone far enough. The Whitney may be small for a museum, but it is the perfect size and shape for an ashram, ready to peacefully revolutionize the art experience.

Imagine! Museum “guards” dressed in flowing robes trained to administer instant pressure-point shoulder massages for a suggested tip of $5.”

Or museum-goers encouraged to lie on the floor with pillows rented at the door, gazing up in relaxed bliss at gloomy Edward Hopper.”


In these three subsequent paragraphs, everyone gets in on the joke of the museum’s penny-pinching ways fed back to them in small change through Charlie’s creative ideas. His use of short descriptive adjectives, such as “peacefully”, “flowing”, “relaxed”, and “gloomy” are off-set with his recommendation of “a suggested tip.” Charlie’s succinct parameters make his writing almost surgical where every word creates some kind of incision. He cuts to the heart of his piece in the following block of type:

“This is a win, win, win situation: Whit revenues would soar, no staff would ever be fired again, and museum-goers would be as still and calm as a roomful of Eli Nadelmans. But that’s not all folks – what about introducing relaxology to the psychic jungle of Chelsea?”


Within just thirteen words, “museum-goers would be still and calm as a roomful of Eli Nadelmans,” the onomatopoeia of “Nadelmans” conjures up a set of knocked down bowling pins and/or people nodding off to sleep. Finch rides that elusive wave of word choice that floats effervescent humor. Reading him for the first time can spark a laugh in context with the entirety of the piece; pulling it apart in analysis kills Finch’s elusive finger that touches the funny bone. Charlie is a rolling monkey of creative imagery and we meet it in the following paragraph:

“Each dealer could specialize in a sideline, such as midget wrestling from Mike Weiss or optometry from Daniel Reich. In such an atmosphere of permanent bliss, the dealers would start giving the art away (oops, can’t do that!) Everyone would be famous for 15 minutes and relaxed forever.”


Coming to the end of “Assuaging the Anxiety of Art” opens the door to other Finch pieces. He is not all humor and biting sarcasm. Finch sensitively covers the suicide of an obscure artist in his post, “Death of an Artist.” In this post, we meet the sober and quiet voice of Finch engaged in carving a moving obituary:

"Art, apparently, can only do so much and it is never enough. John Michelini found the space between art and life, and he jumped."


A more typical Finch is met in his review on the state of art blogs “A Not-So-Vast Right Wing Conspiracy.” In this latter piece, he still positions himself as an auteur of descriptive jargon operating in abbreviated format:

"One of the nice things about art criticism is that you can read it, go to a show, and forget about it. It’s sports writing for the eggheads with the little grey cells.

Unfortunately, the proliferation of art blogs has taken all the day-tripper fun out of criticism by circle-jerking, recycling and regurgitating the effluvia of critique beyond the wildest fantasies of Rosalind Krauss. An example is Sharon Butler of the "Two Coats of Paint" blog in Connecticut, who is so exhaustive in her summaries of current art writing that someone could start a (short) blog on how Sharon Butler spends her nonexistent spare time.

What’s "fun" about the art blogs is how conformist, reactionary, redundant and self-referential they are, the Sam Brownbacks of the art world. Tyler Green sucks up to every curator on the planet, and I wish him well on his world tour of speaking engagements at obscure museums, cashing his money orders at the bus station.

...

I suppose these sloggers do have a legitimate complaint that New York-London-China are ignoring the art shows and concerns of out-of-the-way places like Washington and Philadelphia, but dull blogs make the tourist brochures of such burgs read like radical manifestos."


Finch’s voice is not just inventive, it is deeply contextual in referencing a complete understanding of the New York art scene. His voice addresses everyone in the scene and amuses those outside of it. His use of language but moreover his turn of phrase and biting short-circuited wit create the impression of a rather bored and sarcastic aficionado who is attempting to uncover something wonderful under a heap of art trash. In the largely incomprehensible abstract landscape of art, Charlie’s voice more often than not reflects and complements the absurdity of contemporary art. That’s his ethos: he has made enemies and he has made friends. Above all, Charlie’s greatest accomplishment has come through his writing style that has prevented him from being ignored. In the art world, he is ultimately loved - at least he keeps getting invited back to catered receptions, because he has achieved what everyone in his scene respects and seems to desire: notoriety. ♦

Profile: Giornale Nuovo Blog


Since I’m a history, fine art, poetry and sports enthusiast, I was excited to locate a group of blogs that I thought were pretty rich with novel content and user friendly commentary. Heaventree was among these finds along with Vulnex, which is defunct but is still able to be accessed for its commentaries on the raison d’etre of “Why Blog?”. In a pod of blogs mentioned on Mountshang, I also discovered the excellently designed Giornale Nuovo.

Even though the Giornale has become defunct as a blog site, it is no doubt maintained on the web for its images and the sheer accessibility of the voice of its author who writes primarily about fine art intermingled with literature. It would be a crime to delete this blog from the web, since it is equivalent to a finely bound leather volume. In fact, posted comments can still be found on Giornale that applaud the site as one of “the most favorite blogs on the web.” Since the site is defunct, I have been unable to assess the site’s ultimate ranking in popularity; the site http://technorati.com/ makes no mention of it as far as I can tell. That said, the creative melding of modern and antique curiosities on Giornale is breathtaking. Looking at its creative menu with all entries, the site is more like a collection of admirable novelties rather than a forum for intense “town hall” debate. Giornale is clearly not Deborah Lipstadt’s blog where controversy over a hot topic like “Holocaust Denial” is the engine for blogging input. Clearly, the appeal of the Giornale is its introduction of rarely considered material culture. Accessing the blog, one gets the sense it was built to be a little “Ashmolean” of the web, with its audience loving its author’s hunt into little known dusty areas of artistry and history. In a word, the site has style.

Indeed, the Giornale in the author’s words, is “a public weblog, journal and scrapbook,” which was “composed in a hotel room in a town on the Baltic coast of Southern Sweden.” The author, not a historian, worked as an IT consultant for a telecom company in the town, having been born in Wales with some years spent in Italy. From this cultural vantage point, the author’s postings to on-line diaries at memepool weblog, led the author to continue posting at the OpenDiary, that in time became less a day-by-day diary, morphing into intermittent “notices in the shape of a web-log” to which people responded. The archives of the weblog are kept online as monthly archives and individual entries. Since the author became disinterested to continue his postings, the site was last updated on the 9th of May, 2008. My guess is that the site required a tremendous commitment of resources and time to generate. Nevertheless, the author maintains an open email for contacts. As noted before, Giornale can be accessed along with other links on Mountshang.

My interest in Giornale as well as Heaventree no doubt stems from the idea that original source artifacts can spur discussion. Material culture is a basic leverage point of historic enquiry and these sites exploit the arcane and little known, engendering a special kind of fascination. Chinese art and artifacts, 19th to 21st century European and American sculpture and painting, offer portals through which bloggers can engage in creatively accessing histories of China, Europe and the Americas. Getting hold of an interesting smorgasbord of cross-cultural content shapes a platform for creative streaming. Speaking about content in relationship to the work of Didier Massard, the Giornale is pretty straightforward in this post, letting us know the photographer builds miniature models and then takes pictures of them which can be seen at the Klein Gallery. Actually, it isn’t so much what this defunct blog says in its posts about art and history, but that it does so in a way that inspires people to dig down and mine their own artifacts, recollections and insights, posting their responses. We can see this at work in a post by Michelangelo on October 1,2007 08:02 PM, that responds to Gironale’s review of Didier Massard’s Klein Gallery show, lending insight into other kinds of rare architectural Models.

Cutting away from the Giornale, in my own blog, I’ll want to project a more colorful lead blogger with a voice that warms up when dusting off photographs, in-situ art, constructs, paintings, sculpture and creative writing while also appreciating the history that spins off visuals and literature. Where Giornale and Heaventree borrow their art and literature, I own the rights to much of what I plan to photograph and write about as well as some large scale murals I’ve painted and some literature I’ve written. While pursuing coursework at Yale, I did some on-ground research into the history of a relative of mine in New Haven in anticipation of writing a screenplay which I’d also like to blog about. Posts on Gironale, much like what I plan to do, are not particularly in-depth or exhaustively scholarly by any means, but serve rather to whet the appetite for discovery that would otherwise remain lost. Underscoring this focus, is the post on the Swedish museum show of artist Eva Bonnier, which led a blogger by the name of Monica Perna, to post a commentary that helped flesh out a sense of relationship to this obscure artist. Visiting the Giornale site, blogging threads are from doctors, scholars, as well as intellectual vacationers.

While no doubt interesting to fine art connoissuers and antiquarian specialists, the Giornale blog is really a wide ranging random mix of curiosities that are difficult to categorize but gain a sense of order and relevance on the author’s blogging collection. While appearing rather as a mixed bag, this blog’s real force is in the pleasure of things discovered and the inspiration that each blogger is contributing not just to the extension of the web through usage (What is web 2.0 / “The Machine is Us/ing Us”) but joining in the extension and witness of history. In these blogs, what appears as disjointed trivia in a site like Giornale is actually the spin of the first threads of written historic documentation and remembrance. The challenge of the blogsphere is to cull significant content and to save it as a repeatable path to access. Keeping the Giornale in place on the web even though the blog is closed, keeps alive one of the essential mechanisms of history through creating a portal of access and contemplation through preservation.

In a site like Giornale, bloggers walk down the most basic trail of history in observing or recollecting their world and recording their impressions in format. Historiography is the lens which colors a scholarly historian’s viewpoint onto documentation and blogging seems to naturally celebrate this bias that permeates all of historic documentation in presenting personal taste and viewpoints on all sides of postings. That said, the blogsphere is a great way to introduce, acknowledge and help preserve what is in our cultural attics, through our experience of the past and particuarly in our present lives. ♦