Archive for April, 2006

Art in LA this weekend

Thursday, April 27th, 2006

Hey, is it Thursday again? And you without tickets to Coachella? Don’t despair, it’s LOS ANGELES. The weekend is still entirely salvageable.

April 30: The Human Rights project is teaming with Delia Cabral for a LiveDraw fundraising event at Bamboo Lane Gallery, in Chinatown. You pay an entry fee of $50 to come in and watch a bunch of artists drawing from live models. Artworks will be sold, fresh off the pad. KCRW’s Cathy Temkin is spinning. Funds go to an awfully good cause. PDF of press release(launches acrobat)

Ongoing: Ubiq: A Mental Odyssey, installation at Redcat (Calarts’ downtown LA branch), by Mathieu Briand. Nice LATimes writeup, but truthfully, this viewer becomes the viewed thing may just be too high-concept for the kind of girl who spends her workweek drawing naked ladies (and damn, not even for charity).

Ongoing: The Société Anonyme: Modernism for America, opened this week at the Hammer. Dreier, Duchamp, Klee, Picasso, Man Ray, Calder, Albers, Kandinsky… many more, but that right there’s enough to make my head ache.

LATimes Festival of Books. Be sure to stop by and say hi to Kathy, there’s some rumors going around about an ipod giveaway.

Hey, happy 400th birthday:Rembrandt Rarities opens this weekend at the Norton Simon museum. The Norton Simon has a large collection of Rembrandt etchings, and once in a while they need to air them all out.

Oh, one more. If you’re in the LA area, and interested to see an amazing show of contemporary artists (lots of abstract, beautiful and figurative works), send me a note or leave a comment with your contact info. There’s a show this weekend that promises to be simply amazing, but it is in a private residence, so I’m not posting details.

Five things to do this weekend in LA

Friday, April 21st, 2006

Hey, Artwalk! (PDF flyer)

Gregory Colburt’s Ashes and Snow, before it’s gone…

5 works by Gustav Klimt at LACMA

Degas at the Getty

Lorna Simpson at MOCA. Great name, great artist.

Some come to paint…

Wednesday, April 19th, 2006

Others come to sleep.

Welcome back, Noah!

Whee!

Wednesday, April 19th, 2006

So don’t be so precious.

Wednesday, April 12th, 2006

So I’m taking the introductory figure drawing class at UCLA Extension, with Joseph Blaustein. I’ve taken this class before, with a different teacher, (I’ve also taken Joe’s intermediate and advanced classes), but I’m really lucky to be able to take it a second time. It’s so worth doing it again.

Joe’s one of my favorite teachers, ever, and if you live in Los Angeles and you are interested in figure drawing, you’d be doing yourself a big favor to sign up for one of his classes.

Watching the progress of my classmates is amazing. People’s work is growing tremendously and it’s only the second week so far. I noticed a change on the first day - between the first and second rounds of drawing. It’s impressive and inspiring how fast it happens, and that kind of thing you can only blame on Joe. A working artist, he manages to create a safe place to play and explore, but the thing that’s priceless is that he finds the perception or style unique to each artist.

The thing that’s catching me, though - is that most of the students are unaware of their progress. They have no idea how much they’re learning, they can’t see how far they’re progressing. They don’t know because they’re so deep in the middle of it.

When you’re driving down the freeway, things don’t change so fast. It doesn’t look so different whether you’re driving 20MPH or 80MPH. You’re focused on the horizon, not on how quickly the roadside trees are zooming past. Everyone can see how fast you’re moving, except you.

This class is just like that. I’m learning and growing, but this time it’s at a slightly slower pace. Now I also have the privilege of watching the progress, because it’s not new to me - I’ve done a lot of this before, so I’m seeing all the growth that’s happening around me much more closely. It is happening and it is incredible.

Between breaks, I chat with the other people in the class. They are focused on the exercises, and while I try to keep to the basic excercises, I certainly play around more.

Today I was chatting with some classmates, and someone said something slightly wistful, I don’t remember what exactly. It doesn’t really matter, but it made me suddenly realize, they don’t know! THEY DON’T SEE IT YET! They don’t even know how much they’re learning. They don’t know how good they’re getting. They have no idea - when you’re moving that fast and staying that focused, you are not watching the trees on the side of the road.

That little leap made me further realize, not so long ago, THAT WAS ME! And I didn’t see it - the growth was there, and I definitely felt it (it felt great), but at the time, I didn’t have any clue how much and how fast. Sometimes you can’t recognize it in yourself until you see it in someone else. The realization floored me, because suddenly I got it. I realized I’ve been growing, and growing a lot.

There was a moment for me, when the ceiling cracked wide open and let the endless sky shine through. And this is how it happened: Once, I happily spent hours and hours focused on a single drawing. I would start a single drawing, and put everything into it. I’d be devastated to smudge a line, or later realize a little proportion was off. I was precious about everything I did. I didn’t do drafts, I knew where I wanted to do before I started. It was the most paralyzing approach I could have taken.

The first figure drawing teacher I had was not a bad person, nor was he a bad teacher, but he would, once in a while, pop out with something like “Ooooh. You should just stop, now, and call that done. Because that’s pretty good, and if you did something else you might mess it up.”

I was at Joe’s class today and I was down to my last three sheets of paper, so I had to maximize space on the page. I was using soft vine charcoal, and for the last few sets of poses, I just wiped away each drawing after I finished it. A few of them were, I think, not so bad, and at one point as the figure met the chamois cloth, someone said “Oh, you don’t have to wipe that away!”

Aside from the part about having no more paper, I realized I’d made it to a whole new place. I wasn’t precious about my work, anymore, not even a little. Smudges happen, things don’t always go in the controlled, careful way you’d like. Just like life, drawing is transitory, and sometimes the smudges are the best part. There’s no reason to be precious. If I can’t do another drawing again, one that’s just as good, then it was an accident, and that means it probably isn’t worth keeping as a representation of my ability. And maybe that’s the biggest breakthrough so far.