It's interesting that you mention Rauschenberg as one of the artists you like, since one set of paintings he did in the 50s were white panels. Don't know whose white panels you saw at the Whitney - could have been Robert Ryman ... he's after a different sort of thing in his white paintings.

Reid

On May 22, 2007, at 6:38 PM, Dragonfly Dream wrote:


On May 22, 2007, at 12:17 PM, Reid Wood wrote:
Dragonfly-


>You've opened up a potentially year-long discussion with this first paragraph.


Yeah, that would be nice! I really do love to have these conversations.

>A question - you said as a young adult, you didn't get the work at the Whitney. Do you now (I'm sure you still fit in the young adult category)?

LOL, yes, I am not quite yet 50, so still young, eh? As for "getting" the art at the Whitney, well, umm, some I get, some I don't. A couple of years back I was able to attend the biennial there and saw all kinds of wonderful odd art. The place was packed and so it was heard to see much of anything really. I recall a wall piece that were words taped formed by burned matches taped on the wall. I actually liked this and even thought about doing something like that as mail art.

> Yes, Tintoretto, Bellini, Raphael, Leonard and the like created some beautiful paintings. Of that group I like some of those artists better than others and some of their paintings better than others. Even at that time there were artists who felt that they needed to break away from the style of the High Renaissance, and so you have styles like Mannerism. It seems by the artists you mentioned and the more contemporary examples from the Whitney you alluded to you place a high value on illusionistic rendering as a determinant for what is art. Is that true, or am I reading too much into your examples?

I was just siting some of those incredible artists I was able to view as a kid. My almost 46 year old self likes stuff more on the contemporary side. Folks like the following wet my whistle and fan my fires..

Christo
Helen Frankenthaler
Wiliem de Kooning
Richard Diebenkorn
Jim Dine
Red Grooms
Keith Harring
Louise Nevelson
Claes Oldenburg
Robert Rauschenburg
Mark Rothko

of course the list could go on and on, and let me not forget to mention some of my other favorites below!

 Lena Bartula -mixed media and installation artist

John Chiaromonte - mixed media artist

 Alexandra Eldridge -mixed media artist

 Cynthia Fusillo -mixed media and installation artist

 Jorge Leyva -painter

 K. Moss -collage, art dolls, beaded jewelry

Darlene Olivia McElroy -mixed media and collage

 Cris Parks -fluid painting






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