Hi Michael;

"Map of a Robbery" reminds me of Kenneth Patchen's poem, "The Murder of Two Men by a Young Kid Wearing Lemon-colored Gloves."

"The Wilderness Years": "The idea of looking out at the world was never encouraged. It didn't occur to me for a long time that looking and attempting to set out what one actually saw might be key and furthermore that one's own attempt, the meeting between subjectivity, a 'skill' in flux or development and a willingness to face failure, that is, the performative part of it all, might be in and of itself worth something."
Cezanne would have agreed with this!

School bus driver?  (Some beautiful work attached to it this drawing!)
"I did and do feel that an artist of any worth should be able to make something of some interest (I'm keeping the bar deliberately low) with the tools to hand or with a severely constrained set of tools." As someone who still uses 15 year old Dreamweaver MX, of course I agree with this.

Kingfisher movie: Interesting.

A self-portrait: Powerful. "cultivating patience."
A few days ago, I picked up a used copy of Robert C. Morgan's, "The End of the Art World," mainly for a short piece in it, "The Boredom of Cezanne." "What grabs the viewer of a Cezanne painting," Morgan writes, "is not the artist's astonishing sense of structure, as in Seurat, or his bold use of color, as in van Gogh, or his sense of shape, as in Gauguin, or even his acuity of perception, as in the late-period Monet. What comes across in Cezanne is his contribution to boredom---a concept of time, I would argue, that is essentially French."

I don't have the time now for the rest, which, breezing through, looks worthwhile spending time pondering..

Warmly,
Joel




On 8/12/2014 1:18 PM, michael szpakowski wrote:
Because I don't have any sense of a formalised approach to drawing -I
never "learned how" to do it - every one seems like starting from the
very beginning & every one seems like a miracle when it "works" and
depresses me when it doesn't. That said I wouldn't have it any other way
but I feel "gifted in the basics of art", for me at least, would be
flying under false colours...
I wrote a piece called "learning to draw in public" -it's here
http://www.michaelszpakowski.org/
and it enlarges upon my uncertainties at some length...



cheers
michael


________________________________
From: Joel Weishaus <[email protected]>
To: michael szpakowski <[email protected]>; NetBehaviour for networked distributed 
creativity <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 12, 2014 8:29 PM
Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] six drawings based on wallace stevens 'anecdote of 
the jar'



Why?


On 8/12/2014 12:17 PM, michael szpakowski wrote:

thanks Joel & Edward. "gifted in the basics of art" fills me with intense 
anxiety though :)
cheers
michael






________________________________
From: Joel Weishaus <[email protected]>
To: NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 12, 2014 8:01 PM
Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] six drawings based on wallace stevens 'anecdote of 
the jar'


It's always good to see someone gifted in the basics of
               art, such as
drawing. And these are amazing!

-Joel


On 8/12/2014 9:33 AM, Edward Picot wrote:
Michael -

I particularly like the third one and the last one,
               both of which give
a real feeling of the solidity and glassiness of the
               jar.
- Edward
_______________________________________________


-

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