Saturday start.


Had a great talk with the wonderful Murray and he pointed up that silhouettes were of value sending me to a site of an artist, Diana Bryan who uses the form amusingly and of course, to the one of the kings of styles, Mr. John Alcorn (example shown above). What a delight! So, encouraged, I am going to bop around a bit on this and see if anything comes off the pen.

Am still horsing around with the fu dog. It was missing something, so I output the illustration and starting working right on top of the output. From that, it actually happened versus the sometimes frittery thing that happens with trace (albeit, other great things happen with trace...so no malice or ill will there). I will post the mid step for you to see...but a bit more twiddling with it...laying some short gradients in the corners and behind the point of the heart (at top) and maybe a bit of tone behind the heart. Might look at some vector rays in black just to see what happens...But putting this image in a background grounds the image and from the silhoutte image I formerly had (and liked and could have stopped with), this image has gone another place with the whomping up of the background. You can tell me what you think, okay?

Went to the Flax sale yesterday afternoon. Its sort of a rite of spring--women stripped down to bathing suits or tank tops and running shorts, tearing off their top layers and diving into boxes fiilled to the top with linen clothing. The ladies manning the show, wearing bright tees and facemasks due to the heavy linen residue, pushing shopping carts of tried on clothes, back to the bins, separating this type from that--and watching a new batch of box divers, grab and try on the garments as they are returned. There were garment resellers, ebayers who had piles, literally piles 48" tall that they were developing in sizes, each shirt/dress/pants/etc. gently laid one on top of the other... Thousands of dollars worth of new clothing which they could easily double. The prices are good. Normally a Flax shirt can go for around $80. At the sale, they are $25.-$30. so you can see why the frenzy is so exciting. And, you can also see why Flax is the "look of Ithaca"--which is terrific as the ithaca ladies have great alternative style and put this look to the test with a mix and match that is not "country club". I was very restrained and bought a few things... figured I would push the old stuff to use...and be discriminating this year (which is hard...but the right thing to do).

We are off to the Luckystone for spring cleaning, getting rid of the plaster dust, the litter and mess that happened with the great pipe freeze. Gotta go. Kinder are here needing to be packed into the car before we lose momentum.

Flax Nation 2009

Flax Sale

This Friday and Saturday and Sunday.
Friday 10 a.m.- 7 p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m.- 5  p.m.
Sunday  10 a.m.- 4 p.m.
New location (at the"shops at Ithaca" Mall)
Plan on it.

Local Holiday around here. The Tribe will convene!

silhouettes on my mind.

wonderful drapery fabric from my sister in law's house. Did I say that I love silhouettes and still am waiting to do a body of work on silhouettes. However, after last summer when my classmates at Hartford abused silhouettes as a cheap way to do a project, I have been reluctant to let this love bubble up. But, here we are,  eight months later and I am still in a later about them. Hmmm.

Have a luncheon today. Rushing to get stuff done. And guess what>? Just like bubblegum on your shoe, this logotype project that no one seems to be able to define "Need something simpler that has more of a visceral emotional hook". So, I have a few more days to see what could pop up. Just had a good meeting to get some better idea of the visceral emotional hook...and think with a dollop of schmaltz, I might be able to come up with something that might work. I hope... 

visceral emotional hook, I love it.

Reworking the double happiness to really work/be designed in  a heart shape.
More later.

funkibones


Working my way out of an illustration funk. I kept sketching and nothing clicked. Nothing. But, the double happiness symbol kept surfacing in my thinking...so I am doing a quick sketch (nooks and crannies of time today) of a chocolate box style valentine of the double happiness combined with florals... which, If I really design this thing, it could be nice...but over the top with the dragons too. So, dragons one and chocolate box one (or maybe it's candied lychee nuts or dim sum?) Need to get back on the illustration beat. Have a few sections still to scribe in the paper due on May 1st. So, a bit of leaning into the paper with a bit of energy on the illustration is needed.

Ordered a new tower the week before the trip. My computer is seconds from meltdown--and is close to nine years old. So, a new macintosh is coming to me. I am tired of waiting and waiting for the image to change and not being able to work in more than one program at a time. Its very exciting--but really needed. My productivity is compromised.

So, more linoleum cutting needs to happen. This amazing student we saw at Hampshire, Wilson Kemp, had some extrodinary linoleum prints that he cut on golden cutthat he printed at Amherst College. We saw a ton of letterpress work (simple stuff but really pretty) at RISD with the student guides chattering excitedly about how wonderful the letterpress was. Then we went off to have mexican food at Taqueria Pacificaand adorning the walls of this restaurant (on one side of the room) and bar on the other (separate operations) was a ton of experimental letterpress work (letters...no images). Taqueria Pacifica was part of the AS220 Artists Collective who define themselves this way:
___

AS220 is a non-profit community arts space in downtown Providence. Our mission is to provide an unjuried and uncensored forum for the arts. If you live in the state of Rhode Island, you will get an opportunity to exhibit or perform at AS220.

AS220 is part Incubator and part Bazaar.
We also build new audiences and infrastructure for artists to stimulate the cultural mulch in Rhode Island.

So, they offer studio space, living space, performance spaces, a restaurant/bar and a letterpress shop for the members of AS220. I want to know how soon I can join! It is wayyyytooo cool.

So, circuitiously I am so charged about printmaking, scratchboard making. But first more images, images to correct and paper prelims to finish. I also found some way cool alternative resources that I am reluctant to broadcast until I try them out for myself. Just need to shake these old funkibones and get them moving to create and finish.

Homeward

We toured RISD yesterday after tromping up the hill to Brown, seeing the extreme temples of learning and libraries,touring the Brown greenhouse of plant exotica, and viewing the senior textiles and apparel show from RISD. Brown and RISD are both beautiful campuses that live in the ( for us) newly exquisite Providence. RISD was good-- the freshman foundation program is solid, the problem/ solution approach is good but it really didn't drastically stand out as much as the school's reputation sets it heads and shoulders above everybody else. Our tour guides were not impressive-- ditsy and vacuous--though I will not base my impressions of the student body on those two. Great art supply shop-- though the selection and volume of book choices were sadly limited. RISD now offers an extremely limited dual degree program with Brown (only 18 students last yr)-- the whole attractiveness of " bio at Brown" kind of means one or two classes.

After our time on the campuses -- complete with full blown daffodils, magnolia trees, forsythias and budding cherries, we went to the Apple store to have Alex's iPod fixed. They replaced it. Phew!

Dinner was thanks to Yelp! A website / iPhone app which I have that is about rating and adding local restaurants, stores etc.for others -- and you can select/ find places that are close to you. We went to Tacquiria Pacifica which was a few blocks from our 4 star hotel accomodations (thx to hotwire). This order at the counter place had great, inexpensive food ( the fish tacos hands down looked like the winner of the evening-- Alex had 3!) with a bar on the other side of the room if you wanted drinks. This place supported the AAS220-- an arts community outreach, galleries and events( with studios, housing -- even a letterpress shop for members. There was a live band ( with one of the featured instruments being a tuba!) and a way groovy group of artist / cool folks eating and hanging out. Cassetti dug it "word, dog" as he is quick to confirm.

Providence

We visited my brother and his family on Thursday in Manchester. He took us off on a driving tour to Appleton Farms in Ipswich. While we were there I cajoled the group to go to the Ipswich burial grounds where some of our ancestors were along with some nice examples of urns and willows --1600s style. It's curious though not odd that each burial ground has a local style of popular imagery, language and typography / lettering. The Granery more spirit effigies and skulls and hourglasses-- Ipswich more urns, heavy lettering and willows . The hand of the carver illustrator or the carver letterer. It was a beautiful clear spring day to boot.

Yesterday we saw Clark University in Worcester. Great school but not a great fit with the home team. Excellent psychology, geography and biology. Emphasis on undergrad research and community service. Five yr masters program with the fifth year free if you keep your gpa above 3.25. Only problem is the area is not fab and there was an attitude ( this is me speaking) that was a little prideful and smug. Everyone was a bit too special to themselves.

We are seeing RISD today-- and home tomorrow.

Granary Burying Ground on Tremont Street in Boston, Massachusetts is the city's third-oldest cemetery.














from Wikipedia>>
The Granary Burying Ground is the 3rd cemetery established in the city of Boston, dating to the year 1660. The need for the site arose because the land set aside for the city's first cemetery, King's Chapel Burying Ground located a block east was insufficient to meet the city's growing population. Early in its existence the area was known as the South Burying Ground until 1737 at which point it took on the name of the granary building which formerly stood on the site of what is now the Park Street Church. In May 1830 trees were planted in the area and an attempt was made to change the name to “Franklin Cemetery” to honor the family of Benjamin Franklin, but the effort failed.

The Burying Ground was originally part of the Boston Common which originally encompassed the entire block, but two years after the cemetery was established the southwest portion of the block was taken for public buildings, which included the Granary and a house of correction[2] and the north portion of the block was used for housing.

Tombs were initially placed near the back of the property and on 15 May 1717 a vote was passed by the town to enlarge the Burying Ground by taking part of the highway on the eastern side, (now Tremont Street). The enlargement was carried out in 1720 when 15 tombs were created and assigned to a number of Boston families.
--
I was struck by the extrodinary liveliness of line, of spirit and of image that was expressed at this significant graveyard. Yes, there were many stones that were to the raw eye, probably developed, cut and finished by the same artists. However, even in those "gimme one of those" moments, how each stone had a special attitude, spirit that suited the stone that was selected (with many of them having the carving and lettering conform to the basic shape of the stone), the depth and fineness of the line, and the expression of the faces/skulls. I was intrigued by the way the wings even in this small community of stones were different from a central form from which feather forms developed either horizontally or vertically. There were some pomegranates, pinecones, masonic symbols, and sometimes a stacked spirit effigy and skull combination.

I am charmed by the stone with the heart as the central vehicle to hold the type . In the same manner, I am charmed by the stone with the urn that holds the type. This is originality that is not the same as the look in this neighborhood for the afterlife. I just got a great book on American printer's woodcuts/etchings. There are a few examples of handbills notifying the public of a death at this same time. It is a fascinating juxtaposition that somehow dimensionalizes these stone versions....Unfortunately, I didn't shake poor old Memento Mori out of my system when I stopped a while back. I think there are more images (perhaps a bit more refined) but more images nonetheless.

New Hampshire


I can see why we were sent to the University of New Hampshire. Land grant college vibe like Cornell. More affordable than Cornell. Beautiful setting like Cornell with nature inching onto the campus. Lovely rocks, trees, small brooks--missing the gorgeous quads and views that Cornell has, but same sort of proximity to nature and greenery. Some amazing new facilities from the dining rooms and dorms to the gym, the campus center/student center, the amazing library and computer clusters to the Bio facilities and the amazing (truly) Engineering labs with all sorts of machinery to make and do with. Very sustainable in their speak (but unlike Emerson who's new rennovations do more than speak about sustainable, they are detailled into every aspect of their new buildings. Beautiful new halls that really are designed to be state of the art, beautiful and clean, good use of color to designate areas..wonderful windows again to bring the pine trees and rocks into the building. Inside out.

We did the tour and info session which is pretty much the same template that most use. The big room with coffee and some sort of thing to eat. Then, the slide show about what it is to be part of the community, the classes, the greek system, the international programs, the majors/minors/programs they offer. Then, the smiling person who talks about financial aid, the fees and tuition and the grants, scholarships and loans available. Then we are always broken into groups for the tour which always consists of dorms, food, entertainment and the gym, and then a classroom or two. This tour is always for the "moms' who are just this side of suicidal about where the baby will eat, what they will eat, when they will eat, how they will eat, sleep, with who, how and when, security, and how they will be entertained (as there is so much free time in college, you barely know what to think). However, at the gym there is this amazing room you can rent mountain bikes, skis, cross skis, gym equipment, tents, sleeping bags...you name it to use. Free. Additionally, you can rent/borrow a computer the same way so they make the aspect of owning a computer is a nice but not necessary. There are quite a few things like this that pushes the student a bit out of their corners to try stuff.

So, we toured the art building, the bio building and the engineering facility independently. We were constantly surprised at the nice faculty members who took us to the side to explain something, point us in the right direction--interested in Kitty and our quests. It was slow to warm up to but with the offering in biology, the nature and location, the price and proximity to Boston (an Amtrack train hourly goes through the campus taking you further up the coast to Maine or within an hour, Boston...so close enough to make an urban experience doable and affordable. It was much less our tribe and Kitty's tribe...but it is an option not worth discarding. What with some 2000 classes offered to the community of 12000 students, there must be a range of things to study and engage in. The student body seemed nice but a bit like as Kitty put it "high school". However the facilities belie that. I still think Hampshire is our first passion for now...but a revisit will be needed to my thinking. New Hampshire is not to be ruled out as an option as a place to apply.

We are spending the night at the New England Center, right off the UNH campus. It looks like the "Ewok Hotel" as Rob calls it with a vertical orientation within a pine forest that you can look out the big windows at. The building is green colored and blends in with the trees, the rocks and the light green growth just beginning to peek through though there are still hillocks of snow still needing to melt. It is very nice and clean...with plenty of space for the home team to not be too crowded (yesterday at the Onyx was a bit tight, but the beds were prime...and with the lights off, no one would even know how small the space was...(and you can overlook it a bit as the Aveda soap and shampoo are a real treat!). Hopefully some seafood tonight!

rolling

Monday we had a day long session at Hampshire College. To put it mildly, we were blown away. And, after viewing it the night before, were not prepared to be so pleased. The evening before we had toured the five colleges in the area in the golden sun with the grass greening right in front of us. Kitty had been wowed by Amherst College's architecture and attractive students we saw walking on campus. We loved all the collegetowns. We loved UMass and the nice Studio Art building along with the offerings it had. Smith was quaint and beautiful...along with Northhampton filled with stores, restaurants and places to hang out. It was all pretty great. On the flip side, after entering the Hampshire Campus from the back side (or was it the side) from the perfect, small Eric Carle Museum, we were less sure about this place. It was shaggilly. It did not have perfect buildings. However, to see the students hopping around campus, it did reflect an eccentricity and diversity that was not evidenced at the former locations. So, we drove about...admired the woods, the grounds, the trees...and drew in our breaths for Monday. Looks arent everything!

Monday, we were greeted at their gymnasium by tables manned by smiling, attractive people with folders stuffed with information, tables adorned with tablecloths and flowers and coffee. And vegan coffee cake. There were banners in front of the impressive climbing wall that served as the background to a small stage and podium. The prospective students and ones who were making their decisions were all there...with parents and siblings in toe. And, they were our tribe! It was if the Tburg crowd from every state, and region had showed up with their eccentric child, their headsets all sync'd. So, we were in the right place. Then the adorable, and real admissions director stood up and gave us our schedules of tours, classes, and lunch--warmly suggesting we spend the day and come back at least five more times...

We were whisked off to a large-ish hall to have an orientation run by smart and very articulate students (and one new graduate). These people were funny, confident, engaged (!) and took us through the self-driven core of what it is that Hampshire does...essentially, using my phrasing "messing about" with focus. The Hampshire program mirrors what I have been doing during the last two educational stints in graduate work--classes that then form a small body of work that drives another body of work that forces re-education through reading etc. and then the cycle continues. Liberal doses of writing and talking and thinking. Math, only if you like it--or need it. The Hampshire diamond approach (explained to us by our first year tour guide) is that one takes a class...say in pond biology. You love it, and feel that you need more training in a topic...so you go do that either at Hampshire or any of the 5 other schools (a bus runs every half hour to all the other schools). Then, with the training, you study more either on that topic or something else. The path of learning takes you to where you either want to go, or find yourself going. And, this work is supported by panels of teachers--with the end product being a way to learn, a passion and a focus that is bespoke for each student.

They had me by the ears.

Then, the tour led by a very candid, funny first year. He was very honest about eveything from the bicycle repair run by students, to the Emergency Medical teams run by students, to the spring and Jan Term trips (run by students) in kayaks and canoes. No sports--except their competitive Ultimate Frisbee team. Man, having no sports changes the paradigm considerably. Rob reminds me that they do engage in dodge ball. We saw classrooms and most importantly, the shops. The biology labs, woodshops, art studios all were phenomenal messing about spaces. Room to work.Really work...and if you needed something you could get it, or build it yourself. The art barn had a nice small painting studio where a professor was critting a remarkable work done by a student. The cubbies/studios for the other students were great and the WORK. OMG. The work was phenomenal. This is a place (remember, this is self driven) where even the best artist gets better/stretched. We saw a student's work, Wilson Kemp, who had linoleum prints which were extrodinary, bold, and beautifully designed. He had come to Hampshire as a photography student (state of the art Mac lab with 3 enormous epson printers there for anyone's use)--and after his trip to Cuba (did I mention that their study abroad program really was about study...it is the real thing with Cuba, China and one other place that Hampshire focuses on)--he came back and was taken with printmaking. He does all of his work at Amherst (knowing the riches that are there) and takes full advantage of the 5 college relationships. There were paintings better than MFA work from Syracuse that I bumped up against. Once again...each person with confidence, excellence and a work ethic that was beyond their years. We saw students working passionately, as if on deadline with themselves...and when Rob and I sat on the commons...what did these students talk about? Sex and parties? NO. Work, and their learning. So, when Kitty and Alex sat in on a class on Neurobiology (which they both loved), we went back to the shop to see about the glassblowing that was mentioned. We were given a tour by one of the shop heads who explained it was flameworking...but the santas workshop aspect of how they (the teachers) were there to help make anything happen. There was a tiny blacksmith kiln that had been rigged to take vegetable oil and the student could get it to heat to 2800 degrees. Another student was going to make a tabletop glass operation (inspired by the medieval furnaces) which was impressive.

Never judge a book by its cover...and at Hampshire, this is certainly the case. It's the beat..the passion, the love of learning and the entrepeneurism that comes from each student having to get out there and get what they need to fuel more learning. It is a fearlessness that I admire in people who are possesses and on a path which is rare in any academic environment--however at Hampshire, seems almost commonplace. I could rattle on forever but time is of essence.

We saw Emerson College yesterday. Emerson is situated at the edge of Boston Commons--an urban campus which has amazing facilities from the high tech studios and classrooms to gorgeous dorm rooms and library. The students are very focused (a professional program) on journalism, film, theatre, theatre production but have the ability to work in any of these areas with student run clubs and productions. This school runs and manages two theatres (beautifully rennovated, old theatres with gold leafed plaster putti and balcomies) with more than fifty productions a year. Everyone gets their hands dirty. They run a recognized radio station that broadcasts, raises funds and even is available on itunes. They run a newsroom and a t.v. station. It is very real. The students we met and saw were nice, focused and also driven by the work in a more conventional way. Not a place to find yourself but if you know what you want...impressive place.

We did a bit of walking around. A trip to the cemetery next to Park Church for me. Wonderful. Being with so many of these carved gravestones was amazing due to the liveliness of the cutting, the repetition of the imagery and yet so many derivations. The lettering was great--with ligatures and corrections to amuse everyone. Kitty and I spied a triple head...one of a skull, a winged cherub and then another head on top of that. There were some other examples not shown in the Ludwig book...from flat stones cut like silhouettes of obelisks, to silhouettes used in the design of regular stones (an urn in particular which served as the base for the copy). Paul Revere was buried there with a column marking his grave where people left stones as tributes. John Adams was there with a rather monumental marker complete with an English style heraldic device with lions/griffins, swirlies, and hands. Will post the images later

We got a taste of Harvard in the morning...walking through the beautiful campus on a perfect cool spring morning. The buds are coming out...the students were on campus...so it really was quite a juxtapostion from Hampshire to Harvard. Cambridge was bustling. We had remarkable hamburgers for breakfast/lunch that made for some fun as it was very much a student landmark we ate at to the delight of the home team. We took the Hotwire lottery and spent one night at the Kimpton Hotel Marlowe and the second night at Kimpton Onyx Hotel in the Quincy Market area.
Both very nice, small boutique hotels that we have stayed in in San Diego and last Christmas in Westwood (LA) California.

Off to University of New Hampshire this morning. Should be interesting.

North Adams, Massachusetts

Went to Mass MOCA last night and saw a hours worth of art-- with the highlights being a vast and wonderful wing committed to Sol Lewitt and a body of work inspired by Dante's Inferno within a show Eulogizing Modern times. Even thinking about eulogies is wonderful.

We browsed the store and got to the music performance space to have an easy dinner prior to hearing an inspired trio, Harriet Tubman, play. Today more art and then a trip over to Amherst to be prompt for a tour of Hampshire College tomorrow.

Watch the sidebar on the right for quicky updates!

No IF today again.


Its pretty much flat out here with work, kids stuff and trying to polish my paper up and get the work refined, redone or added (3 new). The new ones are the Fu dog, the double happiness (still working on it...you all just have sketches) and possibly one on Japanese Tea Garden in San Francisco (with Peonies, and the like)--maybe even a Union Square one with the sculpture and the moon flowers. I also want to do a vector buddah and a vector (but very poster styled) dragon head. I would like my SF project to be a small book of images (lulu) and have enough to hand out at the session. It would make a fun promo...a la PushPin...and is a good goal with a deadline. This is topline thinking.

The weather is glorious with high blue skies, cool lovely temperatures and the green grass is greening up. My big stinky frittillaria bulbs are coming on like gangbusters and the varmints (deer) are afraid of them and thus, they flourish. The willows are that soft yellow green before they begin to blow out. Our daffodils are back on track. And the meat headed Turkey Vultures have returned to circle the tall pine trees and stomp around when they are damp. We had a half dozen turkeys scurrying down the driveway last weekend. The turkeys are prolific this year. Rob had to stop the car coming home the other evening as there were a stream of them, well over a dozen that were wobbling across the highway thank you very much.

The computer is prodding me, I have to go to an appointment.
More later, I hope. No IF. Couldnt get the steam up for it today.

no happiness with this.


Doesnt say Double Happiness Valentine. The Dragons need to be more curly on a frame... like the head...but this is not working...albeit, maybe i can save this as a frame (not for double happiness) but for a happy cat, a waving Buddha, or a dim sum celebration. I have another drawing of a dragon on the board..Sushi Valentine could be fun...or to go back to the family portraits which might be a bit of a stretch. Am taking one or two of the weaker valentines out of the mix and putting these Chinatown valentines in their place. Chipping on the paper.

All on track but lots of time being spent getting hair cut, teeth worked on, feet worked on for the kinder. R. in NYC today with family medical stuff. Need to move forward to get work done. Back steps being rebuilt. Gazebo over the pumps in the yard to have a bit of a cleanup. The town wants us to post our property so they can police the area...but somehow "Posted" signs down up against Camp Street doesnt really communicate the image we want to portray.

Gotta go.

I Luv Fu too.


Woke up. Hated the vegetation at the bottom. Stupid and undesigned. So, I stripped the flowers out...and its looking a bit better. Then the gingerpeel background with tones were added. I am liking where this is going. Cleaner, whiter, brighter...more focused. Need to put 10% cold in there...thinking turquoise.

Its snowing today. Poor little daffs. There were a few early anxious ones that came up...willing Springtime to come along. But mid April is always the big wet snow time...time to kill the willow trees.

More later. Working on Quest and on my paper. I am a bit of a bore.