Got a call from ALOC. Wouldn't you know it, "Canvas can do miracles" got an Honorable Mention ribbon. I'll post the juror's statement once I have a hard copy of it.
Monday, February 19, 2018.
ALOC "Note Worthy" exhibit coming soon.
The premise of this exhibit is art that was created by inspiration from music. They requested a specific piece of music to be noted: Tune, artist and performance. Their intent is to have a link to Youtube during the show so that you can use your phone to listen to the music that stimulated the art.
I have done two pieces. I almost always design with music on and frequently annotate the music at hand. Because of that I remembered that I had been listening to a very particular solo performance of Camille Saint-Saens' Danse Macabre by Vladimir Horowitz while designing and fabricating a piece I call "Hyperspace Dance."
So here it is, my first submission to "Note Worthy" - "Hyperspace Dance."
This piece is a single leaf of Myrtle 'Muscle Figure' inlayed into some bias cut "Fumed Larch." To achieve the 'macabre' dance I inlayed a strand of Kevazingo (the squiggly line) which I extracted from some scrap by finding the shape I wanted and following the grain so that it would look natural. (Kevazingo is the trade name for plain sliced Bubinga.)
(BTW: Fuming is the process of subjecting wood to the fumes from some sort of acidic mixture. In this case the fuming was industrial strength ammonia. NO, I didn't do the fuming, I bought the veneer already fumed.)
As a second submission I settled on Christopher Cross's performance of his huge hit tune "Sailing" because the tune always moved me. Just the lyrics (at the end of this narrative) are enough, even without the music, because they feel to me like great prose even leaning toward poetry.
I felt I needed to do a new piece mainly because the challenge was do a piece specifically for the show from a specific piece of music. I have sailing themed pieces on hand but wanted the challenge of doing as they asked. It's just who I am I guess; my own kind of adrenalin junky - pressure makes my blood rise.
I listened to Chris's tune several times, printed the lyrics and hung them in my studio/shop. Then I listened some more while reading the lyrics. Eventually I knew what I wanted.
The feeling I got more strongly than any was from the phrase "The Canvas can do miracles, just you wait and see, believe me."
So, I first wanted the canvas to be dominant. To do that I found the movement I needed to accentuate the shape of the sails (one spinnaker, and one main sail) in some Japanese Elm I have several flitches of. I immediately loved the free form shape of the sails the Elm yielded and started toying with the size and shape of the hull they would predict. After a single false start (I put the sails above a hull of Brazilian Rosewood, maroon in color) and almost immediately was hugely disappointed because it looked, well crafty, and definitely not artistic. Worse, the sails (or canvas) weren't the focal point and this was about 'canvas doing miracles.'
After two days of getting frustrated and thinking about giving up the idea I woke up one morning (this past Sunday in fact) and knew what had to happen: A sky with ghostly suggested clouds would be behind the sails in a Birdseye Maple sky and the hull of the sailboat would be a dreamily 'almost there' ghostly image of a hull. This would make the sails focal.
Indeed, my hope for this piece will be viewers will look at it from a distance and question the sanity of the artist and then come closer out of curiosity for their personal aha! moment when they see what it is and identify with the tune that inspired it. Will it work? How should I know. All art is a gamble isn't it? I especially think the biggest gamble is hoping for a specific response to the idea that made the artist put the first pencil mark of that idea onto paper. It is so much safer to make art look like something or, even to make it look like nothing (such as an abstract) as long as it has a good design foundation. Well enough word-smithing (I can be verbose a bright and good friend recently told me) here then is "Canvas can do miracles."
My miracle (which I'm confidant no one will 'get' is that the spinnaker is fully inflated while the main sail is luff (limp or fluttering.) I hope I've achieved both the serenity and the graceful movement involved in sailing also.
Both the hull and the clouds are suggested by micro carved outlines into the Maple sky and the Chestnut sea. Hopefully these close-ups will help that come clearer.
This piece is just now out of the press and sanded. The micro carving has been better defined and it is ready for any shading I might decide to do. It will be interesting to see what happens with this piece. Interestingly I switch back and forth with it.
Love and worry. (I worry I will embarrass myself with this piece.)
Well, that's why I do this.
"Sailing" (words by Christopher Cross)
Well, it's not far down to paradise, at least it's not for me
And if the wind is right you can sail away and find tranquility
Oh, the canvas can do miracles, just you wait and see.
Believe me.
Oh, the canvas can do miracles, just you wait and see.
Believe me.
It's not far to never-never land, no reason to pretend
And if the wind is right you can find the joy of innocence again
Oh, the canvas can do miracles, just you wait and see.
Believe me.
And if the wind is right you can find the joy of innocence again
Oh, the canvas can do miracles, just you wait and see.
Believe me.
Sailing takes me away to where I've always heard it could be
Just a dream and the wind to carry me
And soon I will be free
Just a dream and the wind to carry me
And soon I will be free
Fantasy, it gets the best of me
When I'm sailing
All caught up in the reverie, every word is a symphony
Won't you believe me?
When I'm sailing
All caught up in the reverie, every word is a symphony
Won't you believe me?
Sailing takes me away to where I've always heard it could be
Just a dream and the wind to carry me
And soon I will be free
Just a dream and the wind to carry me
And soon I will be free