L. Joshua Goodman’s Art Blog

November 25, 2009

Resisting the Urge

A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.
-Antoine de Saint-Exupery, author and aviator (1900-1945)

The Urge to Do Something can be powerful.

But good practitioners of any discipline are skilled at stripping away frivolity. The famous dictum, Occum’s Razor says something like, “Whatever doesn’t support, detracts” (that is not an exact translation, but it is an accurate translation). In Hebrew they say, “kol mosif gorea” which means “additions diminish”.

At the risk of violating the above principles I’ll tell you what brought this to mind. I just pulled a print. It’s the second state of a small plate that I took with me to a hillside not far from where I live. It’s located above the Sataf Spring just outside of Jerusalem. I drew out the landscape, the hills cascading one behind the other and the hungry sky above. I etched and printed it last week, but I felt it needed some atmosphere, some depth, so I did a few things (involving spray paint aquatint) and today I pulled the second state.

I don’t know exactly what to do right now. The decision is to Do Something or to consider it Done. It might actually be finished, but, and this is crucial, maybe it needs more. There is more that CAN be done, but I’m uncertain if there is more that SHOULD be done.

Meanwhile, I’m resisting the Urge.

November 13, 2009

Turkish Tiles

In 1972 I went to Israel in search of employment. I stayed in a few run down youth hostels that fortunately were so old that they still had the old flooring from the previous century. Thus, I  discovered Turkish Tiles.

izaniTo see samples of original Turkish tiles, go to; http://www.bazaarturkey.com/tile.htm or http://www.rugart.com.au/about_tiles.htm (image at right: samples from rugart.com)

What I found so fascinating was the nature of the design. Mostly, they were a single pattern that formed a greater whole when placed next to each other in an area like a floor or a wall. I thought how very much like Printmaking this could be.

You may notice that each of the designs in the sample shown (right) are actually four tiles. If you’re quick you can see the four quadrants that form the larger image. Each of those smaller quadrants is a design that is different than the bigger combined image. The whole is greater than the sum of the parts.

The nature of Printmaking is multiples — printing multiple prints of the same plate. This means that a large finished work could be made from a combination of prints from a small(er) plate. Very efficient.

This concept frees printmakers from the need to think in terms of editions. That is, each “work” is made up of multiples. If one “work” was twelve tiles then an edition of say twelve “works” would be 144 individual impressions.

It’s probably already been done, but if not this would be a first. (I love a sentence like that…please accept my apologies!) I’ve never seen anything like this before, but you never know. Probably somewhere somebody has already come up with this idea. However etchings have heretofore been printed as sets of deliberately limited numbers (to hold value), sold either as a whole edition of individual prints or as single numbered prints (each one an original). But no longer! As of 1972 a single print is a mere building block in the making of a greater work.

In any event I find the idea of Intaglio prints as building a greater whole from multiple prints to be engaging. Of course the decorative floral designs of Moslem culture are not the only designs susceptible to this technique.

Pianos for example can be given this treatment. Or even a Community of Faces (see my website and other posts of this blog for examples).

Hand and Hammer Progress

Three colors recomined to make a multicolored whole.

Three colors recomined to make a multicolored whole.

I’ve printed a green and a purple version of The Hand. I’ve put them together with the Peach version from three and a half years ago. Here’s what it looks like.

I’ve tried to draw and etch the piano. This is the third time that I’ve attempted this. For technical reasons it hasn’t worked. I’m going to try photoEtching (I like the Italian word, PhotoIncisione). Some places (e.g. Il Bisonte in Florence) are against this decidedly modTech cheat. On the other hand I will try anything when all else fails. Necessity being the Mother of Technology.

October 30, 2009

Mistakes

Filed under: General Discussion — Joshua @ 4:51 pm

My band, the Hazel Hill String Band, played a concert last night. During the course of the performance I messed up the opening riff and several other riffs as well. Nevertheless EVERYbody seemed to have a good time. We got tons of compliments. By the end of the evening we even sold several disks.  Mistakes notwithstanding.

I asked my friend Robert Fuchs, an international level composer and pianist,  if concert pianists make mistakes. He said, “Even Horowitz makes mistakes”. He went on, “A professional knows how to HIDE his mistakes.”

Picasso used to use plate imperfections or other “mistakes” as the point from which to draw beautiful portraits (I saw one like this at the Israel Museum a while back).

In HighTech they say, “It’s not a bug, it’s a FEATURE.”

The Best Laid Plans…

It’s my observation that despite planning, the unplanned happens. I’m by no means disparaging planning, which in many was is the sum and substance of the process of Art. But I think it’s useful to use those “mistakes”.

This could be an “Emperor’s New Clothes” situation, however. In my first art class in High School we had an interim critique of sorts. Each student had to describe the project he was working on. One cheerful fellow said as he held up a block of wood that he was carving, “It’s going to be a ballerina, and if it doesn’t work out, it’s going to be abstract.”

I doubt Horowitz or Picasso ever said this kind of thing. But using mistakes is another matter. Sometimes I stop in the middle and take a fresh look and I see things happening that I hadn’t planned. This has been very useful at times. I used to tell my clients and students, “If you build the system right, all the little things turn out right as well.” This is very important in Etching where process is so very important.

Taking What the Process is Giving

In etching it’s recognizing the developments throughout the process that inform the discussion. I read in Vasari once of an artist who was technically correct in every detail, but his work was dead. Whereas Reubens might have drawn figures with disproportionate limbs but his work flowed with LIFE! (I think this was the subject of a poem by Browning or somesuch, but I’m not sure…it’s been a while). I’ve had this happen to me on occasion, and it is so much fun. Things happen that are fortunately beyond my control. Like getting stuff for FREE!

Anyway, letting the “mistakes” live. I think that’s a Very Good Idea.

October 24, 2009

The “UNDO” of Life

Filed under: General Discussion — Joshua @ 12:56 pm

Richard Farnña wrote a song, “Pack Up Your Sorrows”, arguably his best and probably his most famous song. He dedicated it to someone “…who was the first to know it’s simple meaning”.Which tells me that there is a simple message here.

Do you ever wish you could “undo” (cmd/ctrl Z) something you’ve just done or said? It happens to me all the time. Not exactly like regret, but something like that. We have a new tool (because of the computer and Apple’s early Developer’s Guidelines).

I think it would be nice to extend the cmd/ctrl Z to all areas of life. Run a stop sign? No problem. cmd/ctrl Z. Say something stupid (”like I love you”)? Not to worry. The press of a simple keystroke combination makes everything right. Just think what would happen to politics. We could eliminate war! Providing of course that people use it.  It’s one thing to be able to take back regrets, but another thing to consider the regrettable to be commendable.

For that we will need “Multiple Undo”

Apple can figure it out for us. Theyve done it before.

Steve Jobs once again to the rescue of civilization with a simple message. Just like Richard Fariña said.

October 17, 2009

Improvising and finishing

We had a very interesting conversation over dinner dinner last night with a very interesting gentleman, a concert pianist and composer.

Finished Painting

The first interesting thing is that during the day I had been thinking about “How do you know when you’ve finished a painting“. I’m not sure anybody knows the definitive answer to this. Of course some painters have a fixed goal in mind and they paint until they reach that goal. Like paintings on black velvet of bullfighters and puppy dogs or certain seascapes. But for most artists, the exercise of seeing is never quite totally consummated. Except when it feels good. Or when it feels that there is nothing more that one can do. Or undo.

Improvisation

So during dinner the subject of musical improvisation came up. I suppose I was trying to make the point that plastic art was superior to music in that the performance may be sublime and profound, but simply lasts for only one performance and then is lost. On the other hand a great painting can be seen again and again. My pianist friend told me several very interesting things. First he said that sometimes Bach and Mozart would indeed write down later from memory what they had improvised. He further said that all the great composers were great improvisers and found it helpful in their work.

And then he said, “Painters are improvisers too. The proof is that they never finish a painting!” I was mightily impressed by this. I know that Rouault was (in)famous for never finishing a work. He even was known to ask for a painting back after it was sold for a few finishing touches only to return a completely reworked and totally different piece! In graphic design Paul Rand changed the IBM logo (adding the stripes) two years after it was originally launched. He also reworked the UPS logo and asked the client to use his finessed mark in place of the original but was refused. The old was good enough. This is the visual equivalent of improvisation.

Improvisation is the technique by which artists (plastic artists as well as musicians) sketch; improvisation becomes a search for perfection. If not perfection, then at least improvement. Can anybody really say that they’ve done the best that can be done on any particular work of the moment?

I was criticized once in Art School for overworking my paintings. I still don’t know exactly what is meant by this. I have lost clients because I have modified the design after approval (and before final printing). To do otherwise would be personally irresponsible if not professionally derelict! Good clients know this.

It’s not overworking; it’s seeing more in the light of what has already been done.

October 12, 2009

The Story: Two Color Head

Filed under: General Discussion — Joshua @ 8:53 pm

Size: approximately 12.5 x 8.5 in.
(32 x 21 cm)
Technique: Aquatint with special water resist technique

Two-color-Head

So much of Intaglio is dependent upon process, and this Head is all about the process. This is not a portrait of any particular person. Rather this is a formal study in how to work with color in the etching studio. Along with that, I have used the water resist technique that I inadvertently discovered one day while working frantically in the rain. This came about because one morning I hadn’t finished applying the aquatint (I use spray paint) before the big rain started. The result surprised and amazed me. The upshot was a texture that is both random and exceedingly biological. It simply looks like something from a medical textbook (don’t ask me where, though).

I couldn’t have done it better, if I had tried!

I have many experiments in many different colors. You can write to me for a complete list of colors. Or ask for a photograph. I’ll try to oblige.

The Story: Hand and Hammer

Filed under: General Discussion — Joshua @ 8:44 pm

Size Varies by paper size.
30 x 22.5 in.
(70 x 50 cm)
Technique: Sugar-lift Etching on Industrial Iron plate with Chine Collé

Hand-and-Hammer

A print of a drawing of my left hand. I have discussed on a previous blog (what, should I copy/paste??) about my left hand (it’s near to me and easily accessible, always available) and about hammers. I won’t go into all that again. Suffice it to say that I consider this to be something of a self portrait. In that a leaf recapitulates the form of a branch and a branch is like a tree trunk with it’s branches and the whole visible tree has the form of the unseen part of the tree, the roots. In that same way, everything you could want to know about me, can be known by just looking at the hand.

And the hammer? Well, ever since man got tired of pounding tent pegs into the ground with his bare hands, a tool has always been cool.

October 10, 2009

Outside Atoms

Filed under: General Discussion — Joshua @ 4:13 pm

When I was about fifteen years old, I took the Greyhound bus to visit my Grandparents in LA. I remember this extremely well, because this is where I first had the desire to study “Outside Atoms”.

While sitting on the bus looking out at all the cars below, I was suddenly struck by the fact that the tires of the cars touch the street below. It was as if I was a visitor inside the rubber of the tire (I would have to have been microscopic). Traveling through the rubber, I might come to the edge, to the boundary of where the rubber stopped and the street began. I began to wonder what it was like to be an atom at the spot where the rubber hits the road. How would it feel.

It’s one thing to be an edge, but it’s so much more intimate to be at the atomic level, i.e. to be at the atomic outer edge of the edge.

I have put off grant-writing for this project. I know I would need funding to pursue this project to a successful conclusion. But meanwhile I am content to contemplate.

And besides, I’m not a scientist.

The Story of a New Project – Day One and Day Two

17x17 paper squares P1010005
17×17 cm paper tiles

It’s not always easy beginning a new project. There is even an expression, “All beginnings are difficult”. I know that writers face “The terror of the empty page”. Probably most creative people know this feeling.

It takes me time to warm up; I start slow. The first day it took pretty much all day to divide my large parent-size sheets of Arches (pronounced “Arsh”) etching paper (roughly 50×70 cm / 19.5×27.5 inches). But by the end of the day I had two sheets cut down to 17×17 cm squares. I know this sounds simple, but I had to think constantly if this would work out properly in the entire scheme of things.

Then on Day Two of the project I made a grid for the piano. I needed to cut the piano into four pieces and position each fourth into a corner. I have done several of these in the past and each time, despite my best efforts and calculations, they never fit together right. So, as Harry said, “once more into the breach!

Piano-sketch-and-Tile-sm
Piano sketch and decomposition onto a tile

I began by drawing a piano. A Grand Piano at the angle I like, a three-quarters view from the right. Then I photocopied the drawing and divided it into four pieces. Then I placed those four quadrants into the corners of a predrawn 17×17 cm (6.75 inch) square and photocopied that four times. I need a minimum of four tiles to make one complete image in the center. As my finished work will be 12 tiles (four across by three down) this should give me at least six whole pianos. (Did I say that I will show you pictures soon?)

All this is a bit complicated. That’s why it takes me time to do these projects. Nobody likes to make mistakes (they cost money!). And it’s the old carpenter’s rule, Measure Twice, Cut Once. In the end, I think I should have made the tiles about three millimeters larger (about 1/8 inch). But I hope that all will be well, with perhaps a few adjustments as a I go.

That is Day Two.

Next Step in the coming days…

Next I have to draw and etch the piano tile and make four test prints. I’ll probably print one and photocopy the others. Hopefully it will all fit together and be beautiful. If not, I will make adjustments. And refinements. Until it is beautiful.

Then the final printing and assembly.

That’s another post.

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