Saturday, February 26, 2011

Postmodernism


Marissa Arterberry asks:
What are your thoughts on Postmodernism?
Do you consider your work in any way Postmodernist?

kelly: discussions about Postmodernism, in my experience, very quickly become too heady, and i am not attracted to this kind of interaction often. i am additionally not attracted to the exercise of labeling myself too much. i acknowledge the dichotomous nature of my proclamations however, which lends to the vibe of what Postmodernism is: a concept that in and of itself is hard to define, a concept that proves the difficulty of intellectualizing art. ... about dichotomy: so, we’ve got things (feelings, personality traits, elements of nature, etc.) that in their oppositeness rub up against each other like curious confused kittens. we cannot deny the existence of dichotomy everywhere in our world. there is a place of holy worship just feet from a war zone. perhaps you’ve been "in love" b4, but delusional about what ~healthy love~ really is. the ocean is calm and fascinating, but sometimes violent and hella polluted. the feelings created by opposite things merging are the very foundation of Postmodernism. as aforementioned, i prefer few labels on my work or on my sleeve, but i gather that my preference for ambiguity and bucking what’s come before are Postmodern ideas. let me tell you what i think we’re really up to tho, because it’s beyond Postmodernism. the community of artists that i gravitate toward is operating from spaces that are more energy-based, more mystical. sounds are words. color and iconography (in placement and mere presence) equate efforts to communicate a deeper meaning: something of the spirit, of a life past, of a shape shifted, of a message received, of a dream. while such concepts are not absent from art movements of before, i think a newfound fixation on this creative magic is much more intensified within my inner-circle of art-fam. i think my friends (we yung emerging artists) are quite conscious of our purpose to create a new movement, one that is even more difficult to touch with text and analogy. everything is becoming much more experiential, sometimes so wordless that it remains a shadow for a long stretch of time ... until we accordingly morph to greet it //depart // over n over.

Monday, February 21, 2011

The International Museum of Women's Blog


friends,

~ ~ ~ i am super stoked about this article, created by my dear friend, Marissa Arterberry.

check out my interview for The International Museum of Women's blog:
here



Monday, February 7, 2011

lady-roars, 5

^ beauty ~ ~ ~

!!! welcome to lady-roars, 5 ~ !!!
i initiated free*form conversation with fellow women creators about art, identity, and whatever else.

~ ~ ~

Marissa Arterberry is a visual artist working in the realms of painting, illustration, and installation. Born and raised in San Jose, California, Marissa graduated with a B.A. in Painting from San Francisco State University. She writes for her own arts blog, Black Butterfly, as well as for Her Blueprint, the International Museum of Women‘s blog. She has exhibited work throughout the Bay Area as well as in Chicago and Brooklyn. Marissa currently lives and works in Oakland, California.

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I think that being an artist is one of the most wonderful professions a person can choose, as well as one of the toughest and most misunderstood. It is getting up every day and creating something special to share with the world, and it is having no guarantees that work you do (and it is work ~ there are some folks who don’t view it that way) will keep a roof over your head or put food on your table. Because of that, the people drawn to this profession are deeply passionate and committed to what they do. Sometimes that is all you have.

What I’ve learned is that part of working as an artist, especially an emerging artist, is having to be your own cheerleader a lot of the time. Everything will be picked apart and questioned by others: the nature of your work (shouldn’t you be doing something more commercially viable?), what it is that you’re trying to “get” at the end of the day, a run-down of how you haven’t made any money at this supposed career of yours. I’ve heard it all, and it never stings any less. But what hurts more is to give in to those pressures and to try to be someone else. I try to just face the music and learn to deal with it by finding something else that feeds my soul, to counteract all the criticism. I can't hide from it.

I know that I’m going to be creating all of my life, because it is like breathing for me. Art is the first thing on my mind when I wake up in the morning, and there is nothing more satisfying than making something by hand, purely out of my imagination. It’s so much fun!

Right now I’m in a phase where my work wanders off the canvas more, which came from this time where I was too broke to afford paint and canvas. At first I was very frustrated, and felt like I couldn’t do anything. What I did have was a bunch of old sheets of watercolor paper, and watercolor paints (which last forever since a little bit can always be reused). I began to paint characters on the paper and cut them out. I found colorful yarn and ribbons cheap at craft stores, and made hangings out of my cutouts, with big trails of yarn and ribbon. I’ve been creating altar installations with the cutouts, and not a scrap of paper or ribbon goes to waste. I found out I can always make something somehow.

check out my full-length artist's interview with Marissa by clicking HERE.

lady-roars, 4

~ she's a sunshine daydream ~

!!! welcome to lady-roars, 4 ~ !!!
i initiated freeform conversation with fellow women creators about art, identity, and whatever else.

Maro Bizarro is a purple-monster-butterfly-fish somewhere out to sea. She fled from her home (Wisconsin) in early 2008. She resides now (with her puppy) between Athens, Greece and her teeny tiny village on the Corinthian Gulf. Bizarro enjoys making masks and stages, painting, writing, teaching, making movies, taking photos, and cooking.

* * *

I can only tell you that I aspire to use creativity throughout my life, because I don't really like the alternative. I aspire to do everything with love, tastefulness, fun, intuition, and the results so far have been rewarding.

* * *


I do not consider myself an emerging artist, necessarily. I think that I have always just wanted things to be attractive. I have affected some people in my travels who have asked me to work for them in movies, television (special FX), and theatres (makeup FX, set design, and teaching as well). I am emerging each time I impress myself with an awesome idea, or when I find someone else like-minded. I have never thought about a lifelong commitment in doing one thing; I like surprises and change, although I dream that I will always be friends with alginate and paint, film, and other creative people forever.

* * *

what is it like to identify as an artist/creator?


There once was a purple monster butterfly fish. She could do anything. First of all, she was the Earth, but she could flutter through the storms and escape through the roughest seas. Her friends wore stingers and wings, were dressed in scales and shells, and had really come to the most serene rainbows on their journeys. Sometimes however, she transformed her wings into bones, her fins into flesh, with an enormous amount of hair and heat. In this form, she experienced such complex creatures that she preferred to befriend only pleasures. With these components, she was able to relax and smile, make jokes and tell stories, but she was blind. One day, after a long flight, a mosquito ate her wings and she was forced to return to the sea. She gazed at the clouds, at the stars, and at the other fairies and butterflies and reminisced of her times in the heavens. She became so comfortable with only her fish-nature that she slowly forgot the wonders of the sky. She could no longer feel the cool air perpetuate momentum and inertia in her body. Slowly, she even forgot how to breath. She decided to return to the earth for awhile, perhaps for a short visit.

* * *

Well, I am here in Greece now, trying to freelance the f*** out of everything I do, while remaining interested in everything and taking any artistic opportunity I can. I have no idea where I am going? For the moment, I like where I am. This spring, I will take part in a 7-artist collaborative exhibition in Athens. I hope to do more independent exhibitions in the future, as well as participate in the Athens Film Festival.

* * *

I have had support, in some kind of way, from everybody I have probably ever met. I’ve had a lot of apathy as well, which usually left me unaffected, or, oddly inspired. I like support and I like not having support sometimes, too. Both can affect an artist's work quite positively.

lady-roars, 3

Candid Lee, forever diva

!!! welcome to lady-roars ~ #3 ~ !!!
i initiated free*form conversation with fellow women creators about art, identity, and whatever else.

"Candid Lee is an hyperbole. She is a brilliant blonde baritone and also sometimes known as an iconoclastic clusterfuck. What you see is only the beginning of what you get!

Candid Lee fancies herself an unofficially recognized genius. But she's cool with that shit because she doesn't have any room in her house for any more awards of recognition. And yes, she has been recognized for almost everything, from the 'loudest bitch' to the 'butchest femme.' It is a good thing Candid Lee is all about seeing other persons as equals, or else she'd be a pretty pretentious asshole!

Candid Lee is a Libra, lactarded, and fond of alliteration. She is a proud Ethical Slut and recommends reading the book of the same title which she did not write, but would have loved to have written. She offers unsolicited advice on her blog and practices acting like hot shit because that is one award she actually gave to a friend who totally was hot shit this one time, right, but now she's got this empty frame and a heart full of TEARS!!! cuz a hot shit award is not easy to come by!

But that other bitch who totally was hot shit for real-real is totally doing the honor justice. Maybe Candid has an award for you, too!"

Art musing from Candid: "I'm an iconoclastic clusterfuck who would very much like to entertain the world into thinking about things they might otherwise view as taboo. And bitch, I AM art. Where am I now? In front of my computer typing this shit. Where am I going? Published author territory and one-person show territory, which are just pit stops."

Sunday, February 6, 2011

lady-roars, 2


Erin Sullivan, rockstar

!!! welcome to lady-roars, 2 ~ !!!
i initiated free*form conversation with fellow women creators about art, identity, and whatever else.



Erin Sullivan is a bassoonist from Denver, Colorado. She is currently finishing her dissertation for a doctorate degree in music performance from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Since college, Erin has had a passion for performing modern music written for the bassoon. Her dissertation, which expands on this interest, is on Luciano Berio's Sequenza XII, a monstrous piece for solo bassoon, which demands the performer to master all of the most difficult techniques developed for the instrument. She will perform the piece in August.

* * *


"Life is an opportunity, happiness is a choice." This is a phrase I read from an article in Rolling Stone used by Jimmy Fallon's wife in describing her husband's optimism; and it really describes why I feel being a musician is an opportunity that has lead to positive and happy choices. I learned in college that making my love of music into a career would not be an easy road, but every time I would have doubts about how far I could take this career, I would always ask myself, "what else could you do that would make you this happy?" Since I could never find an answer to this question I kept going. Now that I am almost done with my doctorate degree and the pressure of being a musician as a full-time job is ever present, the statement of "life is an opportunity, happiness is a choice" is even more poignant. I choose to be a bassoonist, a not so common occupation, but I do so because I am continually happy with this choice. Being a musician is about being an opportunist: no one is going to come along and say, "here is this high paying great position for you." Instead you have to be willing to take that day job while you network with everyone in the field and be willing to do jobs outside of your comfort zone like in my case, teaching middle school students. I think that the cliché of a suffering artist is crap. Of course this lifestyle has its difficulties, but in the end it is a choice. With happiness comes trust, which is the foundation every artist needs to succeed: trust in one's talent, in one's ability to overcome problems, and trust in one's choices.

lady-roars, 1


blue fawn, Jenn Kay

!!! welcome to lady-roars, 1 ~ !!!
i initiated freeform conversation with fellow women creators about art, identity, and whatever else.



My name is Jenn and art has always been significant to me. Growing up I was more into drawing things, usually graphite sketches. Lately, I've been embracing the digital camera revolution and enjoy modeling and taking silly pics of my own. ((Jenn lives in Brooklyn with her man, his pup, and her bunnies.))

Art to me, is like a breath of fresh air. It makes me feel alive and more aware of the world and people around me. Likewise, it can provide an escape from the world. While I have been unable to dedicate as much time as I'd like to my art, I try to incorporate it in my own aesthetic, no matter how subtle it may be. Of course I'll do a photo shoot any chance I get, or do a quick sketch if I have the urge to create.

Since this is how my relationship with art has been over the past couple years, I have a feeling that it will always be with me; I will always be creating, whether it's sporadic or constant. With how hectic things are for me as of late, sporadic creations just seem to be what's working for me right now. Photo shoots also just seem to flow more easily for me as opposed to drawing things. So yes, I believe modeling can be an art if that's the intention behind it. I've also been taking plenty of snap shots lately of the world around me, and while I know that's not really a serious art, I enjoy it because of that aspect.

One of the things that seems to hinder my creative process is a lack of structure. Back when I was in high school, I had a lot of support from teachers and fellow students, and they were a constant factor. That helped a lot in regards to finding the energy to make things happen. Not that I'm saying I don't get any support for any of the art I make now, but it's not a constant thing anymore. My support is now coming from friends who happen to *stumble upon* my creations. Another thing about that that I know holds me back is the networking I personally would need to do to just advertise me. I almost feel like I can't get serious enough to do that, which can be a good and bad thing. I don't mind though, since I view my creations as a visual expression of what I may be feeling, but also part of my escape from this world … and just something fun and silly, even carefree.

Yea, I like how that sounds. Carefree art.

Art Archives: February-June 2017

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