Monday, October 24, 2016

Original version from "A Room of One's Own"

Lunch at the men's college:

"[T]he lunch on this occasion began with soles, sunk in a deep dish, over which the college cook had spread a counterpane of the whitest cream, save that it was branded here and there with brown spots like the spots on the flanks of a doe. After that came the partridges, but if this suggests a couple of bald, brown birds on a plate you are mistaken. The partridges, many and various, came with all their retinue of sauces and salads, the sharp and the sweet, each in its order; their potatoes, thin as coins but not so hard; their sprouts, foliated as rosebuds but more succulent. and no sooner had the roast and its retinue been done with than the silent serving man . . . set before us, wreathed in napkins, a confection which rose all sugar from the waves. To call it pudding and so relate it to rice and tapioca would be an insult. Meanwhile, the wineglasses had flushed yellow and flushed crimson; had been emptied; had been filled...how good life seemed, how sweet its rewards...."



Dinner at the women's college:


"Here was the soup. It was a plain gravy soup. There was nothing to stir the fancy in that. One could have seen through the transparent liquid any pattern that there might have been on the plate itself. But there was no pattern. The plate was plain. Next came beef with its attendant greens and potatoes -- a homely trinity, suggesting the rumps of cattle in a muddy market, and sprouts curled and yellowed at the edge, and bargaining and cheapening and women with string bags on Monday morning. There was no reason to complain of human nature's daily food, seeing that the supply was sufficient and coal-miners doubtless were sitting down to less. Prunes and custard followed. And if anyone complains that prunes, even when mitigated by custard, are an uncharitable vegetable (fruit they are not), stringy as a miser's heart and exuding a fluid such as might run in misers' veins who have denied themselves wine and warmth for eighty years and yet not given to the poor, he should reflect that there are people whose charity embraces even the prune. Biscuits and cheese came next, and here the water-jug was liberally passed round, for it is the nature of biscuits to be dry, and these were biscuits to the core. That was all."

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Module #1 Assignment

Explorer exercise.

I decided to go with “Everything is interesting.  Look closer”  and “Notice Patterns - Make Connections.”   

My usual style of painting is naive art and I use the primary colours a lot.  I love colour and simple shapes.  So,  I decided to do a painting that would be the last thing I would think about doing.  So I planned on creating a painting that would be just straight black lines on white paper.  I was going to do this first but I just couldn’t quite do it.

So I went to the next phase of “Notice Patterns - Make Connections”. Then I thought of the Eiffel Tower,  a structure I love very much and is straight black lines for the most part.   And then I made another connection to the “campaniles” …the wrought iron bell towers you see a lot in France and that I’m very attracted to.  Many of these have straight black lines but I couldn’t find any black and white drawings of those so the wrought iron is mainly curved.   I decided to make a collage using the drawings of these items.




I still couldn’t quite bring myself to do the painting.

Then I thought that these were very hard solid objects and I wondered how can black and white be softer so I thought of animals I love that are black, white,  or black and white.  This lead me to think of orcas,  belugas,  skunks,  dalmatians,  border collies,  and seagulls.  So I made a collage of those.




And I still couldn’t quite do the first thing I was planning and then I had a breakthrough.  I love the work of Mondrian and the idea of doing an “empty”, (i.e. just the black lines that are so important in a Mondrian painting)  Mondrian painting appealed to me.   So,  this ended up to be more of a drawing with a black marker.  I never was very good at doing straight lines even with a ruler but I will blame the wobbliness on the camera angle.




What amazed me about this whole process is that I realized how much I like black straight lines!  So,  while I was struggling to see things for the first time....I somehow ended up doing that.


Note:  One of the "explorer ideas" was to "see things for the first time"  and I was having a lot of difficulty doing this and reflected on that so when I ended up doing that I was really rather amazed.

Here a "non empty"  Mondrians for those who aren't familiar with his work.