ordinary | art
this is the key for my next tank install at SF State. i have a whole folder full of the keys that i've made - some realized, some not.... i really like this kind of busywork. something obsessive that i know has a beginning and an end and that i can sort of meander around while making... you have to pay enough attention so that you don't put the wrong color dot in the wrong space, but there's a method to the madness. it's a nice balance.
so remember the book by michael kimmelman i mentioned? the Accidental Masterpiece. well, i really want to share this passage [this is particularly for shari and maria ]. the set up is that he's talking about a found photo.
It is a fair guess that this man, this woman, and their photographer would be surprised to learn, if they are still alive, that their momento made it to the Met, sharing wall space with Rembrandts and Monets. Whenever the picture was snapped, wherever that was, the man and woman peering into the sun, the photographer maybe fumbling with the shutter before asking them to say "Cheese!" -- none of them were presumably motivated by the desire to create timeless beauty... But the art in the photograph of those strangers and the car is there, plain as day. It is in the reflection of the woman's body on the card door. By some act of divine comic grace, the reflection happens to match up precisely with the head of the man so that he looks like the woman's ghostly, dwarflike double, a funny-surreal coincidence that, by adding a layer of unanticipated meaning to the picture, suddenly elevates it from ordinary snapshot to art.
Sometimes art works that way. It appears unexpectedly. It doesn't arrive through the front door. It senaks in the back, the more startling for being the result of dumb luck. This picture would be less likable, I suspect, if we learned that a professional had planned it, because the amateur's fluke reminds us of a basic fact in life, which is always heartening: the art is out there waiting to be captured, the only question being whether we are prepared to recognize it
um. yeah. need i say more? i almost feel like this is the essence of why we hunt for small moments of beauty. why we look around, take pictures, blog.... it's the line. the line between ordinary and art that i seek. i want to see where it blurs, where it crosses over, where it leans more heavily in one direction. this is why i feel like it's justifiable to call one's art practice research. because research is :: the systematic investigation into and study of materials and sources in order to establish facts and reach new conclusions.
and because this matches my argyle and shash is holding a textile pattern week.... my laptop bag from brooklyn industries
have a good wednesday
Comments
I love that. I like when they are blurred, it's something I strive for as well. Thanks for posting this passage today.
btw -I had a dream last night that you and I were in the same room talking:) you were wearing a pink t-shirt and had blond hair (?).
...the art is out there waiting to be captured, the only question being whether we are prepared to recognize it
amazing words. i totally believe that!
the key was very cool...I had the thought that it looked a lot like a pattern chart, and was struck by the really strong desire to knit it....
And then the passage..YES again!!!
Thanks for sharing with us and putting these thoughts into my head. Would love to read more of that book!!
Have a great weekend xxx
love your tank key....
frame your tank keys.
they are works
of art too.
can't wait
to see new tanks...
get extras!
;)
xoxo
take care, happy musing and tinkering,
g xo
i like your keys.
thank you so much for posting this quote. so perfectly put. those blurry, crossing-over spaces are the most interesting...
xoxo
i'll be sharing more from the book as i can't help but dog-ear more pages....
laura - YES! tanks at SF state
bug - i don't frame them, but i have them all....
louise.... thanks for that GREAT link!