A virtual visit to artist studios with interviews and art reflecting current trends in "Abstract Art".
Luminous Journeys Through the Abstract
  • Curator's Introduction
  • Gallery One
  • Gallery Two
  • Gallery Three
  • Gallery Four
  • Gallery Five
  • Gallery Six
  • Gallery Seven
  • Gallery Eight
  • Studio Visits: Artists and the Abstract
  • Art Forum Commentary
  • Contact and Catalog Order
  • Catalog
  • ABSTRACT: Finding Meaning

Open Forum and Commentary                            Face the Arts through the Abstract

12/3/2013

1 Comment

 
1 Comment
Kathryn Burke Petrillo link
4/24/2014 05:28:31 am

Submitted on 2014/04/23 at 10:17 AM

This is a wonderful essay on Abstract Art. I wanted to comment on this particular paragraph:

Kuspit further explains the masks artists may use intentionally as ways of hiding emotion and events. The abstract paintings may evolve from and associate with the artist’s “world-weariness.” 20 Associations of this sort stop short of requiring the viewer to work out a hidden meaning within the abstract art. Rather the perception is masked by intentions of the artist and is not considered to be a part of the resulting “pure art.” However, he suggests that this purity of form, the absence of meaning should be viewed with reverence. This visual examination may reveal sacred meaning therefore giving permission to the viewer to perceive through their own consciousness the possibilities of the illusion of the image. In this way abstract painting becomes the suggestion by the artist giving permission to the viewer to find meaning.

“This particular way of creating art, I think, was brought on by several outside occurrences, which affected the artist to go inward and bring forth some semblance of order, as well as voice to shout out to the public. For example the German expressionist movement that existed in the early 20th century. I am referring to artists E. L. Kirchner, Kathe Kollwitz and Max Beckmann, (the list is longer-I chose these three as they are important to me, as well as more known. perhaps to others. Therir work reflects the socio-political occurrences of their time as well as expressing their personal feelings by their choice of images that they choose.”

I feel that this particular movement, which was not only in Germany, was the precursor to the more non representational abstract expressionism of Pollock. It pulls more intensely on his psychological personality and how he relates this to the viewer. Here I find that the surface is important and Greenberg of course was most probably afflicted by the curse of “closed mind set that is prevalent in most scholarly attempts of critique, which I think is prevalent in the attitude that if you change your premises and alter your opinions, beliefs etc, based on new evidence, you are considered weak and perhaps wishy washy. I am not of that opinion at all. I think that art is a journey of exploring the individual artists cognitive and perceptual aspects of personal reality foregoing perhaps consensual reality, by consensual reality I mean that which is explained by Newtonian Physics.

Physics in particular quantum physics, hermeneutics, linguistics offer the artist a way in which they have a carte blanche approval for an expressionism that is an open set of the gestalt of their existence. Another words, what they paint is not just an individual deep expression, that is part but it is subsumed by the outward symbolic expression of the socio-historic age of the artist. This is sometimes, I feel, overlooked in many critics of art.

I hope you continue to post more reviews, essays etc. Your are a gentle, hardworking, artist who really rocks me Linda! You inspire me to continue the struggle and the joy of creating.

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    Curator/Artist

    As an abstract artist with a professional exhibition vitae spanning over 35 years, I decided to bring to the easel an examination of Abstract art today and its' trends by representing a group of artists with an on-line, virtual gallery that will allow viewers of this blog to interact with the work.  The selected artists are represented in individual galleries on the exhibit web site with views of their work and studio visit interviews videoed and taped with the artist's permission.

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Studio Visits and Interviews

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Gallery One
Gallery Two
Gallery Three
Gallery Four
Gallery Five
Gallery Six
Gallery Seven

Curated by L. Bigness: Exhibit will open at the Kirkland Art Center, Clinton, New York,
April 3, 2014 through May 31, 2014.