Friday 14 September 2012

OH MERCY





Yup, if you know this picture, mercy's on you :) For those who don't, it's the album cover of
'The Great Barrier Grief', a beautifully soft and touching ballad of Oh Mercywhose music 
and lyrics have inspired me so much in my art. Listening to 'Stay Please Stay' is like casting
 a melodic chant; but only it makes me wanna dance (like those in the video); my thoughts blur away
 in this hazy mist of peacefulness while I sync to the lyrics and the day just won't get any better.



Talking about art without mentioning about music is like making a cake without sugar-you 
may as well forget about dessert? Art and music are biffles, it's all very Zen, and my post today
 is fully dedicated for that. I've chosen  Alexander Gow, the frontman of Oh Mercy
 as the best example of this beautiful art-music marriage. Also FYI, the cover on the album 
you saw above is by Ken Done(It's Ken it's Done- haha) .In my opinion, when you have 
a strong emotional connection with a song you will also form a connection with any sensual/visual 
feature associated with it. Every time I listen to the album, the picture above appears in my head 
and vice versa- hence I connect so much with the album and that abstract nude painting is 
definately one of my favourite,evaaa!

Anyway back to Alexander Gow. This is his essay about the beautiful marriage between art and music


“Art is the thrilling spark that beats death.” Brett Whiteley

When I drop my bags and guitar cases at the Billabong Gardens Backpackers 
in Newtown, I stare at the Whiteley print hanging on the wall. (They always give 
me the same room). I’m thrilled. It makes me want to drink coffee. It makes me 
want to play the guitar. It makes me wish I could convince the gorgeous 
German woman staying next door to undress for me. I am thrilled. 
(Listening to Leonard Cohen makes me want to do all of the above at the same time.)

And if we ourselves lift the brush, the pencil, or the tape recorder, we are making 
a record. We are trapping a moment of intense beauty, passion, grief or 
everyday monotony - if we choose. This is the musician and artist’s greatest gift. He 
or she is given permission to sing that thing that was too stupid to be spoken. Or paint 
the German woman without her clothes on, despite never even meeting her. 

Voltaire once said “Anything that is too stupid to be spoken is sung.” 

Anything too bold to suggest, or too romantic to whisper, can be sung. Something 
too flawless or flawed to survive; something too relentlessly intoxicating, mercilessly
exhilarating, can be painted. Or, at least we can try. The musician, the writer,
is given the privilege of naming a song, of naming an album, of choosing the cover art.
What a gift! He or she has complete control over their perception. They have 
complete control. What luck!

I understand my luck. I am lucky that some people like my songs. I am lucky that 
Mitchell Froom worked with me. I am lucky to have a passionate and dedicated manager.
I am lucky to have Ken’s painting represent my music. I am lucky that I get to name
songs and an album, lucky that those titles will be spoken be others - real life human
beings. I am lucky that in 100 years my great grandson will know that his great 
grandfather adored woman as much as he might. 

That is the gift that is my ‘immortality’ for artists and musicians alike. And I will not take
 it for granted.

Alexander Gow

The pink heron, Brett Whiteley

Art, life and other thing; Brett Whiteley



"Let Me Go"-I'm a single man don't fuck up my plan


Orange Nude, Ken Done

Downstairs at the cabin, Ken Done














"Drums"

Monday 10 September 2012

THE HUMAN BONSAI





Hey guys, so this is my first blog. I dunno much to write here so I guess let's get the pics speak for themselves.

When I make art,I often don't think too much or dig too deep into the subject to find a meaning out of it. The brushstrokes, the shapes, ongoing events, time and my emotions speak to me of different interpretations of my art: drawing from the unconscious mind, portraying the ambiguous thoughts. Since I'm terrible with talking about my own stuff, everyone is encouraged to form their own opinions on what you see and your comments would be much appreciated to be shared. Dare I say it, my art is provocative, often cynical, socially challenging, ambiguous with a sense of fun and experiment. I'm not afraid to talk about most of 'touchy' subjects- questioning and fighting against sociocultural barriers is too much fun to back off. 



Here are a few key themes of my first project: "The Human Bonsai":
FEAR                
DNA/ HUMAN IDENTITY
GENETICALLY MODIFICATION
PAIN (and how we share it with each other)
GUILT/ SHAME





You Me Growing Old 4eva, and no-one will tear us apart.




I used to be a normal tomato tree. Now they make me into a dysfunctional human bonsai. 




The Human Bonsai-2 shoes. We hear everything from the winds.



I find my works closely related to ones of Ricardo Lanzarini -a South American artist who draws on the wall and into little tiny space( such as cigarette papers). His work is figurative yet symbolical and when you look closely at it a pattern will form. Go check out  Ricardo's tiny little worknow!


His ink drawing. Cute as heyyy


                             
© Ricardo Lanzarini
Here's another one...nawww




The abstract landscape of mushroom blending in with the crowd creating a lot of confusing patterns