I found this photo of a drawing from 2008. The drawing did not survive. From the drawing, this means it is either plant food, giraffe feet, blue spirituality ascending to the moon or red spirituality ascending to the sun.
Monday, 26 March 2012
Sunday, 25 March 2012
The New Adventures of a cat named Rin-Tin-Tin
Rin Tin Tin was adopted in January 2012 from the The Cat Haven: Where Every Cat Matters after: 1. I wanted a puppy, 2. I saw The Future and 3. we rescued (as in ambulanced to a 24hr vet) a very badly injured dog who had been hit by a car on the highway and was later euthanised. The kitten we adopted was 14 weeks old and had spent a mere 4 days at the Cat Haven. His siblings had been adopted out and we found him sleeping quietly among others. I thought the name Rin Tin Tin would evoke in him some pride and dignity, a little loyalty and obedience. (Laugh now).
Rin Tin Tin: Kitten Kong |
The kitten is good natured, laid back and obliging. Also messy and mischievous. Like a kitten. This is also the story of a Canon EF 50mm F1.4 USM Lens which was procured in the hope of catching images of this small black streak rampaging through the house and yard. I think it's love.
Rin Tin Tin with spiderwebs. It's a great cat day if you end up with spiderwebs on your face. |
Rin Tin TIn: a handsome cat |
Rin Tin Tin digging a hole and then sitting in it. Like a dog. |
Rin Tin Tin. Like a cat. |
Rin Tin Tin on the first day he climbed onto the fence. The end of knowing where he was at all times. |
Saturday, 24 March 2012
Art Around the House: Daniel Bourke
This edition of Art Around the House is a little different. The work here: Mustard Cactus is somewhat altered from when Daniel Bourke first conceived of it and I purchased it from one of those fundraising enterprises at art school. The work is firstly: unsigned and secondly: missing provenience in the form of a receipt. More woefully and tragically thirdly: has undergone damage and been repaired. Thus, it may be argued that it's value as an investment piece is somewhat diminished; having been replaced almost entirely by a functional affection. It's possible that Bourke might be more satisfied with this second outcome, given his comments upon handing it to me immediately after purchase. They went something like: "You should probably drill a hole in the bottom. But I don't know if that would break it."
For about a year this dilemma see-sawed about in my consciousness as I watched the original cactus shrivel up and die. Frozen in fear by the possibility of breaking the pot if I drilled the hole but without ever being able to maintain the right sometimes wet/lots of drainage conditions, I found myself incapable of taking care of the artwork in it's original condition. I tipped out the dead cactus and soil into the garden in the ever optimistic hope that if there were any life left in the thing it might be resurrected in the natural elements there. For a time the mustard pot sat clean and empty with the jovial CACTUS instructions propped up inside.
The pot never moved out of the kitchen. Gradually I learned the CACTUS instructions; each little flower and spike. How could all those different-looking plants fall under the very uninformative title: "Cactus"? It grew more and more ridiculous in my mind. I became determined to make amends and solve the drainage problem once and for all. Eventually I came across a happy flower-covered cactus who was much too large for the mustard pot but had smaller baby cacti. I modified a seedling tube to act as a liner. The Mustard Cactus rode again.
I've started reading a book by James Elkins called The Object Stares Back. In the first chapter "Just Looking", Elkins briefly mentions curators perhaps aspiring to be objective, disinterested in art. As though they don't desire images.. unaffected.. perhaps I'm paraphrasing very badly... I drifted off. I thought about the grottos of the Merzbau. Schwitters made little homes for the artworks he had from his friends. I thought about taking care of artworks, covering them with fire blankets at night, rolling them up safely in tubes. Or finding them in their places like Mustard Cactus on the window sill with other plants for companions, amongst the greater impromptu Vanitas that constitutes the windowsill. Its very important and not at all. Sometimes the cat knocks the baby cactus out and I worriedly plant it again. Perhaps it's important that it is always in peril, needing protection and daily attention.
For about a year this dilemma see-sawed about in my consciousness as I watched the original cactus shrivel up and die. Frozen in fear by the possibility of breaking the pot if I drilled the hole but without ever being able to maintain the right sometimes wet/lots of drainage conditions, I found myself incapable of taking care of the artwork in it's original condition. I tipped out the dead cactus and soil into the garden in the ever optimistic hope that if there were any life left in the thing it might be resurrected in the natural elements there. For a time the mustard pot sat clean and empty with the jovial CACTUS instructions propped up inside.
The pot never moved out of the kitchen. Gradually I learned the CACTUS instructions; each little flower and spike. How could all those different-looking plants fall under the very uninformative title: "Cactus"? It grew more and more ridiculous in my mind. I became determined to make amends and solve the drainage problem once and for all. Eventually I came across a happy flower-covered cactus who was much too large for the mustard pot but had smaller baby cacti. I modified a seedling tube to act as a liner. The Mustard Cactus rode again.
I've started reading a book by James Elkins called The Object Stares Back. In the first chapter "Just Looking", Elkins briefly mentions curators perhaps aspiring to be objective, disinterested in art. As though they don't desire images.. unaffected.. perhaps I'm paraphrasing very badly... I drifted off. I thought about the grottos of the Merzbau. Schwitters made little homes for the artworks he had from his friends. I thought about taking care of artworks, covering them with fire blankets at night, rolling them up safely in tubes. Or finding them in their places like Mustard Cactus on the window sill with other plants for companions, amongst the greater impromptu Vanitas that constitutes the windowsill. Its very important and not at all. Sometimes the cat knocks the baby cactus out and I worriedly plant it again. Perhaps it's important that it is always in peril, needing protection and daily attention.
Sunday, 18 March 2012
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