Sometimes Things Work Out Well

“Don Quixote Portrait #2″   pencil on paper; 5″ x 7”

Last summer I answered an ad on Craigslist from a young guy who wanted to barter his office and marketing skills for art lessons.  So we both took a chance and agreed to see how it went.  It’s going well.

In fact, here are 2 reasons why I love my new assistant Larry:

1.) He compiled this never-before-seen behind-the-scenes  video: http://bit.ly/91paintings.

2.) He wrote this press release:

      Re.   Michael Wilson’s ‘Staff Pick’ project on Kickstarter: “Don Quixote: 91 Paintings in 91 Days”. http://kck.st/ReaiaO

The work explores the connection between an artist, their subject and the constantly blurring definition of which is who. Don Quixote’s quests through an unsympathetic country-scape are rivaled in delusion only by an artist’s pursuit of their own ideal. Although the creative journey is rarely conclusive, it reveals a little more about the counterbalancing roles played by each.

I think this project is representative of many others which don’t
receive enough attention. Projects which challenge an artist’s
sensibilities and definition of who they are; projects which
ultimately change artistic direction by the sheer intensity of their
force. I think ’91 in 91′ succinctly manifests the frenzied, crazed
drive of an artist looking to break free of how they’ve been
expressing themselves for decades. And the challenges associated with that change: representation, acceptance, continuity.

I think your readers might enjoy an exploration of this and other
blind leaps of faith.

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No Way to Stop Now

“91 Paintings in 91 Days” has raised the funds I sought to support my Don Quixote Project. Hooray! Thank you to all who helped out!!

Still 8 more days to go – enough time to get an original drawing or painting of Don Quixote, created by me in a cubist style, at 1/3 to 1/2 off.

“Blue Highways”; oil on canvas; 48″ x 36″

A win-win!

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10 Days to go and counting…

Not there yet but ALMOST – $7.00 with 10 days to go… I am 99.9% sure that we’re going to succeed!! THANK YOU!!!  to everyone who backed the project so far.

What a win-win this will be now that I am confident it is successful! I will get to buy the materials I need and the backers get these drawings and paintings, which I must say, I am really very pleased with.  Here a few of them:

“Don-Quixote-#24″ 5″ x 7” pencil on paper

“Don-Quixote-#25″ 5″ x 7” ink on paper

“Don Quixote Portrait-#3”
5″ x 7″ pencil on paper

“The First Knight” 48″ x 36″
oil on canvas

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Post Election Update

The Kickstarter project is halfway through – 12 days to go – and we are almost there.  But still so far away.  $ 600 left to raise. The quest goes on.

Don Quixote #15″ pencil on paper 5 x 7″

Here is a behind the scenes look at the making of a kickstarter video, shot and assembled by Lawrence Ampadu, my assistant:

http://bit.ly/91paintings

The WMAA Open Studios went very well.  We gave out a couple hundred postcards, with a link to “91 Paintings in 91Days”.  I met folks who had bought paintings and sculpture from me years ago, and who I had either never known, as the sales went through a gallery, or that I’d forgotten. That was fun.

What I realized halfway through Sunday afternoon was how many people smiled when they saw the Don Quixote work.

Open Studios 2012

“Don Quixote Wearing Chaps” 40 x 30″ oil on canvas

 

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Ghosts to fear…

I love this cartoon.  So true.

by William Haefeli; The New Yorker July 9 &16, 2012

 

Nothing ruins a good joke like explaining it, but I love the contrast between the warm, cuddly scene of Mom and daughter with the dark and foreboding shadows on the wall and the existential advice.  In fact the shadow of the mom is more frightening and of the girl more frightened, than their human counterparts.

So what do you do as an artist to combat the ghosts of your past?

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We have LIft-off!!

Okay it is official: My Kickstarter project is live!

Anyone who wants to, can help me spread the word by posting something about it on your Facebook page. That would make each of you an Especially Awesome Person, at least to me.

Yesterday, October 20, I stopped procrastinating and clicked the button to launch. There are now 29 days left to reach my funding goal of $3000. If I don’t raise that much, the project won’t go through.   Anything over that amount I get to keep.  To see examples of the latter, check out the “successfully funded” projects under Discover Projects button on the Kickstarter homepage.

I want to thank Nat Boyle, who is brilliant at turning ideas into words; Zaccur Fettig, for his camera work and advice; Sunniya Saleem, for everything; and Lawrence Ampadu, my new assistant, who is my new director of sales and marketing.  You will meet Lawrence at Open Studios, Nov 3 & 4.

This project would not be anywhere as good as it is without their help. My good fortune to have this team coalesce now is a sign that this is meant to be.  Perhaps it truly is my destiny that I take this quest!

With my steed, my lance, my lieutenant Sancho Panza, and the generosity of everyone who chooses to back “91 Paintings in 91 Days”,  I shall be starting my journey soon.

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Someday I’ll Stop Procrastinating

( I started this last Thursday) 

It’s been a long time since I’ve written.  Honestly, I have the most difficult time getting started writing.  It’s like stage fright: my stomach gets nervous, I pace, my breathing becomes shallow and my skull feels like it’s being squeezed between my temples.  Sorta like George Castanza when he’s confronted with something he doesn’t want to admit to, just before he gets angry.  So I put it off.  Again.  But not this time!

Anyway, I have been working on a Kickstarter project since June.  What is Kickstarter?  To quote from their website, http://www.kickstarter.com:

  1. “What’s Kickstarter?

    Kickstarter is a funding platform for creative projects. Everything from films, games, and music to art, design, and technology. Kickstarter is full of ambitious, innovative, and imaginative projects that are brought to life through the direct support of others.

    Since our launch on April 28, 2009, over $350 million has been pledged by more than 2.5 million people, funding more than 30,000 creative projects. If you like stats, there’s lots more here.

  2. How does Kickstarter work?

    Thousands of creative projects are funding on Kickstarter at any given moment. Each project is independently created and crafted by the person behind it. The filmmakers, musicians, artists, and designers you see on Kickstarter have complete control and responsibility over their projects. They spend weeks building their project pages, shooting their videos, and brainstorming what rewards to offer backers. When they’re ready, creators launch their project and share it with their community.

    Every project creator sets their project’s funding goal and deadline. If people like the project, they can pledge money to make it happen. If the project succeeds in reaching its funding goal, all backers’ credit cards are charged when time expires. If the project falls short, no one is charged. Funding on Kickstarter is all-or-nothing.”

    My project will be to paint 91 paintings of Don Quixote, The Man of LaMancha, in 91 days, and to raise $3000 in order to do it. The rewards will be drawings, paintings and giclee prints.  The non-procrastinational launch date for my Kickstarter project is October 18.  I will then have 30 days to reach my goal.

    Why Don Quixote?          Why 91 paintings             in 91 days?Don Quixote of La Mancha is a great analogy for the principled and unrelenting life of an artist.  Pursuing personal vision regardless of critical opinion is a chief tenet of any artist.  I am not the first to take on Miguel de Cervantes’ fictional protagonist, nor will I be the last.  Pursuing “The Impossible Dream” is a timeless theme that has beckoned artists of all stripes.

    My project is to to create sixteen paintings featuring the character of “Don Quixote of La Mancha” ranging from mid-size to large, along with twenty-five small paintings and fifty drawings and watercolors in just over three months.  That’s actually 91 pieces of art in 91 days, but it’s much more catchy to say  “91 Paintings in 91 Days.”

    “Don Quixote Encounters Pigrims On the Road” oil on canvas, 48 x 36″

    As for the style change from persnickety realism to cartoon-ish Cubism?  In a word: Creativity.  In a second word: Fun.

    Painting highly realistic subjects became too restrictive for me. The paintings of  cars, or women, or places were always meant as an homage to honor the beauty of the subject, and a strict fidelity to  the image was the best way to do that.

    oil on canvas, 24 x 34″

    To paint that realistically became like an athletic endeavor,  requiring focus and discipline with a strong dose of competitiveness just to see if I could do it.

    Once I knew I could continue painting them, I lost the need to.

    Strange and wonderful rock outcropping along I-40 in NM. acrylic on canvas 18 x 2

    Doing your own marketing is the worst part of this job.  “Good luck with your career…” is a terrible and cruel phrase to hear.

    I needed to be able to paint without the limits that realism  demanded, and cubism is a method that requires                 throwing fidelity to the image out the window.  Psychological and

    emotional truths (subjective as they are) are the goal, along with a flair for the decorative.

     

     

     

     

     

    If art is about holding a mirror to society, then Cubism is about holding up a hall of carnival mirrors for us to find our true reflection.

    “Cubist Village Road” 8″ x 10″ oil on canvas on panel

    Actually Cubism was originally meant to present objects the way they look as you move around them, so you’re seeing a dynamic image in space/time represented on a 2-D surface.  The process is to take apart (deconstruct) an image into it’s simplest forms then re-present them in an original way to express movement, and how the artists feels. At the time it was radical to  venture so far from the objective reality around us as to include the hand of the artist as every bit as important as the subject matter.

    “Don Quixote Crossing the Charles” 9″ x 13″ oil on panel 2012

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Art I Like

I got a an email about this show in Santa Fe from a friend, but I was back in Mass. and didn’t see the show.  After looking at the work online, I’m thinking that this would be one show that if I could I would fly specifically to see.

http://gebertcontemporary.com/exhibitions/68/

"Madremanya"

“Madremanya” by Tim Craighead
Oil, alkyd, and casein on linen
72 X 60 inches

I’ve seen Tim Craighead’s work before, over the past 10 – 15 years at the Gerald Peters Gallery in Santa Fe. I’ve always liked it, from the first time I saw them. I’ve mostly seen the paintings on paper, though I did see large paintings in a show years ago.

I love these paintings.  I often find that abstract paintings have little relevance outside of the artist’s mind.  Granted, I do like a story line or a narrative of some kind, and abstraction seems too arbitrary and the point the artist is making escapes me.  I do like abstraction, but bot all of it anymore than I would like all of realistic painting.

Why do I like these?  They are so painterly: the variety of mark-making and line quality, the movement around & within the painting, the color harmonies and discords, patterns that emerge just long enough to dissolve as you start to follow them… and the surprises. These paintings continue surprising me the more I keep looking.

For example the scrim of white marks swimming up the center of the blue.  It could be read that the idea of water is trying to reach the idea of a boat.

I think it’s true for most of us that if we are given a picture we look for words to describe it, and if we are given words we conjure the pictures that the words elicit.

Signal

“Signal” oil, alkyd, and casein on linen
72 X 60 inches

“Signal” compels me in part because of the contrast between the soft edged white and gold shapes against which the fine white and black drawing lines are so delicate and precise.

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Drawing upon Experience

“In Old Mexico”

I’ve created a gallery here for the drawings of The “Man of La Mancha” series, alternatively titled “A.K.A. Don Quixote”. Which is also the working title for a Kickstarter.com project.  More on that later.

Drawing is thinking.

“In the Islands”

“With A Mediterranean Mustache”

Let’s look at these drawings.  The “Leaving La Mancha” paintings were all preceeded by drawing.

Not as in making a drawing and then making a painting from the drawing, but as in thinking through possibilities first by drawing. Just letting your pencil run where the mind goes.

It’s like the classic contour drawing exercise where you fix your eye on a point on an object, and your pencil on the page.  Imagine that your pencil is touching the object at exactly the point that your eye is focused on, and without looking at the paper move the pencil as your eye moves, never losing that exact same contact point: your pencil is touching where your eye is focused.   The point of the exercise is not to make that drawing a beautiful drawing worth keeping, but to develop your eye-hand coordination. It is the equivalent of an athlete running drills. You do it so that when you are in the moment when it matters you will have the skills to do the job without having to stop and think.

Back to the analogy:  You want your pencil to move in sync with what the mind’s eye is seeing just as your pencil touches what your eye sees in the contour drawing lesson.  A doodle, if you will, but a doodle with self awareness. On steroids. With a mission.

Taking my cue from a love of cubism, I began sketching basic shapes of a guy on a horse, using a funky little welded nuts & nails sculpture of Don Q., and Picasso’s famous sketch or drawing or print, whatever it is, as a disembarkation point. 

As I drew in the lines and shapes of the sculpture, I assembled simple forms representing parts of the figure & horse, and then reassembled them slightly disjointed so they had the appearance of being put together in the back yard with chunks of wood, pieces of tin and balling wire.

This is the earliest drawing I in the group, and in tit you can see how the shapes have been identified, then simplified and exaggerated.

“In a Dusty Town”

I chose a drawing by Watteau of  country houses on a lane, abstracted, as the setting for our protagonist. The abstraction was adapted to fit the drawing of D.Q.: the buildings on the left edge curve upward to complete the arch from the horse’s head up to the spear and helmet, then down to the tail. Those buildings also connect in a line through the back of the horse to the tree in the upper right, forming half on an “X” composition, completed on the other half by the line from the tip of the spear down through the saddle and belly to the end of the leg, lower right.  The horizontal line of the street and the legs splayed out like saw-horses anchor a drawing of swirling lines and diagonals in every direction that could easily go top-heavy and be unsettling.

The simplified shapes of the horse’s head, chest and tail ( which is really not even a shape, just lines), just like D.Q.’s helmet, face and the arm and hand holding the spear, have been drastically simplified.  Abstracted though they may be, every shape in the drawing is still representative of some thing.

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The paintings of “Leaving La Mancha”

This gallery contains 18 photos.

Here are (most of) the paintings that are contained in the show: “Leaving La Mancha”. Click on an image for a larger view.  

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