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Friday, April 6, 2012

The Crucifixion


It was simply the most dramatic; the most significant and the most far-reaching event in world history. The crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth; the Son of God, the Prince of Peace. The death of Jesus by crucifixion was not without reason or purpose.



It was a passage in his ultimate defeat of the second death, the eternal death and the bridge to enable his subsequent resurrection. Generations far beyond the event continue to be effected and influenced. Dating back at least as early as the European Middle Ages artists and artisans have given their own and the church’s account as testament to the power of “The Crucifixion.” From Giotto to Chagall, from Rembrandt to Dali it has inspired the creative mind. The miracle continues and masterful interpretations of eight great and original works illuminate this writing. Much greater than any novel, battle or symphony; “The Crucifixion” endures in heart and mind and most expressively in art. 










                                                                                        





                                      

Sunday, April 1, 2012

DOUG AITKEN: SONG 1 @ THE HIRSHHORN


Twilight; a unique time of ending and beginning.  The bridge between night and day. Wonderment and magic live at twilight. Outside the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington D.C. a sort of magic was born a little over a week ago. Beginning at twilight and running until midnight every night through May 13th this massive doughnut of a building (The Hirshhorn) and it’s unusual 360’round exterior will make for an event like no other. The lights and sounds of the city that normally accent the building were enhanced by a multi-media achievement by Doug Aitken;  ”Song 1.” This is something extraordinary!
Doug Aitken has created the grandest of illusions. An illusion that rivals David Copperfield and Houdini on a scale that no other artist; save for Christo has ever attempted. Even when seeing a film on an IMAX screen we are limited to a single perspective. The Hirshhorn’s shape allows the viewer multiple vantage points that are enhanced by the sculptures, trees, buildings and traffic that surround the structure. The museum is literally transformed into a work of art and in a very real way disappears. This is a work that can be enjoyed by all that will have the incredible fortune to see and hear it. This work is both exuberant and subtle; remarkable in it’s splendor. It is to the credit of Doug Aitken that he doesn’t try to overwhelm but uses the subtle romantic standard “I Only Have Eyes For You” as his sound track and center. The lyrics themselves are completely appropriate  ” I don’t know if we’re in a garden… or on a crowed Avenue…”   The Hirshhorn  offers both. The visuals are complementary to the music and lyrics and give us something that is Zen like and I found myself entranced by it all. The massiveness of the building; the lightness of the projection and music are a perfect counter-balance. The video loops seamlessly for the duration of time as it physically loops the structure. Digital technology has made this a possibility that would have fallen short at an earlier time. This was a shared experience like no other as onlookers sat on walls and in cars, stood on the sidewalks and were equally awed by the presentation. “Song  1” is for the romantic…it transcends even the notion of art. It is that good. A pure thing that exists simple to exist, to transport and enrapture.



I saw this unusual exhibition that redefines the notion of every similar thing on the first Saturday of it’s opening week. The usual excitement of DC subsides after dark on the National Mall and this was something of an enchanted evening. It was very close to Heaven that night to walk around the Hirshhorn, around “The Mall,” around midnight.


Inside the Hirshhorn
  

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Picasso's BULL


Modernism was an art form largely based on improvisation, experimentation and bravado. Pablo Picasso reigned as the undisputed god of modernity for most of the Twentieth Century. He excelled and is most noted as a painter but he also equaled and many times exceeded every practitioner of sculpture, ceramics and print of his era. His series of bull lithographs created in late 1945 are an astonishing example of the man’s genius. He titled the series of eleven drawings simply “Bull.” Each work extraordinary as individuals but as a group without peer.  The set of eleven profiles are all of essentially the same size and point of view but each is an amazing variation on the theme of the standing bull. The lithographs follow something of an arc beginning as representational pieces that evolve into more stylized and even decorative depictions. The works begin to become less defined taking on a more cubist look and more minimal in appearance until the final line drawing is by contrast the least complicated and a fine example of what would once have been described as primitive. The series “Bull” is a striking virtuoso performance and a pure pleasure.

“A picture is not thought out and settled beforehand. While it is being done it changes as one’s thoughts change. And when it is finished, it still goes on changing, according to the state of mind of whoever is looking at it. A picture lives a life like a living creature, undergoing the changes imposed on us by our life from day to day. This is natural enough, as the picture lives only through the man who is looking at it.”

Pablo Picasso













When I look at Picasso’s “Bull” I sometimes think: why eleven and not an even dozen? I can imagine Picasso saying “…eleven is enough; I have said what needs to be said.” With that I leave you to enjoy the work and bring to it what you will.