"Figuring History": Artist parent's day out
Took a break from my own work to spend quality time with another artist parent: Valencia Carroll.
Artist Valencia Carroll views Robert Colescott's "A Cruise to Southern Waters"
We usually see each other at Onyx Fine Arts exhibits, but this is the first time we've gotten a chance to hang out. So we ran off to the museum.
What a pleasure to explore "Figuring History" with her... when we take our kids to museums, they always rush us through the exhibits. Dude: it's not a race to the finish line.
Works by Robert Colescott
I guess they're not old enough to appreciate the impact art has in person, as opposed to just seeing it in print or online. (Yes, I see the irony of me posting photos of this experience.) As artists, we want to read a painting for things like symbols, historical references, color choices. We especially appreciated all those elements in the work of Kerry James Marshall.
Works from Kerry James Marshall's "Vignette" series
I'm generally against massive doses of sparkle and glitter, but in the hands of these artists... well. I stand corrected. I watched the light dancing among the rhinestones in pieces by Mickalene Thomas, just floored by the sumptuous color and monumental size. I'd highly recommend seeing these works in person: it's difficult to convey their dimensionality online.
Detail of "Dejeuner sur l'herbe: Les trois femmes noires" by Mickalene Thomas
And who would've thought rhinestones could link 1960s-era James Baldwin and Walter Gadsden to Black Lives Matter in 2017, with such power? Whoa.
"Resist" (full image and inset detail) by Mickalene Thomas
Good day out. Valencia and I should go on more field trips together.
Book of Bulmash, chapter 94
Chapter 94
- The mother pressed her clasped hands to her mouth in uncertainty.
- Was this The Day That Had Been Foretold, the one her youngest son's teachers had promised during his darkest days:
- "Those qualities that maketh him impossible now, they shall transform him into a leader of men and women when he hath grown up."
- Or, as was more likely, was this morn the Final Sign of the Apocalypse?
- For the eight-year-old had made only minor demands on his mother's patience as he readied himself for school.
- The child had broken fast with a reasonably nutritious meal, AS REQUESTED;
- The child had NOT pushed his mother to the brink of murder by raising an unholy noise before the crack of dawn;
- Verily, the child had been... quiet.
- Lastly, the child had initiated an amusing conversation with his elder brother and mother, concerning the creepiness of the holiday ditty "Santa Claus is Coming to Town."
- Were it not for the earliness of the hour, the mother would have poured herself a celebratory drink of unsurpassed alcoholic strength.
- Instead, she reminded herself that this sterling behavior would probably fade away with the morning mist.
- Yet when the child asked the mother to retrieve a book forgotten at home, she hastened to deliver the requested tome.