Monday, July 7, 2025

Art Appreciation Part 1

 


This post is about art. Just art and nothing else.

I have taken art courses since I was a child. There was an aptitude that many artists have, a passion that non-artists dont understand as it borders on healthy obsession. I went to art school and took many courses and master classes parallel to my science studies. 

I knew early on that I did not want to make it my full time job, but also that art was an essential part of my being. I was quite good and creative, but there are artists far more talented than myself. Color theory, art history and other foundational courses gave me the techniques that were invaluable.

I focused on scientific, botanical illustration as well as wildlife. I exhibited, taught, sold commissioned work and basically had the freedom to do so when an opportunity or interesting project presented itself. 

Among the many pet peeves of mine is the art market and the constant BS around it. Curators influence collectors, who often do not understand art at all but are looking for investments and a good story. Van Gogh is a perfect example. In an age where everything needs to be 'psychologized' some art historians suggested that he was schizophrenic. It creates attention, raises auction prizes and sounds much better than well, actually he was often drunk on absinthe, and loopy.

Art is a special ability, a gift and superpower. Our brains are as different as the individuals who create it. Some artists fit the typical hippie image others do not. And many conceptual artists create the avantgarde persona that people want to see.

Obviously, we all have different tastes and what is beautiful to one person is not interesting to another.

Recently, someone asked to see my portfolio. I showed it despite being aware that I was dealing with someone without genuine interest. As she flipped through, she saw one of my butterfly paintings, she asked:"what is the symbolism of this painting?" " It means that it's a butterfly", I responded. (I doubt she got the Rohrschach reference)

She continued to flip through it, does the placement mean anything? It's a green sea turtle, for a project I participated in for an endangered species exhibit. "No, just an interesting composition". The misconception that many people have is that all art is abstract expressionism, meaning more than just a faithful representation of the object. As I said, it's a pet peeve of mine of living in a society that needs to psychoanalyze everything, even when that's not their qualification.

When a friend of mine saw my framed 'Puffins on a rock', he liked it, then asked "why do they look depressed?" Huh? Ah. "It's their marking. Like cheetahs, black reflects the sun from their eyes."

Of course there are many paintings that are symbolic, and many that aren't. The age old what if it means something or what if it means nothing applies. In the meantime, let's just appreciate the beauty of art.



12 comments:

  1. Art feeds the Soul and that's really all it need to do for whoever is Creating it or beholding it, or deciding to Buy it. It's also quite subjective, since, we all like or dislike certain things, it can make people Feel something about it too.

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  2. Codex@Bohemian
    Completely agree

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  3. My daughter is an artist, she did higher level art in high school and got awards etc., she worked hard on her portfolio and applied to three art colleges in Germany, was accepted in all three (application ratio something like 500 applications vs 10 accepted) and after a short time of deliberating, turned it all down. I could see it coming, she explained it by wanting to be involved in the world as much as possible, not just in the art world. She is still an artist but mainly works in climate change commissions around the world.

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    1. Codex: Sounds like amazing work. She did it without an art degree? What exactly does she do? Digital illustration? Hope she's enjoying it

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    2. Sorry if this was misleading. She studied sociology and political sciences. However, her diplomatic/negotiating skills are a work of art as well.

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    3. Codex@Sabine Does she incorporate art in her work?

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    4. Just checked with her and she told me she occasionally makes little cartoon drawings to bring a point across when negotiations get tense or stuck. And her team regularly commissions indigenous artists to present work highlighting their cases at conferences. i.e. currently Pacific Islanders.

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  4. The story I tell is that my parents saw a talent in me early on and if I wasn't taking art in school then I took extracurricular classes but it was never forced and it was always something I wanted to do. Majored in art in college but never got a degree as I dropped out ready to get on with life. At one point I wondered if I wanted to be an artist because that's what I wanted or because that's what my parents wanted/expected me to be and there was about three or four years when I didn't do any art at all. But then I started drawing again and then stumbled on glass as an artistic medium and the rest is history. I've also wondered off and on if I really qualified as an Artist since by far most of my work does not have any existential meaning or represent anything other than what you see, just pretty pictures. And art speak, oh man, I hate art speak and drafting artist statements always felt fake and torturous.

    I'm a little disappointed you didn't post any of your work.

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  5. Codex: Ellen, but I did post some of my work...*grins*

    I'll respond more later

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    1. Codex@Ellen art is something that you either love or don't. As to being an artist of course you are. As well as an artisan. Making a living out of it is tough as he'll, as you experienced, but you did it.
      Clients want to be able to tell their friends a great story; so the curator gives them one.

      I've mentioned before that I don't post my art for various reasons. It's nice of you to ask though.

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  6. With art, we humans so often default to being reductive.

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    Replies
    1. Codex@dbs I agree, but the opposite is true as well

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