Thursday, January 31, 2013

Visit #9: 1/31/13: Rethink, Inspiration!

So, I've realized something about this project: like all things in life, to be successful, I have to be flexible. I have missed a few weeks of going to the museum. I started teaching a class on Fridays, kids have been sick, Liam's autism therapies have taken priority. I was beating myself up over this kind-of a lot, but then I came to this truth: a year at the museum means 52 visits. I can do that. Even if they're not consecutive. Even if I don't go on Fridays.

I went today for a quick visit, looking to rethink how I do this. Hoping to be surprised, and looking for some inspiration. I'm knee-deep in two new, big book projects with some close-cutting deadlines, and I wanted something to remind me of process. Of people making art that wasn't signed, sealed, delivered and famous. Because that's where most of us operate, not in gallery space, but trying to make art in between the rigors of life.



You won't believe what I found.

Did you love art in high school? Did you know people that made beautiful intriguing things? Were you the sort of kid who drew portraits because you felt like screaming sometimes? Yes, yes, and yes on this front.



I stumbled into the installation of the WI Scholastic Art Show. They were still putting tags on the walls, but look at this art. Everything done here-- all of it!-- is by High School students. Walk with me....
















These are coffee filter rosettes....
















This one with the light is a painting...









 And I think this one is my favorite...


Your votes? Favorites?

See you next visit!

Friday, January 11, 2013

Friday #8: Hand in hand with Eliot and a penguin

Friday #8, 12/28/12 I took two friends with me: Eliot and Backyardigan Pablo the Penguin...

Christmas was sort of anti-climatic, Liam was in therapy that day, and Eliot had needed an outing. 

I told him "we're going to the Art Museum" and he kept chanting it to himself on the drive there....



Required sticker proof of presence...(it took a long time to get this photo believe it or not because E was not happy about Pablo wearing a sticker...)


Pop art!


"Hmmm...which way..."

(Yes, he really said all the quotes...)


"We go this way! To the art museum! To do some painting!"


"C'mon Pablo! We're going to the art museum. Art museum! Art museum!"

(What I didn't document here are the three other kids who came up to Eliot and wanted to admire Pablo. That's how you make friends as a 2-year-old, with a Backyardigan side kick. Seriously. Kids were dragging their parents over to us in delight at seeing this penguin).


On to the Kohl's art studio to do some painting. Pablo drawing by Jamie...


How did this day spin back to autism?

Because it always seems to.

The tidy 6-year-old sitting next to us observed to her put-together mother (the one who I wasn't quite sure if she was nanny or mom until we started talking): "That boy is so neat when he paints! My brother could never do that."

And so I asked about her brother. Mom looked up wearily and explained her son (also 2)'s hyperactivity and his biting ("and the worst part is that he seems to take pleasure in hurting his sister...").

I showed them the bite scars on Eliot's arm, told them about Liam's autism, explained what sensory seeking is, and told them what a child who is very oral might need (gum, chewies, etc.). I pretty much did everything but make any diagnosis or conclusions about her son.

I'm there for Eliot and not trying to get too pulled into this autism story. Just for 1 hour please.

The mom was tight-lipped, to say the least, so we leave it at that, but perhaps the seeds have been planted. Maybe she will look at her son differently...maybe this conversation will change his path (from the psycho kid to the autistic kid who needs therapy?)...

But in the meantime, let's just focus on painting a penguin please...


Or gathering massive amounts of plastic animals...


"Too many animals mama!"


"Shark attack!" (Eliot's favorite game is to run screaming "shark attack" and then tackle. Adam taught him this...)


Yes, he can sit and paint a penguin carefully; but, tell him he can't cross the rope to touch a painting:  full-on meltdown...


"All better now mama...hold hands mama?"


As we were leaving, I saw a mother and her son, walking hand in hand through the galleries. They were near the triangles my son loves. And this woman looked a lot, a whole lot, like my Grandma Merriman, who died last summer.

 I watched them, surreptitiously snapped a picture, and held my 2-year-old's hand, hoping that we might still hold hands when I needed his strength and guidance as much as he needs mine now.


See you next week.

Friday #7: =Saturday with Adam; Edges

So, I'm a little late posting these last 4 visits because our house got hit with the flu-to-wallop-them-all...but, Friday #7 actually happened on Saturday (12/22/12), and I went with Adam...we ended up looking at a lot of edges that day....

Sticker proof of presence on a sphere with edges...



MAM was crowded after a kids' holiday concert...


And this gorgeous Steinway was at the edge of the gallery breezeway, sitting there in its dusty splendor, begging for donations so it can continue being played at the museum...(for special events)...




Into gallery space, Adam took some striking pictures that day...like 80's permed Dee Snyder/St.George carved in wood (Note: his spear has been taken away for safety reasons I presume, although there's a case of weapons behind glass not far away...kind of emasculating, to have his spear confiscated...)


Like I said, Adam was looking at the edges of things, like shadows between display pedestal boxes...


The edges and sharpness of my face...


And here's what I'm looking at in the picture above, "Dance Under the Linden Tree, (1881)", by German painter Lugwig Knaus.  Lots of kids playing, people eating...



...and then I found my autistic son Liam's Doppelgänger, on the far left edge of the crowds, spaced out, there but somehow other... 

Was this autism in rural Germany in the 19th century? It sure looks like it to me....





(Liam under his Linden Tree, Fall 2012)...

In the MAM, there are lots of edges...away from the gallery space...not on display, but still art in a way...


And then, how can we talk about edges without looking at some Cubist paintings? Dazzling how those painters broke space itself, the two dimensions of the canvas into so many edges....



Last, back to the living room to sit on the edge of lake for a few quiet moments....


And to get sleepy...


And to admire the "Sci-fi sky", as Adam' noted....


See you next week.