Saturday, October 16, 2010
Art Outside th Box:The Anatomically Impossible:
This wonderful demonstration by Brandon McConnell is an amazing display of my favorite kind of art: the Anatomically Impossible.
You know what I mean. The kind of thing you look at and say, "How did they do that?" Head scratching, astonishing, omygod kind of art.I love it even more when it turns out not to be so hard as so amazingly clever. It means someone has really thought outside the box.
Nowadays, so much of what we do as artists has to be something you can teach. Is it quick? Is it easy? I understand not wanting to daunt anybody, but if it's too quick and too easy I can't quite pull it in to bother.There has to be something there to make my heart flutter with the impossibility of it. It can be technique or simply a rendering of something I never expected in a way I never dreamed. Or an ability to go wild with saucepans and spray paint.
All my life as an artist, I wanted to to the work that would make jaws drop because it was anatomically impossible.I think what that really takes is an ability to bend, break, mutilate and somewhat ignore our hidebound rules.The ones that stop us from making something large, or flat, or different. The ones that don't really relate to an art form we're doing. They just used to.Changing the rules can be a wholly liberating experience. Can stippling threads cross? Touch? Kiss? I hope so. Can I use purple and orange with blue as a chaser? Will the world go on fire?
I hope so.
I hope you all take time to look at a rule, a truly limited rule that needs some real mutilation, and bend it out of shape.Because when we do that, the anatomically possible is a real probability, glowing ahead on the highway of our next creation.
You'll find Brandon McConnell's astonishing work and classes on his site at Spacepaintings.com
Labels:
life as an artist
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Ellen Anne Eddy's Flowers on Youtube.com
Labels
lunatic fringe
(22)
design
(18)
life as an artist
(18)
lifestyle
(18)
story telling
(11)
art quilting
(8)
fiber art
(8)
art quilters
(7)
books
(6)
color
(6)
free motion
(6)
gardening
(5)
Thread Magic Garden
(4)
embroidery
(4)
quilters
(4)
quilting
(4)
C and T Publishing
(3)
craft
(3)
flowers
(3)
Christmas
(2)
What problem?
(2)
archetypes
(2)
beads
(2)
bias
(2)
bobbin work
(2)
classes
(2)
filling the grid
(2)
sewing
(2)
threads
(2)
zigzag stitch
(2)
Wizard of Oz
(1)
choir
(1)
knitting
(1)
machine stitching
(1)
movies
(1)
seasons
(1)
youtube
(1)
Like us on Facebook
Quiltposium, Fall2011
The Butterfly Effect
My Blog List
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
2 days ago
-
2 weeks ago
-
11 months ago
-
1 year ago
-
3 years ago
-
4 years ago
-
4 years ago
-
5 years ago
-
5 years ago
-
5 years ago
-
7 years ago
-
7 years ago
-
8 years ago
-
8 years ago
-
8 years ago
-
8 years ago
-
9 years ago
-
9 years ago
-
10 years ago
-
10 years ago
-
10 years ago
-
10 years ago
-
11 years ago
-
11 years ago
-
11 years ago
-
11 years ago
-
12 years ago
-
12 years ago
-
12 years ago
-
12 years ago
-
12 years ago
-
12 years ago
-
12 years ago
-
-
-
Facebook Badge
Labels
archetypes
(2)
art quilters
(7)
art quilting
(8)
beads
(2)
bias
(2)
bobbin work
(2)
books
(6)
C and T Publishing
(3)
choir
(1)
Christmas
(2)
classes
(2)
color
(6)
craft
(3)
design
(18)
embroidery
(4)
fiber art
(8)
filling the grid
(2)
flowers
(3)
free motion
(6)
gardening
(5)
knitting
(1)
life as an artist
(18)
lifestyle
(18)
lunatic fringe
(22)
machine stitching
(1)
movies
(1)
quilters
(4)
quilting
(4)
seasons
(1)
sewing
(2)
story telling
(11)
Thread Magic Garden
(4)
threads
(2)
What problem?
(2)
Wizard of Oz
(1)
youtube
(1)
zigzag stitch
(2)
3 comments:
Hi Ellen, I have always loved your art-I am machine embroidering some cranes and thought of you-I saw your post on quiltingart list.If you ever come to see Visions-I live in SD and would welcome you anytime!take care
Breathless is what I am after watching Brandon work his artistic magic.
Your thread work has done the same for me.
Thank you for sharing.
WOW! Great video -- and cool art! Thanks for sharing it -- and I think you're right about bending & breaking the rules.
Post a Comment