Category Archives: Opinions & Views

Art? Life? Don’t get me started.

Ingredients of a Living Painting

picasso.studio Ingredients of a Living Painting Marty McCorkle Fine Art
Pablo Picasso in his studio ‘Le Californie’.

If Life = x, what is Art?

Painting is rightly declared dead.

When a painting is conceived as a dingbat of interior design, or as an advertisement for a pet art dogma, its observer can smell this painting’s disconnection from life, its deadness.

Art may be an "imitation of life", but this phrase sheds no light on art by leaving "life" as a vague, undefined x in the equation.

A living painting reflects life’s essence: a poignantly unreliable series of events that delivers uncertain outcomes.

Great painting resonates with this wobbly, suspenseful human experience called life. It does so with specific ingredients:

Ingredients of a Living Painting

1. Tension.

Tension, whether psychological, narrative or compositional, resonates with life’s dissatisfying, conflicted or poignant aspects.

A painting that explores conflict of wants and unsatisfied yearnings directly quotes from the individual’s life.

2. Play, Fun.

The sheer fact of presently being alive urges both profound wonder and shallow pageantry.

The perpetually serious can only communicate through the dark urgency of impending doom‚Äî but Play, life’s toy trumpet, welcomes viewers to snap out of indifference, to drop their guard and to enter a dialogue about life.

3. Sensuality.

As life’s matchmaker, an artist prompts a love affair between the viewer and the physical world.

The artist embraces the material world unapologetically. The material world is life’s vocabulary, and the building block of human experience, and the bedrock of everything Spiritual.

4. Chance, Happenstance.

Communication is art’s right foot, accident is the art’s left foot, and having two left feet is great art.

Welcoming and incorporating accidents of process takes painting’s meaning to a place that narrow, conscious reason cannot reach.

In one hour of painting, the artist mentally edits a painting about 8,000 times.

claude monet studio Ingredients of a Living Painting Marty McCorkle Fine Art
Claude Monet in his studio.

5. Wit, Irony.

Not taking process, message or self too seriously is the artist’s antidote to modern isolation.

6 Hope.

Too much hope erodes a art’s tension. Too little hope is makes art unbearable.

Picasso’s "La Guernica" exemplifies a balanced tension: amid devastation a woman holds a candle, a modest symbol of hope.

la.guernica.picasso Ingredients of a Living Painting Marty McCorkle Fine Art
"La Guernica", oil painting on canvas by Pablo Picasso.

7. The Ephemeral, Anicha, Death.

The Buddhist concept of anicha suggests that everything that begins will end, including our lives and individual consciousness.

The ephemeral simultaneously confounds our ideal of a ‘perfect’ life while imbuing life with value and urgency. For example, plastic flowers, though long lasting, are valued less than living, momentary flowers are.

Ephemerality speaks directly to the longings, regrets and urgency daily experienced in the process of being alive.

chagall.studio Ingredients of a Living Painting Marty McCorkle Fine Art
Chagall in his studio.

8. Sustained Ambiguity, Sustained Path.

An artist benefits by developing comfort with deep uncertainty about one’s artistic direction.

A deeper sense of direction, living on pure fascination with process, leads the lost artist to unimaginable places.

The poet John Keats refers to this ability to sustain an artistic path in the face of uncertainty as Negative Capability.

Living painting never haunts well worn paths. It cuts new trails for the artist and viewer to experience life freshly.

rodin.studio Ingredients of a Living Painting Marty McCorkle Fine Art
August Rodin in his sculpting studio.

9. Proportionality.

Balance these ingredients to direct a painting’s entry into life experience.

One can detect these ingredients used to greater or lesser effect in art of the past (except irony, a modern phenomenon). For example: 19th century romantic painting and poetry, Greek tragedies, ancient cave art, 20th century silent film.

What Painting Can’t Do

  • A painting without a wish to resonate or to rhyme with life is born lifeless.
  • Painting can never teach nor dictate a viewer’s response. Like one parent trying to conceive alone, a monologue dies childless. Painting offers a place of dialogue and consequently fresh means by which to experience life.
  • Painting cannot change the world. Individuals do. By delivering a single message, didactic painting is merely graphic design.

de.koonin.studio Ingredients of a Living Painting Marty McCorkle Fine Art
De Kooning and his wife in his studio.

What Painting Does

Great painting— and all great art— rises above the limitations of its medium, not by convincingly simulating life but by asking, "Is it just me, or have you experienced this as well?"

By subverting the assumption that we are strangers to our own lives and squatters— beleaguered, uninvited guests of an unwelcoming universe, substantial painting shares life among artist and viewers.

matisse studio Ingredients of a Living Painting Marty McCorkle Fine Art
Matisse in his studio.

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Harvesting Accident

Poetic Stage Dialog, the Book of Changes, and the Art of Capturing the Accidental

marlow Harvesting Accident Marty McCorkle Fine Art

Christopher Marlowe, English dramatist, used iambic pentameter in such topless towers of plays as Doctor Faustus

yin yang Harvesting Accident Marty McCorkle Fine Art

The Yin and Yang: a symbol of dual opposites in human experience.

 

liebniz Harvesting Accident Marty McCorkle Fine Art

Liebniz, creator of binary arithmatic, becoming the basis for computers, spamming and McCorkle’s oil paintings.

 

chirico Harvesting Accident Marty McCorkle Fine Art

Melancholy and Mystery of a Street, 1914, by Chirico

 

Iambic pentameter does not deliver convincing dialog performed on stage.

But it’s a forceful device to change the writer’s lingual habits, forcing him "outside of the box" to pursue the unexpected.

A short vowel followed by long vowel, that “iambic” quality which English language naturally flows even from American mouths, is not particularly demanding for rewrites, but outfitting each stanza with ten words per line requires the writer to both invent and edit, to embellish and compress.

This pentameter forces the author to be clever in fitting the required ten vovels into each line.

Laboring under the burden of pentameter, the alert writer harvests the discoveries from the mental acrobatics required to achieve the ten vowel line and adorn the resultant lines with these accidental jewels.

This also applies to rhyming couplets which nudge the author into unexpected realms in the hunt for rhyming words.

My point is that artists don’t adopt what a style or approach for its appeal on the page or canvas, but a process that affords creative horsepower and a capacity to deliver accidents for the artist to explore.

Accident presents source material ceaselessly, perpetually offering its service to the “stuck” mind to either explore rather than dismiss as unrelated to the labor of creation.

I-Ching: the Coin Operated Book

The Book of Changes (known in Chinese as the “I-Ching”) stands as a voluminous structure arbitrarily composed of insights, containing the Taoist reflections upon Yin and Yang, symbolically familiar as what can be construed as two snakes, one black, one white, swirling about one another in a circle, and representing the necessarily interlocked duality of our perception.

The use of the Book of Changes is initiated with accident, the casting of coins and exploring of the chapter corresponding to the coins’ configuration to one another.

As to whether the chapter one reads delivers meaningful or accidental answers to problems would involve the subjective discussion of one’s relationship to the universe.

I’m simply pointing out the element of accident—the casting of coins—as the necessary mechanism to “activate” this book.

Of significance to my involvement in painting, philosopher Liebniz read a Latin translation of the Book of Changes, from which he invented binary arithmetic, wherein all numbers can be represented by zero and one, the number system used by the computer which lies behind all of our digital ingenuity.

Composing on the Keyboard

Far from being a means to organize, the computer introduces the arbitrary into my painting process.

By allowing me to “grab” shapes from a Continue reading “Harvesting Accident” »

Progression of My Painting Style

travis squat pool small Progression of My Painting Style Marty McCorkle Fine Art

Figure Squatting by Pool, 2006, Oil on canvas, Marty McCorkle

Larger Image

Introducing digital imagery to painting leads to dead ends and open doors.

To simply generate images on a computer as the basis of paintings offers dubious means to communicate with a viewer. The thrill comes when the computer image and oil paint blend into the unexpected.

For some artists, using a computer to paint would seem a dreadful punishment. At times, it is for me: it does not make painting easier, sometimes leading to failure and dead ends. But manipulating images on a computer generates the unpredictable by introducing the random, like throwing a bowling ball into a crysal boutique.

My relation with the computer became confusing as I continued to use it as a starting point for paintings. Rather than steadying or entrenching my perspective or style, it continues to widen it.

The computer tears subjects up like a tree shredder, leaving both artist and viewer to patch Continue reading “Progression of My Painting Style” »

Votive Candles & Nose Milk Laughter

 Votive Candles & Nose Milk Laughter Marty McCorkle Fine ArtAs you may have gathered, I’m not one to judge.

But if you knew how horrible some of my acquaintances are, you’d know how nonjudgmental I am. I mean there they are, sharing quips; then I crack a joke (and not a bad one, mind you) and invariably the “four morticians” stare silently. That’s what I call them, the four morticians, but only behind their backs because I diplomatically censor myself, like Google in China.

Anyway, these four sticks invariably stand there blank facedly as my quip drifts to the floor like a handful of confetti thrown at a funeral gathering.

I mean really, I’m so over it. It was during this state of so-over-it-ness that I slipped away from this funereal entourage to briefly take some Continue reading “Votive Candles & Nose Milk Laughter” »

What I Likes and What I Dislikes in Art

Think I’m opinionated about Art and transparently pushing my own agenda? Of course I am!

In this era of communication, followers, fans and fellow artists urgently seek my artistic opinion. I find writing helps to hammer out viewpoints. Please comment.

thumbs up What I Likes and What I Dislikes in Art Marty McCorkle Fine Art

Marty McCorkle’s Aristic Likes

Pablo Picasso

Pablo Picasso had a flair for experiment and enthusiasm for art, willing to set aside skills to get to the meat of the concept he was exploring. In other words, he was willing to look a sloppy painter, a poor draftsman, a bad artist, while he explored an idea.

Chuck Close

His portraits are the bee’s knees, as the French say.

James Whistler

James Whistler’s little night paintings. Whistler was forward looking and had fun painting; modern without being caught in the cul-du-sac of current modernism.

Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida

Spanish artist Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida’s paintings, all of ‘em, carried mammoth brushstrokes and shared a fun love of figurative painting, Sorolla remains terrifically under represented in the story of art. Wonder why?

A good “virtual gallery” at his Madrid museum shows here. An exhibit of his work is here form the Museo National del Prado.

Henri Matisse

It’s a simple equation:

Matisse = Joy

More on Matisse.

JMW Turner

Though sunsets have been reduced to the realm of the corny, Turner remains a great painter of light. He had an enthusiasm for life that afforded his contemporaries ample opportunities to jot down anecdotes of his eccentricity, allowing us to piece together a  perfectly sane eater of life by today’s standards.

Vik Muniz

Vik Muniz is Andy Warhol “Lite”. He has a sense of humor. Though Muniz’s depiction of one thing as being another (e.g. children’s portraits in sugar, old master paintings depicted in garbage) has become a bit formulaic, he’s great fun.

More on Andy Warhol’s fame .

thumbs down What I Likes and What I Dislikes in Art Marty McCorkle Fine Art

Marty McCorkle’s Aristic Dislikes

Pablo Picasso

Picasso’s ego was blimp like in its gassy inflation, probably from too much adulation. Pablo Picasso remains the most over exposed celebrity ever, next to Paris Hilton.

Any “Art Movement”

Movements ought to be promptly  flushed. Artists don’t work out of pre planned genres or well thought out schools of thought. They grope about in the dark of the new.

Paul Gauguin

Paul Gauguin went go Tahiti with pre set ideas while targeting his work for an apathetic Parisian audience. Better had Gauguin painted more from the heart than from concept.

Georges Seurat, Paul Signac & Pointillism

Pointilism promised so much and delivered so little. Georges Seurat died too young (at age 31) for us to speculate, but the dotty technique seemed to mask weak draftsmanship.

Modernism

Modernism had its hey day, but enough of the formulaic irony, chic minimalism and tearing down Edwardian tradition! Die already!

Modernism has become the new tyranny of tradition, an empty dogma propped by its citadel, the ubiquitous Museum of Modern Art.

More about the tragedy called Modernism.

Post-Modernism

Moderism’s house decays, so it seeks shelter on the covered porch of “post modernism”.

Post modernism is the term applied one applies to something culturally significant when one doesn’t care to figure out why. One simply says, “His youtube video delivers a postmodernist outlook.” In other word: “Looky!”

Art Museums

Visitors are perennially exposed to the notion that art museums have a slight connection to the art world. They don’t. Generally, art museums are places where art movements go to die, offering glimpses into the elephant bone yard of art concepts.

Go visit art museums. I do. But realize that these art exhibitions invariably push an agenda that is quaintly antique.

Art museums offer a place to practice the subtle art of yawning with one’s mouth closed, an undervalued skill.

Andy Warhol Fame: Drop His Formula & Create Your Own Hollywood

Yes, the super intuitive, super gay & super fabulous Andy Warhol woke fame up life like a dreamy hunk from slumber, but deary, current artists can now drop these antique notions about how news media and fame work and create their own fabulous Hollywood.

 Andy Warhol Fame: Drop His Formula & Create Your Own Hollywood Marty McCorkle Fine Art

Andy Warhol statue in Union Square in NY. He toted bundles of cash and jewelry in his nondescript medium brown paper bag, insisting that no one would think to steal such a pedestrian item.

Recently, a gaudy silver statue was unveiled in NY for that art world wonder, Andy Warhol. Appropriate, since silver, as all gay men know, is the new black.

For Andy Warhol, Hollywood was a silver screen heaven allowing members only (not the jacket, dear, keep up) where the glamorous would be eternally famous—none of this fifteen minutes business doled out to the unwashed masses—but an elated state of floating, like one feels after spending a Saturday with Liz Taylor in her beach house in the late 1960s.

The whir of movie cameras, a far rarer phenomenon in the 1960s than now, brought Any Warhol a little closer to that exalted, magical Hollywood. Whether pointed at him or his super models, the camera meant glamour, a term   Continue reading “Andy Warhol Fame: Drop His Formula & Create Your Own Hollywood” »

Video About My Painting: Uncertain Outcome

Here is a short video about my art and my approach to painting. Click play.

Doing a Non-Vermer: Vermeer, Self Revelation and Blogging

 Doing a Non Vermer: Vermeer, Self Revelation and Blogging Marty McCorkle Fine Art

"The Painter" by the inestimable master painter Vermeer

Vermeer remains a well known painter, but how much more so if he blogged?

“The Painter” by Johannes Vermeer, that 17th century Dutch master, always leaves me wanting more. Here works the artist (whose clothes suggest a cello), dabbling away at the canvas while a model, most likely the sister-in-law or a particularly comely parlor maid, parks herself in soft morning light holding up a book and trumpet combo as if she were in the checkout line of the village bookshop.

I’m certain that this painting depicts morning; both model and artist are fresh and sharp for the work after a first day’s latte, enthused for the Continue reading “Doing a Non-Vermer: Vermeer, Self Revelation and Blogging” »

Painting & Deconstructionism: A Lyrical Response to Cool Analysis

While deconstructionism is a staring point for explorations in art, it is more of a door frame than a destination.

 Painting & Deconstructionism: A Lyrical Response to Cool Analysis Marty McCorkle Fine Art

Men Walking with Tapers. Oil on canvas. by Marty McCorkle

An “ism” is an itchy affair, like a sweater one receives for Christmas. On formal occasions, one is obliged to wear it, demonstrating to the aunt who bestowed this itchy gift that it fits and is highly cherished. It otherwise resides in the second drawer of the dresser awaiting deployment when the aunts return.

Thank goodness that art has broken out of its monolithic movements packaging and expresses itself more variously, like a series of Continue reading “Painting & Deconstructionism: A Lyrical Response to Cool Analysis” »