Sunday, July 29, 2012

Upcoming Exhibits

My At Large Exhibit closes at Fourth Corner Frames and Gallery this week.  I've been conceptualizing and preparing for a number of upcoming exhibits that I'm quite excited about.

what waits within me, 36 x 36 in oil on canvas
For the fourth year running, I'll be opening up my studio for the Whatcom Artists Studio Tour the first two weekends in October.  I'll have some new smaller works for the tour and a book of paintings coupled with the words of Rilke.  But only originals.  I do not make prints of my works and people are sometimes disappointed that they can't get an inexpensive reproduction, but that's my position and I'm sticking to it.

I've been selected to participate in the La Connor Art's Alive Invitational Exhibit at Maple Hall this year.  There will be a special poetry & painting space of which one of my paintings will be featured and I've been asked to read Rilke's words.  This is a great honor for me and a wonderful acknowledgement of the many years I've devoted to working on the Reading Rilke series.

And finally, another solo show at Fountainhead Gallery in Seattle during the month of March, opening March 2nd.  The exhibit will be titled Organs of Sentiment and will include some large scale atmospheres.

This is a big schedule for me considering the fact that I've got a full-time paying gig, but I'm so up for it and committed to creating a great body of work.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Stimmung I

Stimmung I, 12 x 16 in, oil on canvas



I often refer to my works as atmospheres.  Not a cloudscape or abstract landscape, but more a sensualness of a landscape--the feeling, emotion, mood that is evoked from a landscape or our relationship to it.  The word stimmung has presented itself periodically in my readings on art, most often by Wassilly Kandinsky who references the "stimmung" (roughly translated as the sentiment) of an artwork as "the lofty emotions beyond words" that enables artworks to "fulfill their purpose and feed the spirit." In his study of the German word Stimmung, Leo Spitzer explores the unity of such feelings between persons and their environments.  He writes "Stimmung is fused with the landscape, which in turn is animated by the feeling of man--it is an indissoluble unit into which man and nature are integrated."  Many artists in Europe used the word "Stimmung" to describe this poetic quality in a painting. "Stimmung" is a German word that means "mood" or "tuning." It's a noun form of "stimmen," which means to tune one's voice, but it refers not only the outward voice, but the inward voice of the soul. As such it has deep musical and poetic associations beyond the visual arts alone.

I've collected up some writings which explore this idea, most by German turn of the century art theorists or philosophers and some by contemporary writers on poetry--so that I can deepen my knowledge of this aethetic idea.  At the same time I intend to create a series of works influenced by these readings and my interpretations and deeper understanding.  The painting above takes into consideration the ideals of mood and abstraction--yet clearly maintains a sense of natural space.

 

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Stimmung

Here is a course I'd love to take...just wish I could read and speak German... so that I could figure out how to express, in words, what I seek to express with my paintings. 

„Stimmung“: Mood – Attunement – Atmosphere in Literature and Literary Criticism (AS.213.654) Monday 5:00 -7:00
The course title marks a problem of translation which already Leo Spitzer in his ―Prolegomena to an interpretation of the word  ̳Stimmung ̳ underscores: ―It is a fact that the German word Stimmung as such is untranslatable.‖ Mood, attunement, atmosphere are facets of an aesthetics of Stimmung as it developed in literature and philosophy from the 18th to the 20th century. Most recently, Stimmung has had a renaissance as a methodological term in a Literary Criticism which seeks to overcome the paradigm of post-structuralism. As David Wellbery has demonstrated, the linguistic usage of the word Stimmung comprises three aspects: a subjective mode of experience/perception, an atmospheric dimension and a communicative efficacy. It is along those lines that the course analyzes the poetics and aesthetics of Stimmung in German Literature and Thought from the 18th through the 20th century. Stimmung proves to be fertile ground for contagious forms of communication, specific modes of representation (i.e. coloring, nuance), and the dissolution of subject/object boundaries. Furthermore, we will discuss Stimmung as a term of Literary Criticism from the 20th century to the present. Readings will include: Kant, Schiller, Stifter, Fontane, Hofmannsthal, Hermann Bahr, Thomas Mann, Georg Simmel, Martin Heidegger, Leo Spitzer, Erich Auerbach, Gernot Böhme, Hans-Ulrich Gumbrecht. Readings and Discussion in German.

We may, in the end, find that silence means more to us than words. 36 x 36 in, oil on canvas.

Monday, July 16, 2012

Paintings at home

A Gentle Unfolding and Slow Deepening, 48 x 60 in, oil on canvas
(Petrie couch by Crate & Barrel,  Noguchi and Eileen Grey tables from modernclassics.com, pillows and lamp from Target)
 
 

The silver lining in the grey cloud of this recession has been that as I continue to produce work regardless of the art market buying conditions, more and more paintings are accumulating in my studio and shouting out to me to "take them home"!  I've been having lots of fun staging them and working them into the different rooms of my house, but most of all, enjoying them outside of gallery and studio and website.  How luxurious this seems given that I've rarely ever kept a painting for myself.  Art sales feed the craft--studio rent, supplies and framing--and my favorite works have sold fairly quickly in the past.  Not to say this one won't show up in an exhibit soon, but for the immediate future I get to lay on my couch and do the contemplatin'. 

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Painting Water




Depth into depth, oil on canvas, 50 x 70 inch, 2012 Sharon Kingston
Since reading From Turnings and Returnings:  The Art of Jake Berthot by Gregory Orr over a year ago, I've kept the ideas expressed below in my mind desiring ever so much to find my own way to balance that certain sunlit and dark while creating a space that holds and transforms the viewer.  Holding them--and me in the making-- just through the subtle shifts and turns of color and form.  For a long time it has been nature's skies that have provided me that space and it was only with this most recent painting which was precipitated by a move to a home near Lake Whatcom that I discovered how much water as an element has to offer me in providing a "depth into depth" space to work my paints and technique.  There is no poetry here, no Rilke words to supplement the visual sense, but only a desire to respond to and push the paint in a new way, with a new point of view, in a new field of color.

How easy it is to glance at/glance off so much contemporary art. Sometimes it seems partly a result of the postmodern repudiation of subjectivity and passion, which have always relied on images of depth for expression. One of postmodernism’s more dubious contributions is to have substituted surface for depth. As if the self, with its dreams, passions, ideas, and longings can be so easily abolished. Given that Jake Berthot’s recent work has located and explored depth through images drawn from the natural world, and has found a guide in Emerson, we might let the American philosopher’s words orient us in the story of depth in nature and consciousness: “How shallow seemed to me yesterday in the woods the speech one often hears from tired citizens who have spent their brief enthusiasm for the country, that Nature is tedious, and they have had enough of green leaves. Nature and the green leaves are a million fathoms deep, and it is their eyes that are superficial.” This depth of nature is a reservoir of life energy. In the words of the Victorian Jesuit poet Gerard Manley Hopkins: “There lives the dearest freshness deep down things.” The vitalizing depth of nature speaks to the depth of human consciousness. Which is not to say that all is sunlit. If nature can be dark at night, human depths have their own mirroring and corresponding darkness and danger. The same poet, Hopkins, put it this way: “O the mind, mind has mountains; cliffs of fall / Frightful, sheer, no-man-fathomed. Hold them cheap / May who ne’er hung there.” But whether the imagery is of darkness or light, jeopardy or joy, the conversation between self and nature is reciprocal.

Instead of the viewer’s gaze skimming off the surface like a skipped stone as in so much contemporary painting, Jake Berthot’s paintings hold you—stop you and engage you, stir you and disturb you. When you stand in front of one of Berthot’s recent paintings, you immediately become aware of depths in the painting and you are drawn out into them, feel some part of yourself emptying into them. But then the mysterious mutuality of reverie takes hold: into your newly created emptiness, something flows from the painting. And gradually, steadily, the experience of gazing at the canvas becomes a reciprocal emptying-out and filling, an ebb and flow. Depth speaks to depth. And when at last, after successive, calm, reciprocal emptyings and fillings, you break the spell of the encounter, you emerge changed in some quiet but definite way.