Artwala Road RSS Feed
 
 

Drawing Life 20

When I was looking at everyone’s work in the drawing class on Saturday I had to think of the great synergy that happens when artists get together to make art and to share their inspirations and journeys. We all did work we wouldn’t have done otherwise because we had the chance to be inspired by each other and to get a boost from the energy in the class.

One of the students, Maureen, is going to Paris next month and lent me the video, Paris Was Yesterday. It’s the story of a group of gay women, Gertrude Stein, Alice B. Toklas, Janet Flanner, Sylvia Beach, Adrienne Monnier and others who were catalysts for emerging modernism in the early part of the 2oth century. Stein bought Picasso paintings before anyone else would touch them. Sylvia Beach published James Joyce when he was hounded out of England for his use of obscenity in his writing. (Dear A, Literature Professor and man of taste and insight par excellence, thinks Joyce is not all he was cracked up to be. You only want to read Ulysses once, if at all, for sure. But Joyce did show us, as all the early modernists did, that we can play and break the mold in any way we want. A big thank you to them.)
Change came from this synergy of creative people gathering together not just from those who burst out of the pack like Picasso and Matisse. They were perhaps the most dogged and devoted and gifted of practitioners but their wider group nourished them.

I pulled out a book I’ve had for ages, Kiki’s Paris / Artists and Lovers 1910-1920. Kiki was a model for many of the artists in Paris at that time and there are hundreds of photos in the book. Here is a drawing of Matisse teaching at his Academy and a photo of some of the ladies in his class at a cafe afterward.

Can we bring back cafe society, please? And hats? That’s Kiki above in the fabulous hat. All of this one hundred years ago but it looks like more fun than we’re having now. We haven’t had great fun clothes or a sense of cultural joie de vivre since the sixties. It’s time, n’est-ce pas? (And we won’t get political here but there are correspondences.) Well, change is coming and I suspect it’s going to be grand and amazing. Keep praying.
Well, here’s to the continuation of creative endeavor and to all who practice art in whatever form and all who support it. It’s about changing consciousness in a positive way. Who knows our part in the creation of peace and joy on the planet? But it’s possible. Oh, yes.

Share/Save/Bookmark

2 Responses to “Drawing Life 20”

  1. 1
    KT:

    There is nothing better than a new hat to brighten the spirits and ward off bad hair days. The girls in the photo look as if they’re having fun and I love it that Henri always wears his wooly suit and tie for a day’s painting. I think cars are responsible for the demise of cafe society. Real communities are thin on the ground these days.

    Bless you and all creatives,

    KT

  2. 2
    Cath:

    Cars are a true problem. I think we should all be riding around in small silent golf carts or hopping onto electric buses. Meanwhile, well spotted re: Henri. Must take care to dress for work. It certainly worked for him.

Leave a Reply

Pages

Categories

Archives

NOW OUT!

Allan Hunter's new book, The Six Archetypes of Love, is now out! If you've ever wondered why a love affair went wrong (and who hasn't?) or how a relationship might grow, this short, concise book is a must read. Based on the idea that we move through defined stages of development in our life journeys this book helps us see just where we are and where we might go as far as love's concerned. It really is brilliant. I know, I'm a bit biased—Allan is my other half—but truly, buy this book!



A Big Shout Out!

Because it's brilliant and fun, because it just might change the way you see your life journey, even make that journey a little easier and wilder, a big shout out to Allan Hunter's new book—Stories We Need To Know.



And check this...

Words from people who inspire us to think in ways that might change our world to one in which we can all live in peace and prosperity—Howard Zinn, Paul Farmer, Robert Reich and more. Edited by Anna Portnoy, Ann Kim , Kate Holbrook. Based on the Global Values class taught by Brian Palmer at Harvard 2001-2004.



Welcome!

I'm Cat Bennett, artist, writer and teacher in Boston. Looking for signs of art on the planet and how we can be artists of change.

Mondays—More notes from The Saturday Morning Drawing Club.

Other days—Notes on art and artful life.

Coming soon...My new art website—www.oneworldsmiling.com

AMAZING GRACE + HALLELUJAH!

CUPS OF KINDNESS





My friend, Debra Bures, is doing a benefit for the Northeast Ohio Foodbank. Over forty artists have donated work, including me, and you can purchase it online. Every dollar donated buys seven meals for hungry people. The show opens Sunday, December 6th. Meanwhile, check the website and see the work as it arrives.

www.cupsofkindness.net

Thank you...

Ring the bells that still can ring,

Forget your perfect offering,

There's a crack in everything,

That's how the light gets in.
~Leonard Cohen





Our world is more malleable than we think. We can bend it into better shape.

~Bono

A good man to know...





If you need quality home renovation work and live in the Boston area then Nick Portnoy's your man. He and his highly skilled team mate, Jim, do kitchens, baths and additions. Nick brings incredible expertise and his artist's eye to the job. And he's my fabulous son! Check out his website—

www.nickportnoybuilders.com

Meta







 

March 2007
M T W T F S S
« Feb   Apr »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031