Category Archives: Early 20th Century Paris

Walk the Walk Flaneur Style!

flaneur-style-old-nycThe definition of a “flaneur” loosely stated is “the art of strolling”. A flaneur is an “idler, a man or woman of leisure, a street connoisseur, an urban explorer”.

Isn’t that just an inflated way of describing a person who walks? Not really. If you are engaged in the act of walking, practically speaking, such as from train to office, from car to house, from desk to desk, from kitchen to bedroom, That is just transporting yourself from one place to another, usually with a necessary intent in mind. Flaneur, a term coined by philosopher Walter Benjamin in the mid 19th century, is far more involved. It’s a lifestyle, part of Parisian culture that Benjamin discovered, observing the poet Baudelaire, and other so called “dandies” of the time, whose flaneur instinct was an innate part of their personalities as artists in the society. Baudelaire was the first flaneur to appear in the literary world. Benjamin an intellectual observer of society’s nuances in his own right was influenced by Baudelaire’s flaneuristic tendencies. His famous series of poems” Les Fleurs du Mal”, describes Parisienne life in the famous arcades asseen thru the eyes of the flaneur.

From an Nyc painter perspective, flaneur or walker, is a necessary activity when on a hunt for ideas, inspiration, and insight to be utilized in the studio later. Because there is no bounty like the urban environment’s gifts naturally exposed to me on my artist walks, open eyes and open mind the necessary tools, while gathering new material for upcoming paintings!

walking-in-nyc-flaneurThe cities London, Paris, and New York are the flaneur’s heaven. Exploring by foot, at leisure, is not only enjoyable, accessible, and exciting, but is also a way to fill the creative well. One goes out with a blank mind and returns with an overflow of sensory information. The walk is not just a walk , simplistic in  meaning , but a “gastronomy of the eye” as Balzac aptly called it!  Getting out of the studio, the office, ditching the computer , is a welcome journey for the creative to go on, the simple stroll, becomes a hunt for jewels  to fill the treasure chest of the mind !

Paris is the flaneur’s natural habitat. As Edmund White paraphrases in his book, “The Flaneur”, “looking at people go by has always been the Parisian’s favorite pastime; no wonder they’re called gawkers!” Baudelaire says of the flaneur,” the crowd is his domain, as the air is that of the bird, or the fish of the sea” The cafe life in Paris caters to the flaneur’s love of observation or as we call it today, “people watching.”

gerard-de-nerval-walking-pet-lobsterIn the mid 19th century, when the flaneur became a “thing” in Paris, it was associated with the lifestyle of the “dandy”, the idle rich with excess time on their hands to stroll the city’s streets at their leisure. Oscar Wilde, Baudelaire, and Gerard de Nerval, the French Romantic poet, who actually walked his pet lobster around on a blue silk leash, were a few of these “dandys”. When questioned about his unusual lobster walking habit, Nerval retorted, “why should a lobster be any more ridiculous than a dog?” Of course, Nerval was utterly and completely Mad! But an original flaneur in every way!

“The crowd was the veil from behind which the familiar city as phantasmagoric beckoned to the flaneur”

Walter Benjamin, philosopher and essayist, was fascinated with this subject. He noted that there was no English equivalent. Being an observer, of human behavior, flaneur was prime material for his fertile mind.

vivian-maier-photos-art-blog-nycBut what about photographers famous or otherwise? Watching, looking, recording strangers, wars, society, celebrities, buildings, faces, light, scenes, landscapes, the exotic, the banal, the photographer’s work in progress is an on going documentary of life as seen through the cameras eye. Certain Nyc photographer – flaneur’s , like, Diane Arbus, Vivian Maier, Robert Frank, Edward Steichen, Cindy Sherman, were always on the GO, walking the streets , looking for new material, and thousands of photos later, we get to experience the city as they did . In the film “Finding Vivienne Maier”, we are taken on this illusive mystery woman’s  city walks, her camera focused ,watching, walking, and waiting for the photo she wanted.  Robert Franks, in his “The  Americans”, the dynamic expose of our society in the 1950’s, Weegee’s crime scene photos from the underground Nyc life, also pre 1970, Ron Galella, celebrity photographer, stalking his obsession Jackie O, up and down the city streets, Doisneau’s, iconic black & white, photographs of Paris, are spectacular records of the street life, and  give us a view of early 20th century life we can only experience through photos such as his. Amazing stuff, stepping into a time capsule, that only the flaneur, armed with camera, or sketch pad, or journal, can give us, from his street perspective, up close, we get to see what he sees and that is a special experience. Diane Arbus’s freaks, her attraction to the atypical as her subjects, the circus freaks, the retarded child, the vagrant, the downtrodden, city characters she came across during her flaneuring in NYC,  sealing her place in history ! The writer, Edmund White, cites French photographer Eugene Atget, as a “scientific flaneur.” “An obsessed photographer, determined to document every street in Paris, before it disappeared forever in the new construction looming in the future.” These flaneur’s armed with cameras, have the ability to document the city scape as it changes, is torn down, rebuilt, transformed over time, with the photographs left to document what once was. In Vivienne Maier’s stunning collection of thousands of NYC photos, now available in a book, “Street Photographer” one is given a historical photographic journey of a city that no longer exists.

henry-miller-tropic-of-cancerHenry Miller, the charismatic novelist, spent his early writing life on the streets of Paris, with his lover Anais Nin, usually looking for a meal, but also gathering  material for his banned book “Tropic of Cancer”,  and the future tropics to follow. Miller is always walking the streets of Paris, from Pigalle to the Bastille, to Montparnasse, the Right Bank, the Left Bank,  he covers by foot, every avenue, every “rue” of old Paris. Miller, the Brooklyn boy, writer in training, expat, soaking up the sights, the people, the language, living as a true “starving artist”, pursuing his dream, his walks taking him into Zola’s “Belly of Paris”, and giving the world his gritty life view in the pages of his often controversial, raw, rough, provocative novels!

There was a recent study by the medical profession stating that “sitting is bad for you” physically. But I maintain that mentally, it’s not great either. Walking is physically AND mentally invigorating!  It’s healthy  mobility, your body and mind moving in tandem, together it’s a powerful combo where all systems are go, and when that happens, the mind is turned on to the stimuli around you as you walk. The synchronicity, the harmony, walking, gives body and mind, is irreplaceable. This is a process that painters get ideas from, returning to their canvas, full of inspiration, visuals, ideas, potato-planting-Van-Goghprovided by their  walk! Van Gogh’s paintings of the potato planters, his sight holding them in his artist’s eyes, as he walked through the Dutch countryside, Utrillo’s cafe scenes, clearly from his meanderings through the winding Monmartre streets in his absinthe haze, Lautrec’s cabaret posters, his brothel paintings, walking with his infamous cane, that held a beaker of absinthe, or brandy in it’s hook, making his flaneur experience compatible with his drinking. The SITTER has a very different experience. One is stationary, compact, confined. Whereas the WALKER is movement, freedom, mobility, unleashed!” Transitory poetic in the historic” Baudelaire says. As only he could, using his poetic liscence freely.  Yes, there is the possibility to “achieve transcendence” as you wander, walk, stroll stride, saunter the city streets. It’s the unexpected encounter, the surprise event, the sudden illumination, the street action, people, traffic, energy,  all carry the flaneur’s ahead, around, and towards new sights, different views of old sights, and unfolds untapped resources of the mind that your walk inspires!

oscar-wilde-flaneurWhile Oscar Wilde, the poet, playwright, gay icon was serving his prison sentence in 1897, for sodomy, “gross indecency” with other men, he wrote a journal he entitled, “De Profoundis”.

“I let myself be lured into long spells of senseless and sensual ease. I amused myself with being a flaneur, a dandy, a man of fashion, surrounding myself with the smaller motives and the meaner minds.” He was feeling regretful, experiencing a prison sentence, ill, depressed, facing the end of a colorful, if turbulent life.

Wilde was the ultimate dandy. He carried flaneur to another level, where his strolling, or cruising, the modern description, walking the city gave him material for his literary works, as well as his erotic lifestyle as well. He was proud of his “dandy” status, unapologetic for anything he did, giving the social environment he lived in many tantalizing moments! This dress, his curls, his homosexual identity, all made him quite the outrage! Another flaneur about town, artist in the making, personality extraordinaire!

There have been many flaneur’s who have made history, as observers of the city, depicting their imagery artistically since the late 19th century. Walking is not especially newsworthy on it’s own, but the distinct qualities of the FLANEUR set him apart, this unique individual activity, absorbing, the city as a classroom, a studio, a library, a stage, where life unfolds in its personal way, view and viewer merging as one, strolling, wandering, gawking, gaping, while walking your turtle or lobster on a leash, leading to creative vision and fresh inspiration, galvanizing new goals, energizing a wider view, while revealing an expansive horizon timeless and free!

Dream Onnnnn

pop-art-blog-nyc-brooklynGenius & Dreamers. The Yin and the Yang. The Yes and the No. The Up and the Downs, the Roof and the Basement.

So, this very cool writer named Jonathon Carroll in one of his books titled ” Outside the Dog Museum” says This about genius:

“Geniuses are allowed to do anything. Picasso was a big prick. Beethoven never emptied his chamber pot, and Frank Lloyd Wright stole as much money from his clients as any good thief. But it was all okay because they were all “geniuses”. He goes on to say that “genius is a boat that sails itself”.

Braque said that “ones style -it is in a way ones inability to do otherwise…. Your physical constitution practically determines the shape of the brush marks.”

“Bullshit on all that artistic suffering, “agonizing” over the empty page….. Canvas”

Anyone who agonizes isn’t a genius is an idiot! Carroll goes on to say.

And there you go.

There it is.

pop-art-blog-nyc-brooklynCould that be because dreams, are the genesis of art in its multi forms? And dreams don’t involve agonizing or forcing, they just are, like the rose petals unfold, a natural process, like nature shows us, from the caterpillar evolving into the butterfly, to the bumble bee giving us honey, to the sun drenched grapes on the vine providing us with wine in the glass. They just happen. Because they are supposed to.

Geniuses always seem to just BE. Creation is easy and they just Have IT covered! Is it because the “geniuses” make their dreams reality and treat them as such, without the wake up process that most people experience?  Or are certain individuals just inordinately blessed, hit the jackpot, were given that bonus coupon, the extra gift that makes them fly, surpassing the rest of us ordinary mortals?

Most of the greats the Rimbauds, the Van Goghs, Kerouac, Hemingway, Mapplethorpe, were intense dreamers, whose dream – reality state was seamless. A unit. They all knew who they were, what they wanted, and where they were going! Dreams are infinite. They are timeless, with out restrictions or human boundaries, free –  fall experiences of the mind, and could it be that “geniuses” accept that idea, live it without questions asked,  and thus accomplish supernatural things that mere mortals cannot comprehend?

The French writer, a genius so to speak, Cocteau, in his journals says:

pop-art-blog-nyc-brooklyn” Then I realized that my dream life was as full of memories as my real life, that it WAS a real life, denser, richer in episodes and in details of all kinds, more precise in fact, and that it was difficult for meto locate my memories in one world or another , that they were superimposed, combined, and creating a double life for me, twice as huge and twice as long as my own”

That’s pretty heavy stuff. His dream life was more real than his so-called real life.

One wonders. Is this true? Who knows? I don’t. Do you?

pop-art-blog-nyc-brooklynWhere does creativity come from? The dream world is certainly a prime originator of all creative genius. The “Songs of Innocence and Experience”, William Blake’s masterpiece, is essential dream material, as is most of his work, his Dragon series, his mystical dreamy, other world visions translated unto his poetry and artwork as a harmonious symmetry of passionate self expression give us his dreams coming to live on the page.

Blake’s work is the substance of genius no doubt, and breaks through  that magical world, the genius spirit taps into, entertains, envelops, and encourages. “I must create my own system or be enslaved by another’s” was Blake’s fundamental goal.

Are you a dreamer? Or are you firmly rooted in the real world? You know WHO you are. But do you know WHERE you Really are?

Are you thinking of your 9-5 humdrum rat race experience, or are you mentally swimming in the ocean of the I don’t know what, but it isn’t THIS!

Patti Smith, in her epic biography, ” Just Kids “, describes her starving days, with Robert Mapplethorpe, freshly fired from their respective bookseller jobs, persevering in their creative goals, aka LIFE, freezing, broke, hungry, in their Lower East Side walk up, pushed to the max, energy pumped by dreams, youth, and that indescribable “IT” factor that makes certain stars shine brighter in the sky!

Joseph Cornell, the “Master of Dreams” was a dream maker incarnate toiling away in his mothers utopia parkway kitchen on his magnificent dream boxes , the world outside a blur, his inner world manifested within these surreal boxes germinating in his unique and fantastic MIND!

These geniuses, some born, others made, believed in their dreams! Nothing was getting in the way! The yellow caution light was blinking but dreamers don’t slow down, they just drive faster through it and beyond to the green light signaling GO GO GO!

pop-art-blog-nyc-brooklynSo when I look at Blake’s engraving of “Jacob’s Ladder”, or “The Ancient of Days”, I have no doubt that he was tapped in, connected to the dream world inspiring and guiding him on his artistic path. His images came from his spiritual, other world reality far removed from the gritty ugly, Dickensonian London cityscape he was dwelling in at time, late 1700’s -1800’s. His interior world transported him out of his exterior world. Lucky!

Living in the Material World. George Harrison talks about “drowning in the material world”, that he has a lot to do to get out of this place, and he does it by dreaming himself out.  Aerosmith tells us to “Dream On”, Fleetwood  Mac in their “Dreams” tells us that when the rain washes it all away then we see the visions, which set us straight, and many more musicians sing the dream theme, because it’s a popular and powerful message.

pop-art-blog-nyc-brooklynSeveral years ago, in NYC, The New York Public Library produced a fantastic exhibit on Jack Kerouac’s writings. During my visit, I was amazed by the extensive collection  of dreams and visions that Kerouac documented in his personal journals and sketchbooks, diaries, and  stories. Mysticism, Buddhism, Beatism, other world experiences, and (yes he was a victim of alcoholism ), which took him to the “other side ” sooner rather than later,  but his dreams pushed him into his destiny as a “Beat” Writer ,an icon , a representative of the NY  literary cultural dream team along with Alan Ginsberg, Bill Burroughs, Diane DiPrima, Gregory Corsco , Hettie and LeRoi Jones! Kerouac, definitely a dream inspired man On the Road! Death could not stop him. His dream lives on!

Genius mentality can be found in any profession from the scientist to the chef, to the mechanic, to the writer, to the landscaper, it is all about taking the dreams and making them real. It’s about the ones who believe in their dreams as serious goals, life blood, veins of gold , and pursue them. The rest of the world calls them geniuses. The dream weavers incarnate.  The surrealists, the Project Runway contestants, the Chopped contestants, the walking dreamers. They all move towards the endgame, the dream dust the oxygen they inhale every moment of every day.

” Dreaming is an art of pure imagination, attesting in man a creative power, which if it was available in the waking world would make every man a Shakespeare or a Dante”

art-blog-nyc-brooklynThoreau whose dream was to retreat in solitude at Walden Pond, and write about his experiences, tapped into his dream power, making his dreams reality! We can read all about it in ” Walden”, a must for every high school student for the past 60 years.

Cocteau did it all as novelist, poet, dramatist, filmmaker, said ” one of the characteristics of the dream is that nothing surprises us in it. With no regret we agree to live in it with strangers, completely cut off from our habits and our friends.” Like Thoreau he identified the dream life with solitude. While a fertile ground for creative growth the genius often survives in isolation living the “dream” apart from the world around him.

art-blog-nyc-brooklynDiane Arbus, Georgia O’Keefe, George Sand, Colette, Piaf, Suzanne Valladon, Sylvia Beach, Simone de Beauvoir, Freida Kahlo, Sylvia Plath, these women were proof of this identifying quality, living off the grid, pursuing their dreams, often without social encouragement or recognition. Dreaming  is gender oblivious. You are or you are not. You Do or you Don’t.

There are an infinite number of examples where dreams are pivotal in the lives of geniuses and creatives throughout time. That tells me that you can’t have one without the other. It’s a tandem experience. It’s the apple pie a la mode, the wine and cheese, the Billie Holiday and gardenias, the Kerouac and Cassidy, the Frieda and Diego , the genius -dream duo is a made to order duality of creative energy and inspiration propelling certain individuals into the stratosphere where dreaming becomes reality and gives the world a special experience unique, valuable and timeless!  The bicycle built for two!

art-blog-nyc-brooklynWebster defines dreams as: ” a conception or image created by the imagination and having no objective reality. ”

“Dream On”. We’ve all heard that at one time or another, meant to dismiss and demean. When actually it should be used to encourage and enlighten. Dream On. Are you kidding? Dream on. I kid you not.

When Dorothy saw OZ she knew she wasn’t in Kansas anymore! She had a dream that became reality, or was her reality the dream? This is the question of the ages, the one that the dreamers accept, thriving in the OZ of their own making , that world of imagination and fantasy, spinning dreams into reality, birthing geniuses, creating art in its many dimensions and forms, inspiring, sharing, and blessing lives into infinity!

Dream On. Keep dreaming. What? You must be dreaming? YES! YES! And again YES!

And

No – Dorothy you’re NOT in Kansas anymore.

Writers & Artists Love Affair

patti-smith-just-kids-art-blog-nycWriters and artists have always carried on a clandestine love affair between the pages and on the canvas. Life gets expressed through the visual, and the literal, and both genres meld as they influence and are influenced in a mutual admiration society giving to the world the unique perspectives through the combined literary and art expression. This is a blending of spirits, of like minded souls, and it’s pretty awesome! Check out “Just Kids” Patti Smith’s, personal expose of her artistic journey with her soulmate, the avant, underground, photographer, Robert Mapplethorpe. These two comrades in their artistic journey into the unknown, wandered through the East And West Village, in the 60’s and 70’s, searching,  dreaming,  ultimately knowing that their future was intertwined in the Netherlands of art, its pain, it’s passion, the fuel driving it’s undeniable rewards. She is enamored of the French poet Rimbaud, and her dual identity as both writer and singer is clarified by her own words, “Please no matter how we advance technologically, please don’t abandon the book. There is nothing in our material world more beautiful than the book.” There. She says it. And she means it. Her story, ” Just Kids ” is pure gold, for us pioneers, the writers and painters, who have walked the walk so to speak. If you are a “creative”, ignoring this book is a BIG mistake! Get it ASAP! It is a love story, a trippy art journey, and it also gives the younger reader a chance to experience a glimpse of the downtown hippie lifestyle of the past, far removed from today’s hipster world of tech, commerce, and astronomical student loans!

patti-smith-quote-art-blog-nycOn the other hand, let’s go on a vastly different trip with Steve Martin as he takes us from North to South, literally speaking, from the authenticity and earthy Greenwich Village experience of Patti and Robert, to the cold culture where Cash is King, and art is a commodity of the pocketbook first, not the innate soul purity of “Just Kids”.

Reading Steve Martin’s, “Object of Beauty” took me into the upscale art world of business art, and the inner workings of the personal lives involved, as Martin illuminates his particular characters, these bodies, who define his novel, in his style, so that the reader not only reads it, but also lives it, meeting the characters, and recognizing them, maybe, or maybe not. His protagonist, Lacey Yeager, hot NY art dealer, social climber, Sotheby’s star, she exemplifies the apex of art world social climber, with dollar signs in her eyes, she is the “Monster Goddess” of Bill De Kooning’s “Woman I”. In “Object”, Martin combine his own personal art collectors vision, residing in this world, with a passion for writing, spinning his tale of the status driven art world, a world that Martin knows very well. He buys. Collects. Spends. Just like the characters in his novel. Included we find prints of images of artists work, from Milton Avery to Andy Warhol. As if to remind the reader that this is all about art, though it’s fiction, the truth is that art is the foundation of his novel! sometimes Truth can be translated through fiction!

gaddis-the-Recognitions-art-blog-brooklyn-nycBut getting into the nitty gritty so to speak one should start with “The  Recognitions”, published in 1955, Bill Gaddis’s, lengthy, detailed, wordy, story of the life of Wyatt Gwyon, art forger, describing his craft of fakery, this book is an expose of the contradictions life offers in Wyatt’s counterfeit world where real is fake and fake appears to be real, and the perception as seen from the outside is everything, similar to viewing a painting, so subjective, yet coming from that intangible mix of the inner and outer mechanisms of mind and matter combined. In this fat novel, books and paintings are intertwined. The philosophies expounded by the characters release so much expertise and insight from the writers, artist, painters, business, point of view, that though a heavy read, it’s challenging, and it forced me to delve in with the persistence of a miner digging for gold in that pit of dirt. The results SO worth it!

“The Horses Mouth”, by Joyce Carey, also another art novel, published in 1944, shows us the life of a painter, who doesn’t cater to the popular fads, and survives by criminal activity in order to afford to maintain his craft. Caught up in his passion, he is willing to do whatever it takes at any cost. Morality, and conforming to the social standards of his time are rejected as the painter, Gulley Jimson, exploits, and tricks his friends and acquaintances in order to further his own ambition driven artist needs. Keeping it Real – Not all artists are saints, not then, not now!

philosophy-of-andy-warhol-art-blog-brooklynLa creme de la creme for me is “The Philosophy of Andy Warhol.”He NEVER disappoints. His philosophy is sooo simplistic, yet in it’s simplicity, abstract and really profound. I just Love his statement on page 112- where he talks about the “So What?” Saying “so what” puts every big awful “thing” in its place and instantly you feel better. This gem is full of nuggets like this one, and if you haven’t gotten acquainted with Andy’s philosophy than you are really missing some cool observations from the Master of Cool. This guy made a soup can famous! Remember??? The brilliant Voyeur whose quote “Everybody will be famous for 15 minutes” made headlines with it’ Andy Fabulous Truth! The Reality Shows of today prove Andy’s prophetic words beyond what anyone would have ever imagined!

max-jacobs-picasso-nyc-art-blogThere are many reminders of the indisputable link writers have with artists and vice versa. Witness Picasso’s best friend Max Jacobs, and the poet Appolinaire, known for his “AlCools,” devoted, bonded in their artistic life, in their Montmartre Bohemia, where eating, and sleeping came far behind creating, and dreaming. The true sustenance being, the preferred art of the subjects at hand, be it Satie and his classical Gymnopedies,Lautrec and his bordello posters, Picasso, and his circus paintings of harlequins and acrobats,  or Valladon and her nudes. Perhaps it was Baudelaire and his absinthe infected poetry, or Jane Avril, friend and model for so many of Lautrec’s posters, celebrity of Montmartre, as star attraction at the Moulin Rouge, they all had a common goal -Art- the making, living, eating, breathing, the food they thrived on that kept them alive, and provided them with nourishment that  no simple meal ever could!

Somerset Maughm’s, ” The Sixpence “, written about the painter,  Gaugin, ” Lust for Life,” Irving Stone’s, representation of painter, Vincent Van Gogh, and of course the famous , made for cinema, Girl with the Pearl  Earring, based on Tracy Chevalier’s novel, the subject originating with Vermeer’s masterpiece,  now prominently displayed in the The Hague. All chains in the link that is soldered together between artists and writers. We get a literary view to back up the visual experience we have while looking at a painting, and we get a complete picture.

henry-miller-pop-art-blog-nycHenry Miller, the novelist of all times, love him or hate him, he can’t be ignored! He was a self taught water colorist, which he claims was fulfilling, in a way that transcended his writing. Thousands upon thousands of watercolors, he produced joyfully, giving away randomly, at his will, to friends and fans.  Talk about a writer – art love affair, Miller, epitomized this duality with his novels , his Tropics series, and his future essays, where he talks as if he’s sitting with us , about his favorite subjects like, art, writing, spirituality, people, Big Sur, Anais Nin, and Paris! In Big Sur, The Henry Miller Museum, is a unique dream place, a stone’ s throw from his old hangout Nepenthe, the former love nest of Orson Welles and his lover Rita Hayworth. It was recreated into a bar, restaurant, hanging off a cliff over the Pacific Ocean, a favorite hangout for Miller and his friends during his Big Sur years. The museum, a picturesque cabin, and the former home of his best friend Emil White, displays his works, paintings, and obscure writings, not commonly found in your local Barnes & Noble. Standing under the majestic Redwood trees, Pacific Ocean crashing below the rocky coast, this humble cabin holds a wealth of artistic bounty, that only the fortunate traveller is led to discover!

henry-miller-canvas-pop-art-nyc-blogMiller’s watercolors are a spontaneous, pure, colorful expression of his thinking, always soulful and pure. In his novel, Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch, he confirms his spiritual relationship to the Divine, as authority for the creative genius he has expressed through his prolific writings, his paintings, and his individual life story, from Brooklyn to Paris to California!

Again, writer, artist, – Seamless!

Yes, IT IS the Love Affair of all time! This writer, artist combo. If you are writing, you’re also probably, in the galleries, or fooling around with your paints and brushes whenever you can. You enjoy a hearty discussion on the merits of Dadaism, and your disenchantment with the Fauve Period. If you are deep in the well of your studio, I know you are hitting the bookstores, and have a couple of novels on hand, and can talk for an hour about why you either detest “Infinite Jest”, or why you love it!

spending-mary-gordon-nyc-artist-blogOne of the most interesting artist stories in contemporary fiction is “Spending”, by Mary Gordon. A sexy, hot and spicy, page turner, depicting a tale of the relationship between a powerhouse commodities broker, who decides to collect her work while also being her Muse.  It’s a lush, witty, sophisticated story of this complex relationship in which art and commerce meet and lead to an emotional quagmire. He spends and she spends and both of them achieve an ambiguous cocktail of experiences as they mix the artist with the money man.

This discussion, highlights that YES, in fact and fiction, art and writers share have a metaphoric womb, like Siamese twins. The poets of the day hung with their artist friends with the common bond that painters and writers intrinsically possess. Gertrude Stein,  with her famous salon in Paris, at 27 Rue de La Fleuris, were legend as the hotspot for all up and coming painters, of the day with only the best writers thrown in, like Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and and while Stein’s talent was writing,  “a rose is a rose is a rose” everyone knew that  she had an insatiable passion for art and collecting! In “The Autobiography of Alice b Toklas,” by Stein, when asked had she ever met a genius, she states that yes, she indeed knew three geniuses: Pablo Picasso, Gertrude Stein, and Alfred Whitehead. Not exactly the humble, shy type, Gertrude made the unknown painters and writers of the day in Ex-Pat Paris, the “Lost Generation” as she coined that infamous phrase; crave her attention, and sit at her feet, beholden to her charisma, intellectual brilliance, and her love of art! These qualities drew those pioneers to her like the moth to the flame! . That’s heady stuff. It’s interesting when I read her quote on genius: “Being a genius means sitting around doing nothing nothing nothing.” Tongue in cheek, so typical of Stein, when what she is really saying is that it LOOKS like they are doing nothing, but their thinking is so far beyond most people, that nothing is actually Everything! Amen to That!

Her writing involves a lot of repetition and perplexing statements. One can only interpret subjectively, because of the vast collection of multi meanings. Always with a question attached. And of course the artists, the painters, flocked to her, she cultivated her favorites, and they went on to great success.  She was one of the highest standards for acceptance, the 27 rue du Fleuris, where Hemingway sought an invitation,  when he arrived in Paris , an unknown at age 24. He got the “word on the street”, that Stein was his ticket into the art world. And he was right, and along with his mentor Sylvia Beach, of Shakespeare and Company, he moved to the head of the line, working hard at his craft, and eventually became a published writer.

Painters and writers. Writers and painters. Ny, Paris, Rome, London, from the depths to the heights, from obscurity to fame, they create an indisputable bond throughout eternity.

john-lennon-quote-art-blog-nycThe San Francisco Beats, hung at the Cedar Tavern, in Nyc with the ab – ex painters of the day like, Kline, De Kooning, Pollock, all sharing a similar life force, mutual interest and ambition. Rarely will you find a division. when people love painting, they usually have a fully stocked library as well. It’s a natural match.

Bookstores adorned with posters is a given expectation. A shared and compatible pairing like wine and cheese. Like Gertrude Stein, and her lifelong roommate, Alice B. Toklas! Like Picasso and Max Jacobs, like, Lautrec and Avril, like Warhol and Basquiat, like KiKi and Man Ray!

The Love Affair, is documented historical evidence of the shared passions between artists and writers. It is and will continue to be a match, an arrangement natural to this psyche that embellishes, and enhances the artistic world, giving it an infinite and profound character, a blending of the written and the painted, the sculpted, the designed, the ying and the yang, the color with the black and white, the multi dimensional personalities that bring these individuals together, in a harmonious blending, providing for everyone, a concert of harmonious notes, entertaining and nourishing the soul.

We experience this Love-In is right here in our city! NYC has cast us into the vortex of a hyper creative atmosphere, as the voyeurs watch the scene, groove to the beat, living vicariously off this powerful synergy, that brings Everyone here and Keeps them here!

The Green Fairy

artists-paris-absinthe
Oscar Wilde once said when describing his much loved absinthe:

“After the first glass you see things as you wish they were
After the second glass you see things as they are not
Finally you see things as they really are”

It was called The Green Fairy, named so for the intense color of the liquor, and the spell though often hideous and sometimes fatal, it put it’s imbibers under. The addiction was instantaneous, the power to alter the senses intense, and the risk of poisoning by the fatal wormwood was high. But these were the attractions of the sugar laden toxic alcohol,the ladies and gents of the Belle Epoque era in Paris were smitten by daily at the Green hour of five o’clock , when the cafés would fill up with the artists and writers of the time , all looking forward to embellishing their day with the popular beverage known as absinthe.

1970-concert-light-show-picSpeaking of art – one doesn’t have to be under the green fairy’s spell to achieve a similar effect of drugged out stupor, when looking at certain paintings be it a Jackson Pollock, a Basquiet, a Twombly, be it the colorful swirls of a Van Gogh,  also an absinthe drinker, or the street scenes of Utrillo, an absinthe devotee. The varied shades of the French impressionists, the New York Ab-Ex group, the graffiti artists of the 70’s and 80’s, the surrealists from Dali to Magritte and the pop wonders of Lichtenstein, Jasper Johns, Warhol , and Rosenquist, give the viewer of these greats works, that crazy indefineable, multifaceted range of emotions, the love -hate, that transcends us to a new level of thought and perception uniquely ours to behold and absorb.

Paintings job is to provoke, disturb, stimulate,  cause joy, or sadness, excite, or depress. The gamut of emotions stir our spirit when confronted with a work of art, and it’s always a surprise to feel the effect. As the Guru  of art education and philosophy states in his famous well read book, The Art Spirit, Robert Henri says “the artist disturbs, upsets ,enlightens, and opens ways for better understanding. Where those who are not artists are trying to close the book, he opens it and shows there are still more pages possible.”

So why have the guilty pleasures of absinthe, opium, LSD, alcohol, marijuana, been socially linked to artists as a fundamental almost necessary part of their artist identity? The fuel necessary to stoke the creative fire?
toulouse-lautrec-absinthe-art-parisIt’s not easy making art and though the paint may flow easily, from your brush, the ideas may be more difficult to give birth to. Retreating to your studio- the sanctuary where the birth takes place,means leaving behind the outer world of society’s conformist rituals in order to reach deep inside and extract the magic from the soul, that gives life to ideas, transforming them unto the canvas, the page,  as the painting, the poem, the novel, the song. The additional impetus of alcohol, or opiates serves to assist in this process and enlighten the sub – conscious where new and extraordinary visions  reveal themselves and in the process art is formed.

Absinthe was a natural during the Belle Epoch era in Paris, where the Impressionists, like, Picasso, Lautrec, Matisse, Valladon, Cezanne, Renoir, Modigliani, Rousseau, and their friends like Max Jacobsand Apollinaire, gathered in cafés after laboring in the birth process of creation all day, to indulge their senses with absinthe and conversation. Five o’clock, the Green Fairy descended and the cafés filled up with her enthusiasts!Then the 60’s brought with it, LSD, rock and roll, pop art, pot, and the art crowd were hooked! It is what it is | 23" X 30" | Acrylic on Paper | 2012Through their transformed, acid tripped heads, the artists work was enhanced with supernatural effects not achieved when their heads were screwed on straight.Be it absinthe in Paris, LSD in Manhattan, or opium in Chinatown, drugs have been a ubiquitous art tool along with paintbrush paint and palette.

Toulouse Lautrec kept his super convenient stash of absinthe in the hook of his walking stick, a clever invention making him able to supply his addiction moment to moment, as he strolled the streets of Monmartre and the brothels, of Pigalle. Picasso’s drug of choice was opium, and the only ill effect it seemed to have on him was making it possible for him to create a superhuman body of work. His productivity was  infinite!

Andy Warhol with ModelsThe factory pop gang of Warhol’s invention in NYC back in the day was known for its cocaine useage,with LSD and pot the common standby. The artists of the 70’s and 80’s thrived on hallucinogens, with the excess and transcendental experiences they encouraged. The swirling colors of those trademark hippie light shows, the expected background to the pop concerts of the day, the masses of stoned out hippies chanting to the Hare Krishnas mantras, the Haight Ashbury communes where LSD ruled, all joined art and drugs as a connected link towards the road to creative expression.Wildes 3 stages of experience in his personal absinthe history, are similar to the same mind altering events artists of all generations can attest to in one form or another.

The Cooler than School, hipsters of today in Williamsburg ,the Lower East Side, and Prospect Heights, can only imagine the world that the dead artists and writers society, lived and worked in, often from a drug induced mind,  where their subconscious floated way over the grid, leaving their incredible bounty of art to the world, the paintings and literature that documents another time past , kept alive thru the power of the paintings, the written word, the poetic visions.

absinthe-bar-trend-brooklynSo interestingly, today in our Pop culture urban life, we see absinthe bars popping up all over the Nyc metropolis. Absinthe cocktails on the bar menus of the hippest hottest restaurants in town. Absinthe had a resurrection, and became cool again, but only in the dumbed down version, the watered down let’s pretend it’real, and of course, minus the dreaded wormwood. Let’s call it a Virgin Absinthe. Yet it still holds an allure of danger, of romance, of risk, that people associate with the artists world , and if the Brooklyn hipster landing in Nyc from Cleveland, or Philly, or Seattle, can sample a small part of that taboo life, of the days of Oscar Wilde and Toulouse Lautrec in the confines of a dark, sleek bar possibly one of the new ones springing up every week in Brooklyn, in Union Square, on Pell street, in FlatIron, with the Green Fairy working her spell, stopping time, and unleashing the fantasies as you trip the light fantastique into the unknown, heading towards that mysterious place where YES!”

After the third glass you see things as they REALLY  ARE!”

Where’ s your Poster Passion?

pop-art-poster-brooklynI have always had a passion for posters! Posters have always caught my attention with the speed of lightening — the colors, the bold lettering, the subject, the commercial effect, all of it has never ceased to catch my eye and draw me if I see a poster I like, it’s a happiness on steroids moment!  And other than my own work, I love the posters of Mucha and Lautrec,with Doisneau, Man Ray, and Warhol coming right behind and anything pulp or noir included.

Posters have been considered cool, a avant-garde shall we say, since those historic art world evolving days of Lautrec and Mucha, and Utrillo. Then fast forward to the 60’s. drugs, sex, and rock and roll! Sounds like Paris in the early 1900’s the Belle Epoch or as Gertrude Stein called it The Lost Generation. The  light show phenomena was a match made in poster heaven – those swirling colors, and hippie slogans went together effortlessly. We adorned our rooms at home, our dorm rooms at college, stages, coffee shops, diners, head shops, were decorated with posters.

monterey-pop-festival-posterWho can forget the famous Monterey Pop poster with Janis Joplin front and center?  Or Andy’s Gold Marilyn? There are certain art forms that adhere to poster style like Dylan took to folk. Pop art is a made to order for posters. A natural. Warhol with his commercial stylized pop art, and Mucha with his ornate, embellished, ultra feminine art nouveau designs advertising products of his day, companied with his muse, the Queen of theatre Sarah Bernhardt, often his model, took his painting off the canvas and onto the paper in poster form that glorified the product with the beauty of the gorgeous women he had posing for him in his studio in Prague.

Toulouse Lautrec Poster Moulin Rouge ParisToulouse Lautrec had his famous poster of Aristide Bruant from the Moulin Rouge plastered on walls all over Paris, as well as Jane Avril, the darling of the Can-can dance one of his favorite models and friends, and many others. Posters became the rage and they still are today! More than ever!

I have discovered that  my paintings also love the poster. And the poster loves back. It’s kind of a love match made in poster heaven. The bold colors, the retro and complex collage design, the story telling I do all make for a jazzy poster, framed or freely hanging. Since I have Always loved posters this makes me very happy!

cool-pop-art-poster-californiaMarilyn Monroe PosterPosters are a glossy, bold, immodest, brazen way to liven up your apartment. You are  making a small investment , but receiving generous returns! Maybe you can’t splurge on the real thing , but you can party with a poster! I still have my Endless Summer poster from 1972, the hot pink, fiery orange, and Malibu sun yellow make a steamy summer statement unavoidable by the viewer. Richard Avedon’s poster of Marilyn Monroe sitting in that long white gown,  makes the room interesting, a focal point , and anything and everything else in that room fades away. I could go on and on, but the bottom line is that the poster is a legit art form and creates a mood and a message undeniable for over 100 years.

Joy D'orsay Pop art posterWhile checking out my paintings at joydorsay.com. I hope you consider my pop art posters on my Etsy store. I have them available for you to hang out with,  be entertained, enjoy, and add to your collection as well as to your life, as you experience The Joy of Art!

 

Eye Candy

Metropolitan Museum of Art NYCIf in doubt, head for the Metropolitan Museum if you happen to be in NYC. Or as New Yorkers call it – the Met. It’s a good move if you find yourself battling the hateful artists block, or just need to escape the humdrum routine of your day job! Retreat from the city’s never ending manic pulse! Or just want to explore, educate and enjoy the art! Whatever your reasons it’s probably a good choice!

I like many others go to the Met to look at stuff. Paintings, relics, statues, pots, antiquities, jewelry, treasures from empires and dynasties of times past, cultural iconography – it’s all there.

But what do YOU see?

My eye candy won’t likely be your eye candy.

Rousseau Eye painting

Artists either Love or Hate museum hopping. Some are inspired, others don’t want to chance getting ideas while being exposed to other artists work. Those types don’t want to have their creative juices tainted by perhaps getting an idea from someone else. I am in the Love category and especially the Met. I revel in the glow of being surrounded by the geniuses of the art world each one unique in their style and attitude and as I wander  the halls,  I know I will be surprised by a chance encounter with Rousseau, Delacroix, Manet, Morisset, Kline, Hopper, Twombly, Soutine –who knows?

Cy Twombly ArtThe artist who is experiencing a drought can help fill it by venturing through the doors of the Met into the overflowing oceans of art welcoming him. Whether it’s the serious Ingres portraits, the insane scribbling of Twombly, the magical world of Rousseau, or the brothels of Lautrec, over time spent visiting these paintings they start to feel like old friends who become more fascinating and  more complex with every new visit.

Colorful Matisse painting of ladyOh yes, just One of the perks of the Nyc experience.  It’s all here for us art people. Easy to access, when we need to get out of the studio, or just relax with art that is not of our own making.

Picasso’s portrait of his friend Gertrude Stein,Pygmalion and Galatea by Gerome, anything by Matisse and of course those sunflowers Van Gogh recreated through his absinthe blurred brain – it’s all waiting at the Met for our subjective, particular, unique view.

artists-salon-parisArtist, art lover, buyer, connoisseur, tourist, or skeptic, take your pick, we are here in the Artists Paradise NYC and Brooklyn is experiencing the prom queen moment, where all eyes are on her and everyone wants to be her best friend! The artists have flocked to my corner of the world and they all want IN. It’s Barclays Center, Jay Z – hey even he ‘s into Picasso, Spike Lee’s latest rant, Flatbush, Bushwick, Williamsburg, Fort Greene, that tangible, very real buzz the artist feels and those who aren’t artists wish they were! Art gets made in solitude. But it is fed by a lot of outer  impressions and stimuli coming from the colorful, diverse stimulating environments. We transform the outside, internally and express it externally with our art. For artists the city beat gives us a lot to work with and when we do enter the solitude of the studio we are ready to rock!

Toulouse Lautrec Moulin RougeArtists don’t choose to be – they just ARE. The dirty dangerous 1970’s and 80’s gave the icons of that time what they needed to create and share with the world. Today, in our cleaner neater technologically wired world, art will continue to be made millennium style. What’s so great is that it lasts forever!  The work of artists past, present, and future pulls us in with its power and if we are lucky we get to make our own art and thus make our lives more real through the creative process, that possesses and forces us to give birth to the work waiting within.

Ways-of-Seeing-bergerJohn Berger discusses his philosophy of seeing in his well known art theory book,” The Way of Seeing, how, what, and why we see WHAT we see. Certainly applicable to the many varied ways people look at a painting … The way we look at everything!

The Met is one of those places that holds the art cycles of time in stately repose waiting for us to show up, explore, visit some old friends, and See what we See!

 

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Take a look at some of my original pop art on canvas,  pop art on paper and my Pop Art Etsy shop!

 

Reading Art

Artists like reading about artists. Their crazy lives, their tilted reality, the fuel that drove them to the power of creation. Yes it’s true! Gerard de Nerval walked his pet lobster on a leash through the streets of Paris, Toulouse Lautrec carried his absinthe in the hollowed out flask in his cane, Picasso never threw anything away (Classic) hoarder, and Mapplethorpe entertained his boyfriends in his apartment at the top of 1 Fifth in Greenwich Village  Before it became an expensive luxury condo. Sure, there are so many stories of the eccentricities particular to painters poets musicians actors dancers that convince the reader that YES the artist is not like you. Or, no, the artist is not like you.

strand-nyc-famous-artistsMy favorite place for this exploration of artist bio is The Strand in NYC, one of the remaining bookstores still alive and well. Their art book floor is a wealthy vault stocked with riches only an art lover would appreciate, providing a bounty of info, a gluttonous feast! one can spend days overloading with the vast bios, pictorials, history, essays, waiting to be explored. And I have done just that..Sometimes I need to get out of the studio. Refresh and revitalize and my way to do it is to explore past artists lives. It’s a great way to escape and enter another world. Familiar yet distant exotic and surreal.

Picasso ClownsWhether it’s Suzanne Valladon or Francis BaconToulouse Lautrec, Modigliani, or Caravaggio they each have a story and each story is a unique revelation giving an insightful view into the mind and methods,the how and why this painting came to be, this photograph was taken, or how this sculpture  came alive out of a block of stone. The mystery unveiled in the written word documented often by the artists themselves. Van Gogh’ s bio is a revelation! Picasso’s lover, Fernande Olivier indulges us with a peek into the starving artist world of Montmartre in the early 1900’s when Picasso found the clowns and harlequins in the circus life a welcome escape from the dark brutal reality of painting by candlelight huddled in the freezing hovel called Bateau Lavoir the studios of Monmartre where genius was born. And we can’ t overlook The Philosophy of Andy Warhol, his up close and personal account of life as he saw it and his motivations for popping out his Warhol creations in his Dream Machine called The Factory! Pop Art Andy style integrated his life with literature,  and his creation of Interview Magazine gave him a venue for putting that Andy philosophy onto the pages he knew would get infiltrate the readers minds who perhaps knew next to nothing about art but were fans of pop culture and cool celebrities like the ones he featured on the covers every month! Interview was one of my favorites and I never ever missed a copy! The Liza’, the Halstons,  Blondie , Mick, Bianca, Jackie-O, we’re thrilled to be included in Warhol’s stable of Interview celebs!

pop-art-gallery-NYCSo I go to get a glimpse, distant it may be, of a world of art where the sterile gentrification the expensive and expansive environment of today, did not exist. The perfect studio Joseph Cornell created his magical boxes of wonder at his mothers kitchen table in College Point Queens, so opposite to today’s celebrity gathering at the Hottest NYC gallery in Chelsea, or is it Bushwick ,or wait maybe Williamsburg, no Harlem? SoHo is Over for art and artists that’s a given. The only thing even slightly reminiscent there is the closed down frontage of OKHarris, on West Broadway, the 1970’s Gallery that was the Kilimanjaro for any aspiring painter. But now it’s most likely scheduled for a glitzy condo building that only the 1%’can afford.

toulouse-lautrec-artistWhether it’s KiKi of Montparnasse, the salon of Gertrude and Alice, the martyrdom of Suzanne Valdon as she cared for her prolific painter son, Utrillo as he in his alcoholic rages and fits of insanity managed to keep painting under her watchful eye, the absinthe ridden Lautrec, deformed and hindered in every way – except the way he was meant to follow – painting the brothel scenes of Monmartre and the nightlife at the Moulin Rouge, or the ravaged Modigliani cut short in his prime as he suffered the freezing winters in unseated ateliers, drinking his way thru the Paris of the early 20th century, the stories are here in the books, documented between pages of memories, letters, research, conversations, poetry, journals, dungeons of lives waiting to be discovered.

Like at the Strand.

Art is Art. The painters of yesterday reflect on today’s emerging And established artists . But they should know who they are dealing with and what. For Me it is a perfect blend of new dimensions, fresh insights and fantastic possibilities! Traveling through chapters of artists lives takes me, a NYC artist, on an adventure- past to present that  opens doors, revealing fresh ideas and inspiration , and leads me to an expansive creative territory as I travel page after page after page……..

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