The Ballet of Swifts & Swallows

“The Ballet of Swifts & Swallows”

“The eager dances of Swallows flying in erratic playful dives, competing the ballet of winged pirouettes with excited cries, Swifts that scatter in cloudy rain filled skies, checking in all directions as dust that appears alive to sweet sunlight sighs, A tiny bat hungrily at our heads whispering loudly for its find, weaving the way through the insect laden murkiness of this dusky night, Geese chattering shrieks pitched ever high, whilst low searching for the glistening of soft blankets below, to plough with their feet like gentle snow. Yes, this is how at day’s end I see my ‘mind’s eye’ on this cushion glow.”

Matt, The Unfathomable Artist – Copyright © July 2015.

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American Art Continues on LP

Asher Durand - 'Kindred Spirits' (1849)

Asher Durand – ‘Kindred Spirits’ (1849)

Can you see Thomas Cole the painter and William Cullen Bryant the poet admiring the view?  Well these are the men extrapolated into this scene following a commission by Jonathan Sturges as a eulogy for Cole having died in 1848.  A moving thought.

Frederic Edwin Church - 'Twilight in the Wilderness' (1860)

Frederic Edwin Church – ‘Twilight in the Wilderness’ (1860)

Where can I begin with this glorious painting?  It almost defies words for me to describe.  ‘Twilight in the Wilderness’ is a masterpiece by Frederic Edwin Church.  The use of textures and colours causes me to feel like my mind is humbled into a whirlwind of thoughts.  In his like brilliance with Monet and Carlos de Haes I find myself inspired to try to even dream to produce a realist painting of this superlative magnitude.

Colour matching is a skill within professional painting that takes years of practice.  Whenever I see greyish blue necked swans my happiness can be likened to the shouting sound of ‘Eureka!’.  Artists want to impress.  To master what they see.  Communicating literally and symbolically.

‘Self Portrait of My Body’ is so important to me as a work that I cannot simply dab colours here and there and hope for the best with colour matching.  Non-artists may not realise the technicalities that age and exact colour matching brings to a canvas.  Are all lines perfectly straight?  Let the imagination wonder why one might hold back from perfection.

Thomas Worthington Whittredge - 'Birch Trees' (c.1872)

Thomas Worthington Whittredge – ‘Birch Trees’ (c.1872)

I’ve chosen Thomas Worthington Whittredge, and in particular ‘Birch Trees’, because it strongly reminds me of artworks by a family relative.  Artwork that I will present here in this blog at an appropriate time.  My family relative passed away 9 years ago and I have Christmas cards that he sent to my Grandmother each with his artwork beautifully displayed on the cover with warm greetings inside.  Amazingly I only knew of his artworks over the past few years.

Whittredge, of course, is a landscape giant of American Art.

Samuel Colman (the American Painter) - 'Storm King on the Hudson' (1866)

Samuel Colman (the American Painter) – ‘Storm King on the Hudson’ (1866)

This painting is quite apt at this present time hence my unusual blog entitlement.  Always a jostling, always a struggle to find balance.  Competition, contention, livelihoods, sentiment and commercial politics.  Samuel Colman was clearly interested in highlighting his then modern world in intellectually sensitive and stunning portrayals.  The cascading hues and focal points make for a rewarding viewing experience.

Sincerest apologies for a concise blog.  My mind is resting determinedly on other matters this past week.

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Momentary Weakness – A Poem

“Momentary weakness is the passing of the night, the full Moon that rides quietly by, it’s the Swans for gliding forever high, on the waves made by our Sun’s rapturous roaring flight, in a mustering up of energy ready for the invisible fight, a gathering of thoughts to win out with last breaths might, as I’ve said before ‘You cannot contain my spirit’ quite, when with all I stand unequalled in this mind, that is ever thirsting for the Light.”

Words for you to picture.

Matt, The Unfathomable Artist – Copyright © 24th May 2015

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Songwriting Mood With Added Swings, Dali-cious

Inspiration is often like the dances of butterflies.  Pretty and irrevocably beautiful.  Whilst I’m eager to paint soon, creating new song ideas and musical compositions has been lots of fun.

Most songwriters enjoy various layers of thought to their songs and I’m definitely no exception.  As a boy of three years of age I was, I’m told, a fan of Abba and Queen’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’.  I know this to be true.

Working out everything with reference to the latter lyrics was extremely satisfying, especially when my thoughts were rightly confirmed quite some time afterwards.

I recall a famous guitarist from another rock band stating that there was no way their lead singer could possibly have much meaningful sense or reason to some of the lyrics he had jotted in a mere matter of minutes.

I dissect whatever seems reasonable to gain an understanding of individual people.  Really though, can anyone know you better than yourself?

The strangest new chorus came to my mind the other day:

‘Have you seen the Cannibal?
Lurkin’ wanton inside your skull,
It’s kind of grey and alien!
Feedin’ on bloods limitation

Don’t get caught, don’t get scared
Cos when its hungry it don’t care
It’ll-sweep-you-off-the-floor, with.. your.. bones,
Its gaze turns your body putrefied Auld,
Like Seventy Nine to the Power of Ten’

Matt, The Unfathomable Artist – Copyright © 10th April 2015

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Super Icon

Having unwrapped the cellophane from a new canvas it didn’t take long for me to wreck the composition because I’m finding the subject material wondrously challenging.

I promise you that even Monet with all his effortless talent needed patience to get exactly what he wanted.

Skill takes time.

I appreciate that all artists have personal epiphani and epilogues of varying distance and depths.  Whenever a personal epiphany is with me I work with tremendous focus.

Painting is a feeling.  My heart is with the art.

I do wish to write things at this moment.  Share my feelings in the vernacular.  Super Icon is a song I wrote in 2006.  I regularly write lyrics, sayings, short stories and poems year on year.  It’s all the thoughts of me, so to speak.

Every song I’ve wrote has a clearly defined melody.  I write lyrics to melodies and melodies to lyrics dependent upon whether it’s the musical or lyrical inspiration arriving first.

Here is Super Icon:

Super Icon 

Oh please do up your lace

Silk worms doin’ overtime

Stallions in a filly race

All I want laid to wait

Chorus 

“Got a new super icon 

You can’t have or buy one 

Looks so nice on my mantelpiece 

Seen it close up megapixel 

Oh a super user icon” 

Got a flyin’ machine

Landin’ strip in the cockpit

Seen it dippin’ splendidly

Engines blowin’ gracefully

Chorus 

“Got a new super icon 

You can’t have or buy one 

Looks so nice on my mantelpiece 

Seen it close up megapixel 

Oh a super user icon” 

Seen one posing double view

Inter-plan-e-tary

Flowers in a vase and dare me

What you wantin’ scary

Linkin’ arms and shakin’

Euphoric body breakin’

Chorus 

“Got a new super icon 

You can’t have or buy one 

Looks so nice on my mantelpiece 

Seen it close up megapixel 

Oh a super user icon” 

Super user icon

Super user icon

You can’t have or buy one

Love my super icon

Super user icon

Super user icon

Super user icon (to fade)

Matt The Unfathomable Artist – Copyright © 23rd April 2006

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Art in the Making – Creative Mind, Human Heart

Quite literally behind my oil painting entitled ‘Human Heart’ you can see the concept and pattern begin to form.

humanheartinprogressweb

Earlier photo of ‘Human Heart’ whilst a work in progress.The physical idea of the heart shown centrally in the photograph of my artwork above was overpainted.

The ghostly apparition eventually appeared in the place of the physical heart originally envisaged.

Linseed oil was mixed extensively producing a sort of treacle effect.

Here is the completed ‘Human Heart’ oil painting:

'Human Heart', oil painting on canvas, 36 inches wide by 28 inches high, completed April 2013.

‘Human Heart’ – oil painting on canvas, 36 inches wide by 28 inches high, completed April 2013.

Texture underlies ‘Human Heart’ and is readily demonstrated in the background detail particularly at the top left.  An eclectic use of blending, searching and soulfulness.

A contrast of blue-grey, yellow-red tones.

Again, to show the creative process of art making please kindly see an earlier photograph of ‘Creative Mind’ below and note the subtle differences upon its completion:

CreativeMindEarlier

The canvas was divided into the evident shapes above.  This has deeper abstract meaning to me personally.  The artwork is thoroughly definitive.

White-yellow fan brush work, also top left, is just about the only brushwork throughout the entire piece. This compliments the unwittingly ‘cubist’ blue uppermost top-left.  Cubist detail shines radiantly in the photograph below.

Please note that two palette knives dominate the artistic construction from beginning to end aside from the fan brush work aforementioned.

I etch the palette knife edge point at the lower-centre section of the artwork.  A succinct thank you to Vincent Van Gogh.

The greyish allegory to brain matter is folded and fluted with the palette knife at the top of the artwork using a multitude of carefully mixed colours.  Appropriate of intellect considering the way our brains look in the physical sense with furrows, folds and swirls.

The outworking of my various artistic styles can be seen in ‘Creative Mind’ along with the volcano-like tempest and the mid-right upper central ‘haze’.

Completed painting of ‘Creative Mind’ immediately below.

(the lower right signature digitally altered in purposed obfuscation):

'Creative Mind' - Oil painting on canvas, 36 inches wide by 28 inches high, completed Autumn 2012.

‘Creative Mind’ – oil painting on canvas, 36 inches wide by 28 inches high, completed Autumn 2012.

My long palette knife took over in bewilderment.  Like hands holding onto a tornado, consumed in the moment.

With art-making sometimes the fruit can ripen oh so quickly.  Sweet coconut milk quenches my thirst.  Succulent figs become silent speeches.  Peaches pressed gently to produce delicious oil.  Wholeheartedly exploring a new depth.

Swan follows swan as ineffably as the one that guides its flight.

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Scream – If You Feel Anxious

Norwegian painter Edvard Munch produced one of the most recognizable paintings of all time, “The Scream”.

Here it is:

Munch created four paintings of which this is the 1893 oil, tempera and pastel version. The fourth [pastel] version not shown here was purchased from Sotheby’s on 2nd May 2012 for $119,922,600 and shows one of the background male figures stooped over the walkway railing.

Firstly, let’s read what Munch has to say about his own artwork in a poem:

“I was walking along the road with two friends – the sun was setting – suddenly the sky turned blood red – I paused, feeling exhausted, and leaned on the fence – there was blood and tongues of fire above the blue-black fjord and the city – my friends walked on, and I stood there trembling with anxiety – and I sensed an infinite scream passing through nature.”

Evocative words indeed. Munch is entirely consumed with the experience. He explains that he is the only person amongst his friends who is affected by what he sees. It is reminiscent of persons such as Michel de Nostredame the apothecary, reputed to be a seer of his time and beyond. I am not at all suggesting Munch had visionary abilities, but rather a strong emotional affectation to certain situations around him.

As one example of seeing in unusual ways if you could ask a few ancient Greeks how they perceived the sky you might be surprised at how they would answer you.  Any reader interested in this particularly with a view to art might like to read about David Hockney who indeed has synesthesia.

Yet I do not believe Munch had synesthesia.  What I do believe is that Munch was immensely sensitive to the world around him like Nostradamus aforementioned.  Furthermore it cannot be denied there is an ominous religious undertone to the wording in his poem as it is clearly biblical in construction.  I think this is highly valuable insight into Munch’ mind and interconnects beautifully to “The Scream” as a great work of art.

In discussing the famous painting I have pictured I hope you agree that the prominent figure in the foreground has the most ghostly distorted appearance.  Again, this is indicative of Munch’ vivid imagination from his childhood and a fondness for macabre storytelling.  A window into Munch and his mind.

It is also without question a self portrait when viewed in light of his poem.

The colours are garish and almost abstract so that if we looked at this sky in a different setting we could perceive the sky as something else.  The fact our brains know it is representing the sky enhances Munch’ feelings about the ‘clouds turning blood red’ which was the description in his diary of 1892 prior to creating “The Scream” series of paintings and artfully constructing the poem.

The best question I ask us to ponder is whether this is a personal scream of himself or for humanity?  Dear Readers you will have your own conclusions. Please allow me to say what I think.  Somewhat both I think.  Although I’m imagining that Munch is referring to a specific event or situation that I do not know as I write this blog.

What we can see is that he draws some stability around himself with his friends as a grounding.  Whilst also feeling completely out of sorts and alone.

There is a chaotic tone to the background details in a flowing lavaic way.  Correctly of lava.  Its formation is non-descript by nature just as Munch describes himself that he does not know why he felt such anxiety on that day and at that very moment. Why did he feel so wearisome?  Clearly he felt helpless and a scream was all that was left in him on that day to explain his feelings.

The physical bearance upon himself is why I have likened this to Nostradamus for sensitivity.  A whole body affect, separate.  Distinct.

I have to say that the figure itself seems to take the appearance of a flickering flame or a reflection in water.  I see this as Munch becoming part of the painting.  Feeling as the sky feels or attributing a sympathy along with it.

It is surely one of the most memorable paintings we will ever see.

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The Unfathomable Artist

Greetings dear Reader

It’s most every Artists wish for people to get to know them as a unique person.

Inner feelings and thoughts communicated through artworks.  Sometimes obvious, whilst at other times subtle.


I’ve always believed that good art should speak for itself.  This is true of all  past and present  artworks we see in Museums.  All the great Artists exerted themselves to establish their place in Art History.

Monet and Van Gogh are examples of towering art masters striving to make their work known using the various methods of their day.  Go further back in time and you discover that artists like Peter Paul Rubens used immensely sophisticated ways to reach out to their art clients.

Matt The Unfathomable Artist blog has been created to expand knowledge of artworks and to share inspirational art commentaries with you.

Hopefully you enjoy my blogs and keep coming back for more articles to read.

– Matt The Unfathomable Artist.

SwanPainting

A swan study for “Two Swans Together”.

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