Sunday, 20 March 2011
An occasional dose of culture, Olaf Breuning
Olaf Breuning is a Swiss born artist that works in video, collage, and assemblage. I particularly liked his collages (a medium to which I am somewhat partial).
Monday, 14 March 2011
Collage, my own!
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| The woman's skirt is a uterus and the flowers she is carrying are lung tissue. |
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| The tree was cut out from a medical illustration of a human lung. |
Thursday, 10 March 2011
An occasional dose of culture, A G Rizzoli
Achilles Rizzoli (1896- 1981) like many outsiders only became known after his death. Awkward with people, introverted and shy, he kept to himself. He worked in an architectural office where his talent went completely unnoticed.
He didn't think he had enough talent to do figurative work, he used buildings to depict people. For example Shirley's Temple was dedicated to Shirley, a little girl who lived next door on whom he became fixated after she'd shown him a small act of kindness. His works are noble, dignifies and utterly beautiful.

He didn't think he had enough talent to do figurative work, he used buildings to depict people. For example Shirley's Temple was dedicated to Shirley, a little girl who lived next door on whom he became fixated after she'd shown him a small act of kindness. His works are noble, dignifies and utterly beautiful.

Sunday, 6 March 2011
An occasional dose of culture. Ralph Fasanella
One of my outsider favourites is Ralph Fasanella. A self taught (naturally!) painter born to an immigrant Italian family in 1914. His father sold Ice from a horse drawn wagon and his mother worked drilling holes into buttons, not much scope for creativity there methinks!.He grew to be a union activist believing passionately in protecting the rights of the working man. Fasanella began painting as an exercise to combat arthritic pain in his fingers. As he gained confidence, he began to record the lives of the blue collar communities around him with great affection and honesty. He is not very well known which is a pity as his work is so full of integrity and truth. If art has a purpose, surely this is one of them! To give context to one's life and to process all the information that jostles about in one's head. Critics have argued that Fasanella's work is of sentimental nostalgia for a past that never really existed, So what? He recorded what mattered to him in a way that made sense to him, surely that is what matters?
Wednesday, 2 March 2011
Moleskine pages.
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| I did this while watching the news, seeing the entire middle east rise up willing to die for a better life, is that an oxymoron? |
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| Ultimately we are powerless in the face of time. We think we have control but we really don't. The best one can hope for is a quiet life! |
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