a new exhibition on the map

two of my recent 'earth/bound' artworks have been selected for a forthcoming art exhibition, on the map, at hastings museum and art gallery.on the map - art exhibition - hastings museum and art gallery[on the map, hastings museum & art gallery]...on the map (which includes a display of hastings museum's collection of historical maps) opens to the public on saturday 10 march 2012 and the exhibition is open daily until 17 june 2012....earthbound ii - painting by jazz green - on the map art exhibition[earth/bound ii 2011, detail]the above image is a detail of the textured surface of the painting, earth/bound ii. see a few more of the earth/bound series of mixed media works on panel on my new paintings page - and of course, this painting can currently be seen in the on the map art exhibition, if you are in sussex or the south coast region of england, uk....on the map features the work of eighteen contemporary artists whose work is variously inspired and informed by cartography and mapping the environment.there are also some special events in conjunction with the on the map art exhibition. here is a list of the events at hastings museum & gallery in march 2012:travelling around our worldfree museum trails & activities on the theme of transport and exploration(daily; enquire at reception desk)the unbuilt room : seth kriebel saturday 17 march 2012a performance game for five people at a timeevery half hour from 11.30am – 3.00pm(free) map-making workshop : ed boxall saturday 17 march 201211.00am to 1.00pm and 1.30pm to 3.30pm(free)mapping hastingsan illustrated talk by steve peaksaturday 24 march 20122pm£4 (includes tea & cake)visit the hastings museum and art gallery website for more information on the on the map art exhibition and related gallery events....On the Map: Historic Maps & Contemporary Map Art10 March - 17 June 2012Hastings Museum and Art GalleryJohns Place, Bohemia Road, Hastings, TN34 1ETView location on Google Maps...A satellite view of Hastings, courtesy of Google Earthgoogle earth - a satellite view of hastings, united kingdomImage © 2012 Google © 2012 Infoterra Ltd & Bluesky...

a february sketchbook

some drawings and other doodles in my little black sketchbook, done during the month of february. not quite every single page from february, mostly from the last week or so....artist sketchbook, winter trees, water and abstract patterns, a landscape[sketchbook, february 2012]...artist sketchbook, hedgerow, woods, tree, bark[sketchbook, february 2012]...artist sketchbook, trees, roots, landscape, patterns[sketchbook, february 2012]...artitst sketchbook, abstract patterns, spindly thin trees, bark, wood, logs[sketchbook, february 2012]...sketchbook, more abstract patterns[sketchbook, february 2012]...artist sketchbook, forms and patterns in nature, bark, lichen[sketchbook, february 2012]these 'moleskine style' sketchbooks (which i've not used or liked very much before now) seem to go on forever, and the paper is quite thin, creating ghostly, phantom traces of drawings (which i sometimes quite like).i've not yet finished the new work i started in the late autumn. quiet, cold evenings in february are better suited to sketchbook doodling and reading books, don't you think? with another week to go......

mind over matter

the surfaces of the sculptural 'woodwork' pieces have progressed which has in turn inspired something else...sculptural relief wood panels in art studiosee previous states of this work in progress here: on making art again and not a painting, not a sculpture.on the much smaller panels (gesso on wood), there is a deep bloom of patina, quite muted and monochromatic at the moment, with the illusion of atmospheric depth (if it is a given that painting is always an illusion).patina on gesso wood panels in art studioand inbetween things, some sketchbook drawing......in the new year i decided to watch three tarkovsky films almost back-to-back (a feat of visual endurance) with some sideline dipping into 'sculpting in time'. it was interesting to compare tarkovsky's writings on art and film to the 'the non-object through painting' (with only six illustrations!) - slow looking, slow narratives, subtle signs and symbols that we wait (or wish) to discover for what they might reveal to us about the perilous course (and meaning) of life - allusions and analogies aplenty.art is born and takes hold wherever there is a timeless and insatiable longing for the spiritual, for the ideal: that longing which draws people to art.andrei tarkovsky, sculpting in timethere are always books of various kinds 'open' here, as art seems unavoidably connected to various strands of philosophical thinking - artists are natural thinkers although we may take some time to arrive at any clear conclusions.last week i read an excerpt of foucault's the order of things; back in 2007 a work colleague had mentioned this book, because of foucault's critical discussion of the interplay of analogies or 'similitudes' as he terms them, to communicate and construct a universal 'taxonomy' of knowledge (inspired by a story by borges). this resonated with me:the interplay of duplicated resemblances to all the realms of nature; it provides all investigation with an assurance that everything will find its mirror and its macrocosmic justification on another and larger scale; it affirms, inversely, that the visible order of the highest spheres will be found reflected in the darkest depths of the earth. michel foucault, the order of thingsi found some of foucault's textual expressions quite poetic (obviously in translation) but mostly it seemed too convoluted in its reasoning and argument to grasp it fully. i could see how my work colleague found this book a stimulating read, as a collector of things, how someone working in art or education could create new taxonomies, creating new meanings and connections out of collections of things. you can read more about foucault's concepts here.however, foucault's reference to 'nature' drew me back into thinking once more about the miniature world of lichens, and also to many years back, when i worked for a while in a herbal dispensary, learning more about various healing plants and their connections to organs and functions of the body. i recall the 'story' my boss told me of the plant usnea (a type of hairy lichen, also known as oak moss), how it was once harvested from the rotting skulls of dead soldiers and then used to treat the wounds and infections of the other (alive!) soldiers in the battle field. i am not sure how true this story is although the plant is known for its antibiotic properties. extracts of willow bark reduces pain & inflammation and oak bark is a powerful astringent, suggesting that their 'nature' or constitution (such as willows near flowing water) somehow aptly signifies their medicinal benefits.thinking of weeping willows and oak trees and the history of herbal medicine (many herbal cures & remedies originate from china) draws me back to the non-object through painting again and to the notion of the 'holistic'. the inter-connectedness of nature feels to be one of one vast, breathing organism, a symbiosis of forms and space, between being and non-being, as he describes:true resemblance lies in the allusivity to the invisible dimension that permeates the concrete particularity.françois jullienthe ambiguity that resides between space and form, between the real and the imagined, the perceived and the invisible is difficult to express in art without some outward expression of an object, a physical, lasting presence - which leads me back to materiality of process and the making of art in the physical absence of the 'thing' that it represents, and that in time the 'thing' will make itself visible again. is this the difference between western reasoning & eastern spiritualism..? that a form need not have to represent (or depict) the original form (a look-a-likeness) to be truthful, but could appear as a re-representation in a new form/space, as an emblem or a symbol for it, or (as i have understood from the book), a 'transcendence' of it. in essence, one need not  'picture' the whole form to 'see' it whole.also fascinating to watch a while back, was the bbc documentary 'the strange science of decay', how slime mould so efficiently & intelligently 'grows' and maps out a network in the search for nutrients for its survival, a pattern mirroring modern transport systems - and thinking along similar lines, how certain cells in the body when observed under the microscope function like miniature cities, or how the network of blood vessels mirror the spreading branches of a tree. this is not the stuff of science analogy, it is the stuff of life and the cosmos (but i am not a scientist).mould seen through a microscopelast summer i took some photographs of grape mould through the lens of a cheap (a child's) microscope...mould seen through a microscope...and a couple years ago, while photographing some lichens, i also stopped to gaze at the miniature landscape of mosses growing on a grave. who wouldn't find such micro-landscapes fascinating to observe?moss landscape...moss landscape...i was reminded of a more reflective, spiritual path in art earlier this week on hearing about the death of the catalan painter, antoni tàpies. for the media to describe tàpies as an abstract painter (abstract reduced to the expression of a style) rather misses the material complexity and the philosophical, symbolic content so evident in much of his work. i first got to know about tàpies' work when i was an art student and his work regularly appeared in the high-end galleries of london. around this time, the work of the artist anselm kiefer also started to become more widely known and there are many similarities in their work.for all the ambiguity of my painting [et amicorum, 1978], i wanted it to express a central theme: it signifies both a symbolic gift to all friends of painting - only they really know that its beauty belongs only to those who love it! - and a homage to my best friends, books...antoni tàpies [in tàpies, andreas franzke]