Showing posts with label bloggers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bloggers. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

rethinking everything...

An apt thought for the moment...

Michael Chase: area of interest 
I'd posted this word/image on a much earlier blog post here: http://sophiemunns.blogspot.com.au/2011/03/we-must-rethink-everything.html and tonight, doing a major renovation at this somewhat neglected Visual Eclectica blog it just seemed to sum up my current preoccupation in general.

Nothing like having a good think about things... not just the old stuff that ails us... or what we are doing tomorrow... but the big stuff... the out there stuff that we are all part of anyway. Like how one can open the covers of a book such as this one... a library book I started to read a while back... to be reminded about big ideas, big inventions, changes, eras and such.




I remember being curious about why the writer chose to include what he did in his history of the world in objects... 100 is not many to narrow it down to.. 

Its fascinating to consider the uniqueness of our responses to questions, big and small.

Years ago I was deeply touched reading about a Dominican priest, Matthew Fox, who'd been silenced by the Pope in the late 80's for his outspoken views on a number of things ... but if I recall properly it was his speaking about was happening in Central and Sth America at that time that had really brought this about. Liberation theology rings a bell.

From WIKI:
Matthew Fox (born 1940) ... was an early and influential exponent of a movement that came to be known as Creation Spirituality. The movement draws inspiration from the mystical philosophies of such medieval Catholic visionaries as Hildegard of BingenThomas AquinasSaint Francis of AssisiJulian of NorwichDante AlighieriMeister Eckhart and Nicholas of Cusa, as well as the wisdom traditions of Christian scriptures. Creation Spirituality is also strongly aligned with ecological and environmental movements of the late 20th century and embraces numerous spiritual traditions around the world, including Buddhism,JudaismSufism, and Native American spirituality, with a focus on "deep ecumenism".
Fox has written 30 books that have sold millions of copies and by the mid-1990s had attracted a "huge and diverse following".[2] He was likened by academic theologians in one New York Times article to the controversial and influential 20th century Jesuit priest, philosopher and paleontologist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, particularly for his interpretations of issues such as the doctrine of original sin and the Cosmic Christ and for the resulting conflicts with church authorities.[3]

I particularly loved one of his leading thoughts : Its not what we are in the habit of doing that matters but what we might be able to do... the world doesn't really need people to do what they habitually do... but to ask what would the world really like us to do... or what it needs.

OK...to be honest the words are terribly hazy now... anyone familiar with this whole story might shoot me down and say I've got it all wrong. I apologise for misleading you if thats so... BUT!

Think of that question: What does the world need us to do?

I like to think that somewhere between what we like to do and what the world needs / is aided by... there is a task for each and every one of us... should we chose to consider that, believe that and move towards it. 

Ideal world perhaps you say? The stories we love it would have to be said very often have this key theme at their heart. The person who finds their joy doing something that gives joy or hope or support or aid or ideas and learning to others comes to stand as an inspiration to others. Then again, some are so under the radar most have no idea what they spend their time giving to others.

I remember in late 2011 when in London taking in the crowds at the Brick lane market marvelling at the vast crowds or people from every corner of the globe. I currently live in a city with a remarkably submerged cultural diversity. It exists... but not in the populous, exuberant way it exists in a city like London.
Brick Lane Market London

I walked for hours taking in the multiplicity of offerings... the sights, sounds and aromas ... and then I came across this plaque on the wall on my walk through the teeming masses!



Buxton I had not heard of... but I had to stop and say to myself ... well... if this isn't a reminder that it takes people, not just one either, to change things... I don't know what is. Loved that juxtaposition of the plaque to the masses swarming around me sharing the late Sunday afternoon party of many nations!
LondonVia here.

So what are we in the habit of doing?

Why do we do what we do?

When we fail to find some enriching relationship between what we do and what others are supported by, the world is supported by... it can be a tough life. Stuck in really difficult jobs we are certainly challenged to find a way it bring something more to that work. Life can really test us... so we need people who can remind us of other ways through... other things to strive for or risk doing.



The Groucho Marx question is interesting! I've borrowed that quote to include in slideshow presentations I do on my Homage to the Seed project. It gets a chuckle but is of course quite poignant.


Recent blog posts of mine this year are discussing change on the personal front with the current transition I'm in ... studio packed up and in storage, work on hold... selling one home and looking to find another. Its so interesting to be reminded that when one uproots, soon enough the questions start flowing. Initially one can feel inconvenienced and unsettled and be out of sorts or simply disoriented. Things are easily misplaced and ordinary tasks can become more challenging.

Then, if one is fortunate to gain some time to think during this change, it can become an intensely creative period. Many have said this to me also... its been very much their experience.

Tonight I decided to focus on this one blog. Rethink what its been, how it developed and where its going. I started with the visual element and borrowed 2 background images to use from Lost and Taken Gallery. Free high resolutions textures was an interesting place to search.

Lost & Taken textures are made freely available for use in both personal and commercial projects including web templates, designs, and other materials intended for distribution. Attribution is appreciated, but not required.

The background n this blog is from the paper samples... watercolour on old paper and the header background in the old worn cover of a book ... loved the particular green... so mellow and I'm happy it works with the other background so well.


Concrete


Rust

Theres 100's more for you to see.

Well i have edited just about every possible part of this blog... but the one thing I have yet to do is update the blog-lists i follow. They are tow years out of date in some cases. New people I follow I have not even added to the list.

Ive been very remiss in blog-land... but that was how it was.

Next Tuesday it will be 4 years exactly since I started this blog... my first online site... but now one of many I attempt to keep up with. So if you are reading this and you have visited before and returned... i thank you... and if this is your first visit ... welcome indeed!

I want to say a special thankyou to all who have popped by or click on to follow ... whether its just been a week, a month or a long time now... thankyou ! The opportunity for exchange has brought so much that I could write pages on that alone!

Best wishes to all!
Sophie x







Saturday, June 9, 2012

Who was the 100,000th visitor?



I recently noticed the visitor counter was going to reach a special number and thought how nice it would be to post on who came by at that moment! I missed the 3rd bloggy birthday on May One... so this is a small celebration instead. I've been falling behind in my time for blogging this past month ...but do really miss it and all of you... so this is a tiny tribute to all who have meant such a lot to me these past few years.


According to my calculations the lovely blogger who happened by today when the Visitor Counter struck 100,000 is from Vancouver, Canada ... Annamaria was totally unsuspecting! I came home very late from a day in the studio and remembered to check the counter tonight and recognised the lucky number coincided with someone I knew who does these gorgeous watercolours!

a watercolour by Annamaria Potamiti
I was terribly pleased to see a familiar face rather than an anonymous google connection which could not be tracked to a name. Not only that ... Annamaria stopped and left a message.



Vancouver, british columbia, Canada
My Photo
Artmaking as a visual cocoon for my daily stories. And then some other stuff about life at home and in the studio. Sharing and making friends. Hugs:)

Fine Art Print of Mixed Media  Original Watercolor Acrylic  Pencil Bird Home Garden Wall Art
from Annamaria's Etsy site.


So...I'm very glad not to have let this moment pass and I send my warmest thoughts to all who have come by here with your wonderful ideas, charming responses and kind thoughts these past few years!

I hope to get my camera out and shoot the recent artwork from the Molecular Bio-Science Residency and things from the new studio this week. Its been a great week of getting settled in the studio and working with paints and inks for the last couple of days.

May your weekend be magic...
Sophie x



Wednesday, July 20, 2011

surprises like this I adore!

I dont know what was going on in the skies this past week or two but its been like I've been blessed from on high... so many lovely happenings... from the tiny to quite significant!

Now for some photos to tell some stories!

A dear friend across the Pacific sent me this appealing envelope - inside were a series of postcards based on her paintings - AND this decorative packet of poppy seeds from the famous Seed-Savers exchange in Iowa - her home state.




I posted these two postcards by Mary Zeran from the collection she sent me because I am particularly enamoured of the colours in these ones below ... liquid colours ... reminiscent of stormy skies and days at the beach without much sun - the one on the left! Mary blogs about her painting, process and I must say... loved her recent post on the Seed-Savers farm. Thank you Mary!!! The cards were such high quality that i could really appreciate the compositions of her works so much more than seeing it on the blog... made my heart sing! And I love the seeds ...even the envelope felt special!


Mary Zeran



reclaimed book detail
Mary at Flickr - go see whats here!

Thank you for a lovely surprise Mary. It was such a delight to find this mail waiting!
This is a friend who is one of those deeply thoughtful people whom you are so glad the internet was invented so you could meet and swap notes across the miles



The very next day I think... a parcel arrived from the southern city of Melbourne... actually posted from the country... even better. A book... but not just any book! One that I recently blogged on and commented that I was dying to read.


Patience Grey is one of the authors

The book is 'Plats du Jour' by Patience Grey and Primrose Boyd





I wrote on this blog's sidebar (near the bottom) about another book by Grey which is an old favourite of mine. This was a slide I prepared for a recent event below which also gives an account of the book. If you clock on it to enlarge you might read it more easily.


Add caption

But where did it come from? 
well... it came from the person who took these photos...



see here.



and here.




and here at the most wonderful post called Rose Salt, Rose Sugar.

Rose salt

Though inordinately proud that for once I have a finished picture of a recipe to share, I'm not convinced that this salt is as good as Silvena Rowe's beautiful Purple Citrus & Sweet Perfume suggests. Good with fish, she says, but I wouldn't go out of my way to make it again. The fragrance improves after a week; prior to that, it has a grassy, earthy smell, one not entirely unpleasant, but not exactly inspiring either. Still blogworthy for its edible use of roses.

Gently pull the petals from 1 large, unsprayed red rose. Wash and dry the petals with care. Using fingers, rub the petals with 2 tblsp of sea salt crystals, keeping things a little chunky. Store in a lidded jar and allow a few days for the flavours to get to know one another. Keeps for at least a couple of weeks at (cool-ish) room temperature.



Who's the wonderfully clever person who could have written a page in Plats du Jour?

Well Lucy of course... from nourish me. I've put up photos of Lucy's work a number of times... big fan.
Weve chatted...she sent a postcard to the mnail art postcards show last year... and believe me a few minutes at Lucy's blog and you will come away feeling a little nourished and thinking...what could i do to create that sense of ambience or nurturing and domesticity at its best.

A very warm thank you also to my southern friend Lucy who knows how to turn a phrase ... and make one smile! I'm coming down to see your pizza oven working at your place in the country at some point in the future Lucy... red or white?


There are more surprises to post but... its very late so i'll hint a little.


???

ON Saturday someone came to visit and we had a great old day... chinwagged for 8 hours straight and painted the whole time. I'd not met her in real life before ... she's a blogger. Who knows those marks... anyone?

...well as its very late and I'm dropping off the sleep virtually... I'll say good night and come back soon wth more photos of this day.
It been a ridiculously busy week or two... I keep forgetting things and there's not been any time to blog or visit anyone... so please excuse me for this. More news soon!

Have a great week all!





Monday, April 4, 2011

you'll definitely need a cup of tea with this!

OK.... made yourself something fragrant... perhaps soothing? 


If you are new around here ... hello... and thank you to the lovely new followers and friendly people who've been popping in. I try to keep up with saying hello...  feel awful when I don't. And I'm sorry if I've been remiss.


Thank you all for kind words, great thoughts and the ideas you wonderful bloggers share with me directly and indirectly! I learn so much and am frequently so delighted by that which comes my way...


gardenofthefareast:

time for tea


gardenofthefareasttime for tea

Many of us discover in childhood a love of the micro and macro worlds... if we are very lucky someone feeds our mind with wondrous stories about the stars ... the night sky, the infinite... or helps us to imagine the worlds within worlds thats is the micro-scape...






photos by Textless




there's endless fascination found in learning about these vast worlds beyond our immediate reach. The tiny spider below and the patterns on our fingertips are virtually beyond our naked eye to see properly.




Tiny spider: Textless


Pollen grains need microscopes....



much magnified pollen grains


and atoms ... well this is what Im going to share with you... something I found here on twitter:


 Amira Skomorowska 
Scale of all things ☞ Planck length up to the entire universe (interactive  

Amira Skomorowska has  a number of fascinating weblinks, tumblr blogs etc which I follow - they deal with ideas crossing multi-disciplines...  art, science, history , ideas, philosophy. I discovered the link to an extraordinary website: onvi-alerte which is a must see at Amira's twitter.

By clicking on the red text it will gradually open to an stunning and very appealing interactive - beautifully designed - which covers the microcosm to macrocosm .... with a pleasing level of scientific accuracy. I posted this on the homage blog last night and wanted you to see it and not miss out!

Truly remarkable to contemplate! I was reminded of William Blakes  "to see a world in a grain of sand..." so I added that complete poem here.

Its been a lovely weekend... and managed to fit in quiet painting time... so feeling ready for the week... do hope you have a moment to see this "scale of the Universe".
Enjoy that cuppa... see you soon!
Sx



PS sorry my commenting thingi is not working first go! Have cleared the cashe... must check on those cookies! It seems to work fine second time you try!


Sunday, January 30, 2011

TEDxOrlando - Sharon Butler - Two Coats of Paint: Lessons Learned in the Blogosphere





Two Coats of Paint - a blog about painting - is produced by Sharon L. Butler:

In 2007, Butler created Two Coats of Paint to share reviews, commentary, news, and background information about painting and related subjects. A member of the Culture Pundits network of art blogs and websites since 2008, Two Coatshas been sponsored by many organizations, including the Museum of Modern Art, The Whitney Museum, the Pulitzer Foundation, the New York Studio School, and The Brooklyn Museum. In March 2010 Two Coats won a Mindshare Award for art blog excellence. To read more about Two Coats' roots and philosophy, click HERE


I discovered her blog a couple of years ago and was delighted to be able to visit such a wonderfully informative web log... any itchy feet tendencies I was having at the time for travel somewhere like New York  to see what was happening in the world of art was soon quelled somewhat by the pleasure of being able to dip into the postings on galleries, artists, reviews and such. So when I discovered the Ted talk on video through twitter earlier tonight I wanted to share it here.


Sharon discusses how the blog has led to increased visibility...


Web.20 tools = power for artists


She makes some great points which I think may be of interest ... well worth a visit... make sure you get the last part of the 12 minute video...the summary points!

Friday, January 21, 2011

Something to think on: "The exciting absence of certainty"

Gyroscope balancing on string
Another turning point ... this is a golden age of error. Photograph: Paul Hardy/Corbis



"The exciting absence of certainty" is a post from Jonathan Jones on At Blog - Art critic with the UK's Guardian. Its a concise comment for the curious who might from time to time ponder String theory or other contemporary fields of scientific thought.
In fact... worthy of sharing for the seeds of thought it ponders on a number of matters in contemporary life. Take a look:

January 20th he writes:


I recently read a book called The Trouble With Physics, by physicist Lee Smolin. I was also reading The Elegant Universe by Brian Greene. No need to worry – this is not one of those blogs where I sound off about a subject like string theory from my unique perspective as an art critic, and enraged string theorists line up to put me right. My theme today is not science but certainty, and the exciting absence of it in our world.
Smolin questions the most ambitious contemporary theories in science. Greene is a champion of those same "string" theories. It looks as if the state of physics is at an interesting point, if it is simultaneously close to the definitive grand theory of everything and – claims Smolin – simultaneously at the edge of an abyss of unknowing.
Which makes it a good image of these times. Ours is essentially a tragic age, wrote DH Lawrence in the early 20th century, so we refuse to take it tragically. Of the early 21st century one might say: ours is essentially an ambiguous age, so we refuse to take it ambiguously.
To look around the world today is to see conflicting certainties everywhere, from the bitter American political discourse blamed by somefor the Tuscon shootings to ... Well, to right here, right now, where online argument sometimes – though far from always – seems like an unwinnable contest between different positions.
In reality, the virtue of blogs and the comments they attract lies in the diversity of opinion in itself: so does the value of democracy. This is surely obvious, yet we do not say it often. It seems it is very difficult to acknowledge that (a) we may be wrong, and (b) the most valuable quality of our culture is the right to be wrong, loudly.
The Russian cultural theorist Mikhail Bakhtin was brave enough to praise the mess of reality. He espoused dialogue and multiplicity of viewpoint – a "carnivalesque" freedom – as a value in art and life. He wrote in an age when physicists were discovering some perturbing things about the universe, such as the fact that electrons can be in two places at once.
Debate has never been so popular, online and even in the flesh. We may disagree passionately, but what we need to recognise is that it is the free flow of opinion and contradiction that is the cultural achievement. Certainties abound, but they die on the rocks of doubt. Let's be glad that we live in the golden age of error.

"the free flow of opinion and contradiction that is the cultural achievement"
That I think is a good thought for the day.

elastica:

(via thiswillhurt)
posted at seed capsules - my new tumblr site


ontheborderland:

Found poem by Mary Ruefle (1952- ) from A Little White Shadow.  Ruefle used white-out to selectively erase words from a work originally published in 1889.
(Image via Poetry Foundation)
read more here.



whitehotel:

Jason Karolak, Untitled (2010)
Jason Karolak - read more here.



click here





Art does not lie down on the bed that was made for it; it runs away as soon as one says its name; it loves to be incognito. Its best moments are when it forgets what it is called.
Jean Dubuffet
(via ilobanna)



kleidersachen:

Edgar Mosa, Di Indigetes via apparat
read more here



artspotting:

Marian Bijlenga, Untitled (by upload)
Marian Bijlenga - read more here.





andren:

via www.buamai.com
andren - read more here


so... ambiguity... all these images are posted at seed capsules - my new tumblr blog.

fullbloom:

M
read more here.

On a more personal note.... have been flat out doing a major overhaul of office/studio and living spaces.
Why have I got warranties saved from things that are 25 yrs old and and I no longer own? And and account book from an art-related business I had from 17 years ago? Some of these things I saved from a house fire, endless relocations ... you name it. 
So out with the old and in with the space.
love this quote 
Small rooms or dwellings discipline the mind, large ones weaken it.
Leonardo da Vinci, from Journals, p. 509. (via aubade)


It happens that I presently live in postage-size rooms ... so of course I love this quote. OK ...postage size is an exaggeration.  But there's cerrtainly no room for all the things Ive saved so a radical attempt at decluttering is ongoing till I achieve  a feeling of knowing what exists in every nook and cranny of my abode.
and before I go check out this wonderful story... started by a blogger... with a friend on board and social media thrown in to the mix...
2 days ago I signed on to Baked Relief to offer some help. Started by Danielle Crismani of 
DIGELLA EMPORIUM
ASPIRING MARTHA STEWART STYLE DOMESTIC GODDESS' {WITHOUT THE JAIL SENTENCE}

Danielle, or Digella...yes she's a big fan, decided to bake some cupcakes for volunteers working to sandbag the area near her home before the river rose to flood the city. She blogged about it, and then others came forward offering help. 10 days or so  later she thinks maybe a thousand people are baking and delivering food... plus they started an initiative for people to volunteer to feed a family once a week for months to come. Through twitter, blogging, facebook etc...its created waves of response...and they keep noticing suburbs further out that have been ignored... then finding people to go there with food.... and other things. There is nothing like grass-roots.... and not  waiting for authorities "to do something"! 
Read more by Mel Kettle, the other organsational whiz, on  baked relief  and how this initiative spread like wildfire across Brisbane and beyond. 

Baked relief volunteers going to recovery sites with lunch.

from bakedrelief.org:
Lockyer Feed-a-thon
I took down contacts for the project and will touch base with them in the coming weeks once the roads are open and we can get their safely.
In short, the Lockyer Feed-a-thon project will provide ongoing support to Esk area and Lockyer valley by way of home cooked meals.  With the ongoing support of chefs in commercial kitchens, Baked Relief volunteers and chefs will be cooking and safely storing meals for transportation in refrigerated trucks out to these areas.
For as long as we have finances and for as long as I can run this project I will continue to manage this work. I am hoping for at least 6 months.
Providing a meal to a family affected by floods might not seem like enough, but it shows that we care and it gives them a night off from cooking.
As I always say “Food always tastes better when someone else cooks it”
If you would like to be involved in this project or our other project supporting the Metro areas called Adopt a Family, please go to the website and follow the links.
Some interesting posts I thought you might like
Remember go to website HERE


Ive been emailing another volunteer called Lisa who I've never met - she and I are making lunch for a volunteer spot on sunday. We'll meet at the delivery site. Somehow I think a lot of connections are being forged at the otherwise very difficult time for many ... some amazing volunteer efforts are going on daily... and so much creativitiy. I read of Fisher and Paykel - washing machine manufacturers yesterday setting up temporary washing machine units for the flood affected to wash all their things.
All I hope is that the initiative and involvement thats kicked off here is something we see more of well into the future... So many people said they could not watch any more TV ... they had to go do something.
Well... here's to life beyond TV!
cheers all,
Sophie x