Tuesday, July 13, 2010

What is next?

July 13, 2010
My Old Age Pension has been approved. Lucky me. I have been in the studio doing tasks other than painting. These are rebuilding windows for the "shack" in the country. I've also started to sort through my paintings to judge what I'll do in the future. What is the purpose of art or of life for that matter? I love doing portraits but will not do commissioned work. Most of my paintings I create for my own pleasure, so what to do next? Currently I am working on some "erotic" works, but to me these are tame. Still the studio door stays closed. What to paint next? This blog has changed location and I don't think anyone really reads it so I am talking to myself. Next? I'll let you know when I figure it out.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Spring is here! There is a prediction of snow. This is after all Edmonton, Alberta. The Red Gallery is changing. My work as an artist will continue but much much slower. The "40 Years" show is closing as well as the need to visually express my culture. I don't think I have much more to say about living in Edmonton, after the show "Car Culture" and "Portrait of Edmonton". I want to change my world, but the Bergstrom Block has done that beautifully. This representation of my desire to improve my world has accomplished that. As an artist I can only do so much. As a developer my desire is to continue to create the sort of environment that I want to live in. The current project is a house on the Pembina property. I have started to do paintings of this land. Nature, only as it represents the human condition. A road, or some sunflowers planted by my granddaughter, a small cabin such are my subject matters.
In the mean time, I am writing the "View to Understanding" my journal notes and letters from early years to the current. This is a reflection of my life. No great trauma or mystery, just a life well lived and few regrets.

Monday, January 25, 2010

This month David and I are celebrating our 40th anniversary. It is also my 65th year. Dates are so very important when they mark milestones in a life, a wonderful life. So it sometimes baffles me when art repeats itself in a unconscious or conscious way. My own art is of a European culture which was my childhood. Also I am aware of the trends of the art in our city, Edmonton. The Greenberg connection to the styles of art produced in this city should have become a stale memory, but it seems to raise its head every now and then. So it was with glee that I found an old publication of the Alberta Society of Artists ,Winter 1963. Margaret Chappelle, artist and activist (1915-1992) wrote this article titled, Clement Greenberg.
"The most prevalent reaction upon meeting a "name" of Greenberg"s magnitude is one of passive resistance -- a determination to remain unawed by the reputation. By the end of the first day of exposure to this man his forthright sincerity had pried a few chinks in my armour. He made it clear from the first that he was a critic not a teacher... a new experience for Emma Lake!
" I don't care what type of painting you produce," he told the group - " as long as it's good."
His attitude to work was a bit unusual. Fishing, exploring, the cocktail hour had no place in his schedule and he kept himself constantly available to the assembled painters. Several full days of "talk sessions" conditioned us to the business of painting, with discussion thenceforth limited to before and after the day's work.
Many big names have emerged under the impetus of his artistic approval- names like Pollock, Noland, Lewis. One day I rashly questioned the validity and lasting quality of Noland's circles. His reaction told me that this was heresy! Yet again he would enthuse over a realistic landscape or a still life with flowers. "A gem!" He'd intone with the same admiration bestowed upon his favourite modernist. "Go further into realism" he urged the semi realist. He deplored the over abundance of single-track New York abstract expressionists who had nothing to say. "Stay away from New York," he warned, "if you're a serious painter who wants to go places!"
Though sometimes paradoxical, his thinking seemed uncluttered; his language free of "beat" jargon and double talk. His revealing anecdotes about "big name" painters brought them all into sharper focus. "Action painting" he disclosed (like impression-ism, cubism and so many others) was invented by a newspaper critic, and De Kooning and his cohorts were a bit nonplussed when the label stuck.
On the last day he told us how surprised he'd been discover so much sophistication and unpretentious professionalism "up here in the sticks" ( and the way he said it... took the sting out of that last phrase!)

I like this slice of another artist's life. Margaret Chappelle is now the name on a humane society building in Edmonton. When she died it was discovered in a hand written will that her art should be sold 10 years after her death. November 2003 her work sold for twice the amount than was expected. Her estate,estimated over a couple of million dollars, was given to the humane society.
Occasionally one can see one of her drawings and painting come up for auction. There is little about her work on the net.
About Clement Greenberg there is still a great deal to be said, my favourite comment was in John Perreault's art diary,"Artopia" (The Greenbergian Stake..).I hope if you are interested this article is still on the net.
Now time to paint. Thanks for reading this, Christl Bergstrom