My favorite visual artist.......

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  • RichardH
    Member
    • Nov 2011
    • 2800

    My favorite visual artist.......

    It is silly in a way to have a favorite artist. Of course it is personal, and one person's favorite might leave another person cold. While it is important not to fall into "love me, love my dog", and take personally whether other people are moved by the same things you are, it is nice to share what we love. I would like to share, and would love if others could also share on this thread.

    What artwork or vision moves you? What do you find beautiful in a deep resonant way? What disturbs and stirs you? In Buddhist teachings there are six senses, with the abstract perceptions of mind being the 6th, but this thread is limited to eye, to visual arts, in any medium contemporary or traditional. The artist can be well known, or completely unknown. Just someone making things that move you. Please post more than one image if available, so that a sense of the person's different facets can be seen.


    As a painter I've gone through love affairs with different artists and periods, depending on the kind of work I was exploring in the studio at the time, which goes to show how subjective this is. Here is my favorite right now, Richard Diebenkorn (American 1922 –1993)......

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    Please do share, and thank you.


    Gassho
    Daizan

    sat today
    Last edited by RichardH; 04-05-2017, 01:05 PM.
  • Cooperix
    Member
    • Nov 2013
    • 502

    #2
    Yay Daizan!
    Diebenkorn is one of my favorites as well.

    but my all time favorite artist is the minimalist Robert Irwin.



    He works with issues of perception often using only light as his medium.

    Now, at 87, this artist has seen interest increase in his works, which find the evanescent in the everyday.


    Robert Weschler's book about Irwin, 'Seeing is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees' is a wonderful read. Originally written in 1982 there's an updated edition available.
    NO book I've ever read goes into the creative mind of an artist like Weschler's! Just think about its title...



    There are so many wonderful, inspired artists out there, but for now I'll hold off on listing more.

    Anne
    ~st~

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    • Byrne
      Member
      • Dec 2014
      • 371

      #3
      My favorite painter is the surrealist painter Yves Tanguy. When I first saw his stuff I thought to myself "It looks like this guy is just rolling with a thing he discovered by chance." After reading his bio it turns out that was right. It inspired me at the age of 15 to give visual art a try.

      multi.jpg

      7437489747c6f1a1467631d0cd79f7a7.jpg

      Gassho

      Sat Today

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      • Joyo

        #4
        I love to draw, and beautiful drawings that have emotion move me, regardless of the subject matter.

        This has been one of my favourites for awhile now



        These beautiful, loose pencil sketches move me also, so much detail, yet so simple



        I don't have a favourite artist though. I am a bit obsessed, looking at a variety of artist's work on the internet, and also enjoying making my own pencil sketches and paintings.

        Gassho,
        Joyo
        sat today

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        • Jishin
          Member
          • Oct 2012
          • 4821

          #5
          IMG_0782.JPG

          Gasho, Jishin, _/st\_

          Comment

          • Kyonin
            Dharma Transmitted Priest
            • Oct 2010
            • 6748

            #6
            Hi Daizan!

            I am a total ignorant about art, but I have a few artists that I really like.

            I really like impressionism. Manet, Cézane, Degas... all of them!

            Lately I have developed a taste for urban art like Banksy. Awesome guy.

            Lastly, my have a fond love for Japanese artists like Shirow Masamune:

            appleseedcolor1.jpg

            And Amano Yoshitaka:

            2-frionel-a4.jpg

            Yes, I'm a nerd

            Gassho,

            Kyonin
            Hondō Kyōnin
            奔道 協忍

            Comment

            • Jishin
              Member
              • Oct 2012
              • 4821

              #7
              Originally posted by Oheso
              Jishin, the art critic Peter Schjeldahl said Munch's reputation "has circled the canon of modern art like a big plane seeking a runway" for more than a century.

              gassho, -0

              st
              I have a vivid imagination but average eye coordination. During my last manic episode in 1996 I sketched this on a blackboard in medical school. The sketch got the dean's attention who was a psychiatrist. He quickly recognized that the sketch along other behavior meant I was in trouble and eventually I had to sit out my first year of medical school.

              There is a nice book that talks about the temperament of artists:

              Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament

              I had never consciously seen the painting prior to me sketching it and it was years before I realized that I must have seen it somehow to sketch it during my nervous break down. Freaky, huh?

              [emoji2]

              Gasho, Jishin, _/st\_

              Comment

              • Oheso
                Member
                • Jan 2013
                • 294

                #8
                very freaky. I'd say you must have a good visual memory as well. Maybe Munch's big airplane passed over you while looking for that runway to land.

                gassho, -0

                td. I did it again
                and neither are they otherwise.

                Comment

                • RichardH
                  Member
                  • Nov 2011
                  • 2800

                  #9
                  Wow, thank you for these contributions. It is all beautiful, the "nerdy" stuff too. Oheso, the image you show reminded me of David Milne a wonderful Canadian painter. Here is a bomb crater painted by him from the First World War....




                  Regarding the book, Jishin, if you work in the arts and know a lot of people, you see that "the artistic temperament" is a romantic myth. Artists , and I mean working artists not "artistic types", have a wide range of temperaments, and I personally do not know any manic depressives. This is not to say there has not been some spectacular mental illness in the narrative of art history, it is just to say generalizations are iffy. I feel, and most working artists I know would surely agree, that the romantic myth of suffering in the name art is a poor message for young artists.
                  If anyone is suffering from mental illness, it is best to get treated, and not view it as part and parcel of creativity.

                  Gassho
                  Daizan

                  Sat today

                  Comment

                  • Jishin
                    Member
                    • Oct 2012
                    • 4821

                    #10
                    Hi Daizan,

                    Touched by fire is a fascinating read. A lot of case studies







                    It is said that manic depression is a condition that benefits society at the cost of the individual.

                    Given the same amount of talent, I much rather see the work of someone that has gone to hell, comeback and maybe going again versus someone who has not gone to hell and is afraid of going.

                    My 2 cents.

                    Gasho, Jishin, _/st\_

                    Comment

                    • RichardH
                      Member
                      • Nov 2011
                      • 2800

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Jishin
                      Hi Daizan,

                      Touched by fire is a fascinating read. A lot of case studies







                      It is said that manic depression is a condition that benefits society at the cost of the individual.

                      Given the same amount of talent, I much rather see the work of someone that has gone to hell, comeback and maybe going again versus someone who has not gone to hell and is afraid of going.

                      My 2 cents.

                      Gasho, Jishin, _/st\_
                      Hi Jishin. I'm all for going to hell and back. But as an art teacher and the father of an aspiring young filmmaker, I have to be straight with students and young people. I have known creative people who suffered mental illness, and the result was they also suffered not blooming as artists, having tragic, muted, careers. they just suffered, that's all. There is no romantic redemption in it, no big story.

                      The reality in the art world now is that equating mental illness with creativity is not a "thing" anymore. There is more emphasis on being engaged socially and politically and that favours a temperament different than the old image of the artist tormented in his garret. I hope that people who do suffer get the best treatment possible, and are not told it is a creative necessity. As for going to hell, well., don't presume with anyone, mental illness or not.

                      Gassho
                      Daizan

                      Sat today
                      Last edited by RichardH; 04-09-2017, 07:16 PM.

                      Comment

                      • Jishin
                        Member
                        • Oct 2012
                        • 4821

                        #12
                        Hi Daizan,

                        I have to be straight with folks too. I have to sell people on the idea that overall it is better to steadily produce vs wild productivity and related mood issues. That said, artists that have gone to hell and back are more interesting and you know this from experience because you are an interesting artist. [emoji2]

                        Metta to all.

                        Comment

                        • Byrne
                          Member
                          • Dec 2014
                          • 371

                          #13
                          If you want to be an artist it's best to do something rather than nothing. Your personal habits are circumstantial.

                          Gassho

                          Sat Today

                          Comment

                          • RichardH
                            Member
                            • Nov 2011
                            • 2800

                            #14
                            This is a good discussion to have, and I hope others might engage it here.

                            People living with mental illness have played an important role in the arts. They are stories that need to be told. There can also be a fine line between the non-ordinary states that come with intense creative activity, as well as "religious" experiences, and the spectrum of mental illnesses. The only point of caution here is around the idea of "artistic temperament" . It is a term that does not match experience working in the arts.

                            Gassho
                            Daizan

                            Sat today
                            Last edited by RichardH; 04-10-2017, 01:18 PM.

                            Comment

                            • Oheso
                              Member
                              • Jan 2013
                              • 294

                              #15
                              I think it good to note that not all creative volcanoes vent hell, so no coming back seems to be necessary.

                              Screen Shot 2017-04-10 at 12.59.43 PM.png

                              thankfully,

                              gassho,

                              -Ostd
                              Last edited by Oheso; 04-10-2017, 06:40 PM.
                              and neither are they otherwise.

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