Friday, April 4, 2014

Watercolor and Re-painting

I like watercolor. I am trying to start doing more in other media because I have noticed that when you say "...watercolor..." to gallery people their faces drop (that would be one face per person). Framing and matting is bad enough, but then there is glass (or plexi which is $). Lots of bothers.
Anyway, this one is called 'Hermit'. First painted in Dec 2013, but was never right so I had at it during February and it is ok I think. The lines are made with an extraordinary pigment called Davy's Grey, made with slate among other things.

22" x 30"

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Sunday, March 30, 2014

The Color of Polytheism

2014-03-30
The Color of Polytheism

I have started reading a small book called Chromophobia by David Batchelor in which the author tracks a long-established tendency in Western culture to eschew color in art. The tradition is deep, going back to the Ancients. As Batchelor says, “… Plato, for whom truth, embodied in the Idea, was, as Martin Jay has put it, ‘like a visible form blanched of its colour’.

Being chromophilic (which is not used to mean “lover of color”, but that’s how I intend it) myself I have never concerned myself with color hatred very much, but now I think about it, we live in a country that has particularly chromophobic roots. Our incomprehensibly beloved “Pilgrims” (emphasize the “grim” part) were all black and white. And they came from a black and white European culture. 

Thinking that this trait of fearing/hating color can be traced back to Plato made me wonder if it has a correlation with a cultural concept of deity. The single-God concept demands an all-in-one view, and white is all-in-one (wavelengths) and black is all-in-one (pigments). So do single-God cultures tend to be chromophobic? Some Christians certainly are, and a lot of Jews are. (Plato’s writings survived early Christian purges because they were largely considered supportive of a Christian view, unlike many other pre-Christian philosophers.)* What about Catholics, who can be quite colorful? They have many Saints, who, in a way, reflect different aspects of sanctity – the way colors reflect different components of white light. Hindus are manifestly polytheistic, and what more colorful culture can be found? They have a deity for almost every different world-view you can think of, from pure physical prowess (Hanuman) to absolute holy purity (Brahma) and hundreds of others I don’t know about.  Colors play an active role in this multi-faceted view by helping to define the attributes of different deities.

I am just starting the book. Perhaps Batchelor makes this point himself later on….. Now I am wondering how the Muslims do or don’t fit the view of monotheist chromophobia.

*   Plato’s Theory of Forms
     by Ian Bruce © Copyright 1998
“If we ask the question of why in the two thousand years of suppression of ideas and burning of books that has been the Christian era, Plato's dialogues have survived intact, we must answer that Plato's theories are fundamentally supportive of basic Christian doctrine.

http://www.ccs.neu.edu/course/com3118/Plato.html

My Poor Neglected BlogSpot from 2012

I put some small watercolor paintings up in 2012, but now there is no link to them from my blog home, but they are still there....

http://danconradarts.blogspot.com/


2014-03-30 The Economic Blindspot

I Don’t Understand the Economy - Part 1

I am "retired" from full-time paid work, but I stay quite busy as an artist.

Yesterday I drove to BWI Airport to pick up my son-in-law, Brendon. He came east from Washington State to be with his father, Phil, who has fallen and broken bones in his hip joint, a very painful injury, and to help his mother.  I drove with my wife, Carol, to the airport, then to the hospital in Harford County near their home, and back to our home in Baltimore City. All this in pouring rain. I would estimate the total trip to be in the range of 70 to 90 miles. Plus a $4 toll for the Harbor Tunnel. The driving, even under poor conditions, was a pleasurable break from some urgent work I had been doing for a deadline on Friday, and it was great to see Brendon. The only problem was the car, our ‘new’ used car that gets much worse mileage than specified for the make and model.

Although this was effectively a pleasant excursion, it amounted to free labor. Brendon could have found some combination of “public” transportation. It would have added a lot of time to his journey, and at least the final part would have required a fairly long taxi ride. By driving him myself I deprived the economy of an influx of liquidity for service providers, and there will be no tax on proceeds of my labor.

The effect of unpaid labor in the economy is nothing new, and my story is very common. The prime example is the case of “housewives” whose labor was not an economic consideration until the growth of the two-income household and the need to purchase services that were previously “free”.


Did I do a days “work” yesterday? If so, how can I credit that on any economic measure of asset for myself? Without such a measure how can there be any real measure of the economy?