Showing posts with label Eyes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eyes. Show all posts

Thursday, April 7, 2011

James Galvin


"Let us begin with a simple line,


Drawn as a child would draw it,


To indicate the horizon...."












American Poet


1951 -











In drawing and writing, we almost always begin with the line.  The line turns into letters which turn into words which turn into sentences.  And eventually the sentences become poems, short stories and novels.  The same is often true is art.  The line becomes an eye, then a nose and soon a face.  The drawing begins as a simple line much like what a child starts with.  The artist then transforms that line into a beautiful portrait, landscape or abstract painting.





When we begin the canvas and the paper are blank, empty, without much meaning.  As creative artists our job is transform that paper or that canvas into more.  To create something out of a simple line.  To communicate our vision of the world through a simple line joined with other simple lines — one built on another.





The same can be said about life.  Each moment we live is like a simple line.  We build a life through living each moment to the fullest.  And millions of moments become a life lived.  





Here is the poem, Art Class, by James Galvin.











Art Class


By James Galvin





Let us begin with a simple line,


Drawn as a child would draw it,


To indicate the horizon,





More real than the real horizon,


Which is less than line,


Which is a visible abstraction, a ratio.





The line ravishes the page with implications


Of white earth, white sky!





The horizon moves as we move,


Making us feel central.


But the horizon is an empty shell —





Strange radius whose center is peripheral.


As the horizon draws us on, withdrawing,


The line draws us in,





Requiring further lines,


Engendering curves, verticals, diagonals,


Urging shades, shapes, figures...





What should we place, in all good faith,


On the horizon? A stone?


An empty chair? A submarine?





Take your time.  Take it easy.


The horizon will not stop abstracting us.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Marcel Proust


"The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in having new eyes."








 






French Novelist


1871 - 1922











For some people the environment is crucial to their happiness.  They let where they live affect their emotional life.  And there is some truth to the fact.  Cloudy days can bring people down.  Long winters give some people cabin fever.  Others need the mountains or the ocean or the prairie.  How does your environment affect you as an artist?  Does it inspire your creativity?  Does it make you hopeful?  Does it make you happy?





For other people like Proust and myself, the environment is less important?  I can create anywhere.  I can sit in a shopping mall and write poetry.  I can sit in a church and write.  As I write these words I am sitting in a hotel in South Carolina.  And the environment rarely affects my mood or happiness.  I love the mountains, the ocean and the prairie, but I don't need them to be happy.  I live inside my head.  Can you create anywhere?  Or must you be in a certain place?  A certain mood?  A special environment?






Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Sydney Smith




"Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off your goals."












English Writer, Anglican Clergy


1771 -1845











The reason many creative leaders don't reach their goals is that they are focused on the wrong thing.  People focus on all the reasons their feel they can't achieve their goals.  They need to focus instead on their goals. 





If you are focused on your goals, you will see over the obstacles, under the obstacles, around the obstacles and through the obstacles.  If you are focused on the obstacles, you will only see the obstacles and you will not achieve your goals.





What are your goals?  What are you focused on?  The obstacles?  Or the GOALS?  Banish the obstacles from your mind.  Focus on your goals.  Achieve your dreams.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Henri Matisse


"Look at life with the eyes of a child."






1869 - 1954






A child looks at the world around her with wonderment and joy.  She laughs at new and strange things.  She enjoys the moment without worrying about tomorrow or yesterday.  She smiles at strangers and trusts them.  She shows little fear and puts herself at physical risk.  She sees everything and takes it into herself.  What can you and I learn from a child?  What can the child teach us?  Don't you think it is time we hug life?  That we listen to our hearts?  That we see the world through the eyes of the child we once were?