Showing posts with label face. Show all posts
Showing posts with label face. 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.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Pablo Picasso


"There is nothing more interesting than people.  One paints and one draws to learn to see people, to see oneself."












Spanish Artist


1881 - 1973













La Vie
(1903)


For me, people are central to being a creative leader.  The stories that writers share are about people and their relationships.  When I speak on leadership, I talk about leadership being defined as people working with and through people.  I love paintings and photographs that involve people.  People communicate so much meaning through their expressions and gestures.  I find people fascinating because in them I see bits and pieces of myself.  Through interactions with others I learn more about myself.  People teach me important lessons that I need to learn.





If I were the only human remaining on this planet, life would be boring.  When I was young, I thought I would like to be a hermit and withdraw from the world, but I no longer feel that way.  I do need people.  Having said that, I must confess that I am still an introvert.  What that means is that many people take energy from me and I must have alone time to restore my energy.  Extroverts by nature enjoy people and are re-energized by being with people.  After spending two hours in a mall, I am exhausted and must withdraw to replace my energy and recharge my spirit.  One of the few places where I can be re-energized by people is when I am speaking in front of an audience.  Some audiences will take the energy that I give out when I speak and return it to me ten-fold.  Other audiences will absorb my energy and suck me dry.





Who are the people in your life?  Do they help restore your energy or do they drain your energy?  What about the people in your stories, your paintings and your songs?  Are your relationships positive and life-giving?  Or are your relationships toxic and destructive?  What are the people in your life teaching you?  Even the most difficult people in our lives are there to teach us lessons.  What are you learning about yourself?  And what are you teaching the people in your life?






Sunday, September 26, 2010

Victor Hugo


"Laughter is the sun that drives the winter from the human face."






French novelist, poet


1802 - 1885








Humor helps to cleanse the spirit — to clean out the cobwebs in our souls.  Are you able to laugh that deep belly laugh?  To give yourself up to the moment?  What makes you laugh?  I don't always laugh at the same things as others.  I don't laugh at many movies that others find funny.  I enjoy humor in the absurd, in the contradictions.  I don't like humor that makes people look stupid.  I don't like humor that makes fun of groups of people.  I can laugh deeply and have laughed so hard that I have tears in my eyes and can hardly breathe.  Have you laughed today?

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Henri Matisse


"The character of a face in a drawing depends not upon its various proportions, but upon a spiritual light which it reflects."





— Henri Matisse

French Artists


1869 - 1954






Like an artist or a novelist, we all need to see beyond the surface characteristics of the human face.  We need to see the individual person who lives within.  We have been taught not to judge a book by its cover, yet how many times do we still do it.  Inside every person, beyond the hair and the clothes, is something very special.  Sometimes it takes work to find that person because the person has hid himself behind so many masks that he does not even know who he is.  And the same can be said of ourselves.  How many masks would you have to take off before the light within you would shine through?