Thursday, July 26, 2018

For all of my students who will be following this blog, you will come to see this as either the bane of your existence or your salvation...  Time is fleeting.  School begins in a few short weeks and I'm anxious to see your summer ideas and the museum visit.  How are you finding them?  Are your ideas thoughtful?  Do you think they'll make a great portfolio?  This is the year of the 5.  For all of you. Commit now and let's DO this.  No excuses.

Now go do art.

Investigation Ideas (to name a few...)


  1. Car part ads
  2. Portraits detailing emotions
  3. Portraits detailing odd body positions
  4. Extreme abstract close ups
  5. Extreme abstract close ups of nature
  6. Normal things using alternate colors
  7. What people throw away
  8. Family heirlooms
  9. Variations of one thing
  10. Seasons
  11. Recreations of famous art pieces
  12. Close ups of person - abstracted
  13. Designing shoes/shoe close ups
  14. Portraits of things broken or ruined
  15. Opposites (ie: something hot as cold)
  16. Textures
  17. Animals.insects in environment
  18. Close ups of sports equipment
  19. Close ups of art supplies
  20. Distortion
  21. Optical illusions
  22. Where has it been? (ie: the dollar)
  23. Items upside down or backwards
  24. Items missing something vital
  25. Images inspired by songs
  26. Cause and effect
  27. War and its effect
  28. Landscapes: day and night
  29. Perspective
  30. Significant buildings
  31. Accessories
  32. Sunglasses and faces
  33. Scenes from dreams
  34. Scenes from books
  35. Self portraits with traits exaggerated
  36. Illustrate a story
  37. Line drawings of objects
  38. What will the future be?
  39. Past and present
  40. Modern and historic
  41. Odd, interesting people
  42. A day in the life of...
  43. One object 12 different views
  44. Technology
  45. Different cultures
  46. The Heavens (planets, stars, etc.)
  47. Aerial views
  48. Stages of growing up
  49. Things whole, broken up
  50. Surrealism paintings
  51. Real to life with surreal background
  52. Hands doing things - different media
  53. 12 different parts of a face, together creating a whole face again
  54. People who are angry (happy, sad)
  55. Buildings
  56. City scenes
  57. People in motion
  58. Innocence
  59. Nature scenes
  60. One person, portrait young to old
  61. Areas of concern in America
  62. Old photographs
  63. Polaroids
  64. The act of protest
  65. Shape (altering with diet/weights)
  66. Triumph
  67. Using trash to create
  68. Teenage life
  69. Monochromatic (life?)
  70. The game of life
  71. Childhood mementos
  72. Family vacations
  73. Family members
  74. A friend’s different moods
  75. First day of school pictures
  76. Elderly
  77. Playgrounds
  78. Door handles
  79. Bathrooms
  80. Scenes from a music video
  81. Beach scenes
  82. Undersides of desks and chairs
  83. Insides of things
  84. Jewelry
  85. Zippers
  86. Metamorphosis
  87. Close ups of favorite foods
  88. Sweat
  89. Beauty of hands - how they are used
  90. Generations
  91. Things we desire
  92. Love/friendship
  93. Vulnerability
  94. Change
  95. Hope
  96. Appropriation
  97. Helping others
  98. Picking up after hard times
  99. Newspaper headlines
  100. Natural disasters
  101. Human emotion
  102. Leaving things behind
  103. Adventures
  104. Nonconformity/individuality
  105. Conformity 
  106. Sameness
  107. Comfort zones
  108. War and peace
  109. Diversity
  110. Beauty in simplicity
  111. Where have you been?
  112. Forever young
  113. Evolution of objects
  114. Light
  115. Sound
  116. Motion
  117. Abandoned buildings
  118. The smallest parts of a whole
  119. Media impact
  120. Parts of the body to represent different emotions
  121. Necessary objects
  122. Communication tools
  123. Different scenes through broken glass
  124. Famous speeches (...to be or not to be...)
  125. Photographs telling part of a story
  126. Windows/mirrors
  127. Fire
  128. Water
  129. Earth
  130. Wind
  131. Comic strip
  132. Parties
  133. Skeletal structure
  134. Wood
  135. Walking on the ceiling
  136. Through the eyes of animals
  137. Life as a napkin
  138. Life as a paperclip 
  139. Life as a ____________
  140. No skin, just the inside
  141. Negatives
  142. Pure line
  143. Overconfidence
  144. Fashion designs
  145. Illustrate a book
  146. Night scenes
  147. Opposites
  148. Same place, different time
  149. Decades
  150. Fruits inside and out
  151. Produce
  152. Sleeping people
  153. Patterns
  154. What is art to you?
  155. School life
  156. Your surroundings
  157. Refuge
  158. Current issues
  159. Death
  160. Abstraction of every day life
  161. Different rooms - what makes them interesting
  162. Hats
  163. Fear
  164. Poverty
  165. Interiors and Exteriors
  166. The figure in space
  167. Abandoned houses
  168. Deterioration - the body, a structure
  169. Morning rituals
  170. Shadows - extreme
  171. Reflections in surfaces
  172. Interpretations of one object
  173. Creating a drawing for every line of a song or poem
  174. Decaying objects
  175. Illumination with candle light
  176. Drawings/paintings in different artistic styles
  177. Daily Routines
  178. People and their pets
  179. Jobs
  180. Horses
  181. Trash versus treasure - who decides?
  182. Bedrooms
  183. What’s in your closet?
  184. Child labor
  185. Poster events (rodeos, carnivals, etc.)
  186. Homelessness
  187. Unfinished things
  188. Assemblages
  189. Boxes
  190. Boxes as a metaphor
  191. Stages of Life
  192. Paths
  193. Unusual environments
  194. Colors as influences
  195. Seeing color where others don’t
  196. Chairs
  197. Art and text
  198. Illustrate Shakespeare
  199. Illustrate a famous historical event - (JFK assassination, Harvey Milk and SF gay rallies)
  200. Body language
  201. Drawings of reflective materials
  202. Dolls
  203. Drawing over time (one setting adding a new element every day)
  204. Drawing in each color scheme (warm, cool, analogous, etc.)
  205. Pop Art analyzed personally
  206. Organic materials used non-organically (clothing? transportation?)
  207. Changing landscape (Monet)
  208. Emotions through abstraction
  209. Temporary art - graffiti, sand on sidewalk, dust on car windows)
  210. Toast
  211. Clouds
  212. Light fixtures
  213. 7 Deadly Sins (lust, gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath, envy, pride)
  214. Kitchen objects
  215. Focus on Vermeer (friends set up in famous positions)
  216. Fauvist style landscapes of favorite places
  217. Human influences on environment
  218. Close up of machines
  219. Emulating artists’ styles
  220. Braids
  221. Interior of moving things
  222. Unusual landscape alteration
  223. Portraits with your mother
  224. Portraits with your art
  225. 27 dresses

I once received an email from a student who was going to be taking AP Studio.  He was responding to suggestions I had made on ideas he had for the concentration section of the studio portfolio.  I was blown away by his response and level of thinking on how he took my thoughts and digested them, then took off in a new, exciting direction.   He wrote that he'd seen an old, abandoned bed post and was thinking of salvaging it and "just maybe based on the idea of modern society through the lens of the whole altarpiece type feel" he could use that idea and his love of art history (proudly, another class I taught that he was in and received a 4...) My response back was long-winded and I realized I was revealing more of myself to him (and to myself) than I had planned - but I kept going anyway.  He was also concerned about being excited with the concepts but afraid he didn't know enough technique to pull off the finished work.  My response:  I hear what you're saying as far as technique.  That will always be a fear (and should be to challenge you).  You can do this - just keep looking at art.  I have become completely addicted to looking.  While I want to do everything I see and wish I could have the time, I learned something when I was in advertising many years ago - I can't be the best at everything.  I realized I would never be the best painter, drafts person, whatever - but I knew I was really, really good at how I approached a concept and could follow it through.  That's my talent.  One of the reasons I have had such a difficult time going back to the studio is that I was trying to do what I have always done - created the still life images I have sold for years.  My fear:  am I still good enough?  Will these still sell?  My reality:  I am a different person and I don't want to do the same things I did 10 years ago.  My love of sketchbook and deconstruct has led me to experience and experiment with  materials and a "quickness" I never thought I could do.  I don't approach every piece as if it has to be in a gallery (and I can tell you many would never make it...) but what I've discovered is what YOU are suppose to discover in doing a concentration.  What you are capable of - what you truly love and are interested in.  The rest will follow.  Technique is about practice...again and again and again.  Concentration is about concept and how you THINK over and over again.

So I'm starting a full length self portrait based on a piece I saw present day but reminds me of John Singer Sargent (I always loved Madame X, I will admit...the attitude and, at the time, secretive nature of the painting and her pose).  This is WAY out of my comfort zone but I actually don't care.  My mother posed an interesting question the other day when i showed her all the self portraits I was doing (I'm working on three...).  she asked me what I was going to do with them - was I going to hang them?  Art has a purpose other than placement on a wall behind that chair...it allows you to see inside who you are and how you perceive the world.  Even if you never show the work to anyone else.  When my mom asked that question I was, at first, annoyed and then I realized she just doesn't understand.  It's the journey that is the adventure.  Not the destination.