artists only


    from theCommunity Arts Center
December 2013

The Art of the Found Object

 

Artists can make anything - or rather, they can make the appearance of anything. If you want a blue house, an artist can create an image of a blue house. If you want a "happy little tree," an artist can create an image of a happy little tree. If you want a green giraffe... well, you get the picture. If you want an image of something, an artist can find a way to create it, whether through painting, drawing, trick photography, Photoshop manipulation, video editing - the possibilities are endless.

 

But creating images of things can only get you so far. Sometimes you find that you need to use an actual "thing" to get your point across. Enter the found object. You "find" an object and use it in your work.

 

The Cubists were using found objects in their assemblages, and Picasso gets to take credit for the first use of found object in art in 1912 when we used the caning from a chair in a collage featuring of all things - a chair. Of course, somebody else less famous probably did something similar before, but art history favors Picasso. 

 

The most infamous use of found object in art history no doubt goes to Marcel Duchamp with his artwork titled Fountain from 1917. Duchamp upended the art world when he upended a urinal, signed it under a pseudonym R. Mutt, gave it a title, and put it on a display. He didn't really change anything about the object in use other than the concept surrounding it. Calling this series of works readymades, he took an object from the lowest low and elevated it to art. Even though it was somewhat of a parlor trick to infuriate the art world, Duchamp's Fountain changed the way people viewed objects as art. The Dadaists, Duchamp's anti-art (yet still somehow art) revolutionary peers often used the found object as a primary medium in their work. A favorite tactic of the movement was to take a useful object and make it useless. Putting a wheel atop a stool, attaching tacks to a clothes iron, inverting a bottle rack all converted once useful objects into beautiful artistic uselessness, while giving the viewer a reason to reconsider the object as an artistic endeavor. The practice suddenly gave a new conceptual dimension to things that would never have been considered as art.

 

I had a bit of a revelation as a young artist when I saw a picture of Robert Rauschenberg's combine (his word for found art combined with found objects) Reservoir which features a wooden board, two clocks, some wheels, and cloth mixed in with abstract painting. I couldn't tell if it was supposed to mean anything or have any relation to the title, but I was interested. As someone who used to think that art supplies came from the store, I was blown away.

Figure 1 Reservoir by Robert Rauschenberg
Figure 1 Reservoir by Robert Rauschenberg

I decided to take action and try it myself. I took a walk down the roadside near my parent's rural home, gathering up pieces of litter and rubbish - cigarette wrappers, bottle labels, lottery tickets, fast food packaging - a whole new world of found media had opened up! Using these materials, I would immediately return home and see what I could make using the objects that I had found on my mini-journey. I was surprised that limiting myself to just a handful of supplies as my initial inspiration yielded such powerful and immediate results. There was no sitting around wondering what to draw or what to create - it was all sitting in the ditches of Garrard County just waiting to be transformed into art. 

 

Since that initial experience, I have been utilizing found objects and materials on a regular basis. There are some artists/activists who use recycled materials to save them from landfills, to clean up litter, and save the environment - which are all great reasons, but I find myself drawn to the idea that each scrap had an existence as something else before I got my hands on it. These inherent former lives of the found materials can often lend nice levels of juxtaposed meanings in the artwork.

 

For example, using a church bulletin or religious tract and lottery ticket in the same piece, the viewer brings their own interpretation to the work - maybe it's a commentary on faith vs. luck, or spirituality vs. materialism. To make these connections between somewhat unrelated objects is a natural human response, but as the artist, you needn't make these connections yourself in order to make interesting art. I believe Rauschenberg purposefully tried to avoid making these connections, but rather chose images and objects that fit the scale and mood of the piece rather than a specific meaning.

 

I later fell in love with other found object artists - Claes Oldenburg, Jasper Johns, and the collage work of Kurt Schwitters simply cannot be denied as powerful works of modern art. I enjoyed poring over their works, finding subtleties and nuances upon repeated viewings that didn't seem to exist in the works of more traditional artists. Textures, found text, latent images, transparencies - all reveal themselves over time.

 

So, I challenge you to take the plunge into found object art. Go for a walk or look around your studio (it is rather cold outside). Find something you would probably toss into the garbage or recycle. Use it in your art. Change the scale, orientation, meaning, or concept of the object and make it your own. If you adopt the practice of using found objects in your art, you must also accept the challenge and responsibility of knowing what you should or should not use as art supplies. Otherwise your studio turns into a disaster area and you'll find yourself on an episode of Hoarders: Buried Alive.

 
Dear Friend of the Arts Center,  

Welcome to Artists Only, a newsletter produced by the Community Arts Center in Danville, Kentucky with the artistic audience in mind.
 
We'll keep you posted with tips from working artists and gallery curators, exhibition opportunities, and must see exhibits - all within a short drive of the bluegrass region. 
 
Please let us know what you think about our topics and what you'd like to see in upcoming newsletters! Email your feedback to
ARTISTIC TIP

If you find yourself stuck on a particularly challenging work of art, get out and take a walk.  Getting out of the studio and clearing your head can often yield surprising new ideas.

ART QUOTES

"The Artist always has the masters in his eyes."

Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

"A work of art which did not begin in emotion is not art."

Paul Cezanne 

 

"The truth is ugly: we have art so as not to perish perish from the truth."

Friedrich Nietzche

 

"When the work takes over, then the artist is enabled to get out of the way, not to interfere. When the work takes over, then the artist listens."

Madeleine L'Engle, Walking on Water: Reflection on Faith and Art

 
"Whoever uses the spirit that is in him creatively is an artist. To make living itself an art, that is the goal." Henry Miller

Quotes from www.goodreads.com 
 
GOODGIVING
GoodGiving Guide Challenge
The Arts Center is one of 108 central Kentucky nonprofits participating in this online fundraising and awareness campaign!

Why is the Arts Center worthy of your financial support? Don't take our word for it. See what artists David Farmer, Allen Arth and "Grandbuddy" Clif Jones have to say about the Arts Center.

Visit our giving page today and your donation will be matched $.50 on the dollar, thanks to the Lottie Ellis Match Challenge!

Questions? Email carrie

COMING SOON
Rethink Recycling, Opens Feb.5  
At the Arts Center's 
2014 blockbuster exhibit, "Re," we'll encourage our community to rethink recycling. The exhibit explores art made from recycled or repurposed materials and the impact its creation has on the artist, the arts world, our community and our environment. 
 
"Re" will provide interactive and engaging activities that go beyond "reduce, reuse, recycle" by examining repurposed art to offer understanding of the creative possibilities.
ARTIST OPPORTUNITIES

RE

The Community Arts Center's 2014 blockbuster exhibit, "Re," will explore art made from recycled, repurposed and upcycled materials and the impact its creation has on the artist, the arts world, our community and our environment. If your work fits this description and you would like to be included in this exhibit, email a .jpeg of your work and its dimensions to brandonlong@communityartscenter.net for consideration.
 
REPURPOSED AND RECYCLED: WORKS BY KENTUCKY ARTISTS 

The Kentucky Artisan Center at Berea is seeking entries for their next exhibit, "Repurposed and Recycled: Works by Kentucky Artisans" to be held March 1 - Sept. 6, 2014. For a complete prospectus and entry form visit the Center's websiteDeadline: Jan. 15, 2014.

  
SCULPTURE TRAILS OUTDOOR MUSEUM
Sculpture Trails Outdoor Museum in Solsberry, Ind. invites sculptors to submit a piece for consideration for installation at the site. Learn more.
 
CALL FOR ART SHELTER MURALS
Art in Motion in partnership with the Lexington Corridors Commission, LexArts and Lextran, seeks new murals for two art shelters in Lexington: East End Artstop and Bluegrass Art Shelter. Their goal is to provide an opportunity to display site-responsive work that will engage the community and encourage citizens to consider the role of art in our streetscape and public transportation. Art in Motion's mission is to make Lexington a more vibrant, livable city through the fusion of public art, public transit and public spaces. Learn more.

 

INTERESTED IN PLEIN AIR PAINTING? 
Artists in the Danville, Ky. area are forming a plein air painters group to capture the beauty and splendor of our surrounding landscape. If you are interested in joining the group or attending any of their upcoming paint outs, please contact Pat Fretz at 859-936-0137.
 
MICRO-LOAN PROGRAM FOR VISUAL ARTISTS IN JEFFERSON COUNTY 
Louisville Visual Art Association 
LVAA offers a micro-loan program to artists who are seeking funds to further their professional and business development. Any visual artist over 18 living in Jefferson County may apply for a loan for any purpose that furthers the applicant's professional career. Learn more
 
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS FOR EXHIBITS 
The Gloria Singletary Gallery at the Living Arts and Science Center in Lexington, Ky., invites a variety of artist proposals for 4 - 8 week exhibitions. Independent curators, collaborative teams of artists and individual artists are encouraged to submit proposals for exhibition. Learn more.

ARTEBELLA DAILY: LOCAL ARTISTS PUT ON GLOBAL STAGE 
The Louisville Visual Art Association (LVAA) announces the launch of Artebella, a new website and daily email that features a different Louisville-area artist's work for sale each weekday. Artebella offers an innovative program to help educate the public on visual art, build international awareness for local artists, and connect local artists to prospective individual and corporate art buyers. Artebella is about more than the individual; it has the power to change the way Louisvillians view art and how the world views Louisville artists. Any media, size, style and subject may be submitted for consideration in the program. Learn more.

More calls to artists can be found on the Kentucky Arts Council's website.

MUST-SEE EXHIBITS

INNOVATORS AND LEGENDS

Generations In Textiles And Fiber 

The Art Museum at the University of Kentucky
Through Jan. 5, 2014 
This nationally touring exhibition explores the extraordinary originality of the world of fiber and textile art. It features works by 50 artists, both established masters and the young artists they have inspired, and presents the ongoing transformation of this art form from the functional and decorative to the innovative and experimental. Among the masters are the UK's own Arturo Sandoval and Katherine Westphal. Among the younger innovators is Nick Cave, a contemporary performance artist whose art sometimes takes the form of elaborate costumes. Learn more.

HOLIDAY REVELS 
M.S. Rezny Gallery, Lexington

Through Dec. 31

A group exhibit of artwork by the 2013 featured gallery artists in M. S. Rezny's Gallery. Learn more.

  

UNCOMMON WEALTH; LEGACY OF THE KY ARTS COUNCIL AL SMITH FELLOWSHIPS
Lyric Theatre, Lexington
Through Jan. 11,  2014

Uncommon Wealth exhibit celebrates 30 years of the Kentucky Arts Council's Al Smith Individual Artist Fellowship Program. The fellowship program was established in 1983 to recognize creative excellence and to assist in the professional development of Kentucky artists. More than monetary support, the fellowship serves as a benchmark of excellence in the careers of the state's artists.

The artwork in this exhibit provides a snapshot of the work created by fellowship recipients in the visual arts. In the 30 years of the program, 174 visual artists have received fellowships; 62 of those artists are featured in the exhibit. Learn more.


ROUGH ROAD
Photographs by Bill Burke, Bob Hower and Ted Wathen
Kentucky Folk Art Center, Morehead
Through Dec. 31
During the mid-1970s three photographers set out to document the life and landscape of Kentucky. Today, these amazing photographs stand as a testament to what life was like in the Commonwealth nearly 40 years ago. Learn more.

 

JR
Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati 
Through Feb. 2, 2014
The Contemporary Arts Center presents world-renowned French artist JR's first solo museum exhibition, featuring more than a decade of work seen in public spaces around the globe. Describing himself as both an "urban artivist" and "photograffeur," JR has won international acclaim (including the 2011 TED prize) for postering arresting black & white portraits of community members upon a variety of city surfaces. Learn more.

DEVIATING UTOPIAS
Frist Center, Nashville
Through Jan. 12, 2014
Ana Maria Tavares finds inspiration in the architecture of the modern city, particularly the stylistic grammar of Oscar Niemeyer and other utopian modernist Brazilian architects who have transformed urban Brazil in the post World War II years. She employs materials such as steel, glass, and mirrors, often alluding to building interiors and product design, to make structures that occupy the border between design and fine art. Airports and departure lounges-places that symbolize exit from everyday life-are a recurrent theme in her work, evoking feelings relating to floating and falling, meditating, and the co-existence of the real and virtual. Learn more.
 
ORIGINAL ART... ORIGINAL GIFT
Berea Arts Council
Through Dec. 21
Celebrate the winter holidays with this exhibit and sale at the Berea Arts Council Gallery - an artful alternative for holiday shoppers to support local artists! 
 
The Dr. Donald L. and Dorothy Jacobs Gallery
Georgetown College 
Permanent Collection
The Dr. Donald L. and Dorothy Jacobs Gallery at Georgetown College includes modern and contemporary works of art by international, national and regional artists, along with an outstanding collection of antiquities. Visitors will enjoy works of art by:
 
* Djawid Borower 
* Louise Bourgeois 
* Dale Chihuly 
* Christo 
* Thornton Dial 
* Helen Frankenthaler 
* Ernesto Gutierrez 
* Jasper Johns 
* Judy Pfaff 
* Robert Rauschenberg 
* Frank Stella 
* Andrew Wyeth 
* Georgetown College students, alumni and faculty 
 
The gallery includes antiquities from China, Costa Rica, Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Ghana, Greece, Guatemala, Indonesia, Liberia, Palestine, Peru, Thailand, Turkey, and Vietnam. Learn more.
 
NEW YEAR NEW ART
Community Arts Center, Danville
Jan. 2 - Jan. 25
All-new art from local and regional artists! Join us Thursday, Jan. 9 at 6 p.m. for a free reception featuring pianist Larry Bitensky and Executive Vice President for Health Affairs at UK HealthCare, Dr. Michael Karpf. 
Community Arts Center Danville
401 West Main Street
859-236-4054
Open to the public:
Wed-Fri: 10 am - 6 pm
Sat: 10 am - 4 pm 
 
Exhibits Closed Dec. 25 and Jan. 1
Happy Holidays! 

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The Community Arts Center needs your support.
Please donate through
through Dec. 31.
 
Thank you!

Kentucky Arts Council

The Kentucky Arts Council, the state arts agency, provides operating support to the Community Arts Center with state tax dollars and federal funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Copyright © 2013. All Rights Reserved.