Miscellaneous Notes
This Part is a collection of miscellaneous notes without
much
organization. In a sense, it is a placeholder for material, much of it
in the form of personal notes and observations.
- When making personal marks, choose the right tool to
express the mark with.
- Be aware of the restrictions your working environment
might
place on your artistic development. People who have small, cramped
working spaces or limited storage and display space are likely to paint
small and have limited productivity. because their working space is
small, they "think" small and their progress is small. Similarly for
people worried about the cost of materials. They buy inferior, student
quality products which have poor performance characteristics, thereby
retarding their development. They will be miserly with paint and
never develop a sumptuous, generous style of expression. Their
progress will be slow and their output limited.
- Notes from a workshop with Katherine Chang Liu in
march 2007:
- Let your work get better and better and people will
chase you.
- When you finally develop consistency in your work,
pick the best 16 and approach galleries.
- If you work for a while, you will begin to
understand the type of place you should send your work to.
- Market demands should not be the motivating force
in your art unless you need the money.
- Plan your symbolism before you start a work.
- When you leave the studio, mark on a post-it note,
where you left off with information on what to do next.
|