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#11
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
"George Dance" wrote in message ... On Feb 6, 6:45 pm, "Will Dockery" wrote: I've posted a new gallery of some of my recent abstract paintings, which some of you may have an interest in checking out, for whichever reasons you prefer. These paintings are made with a variety of materials from oil, watercolor and pastel paints, to housepaint, solvents and melted plastics: http://www.fototime.com/inv/E917106F136751F Comments and critique, as with all my work in all forms, is most welcome. Reminds me of some of this guy's stuff: http://www.skypoint.com/members/dmh7...s/Borborygmae/ In a couple of cases, (Ozone Stigmata being one I remember), I liked your detail shot better than the full picture. For that reason I think I'd appreciate the originals better if I could enlarge them and see more detail. Not that I didn't like any of them. "Planet Fall" had a composition I liked; I wouldn't be ashamed to have it on a wall of my living room. Unfortunately, this whole way of creating art reminds me of tossing off -- just throwing something down and hopin the result is art. I see too much of that in attempts to write poetry, on usenet and elsewyere, and I don't like it here any better here than there. Occasionally a good piece does result; but that's always too dependent on accident or mere coincidence for my liking. *it's definitely not for everybody. look- the most complex work of art that requires years of schooling to master is always open to intense scrutiny as well, esp in the art world. i think it goes by feel more than technique. and, i think that's how it goes with writing as well. the most important thing is to have fun in life. the cynics disagree. usually, they're off somehere whining about being better than others and not actually doing anything worth while themselves. none of us are going to make any kind of dent in THAT world. but, for eachother and around here?- we make plenty of differences in peoples lives. to me, that's all that matters in the long run. rules or no rules. |
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
"George Dance" wrote in message ... On Feb 7, 10:57 am, "msifg" wrote: "Dale Houstman" wrote in message ... Savageduck wrote: Pollock is much maligned. Most of those who ridicule his work have not experienced it, only imagine that they are capable of similar work without his artistry and intellect (alcohol not withstanding) they never attain his result. He was unique. As we have seen with Mockery's "paintings" even those who profess to like Pollock's work malign it with their misunderstanding of it. Will appears to think the art is in the dribble. dmh well, now- what have we here? houstman bringing it down to b's cat level of altering the posters name. (a tell tale sign that someone just got owned.) Nahh, "Savageduck" appears to be a real nym. I checked his profile; he's been posting under that nym for years. *yeah- well, i ducked that reply. check out the "mockery." see, i've got some luck. |
#13
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
"George Dance" wrote: "Will Dockery" wrote: (Google ain't quoting right this morning, or something, so my replies are with an *) I've posted a new gallery of some of my recent abstract paintings, which some of you may have an interest in checking out, for whichever reasons you prefer. These paintings are made with a variety of materials from oil, watercolor and pastel paints, to housepaint, solvents and melted plastics: http://www.fototime.com/inv/E917106F136751F Comments and critique, as with all my work in all forms, is most welcome. Reminds me of some of this guy's stuff: http://www.skypoint.com/members/dmh7...s/Borborygmae/ *Heh... who would have figured? In a couple of cases, (Ozone Stigmata being one I remember), I liked your detail shot better than the full picture. For that reason I think I'd appreciate the originals better if I could enlarge them and see more detail. *Yes, as I noted to another person a few minutes ago: "...The photos were not taken by Martin Scorsese, but just a pal with a camera, so first off they're not as crisp a veiw as you'd get if you were standing in the shed with me, but that tossed off comment is typical of your lazy commentary. I have to say if, say, you think that these two close-ups of a section of two of the paintings: http://tinyurl.com/green-planet compared with http://tinyurl.com/cqzktb And still shrug and claim they're 'pretty much the same', then you either need a new pair of glasses, or you're indulging in your typical, and tiresomely whining negativity game..." Oh course, this person (who no doubt fancies himself a better paint dribber) probably never made it past the opening thumbnail, if his usual standard of critique is the way he approached these paintings. But, yes, properly scanned or better photographed, I'm sure they'd have more of their intended impact, thanks for taking the time to give them a try. Not that I didn't like any of them. "Planet Fall" had a composition I liked; I wouldn't be ashamed to have it on a wall of my living room. Unfortunately, this whole way of creating art reminds me of tossing off -- just throwing something down and hopin the result is art. *I've thrown away and given away many paintings that I think failed... sometimes to my regret. When I moved out of a house back in 1989, I left all the paintings I'd done up to that point there, because they just didn't "move" me anymore, or at least not enough to "move" them... damned heavy pieces... I feel this batch works better, so far... I see too much of that in attempts to write poetry, on usenet and elsewyere, and I don't like it here any better here than there. *You might like my comix better... maybe... Occasionally a good piece does result; but that's always too dependent on accident or mere coincidence for my liking. *Yes, I'm guilty of about 20 years of poetry that could be judged in that way, just over the last decade or so knuckling down to working in more "universal language" and trying the more traditional forms... I credit the collaborations with musicians who insist on knowing what the hell's going on at the time with working more and more in that direction, For example, HC /hates/ things like the title "Ozone Stigmata" and so forth, he tried to insist we call it "Handbasket From Hell" for weeks, "You gotta have the listener be able to find it on the jukebox!", but the words "Ozone Stigmata" are jam-packed with multiple meanings, and I have to stand my ground in certain cases like these... I can only pander to the masses so far... heh. -- "Twilight Girl" and other song-poems by Will Dockery: http://www.myspace.com/willdockery |
#14
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
"msifg" wrote:
"Will Dockery" wrote: I've posted a new gallery of some of my recent abstract paintings, which some of you may have an interest in checking out, for whichever reasons you prefer. These paintings are made with a variety of materials from oil, watercolor and pastel paints, to housepaint, solvents and melted plastics: http://www.fototime.com/inv/E917106F136751F Comments and critique, as with all my work in all forms, are most welcome. cool! my dad just sent me a bunch of abstract art. it's some of my favorite kind of art. my dad paints on a regular basis. Are any of your father's works online anywhere? I'd like to check those out, since abstract is by far my favorite form. I hope to somedays get some of Sulzbach's work scanned and online, but he's such a hermit-type, living out in the wouds of Alabama, it'll be some trick getting that done. thanks for sharing. (sharks bewa i've got a new pair of teeth.) This unsent post I just found in my "Drafts" section, from last year, of another old-time artist friend of mine, you might enjoy, as well: Here are galleries of Barfield, my teacher, who has been highly influenced by Aborigine art and culture... The art of Dan Barfield: snip for brevity http://www.danbarfield.com/index.php The Dream: http://www.danbarfield.com/gallery1.php The Reality: http://www.danbarfield.com/gallery2.php my dad is very old and has never been interested in sharing his art but with close friends and family. we try to get him to go online like some of his art friends. however, he really doesn't feel like his work merits that kind of exposure. i think it does. however, i'm far from an expert. Hope you can convince him to put some out for the world, though. that dan barfeild stuff is abstract. however, my dads stuff is more like yours. the barfield stuff is pretty and phantasmagorical in an otherworldly kind of way. it kept taking me to the astral plane. that's some of my favorite stuff. people who paint like that usually don't get much exposure. that's what makes it "art." i'm not big on discussing paints and techniques but i love sharing ideas like you just did. my dad just offloaded a few paintings on to me as gifts. at some point, i'll scan them onto a webpage dedicated to him. i really don't know what's going to happen to all of his stuff when he goes. he's got hundreds laying around the house. Barfield's art almost got me arrested a few years ago, a nosy peeping tom thought I had "dead bodies" stashed in the backroom: ---- Columbus Ledger-Enquirer (GA) July 13, 1997 Section: LOCAL Edition: FIRST Page: B1 HOW GROSS THY ART Tim Chitwood Apparently it was all just a big misunderstanding. The misunderstanding led to a 911 call about a decomposing body in an old house M***** S*****'s husband R****** owns at 2113 **th St. in Columbus. That led to the discovery that it wasn't a body after all, but artwork made of barbed wire and blowtorched Barbie dolls. But it sure looked like a body to police. And it looked like a body to paramedics. And it definitely looked like a body to Danny W****. Danny is a real estate agent who with M***** went to look at the house July 2. He wanted to buy it and fix it up. It needs fixing up. The roof leaks in places and some of the floor's rotting. The S**** now live on F**** Drive and use the **th Street house for storage. M*****'s son Will Dockery lets friends -- artists, poets and madmen, Will says -- store their work there. Among those artists is Dan Barfield, who has a concept piece called "Vietnam,'' part of which the veteran made of melted Barbie dolls. ("He hates Barbies,'' says his wife Judy.) It now lies on the floor among other stuff stored in the dark, northwest bedroom of the ##th Street house. To someone who didn't know what it was, it might look like a rib cage and sternum atop decayed matter. That's what it looked like to Danny W**** when he walked into that musty room, first staring up at the rafters. Then he looked down. Then he froze. Then he ran. He wasn't sure what he saw. Maybe a body. Maybe it was sealed with wax, which trapped the odor. Maybe this was a bizarre ritual. Maybe he didn't want to know. M***** followed Danny as he dashed outside, where he tried to make a call on his cell phone. She told him not to. According to her, she told him he'd just seen some artwork. According to Danny, she never said that; she just said they didn't need the police coming there. This did not sound reassuring. Danny had to make that call. Now don't call the police, M***** said again. She says she also told Danny her son Will had a bad temper, and he wouldn't like Danny calling the police. She says Danny replied that the police wouldn't do anything to her; she wasn't involved. That's true, she said (she wasn't involved in storing the art), but the police needn't be bothered. M***** claims Danny then offered her $13,000 for the house, then said it needed so much work the most he could give her was $10,000. Danny maintains all M***** did was tell him no one should call the police. The next day, someone called the police. About 10:30 a.m., police and paramedics rushed to the house, unboarded a door to get in and examined what they, too, thought was a decaying body, oddly odorless. Then they poked it and figured out it wasn't. It was such a weird story, the Ledger-Enquirer ran it on the front page July 4. That's how M****** learned police had broken into the house. She was perturbed. She blamed Danny. Danny won't say he called police, but admits he told someone what he thought he saw. Stan Swiney of the 911 center says the call reportedly came from a Billy Hanson. (No Billy Hanson listed in the Columbus telephone directory was involved; I called.) The 911 report said someone saw the alleged corpse through a window. That's difficult: The room's dark; the window's dirty; the art's hard to see. The artist, Dan Barfield, says it's funny Danny W**** would be frightened, because the real estate agent stopped by a few months ago when Dan was moving art into the house, and this piece was out on the lawn at the time. The artist claims the agent told him a decayed body was found in the house once. Danny says that's outrageous: He has never met Dan Barfield. "I would remember that,'' he says. Danny says he just wanted to buy the house to help clean up the neighborhood, where he owns other property. ``As far as I'm concerned now, they couldn't give it to me,'' he says. Perhaps it will remain the house of scary art, where once people thought they saw a dead body. But didn't. ---- Barfield took off to live in Texas a year or so ago and I haven't heard a word from him since... hope the old cuss is doing okay out there. -- "Twilight Girl" and other song-poems by Will Dockery: http://www.myspace.com/willdockery |
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
"msifg" wrote in message ... "Dale Houstman" wrote in message ... Savageduck wrote: Pollock is much maligned. Most of those who ridicule his work have not experienced it, only imagine that they are capable of similar work without his artistry and intellect (alcohol not withstanding) they never attain his result. He was unique. As we have seen with Mockery's "paintings" even those who profess to like Pollock's work malign it with their misunderstanding of it. Will appears to think the art is in the dribble. dmh well, now- what have we here? houstman bringing it down to b's cat level of altering the posters name. (a tell tale sign that someone just got owned.) Or a tell-tale sign that you can't follow a thread (even if you move your lips). Rob -- Rob Evans ----------- When I see a swine, I reach for 45-calibre pearls -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access |
#16
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
"Dale Houstman" wrote in message ... Will Dockery wrote: I've posted a new gallery of some of my recent abstract paintings, which some of you may have an interest in checking out, for whichever reasons you prefer. These paintings are made with a variety of materials from oil, watercolor and pastel paints, to housepaint, solvents and melted plastics: http://www.fototime.com/inv/E917106F136751F Comments and critique, as with all my work in all forms, is most welcome. They are all pretty much the same apart from being different colors. I suppose you think they're akin to Pollack's work, but Pollack is one of those figures (like "e.e. cummings" in poetry) who - although marvelous in their own right - have served as "bad examples" and invitations to laziness for an entire generation of artists. With "cummings" it is the notion that if one just puts in enough punctuation, splits up words, spells words oddly, etc. then poetry is inevitable. The Beats obviously serve a similar function for you and many other mediocre-to-terrible performance "artists". Here - in your "paintings" - you seem to think if you dribble enough colored crap on a canvas, it must - by some universal law of cosmic kindness - create a work which is the perfect expression of some inner passion you pretend to feel. But they are just charmless masses of direction-less non-intent. The contrast with Pollack's works is instructive: despite his being called a "dribbler" his works reveal intent, there is strength, energy, and a "rush toward an answer" to his lines: he is truly finding the "expression" in "abstract expressionism". Yours are an (unintentional and unfunny) parody of his accomplishments, more a critique of what those who disliked his work thought his work was than an understanding of his vision. Yes Jackson also used housepaint, which has led to a set of preservation problems: you needn't worry that this will happen in your case - not one of these "paintings" needs to survive past next week. dmh we can only hope the artist does not do so as well |
#17
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
"Savageduck" wrote: Will Dockery wrote: I've posted a new gallery of some of my recent abstract paintings, which some of you may have an interest in checking out, for whichever reasons you prefer. These paintings are made with a variety of materials from oil, watercolor and pastel paints, to housepaint, solvents and melted plastics: http://www.fototime.com/inv/E917106F136751F Comments and critique, as with all my work in all forms, is most welcome. Pollock is much maligned. Most of those who ridicule his work have not experienced it, only imagine that they are capable of similar work without his artistry and intellect No, it isn't as easy as so many of those people would think, and certainly isn't just a matter of "splashing paint on a board", as folks like to assume. (alcohol not withstanding) they never attain his result. He was unique. He inspired quite a few greats that seem to be often overlooked, such as the previously mentioned Richard Dousette-Dart, who was actually a more direct influence on my paintings, having studied his works up close. http://www.artnet.com/artist/13705/r...ette-dart.html Pousette-Dart's work was here on exhibition for a few months back in 1991 (1990 - 1992 Retrospektives in Indianapolis, Detroit, Columbus Georgia, Washington), and one of my favorite things to do at the time was to smoke a good joint and wander among his paintings. Here is Pollock #2 at the Munson Williams Procter Arts Institute Utica NY, http://snipr.com/7or04-wiksca MWP http://www.mwpai.org/museum/collecti...dcontemporary/ Great stuff, yes... a shame so many people just don't "get it". Regards, Savageduck Thanks, and great name, btw... heh. -- "Twilight Girl" and other song-poems by Will Dockery: http://www.myspace.com/willdockery |
#18
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
It's a little chaotic Will, that teases the eye, but too fine for me to
tease any dream time. contrasting pallet but it's all background, like your road picture give it some subject(s) in contrasting ideology, and you'll be on your way ------------------------------------------------------------------- Subjugate the rhyme and rawk with the rhythm Only got one line to balk all the schizm SteepleJack Beer http://www.lulu.com/content/5611390 |
#19
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
msifg wrote:
whining about being better than others and not actually doing anything worth while themselves. True, that. ------------------------------------------------------------------- Subjugate the rhyme and rawk with the rhythm Only got one line to balk all the schizm SteepleJack Beer http://www.lulu.com/content/5611390 |
#20
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Abstract paintings of Will Dockery
Dale Houstman fanged:
problems: you needn't worry that this will happen in your case - not one of these "paintings" needs to survive past next week. You should have used links, you look like an idiot not having supported a single claim in your entire diatribe ------------------------------------------------------------------- Subjugate the rhyme and rawk with the rhythm Only got one line to balk all the schizm SteepleJack Beer http://www.lulu.com/content/5611390 |
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