interview with artist Seren Moran

The Interview Series continues with artist Seren Moran sharing her thoughts on painting, art, and the creative process. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see the featured portfolio.
From the 'Brazil' series by Seren Moran

From the ‘Brazil’ series by Seren Moran

1. How did you first become interested in painting?

Ironically enough, my parent’s actually forced me to study art.  I was a super creative and artistic child and won all kinds of awards for my art citywide and even some pieces went statewide as early as 5 years old.  But during my adolescent years I was pretty rebellious and ended up dropping out of high school.  My parent’s were convinced that had I had an artistic outlet, I wouldn’t have acted out as much.  So when I decided I wanted to go to college, they said they would only pay for my applications if I applied as an art major.  So I did.  The agreement was that I only had to try it for the first year and could then change to any major I wanted.  But of course I fell head over heals in love with art within the first few months, and haven’t fallen out of love since.

2. What do you learn through your work?
As time goes on I find that my art really is just an extension of myself, so it’s hard to separate between what is me and what is my art.  What I learn in life is reflected in my work and what I learn in my work is reflected in my life. They are really just one in the same.

3. What is most satisfying to you about the creative process?
Being able to be and do anything.  I love that in art there are no rules, and even if there were you could break them.  I can act on all my impulses and be whoever I want without having to worry about how that translates to acceptability in society.  It’s extrodinarily satisfying to know that you can truly create something from nothing, and I honestly don’t know how people live their lives without some form of art.

From the 'Brazil' series by Seren Moran

From the ‘Brazil’ series by Seren Moran

4. If you have artistic/creative role models, who are they and how do you relate to them?

I’ve actually found that most of my artistic role models are non visual artists.  I have friends and collegues that I really admire and who inspire me. These are poets, actors, musicians, directers, and writers, yet few painters.  I think my inspiration comes more from the way people think, feel and how they view the world, rather than which art form they use to express their creativity.The creative process and artistic mind are similar regardless of medium.  I will say that my brother is a huge role model, and I really can’t imagine being where I am without him.  He is an actor and director and I couldn’t feel more proud or lucky to be his little sister.

5. Can you describe your technical processes? How do you make the images, what materials do you use, etc…?

It really depends.  I don’t have one way of working, and I like that.  Sometimes I work from life and do sketches that then turn into paintings, sometimes I take photos and paint directly from those withtout sketching at all, sometimes I sketch from my imagination or from photos and then paint, sometimes I make collages and paint from the collage using that as a sketch, and then sometimes I just paint, with no plan or image ahead of time.  In regards to medium, I’m in love with oil paint.  In Brazil and some months prior, I was forced to paint in acrylics which initially was frustrating but actually turned out for the best.  I experimented with more geometric styles and linear forms that I might not have otherwise.  And now I actually do a lot of my paintings with an acrylic undercoat and paint with oils on top, which I am loving.

6. You have traveled quite a bit. How does this influence your work?

Greatly! My environment influences my work regardless of where I am, traveling or not.  If I am present and in the moment, then where I am, who I am with and what I am doing in my life are always going to be reflected in my work.  So traveling has of course changed my work significantly.  Adjusting to a different culture, language, lifestyle and country has had a huge impact on who I am, how I view the world, and therefore my art as well.  I think one of the contributing factors to my “Brasil Series” being so stylistically different than my other series’ was that literally the style and way of my life was so different when living there.

From the 'Brazil' series by Seren Moran

From the ‘Brazil’ series by Seren Moran

7.  Where do you see yourself and your art practice in say 10 years?

Honestly, I just hope I’m still painting.  However that happens, whether I’m successful as an artist or not, I just hope that regardless of what job I have, family or not, that I am at least painting…even if no one sees it.  That’s what matters most to me.  But of course it doesn’t hurt to have some recognition along the way.

8. How do you feel about contemporary art and your contribution to it?

Gosh, “contemporary” art… I suppose I could ramble on about what that even really means, but all in all I have mixed feelings about most of what I see in regards to “contemporary” art.  Not always, but at times I feel that a lot of art today is becoming overly conceptualized.  I don’t think there is a better or worse between conceptual art and emotive art, but I find more and more artists becoming highly concerned with the ideas behind their works which for me often times falls flat and doesn’t move me.   Something primarily conceptual can certainly cause you to feel and something primarily emotive can certainly cause you to think, and in my eyes both are equally important. I’m contributing by allowing the emotive aspect to take form and the thinking and relecting to happen afterward, by myself and my viewers.  This is the most organic and honest way I have found to approaching my art.

From the 'Brazil' series by Seren Moran

From the ‘Brazil’ series by Seren Moran

9. What is the most important thing you want viewers to come away from your work with?

Anything a viewer takes from my work is important, whether it’s a feeling or idea, bad or good.  The worst thing someone can say about my art is that they don’t remember it.

11 questions with artist Leslie Supnet

The 11 Question Interview Series continues with artist Leslie Supnet sharing her thoughts on drawing and animation. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see the featured portfolio.

'Revenge'  by Leslie Supnet

‘Revenge’ by Leslie Supnet

1. When did you first begin to draw seriously? Or rather…take your drawings seriously enough to consider sharing them?

It was after meeting my partner, Clint Enns, that I decided to share my work and have an exhibition at local gallery in 2007 – Semai Gallery, owned and operated by Winnipeg based artist Takashi Iwasaki. Clint was very supportive, and encouraged me to think about actually having an art practice. In return, I did the same for him, pushing him to make films.

2. How did drawing translate into animation? Was there a sharp learning curve?

As my arts practice started to emerge, I became interested in artist-run centers and creative communities in Winnipeg. I signed up for a circuit-bending workshop at Video Pool Media Arts Centre, and after that started voraciously taking workshops there and at the Winnipeg Film Group – animation, filmmaking, Super 8 and 16mm experiments and editing. Definitely the animation process became easier over time.

'Hand Cranked VHS' by Leslie Supnet

‘Hand Cranked VHS’ by Leslie Supnet

3. Can you describe your technical process a bit. Do you sketch out ideas? How do you turn your drawings into animations?

I usually think of an experience, or emotion I would like to concentrate a drawing or animation on, then think of a good title that conveys that experience. Humor has always been a healthy way of coping with grief or tragedy for me, so I try to infuse that in my titles which then carries over into the animated narrative. This is how some of my drawings turn into animations — there’s always a back story in my drawings.

4. If you have artistic/creative role models, who are they and how do you relate to them?

Margaret Kilgallen is someone I look up too. She was a San Francisco visual artist, street artist and musician who passed away, loosing a battle with cancer in 2001. The way she drew from folk art, hand painted signs in her neighborhood, and the beauty of every day life, and created art that was sincere which didn’t need art-speak to justify its existence was really inspiring.

'Sunny Day' by Leslie Supnet

‘Sunny Day’ by Leslie Supnet

5. What is most satisfying to you about the creative process? 

Figuring out a way to communicate an experience or feeling with colour, movement and light. And intuitively knowing you’ve hit on something, that usually I can feel in the gut area. I really really really enjoy that! It’s like that moment you get a joke. Pure joy.

6. Your work seems to have ‘characters’ that are pulled from various sources. How do you define these roles for your ‘cast’?

The characters in my drawings and animations started off to be fairly generic, with the intention to be as universal as possible, rather than be specific. Hence the lack of hair colour, and ambiguous ethnicity in my early characters. But when someone thought I was only drawing Caucasian blondes, I knew I had to address that with specificity. So with my animation Gains + Losses, I decided to draw upon characters in my own life and experience, the central character in that work my cousin who committed suicide in March of 2010. Since then I’ve drawn upon people around me, and also base a lot of the characters on myself.

7. You have also studied mathematics. How does that influence your work?

I graduated with a BSc in Statistics. I’m not sure if that education influences my work at all, on a conscious level anyway.

8. How autobiographical is your work?

Most if not all my work draws on personal experience. Though personal, I focus on experiences most of us go through – loss, grief, longing, loneliness, awkwardness and love.

'The Nature of Schemes' by Leslie Supnet

‘The Nature of Schemes’ by Leslie Supnet

9. How do you feel about contemporary art and your contribution to it?

Since I started animating, I’ve been focusing more on the black box than the white box. I really do enjoy experimental film – making it, watching it (other people’s work!) – over anything else at the moment. I really like the nature and experience of experimental moving images – accessible, ephemeral, hard to monetize. I find it more freeing than making art objects that often gets a value attached to it to be sold to whoever can afford it.

10. What, if anything, do you want viewers to learn from your work?

What I hope people take from my work is a sense of empathy and connection.

11. What can you add that would help us understand you and/or your work better?

I’m an introvert, and spend a lot of time looking inward for answers. I trust my intuition and feel that when I listen to myself, it’s the most honest thing I can do.

11 questions with artist Clint Enns

The 11 Question Interview Series continues with artist Clint Enns sharing his thoughts on cinema, history, and video games. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see the featured portfolio. Interview with Peter Hayes.

Clint Enns

Clint Enns

PH: How did you first become interested in exploring film, cinema, and photography?

CE: I first began making films in 2006 and I was an avid cinephile for many years before that.  The first film I made was for the One Take Super 8 Event in Winnipeg, Manitoba – an event where filmmakers shoot a roll of Super 8 and the first time they are seen is unedited in an audience full of people.  My partner, Leslie Supnet, pushed me into making it and I had a blast.  Since that time I haven’t been able to stop making films.

I began taking photos in 2010 when my friend Ashley Gillanders, a Winnipeg photographer, shared a disposable camera with me.

In 2011, I made photography a part of my practice while taking a course titled The Practice with Toronto filmmaker Mike Hoolboom at York University. The course was about exploring cinema and our practice through Buddhist philosophy, which may sound cheesy, however, the course was totally amazing.

PH: Can you articulate what you are looking for when creating your work?

CE: I really believe in fun formalism, that is, entertaining films and videos that explore and experiment with the formal elements filmmaking.  I attempt to make works that not only experiment with form but distance themselves from the supposedly “boring” world of avant-garde film.  I am interested in experimenting with the medium itself and its underlying structure.  Currently, pursuing a Masters degree in Cinema and Media Studies at York University has lead me to theorize about medium specific explorations.

PH: What is most satisfying to you about the creative process?

CE: In general, I love making films and videos, however, the most satisfying part is when a work breaks your expectations and you produce something better than you imagined it would be.  It doesn’t happen very often, but when it does it is like “Oh shit, I made that it.  Awesome!”

Clint Enns

Clint Enns

PH: If you have artistic/creative role models, who are they and how do you relate to them?

CE: The support and camaraderie of the Winnipeg film community means the world to me.  There is definitely something happening there.  Filmmakers and video artists like Michael Snow, Guy Maddin, Shana Moulton, Wendy Geller, George Kuchar, James Benning and Owen Land have had a huge influence on my own practice, specifically their use of humour.  I think the use of sound in Benning’s work is incredibly clever and humorous.

On that note, I believe humour and satire is an effective form of critique.   For instance, consider the way in which Owen Land makes fun of Hollis Frampton in Wide Angel Saxon or the structuralists in Film in Which There Appear Edge Lettering, Sprocket Holes, Dirt Particles, Etc.

Some people take art making too seriously.  Relax, it’s only art.

PH: How does your study of mathematics influence your work?

CE: Mathematics has helped me to develop problem solving abilities.  In addition it has provided me with an interest in abstract structures.

On a practical note, it has provided me with the ability to write basic code and at the very least it has provided me with the ability to hack other peoples more complex code.

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Clint Enns

PH: Your work references history and specifically film history while adding a contemporary twist. What specifically about film inspires you as opposed to, for example, painting history?

CE: Cinema speaks to me more than painting.  I like how the field is fairly new and rapidly evolving.

Some people view seminal avant-garde films as sacred, however, to me, they are another database of found footage.  With that being said, I reference historical works in order to develop a dialogue between my work and the original.  It is also a chance to pay homage to the my favourite films and filmmakers.

PH: In addition to appropriating imagery and technology, how big a fan of video games are you? Thoughts on the evolution of gaming technology?

CE: I like video games, however, I wouldn’t consider myself a gamer.  I am more interested in game art and game technologies than I am in playing video games.  I am convinced that the evolution of gaming technologies, especially in regards to game art, is directly linked to our understanding of the underlying structure of digital video.  Furthermore, I feel that video games provide us with a better reflection of contemporary culture practices than television at this point.  In regards to my own practice, I view video games as another source of found footage.

PH: Where do you want to see your art career in, say, ten years?

CE: I hopefully will be alive in ten years.  If I am there is a good chance I will be making making, watching and writing about films and videos.   In addition, I will continue to be an active member of my local film and video community.

PH: How do you feel about contemporary art and your contribution to it?

CE: I believe strongly that making contributing to the experimental film and video scene means more than just making experimental films and videos.  To me this taking part in the community through writing, programming, interviewing, reading, theorizing and watching.  If artists aren’t interested in each other work and aren’t creating dialogue, how can we expect others to be interested.

ImageJ=1.45p

Clint Enns

PH: What is the most important thing you want viewers to come away from your work with? What, if anything do you want them to learn through your work?

CE:  My videos are experiments and explorations.  With that being said, they aren’t intended to be instructional.  I hope people enjoy them.

PH: What can you add that would help us understand you and/or your work better?

CE:  If anyone has any questions about my work, feel free to contact me.

Culture Shut Down

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Public call: Day of Museum Solidarity – March 4, 2013

Call on museums and galleries across the globe to demonstrate solidarity with threatened Bosnian cultural institutions.

February 20: Sign up to participate
March 1: Take action, upload image
March 4: Promote the collective action
Organizer:
Dr. Azra Aksamija and the international platform www.cultureshutdown.net

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March 4, the date of this Day of Museum Solidarity, marks the six-month anniversary of the Zemaljski Muzej’s closure. This crisis in Bosnia-Herzegovina requires political, economic, and institutional solutions. By participating in the Day of Museum Solidarity, you will make an important and much needed contribution to resolving this crisis. This call is supported by CIMAM and more than 40 museums, galleries and universities across the globe. To participate, follow the simple directions provided on the CULTURESHUTDOWN website.

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Artist Marketing Resources

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ArtistMarketingResources

ArtistMarketingResources provides their artist readers with news and information about art careers, calls for art and exhibitions. Regular updates to the blog make the site a valuable tool for anyone looking to stay informed about calls for work and other art related news.

Check it out here: artistmarketingresources.com

Tell Me a Tale

Tell Me a Tale: An anthology of 20 short stories published by Fluster Magazine & Armida Publications Ltd.

As a celebration of the inspiration and creativity that went into the Tell us a Tale Short Story Competition, Fluster Magazine and Armida Publications put together a collection of the 20 best short stories submitted by authors (published and unpublished alike), the world over. The stories are diverse in scope and theme and were inspired by photographs in Fluster Magazine’s Flickr Pool.

For more information see: armidabooks.com or flustermagazine.com

vote 2012

Shepard Fairey: http://www.obeygiant.com

 

The Rock the Vote election center is a great resource for finding your registration status.

ArtsVote is a national initiative by Americans for the Arts geared towards ensuring that the arts impact federal elections. See highlights here.

Also from Americans for the Arts – a Congressional Report Card to help you make art-informed decisions at the polls.

Here is an interesting gallery of images with the theme of ‘Power’ for the 2012 election commissioned by CNN.

Palimpsest

A Coup d’Espace project curated by Steven H. Silberg and Neil C. Jones

Dates: October 12 – November 9, 2012

Location: 2023 Massachusetts Ave, NW, Wash, DC

Curated by: Steven H. Silberg and Neil C. Jones

Participating artists: Jesse Morgan Barnett, Scott Blake, Patterson Clark, Jarrett Davis, Samantha DiRosa, Gary Duehr, Mark Geil, Julee Holcomb, Ryan Hoover, Miyakawa, Michele Montalbano, Matteo Pasin, Jessica Rowshandel, Sarah Sachs, Ali Seley, s/n coalition, Eric Souther, and Erika Stearly.

Opening Reception: October 12, 6:00-8:00pm

Palimpsest is a Coup d’Espace project curated by Steven H. Silberg and Neil C. Jones. which explores the constant layering of information in contemporary society and the impact technological advancements have on the ways we represent and receive information.

As digital texts—documents, photographs, video—become ubiquitous, we adapt to new ways of reading, adjusting to the layers of information these digital texts contain. In recent years, the QR code has become a common way of relaying additional information, allowing users with the correct technology to access additional data in everything from advertisements and museum exhibitions to business cards and printed books. But what if the QR code became the contemporary representation of information, displacing the original information? It wouldn’t be the first time that newer “text” has superseded the old. Throughout the history of the written word, parchments and vellum have been scraped clean of their original text and reused. Over time, that original text (the scriptio inferior) resurfaces through natural means or scientific research. An immediate relationship between the original text and new text is constructed through their juxtaposition.

Palimpsest alters the experience of viewing individual works of art by forcing viewers to experience the works through the mediation of this new technology. Artwork selected for the exhibition has been documented before being whitewashed or otherwise obliterated. A QR code, which links to the original documentation of the artwork, has been placed on the surface of each individual piece. While the individual works already address the layering of information, the very act of viewing the exhibition will force viewers to experience the layering and mediation the works address. Including work in a range of media—painting, photography, video, and sound—Palimpsest asks what these new methods of representing information mean for artists and their work.

ABOUT THE CURATORS
Steven H. Silberg is an image-influenced, pixel-based cross media artist with a background ranging from photography to book conservation. Working in print, video, and interactive installation, he engages new media as a literalist. For him, the pixel and structure of the digital image is as important as the composition and content. Created in Baltimore, his work has been enjoyed regionally, at venues including Baltimore’s Artscape, the University of Maryland, and the Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts; nationally, at the University of Texas, Dallas, Missouri State University in Springfield, MO, and Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, CA; and internationally at the Third Beijing International New Media Arts Exhibition and Symposium. He was selected as the Winner of The Washington Post’s 2010 Real Art DC competition and has been selected as a semi-finalist for the 2012 Trawick Prize. Silberg received his MFA from MICA in 2004 and his BFA from the University of Delaware in 1997. He is a Lecturer in Foundations, concentrating in Photography and Video, at UMBC.

Neil C. Jones is a photographer and faculty member at the Maryland Institute College of Art and Anne Arundel Community College. His work has been exhibited nationally in Atlanta, GA, Baltimore, MD, New York, NY, and Washington, DC, and internationally in Heidelberg, Germany, and Lacoste, France. He holds an MFA in Photographic and Electronic Media from the Maryland Institute College of Art , an MA in Digital Photography from the Savannah College of Art and Design and a BA in English Literature from the University of Delaware. In 2012, he was awarded an Individual Artist Award for Photography by the Maryland State Arts Council.

ABOUT COUP D’ESPACE
Coup d’Espace is WPA’s member-generated programming series. By inviting member artists and curators to plan installations, exhibitions, and events in its office project space, WPA provides a venue for unusual collaborations, exploration of new concepts, and the production of new and experimental work. Coup d’Espace allows artists and curators to utilize the WPA office as a laboratory or workshop space, to introduce new and in-process projects and present challenging ideas.

Creative Mornings

CreativeMornings is a free, monthly breakfast lecture series for creative types. There are chapters in 29 cities across the world, including San Francisco. Some have dubbed it “TED for the rest of us”.

For upcoming events, and a great video archive of past talks, check out creativemornings.com

National Arts and Humanities Month

President Obama issued a White House proclamation that recognizes the value of the arts and humanities!

“We must recognize the contributions of the arts and humanities not only by supporting the artists of today, but also by giving opportunities to the creative thinkers of tomorrow. Educators across our country are opening young minds, fostering innovation, and developing imaginations through arts education.”

new featured artist: Dan McHale

pivot art gallery is pleased to present the next artist portfolio in the ongoing series at pivotartgallery.com

visit the site to see the fantastic animation by Dan McHale!

McHale - animation still from 'Spear, Fish, Boat' - 2011

Callfor.org – new online resource

Callfor.org is an new initiative of the Tupajumi foundation that features 
international calls for art where no fees are needed to participate/enter. 
Currently featuring only arts but design & architectural calls will be 
coming soon, according to the site. Looks like it will become a great resource!
Search for calls or post your own open call here: Callfor.org

Take 5: Art Break Day

What: Take 5: Art Break Day. Hosted by Art is Moving
Where: San Francisco Bay Area, California
When: September 2, 2011

Details: This free public event encourages attendees to “Take an Art Break” and provides supplies and a space to create art. It will happen simultaneously in five different cities – San Francisco, San Rafael, Richmond, Berkeley, and Oakland from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM.

Booths and tables will be set up and there will be free access to art supplies, including paint brushes, paper, pencils, paints, and crayons. Everyone is welcome to make art for free. No prior art-making experience is necessary to attend the event.

More Details: artismovingnow.com

Remixing Revolution: Art, Music and Politics | National Radio Project

For many activists, supporting the arts is fundamental to creating social awareness, environmental sustainability and political change even when economic times are hard.Listen as artists talk about how they make an impact.

radioproject.org.

xs art gallery

very cool online art gallery showing work from artists around the world. check it out here: xs-artgallery.com

YBCA – Bay Area Now

Chris Fraser, One line drawing the view from my studio window — credit: courtesy of the artist


don’t miss Part II of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts sixth edition of its signature triennial event, Bay Area Now, a celebration of regional artists across an array of disciplines, from performance to visual art, to film/video.

when: July 9 – October 22, 2011
where: YBCA, 701 Mission Street, San Francisco, Calif.
more info: www.ybca.org

Blue Star Museums

Blue Star Museums is an NEA initiative offering free admission to museums for active duty military personnel ( & their families) from Memorial Day, May 30, through Labor Day, September 5, 2011.

Find more info here: arts.gov/national/bluestarmuseums

Reinvesting in Arts Education

The President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities (PCAH) announces the release of its landmark report Reinvesting in Arts Education: Winning America’s Future Through Creative Schools.

After 18 months of research, meetings, and site visits the report represents an in-depth review of the current condition of arts education as well as recommendations for federal, state and local policymakers.

read the pdf document here: Reinvesting in Arts Education

11 questions with artist Scott F. Hall

The 11 Question Interview Series continues with intermedia artist Scott F. Hall sharing his thoughts on art. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see his featured portfolio.

Scott F. Hall, still from "Video Self-Portrait" 2009

1. How did you become interested in making sound art?

Answering this one requires a *lot* of words.

I was involved in visual art in extracurricular study by age 5–by 1968, as a tiny kid taking some afternoon art classes at Colorado College.  I lived in Colorado Springs from age 2 to 8.  My earliest artist-formative memories involved me within a rather ideal nuclear family home life punctuated by repeatedly gazing at the sublime beauty of the local landscape: bare desert to red rocks to pale and rounded boulders to grassy rolling hills to the snowcapped Rocky Mountains.  I remember riding in the backseat of my parents’ car: I would observe that romantic landscape while simultaneously hearing the most amazing new progressive rock music playing on the radio—mind bending, sweet, deep, and ultimately timeless pieces like “Close to the Edge” by the British band Yes.  That combined experience of visible beauty encompassing me in the round while also hearing the most artful and positive new electric sounds of the day was something I’ll never forget.

The first instrument I specifically noticed in the mix and obsessed on in the early ‘70s was Chris Squire’s harpsichord-like Rickenbacker bass–specifically in the hit Yes song “Roundabout”.  That was surely the start of sound *as* art for me: I listened not just to the music but also to the subtle tones and nuances lying *within* single notes.  I realized by then that all one needed to express in sound was deep engagement with complex, intricate, and yet minimal timbre.

From 1972 to ‘74, I lived in western Turkey–there, I was amazed on weekends at the sight of ruined ancient Greek cities–not everyone knows that western Turkey held some of numerous city states comprising ancient Greece to the west, east, and the Aegean islands in between.  I often saw Ephesus and Troy in Turkey and Athens, too, over in modern Greece itself.  All the while, I was still listening to Yes–in my head this time. Ruined classical architecture combined with a mental art rock soundtrack and, no doubt, the alien beauty of being awakened each morning by Islamic muazzin chants coming from mosque towers—this was a major step toward my ultimate passion for all things visibly and audibly aesthetic.

By the age of 12, I was back in America and began reading music, playing brass instruments in bands, and ultimately, played rock music in high school and college on electric bass while making visual art on the side.  In time, I quit the ’80s rock music performance scene–it seemed too much like a commercially restricted “folk art” path for me to maintain as my primary focus.  So I returned to college and completed BFA and MFA degrees in sculpture. Sculpture was by the early ‘90s the most open creative field in which to work on (or in) anything: image, sound, material, and performance.  Then and now, anything goes in the expanded field of sculpture.  By the time I had my MFA in 1994, I was building odd acoustic and electronic instruments, working with electronic audio sampling and synthesis, and recording interesting noise that was presented in whole room synaesthetic installations of sound and computer-animated light.  Observers would enter these dimly lit spaces and emerge sometimes 30 minutes later in an altered state—in trance.

Today, my motivation to make art in image, in object, in video, and especially in sound occurs as a summation of these experiences.  At 47, I continue to blend the past with the present—I constantly strive to grow and change.

2. If you have artistic/creative role models, who are they and how do you relate to them?

I’ve mentioned the band Yes–they are quite important to me. There are many others that influenced me–a lot of rock musicians certainly: Peter Gabriel, Kate Bush.  Also Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson, and Neil Peart in Rush, for sure.  Sadly, these people are not taken too seriously in academic, critical, and theoretical circles—that is a shame.  They may be part of pop culture, but they have had enormous impact on thousands of creative people who don’t settle for the average but push forward toward excellence and innovation.

Of course, visual artist are also a huge influence on me.  We would be nowhere in contemporary international art these days without Marcel Duchamp–he is absolutely key.  Others I admire are really too numerous to name in full but I’ll cite a few here so you get a sense of my interests: Anish Kapoor, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Damien Hirst, Matthew Barney, Lee Bul, Luigi Russolo, Marina Abramović, Richard Long, Wolfgang Laib, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Wim Delvoye.

3. What types of music/sound/art influences you?

I’ve mentioned some of my musician interests above.  I haven’t mentioned more classical forms and people yet: I certainly enjoy western European Medieval and Renaissance recordings and the usual list of known characters a bit later in time: Beethoven, Mozart, Bach, etc.  I like some of the more abstract 12-tone stuff circa early 20th century: Schonberg, Berg, Webern.  I like roots electronica: Clara Rockmore in association with Léon Theremin. Much more recently, I like Philip Glass, an innovative 10-string classical guitarist named Dominic Frasca, and lately, a new star violinist from England–Ruth Palmer .  Electric bass players of high merit impress me, of course: Geddy Lee, Stanley Clarke, Michael Manring, and Les Claypool.

4. What else inspires you?

This might sound rather cheesy but I certainly noticed as a child that hippies and creative people in many fields were avidly promoting love, peace, and kindness.  I think these are still the most important things in life–every person on the planet should work to advance them in some way every day.  In doing so, the same comes back to you–what a great and positive cycle to join into.

5. What do you learn through your work?

Every time I create something new, I realize once again–very much to my complete personal satisfaction–that invention remains quite endless.  I think there is a magic top hat of creativity out there: each time one dips one’s hand down into it through focused, true, and ambitious creative effort, one has great potential to pull out a gem. It happens again and again and again.

6. How long does it take to create a piece? What is your process like in general?

I do have flash visions sometimes of images and sounds that are complete–simply sketching the proposed work onto a page or writing it down in words or notes is enough to capture it for future reference.  Sometimes, I’ve heard complete sound pieces in overnight sleep–in dreams containing both sound and image.  Upon waking, I immediately record what I’ve heard.  At other times, the process is more mundane and open: I proceed to make sound and record it or I proceed to capture sound in the field like a photographer captures images found before him.

Depending on the medium, pieces can be finished in minutes, in hours, or off-and-on though the protracted labor of days, weeks, and months.  I find that a complete sound series is never longer than an hour.  To complete an hour of sound, it takes me a full year at least.  Sometimes, though, series of sound art I am building are created in parallel: two or three bodies of work may be developed alongside each other.  This means my release time on completed bodies of work might drop to every 6 or 8 months.

7. What is most satisfying to you about the creative process?

As stated in prior responses here, I am continually satisfied personally by my constant ability to invent new work.  Especially in the sense that these pieces often seem to come to me from a source outside myself–not so much from within–I have a real sense of being *given* each work.  This experience is very much in line with the traditional concept of artistic gift.  For me, then, the lifestyle of chronic creative making provides evidence of the existence of something seemingly conscious and “other” which is outside the self—it’s perhaps best referred to as “spirit”.  No doubt, it is a positive spirit (or spirits) in my view.  Though my latest work in sound has gone quite dark and intense compared to most I produced in past, this darkness is not a reflection of a sense of a deep negative within *me*.  On the contrary, I’m quite satisfied, quite happy—more so every day.  I feel the darkness that pervades my work this year is directly connected to struggle that persists out in the world—to global climate change, to the constancy of people on the planet who pursue an agenda that is evil, and perhaps to the global economic crisis that has lingered on for years now in so many ways.

8. Do you consider yourself a musician or a sound artist? If there is a difference in these terms for you, could you elaborate?

I usually refer to myself as an “intermedia artist” in order to concisely express to the audience in just two words the notion that I *do* feel free to make creative work in any medium I wish to and often, those mediums and practices intermingle in a hybrid way.  Following behind that two-word term, I sometimes refer to myself as “sound artist” and sometimes simply as “artist”.  When I focus the terminology yet more and refer to myself as a musician, sculptor, or photographer, my intention is to definitely raise in the audience an awareness that I intend them (during a particular exhibition) to see me in the limited context of a particular craft.

9. How do you feel about the contemporary art world and your contribution to it?

I think we are truly blessed to be living in fairly peaceful, safe, and comfortable times in which so many creative pursuits are honored in the majority worldwide culture–which is a culture that is admittedly still very much descended from the western European tradition of forward-bound progress.  These days, classic and traditional forms of art and craft are revered as are hybrid and experimental forms of all description that emerge and merge and keep everything vital, alive, and fresh.  Work is inhabited now by the free influence of what used to be termed “The Other”–worldwide aesthetic creative culture has benefited so much from embracing difference.  Also, I’m pleased that the breakdown of The High and The Low occurred especially through Postmodernism in the ’80s.  Since then, I’ve observed a grand opening up, validation, and explosion of varieties of venues and levels of art and craft practice, each operating within its own more liberally defined confines of theory and criticism.  Surely, this growth also came as a consequence of the boom in electronic media and communications in the ’90s.  In sum, we live in an age in which an artist or craftsman experiences more freedom than ever to make, to show, and to interact with others and shine brightly within the niche area of her greatest interest.  It’s an excellent time to be alive and to be making and showing work.

But specifically in reference to THE contemporary international art world–the single, highest art world; the one that stands apart as the pinnacle in which perhaps there exists just a handful of significant galleries, museums, and perhaps just 1,000+ major collectors: I am truly pleased that it still exists and basically flourishes in its vast accumulated wealth.  Wouldn’t we all just love to rise to visibility at that highest level?   Fame and fortune–these are wonderful dreams that are definitely still possible here in 2011–hopefully, dreams that are pursued in conjunction with a life lived in love, peace, and kindness.

10. What is the most important thing you want an audience to come away from your work with?

In the best case, I want them to take home an original physical object which they can cherish and hold onto for life—a signed limited edition sound art CD, for example, a drawing, a print, a sculpture.  If not that, then I hope they take with them a pleasant memory of my work and a pleasant memory of me.

11. What can you add that would help us understand you and/or your work better?

I’ll simply reitterate in reference to all of us who make, to all of us who both make and observe, and to all of those who do not make work but enjoy seeing and hearing Art:

Fame and fortune–these are wonderful dreams that are definitely still possible here in 2011– hopefully, dreams that are pursued in conjunction with a life lived in love, peace, and kindness.

–Scott F. Hall, 29 April 2011

Amp Wall

Daniel McCormick at Brower Center

This gallery show features installations of ecological restoration materials that are usually only experienced on site. It is a unique opportunity to learn more about the work of this important artist and his interweaving of art, design, and ecological restoration.

when: January 27 – May 11, 2011

where: The David Brower Center, Berkeley, CA

more info here: browercenter.org

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