Film

Back from Painting Trip

Back from a wonderful time in Provincetown or PTown as it is affectionately known by the locals. I loved the light and color and worked on a series of lighthouses, ocean scenes and marsh/ponds while I was there. Here's a work in progress from the marsh photo that I share in an earlier post.

Studio Marsh

Marsh-1

I caught up with some old friends there and had a wonderful dinner in an old building along the sea shore in Provincetown. The building was bought up many years ago by a collective of artists and writers. Amongst the company that night were fellow artists and sea-faring adventurers who spent most of their time in boats on the ocean. One lovely man that I met, Richard Bailey, was captain of the Tall Ship Rose, a replica of an 18th century Royal Navy frigate that cruised the American coast during the Revolutionary War. The boat was used during the making of Peter Weir's "Master and Commander.

Hmsrose Med

HMS Rose 2002 © 2003 Scott Kennedy

Amongst the painters was Paul Resika, colorist and student of Hans Hoffman.

I didn't get a chance to visit the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center but plan on visiting during my next visit. Here's a bit of history:

"The Fine Arts Work Center buildings are historic art studios in a town that is famous for its contributions to art history. For over a hundred years, artists and writers have found the atmosphere of Provincetown on the tip of Cape Cod particularly suited to them. Henry Thoreau was probably the first writer to come to Provincetown, in 1849. Eugene O'Neill wrote his first play here at a time when he was known to the art community as an obscure writer of one-act plays. O'Neill's first play was produced by the Provincetown Players the winter of 1916, before he went to New York with his actors to win recognition and fame. John Dos Passos lived and worked in Provincetown. In the late 20's, he was known by the artists not as a writer but as a painter who showed his paintings with them at the local Provincetown Art Association. Stanley Kunitz, Norman Mailer, Alan Dugan, B. H. Friedman, and Mark Strand are contemporary writers who have lived and worked in Provincetown and are active in the Work Center Program.

Charles Hawthorne is credited with founding the first art colony in America in Provincetown in 1899. Starting in 1914, Hawthorne lived and worked in studios of what is now the Fine Arts Work Center. Among his students in the teens were Edwin Dickinson, Ross Moffett and Karl Knaths, all living and working in the studios of 24 Pearl Street, and later gaining national and international acclaim. Fritz Bultman, Paul Burlin, Adolph Gottlieb, Helen Frankenthaler, Myron Stout, and Marsden Hartley are among other famous artists who worked in these studios. Hans Hofmann, Franz Kline, Mark Rothko, Robert Motherwell, Claus Oldenburg, Milton Avery, Jack Tworkov and Edward Hopper have all participated in the art community here. Important paintings by Charles Demuth, Marsden Hartley, Stuart Davis, and Edward Hopper have centered around their involvement in this small seaport town."

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Nicole Kidman to Play Diane Arbus

Nicole Kidman and Robert Downey Jr. have signed on to star in Fur, director Stephen Shainberg’s biopic on photographer Diane Arbus.

Diane Arbus was a New York photographer known for her disturbing, always candid photographs of freaks, losers, and others on the fringe of American society. She committed suicide in 1971. No doubt Nicole will be able to drawn on her experience in filming "The Hours", a portrayal of Virginia Wolf, when rounding out the character of Diane.

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Two ladies at the automat, N.Y.C. 1966
Copyright © 1980 The Estate of Diane Arbus, LLC

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Frank Lloyd Wright on Humility

Having always been fascinated by the enigma of Frank Lloyd Wright, his architecture, and persona, I enjoyed this quote attributed to him at Artquotes in this morning's email.

Early in life I had to choose between honest arrogance and hypocritical humility. I chose the former and have seen no reason to change.

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Frank Lloyd Wright, photographed in 1952

I guess that the difference between “honest arrogance” and “hypocritical humility” is a very subjective thing, but it makes sense to me. Without honesty at the beginning, the rest of the sentence is essentially meaningless. It certainly helped Wright to create an incredible artistic legacy.

Architectural writer, Robert Campbell, had this to say about Wright:

The greatest artist this country has ever produced seems at last to be coming into his own. America's other great artists -- our painters, sculptors, composers - don't really rank with the tops of all time. They're not Rembrandt or Michelangelo or Beethoven. Wright alone has that standing

In my dreams I live in a beautiful prairie-style mansion, inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright, overlooking the ocean at Makena Beach in Maui - similar to the one in Josse Ford's painting, “House at Makena II”. Its a sacred place - one that I hope to bring into physical reality someday.

To learn more about Frank Lloyd Wright's amazing life and legacy, visit the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation or view the wonderful PBS documentary.

Ansel Adams: American Experience - an excellent documentary

I watched "Ansel Adams: An American Experience" last night on DVD. I would highly recommend it. Ansel Adams was a Modernist photographer known for his stunning black and white photographs of Yosemite. I've always loved his work but didn't know much about his life. I don't know about you but I have sometimes rented DVDs on great artist's and ended up falling asleep after about ten minutes.

This documentary was really interesting and full of insight into the turning points and influences in Ansel Adam's life. Some of the things I learnt:

  • Ansel was a hyperactive handful when he was a child. His father had the courage to pull him out of school where he was failing. Instead he looked for the boy's unique interests and hired the best instructors he could find to home school him. Even though he was struggling financially he paid $6000 for a really good piano to foster Ansel's dream of becoming a concert pianist. In his later years Ansel Adams said that he owed everything he had become to his father's love.
  • Ansel originally wanted to become a concert pianist. He spend up to 6 hours a day. The rigorous discipline and focus he learnt from this carried over into his approach to photography. He worked incredibly hard on his photography. Taking photographs every day, unless he was recovering from a hangover.
  • He worried about money for most of his life and concern led him to work very hard. The interesting thing is that most of his best work was done when he didn't have much money. (I have noticed this pattern of financial uncertainty in many great artists lives. Perhaps too much comfort leads to mediocre work, pandering to the market. What do you think?)
  • One of his major turning points was when Alfred Stieglitz dubbed him an artist, and said that it was some of the finest photography work he had seen. In those days to be named by Stieglitz was the Holy Grail of art photographers.
  • Ansel Adam's purpose was to capture the way he felt in his photographs when he looked at the stunning Sierra Nevada ranges.
  • In his later life he was an activist for the environment. After he died a mountain peak was named after him

So go check the DVD out. I rented mine from Netflix.


"Ansel Adams - A Documentary Film" (Ric Burns)

Stranded whales - are they trying to tell us something? More than coincidence?

Mankind has long enjoyed a special relationship with whales. They are highly developed beings with very large & complex brains. It has been clearly shown scientifically that the whales have a brain proportionately larger than Humans & in some ways far more developed, that they have clearly identifiable, highly evolved emotions such as joy, compassion, humor & emotional self control, that they live in large complex social groups that live in great harmony.

Whales are often associated with dreams and people who have swum with the dolphins often describe the experience as if being in a dream. The ancient bond between dolphins and humans bridges two worlds - the worlds of sea and land. The strength of this interspecies relationship is so powerful that dolphins and humans have even risked their lives to help each other in real life as well as myth.

Indigenous peoples especially have long considered whales to be sacred.

SEVERAL hundred mourners turned up at a funeral for a whale in central Vietnam where the animal is revered and considered a creature of god. The corpse of the 5m whale was discovered off Dong Tri beach in Quang Nam province a day earlier, a police officer said. Villagers brought the two-tonne mammal ashore and buried it in a traditional ceremony symbolising their respect.

"Local people believe the whale is a sacred animal because every time they bury a dead whale, the weather changes and it rains," the police officer said. "We started worshipping 'Sir Fish' in the 1950s, when it saved and brought ashore a fisherman after his boat capsized in a storm," said Nguyen Minh Hung.

"Sir Fish always helps fishermen in danger and warns us about it. Every time we see him near our port, it means there will be a storm or big rains, so we stay home and don't go fishing."

In Australian there is a tribe of Aborigines known as "People of the Whale". The Mirning believe that at the beginning of time a great white whale spirit called Jiderra came down from the Milky Way with the seven sisters dancing on his back, to create the earth and sky. It is at this sacred place, now known as the Head of the Bight, that some of the Mirning have communed with the whales for over a hundred thousand years. It is said that there is a prophecy that states that the coming together of Whales and Humanity will signal a great change in the people…bringing them back into balance with nature and therefore with God.

Whalesong Art
Whalesong Dreaming by David Jimenz

According to the Maori people the White Whale is their guardian. What people are to the land, the whale is to the sea. When the first ancestors made the long journey from Hawaiiki to New Zealand, whales led the boat to New Zealand.

I think all of us have enjoyed the word-of-mouth success of "WhaleRider." The movie is based on the Ngati Parou myth of Paikea who believed that their ancestor came to New Zealand from Hawaiiki on the back of a whale. Whales are sacred to them and a memorable scene in the film is where the whole village is frantically trying to save a pod of stranded whales that have come to shore in response to a call for help from the young girl heroine. The elder of the tribe believes that this signals an apocalyptic end to his tribe.

If you were to ask the Maori elders, what would they have to say about all the whale strandings in the past year? More than coincidence? A warning?


"Whale Rider" (Niki Caro)

So what's up with all the whale strandings around the world in the past year? Are the whales trying to tell us something?

  • Whales beach again in NZ after rescue attempt:On October 19th, 2002 19 pilot whales died on Friday on New Zealand's North Island having stranded themselves for the second time in two days, conservation workers said. The mammals were "very, very distressed," Department of Conservation spokesperson Wanda Vivequin told Reuters. "
  • On December 29th twenty adult female sperm whales were found washed up on a remote Australian beach but wildlife officials yesterday were unable to explain the third such mass stranding in the same area in a month. Scientists said it was impossible to tell if the mass beaching was linked to a huge earthquake recorded between Tasmania and Antarctica last week.
  • From November 28, 2004 to January 7, 2005, there have been recorded incidents of around 200 whale beachings on the coasts of the island of Tasmania, 240 km off the south-eastern coast of the Australian continent. This is an unprecedented number and has caused widespread concern.
  • On November 30, 2004, Australian Senator and Green Party Leader, Bob Brown, made a statement saying that ocean seismic tests to search for gas and oil should be stopped until the whale migration season had ended. His call followed the deaths of 19 long-finned pilot whales which beached at Tasmania's Maria Island the previous day. Just 24 hours earlier, 73 long-finned pilot whales and 25 bottlenose dolphins had been beached and had died.
  • Senator Brown said in both cases seismic tests, involving so-called sound bombing of ocean floors to test for oil and gas, were carried out in the days before the whales were stranded.
"There is growing evidence that such activities may impact on whales and dolphins, but research data is inconclusive," he said.
"However, the precautionary principle should apply and the tests, until shown to be safe, should stop - at least in whale migration seasons."
  • At least 37 whales beached themselves and died along the North Carolina shore on January 16 and 16, earlier this month soon after Navy vessels on a deep-water training mission off the coast used powerful sonar as part of the exercise. Although the Navy says any connection between the strandings and its active sonar is "unlikely" -- because the underwater detection system was used more than 200 miles from where the whales beached themselves -- it is cooperating with other federal agencies probing a possible link. Government fisheries officials, as well as activists for whales, say the fact that three species of whales died in the incident suggests that sonar may have been the cause.

Some of the leading theories as to why whales beach themselves include failure of geomagnetic reckoning, following a sick leader, parasitic infection, seeking land in time of extreme stress, chasing prey aggressively, and gentle shelving beaches that disrupt sonar navigation.

While no-one can come up with a definitive answer there does seem to be solid evidence that some of our human activities are impacting upon the everyday world of whales and dolphins in negative ways. Sonar tests involved in testing for oil, navy ship exercises have been shown to impact the very developed hearing of whales.

According to Mark Kaufman of the Washington Post, July 14, 2004:

WASHINGTON — Residents of Hanalei Bay on Kaua'i woke up last weekend to a distressing sight: As many as 200 melon-headed whales, a small and sociable species that usually stays in deep waters, were swimming in a tight circle as close as 100 feet from the beach, showing clear signs of stress.

To keep the animals from beaching, residents kept a vigil all day and through the night, until a flotilla of kayaks and outrigger canoes could be assembled to herd the animals back out to sea. So far, only one young whale has been found dead.

But among increasingly worried whale advocates and researchers, the event set off immediate alarm bells: Melon-headed whales are not known to beach themselves, and nothing like this mass stranding close call has occurred in Hawai'i for 150 years.

Several hours after the Hanalei Bay episode began, it was learned that a six-ship Navy fleet 20 miles out to sea had begun a sonar exercise the morning that the melon-headed whales headed toward shore.

So if we enjoyed the film "Whale Rider", and we like the idea of "swimming with the dolphins" shouldn't we also be willing to look at our behavior and how it might be impacting on our neighbors in the ocean? I believe that we are all connected and if dolphins and whales cannot speak for themselves then who will speak for them?

Art Of Saving Whales B

The Art of Saving Whales by Wyland

And how's this for uncanny? Indian Professor predicts earthquake based on whale strandings

On December 4, three weeks before the earthquake off Indonesia, an Indian academic, Dr Arunachalam Kumar, professor of anatomy at Kasturba Medical College at Mangalore in Karnataka, posted a note about a recent whale-stranding in Tasmania, and its possible implications, on a "listserve", an e-mail distributor, hosted by Princeton University.


About 120 whales stranded and died in Australia at the end of November and 50 pilot whales died on a Coromandel beach at the same time.

"It is my observation, confirmed over the years, that mass suicides of whales and dolphins that occur sporadically all over the world, are in some way related to change and disturbances in the electromagnetic field co-ordinates and possible realignments of geotectonic plates thereof," he wrote. "Tracking the data and plotting the locales of tremors and earthquakes, I am reasonably certain that major earthquakes usually follow within a week or two of mass breaching of cetacians [sic]. I have noted with alarm, the last week report of such mass deaths of marine mammals in an Australian beachside. I will not be surprised if within a few days a massive quake hits some part of the globe. The interrelationship between the unusual 'death-wish' of pods of whales and its inevitable aftermath, the earthquake, may need a further impassioned and unbiased looking into."

FURTHER READING

The Motorcycle Diaries

I wanted to see "The Motorcycle Diaries" ever since I saw the movie trailer. The film is the story of two young men who go on a long motorcycle journey through South America that changes their lives. As the movie trailer says "Before he knew where his life would take him. Before the world knew his name. One journey defined his life. Let the world change you and you can change the world."

The movie didn't disappoint. The film shows how at certain points in our life there are moments that define us and that reveal to us our place in the world. I didn't know anything much about Che Guevara or his story but what struck me in the film what his deep sense of connection that he felt with people and their struggles to create a better more dignified life for themselves. He had a big heart and a big love for life.

The scenes that most touched me in the movie were the ones that took place in the leprosy hospitals. In conditions that would have appalled most of us he chose to stand with the people, the poor, the diseased, the abandoned rather than view them from the somewhat lofty position that his status as a doctor awarded him.

This movie affected me quite deeply. I rushed out and bought the book. I would highly recommend it.


"The Motorcycle Diaries (Movie Tie-in Edition) : Notes on a Latin American Journey" (Ernesto Che Guevara)