Thursday, June 23, 2011

Bliss from the Koran


Bliss from the Koran


I'm going to be in a show at Western Exhibitions gallery in Chicago in...jeez....just a few weeks. The show is called "People Don't Like to Read Art", and you can check out the link here. I'll be showing two text drawings, one of which I just finished late last night (see above). I like this piece. It feels very strong to me, even though it's not my best piece. It has some formal problems that bug me; the composition is a little weak. But I think it works well enough, and I love how it came about. I was planning to create a rough circular shape using the word 'bliss', but it didn't flow smoothly. It kept wanting to coil and loop, so I surrendered to the flow of the line of type, and then it wanted to pinch on both ends, and lo! a snake was born.

It's so cool when that happens. When you have an idea for a piece, and once you start it, it wants to go in another direction. If you force the piece to submit to your will, you'll end up with a really boring, dry piece. Drier than a popcorn fart, as my dear Dad likes to say. The other option is to submit to the creative flow, which means setting your ego aside. I think you have to develop a sense of wonder about your process, and allow the flow of creativity to take over. It takes a certain amount of trust, and surrender, and forgiveness, because mistakes and failures are part of the creative process.

The letters in this piece were cut from an old and yellowed Koran. This feels deeply satisfying as a statement about Islam. Indeed, without its unfortunate political associations, the Koran is a gateway to the Divine. And the fact that it's shaped like a coiled serpent is a reference to Shakti, the feminine energy in the form of kundalini. So in a very subtle way I'm bringing Islam and Tantra together, and watching how they interact. A strong masculine and sensuous feminine...it makes sense that they intersect so well.

Have a bliss-filled day!


Above: Bliss from the Koran, 2011. 9" x 7 3/4". Letters cut from sacred text.

Friday, June 10, 2011

The Ugliest Sofa Ever


For the last two months I've been obsessing over buying a sofa. When I moved into my new digs I decided that I needed one, since there's a lot more space here. And I seem to be having more out of town visitors here than in my old place, so it needed to be a sleeper sofa – you know, the kind that folds out into a nifty bed. A staple in New York apartments.

I figured out my budget and decided I could pay up to $100 for a decent sofa, and was even willing to pay as much as $150 if the perfect one came along. I looked around in a few furniture boutiques in Manhattan, and it didn't take too long to figure out that a'hunnerd bucks would buy me a couple of limp pillows and no more. So I bit the bullet, kicked in some more cash, and commenced my search for the perfect sofa.

Now, I hate shopping. I really do. It's such an abysmal waste of time. I mean, in the time that it takes me to run around Manhattan and slog through furniture stores, I could be getting my nails done, or ears waxed, or something equally deep and riveting. So I aborted my search, went online, and finally found the most sublime sofa that I could afford. I ordered the premium full-size sleeper in a rich, velvet maroon, and eagerly awaited its arrival.

It arrived today. While I burnt sage and chanted a few Tantric prayers of thanksgiving, the movers hauled it upstairs and set it down in the perfect spot. I then performed a sacred dance to Lakshmi, the goddess of abundance (this is my first sofa, after all!) while the good men cut the plastic off, and lo! there in front of me was my brand new sleeper sofa, looking up at me apologetically, as if to say, "I'm so sorry...." Yup, I'm here to tell you that it was and is the ugliest friggin' sofa you ever saw. It bends the mind how ugly it is. Every time I look at it I think of a Sears showroom. It crossed my mind to stack a couple of radial tires on either side as end tables, just to complete the cheese effect. Thankfully I didn't go for the queen size...omg...at least mine is small enough that it only takes up half the room.

My dear grandmother had a sleeper sofa that was lime green and made of bricks, on which I awoke in the morning stiff as a cadaver. I attribute a sizeable portion of my neuroses to the nights spent on that criminal piece of furniture. Well, guess what. This is cruelly reminiscent of grammy's couch, minus the crocheted pink afghan slung over the back. The only crumb of good news is that my guests won't be staying very long. I think two nights ought to do the trick, then they'll find some flimsy excuse to stay in a hostel.

My dear friend Victoria advised me not to make such a big purchase without seeing it first. She highly recommended that I sit on a sofa before buying it, to really be sure that it works for me. I didn't listen. I went with my gut, which told me that it was a totally bitchin' couch, and I didn't need to sit on it, and after all, how bad could it be?? She's such a good friend that when I called to tell her it was uglier than the backside of a schnauzer, she didn't say "I told you so." Which goes to show what a saint she is. I don't think I could've resisted.

Well, there's no way I'm going to send it back, because I ordered it from...sigh...Seattle. Yup, that's right. They didn't have what I wanted in Anchorage, so I had to settle for the farthest distance away within the lower 48. Crap. It's mine. So here's my solution: I'm going to smother it with a couple of throws made of nice fabric. I'll toss a throw up one side and down the other, add a few sexy pillows, and then the only thing it will be is uncomfortable. I can deal with that. After all, I won't be sitting on it – it's for my guests.

Okay, so now you know. Learn a lesson from The Madge and for heaven's sake, don't order a sofa without sitting on it first. And buy it within a 10-mile radius, so you can return it without hiring a caravan of she-camels to hump it back across the Great Plains. And listen to your friends when they give you sage advice about matters you know nothing about. And if you do make a similar mistake as mine, please be sure to let me know so I can say I told you so.

Above: That's not my sofa. My sofa may be ugly, but at least it's not plaid.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Buddhist Prayer for Peace


Buddhist Prayer for Peace
letters cut from the Methodist Hymnal
2011
7 x 5 in.



...ooOOOOOOOoo...