FAFATL

Free Art Friday: Spontaneous and Beautiful

For my inaugural post I thought I would discuss something that occupies a lot of my free time. It is called Free Art Friday and it is an art based scavenger hunt that I play in Atlanta.

Though it is often pointed out that artists leaving art to be discovered by people on the street is not an original concept, the range and popularity of the Free Art Friday movement is impressive. It can be traced back to this web page and was born initially in England as way to engage with the public and bring a little whimsy and joy to the world at large. As the group description says, “go on, make someone’s day!”

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RE:RE: When Will the Art Revolution Begin?

SmashCut Talk thumbnailElisabeth identifies a fine point in her reply to my original question which is, perhaps the Michelangelos, Boschs and Rembrandts of today are actually working in other more popular mediums of expression, like film.  I like this train of thought.  It certainly isn’t a stretch to think that someone of Da Vinci’s talent and knack for invention, that if he were alive today wouldn’t have made a few films himself.  Michelangelo most certainly would have.  So, if this is the case, then of course it’s allowed those gatekeeper positions to be filled with the uninspired, the morbid and the depraved.  Artists and their admirers who buck the tradition and lash out for shock’s value.

After an in-person conversation last night at a social meet-up of Los Angeles SCC contributors (yes, it happens) on this same topic, our resident comic strip artist Francesca Parise sent me another name to go along with the ones Elisabeth mentioned – Joseph Lorusso of Missouri.  One look at the painting Soft Eyes (below) was enough for me to immediately put asise what I was doing and look through his entire portfolio.  I’m grateful to my colleagues for sharing and I encourage all of us to support these types of artists who compel us to ponder, study and marvel at how and what they capture of life.

"Soft Eyes" by Joseph Lorusso
“Soft Eyes” by Joseph Lorusso

Re: When Will the Art Revolution Begin?

SmashCut Talk thumbnailIn answer to Matt and Andrew:

a) “What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun” (Ecclesiastes 1:9).

b) I think it all depends on where you look. I know there are Christian artists not named Thomas Kincaide whose work is breathtakingly beautiful and original–but also usually expressly religious. I’m sure the same is true of Western artists in the mold of Remington and Russell, though I’m not as familiar with what’s current in that scene. On the other hand, there’s fanart. Some, like the work of Alan Lee, is authorized and professional but still not likely to end up in hip LA galleries. Other artists may or may not be professional artists but do fanart for the love of it. My cover designer, Christine M. Griffin, is one. Polish artist Katarzyna Karina Chmiel-Gugulska is another. Yet just as most of the really great composers these days, like Howard Shore, are working in films, a lot of these talented fanartists who are pros are working in sci-fi/fantasy, especially book/magazine covers, illustrations, and game graphics.

I could wax theological about the uglification of culture, but I won’t. Suffice it to say, it seems to be part and parcel of the chronological snobbery and rejection of all things traditional that kicked into high gear in the ’60s. Now, in culture as in academe, those rebels have become the gatekeepers and appear to be actively denying entry to those of us who find their revolt… well… revolting. The problem for the art scene, I think, is that the indie option doesn’t seem to have any meaning there. Not being a professional artist myself–calligraphy’s still more hobby than (fifth!) job for me at this point–I don’t really know how it works or what the solution would be aside from allowing oneself to be pigeonholed in genre work.

(Bring back the patronage system, that’s what I always say….)

ANYWAY. Yes, talented people doing non-ugly work do exist in the art world. The next question is, how do we get them out of the shadows and past the Vogon gatekeepers?

RE: When Will the Art Revolution Begin?

SmashCut Talk thumbnailMatt’s call for a new art revolution reminded me of a question I’ve been thinking a lot about lately.  Has our culture run out of steam?  It certainly seems to have run out of originality.

Just look at other art forms than the fine arts and you will see the evidence.  Music and fashion seem to be nothing but rehashes and remixes of past trends.  The last decade of original fashion and music — heck, even politics? — was the 1980s.

Some say the culprit is the digital age, which enables us to make perfect copies of everything from music to video.  The rise of digital media in the ’90s has been an enormous boon for commerce and comfort.  But has it killed originality?  Can anyone point to something genuinely new today?

 

 

SmashCut Talk

SmashCut Talk

conversationSmash Cut Culture’s newest feature is called SmashCut Talk. This is the public on-going conversation between the contributors of SCC.

We hope you comment as well and engage in the dialogue as almost every topic is fair game.  If there is something you’d like to contribute on regular basis please contact us.

When Will the Art Revolution Begin?

SmashCut Talk thumbnailI’ve been out to a few art exhibits here in Los Angeles as well as the Getty Museum over the past couple of months. The modern, postmodern and current art works I’ve seen at these exhibits leaves me wondering if we will ever see the likes of such artistic periods that are represented in the halls of the Getty Museum or the Louvre.  The so-called art that makes its way onto the walls of these galleries here in LA is abysmal.  A terrific piece by Stephen Hicks over at Atlas Society from 2004 asks and tries to answer the question as to why art became ugly.  He doesn’t just claim it that art is ugly, he acknowledges it as fact and asks why.

In the end he wonders when the revolution against ugly art will begin.  Can anyone point to artists who are contributing paintings worthy of study, worthy of admiration, even just worthy of the paint that was used to give it life?   We are long overdue.

Where was Caesar Flickerman?

SmashCut Talk thumbnailDue to circumstances beyond my control, I was obliged to be in the same room as my friends while they watched the red carpet leading into the Academy Awards this past Sunday.  With every revealing gown, wild hairstyle and fawning correspondent that graced the screen, I couldn’t help but think that at any moment, Caesar Flickerman from The Hunger Games was going to show up and take over.

Hollywood, CA (not the actually city, but the label) is Panem’s Capitol.  A collection of citizens more concerned and consumed with the plunging neckline of Jennifer Lopez’s dress, the elaborate nails highlighted in the mani cam, the contents of a $167,000 swag bag, and a flogger that actress Dakota Johnson took home with her from the set of 50 Shades of Grey, than the actual films that the event is marked to celebrate and even more removed from the horrific events occurring in the world.

I hadn’t seen a red carpet production in a while and haven’t watched the actual Oscar awards show since 2008, but when I pointed out the comparison to my wife she became wide-eyed by the comparison.  What is worse however, is us.  Because we watch it.

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Trailer Tuesday: “The Voices”

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This week, things get a little bleak.  I’ve been into the indie scene more and more recently, and that brought me across this wonderfully horrific trailer for the dark comedy “The Voices.”

This star-studded indie boasts a cast of A-list proportions, lead by Ryan Reynolds, Gemma Arterton, Anna Kendrick and Jacki Weaver.  Naturally, I was skeptical of anything that has Ryan Reynolds at the forefront, but I gave this one a chance, and I was pleasantly surprised!

The first thing we notice is that Reynolds’ character Jerry is a social outcast, but in a quirky, lovable kind of way.  This was instantly a nice change of pace for Reynolds as an actor since I feel that we typically see him playing douchey characters.  Jerry leads a pretty boring life from the looks of it, with the same routines we’re all used to, consisting of a clock in, clock out, nine-to-five job and…pets.  One dog. One cat. For one man. Hm.

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[RESULTS] 2015 Smash Cut Culture Oscar Pool

birdman-oscarsThanks to all who participated in Smash Cut Culture’s first ever Oscar Pool.

Congrats to Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu for taking home three Oscars for Birdman.  Along with the award for Best Cinematography, that brought Birdman‘s win total to four, the most for the night.

As for the race to win the Smash Cut Culture Oscar Pool, it was a nail biter.  Two people ended up with 17 correct picks and it came down to the tie breaker.

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“You keep using that word…”

SmashCut Talk thumbnailI’ve been busy recording lectures and didn’t watch the Oscars, but there’s been a wee bit of a stir among my friends over the “rural Texas” comment. As one friend pointed out, Houston’s the fourth largest city in the US, and Austin is the eleventh.

I live in the real rural part of Texas, seventy miles from Austin, out where there might literally be more cows than people and the schools schedule holidays around major livestock shows. I’ve also lived in the Houston area. And I can tell you for sure: If there’s one thing Austin and Houston ain’t, it’s rural.

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Literature You Should Know: Lewis’ The Four Loves

For some years now, I’ve been wishing I could smack American culture as a whole upside the head with this week’s book.  Fifty Shades of Twilight is only the latest iteration of the problem’s symptoms.  James T. Kirk, James Bond, Jim West, Robert Hogan—I could go on and on listing examples of the notion that a hero will have girls throwing themselves at his feet every week, with manhood defined not by virtue but by virility.  But the problem is even older and deeper than that.  Romeo and Juliet, Abelard and Heloise, Tristan and Isolde, Lancelot and Guinevere… they all imply that romantic love is the highest and best form of love, that such a feeling is worth sacrificing even Camelot for the sake of the beloved, and that life bereft of such love is not worth living.  Now society’s reached a point where it seems a large number of people can’t conceive of any form of love that isn’t inherently sexual.

And it’s all a thrice-accurséd lie.

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The MPAA green card

THE REAR VIEW: Movie Trailers

Over the years they have become the best part of going to the cinema.  A highly anticipated one can debut online and quickly break the internet.  And often times, they are the topic of discussion more so than what they are designed to promote.  I speak, of coruse, about the movie trailer.  In the latest reel of The Rear View, film trailer editor Joshua Dunn joins me to discuss the art form of the film trailer.

From the early beginnings of just previewing  to the big voiceover days of  to the overused  of recent years, trailers are sometimes more exciting than the films they are supposed to market.

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RE: Hip to Be Square

SmashCut Talk thumbnailIn response to Elisabeth, (who I now imagine as the fictional writer Joan Wilder from the movie Romancing the Stone. A film any self-respecting hipster should love,)  and the question of “what’s wrong with liking good things?”  As Lincoln driving Matthew McConaughey has reminded us, sometime we do things not to be cool or to make a statement, but just because we like it.

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Psychological Attack!

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I’m making my way through the Vampire Hunter D series of novels by Hideyuki Kikuchi.  This series is as pulpy as it comes, replete with an invulnerable hero, who is by the way devastatingly handsome and experiences the misfortune of having a different busty seventeen year old girl fall in love with him in each novel.  Perhaps the English translation is the cause of the Stilton-like essence emanating from the prose, but I kind of doubt it.  That hasn’t stopped my  enjoyment of the series either, which I find to be imaginative and action-packed.  One of the key elements that I love about it as an inspired piece of vampire literature is something it shares with the most awesome vampire story of all time, Hellsing, and that something is my favorite vampire attack: the psychological attack!  The exclamation point is needed because often the psychological attack is the last thing you’d expect, though what you should have expected all along.  What I love most about this attack is that ultimately, its kind of real.

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110

When Guerrilla Street Art Serves the People

A remarkable story from We Like LA was published last week.  As an LA native and frequent traveller of the 110 freeway through downtown Los Angeles, I was absolutely fist pumping with joy when I came across this story.  What’s even more fantastic is that this public service, done by a local artist who wanted to help his fellow citizens, was captured all on video in an equally satisfying 10 min film.

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One Minute of Melissa McCarthy Stole a Three and a Half Hour Show

Melissa McCarthy channeled the late great Chris Farley and absolutely delivered the greatest moment of an excruciatingly long three and half hour tribute to 40 years of Saturday Night Live.

And of course because NBC/Comcast hate to share content on YouTube,  you can’t find a decent clip of it online that won’t be taken down more than 10 minutes after being uploaded.  So apologies is the video embedded below gets disabled.  You can find the whole Weekend Update sketch over on Hulu.

Hip to Be Square

Maybe it’s because I’m one of those people right on the Gen X-Millennial divide, but I don’t get hipsterism. Sure, I can understand critiquing cultural institutions and attitudes when they’re off base, and there are many ways to do so. But the whole emphasis on being “ironic” reminds me somewhat of a passage from “Unreal Estates” where C. S. Lewis, Kingsley Amis, and Brian Aldiss commiserate over being accused of only pretending to like science fiction–except from what I can tell, hipsters either are genuinely only feigning interest in whatever the Latest Hipster Thing is to make A Statement or feel that they have to pretend to feign interest to fit in.

What is wrong with liking good things?

Let’s be honest: I’m hopelessly old fashioned. I write Westerns with real heroes and real villains. I watch old movies and old TV shows. I listen to old music. I read very old books (and get paid for it!). I like antiques and old clothing fashions. I practice old crafts and demonstrate them at reenactments. Once in a blue moon, I even write alliterative poetry. But I don’t do any of those things to make any kind of statement about Life In These United States or to Stick It To The Man or whatever. I take delight in them–because they are delightful.

“A thing of beauty is a joy forever,” said Keats. Have we seriously forgotten what that means?

Grand Bemusing Hotel

I’d sum this film up in one word “bemusing.”

I wasn’t amused, nor did I laugh out loud, nor did I feel moved – it was one long state of bemusement, which I define as amusement but more cutesy.

I did go the distance, the only one of the Oscars Best Picture noms I’ve seen.  I watched it on a plane and had no erstwhile bed to retreat too.  I’m as anti-hipster as the next Alabama guy, but I admit I actually liked it.  I don’t really see bemusement as the accomplishment of a Best Picture.

My advice to Mr. Anderson, which I’m sure he needs like a headache, is more Willem Dafoe.

The Grand Budapest Hotel: The Hipster’s Swan Song

SmashCut Talk thumbnailAfter about an hour into The Grand Budapest Hotel, this year’s multi-Oscar nominated film from Wes Andersen, I became very agitated.  I wanted to drive the 20 minutes across LA (which would have taken 45 minutes) to the Silverlake/Hollywood/Los Feliz tri-neighborhood capital of Hipsterwood, emerge from my 4wd vehicle with a bullhorn to my lips shouting cries of “Ok, everyone out of the pool. Party is over.  You don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here!”

Of course, I didn’t actually do that, I just wanted to.  What I did instead was turn off the film and retire to my sanctuary – the three foot wide section of the bed I share with my fetching wife.  I’ve vowed long ago, that if I wasn’t enjoying a film, book or anything else that I choose to pick up to read or sit down to watch, I’d stop wasting my time and move on.  I’m willing to hear why I should have used up another precious hour of my time on Earth.

am sniper

The Character of American Sniper

american-sniper-poster-2American Sniper is one of perhaps three films* that I’ve seen all year which profoundly capture the pure essence of an individual.

Everything about it is distilled through the singular goal of telling the story of Chris Kyle, “America’s most lethal sniper”, during his four tours as a Navy SEAL in the Iraq War. Kyle is a man who I would have had almost nothing in common with either on an intellectual level or even simply as a matter of personality.

Yet through the phenomenal directing by Clint Eastwood, and the masterful portrayal by Bradley Cooper, I came out of the theater deeply understanding the character of Chris Kyle. Who he was as a human being; what he believed; why he believed it… And yet at no point did the film make any heavy-handed push for me to agree with the way he saw the world. That’s a trait that is nearly impossible to achieve as a director and speaks to Eastwood’s absolute mastery as a filmmaker.

In a recent interview with The Star, Eastwood explained his point of view:

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Trailer Tuesday: “Fantastic 4”

More like fantastic FINALLY! (Sometimes, I just can’t help myself).  But for real, this film has flown sooo low under the radar that endless rumors went around about how bad it was going to be.The_Fantastic_Four_poster

Basically since pre-production, there was buzz that the script was somewhat less than fantastic itself, and even more controversy sprouted when the cast was announced.  In what world would Miles Teller, the drunken buffoon from “21 & Over” make a good superhero?  Not to mention the wild controversy involving the race change of Johnny Storm being cast as a young black man.  All in all, depending on personal perception, there was a lot of negativity surrounding the production of this film.  So fanboys’ and fangirls’ doubts alike were all the more reinforced the longer we went without any footage, promo art, stills etc.  I personally have been holding out hopes since the beginning, being a fan of director Josh Trank‘s since seeing his directorial debut in “Chronicle.” He seems to have a pretty good handle on the sci-fi genre, so I’ve personally been pretty amped to finally get a taste of what to expect.

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