A Twelve Image Story
December 16, 2010 by artistatexit0
Posted in Art | 15 Comments
15 Responses
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
-
Archives
- December 2018 (1)
- July 2018 (1)
- December 2017 (2)
- October 2017 (1)
- June 2017 (1)
- April 2017 (1)
- March 2017 (1)
- January 2017 (1)
- December 2016 (2)
- November 2016 (1)
- September 2016 (1)
- July 2016 (1)
- June 2016 (2)
- May 2016 (3)
- April 2016 (1)
- March 2016 (4)
- February 2016 (3)
- January 2016 (4)
- December 2015 (2)
- November 2015 (1)
- October 2015 (3)
- September 2015 (2)
- August 2015 (3)
- July 2015 (2)
- June 2015 (4)
- May 2015 (4)
- April 2015 (2)
- March 2015 (2)
- February 2015 (2)
- January 2015 (1)
- December 2014 (3)
- November 2014 (3)
- October 2014 (3)
- September 2014 (2)
- August 2014 (3)
- July 2014 (1)
- May 2014 (3)
- April 2014 (2)
- March 2014 (4)
- February 2014 (3)
- January 2014 (2)
- December 2013 (1)
- November 2013 (3)
- October 2013 (4)
- September 2013 (5)
- August 2013 (4)
- July 2013 (5)
- June 2013 (6)
- May 2013 (6)
- April 2013 (5)
- March 2013 (6)
- February 2013 (4)
- January 2013 (3)
- December 2012 (3)
- November 2012 (3)
- October 2012 (4)
- September 2012 (2)
- August 2012 (4)
- July 2012 (2)
- June 2012 (6)
- May 2012 (4)
- April 2012 (4)
- March 2012 (5)
- February 2012 (3)
- January 2012 (3)
- December 2011 (4)
- November 2011 (5)
- October 2011 (4)
- September 2011 (3)
- August 2011 (2)
- July 2011 (4)
- June 2011 (6)
- May 2011 (6)
- April 2011 (6)
- March 2011 (6)
- February 2011 (6)
- January 2011 (5)
- December 2010 (7)
- November 2010 (7)
- October 2010 (7)
- September 2010 (9)
- August 2010 (8)
- July 2010 (11)
- June 2010 (11)
- May 2010 (13)
- April 2010 (10)
- March 2010 (10)
- February 2010 (8)
- January 2010 (12)
- December 2009 (8)
- November 2009 (7)
- October 2009 (13)
- September 2009 (9)
- August 2009 (10)
- July 2009 (15)
- June 2009 (14)
- May 2009 (21)
- April 2009 (13)
-
Categories
- Absurd (374)
- animal art works (85)
- animals (90)
- art and environment (452)
- Art (408)
- Art and Nature (47)
- art and the environment (32)
- Artist at Exit 0 (47)
- assemblage art (41)
- birding (62)
- birds and birding (68)
- Clarksville (3)
- collecting art (8)
- collections (100)
- creativity (381)
- deer skull (2)
- driftwood (19)
- ecosytem (275)
- environmental art (265)
- Falls of the Ohio (409)
- First Saturday in May (1)
- flip-flops (11)
- found materials (41)
- Found objects (40)
- fresh water (209)
- Green (139)
- Installation (16)
- Kentucky Derby (1)
- lost and found (27)
- lost sandals (8)
- Louisville (3)
- Louisville, Kentucky (232)
- material culture (44)
- nature (240)
- nature photography (232)
- Ohio River (340)
- Originality (123)
- Ohio River flooding (21)
- old refrigerator (1)
- photography (19)
- Photograpy (21)
- plastic (32)
- Plastic art (18)
- public art (273)
- recycled art (357)
- repurposed art (35)
- repurposed materials (37)
- sculpture (253)
- sense of place (48)
- Site specific art (35)
- Styrofoam (306)
- toy horses (2)
- unusual collection (86)
- watershed (253)
-
Pages
- About
- Balls of the Ohio
- Beach Combing
- Bottle Images: Liquid Light
- Contents Under Pressure
- Fake Food Collection
- Fishing Floats Collection
- Fishing Lure Collection
- Found Paintings and Signs Collection
- Kentucky Lucky Ducky Collection
- Passing Gas(oline) Can Collection
- Plastic Bottle Color Spectrum
- Reflectors and Tail Lights Collection
- Soap Bubble Wand Collection
- Squirt Gun Collection
- The Shoes You Lose
- The Shoes You Lose 2
- Wee the People Collection w/Animals
- About
how terrible and outstanding your materials and your art. i agree as a creative we can create anywhere, anytime with anything. …and… not that i want to take your materials away from you… but i hope we human beings figure this one world and one planet out some day. because i know you could still have access even if this material was appropriately placed in the first place… i like the point you make beyond the enjoying moments of your art. aloha.
I am often struck by the similarity between us and the materials we make and use. Styrofoam, to me, describes “us” well during this point in time. Thanks for your comment Rick!
aloha Albertus – yeah, you are right, styrofoam is a mark of our culture and time. i’ve been thinking about a similar mark in all the words we use on and with products and services now – from disclaimers, warnings, inspections, fill out forms, notices, tickets and advertising to PR and, and, on and on… material i use frequently now in collage and altered images… products of our time and culture.
i also have to say it was presumptive of me to think i knew how all your material got to where it is there. floods and other possibilities may be contributing factors as much as irresponsibility. …still what is along your canvas way is a mark and product of our culture, time and place. you make ingenious use of it in positive ways. i like that. – aloha
Hi Al. I was tracking that tire–or tires–until I saw the chair. Someone actually left a chair by the river? Or did it wash up there? Something about the chair–perhaps because I don’t recall seeing any other ‘furniture’ in your photographs–just stopped me in my tracks. Now I’m wondering if I’ve gotten too accustomed to your found art creations? huh? And only when something as UNexpected as a chair appears do I begin to wonder what the heck is going with our water. As for the tires—EEEGADS–the darn things are everywhere. Dark, brooding menaces the whole lot of them–even when tied to a tree for a swing tires ‘bother’ me. Hmm.
A Chair! A chair! My kingdom for a chair. Down by the river, of course.
I have found many river chairs over the years and the thought of them drifting downriver is buried forever deep in my mind. I have featured them in the blog before, in fact, this chair made an appearance earlier in the year. What did you think of the lack of words? Thanks Eva!
As for the lack of YOUR words–I rather ‘missed’ your unique voice and perceptions. Had the shadow of it in mind due to your previous writings. The images do work well–it’s just that your words compliment your creations in such interesting and engaging ways, Al.
ps, The concluding image of the single tree/plant is really lovely.
Merci, it helps form a bridge from the last post.
first them uprooted trees final the young tree perfect
it is sad hey what people just disregard
Yes it is…the sad part is that one doesn’t miss what one doesn’t see or know about. We need people to go through life with their eyes, minds, and hearts open.
I liked the picture story. I have several picture storybooks and my Granddaughter can come up with new stories from the same book that make me listen with wonder.
What I felt most strongly from this story is that through it all there is a positive strength in this world. The beauty of nature, in one small tree, will rise up! Thank-you for this, Al.
Thanks Leslie, It was fun playing with just the images this time and something I hadn’t done before. Sometimes I think the words get in the way. I think posting the final image of the tree “ends” the story on a more upbeat note than finishing things with a tangled ball of monofilament!
Ah, I really like this format for creating narrative, Albertus! How fun to piece together my own stories looking at this series of photos (a little like what Leslie was saying!) This is so interesting in conjunction with your storytelling posts… I love the combination. This moment of reflective silence, where we’re forced to reach into ourselves…
I don’t know how I missed this post! I love the story, it looks like the styro figure is trying to make a quick getaway! The river looks quite menacing and the chair is just so surreal and out of place! The roots on No. 4 pic look very grasping – no wonder styro man looks frightened! This is a sinister narrative – LOVE it:-)
Lynda, the river is not the only thing out here with under currents.