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| Chautauqua School of Art [link] Chautauqua, New York June-August, 2006 |
Works from
WEEK 8:
Giving time and tempo to a pause- the comma. Paying
attention to the action and happenings within rests. |
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3ft
x currently up to 30 feet long, pencil on paper scroll |
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| Airy
Comma Series, Monocopy, 8.5" x 11" |
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Extended-Comma #1, flame-treated Monocopy, 8.5" x 11" |
Extended-Comma #2, flame-treated Monocopy, 8.5" x 11" |
Period, flame-treated Monocopy, 8.5" x 11" |
| Rests
and pauses in music have various indicators like tempo and beats to communicate
their resting length, so specific that the difference could be a fraction
of a second. If I took the comma, for example, how could I communicate
its relationship to time, and my relationship to this 'rest'? Here on the top right was an exercise to think about those two questions. To explain briefly, I begin making a comma on a scroll of drawing paper whenever start working (work= drawing comma with pencil). The comma extends during the period of time I work. When I decide to take a break from it, I finish up the stroke of the extending comma, then begin a new one again when I return. The "Monocopy" (Mono- Photocopy) series were the last few pieces I made in Chautuauqua. They came from cutting comma shapes from the note-less music scores seen on the previous page. The paper comma was then placed on a photocopier machine, and with the cover of the machine open, the comma was dragged along the surface as the photocopying started. Resulted shapes of each monocopy were based on the speed which the comma was moved during the process. The three images below were done the same way, but with a blank paper comma, and on flame-treated copying paper. *** What I have gained from this experience at Chautauqua Institution was invaluable. Clarity emerged for me from ways I have learned to listen, and to follow an intuitive and spontaneous flow. I would like to give special thanks to those who have guided and supported me: Don Kimes, Barbara Bernstein, Paul Bloom, Tom Butter, Zoe Charlton, Rick Delaney, Jim Doiron, Glenn Goldberg, Barbara Grossman, Subagh Singh and Subagh Kaur, Elaine King, Joe Lupo, Margo Margolis, Boris Minkovskij, Luis Silva, and last but not least, Chautauqua young artists and singers: Thankyou and goodluck! |
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