28:11 Now you’re talking! That’s revelatory. I would say, it complements the previous one by highlighting the structure that the first painting in the series that has not yet begun will have attempted to escape the conformity of good taste in art. Revolutionary. And visionary.
29:26 Yes, and yes again. It’s phenomenal phenomenology with a bit of phrenology as the painter was almost blue when she painted this. The profundity of ineffable angst with hues of almost blue that pass as Jungian shadow of the red in another painting the artist will paint in 9 months from now. It is seminal. Seriously.
30:53 The tiny rectangular protuberance is the clown’s anatomical part which explains the yellow stain on the left side in the previous painting. The harpy managed to existentially avoid the clown taking the piss. The use of slang is not only acceptable here, but required to transmute the reality of city walls on which men inebriated with the nectar of artistic ecstasy splash their inspiring motifs. It’s the archetypal flood of biblical significance. Which explains the harpy subject as a symbol of Eve’s emancipation. Though, of course, me identifying as a ‘she/her’ I fight against the word ‘emancipation’ because it conveys the idea of a woman being ex- man, like Eve out of Adam’s rib.
36:15 Hitchcock nods. I am not an artist, but yes, I do have an albatros existential problem. It keeps me awake at night, its shadow threatening the fries of Buddhist illusion that my Ego munches on whilst taking a stroll on the beach of the collective Unconscious.
26:55 ‘the Clock’. Yup, I can see it’s 3:67, but it is metaphysically concealed behind the green line that reveals itself as a red line. It’s about crossing time or, better said, transcending time- and space- through crossing the line of common sense. 🧐
Lovely and very inspiring. Fascinated by Amy Sillman's thoughtful approach to abstract work.
This was good, thank you.
Agreed!
27:06 It really is one superb structural iteration through conglomeration of colourisation of inspiration. 🤩
The expressionalism part is very profound a set up for abstract
28:11 Now you’re talking! That’s revelatory. I would say, it complements the previous one by highlighting the structure that the first painting in the series that has not yet begun will have attempted to escape the conformity of good taste in art. Revolutionary. And visionary.
You totally have to see them in real life. I was blown away by the real works.
29:26 Yes, and yes again. It’s phenomenal phenomenology with a bit of phrenology as the painter was almost blue when she painted this. The profundity of ineffable angst with hues of almost blue that pass as Jungian shadow of the red in another painting the artist will paint in 9 months from now. It is seminal. Seriously.
I would have enjoyed the paintings much more if not hearing her narrative. Let the art talk maybe?
I ran into Amy a few weeks ago and told her how much I hated her new show
30:53 The tiny rectangular protuberance is the clown’s anatomical part which explains the yellow stain on the left side in the previous painting. The harpy managed to existentially avoid the clown taking the piss. The use of slang is not only acceptable here, but required to transmute the reality of city walls on which men inebriated with the nectar of artistic ecstasy splash their inspiring motifs. It’s the archetypal flood of biblical significance. Which explains the harpy subject as a symbol of Eve’s emancipation. Though, of course, me identifying as a ‘she/her’ I fight against the word ‘emancipation’ because it conveys the idea of a woman being ex- man, like Eve out of Adam’s rib.
36:15 Hitchcock nods. I am not an artist, but yes, I do have an albatros existential problem. It keeps me awake at night, its shadow threatening the fries of Buddhist illusion that my Ego munches on whilst taking a stroll on the beach of the collective Unconscious.
26:55 ‘the Clock’. Yup, I can see it’s 3:67, but it is metaphysically concealed behind the green line that reveals itself as a red line. It’s about crossing time or, better said, transcending time- and space- through crossing the line of common sense. 🧐
30:06 Obviously.
27:37 I told you about the red line, did I not? I am, practically, an art critic with a fine insight into the artist’s psyche.
I will never be a successful painter because I just cannot talk so much, so spontaneously, so nonsensically 😳😂