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Ruth's Work
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Nice!


I really enjoyed viewing your professional work...
You are very blessed to have realized your creative desire and to have completed your education in this field.
Do you still teach?
Mixing Memory and Desire, is just wonderful! I hope you will continue to share with us.
Thank you Ruth.

I really enjoyed viewing your professional work...
You are very blessed to have realized your creative desire and to have completed your education in this field.
D..."
No, I'm almost 75 years old. Haven't taught for 14 years. Right now I'm writing poetry more than making art, but still working off and on with the Visual Poems.


I'm having a ball with the Visual Poetry pieces. I like it that they're so small, it makes it very intimate when I work on them.
Due to my 12 year hiatus in producing artwork, I'm no longer affiliated with my Los Angeles gallery, and I haven't done the legwork to find a new one.
I did show the poetry pieces in 2007 when I had a retrospective show at the college where I used to teach. I had one whole section devoted to vispo and they did look nice, if I do say so myself.
I have always loved Medieval manuscripts, and I like the connections these have with those. I often use metallic paint. Hard to see in the reproductions.
I have an idea for a slight swerve in the vispo, but I can't get at it until our kitchen remodel is finished. My worktable at the moment is covered with mixers and bowls and boxes of spaghetti.


blank like the canvas is my mind.
I enjoy looking at the work other people do!
have you heard of this event:
http://www.artprize.org/
you should register!
(today! No really, registration ends today!)

That contest looks a little suspicious to me.

Lots of great work, mixed in with lots of... weird stuff.
:)
One of these days I'll pick up that darn brush again.


Voices and Reflections

Summer Promises



Actually painting reflections and transparencies is easy once you learn that you're not painting the reflections and transparencies themselves, just duplicating all the funny little shapes you see.
What kind of work do you do, Lorie?


There was a 17th-century Dutch artist named Egbert van der Poel who made a specialty of paintings commemorating the explosion of the gunpowder magazine at Delft. (It was a big event in the history of the town, so there was a demand for mementos.) Anyway, his version of fire and danger:


As for my own fires, ask and ye shall receive.

Phoenix Nest
oil on canvas 46x30

Ladybird, Ladybird
pastel, 22x30

Both very nice pieces.

http://www.loriemccown.com/

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Of course, I think they are all good. Your resume sure is impressive! Thank you for sharing!





In some weird way that comforts me, Ruth. I have always told myself that I can't do any form of artwork. But then again, I don't have any training, or practice, or study. Who knows? What if I could actually come up with something? But for now I am content to relish in the excellent efforts of others.

I would return to the visual poetry. There is much more to be mined there. I am not sure where you can take off from there, but perhaps simultaneously complicating the imagery and simplifying the words even more.
Give me time to think about it some more. I am intrigued by the possibilities and the direction.
I started out in art wanting to be the last of the Abstract Expressionists. In grad school I was doing Minimalist-inspired abstraction. Gradually I moved through a series based on Chinese lattice designs which led me to still life. At the same time I moved through photography to figurative work.
Left all that about 15 years ago with an extended art dry spell when I began writing poetry. About 5 years ago I started on the work I’m doing now.
This is one of my older pieces.
Mixing Memory and Desire
24x36, oil on canvas
1989
There is more of my older work here: http://web.archive.org/web/2003022823...
My recent work is what’s called Visual Poetry, combining both words and images, carving poems out of the text in old books, the working on the page with watercolors, inks and metallics. Three of these were published in the special Visual Poetry issue of Rattle last year. You can see them here:
. http://www.rattle.com/blog/2008/12/th...
http://www.rattle.com/blog/2009/03/th...
http://www.rattle.com/blog/2009/01/i-...
And more