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Garish: Roadside Color Polaroids

 

gar·ish

[gair-ish, gar-]  adjective
1. crudely or tastelessly colorful, showy, or elaborate, as clothes or decoration.

 Garish: Roadside Color Polaroids, the new book by my friend Robert Jones, is a feast for the eyes. Even if you’re not an aficionado of the extended road trip, as I certainly am, you will find yourself experiencing a certain sense of déjà vu as you page through this book. The photographs tell a tale of an era that could be considered bygone, yet whose artifacts are still so present in so many forgotten little corners of North America that it seems its influence will never be erased completely.

Robert Jones -Mexican Taqueria
Mexican taqueria detail
Farm-to-Market Road 2790, Somerset, Texas, February 2007

As Jones tells us in the intro, this collection of Polaroid prints, taken with his trusty Colorpack III, “represents a quarter-century’s quest to find beautiful, vivid, man-made color.” His color sense influenced by the “revelation” of David Lynch’s use of surrealistically brilliant hues in Blue Velvet, Jones has driven “untold thousands of miles” to find outstanding examples of these intense colors. He says,

“Ironically, these hues are most deeply intensified when driving across endless lonely stretches of highway in the American Southwest and Mexico, where the people use buckets of brightly colored paints to break the drab monotony of the brown stubble and caliche that characterize that region’s landscape. The crisp, clean air in Canada has given me skies with the deepest blues, and the most luminous greens and reds.”

The Polaroid film serves to exaggerate and shift the color in a nostalgic, yet slightly unsettling way.

Robert Jones - Motel roomsMotel rooms
U.S. Route 130, Burlington County, New Jersey, May 2004

As to the artist’s intent, there is no attempt at a hidden message here; it is straightforward and without pretense. To understand what the photographs represent, a passage from “Coloring Outside the Lines,”  the essay by John DeFore included in the book, is enlightening:

“Where someone else might have culled through the hand-painted signs and statuary here in search of ironic juxtapositions, or framed them in ways that suggest a new layer of meaning is being created, Jones is happy simply to celebrate what he has found. This collection isn’t a straightforward, undiscriminating catalog of roadside oddities, but neither is it a monograph treating those objects as mere fodder for an artist hovering on a higher plane. Jones takes his pictures seriously, but he clearly respects what he’s photographing as much as he does the image he’s creating.”

Robert Jones - Hoppers and landscapeHoppers and landscape
U.S. Route 87, Union County, New Mexico, February 2002
Robert Jones - Stop sign and street cornerStop sign and street corner
Town plaza, Villa Union, Coahuila, April 2002

Are these photographs truly “garish”? I suppose that’s something best left up to the viewer to decide. Perhaps my judgment is compromised by my love of this subject matter, but I would say they are hauntingly beautiful, celebratory of the overlooked magnificence that can be found in forgotten little corners of the world, sometimes sparked into momentary transcendent splendor by a brief angle of sunlight, other times waiting patiently for decades for an appreciative glance, or for nothing at all. In this age of Instagram and Hipstamatic and instant-whatever-the-matic, in which anything and everything becomes fodder for an overload of superficially formulaic “artiness,” I find it comforting to think of Jones out there on the road, recording these images with this all-but-lost technology, a piece of paper with chemicals that in its own time revolutionized the art of photography.

Robert Jones-Evan Jones and hillbilly figureEvan Jones and hillbilly figure, miniature golf course
Seawall Boulevard, Galveston, Texas, February 2007

For more information and to see more photographs by Robert Jones, please visit his website. The book Garish: Roadside Color Polaroids is available on Amazon.com. It’s also available as an ebook for Kindle on Amazon and as a NOOK book at Barnes & Noble.

September 15th, 2012|Interesting Artists|Comments Off on Garish: Roadside Color Polaroids

2012 SAQA Benefit Auction

Deidre Adams - Entheos
Entheos, mixed media textile, 12 x 12 inches, ©2012

Tomorrow morning, Sept. 10,  is the beginning of the SAQA benefit auction, SAQA’s biggest fundraiser and most important income source after membership dues. Purchasing a 12×12-inch piece from the auction helps this non-profit organization to fulfill its mission of “promot

[ing] the art quilt through education, exhibitions, professional development, documentation, and publications,” a mission near and dear to the heart of anyone who makes art using the quilt medium. Above is my piece for the auction.

This is a reverse auction, meaning that at the opening (tomorrow at 2 pm eastern, 11 am pacific), each piece starts out at the highest price, $750. If it remains unsold for 24 hours, the price drops then and each subsequent day until it can be had for the incredible bargain price of $75. There are 3 groups to be sold, with bidding commencing tomorrow for group 1, then group 2 on Sept. 17, and finally, group 3 on Sept. 24.

Here are just a few more from the first group:

Carol Larson - Currents #18Currents #18 by Carol Larson
Linda Jean Strand - SunflowerSunflower by Linda Jean Strand
Loris Bogue - The CityThe City by Loris Bogue
Helena Scheffer - Syringa SpontaneaSyringa Spontanea by Helena Scheffer

 

See the other works in group 1 here and here. I hope you will consider bidding on one of these fine works and supporting SAQA and textile art.

September 9th, 2012|Art|Comments Off on 2012 SAQA Benefit Auction

What? I have a blog?

Well, better get to it then!

Primordial No. 6, 8 x 8 inches, acrylic on panel, ©2012 Deidre Adams

So back in April, I made a big deal about my new web site/blog design, then I fell off the face of the earth, or so anyone who reads my blog may have thought. I did get a little sidetracked there for awhile by things over which I have very little control. But although I’ve been quiet as far as blogging, I have not been idle. In the 153 days since my last post, I’ve done these things:

  1. Attended the SDA/SAQA joint conference in Philadelphia March 30–April 1, which was held concurrently with FiberPhiladelphia 2012, an “international biennial and regional festival for innovative fiber/textile art.” There were over 40 exhibitions of top-notch fiber art available to be seen, including the outstanding Inside/Outside the Box. I saw so much great artwork and took so many pictures, I became completely overwhelmed and never got around to posting any of them. I still might at some point, even though it’s super old news now, because the work is just so great.
  2. Also spent a couple of days in New York with my friend Susan, and saw some art exhibitions there. Plus got to weave my very first scarf in the beautiful weaving studio at the Newark Museum. Susan is a weaver who attends their ongoing weaving series, and on the day I accompanied her to the studio, they very kindly asked me if I’d be interested in making a scarf on a loom that was already warped and ready to go. Who could pass that up!?Deidre Adams weaving
  3. Attended the WARP (Weave a Real Peace) annual meeting & Colorado Weaver’s Day in Boulder. (Am I thinking of taking up weaving when I already have way too many things I like to do? No, not exactly, but I have been thinking about some non-traditional techniques that I might want to experiment with in my work.)
  4. Finished 21 paintings, to be posted in the coming days. (OK so granted, most of them were really small, but I still claim credit.)
  5. Reworked 3 older paintings that I had never been satisfied with, and started several new ones.
  6. Sold and delivered 2 paintings for the new Hospitality Learning Center on the campus of Metropolitan State University of Denver.
  7. Shipped Composition IX to Taiwan for exhibition at the Taiwan International Quilt Exhibition 2012 during August-October this year.
  8. Finished works for 2 different fund-raisers; more on those soon.
  9. Sent in 4 works for the SAQA Showcase exhibition at the International Quilt Study Center & Museum at the University of  Nebraska–Lincoln, which opened Aug. 3 and runs through Feb. 24, 2013. (photo courtesy International Quilt Study Center & Museum.)
  10. Finished my piece for Seasonal Palette, a juried exhibition for which selected artists have each made a textile piece depicting a particular season. More on this later.
  11. Finished 2 textile pieces for possible entry into Quilt National, working on a third, but it’s refusing to cooperate. Deadline is in 6 days.
  12. Also (note—totally off topic) joined a CSA to get great fresh organic fruits & veggies every week, so I have been learning how to cook – something I’ve never enjoyed until lately, when I just decided no more meat. If the men want meat, they can bloody well cook it themselves. I bought a pressure cooker and dusted off the Cuisinart, and learned how to make hummus, vegetable stock & soups, pesto, pizza dough, and killer pie crust, all from scratch. The peaches have been outstanding this year, so I had to make a couple of pies.

There now, all caught up!

Oh, and just because there is more happening in the world outside of my own little domain, here are some other things that happened in those 153 days:

“June broke or tied 3,215 high-temperature records across the United States. That followed the warmest May on record for the Northern Hemisphere – the 327th consecutive month in which the temperature of the entire globe exceeded the 20th-century average, the odds of which occurring by simple chance were 3.7 x 10-99, a number considerably larger than the number of stars in the universe.”   (1)

Devastating drought in the U.S., India, and eastern Europe will mean sharp increases in food prices throughout the world. The dollar value of crops lost in the U.S. alone could reach $20 billion. (2)

About 3,800,000 more people around the world died of hunger or hunger-related causes. (3)

Meanwhile, a study has revealed that the global super-rich are hiding at least $21 trillion (that’s 21,000 billion) in tax havens, with fewer than 100,000 people accounting for almost half of it. (4)

Nearly half a million U.S. homes entered foreclosure. (5)

Companies continue to hoard excess cash, “vastly more cash than is needed to finance their operations,” (6) while the number of jobs added to the economy each month continues to be less than needed to even keep up with population growth. (7)

13,224 people in the United States have died from gun violence, another 27,816 were shot but survived. (8)

In “Support Our Troops!™” news, there are now over 870,000 veterans waiting to hear back from the VA on their disability claims, with delays of over a year in the worst cases. One VA office in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, had such an immense load of paperwork, it was threatening the structural integrity of the building. (9)

And so on and so forth.
____

Why do I bother mentioning all of these terrible statistics? Because I’m so torn about all of this. On some days, I think I really want to try to make a difference in the world, and other days it just seems utterly hopeless. I’ve joined a couple of groups that were working on some activism, but each time it seems people are drawn away and the thing dies a quiet death. I’m not a leader – never have been, never will be. That’s just a fact. Is it enough to just continue to make art that makes me happy? Should I be doing something I don’t enjoy as much but has a more noble intent? Is there some way I can combine all of this? I don’t have an answer. I’m tossing around several ideas for new bodies of work to address my inner turmoil on this, and hope to have something to show you in the not-too-distant future.

 

September 8th, 2012|Art|14 Comments