Contemporary Fiber at Denver’s Helikon Gallery

After a brief hiatus, I’m hoping to return to a bit more active blogging presence. It’s been a very busy couple of months. Following my participation in the most excellent Texture, Form & Function at The Art Gallery at the Denver Performing Arts Complex, I went to Nepal & India with my husband and some good friends. I have lots of photos to sort out and will be posting about the trip soon.

In the meantime, I have the distinct honor of announcing that I’ve been asked to participate in Contemporary Fiber, an “historic exhibition will challenge viewers’ expectations of what fiber art can be by juxtaposing an eclectic array of art ranging from painted fabric, woven steel, formed paper, and lighted sculpture.” The show is curated by fiber artist and aBuzz Gallery owner, Carol Ann Waugh. Exhbition dates are June 5 — July 19, 2014. I’m very excited to be showing along with an impressive group of artists, a list of whom is shown below. Links to their web sites can be found on the Contemporary Fiber page on the Helikon Gallery web site.

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March 31st, 2014|Art|Comments Off on Contemporary Fiber at Denver’s Helikon Gallery

Pseudocode

Adams-Pseudocode I-Pseudocode, 42 x 78 inches, acrylic & mixed media on panel, ©2014 Deidre Adams

 

A long, long, time ago — in what feels like an entirely different lifetime — I went to a technical/vocational school in Albuquerque and enrolled in a course of study called Data Processing. The field wasn’t as complicated back then, so this prosaic name was perfectly acceptable. I’m going to really be dating myself here, but the first computer language I learned was COBOL (COmmon Business Oriented Language). Before the school upgraded to their snazzy new Data General with input terminals in the early 1980s, we had to type our program code onto punch cards. Really, kids!

punch-card

 

One mistake in typing, and you had to throw the whole card out and start over. Some of the programs got to be pretty long, with several hundred cards that absolutely had to remain in the right order. Having your program run involved handing your box of cards to a lab tech and then coming back hours later to get back your cards along with a printout of the results. Because you never got it right the first time, you’d then have to debug and type some new cards with the changes. This was an iterative process which could involve many rounds. If your program got to the point of being many inches worth of cards, the lab techs had a great joke they might play on you, especially if they knew your deadline was imminent. They would come out with your box, with the cards all piled up in a big jumble and say, “I’m so sorry — I tripped!” After several minutes of enjoying your utterly panic-stricken (or rage-filled) response, they would reveal that your stack was safe and sound the whole time and it was all just fun and games.

Prior to doing the real coding, a programmer would first write out the program in pseudocode, a kind of higher-level outline that would help to organize the logic of the program before getting too far into the weeds of code. I hadn’t thought about this in years, but last summer I went through a basement purging and found some old COBOL textbooks that I had held onto all this time for who knows what reason.

We had pre-printed forms for writing pseudocode.

Pseudocode01From Introduction to Computer Programming: Structured COBOL, Shelly & Cashman, 1978.

 

The next step was to translate the pseudocode into code, written by hand onto yet another form. So primitive!
Code002From Introduction to Computer Programming: Structured COBOL, Shelly & Cashman, 1978.

 

But I digress.

This got me to thinking about the word pseudocode, and how it’s rather a good metaphor for the kind of communication that’s prevalent in the media now — a lot of coded language, sounding like it means something, but quite often saying little to nothing that’s going to make a difference in people’s lives. This also ties back into my work, in which I use expressive gestures and calligraphic symbols which have a kind of significance for me but don’t convey any concrete meaning to the viewer.

Adams-Pseudocode-det3-Pseudocode (detail), acrylic & mixed media on panel, ©2014 Deidre Adams
Adams-Pseudocode-det5-Pseudocode (detail), acrylic & mixed media on panel, ©2014 Deidre Adams

 

All this is fodder going towards me re-thinking my artist’s statement in preparation for the upcoming show. I think every artist should do this from time to time, and what better time than when you have an opportunity to show some new work? I hope to have an updated statement ready to post very soon.

January 18th, 2014|Art|2 Comments

Settling back in

Adams-ACrossSectionofAwareness-
A Cross Section of Awareness, 36 x 72 inches (triptych), acrylic & mixed media on panel
©2013 Deidre Adams

 

The experience of the immediate few days after returning home from a 4-week residency is not unlike the post-show letdown syndrome. The normal routine has been broken, there’s stuff piled everywhere that you have to deal with, and that little nagging inner voice of self doubt rears its head again. The fabulous time of working in a huge studio with so many other creative people nearby is over and you miss them – a lot. And it’s so easy to just sit in front of the computer wasting precious time instead of dealing with any of this.

I allowed myself several days of down time because I just didn’t feel motivated at all. Then I got tired of looking at the piles and started putting things away. Looking at tubes of paint and piles of paper and books and realizing I don’t have room for all these things in my current small space was a motivator to leave them out and start using them right away. Luckily, I had left myself a nice gift: an unfinished painting. Finishing this painting was just what I needed to get myself back into the habit of working again, because I love the rhythm of the process. I had decided to do this one in 3 parts because after having worked with some 48 x 72-inch panels earlier this year (see here and here), I realized these were just very difficult to deal with in my current setup. Working modularly is a great way to do a fairly large piece without so much of a struggle.

Adams-StudioShoot-131107491-

A Cross Section of Awareness, detail

 

Adams-StudioShoot-131107490-

A Cross Section of Awareness, detail

 

And because of my web-induced ADD personality, I have to have multiple things going on in the studio, so I’m continuing to do more Excavations pieces in between letting coats of paint and medium dry on the paintings on the floor.

I’ve also got this crazy idea now that I want a studio outside of my house. I so much enjoyed working in a community of other artists and having a space I could get really messy in, which just isn’t practical in my house. So far I haven’t found anything I could stand to be in at a price I can afford. But I’ve only been looking for a week. So we’ll see.


November 22nd, 2013|Art|2 Comments