Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

25 February 2008

Flatfile


For those of you who may have found the original art in my last post to be distasteful or simply uninspiring, do not despair. There is plenty of fantastic art on display at the Art Space building, located at the Northwest corner of 43rd and Walnut Streets just east of Main. This free show is called the Kansas City Flatfile and features the work of 171 area artists, ranging from students and beginners to professors and professionals. Most of the work is contained in portfolios in file drawers (hence the name flatfile), but there are also wall displays curated by the gallery's directors. The event is also unique in that all proceeds from the sales go directly to the artists.

The photo above was taken a year or two back of the Artspace's project wall by Jenn, who also has some stuff on display at the exhibit.

Another artist whose daily drawings I've been enjoying is T-Bit, who is completing/displaying a drawing for every day of 2008.

Back to the drawing board...

11 January 2008

A night at the Love Garden


If you're anywhere near Lawrence, Kansas tonight, you should stop by and check out Liz Gardner's "Pocket-Sized Pieces" art opening at the Love Garden. Art, wine and whores davores (that's a funetic spelling, I don't speak French) starting at 7 p.m. Ghosty plays at 8.

I contributed to the art pieces by writing short poems for about one third of the pieces, and they will be on display as well. Though my involvement is a small one, it's been lots of fun to assist Liz with this project, and just being able to say that my haiku line the walls of the Love Garden is kind of fun in itself. Maybe more so if you didn't know that the Love Garden is a record store at 936 1/2 Mass.

If you can't come to the opening, swing by the store anytime in the next month. They'll still be up.

Also, for you music fans, Ghosty will also be playing (as a 7-piece!) Saturday night at the Record Bar with opening bands Fourth of July and hometown hip-hop hero Miles Bonny.

To read the Lawrence.com article about Liz's art show, click here. For some recent local press about Ghosty, check out this from The Pitch and this from Lawrence.com.

Hope to see you out this weekend.

28 December 2007

Llamas


Hey Anna, this is that weird-looking llama I was telling you about.


Photos by Jenn. Girl in pink skirt is Tara. Drawing below is by Anna W. For more llama art by Anna, see here. To find out how to help unite llamas with the children who love them, hit up Llama Love.



Llove,

Llukas

16 November 2007

Pocket-Sized Pieces + Poems

A couple of weeks ago, mixed-media artist and good friend Liz Gardner debuted the first eight months of her Pocket-Sized Pieces series at the Hobbs Building open studios event. Basically, Liz is creating a small piece of artwork (roughly 3x3 inches, give or take) for every single day of this year, using thread, watercolors, ink, clear plastic, scraps of magazines and a variety of other materials.

While scanning in her pieces over the summer, I began writing accompanying poems in haiku form (technically, many of them should be called senryū) inspired directly or indirectly by each of her pocket-sized pieces, or PSPs. The poems are not intended to tie the PSPs to any specific interpretation, but rather to present some of the countless ways in which each piece can be considered.

The following is a sampling of PSPs from February, March and April and their accompanying poems. The goal is to put some kind of book or calendar together once they are all complete, in addition to an exhibit. If you like what you see here, be sure to check Liz's Web site to see some more examples of her art and keep up on upcoming events. Enjoy!

(Click on each piece to enlarge)

4/4

the rarest of birds
emerges through a red shroud
silently cooing

4/30

a golden collar
for the kitten with green eyes
and nine hundred lives

4/28

drink carafes of wine
find peace at the piazza
lazy Firenze

4/26

the heart of a dog
is easier to read than
the heart of a man

4/25

angry lover leaves
his laundry basket behind
on Liberty street

4/10

home appliances
forging dark alliances
in my new kitchen

4/12

social networking
interconnected lines show
just how I know you

4/1

vaginal machines
drones bearing pheromones in
service of the queen

3/9

glaciers on the go
projected trajectories
away from the poles

3/8

am Kurfürstendamm
returning from KDW
Kaufhaus des Westens

3/7

composition marked
by a lack of violins
but she still hears them

3/28

attention shoppers:
The Great Shopping Cart Face-Off
is about to start

3/26

escaped from the farm
a sentimental rooster
remembers childhood

3/22

following the flag
undaunted until you fall
off a precipice

3/19

rainbow rivulets
racing to the finish line
to snap the ribbon

3/18

ladies of the night
make a different kind of call
by the light of day

3/15

Earth's out of orbit
all the people in China
jumped at the same time

3/12

spin straw into gold
tell your secrets to no one
but the campfire

3/10

Cinderella team
searches for the right fit for
the silver sneaker

2/26

fair for the veggies
celebration of being
fare for the veggies

2/19

a square of lace torn
from the scrapbook of your past
life as a cherub

2/4

dismembered mallard
Nintendo's not innocent
for Duck Hunt victims

2/13

bloody sea serpent
what did you eat for breakfast?
anyone I knew?

2/15

your heart-shaped glasses
tinted windows to the soul
of a hot summer

2/20

seashells behind glass
tiny turrets, sea torches
on the diamond shores

2/2

swallow a snow globe
then get an X-Ray taken
it will look like this

2/28

mating rituals
between super guys and girls
involve lightning bolts

2/22

echolocations
leading to baroque caverns
black and red flowers

more information, videos and PSPs from January at www.lizgardner.com

01 November 2007

Fall and all


If you're trying to decide which of the million open gallery events to attend in Kansas City tomorrow, the biannual event at the Hobbs Building would be a good bet. Included in these open studios will be the first large-scale showing of Liz Gardner's "Pocket-Sized Pieces" collection. Some of my accompanying mini-poem/haiku-ish verses will be on display to complement Liz's fantastically intricate little pieces. The event goes all weekend, so stop by and see the Hobbs Building studios at some point if you get a chance.


Earlier this month I posted a few photos of murals in Kansas City, Kansas. It turns out these are the work of artist John Bonifacio Moreno, a Kansas City-based artist who has been traveling the globe for 17 years, doing murals and teaching art to urban youth. Mr. Moreno contacted me when he saw that I posted his mural pics, and I spent some time checking out his site, www.unmejormanana.com. There's some photo galleries up of his recent work, and a link to the trailer for his upcoming documentary film, "Un Mejor Mañana." Moreno says of his work:

"I want to create unique films and set up shots that share with the world how I see things. I want to awaken people who are asleep and bring them into another world, a world full of beauty and peace. I am especially interested in cultural issues and the struggle of the human soul. Through my documentaries & films I hope to help others better understand topics dealing with the psychic realm, faith, unexplainable events, the soul, spirituality, and life after death. I believe we create our own reality, whether it's good or bad."

Best of luck to John in his endeavors and a happy Día de los Muertos to all of you blog readers out there -- living or dead.

Finally, I'd just like to say Hello...

...to November

08 April 2007

the hunt is on...


The entries in this year's lukaswetzel.blogspot.com Kids' Easter Comic Contest were a bit darker than usual. Probably because it is colder outside than it should be. Or perhaps it's that pesky war. Whatever the case, I wish you all a pleasant Easter. If you want a closer look at this year's winning drawing, click here.

Also, big shout out to bunnyman.

14 March 2007

Behind Every Good Woman There are Two Good Elves


A happier, more fantasiatic subject for Tuesday's drawing of the day.

19 December 2006

paint a lady (desaturated)

desaturatedlady
LW 12/16/06

21 September 2006

original artworks


This corresponds to an earlier piece on this very site about bidding farewell to an adobe Igloo in a Lawrence, Kansas backyard. The piece ends with the narrator likening himself to a miniature llama/birthday cake decoration that has been moved to a windowsill and given a cidada cowboy as a rider/companion (actually, the hat itself is artistic license). The piece was drawn in summer, but has not yet been publically reproduced until today. Unlike its companion essay, "Goodbye Gloo," the spirit of this piece is believed to be more than pathos. The rendering of a smile on the llama suggests a willingness on part of the artist to move on; to put a happy face on future travels. Upon the piece's unveiling at the Nowhere gallery on 19th and Alaska Streets, one reviewer called it "The song of the open road played by a cicada's kazoo while seated upon the pastel-toned saddle blanket of a miniature llama. Endearingly not-believable."

This piece was made with the usual medley of oil pastels and outdated stamps of a monkey wishing us happy new year.


Most of my drawings could be regarded as "outsider art," in that their expressionistic qualitiy clearly outweighs any real craft. And from time to time, they get made fun of. But validation from the art world is at hand. This drawing was a runner-up in the band Minus Story's "No Rest for Ghosts" art contest. The drawing is part of a 2001 series of oil pastel portraits originally entitled "Rejected Muppets." The series was later incorporated by Jonathan Nagel into his performance at the 2004 Farmer's Ball, to mixed reviews. Someday the series may be displayed here, but only if the curators of fate deem it so, and only if there is an interest on part of the critics and art fans in my reading public (provided such a public exists).

22 August 2006

mythical biketrip to dubrovnik

LHW060822

15 June 2006

Class of 1992 (not really)

While I'm posting children's drawings, I might as well post this fake grade school yearbook page I drew and gave copies of to my real classmates in the spring of 1992. I was thinking of it the other day, and while shuffling boxes around tonight, it popped up.

All characters are originals, except for a few like Arnold, Daniel, Paul and Zordack, who are clearly celebrity-influenced. Shirley, in the upper right corner, was our bus driver. Ms. Jackson has nothing to do with the Outkast song, predating it by several years. Xavier X looks like a tooth. More up-to-date artwork coming soon!

06 June 2006

New Art Acquisition: Robo-Knight

While attending Liz's popple show this weekend, I picked up the most recent addition to my medley of original works of art -- a colored pencil and magic marker drawing entitled "Robo-Knight." "Robo-Knight" is the work of Atticus von Holten, who I believe is 8 years old. His work was featured last month in the Kids' Corner wing of the Olive Gallery, where myself and other Lawrence art collector glitterati snatched up his illustrations for the alarmingly low sum of $2 each.

The chivalric nature of the subject matter, the knight's triumphant posture and the fusion of space- and middle-ages mark young Atticus as an artist after my own heart. I'm reproducing it here to boast of my acquisition, naturally, but more importantly to announce the emergence of this exciting new illustrator.

02 May 2006

backward, tears

In celebration of the month of May, I'm including this translation of "I'm so wild about your strawberry mouth," a ballad by Francois Villon which I first heard read by the late German actor/eccentric Klaus Kinsky. For at least part of his life, Kinksy was obsessed with Villon, a 15th-century French poet, outlaw and vagabond who wrote this poem about his ex-girlfriend, Isebeau. I couldn't find an English version, but I had a CD and transcription of Kinski reading it in German, so I took the liberty of translating it tonight. The line breaks and forms of address (i.e. repetition of "you") are modeled after Kinski's reading, which is full of ecstatic shouts, quavering pauses and reverent whispers. I wish I had the means to include it here. I also recorded a 12-minute electric guitar anthem last month borrowing from this poem's title, imagery and energy, but I'll leave that off the Internet for now.

The above illustration was inspired by a line of Paul Celan's that means "a tear rolls back in its eye." I had it in my head for a while without remembering where it came from, and I decided to draw it to look like weepy faces going through the last stage of an automatic car wash, the part where heat fans lift the moisture up the windshield.

For now, here's Villon's ballad, one of my first efforts to interpret/translate a classic.

You
You
I'm so wild about your strawberry mouth
I've torn my lungs from shouting
after your white body,
you woman.
In the clover, May built a bed,
there bloomed a sweet passing-of-time
with your love the long night.
I long to be there in the deep valley.
Your night prayer and your star-husband.

In deep strawberry valley, in black hair
I slept several summers there
but never slept enough all the same
come,
come here
I know a lovely game
in the deep valley, in mussel-earth
oh, you
you
I'm so wild about your strawberry mouth

The gray world brings joy no more
I gave my sweetest summers there
and it has also brought you no happiness;
not really, only your red mouth
has been spared
for me, for me
for me kept so deep in your hair
I searched the long nights
in winter valley, in ashen earth
I'm so wild about your strawberry mouth

In winter valley, in black strawberry cabbage,
the snowfall built a nest there
and did not ask where love was.
I had ridden that red beast so deep
when I slept with you
Oh, if only the winter were through
and the meadows green again!
oh you,
you
I'm so wild about your strawberry mouth

-Francois Villon

06 February 2006

family

Some new portraits I drew yesterday with aforementioned art kit.
child
mother
father

05 February 2006

February brews us up a winner

While brainstorming about how to create a cereal with the same kind of glow as Stephen's furnace, I brought into existence this little monster, based on the patterns in the carpet. Clear derivations of Van Gogh are present. Glowing chernobyl puffs are yet to hit the streets. Thank you Aunt Margaret for the art set!