LUNES, EL VIENTISEIS DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
An eyes, nose and mouth building down K road.
SABATO, EL VIENTICUATRO DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
A break and a nice drink in the sun, aesthetically designed by Jim V.
JUEVES, EL VIENTIDOS DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
Tonight's the book launch of The Real Art Roadshow hardback edition at Art+Object. Here's a reference to it on Beatties Blog.

MIERCOLES, EL VIENTIUNO DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
Last night was the opening of I Go Where The Party Takes Me. A good turn-out and lots of fun, along with serious conversation. There's some photos of the opening on Jo's blog here.
MARTES, EL VIENTE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
Here's a photo (middle one) that a friend recently sent me. They're part of a photo shoot by Dan Budnik in Guston's Woodstock studio in 1964. What I like about this photograph in the middle is the square of light and the bottom left of the pic, with Guston's head creating a shadow, echoing his paintings from that period. The linseed-ridden, gun-metal head-shaped blobs seemed to carry on throughout his painting career. Below the photos are two untitled paintings, one from the 1964 period and a figurative head from the last group of ink and acrylic paintings he completed before he died in 1980.
Right, I'm off for a couple of weeks, will upload a post or two when I have internet access.

LUNES, EL DIECINUEVE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
A new piece of pottery, a phoenix rising from the flames salt and pepper shaker set.

EL CRUZ DE DOMINGO, EL DIECIOCHO DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
wacko-cross. Fused coloured glass crucifix with plastic corpus

SABATO, EL DIECESIETE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NEUVE
I've been thinking about reinvigorating my Whiteworld series of drawings and have been looking into the new designs and styles of currencies, notes and bills. The most popular one at the moment is the possibility of the Amero, a joining of the Canadian, Mexican and American currencies. There's some great conspiracies out there so I'm thinking it would be interesting to address it now artistically as a marker to see what happens in the future. Check out the image below with the photoshopped deer from the net.
I also keep going back to the drawing below, Changing World (pencil on paper, 2004) which was a precursor to the Whiteworld portraits. It's based on the American one dollar bill, but apart from that I think its something to do with the composition that seems to be popping up in a set of new paintings on tin that I'm working on at the moment.

VIERNES, EL DIECESEIS, EL OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
An invitation to an exhibition of Whanganui photography in Auckland next Tuesday.
JUEVES, EL QUINCE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
121 years ago today:
From Hell, Mr. Lusk....

MIERCOLES, EL CATORCE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
Rouge-Test:
MARTES, EL TRECE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
I've just received an invitation to 'The Captain' at Tauranga Art Gallery, so I'm guessing my artwork Thou Art Nothing, 1999 (below) is in the exhibition. I'm heading up to Auckland for 10 days late October, so I'll get to se the show. The invitation features two images: one, Marian Maguire's 'A Portrait of Captain James Cook with a Classical Urn from the Collection of the Admirality' (2005) and Gavin Hurley's 'My Sad Captain' 2006.
I love it how the Tauranga Art Gallery managed to snap up the New Zealand 'Art Gallery' URL before any other gallery.
LUNES, EL DOCE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
I've found some real gems while looking through a lot of 50's fashion photography, including this fantastic photograph of the french dancer and actress Leslie Caron in sphinx-like pose, claws included. The photo was taken by often overlooked fashion photographer, Clifford Coffin. The image on the right is another Coffin image from a poster that I picked up from the National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh in 2003. An intriguing image that I had on my wall in Wellington for 2 years. I'd love to know where the poster is now, after six house shifts since I took it off my wall.

DOMINGO, EL ONCE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
After looking through a bunch of Irving Penn Vogue photographs, I came across the cover below which reminded me of part of a painting I completed just before heading overseas in 2008. Here's a link to the painting My Ambassador. I guess I painted that image in the roundel for the fear of running out of cash half-way through the trip. It didn't happen, luckily and I even made a couple of sales overseas (don't tell my accountant)...and how am I going to fit in a crucifix? Well, below are rosary beads with a wooden crucifix that I bought from a Mexican Swap-meet in North Las Vegas, a large field with many small tents and stall selling their wares (similar to our A & P shows). When you look through the small metal ring on the crucifix (called a stanhope), an image of the Virgin of Guadeloupe appears.
SABATO, EL DIEZ DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
Just heard that Irving Penn passed away three days ago, aged 92. His famous Vogue cover image of 1950 (Below) taught me about the wonders of photographic fashion design cropping, having been familiar with the final cover, seeing the original photograph (left) showed how a subtle trim either side can change the whole feel of a photograph. His portraits of Truman Capote are great too, but I couldn't pass up the fantastic Jasper Johns photo below.
We unfortunately missed the Penn show at the Morgan Library in NYC by 3 months last year, would have been great to see, although, you can't be everywhere, all the time.
VIERNES, EL NUEVE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
About week ago, I watched The Simpsons episode, Half-Decent Proposal, where Marge's high-school beau Artie Ziff proposes to Homer a million dollars in exchange for a weekend with Marge to re-create their school prom in order to win her back. Anyway, Jo sent me this link about 'robot painters' that turn internet noise into 'fine art'. I mention The Simpsons episode as Artie Ziff demonstrates how he made his millions by inventing a machine that transforms dial-up modem noise into muzac. That episode aired in 2002.

JUEVES, EL OCHO DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
This bar-coded Google 'logo' popped up on my browser today, a subtly autocratic air about it, especially after reading this staggering article in the New Yorker yesterday (only the abstract is available online). I guess I knew that Google is a powerful net intermediary, but I guess to see the actual monetary values puts its on a whole other level. On the lighter side, I'm reminded of a very funny Arj Barker skit about the smug attitude of the Google image search engine. It should be on you tube somewhere.
MIERCOLES, EL SIETE DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE (!Feliz cumpleanos Thom E. Yorke!)
On Sunday, I mentioned a crucifixion drawing by San Juan de la Cruz that came to him in a vision. I remembered I used the image on a small transportable devotional painting I did in 2005. These were an odd group of works, intuitively unravelled after a big overseas trip to the UK, USA and Europe in 2004. This particular work, called Bath Salts, was in reaction to a residency I'd completed in Arbroath, Scotland a year before. This is where the Scottish Declaration of Independence was signed. In turn, America used this document as a framework for their declaration. So, I wanted to link it back to New Zealand and this double-panelled, double-sided painting was the outcome.
I think I used the San Juan drawing (seen below, detail and with relic in frame) to describe the concept of perspective, not as in Alberti but as in a particular attitude towards, or a way of regarding something in particular.
The oblique title refers to the small images around the edges of the top canvases - taken from old New Zealand notes, once released from their numerical currency context, for me, they took on the form of those candy-looking cakes you throw in the bath.
Unravelled intuition indeed.
MARTES, EL SEIS DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
More Sphinx: a painting reference to Venus in Furs, a movie I went to see with Jo at one of the Wellington Film Festivals, probably around 2003-4. I'd started looking at the Symbolist painters in my 4th year at art school, specifically Von Stuck, Elschemius, Khnopff and Bernard, oh and the guy who did the pterodactyl with the glove - can't remember his name. I was stuck in my work and Peter Ireland suggested looking at that specific period of esthete painting.
A few years later, revisiting Von Stuck, re-listening to The Velvet Underground (song based on the book), listening to the new P J Harvey cd and watching a couple of Werner Herzog films (Klaus Kinski was in Venus In Furs), this painting (on the right) came out - called Religious Instruction. (oil on canvas, 2005)
I should have really wrung out the synchronicity by reading the Sacher-Masoch book that the movie was based on. Oh well...
I think what jogged my memory was going to see Hot Pink Bits by Penny Ashton on Saturday night - she mentioned Sacher-Masoch in her 'fetish' act.
LUNES, EL CINCO DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
The top row of images are screenshots from the start of the movie documentary, Woodstock.
below, a set of Apple Ipod advertisements.
EL CRUZ DE DOMINGO, EL CUATRO DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
A Papal crucifix (0n right) that I purchased at Vatican City last year in August. I found it in a tiny shop beside the entrance to the Reliquary museum in St Peters cathedral. The crucifix,which was popularised by Pope John Paul II on his pastoral crozier, has a similar feel to the mystical drawing by San Juan de la Cruz - the small drawing in Avila prompted Salvador Dali to paint his homage which was hung in St. Mungos Chapel in Glasgow, last time I visited in 2003.
SABATO, EL TRES DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
I've just finished re-watching Crumb, a doco that I own about cultural cartoonist, Robert Crumb. He visits his younger brother Maxon in San Francisco and discusses their time growing up and look at some of his paintings. The painting below that he's holding produced an intense flash-back to Madrid, where I saw Caravaggio's St Catherine of Alexandria at the Thyssen-Bornemisza Gallery.
Both paintings feature intensely elegant, yet fragile-looking women, juxtaposed with aggressive, metallic forms. St Catherine is turning her head away from the impaling prongs, while brazenly stroking the blade of the rapier. I distinctly remember being captured by that stare and the angle of her head. Crumb's painting has a female encased in a metallic bra, which he mentions, "...talks about her personality...".
Both their expressions have an impish, puckish air about them. Just thought the comparison was kind of interesting.
VIERNES, EL DOS DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
Thomas Kinkade, the self-proclaimed Monet of the millennium has been 'Endorized'. There's also another one of a large octopus devouring a Kinkade lighthouse somewhere out there on the net that I saw a while back.
I find the politics of Kinkade's work interesting, especially in regards to the christian-right acceptance of his art. Since the 60's, the airbrushed landscape poster-reproduced paintings of this genre have dominated christian publishing, book covers and ephemera. It's amazing how quickly a pastiche is created through total acceptance. It's a far cry from the visceral Catholic imagery of the Quattrocento. Jeffrey Vallance, commented on Kinkade's paintings: "...This is another area that the contemporary art world has a hard time with, that I find interesting. He expresses what he believes and puts that in his art. That is not the trend in the high-art world at the moment, the idea that you can express things spiritually and be taken seriously… It is always difficult to present serious religious ideas in an art context. That is why I like Kinkade. It is a difficult thing to do...")
I think Vallance's quote talks more about art hierachies and politics rather than presenting religious ideas through art and I find his work is nestled closer to the christian art of the past: the use of narrative and imagery to instill comprehension through trepidation. If Vallance's was born during the Trecento, I would imagine him to be a predella painter - subtly subverting and questioning tenets through his use of extant symbols, all displayed in small format at the base of a formidable polyptych.

below: Kinkade/ Star Wars mash-up
under that: Jeffrey Vallance, The Devil Hates Art, 2001
(courtesy Lehmann Maupin, NYC)

JUEVES, EL UNO DE OCTUBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
I'm getting more and more confused about the de Chirico painting that I've been writing about last week. I just watched Robert Hughes' The Mona Lisa Curse and took a screen-shot of him sitting in the Met, looking at three de Chirico paintings, the one on the left being Composition Metaphysique. This one-hour episode came out last year, so was probably filmed in 2007 - early 2008. Why is it there? Still can't find anything about the Hillman loan. It's possibly a different painting (a copy), something that de Chirico was known to do.
I've stopped using capitals, nothing to do with this, but now that I'm writing a bit more than I was at the start, its a spacer-saver thing...fractal savings.
MIERCOLES, EL TRIENTE DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
Another Tansey and its most likely source:

Mark Tansey, Derrida Queries de Man, 1990, oil on canvas
Sidney Paget, Sherlock Holmes and Professor Moriarty in Combat at Reichenbach Falls, 1893, media on paper


MARTES, EL VIENTINUEVE DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
Recently, I've been looking through several discs of photos from an overseas trip I took in 2003 to the USA and UK. The pics I took at the Met in NYC bring back vivid memories and significant realisations as an artist standing in front of emotive paintings that I'd been studying since high school.
I had not consciously come across Mark Tansey before. His painting below, The Innocent Eye Test, 1981 was a revelation because of its Po-Mo tenets and use of Paulus Potter's The Young Bull, 1647, which I had read about in Frank Stella's Working Space (which I've recently re-read). Stella's critique of Potter's painting as an example of minimal, if not any, 'working' pictorial space, especially in comparison to Caravaggio, who had revolutionised the use of pictorial space 50 years beforehand. I see this in the weightlessness of the bull's back legs and the clarity of the sky that shortens the pictorial depth.
After doing a quick search, I see that Andrew Paul Wood has used Tansey's painting to describe Denis Dutton's academic enquires as needing a ".. .call for a truly innocent eye...
"
I like the touch of the Monet Haystack to the right of the Potter painting, another thing that bovine are into.

LUNES, EL VIENTIOCHO DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
AFTER LOOKING THROUGH ALL THE PHOTOS I TOOK AT THE MET IN 2003, I CAME ACROSS THE ACTUAL PAINTING THAT I WAS TALKING ABOUT ON SATURDAY. AFTER TRAWLING THROUGH THE MET'S WEB ARCHIVE, I CAN'T FIND WHAT EXHIBITION IT WOULD HAVE BEEN IN, BUT PERHAPS A TOURING SHOW OF THE COLLECTION OF ALEX AND RITA HILLMAN (WHO OWNED IT UP TO MID 2008). THE GLASS PROTECTING THE PAINTING HAS PICKED UP THE REFLECTION OF THE LIGHTING IN THE GALLERY, A NICE ADDITION OF THREE UFO FORMS.
IT'S ALSO NICE TO SEE HOW THE PAINTING HAS BEEN FRAMED.

DOMINGO, EL VIENTISIETE DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
HERE'S THE DETAIL OF THE SAID FOOT (NO CRUZ TODAY, NEXT WEEK...)
SABATO, EL VIENTISEIS DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
YESTERDAY'S SPHINX POST REMINDED ME OF ONE OF MY FAVOURITE GUSTAVE MOREAU PAINTINGS, OEDIPUS AND THE SPHINX WHICH IS IN THE MET IN NEW YORK. I FIRST SAW THIS PAINTING IN OCTOBER 2003 AND, BECAUSE OF THE SCALE OF THE PAINTING AND THE HEIGHT AT WHICH IT WAS HUNG, I WAS ATTRACTED BY THE FOOT AT THE BOTTOM RIGHT HAND CORNER OF THE PAINTING (I'VE GOT A DETAIL THAT I PHOTOGRAPHED WHILE VIEWING IT- I'LL HUNT THAT OUT). IT REMINDED ME OF THE PAINTING STYLE OF GIORGIO DE CHIRICO, IN THIS INSTANCE, HIS PAINTING COMPOSITION METAPHYSIQUE OF 1914 (BELOW). THIS PAINTING IS INFREQUENTLY REPRODUCED, BUT HAD STUCK IN MY HEAD. IT HAS TURNED UP A BIT RECENTLY THOUGH - IT SOLD FOR USD$6,130,500 LAST YEAR AT CHRISTIES AND HAS RECENTLY BEEN INCLUDED IN GIORGIO DE CHIRICO AT THE MUSEE D'ART MODERNE DE LA VILLE DE PARIS IN MAY THIS YEAR.
THE FOOT IN THE MOREAU PAINTING IS PROBABLY A HUMAN REMAIN, A CAST-OFF OF THE SPHINX'S VICTIMS WHO COULDN'T ANSWER HER RIDDLE. THE DE CHIRICO FEET ARE CLASSICAL GREEK OR HELLENISTIC REMAINS THAT ADD FLAVOUR TO HIS METAPHYSICAL SOUP. I THINK WHAT INTERESTS ME IN THIS PAINTING IS THE FACT THAT ONE FOOT IS OBVIOUSLY FROM A STATUE, BUT THE OTHER IS CROPPED AT THE EDGE OF THE CANVAS, SO WE ONLY HAVE THE PALE COLOUR TO GO BY TO RELATE IT TO THE OTHER FOOT AS A POSSIBLE MARBLE. THIS IDEA IS REPEATED IN THE CHIMNEY STACK AND/OR OTHER CHIMNEY STACK, OR PERHAPS COLUMN; WHICH IN TURN RELATES, SCALE-WISE, TO THE FLUTE-SHAPED OBJECT LYING ON THE OBLIQUE PLANE BY THE EGG. GREAT STUFF.

(TOP) GUSTAVE MOREAU
OEDIPUS AND THE SPHINX
1864, OIL ON CANVAS
206.4 x 104.8CM
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, NYC

GIORGIO DE CHIRICO
COMPOSITION METAPHYSIQUE
1914, OIL ON CANVAS
81 X 54CM

VIERNES, EL VIENTICINCO DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
ANOTHER RECENTLY DESTROYED PAINTING BELOW, BUT INTERESTING (WELL, TO ME) IN WHERE IT LED.
THIS PAINTING, WHICH SEEMS TO HAVE A LOT OF EAGLE BOYS (NOW DEFUNCT PIZZA OUTFIT) REFERENCES, WAS NOT THE FIRST PAINTING WITH A SPHINX PRESENT, BUT THE FIRST TO ISOLATE THE IMAGE. THE SPHINX TURNS UP IN AS A CARDBOARD SCULPTURE IN MY HUGS AND KISSES SHOW IN 2003 AND IN A VERY RECENT WORK, A CRUZ DE LAS ANIMAS, WHICH HAS A REPRODUCTION OF A PANORAMIC PAINTING I DID IN LATE 2000, JUST AFTER THE TOP BLACK PAINTING. I REMEMBER DOING A GROUP PROJECT AT PRIMARY SCHOOL ON THE RIDDLE OF THE SPHINX, THAT WE ALL ILLUSTRATED IN CLASS. SO MY INTEREST AND THE INFLUENCE PROBABLY COMES FROM BACK THEN. THERE WERE NO SUCH THINGS AS REMOTE CONTROLS THEN, SO THAT'S A LATER ADDITION
JUEVES, EL VIENTICUATRO DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
A NEW RETABLO, TITLED THE BEGINNING OF THE END
2
009
OIL ON TIN
360MM X 290MM
MIERCOLES, EL VIENTITRES DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
LOW-BROW ART?, HOW LOW CAN YOU GO? PLENTY LOW. I'M RE-READING GREENBERG'S AVANT-GARDE AND KITSCH FROM 1939, **WITH SURPRISING RESULTS!!** IT SEEMS THE HUNTER HAS BECOME THE HUNTED
I'LL GET BACK TO YA ON THAT ONE...

MARTES, EL VIENTIDOS DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
A PROPHETIC ARTWORK? A REVERSE PAINTED CD CASE WITH CD PAINT PALETTE INCLUDED.
I DIDN'T PARTICULARLY WANT THIS AS I HAVE A THING FOR THE PRINTED WORK.
RUMOUR HAS IT THAT THE FAT LADY HAS NOT YET SUNG, SO I'LL BE LOOKING FORWARD TO RECEIVING MY NEXT ISSUE, AS I STILL HAVE 2 ISSUES THAT ARE PAID FOR .
LUNES, EL VIENTIUNO DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
MY REOCCURRING BACKACHE IS BACK WITH A VENGEANCE. I KNOW WHERE THE PROBLEM IS (UPPER RIGHT-HAND SIDE SPINE, 3 LAYERS OF MUSCLE DEEP) BUT I CAN'T GET TO IT, UNLESS I GO TO A MASSEUR. ALL I CAN DO IS STRETCH TO RELIEVE THE TENSION, ONLY A SHORT TERM FIX.
IN MARCH 2008, I WAS WORKING WITH A MASSEUR WHO WAS INTERESTED IN REFLEXOLOGY, MOSTLY THE FEET. THE CHART BELOW IS THE MOST ACCURATE FOR ME AT PRESENT AND I LIKE IT BECAUSE IT'S VISUAL. IF I CAN RELAX ENOUGH, I CAN WORK ON MY OWN FEET BUT THAT TAKES A TREMENDOUS AMOUNT OF ENERGY AS YOU NEED TO BE RELAXED, BUT AWARE OF WHAT YOU'RE DOING AT THE SAME TIME.

I INCLUDED THIS CHART IN A LARGE RITUALISTIC PAINTING INSTALLATION I MADE AT THE START OF THIS YEAR CALLED THIRTY-THREE. THE FEET ARE FREED OF THE SHOES, AND WALK TOWARDS THE GRAVE AND ACTUALLY WALK ABOVE IT AS IF YOU WERE SKY-WALKING, SIMILAR TO THE GLASS SKY-WALK OVER THE GRAND CANYON. OF COURSE, YOU CAN SEE THE SOLES OF THE FEET, SO THE WHOLE IMAGE BECOMES FLIPPED 180 DEGREES AT THE POINT OF REALISATION.
UN CRUCIFIXION PARA DOMINGO, EL VIENTE DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
A CRUCIFIXION SHOWING TEH SEVEN SORROWS OF THE VIRGIN, BY A FOLLOWER OF QUINTEN MASSIJS (PREVIOUSLY ATTRIB. TO A FOLLOWER OF JAN PROVOST) ABOUT A METRE HIGH, 700MM WIDE.
SABATO, EL DIECINUEVE DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
WHERE'S GEORGE?
VIERNES, EL DIECIOCHO DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
ROB MCLEOD HAS AN EXHIBITION ON AT PRESENT OVER IN SYDNEY AT BEATTY GALLERY.
THERE'S SOME GREAT TITLES IN THE EXHIBITION THAT WORK AGAINST THE INGRAINED MYTH THAT HIS PAINTING IS ABOUT FORMALISM: PAINT SURFACE, SKIN AND THAT THERE IS NO MEANING (RECENT TILES ARE : SWIMMING AGAINST THE TIDE, WALKING AWAY, LOOKING FOR A BOSS, FIGHTING THE PAST, BREAKING FREE). THAT WAS THE LATE 70S AND EARLY 80'S, YET THERE HAS BEEN VERY LITTLE DISCUSSION OF HIS HEFTY TRANSITION BACK TO FIGURATION IN THE EARLY 2000'S. I'M GUESSING MOSTLY BECAUSE PEOPLE STILL SEE PAINT ON THE SURFACE, SO PRESUME THAT WHAT WAS WRITTEN IN THE LATE 70'S BY JIM BARR AND MARY BARR IN THEIR A-M BOOK MUST STILL STAND.
HIS WORK IS OFTEN REFERRED TO AS UGLY, WHICH IS AN ATTRIBUTE THAT DOESN'T SEEM TO BE TOLERATED IN THE NZ ART, ESPECIALLY IN THE PAINTING FIELD. THE STATES HAD THE KIENHOLZ'S, WHOSE VITRIOLIC LIFE-SIZE DIORAMAS OF POLITICAL AND PERSONAL THEMES I FIND SIMILAR TO MCLEOD'S GROTESQUES. NOT ONLY IN THEIR SIMILAR MESSAGES BUT IN THEIR RELATIVE SCALE AND INTEREST IN SCIENCE FICTION, HORROR AND HOW WE RELATE THOSE ATTRIBUTES TO OUR EVERYDAY LIVES AND SOCIETY. THE TYPE OF ARTWORK THAT WAS BEING PRODUCED IN THE STATES AT THAT TIME SEEMED TO BE A REACTION AGAINST THE POST-WAR, CLEAN-CUT OZZIE AND HARRIET WORLD THAT WAS BEING PROMOTED TO SOCIETY THROUGH THE TV. I GUESS I'M LEFT WONDERING: IF THE FACT THAT IF SOMETHING HAS BRIGHT COLOURED PAINT ON IT, IS SUPPOSED TO BE PLEASANT AND PRETTY?
HOW DO YOU ALTER THE PERCEPTIONS OF SUCH AN INTEGRAL SIGNIFIER OF PAINTING SO THAT IT'S COMPLETELY TURNED ON ITS HEAD?


JUEVES, EL DIECISIETE DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
ADDENDUM: WELL, I WAS INCORRECT. I RECEIVED NOTIFICATION YESTERDAY THAT MY WORK IN CHRISTCHURCH DID SELL. AWESOME. THERE'S HOPE YET.
MIERCOLES, EL DIECISEIS DE SEPTIEMBRE, DOS MIL NUEVE
THE PAINTING BELOW WAS AUCTIONED IN THE ART EVENT AT THE CHRISTCHURCH ART GALLERY
ON FRIDAY NIGHT. HAVEN'T HEARD WHETHER IT SOLD OR NOT. BECAUSE OF THE TONE OF THE TEXT, I WOULDN'T BE SURPRISED IF IT HADN'T.

EX-VOTO (19TH OF AUGUST, 2009)
OIL ON TIN

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