Tag Archives: Image

The Curvilinear Traveller (version 1)

TheCurvilinearTraveller1ematted

Whimsicality and spontaneity are pretty hard states and results to achieve in art. That is, when you try to line them up with the love of beauty and wonder. Beauty and wonder do require a sense of design and order to some degree or another. I haven’t measured that degree, but it does seem as if there is some intuitive knowledge there at least. It all has to seem effortless, too, which is a state one works oneself into after doing doodles, warmups, practice runs, and exercises.

This piece here achieved a result of such whimsicality and near total spontaneity that I felt it satisfied a certain, but deficiently defined, level of experiment and discovery for me. I have been trying to achieve this level ever since. But this image you see here is part of a larger image I titled Astonished Buoyancy for which I posted here a while back. Astonished Buoyancy is more suggestive of a large balloon in the foreground, whereas this image has the large foreground balloon cropped so that it looks more like the curved surface of a planet in space. There is still an orange balloon shape in the background at the upper part of this illustration however.

I just became thrilled with the nebula and clouds pervading the space around the objects, which add to the life, dimension, and mystery of the work. When I was physically drawing the drawing this image was derived from on a piece of paper, I made sure not to get overly preoccupied with the lines I was drawing for delineating the forms. This is what I feel is the whimsical aspect. The spontaneous aspect occurred in the filtering of the image as a whole in Photoshop as I altered the colors, did inversions, and executed sharpening effects. The neutral washes and background colors became even more emphasized and psychedelic as I worked on the piece.

What’s exciting about it to me is that, as I work throughout my entire process of creation for an illustration, both traditionally and electronically, space seems to always want to express itself as something more than mere flat emptiness. It always seems to want to express something more, something just beyond perception, beckoning me and you to explore further, to travel past the obvious and discover whatever it is past the fold, hill or cloud radiating from this particular window in time.

Specifications:

Title: The Curvilinear Traveller (version 1)

Source mediums: Water-based ink, alcohol-based marker altered by lacquer thinner and rubbing alcohol on paper, manipulated digitally with filters

Print medium: Hewlett Packard printer ink from Hewlett Packard DesignJet Z2100 printer on Hewlett Packard print paper (Note: print can be made with archival paper and printer if requested)

Digital manipulation completed: 9/20/2016

Dimensions of print: 25 inches by 24 inches

Number of limited edition prints: 25

Contact me: artofevan@hotmail.com

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December 9, 2017 · 9:01 am

Hour Shed (version 4)

HourShed4ematted

I call this one Hour Shed, as in shedding an hour of time. I think of it as an abstract, psychedelic landscape with a warped horizon. A couple of billowing clouds hover overhead, which are more like doorways to other dimensions. I just really have fun scanning drawings I make with mixed media. With the drawing I made for this piece, I used water-based ink pens (a Schneider pen), and alcohol based marker drawn on a small sketchpad. I then applied some water with an excellent flat head paint brush to make the water-based ink bleed. I let that dry, and then applied some ammonia as an experiment to see how the already applied media would interact with it. It didn’t really do much.

I then splashed some lacquer thinner over the surface of the drawing, which made the alcohol based marker bleed, and also the ink from the Schneider pen bled. After that dried, I applied some rubbing alcohol. The results left what I wanted: Discolored, blurred, cloudy, ambient, faded, psychedelic, bled effects.

I’d recently been listening to authors and documentaries discussing the hippie culture in Laurel Canyon during the 1960s. I already knew that the CIA covertly experimented with LSD on people unbeknownst to them. I also knew that the US government really wanted to find a way to divert anti-war protesters from attracting too much attention for being against the Vietnam war. So what I discovered is that the CIA helped to create the hippie counter-culture so as to discredit anti-war protesters and to divert young people into drugs, cheap sex, and other demoralizing activities.

I have always enjoyed abstract and psychedelic art. Much of my inspiration comes from the hippie counter-culture, including a lot of the music produced from that era. It’s just that I now see what purpose that scene served. Today, it’s plain to me that entertainers, artists, actors, and public figures get fame, attention and money because they agree to the CIA’s terms of spreading “American” cultural hegemony across the globe.

It has been known for years now that the American Abstract Expressionist movement was financed and nurtured by the CIA so that America could claim a culture of its own on the world stage. Centralized planners felt that America really had no art or culture up to that point when the Abstract Expressionists were forming, so the CIA decided to create a world stage for them. Again, I’m not repelled by the counter-culture movement of the Abstract Expressionists. I just note that they were allowed to become famous because they had secret state backing.

In my learning and research into art methods, techniques, psychological values, and history, I have come to conclude (perhaps for the time being) that art serves imperial purposes. It is used as propaganda. It entertains, amuses, impresses, catches attention, and thereby communicates messages consciously and unconsciously. An Italian Marxist named Antonio Gramsci called the proliferation of imperial culture, art, and propaganda cultural hegemony. This means that a dominant state—or superpower—superimposes its entertainment industry, such as Hollywood for example, on to subordinate states, thereby achieving a psychological penetration of the collective population.

Specifications:

Title: Hour Shed (version 4)

Source mediums: Water-based ink, alcohol-based marker altered by water, ammonia, lacquer thinner, and rubbing alcohol on paper, digitally combined with organic material

Print medium: Hewlett Packard printer ink from Hewlett Packard DesignJet Z2100 printer on Hewlett Packard print paper (Note: print can be made with archival paper and printer if requested)

Digital manipulation completed: 9/18/2017

Dimensions of print: 30 inches by 16 inches

Number of limited edition prints: 25

Investment of print not framed: $80

Investment of print framed with glass: $400.00 (shipping included)

Contact me: artofevan@hotmail.co

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September 18, 2017 · 9:20 am

Prayer of a Pillar (version 8)

PrayerOfAPillar8ematted

The idea here is a beautified, glorified, abstractified column. It became apparent to me as I was exploring other design configurations. This piece is derived from, believe it or not, Ataraxy (version 1). Of course I combined Ataraxy with a few layers of other material. Another example of that result is the piece I posted here back in August, 2015, called Galactic Template (version 2).

As far as common history is concerned, the architectural usage of columns dates back to ancient Egyptian times of around 3000 BCE. The ancient empire of Egypt is said to have originated in that time period. I only theorize that there could have been great civilizations, not alluded to in contemporary history books, that existed thousands, and perhaps tens of thousands, of years prior to ancient Egypt. Associate professor Robert M. Schoch has done considerable research revealing civilizations our current model of history ignores.

I chose to post this piece now because I had noticed my recent usage of the word “column” in my micro-blogging. My blogging is, of course, influenced heavily by what I notice going on in the world, and by other professional bloggers whose information and insights I value. I like to rely on my intuitive sense of informational flows; one way I do that is by noticing repeating patterns, including words, sounds, and images… even feelings. Perhaps especially feelings, as feelings are the place from which most people make decisions anyway.

A column can define a column in a newspaper, or it can define the architectural noun. To me, a column is a symbol of strength, civilization, calculation, order, governance, continuity, and stability. Perhaps this sense is intended to be communicated by journalists’ official use of columns.

At the bottom left and right of this picture are what appear to be stalks of grass, composed of black mosaic pieces. Or maybe they are skeletal impressions of hands beginning to cup and shroud the base of the column. Anyway, whether if the finger-tips of grass, or the phalanges of hands, they look like they are moving into a praying clasp. Hence, the title for this piece: Prayer of a Pillar.

The metaphorical, amorphic fingers merely suggest the form of hands as if each mosaic piece is obeying the non-physical commands of an unseen field moving them to pray. I’ve seen imaginary depictions of what it looked like in ancient Egyptian buildings and temples, and it appears that Egyptian artisans and their governing priesthoods liked to use bright, bold colors to fill in the shapes, forms, hieroglyphs, and figures engraved on their walls and pillars. So my idea of a column here has a more Eastern and ancient character to it, rather than a Western, colorless, marble quality.

This piece has a lot of detail in it—a quality I wanted to achieve—with an appealing sense of balance and order. As many other pieces of mine, this work looks like it could be a still of a kaleidoscope. I also like to imagine that you are looking through a microscope at an exotic, alien world other than what you might normally see as cells and microscopic debris. After all, one of my original pieces in the Micro-Chimerisms series is titled Microscopic Works of Light.

I may add that the black mosaic phalanges coming up into a prayer formation at the bottom of this illustration can also be seen as the petals of a lotus flower. The lotus flower is an Eastern symbol of enlightenment, as they blossom on the surfaces of muddy bodies of water; from the depths of darkness, illusion, suffering, and mud is born enlightenment. So I’m really combining the Western prayer, the column of strength, and an Eastern symbol of enlightenment here.

These layers of materials, collages, drawings, and texts, along with multiple multi-layered symbols creates an idea I want to communicate to you: That we are multi-dimensional beings who perceive multiple meanings in the vast perceptions we receive and emit everyday.

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May 2, 2016 · 1:13 am

Tri-Iteration (version 1)

TriIteration1ematted

Is it time for some therapy for non-physical beings bound and whipped by the addictive pleasures of the flesh? Well, whatever. Apparently, art therapy is the thing critics and journalists like belittling and criticizing as of late. I sort of don’t blame them due to all the coloring books for adults that even Wal-Mart now sells. If I were more paranoid, I’d say that centralized PR firms caught on to my doodling after observing me from all the surveillance cameras around every corner for the last few years.

I would work on larger more extensive art projects, but, for whatever reason, I’ve been condemned to doodle on scraps of paper glued together into collages. I’m becoming cooler and cooler with that as the world’s years hammer away at my trembling heart. It’s cool; I needed to develop some courage. I hope I’ve gained a thread of it from a badge of courage awarded from heaven.

Anyway, I titled this piece Tri-Iteration because of the repeated lower-case i’s in the lower part of this abstract illustration. An iteration is a repeated utterance. This drawing is basically the foundation drawing for my Wrecked Tangles (After the Crash) J series. Besides the i’s, included in this picture is a t and an H. I suppose you political hacks could find a hidden connection there between the letters I incorporated herein, and current events.

Maybe my unconscious mind was trying to tell me and everyone else something. I wasn’t consciously trying to intend a message. In fact, this drawing was an attempt on my part to escape my over-thinking, analytical mind. Hence, “art therapy.” It allows me to rest my left brain, and enter the playful, experimental, careless regions of my right brain. Having been credentialed as a Registered Health Information Technician lately, I have been trained to think more scientifically, quantitatively, and rationally. I’m glad the artist self within me hasn’t been completely gutted by this world.

What I note to you about this drawing with pens, pastels, diluted acrylic, and collaged pieces of paper is that I used two new agents as transformative properties in it. I used salt and rubbing alcohol to help weather and distort the colors of dust and magic marker. In previous Wrecked Tangles drawings, I had struggled to make the wrecked parts of the angles and lines mimic nature’s and time’s characteristic features of entropy, weathering, stress, and crumbling.

I first made the frame around this piece solid colors with no interference, but then I decided it needed some pocks and perforations to give it a distressed look. So I copied a selection of the pocks, points, and perforations inside the image and stretched them over to the frame. I was satisfied with that result. It can be changed to solid if you want that format. I can also make the image as a print without any pseudo-matting so that you can get it framed yourself if you so desire.


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March 17, 2016 · 6:13 am

Binarydom (version 9)

IdiosyncraticCouple9ematted

I went through three different names for this picture before I settled on Binarydom. First, I thought Binary Idiom because there are two commensurate pinwheels on either side of the image. I didn’t like that though because I couldn’t settle on whether if there were two idioms or just one divided in itself. Echoes of Hegel’s Unhappy Consciousness can be associated here.

Then I thought of Idiosyncratic Couple as a title, which actually sounds about right to me right now. The central theme that I’m developing here however is one of basic blocks and forces of universe building; or, world creating. The title Idiosyncratic Couple doesn’t completely work as a description for me yet here because the shapes, forms, and movements aren’t evolved to the point of human intelligence and relationships. I am sure many analysts will have fun with my interpretations so far.

I progressed therefore to the idea of calling it Manichaea. Manichaeism was actually an ancient religion founded by an Iranian prophet named Mani in ancient Persia. It’s basic narrative is that we live in a dualistic cosmology of good and evil, light and dark, and so on, resembling the Chinese Ying Yang principle. I gazed into my image and just didn’t see that blatant opposition in it however because the colors on the left and the right of the image are the same—there is no oppositional emphasis. Rather, it seems like more of a harmonious synthesis.

What you may imagine looking at here is two quadrilateral (square) molecules linked up together by ionic bonding. I know that there is no such thing as a square shaped molecule, but I like imagining it as thus in my development of generating imaginary universes. Most molecules usually are hexagonal and pentagonal in structure when studied in diagrams.

I henceforth concluded in titling this piece Binarydom. It’s a kingdom of two molecular worlds bound together in harmony as they travel over the nascent inchoate urges towards clearer definition observed in the background. I drew this drawing with gel and ball-point pens first on blank white paper. I already had some pasted together paper media for future projects, which I scanned into the computer to use for this project.

I made a template of Binarydom with just the white surrounding, excluding the colors and forms, and combined that with the background of pasted together paper media. I feel I merged it all together with a certain degree of success by my standards. I altered the coloring for some of the pisciforms so that their bodies are now a cerulean blue, instead of silver. I originally made their bodies with a silver gel pen. The silver didn’t show up as well as I liked, so I adjusted them to a blue hue.

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February 5, 2016 · 8:19 am

Wrecked Tangles (After the Crash) H1

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The archaic character you don’t recognize off to the lower right of this image is a character from the Glagolitic alphabet, which represents L in the English language. In my recent fascination with language and math characters from around the world, I have been drawing a few of them that catch my eye. Drawing a character from any alphabet puts its shape into my memory so I can redraw it anew in the future without having to look at it again for reference. In a sense, drawing, painting, and even writing helps me to commit anything to memory; it’s like a mapping process that helps to work out the kinks.

I drew several other letters, numbers, and punctuation marks from the English language to give you a sense of stability as a speaker of this language. While it is not my intention to alienate those of you who speak other languages, I must limit myself mostly to the usage of English when I draw a word in order to be able to explain what my intentions are for using that word in a particular art piece, as I am monolingual.

This image is basically the foundation drawing for Wrecked Tangles (After the Crash) H series. I find the letter H to identify the group it’s in to be quite fitting for it due to the fact that it looks like you are witnessing a three dimensionally imagined black-hole.

What it reminds me of is those explanations astrophysicists sometimes show to describe how a black-hole might look if it were three dimensional. They will place a heavy metal ball on to the surface of a bed, thereby depressing the part of the bed that the ball is placed on. These kinds of explanations of the curvature of space and time with respect to super-heavy objects–like black-holes–are, I feel, the best because they give a simple visual representation that anyone can understand.

I’ve been fascinated by surfaces, mediums, settings, contexts, and textures for a long time now. I’ve pretty much concluded that anything can be a tool or medium to use for artistic purposes. I wanted to reproduce a visualization I had of an information vortex, and express it in a Wrecked Tangles themed style. I have described to you before how you can imagine quilts being landscapes. Wrecked Tangles (After the Crash) H1 is another fulfillment for a variation on that theme.

I’m often amused by how the surface of beds can be used to explain the fabric of space and time, and their fabrics can also be used as surfaces to paint or draw on… that is, if they are prepared properly for that purpose. I find this all amusing because the bed is symbolic of sleep, dreaming, and pleasure. It is a doorway, if you will, for which your imagination can roam through its wildest dreams.

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Concomitant Comets (version 4)

Concomitant Comets (version 4)

I uploaded the first series of this image several months ago, and it had a bunch of text I incorporated in that previous version that I had obtained from tweets I tweeted out at the time on Twitter. Well, I became annoyed with the text after a while, and really wanted to have this image portrayed without the text detracting so much attention from the image itself.

I decided to attempt to obnubilate the text by using various methods learned from earlier digital art training. You can still see some of the text a little bit, but that’s okay with me. It 1) creates a sort of subliminal effect and 2) allows for more ease on the eye enabling it to explore the textures of color and shape.

The word concomitant really means something that accompanies another thing. Like when a patient takes a certain medicine for a certain illness, sometimes another drug will be prescribed along with the primary drug for treatment. This is termed as taking a drug concomitantly with another drug.

In this picture, I determined that the circular shapes with tails on them looked like comets, and there are several of them, so I titled it Concomitant Comets. It is odd, however, that the comets are arising from what appears to me to be an ocean. Perhaps they are U.S.O.s (unidentified submersible objects) springing forth from a secret alien facility deeply submerged under an unnoteworthy part of the deep ocean far from land so as to remain surreptitious to the sea voyaging human mind.

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December 2, 2013 · 9:05 am

Wrecked Tangles (After the Crash) version D1

AfterTheCrashD1ematted2

While I had the time, I thought I’d begin the D series for this near-future oriented retrospective on the current state of humanity. I already uploaded the first image for the C series, and I plan on making a variety of variations and sub-series within it, as well as the same for the D series.

The star shape in the upper left corner of the picture is actually a piece of cardboard in a star-shape. I pasted it to a rectangular piece of cardboard for a base. Of course I primed everything, and then I sanded down some of the rough spots. I had to do that because I’d also pasted some paper tissues to the surface in order to give the plane some more texture to work with when I added all the other media on top of it.

As you can see, I pasted pieces of cut-outs from magazines, as well as from print-outs, on to the surface. These features have a sort of window-like character to them. If the picture were animated, it would look like there are many different activities going on behind a foreground of pastel and marker media.

With this work, I was able to successfully integrate some more three dimensional qualities, as the simple house-like shapes over off to the right of the picture make it look like the viewer is looking down at a neighborhood.

I drew in some keyboard characters on the picture because I really like the shapes of letters and characters. So many things that are commonly used for utilitarian purposes attract my attention. I feel like they have other aesthetic qualities to them that people most often ignore. Not only that, but utilitarian tools and objects can be combined into seemingly nonsensical combinations and aggregations.

A lot of my Wrecked Tangles ideas look like they are what a visual trip through a subconscious mind and its digestive activity after consuming data and information surrounding it in various environments. Much of our culture is pure advertisement, and commercialism, so I’m giving some visual perspective on what your subconscious mind does in breaking apart and assimilating everything into something manageable to yourself.

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November 29, 2013 · 8:24 am

The Feather-Swept Sky (version 5)

The Feather-Swept Sky (version 5)

I made this image back in June, 2013. It started out with using magic marker on paper. There was some bleed through from some rubbing alcohol I applied to drawings on previous pages. I incorporated the designs into the stains.

What you see here is a digital manipulation of the original drawing. It’s basically the drawing times four. I use mirroring techniques to accomplish what you see here, as well as in other images.

I realized that the process that I take in many of my creations is the process of unfoldment. Unfoldment is different than development in the sense that unfolding is organic, and flower like, whereas development is more machine like, and each machine developed can’t develop more without a designer making a new model.

Unfoldment is a process that takes place from within a living organism or being. So growth, life, and will come from within a living being, not a “lifeless” machine.

I titled this piece The Feather Swept Sky. I imagined all the feathers of birds sweeping the skies of earth and magically sweeping away all the pollution. This image reminds me of some Native American art and jewelry. It also reminds me of ancient Egyptian art work and jewelry.

I suppose it’s a religious and mystical image bringing us all back a reminder of ancient religions, tribes, and civilizations. It’s the wisdom from our past, and the magical beliefs people had. Especially the belief of respecting and honoring the earth as a living, breathing being, not a dead rock to be used up by the never-ending greed of one percent moguls.

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November 21, 2013 · 4:38 am

Yellow Tide (version 1)

Yellow Tide (version 1)

It looks like a lot of people liked Purple Tide, the last image I uploaded here last night. Well, this is Yellow Tide. It’s actually the predecessor to Purple Tide. It’s the same design, but the colors are inverted.

To be sure, this is part of a drawing I created with mixed media on paper, including magic marker and rubbing alcohol. Thinking of rubbing alcohol gives one a cool feeling, as this is how it feels when you rub it on your skin.

I used to live in southern California, and would visit the beaches there on the West coast every once in a while. The colors in Yellow tide remind me some of the memories I have of going to New Port, Dana Point, San Clemente, or Laguna.

Yet, this image is abstract enough to merely suggest a beach scene. In fact, if you get a totally different impression, then, by all means, let yourself explore that line of thought into your own imagination, and use this image as a doorway to help you get there.

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November 21, 2013 · 4:32 am