Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Ish; or to be a Fish --- Day 4/222

Walk: JCC, Hi Tech Nails
Distance: 2 miles and take yoga class


Most San Franciscans wish they could swim with the fishes or go back to their down jackets during our annual Fall-summer.  Ciwt wonders, if you grew up in California and then went back East for college or work, would you be surprised by real (ie, brisk, cold) Fall?
                                                                                            

Monday, September 7, 2015

Long Time Coming --- Day 4/221

Walk: Trader Joe's
Distance: 2 miles and home yoga


Gustave Courbet, The Stone Breakers, 1849, o/c

Jean Francois Millet, Gleaners, 1857, o/c


Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother, Nipomo Valley, (Florence Owens Thompson), 1935, original image on 4"x5" film negative, no known restrictions on use of this image.

In this day of Rap music and other totally expressive arts, it is easy to forget the very long time in the history of western art for images of real people, laborers - rural and urban - to be depicted. The Church, Royals, Landed Aristocracy, then the wealthy Italian entrepreneurs, gradually - beginning in the 17th century Dutch Golden Age - the middle class were the patrons.  If laborers were depicted at all, they were some variation of idealized, strolling, bucolic shepherds and the like.

Then, in 1848 the lower classes rose up in the French Revolution, overthrowing the Royals. And shortly after and probably as an aftermath of the spirit of the Revolution, French artists - who were largely of the working class themselves - began freeing themselves of idealized, stylized and 'pleasant' images.  At this point some art started to become more naturalistic and humanized, sympathetic to the feelings and emotions of everyday life and ordinary, individual people.

Depending on local circumstances (eg, The Civil War, the Great Depression in the U.S., the Mexican Revolution 1920 which spawned muralists such as Rivera, Orozco, Siqueiros, etc.) similar breakthroughs happened in other parts of the western art world, and gradually artistic images which exposed once hidden realities and had the power to mobilize an idea or cause became more and more commonplace.

Such a HUGE topic Ciwt has gotten herself into!  In any event, she hopes you had an enjoyable Labor Day today.

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Wilting --- Day 4/220

Walk: Union Square, Patagonia
Distance: 1 mile


Vincent van Gogh, Sunflowers, 1889, 36.2" x 28.7",  oil on canvas

Arranging flowers has Ciwt exhausted.  Imagine the energy needed to paint the life spectrum, from full bloom to death as van Gogh did in his Sunflowers series. (Take in each individual flower and then how they relate to each other.  Profound and moving - and the reason far beyond prettiness these paintings by van Gogh are among the world's most enduringly captivating).


Saturday, September 5, 2015

Sunday is Flower Day --- Day 4/219

Walk: Laurel Village, Trader Joe's, A.C.T. (Between Riverside and Crazy)
Distance: 3.5 miles, small yoga



Ciwt is looking forward to a Labor Day Sunday tomorrow out of her closet, arranging flowers and fluffing up her deck.

Friday, September 4, 2015

Making Room --- Day 4/218

Walk: Kimberley's Consignment (2x), Goodwill, Sacramento Shoe Repair, Pascaline Paris
Distance: 1.5 miles


Andrew Wyeth (1917-2009), Wind from the Sea, 1947

HUGE donation/errand day.  With so many things released and gone, Ciwt can feel energy quietly shifting, reoccupying space.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Thinking of Abstracts --- Day 217

Walk: Driving Day, Sacramento Street
Distance: 2 miles


Robert Motherwell, Elegy (of the Spanish Republic) in progress at his New York Studio, ca 1950

Ciwt is thinking of going to a lecture at the de Young tomorrow on major Abstract Abstract Expressionist artist Robert Motherwell.  Stay tuned....

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

We Heart The 3 Jackson -- Day 4/216

Walk: Around Home
Distance:  0, small yoga



This is why Ciwt and all her neighbors LOVE our 3 Jackson bus.  Ciwt is four blocks from her house across the street from the 3 Jackson stop.  She's on her way to Union Square with one other passenger.  The 3 will gradually take on more passengers but not fill.  Then on the way home, it is the same (semi)-private experience. Almost like a town car and Soooo nice for the recently completed Fall closet caper and the rest of the time.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Catch You Tomorrow -- Day 4/215

Walk: JCC, CPMC
Distance: 3 miles and yoga class