Tag: fine art

  • I’m an artist. I’ve identified myself as a writer and I am; there is no denying that and it’s my main art form. I am a musician too, and play gigs every now and then. I paint, but only abstracts, on old drop-cloth canvas from Home Depot. When I got into comics I told myself that I wouldn’t try my hand at it. I firmly made that decision. I thought that I could enjoy an art form and not partake, but here I am, buying ink and textbooks. I am doing fake art school like an asshole.

    I want to be able to bring my fiction outside my body and my words, but I’m not skilled enough to drag it there. The only thing for it is practice, I guess.

    I am objectively mediocre at drawing, and I don’t like being mediocre. It makes me feel sad and angry and, well, stupid. I didn’t think that picking up drawing would trigger all that but it has. I’m not even planning to release anything – not really. I suppose the problem is that I am judging myself.

    I’ve mostly conquered this problem with writing, but I thought that since I don’t care about my visual art nearly as much, I’d be able to skate on past this stage. But here I am, sitting around feeling inferior and bad. I’m rather good at putting my insecurities to the side and soldiering on, so I’m not worried about art block or writer’s block, but it does mean I can’t open a comic book without sighing.

    I’ve got no solution for this issue except to get better, and I know I will with time. While it happens, I know that my envy of others’ work needs to be channeled into admiration and an opportunity to learn.

    Anyway, it’s time to move on. I’ve got presents:

    1. Nan Goldin’s (photographer) “Advice to the Young,” which reflects a lot of my thoughts about artists’ needs and the world kids are inheriting from the older generation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RlC3ym4-YaQ
    2. The sweetest thing – Pia Crambling (Grandmaster) commentates Anna Crambling’s (her daughter) chess games at a huge tournament in Iceland. It’s so heartwarming. Pia is analyzes the game while Anna plays it, and is visibly stressed out when Anna makes moves she doesn’t agree with, but is rooting for her daughter the whole time: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3_VCUvHDAw
    3. Three Stanley Avenue Guest House – I stayed here a couple years ago and loved it. I’m hoping to book another trip soon. https://stanleyavenue.com/
    4. Speedball nibs/dip pen holders: https://www.speedballart.com/our-product-lines/speedball-calligraphy-illustration/speedball-pen-nibs/speedball-pen-sets/ (this is what I’ve been using to practice inking, along with regular India ink that’s the Blick brand.)
  • There have been days in my life – once, two full weeks – where I felt out of time. It’s similar to dissociation but more of a disconnection. Reality remains, but it’s not solid (while dissociating, reality remains – I know where it is, but I can’t engage). For those two weeks in 2017 I felt strongly that it was actually February of 2012 and I had an essay due. I felt that, somehow, I had to get it together to write about Lord Byron and his club foot.

    Februaries can be hard.

    And there are days when I feel small and young, and I remember my childhood hamster. Her name was Angel and she was very mean. I kind of liked that. Her hair matched mine because it was orange (pictured at left).

    I often feel very old, but that tracks with my real timeline. I am not chronologically the oldest person who’s ever lived, but my personality doesn’t quite make sense for the average 30-year-old.

    I am sick. That’s why. Nothing exciting. I’m old because I’m still here and I’m cranky because no one seems to care about what is important. Unfortunately, what is important is what they say is important: family, friends, love, art, nature, experience.

    Hallmark sayings and boring cliches do have substance, which I find a little frustrating.

    I think you have to be old – in experience, not years – to understand them. “Be yourself,” especially. No one can tell another person to be themselves and not sound patronizing, but the moment it clicks, when you realize that you must be yourself and there is no other option – the phrase is suddenly frightening.

    “Be yourself” can be an awful thing to say. It used to be for me, but now I find freedom in the phrase. It gives me permission to wear menswear and to draw monsters and to write science fiction. It allows me to stop competing with writers I admire and gives me the space to appreciate their work. Being myself is nice, and it would be even more fun if I liked my body.

    But like I said, I am sick. It is hard to enjoy a body that doesn’t want you there. Sick bodies want to die, and so they’re inhospitable to the life in them. I am that life and often, I wish I weren’t. And yet I must be myself, there is no other option, I have to remain and continue to flicker my bullshit electricity over a half-dead brain.

    I used to wish I weren’t sick, but you can’t do that when you pursue being authentic. If I weren’t sick I would not be this person. I think it’s unfair that she exists because suffering is an awful way to forge a personality, but I’d rather be her than be anyone else.

    Anyway, I’m done talking about this. I’m going to send you home with a gift bag full of media treats:

    Comic: Beyond Real, Vault Comics

    1. Figure Drawing: Design and Invention by Michael Hampton – the textbook I’m following to learn to draw figures more accurately. This is a pirated pdf.
    2. Three Stanley Avenue Guest House (Kingsfield, ME) – I stayed here for four days a couple years ago. They have crappy wifi and there is no one in the town. It was one of the best vacations I’ve ever taken. Cheap as hell, too.
    3. Ebony graphite pencils are the best. Soft and quick – perfect for drawing fast on newsprint.

    The most moving and most interesting piece of music I’ve listened to recently:

  • I’ve been experimenting with visual art lately. It’s made it hard to get writing done but I think it’s helping me from a creative standpoint, so maybe it’s worth the time I spend in front of clippings and paint and my new fine-line pens. I love my pens.

    There are (free) online courses you can take that’ll teach you how to make comics. I’m taking one on Coursera and it’s been a good time. I don’t want to be a comic writer, but two of my characters are visual artists, and it’s been fun to get a better picture of what they’re up to.

    My sketchbook is insane, which is the point of it. There’s a guitar pick taped in there somewhere.

    I do wish I were better at drawing figures/characters so I could make better thumbnails for the book, but I am what I am. No use doing anything other than practicing. I’m getting better. Slowly. People get degrees in drawing – I’m not expecting to be good at it, maybe ever. Art school seems hard and though I am working in a sense, I am certainly not working toward mastery.

    I’ve got two degrees in writing. I am seeking mastery, there. Awards are not my goal; I am interested in creating sincere, earnest work. I want to create something that gets at big questions using specific images and storylines. That’s what I’m working toward, and I think that goal’s realistic enough.

    Here are some things:

    1. This kid is a fabulous songwriter. I think he’s the new iteration of “emo” music for the youths. He doesn’t sound emo, but his vibes are emo as hell.

    2. Comicazi – my local comic shop. I love Boston and I love this shop.

    3. Paper Girls from Image Comics.

    4. Rosebud Salve – weird inclusion but it’s my favorite lip balm. Look it up yourself.

    5. Another song. In Limbo by Rigby. I love the vocals.

  • Writing sometimes gets me down but it happens more often when I’m less prepared. I’ve read a lot of literary fiction and creative nonfiction. I’ve even read a good amount of fantasy. But I’m writing – and most enamoured with – science/speculative fiction. I’m almost finished with a huge collection of Bradbury’s short stories and I’ve been blown away several times. His writing was – is – so inventive. Ahead of its time in many ways, and maybe even ahead of my time.

    These authors, including Ursula Le Guin, Phillip K Dick, Stanislaw Lem, whatever – they’re just cool with cool ideas and next to their imaginations mine feels shriveled. Prune-sized and flavoured. Prune. Flavoured. But prunes are all right some of the time, I suppose.

    Give me a day and I’ll be over this and back in a writing mood, but God is it hard not to compare oneself to other people.

    That said, I find a lot of other other people boring and derivative, so focusing on geniuses is definitely a me problem.

    Here’s the media I’ve been into the last couple weeks:

    • Comic: Kill Your Darlings (Image Comics)
    • Nick Drake – just revisiting him, he’s great. I put on Pink Moon every few days just to feel something.
    • James Ensor, painter. I also quite like this YouTube channel – Blind Dweller. Seems like a nice guy who’s just really into art.
  • Like a lot of artists, I do a lot of art. Because I’m impatient and scatterbrained, I do several different types of art. I’m a good musician and play the occasional gig.

    I am not a good visual artist. Granted, my poems are worse. So bad. So bad you have no idea. So bad that I write them as almost a joke. And like most almost-jokes, they never land. 🙂

    Drawing is fun, though. It came free with my hands and you can do it on most anything. It’s tough when I can’t execute what I imagine, but if you draw enough you get better – good enough for a rough outline, which satisfies me.

    On YouTube I like to watch visual artists do sketchbook tours, where they film themselves flipping through their sketchbooks and do a voiceover. The art is pretty and professional, most of the time. It’s a really peaceful thing to watch.

    But I’d like to see someone do it who’s just straight-up bad. Like, someone who doesn’t care about looking like a professional. Me, maybe. I could do that if I wanted to. I could cut the bits of writing out of the sketchbooks (my drawings often devolve into writing).

    I just can’t add another hobby to my list. I know that. Doesn’t mean I don’t want to. The idea of a series of “writer’s sketchbook tour” videos is funny to me. I love fuckery.

    I’m debating whether I should take pictures of my sketchbook and put them in digital form to do a less time-intensive version of the video idea, but again, it’s just…another thing. And I have so many things I need to pursue. Want to pursue. Time is a limited resource and I wish it weren’t.

    KB

  • an easy out

    I’m determined to remain lacklustre, so this post is more word vomit/journal entry than anything useful. Similar to the last one, if I’m being honest. I do write every day – properly – but this is a place to let loose. Get out all the energy in my body.

    Creative energy, I mean. Other energies are still in me and becoming very, very inconvenient. What do you do when you don’t have a partner and are frightened of intimacy? Anyone got ideas? I’ve got “go meet people” and “marinate in self-pity” but there must be better ones.

    There are so many projects in my life I need to finish, including a novel whose direction changed drastically a few days ago. Means I have to rewrite everything, but I am excited to do that. The change makes the storytelling much smoother. It doesn’t feel like I’m fighting my characters anymore.

    Writing science fiction/speculative fiction is difficult, but easier than literary fiction and more interesting than creative nonfiction. I decided recently to start submitting short stories, but have yet to write one that remains short. So I’m working on that, I guess…

    Let’s get to the list; I’m boring myself.

    Untouchable – Luna Halo (Pop punk but in good taste? Again, a very catchy track. It’s corny but not in the way that most pop punk is.)

    Beneath the Trees (Where Nobody Sees), Image Comics – A comic about an humanoid bear serial killer illustrated like a children’s book. It’s buck wild and I really recommend checking it out.

    • Anne Truitt, Daybook – journal of a frustrated, middle-aged female artist. She sounds like I do in my head and it was so refreshing to read.
    • Currently Reading: I Sing the Body Electric! – Ray Bradbury. Batshit short stories, very cool, very abstract.
    • Song in E – Julien Baker. A great song about love and alcoholism. Has one of my favorite lines in it: “I wish that I drank because of you and not only because of me.”
  • When I think of a blog I think of the ancient site Blogger and its orange branding. It’s still around, I think, though I haven’t checked because if it isn’t, I’d rather not know.

    The point of this blog is to be like those blogs, by which I mean: bad. I thought about creating a Substack like a real writer but I’ve got no bandwidth to add another time-sensitive responsibility to my list.

    Work, my neglected magazine, and my personal writing are enough. If I’m ever able to get out of the 40 hour grind, maybe I’ll pick up something else. I’ll dedicate some time to my painting, or properly produce the album I wrote in 2021. Who knows?

    As far as the writing I’ll keep here, I haven’t pinned much down but the point of writing is to do it, which means I have to start. So far, I’ve figured that some posts can be proper pieces, and some posts, like this one, will be a short ramble and a list of things I’m into at the time of posting.

    Here’s what I’m into:

    • Join the Club by Tilly Louise (indie rock, afab vox, catchy hook, and when I say catchy I mean catchy)
    • Hexagon Bridge, an Image comic, still being released monthly. It’s a cool story but the art is better. There’s a robot named Stanley who is mind-melded to his friend, Adley, though it’s clear (so far) they’re meant to be siblings. I’m really worried for them.
    • The Memory Police, Yoko Ogawa. Beautiful novel. About colonialism, generational trauma/memory, familial relationships, beauty, and so much more. The writing is so gentle.
    • Give It to Me Straight, a podcast/show hosted by drag queen and comedian Maddy Morphosis, who’s known primarily as the only straight cis man to ever perform on RuPaul’s Drag Race. I don’t know if that’s necessarily the case – everything’s fluid, even the straightness of cis white men – but she should be better known as an interviewer. God, she’s good. Like Nardwuar but less painful to watch, more emotional, and much prettier. The people she interviews are also much more interesting than his, and she connects with them on a level deeper than a cheap “gotcha!”. My favorite episode is below, with Mrs. Kasha Davis.