Friday, September 30, 2011
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
New Cards
Janet's drawing "Second Sight" is on the cover of our new notecards, and they turned out so well we thought we'd offer them to y'all. They're available from our CafePress store
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Monday, September 26, 2011
Sunday, September 25, 2011
Friday, September 23, 2011
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Brochure
We made these brochures to display with Janet's two oil paintings, "The Space Around Her" and "Green Head" at the university where they now hang. Recognize the border? Scattered Light!
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Found Objects
Gwen Waight
Check out her site! I took Mom to hear her talk at the Artists of Rubber City meeting last night, and we both came away enthused & charmed. It's interesting to hear about how artists find their ways to a particular form of expression early, often as kids, and hang onto it no matter what the response. Gwen's father mistook her collected dolls' heads for garbage, for instance, and burned them. Didn't slow her down.
Check out her site! I took Mom to hear her talk at the Artists of Rubber City meeting last night, and we both came away enthused & charmed. It's interesting to hear about how artists find their ways to a particular form of expression early, often as kids, and hang onto it no matter what the response. Gwen's father mistook her collected dolls' heads for garbage, for instance, and burned them. Didn't slow her down.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Friday, September 09, 2011
Grady Harp Reviews THAT FEEL
The Blend of Visual and Written Art
THAT FEEL is one of the finest collaborative books published by the sisters Snell. Cheryl Snell is a fine poet and her sister Janet Snell is a fine expressionist artist. In their previous books there was often the question of whether Janet was illustrating Cheryl's poetry or if perhaps each artist made her art and then combined it in the most suitable manner.
Now it is obvious that the art that spreads across both sides of an open book is unified and equally involved in the nidus of expression. The poems and art of THAT FEEL seem to be more visceral than those that came before them - these are poems from the gut, art about alienation and longing and rapturous moments that fade too quickly (or were they even there?). For example in the combined expression of the following, the painting accompanying the poem is that of two faces distorted by reflection in glass or mirror or memory:
REFLECTIONS IN CRACKED GLASS
Each brush stroke had been its own allegory
and could not reconcile the break. I felt for
connection in blind corridors, whispering
Who's there? from within the room's glass
eye.
Maybe I was dreaming. The facts were hard
to parse and sometimes lied. I did, too,
confused by what my reflection showed. The
glass distorted it and the fissure widened from
a thin red line. It splintered our embrace and
again I was alone.
The book may be brief but it is a powerful one. The only criticism about this latest opus is the somewhat disjointed feeling of the varying fonts or typefaces the artists used. Those wide variations of print diminish the tone of the poetry/art like unwanted audience distracters. But that is a minor complaint in a book that further substantiates the excellent collaborative efforts of the sisters Snell. -Grady Harp
THAT FEEL is one of the finest collaborative books published by the sisters Snell. Cheryl Snell is a fine poet and her sister Janet Snell is a fine expressionist artist. In their previous books there was often the question of whether Janet was illustrating Cheryl's poetry or if perhaps each artist made her art and then combined it in the most suitable manner.
Now it is obvious that the art that spreads across both sides of an open book is unified and equally involved in the nidus of expression. The poems and art of THAT FEEL seem to be more visceral than those that came before them - these are poems from the gut, art about alienation and longing and rapturous moments that fade too quickly (or were they even there?). For example in the combined expression of the following, the painting accompanying the poem is that of two faces distorted by reflection in glass or mirror or memory:
REFLECTIONS IN CRACKED GLASS
Each brush stroke had been its own allegory
and could not reconcile the break. I felt for
connection in blind corridors, whispering
Who's there? from within the room's glass
eye.
Maybe I was dreaming. The facts were hard
to parse and sometimes lied. I did, too,
confused by what my reflection showed. The
glass distorted it and the fissure widened from
a thin red line. It splintered our embrace and
again I was alone.
The book may be brief but it is a powerful one. The only criticism about this latest opus is the somewhat disjointed feeling of the varying fonts or typefaces the artists used. Those wide variations of print diminish the tone of the poetry/art like unwanted audience distracters. But that is a minor complaint in a book that further substantiates the excellent collaborative efforts of the sisters Snell. -Grady Harp
Labels:
book Review,
scattered light library,
that feel
Thursday, September 08, 2011
Monday, September 05, 2011
Science and Art
What is the effect of art on the brain? Read the article for one answer. The work of Quentin Massys, who painted this portrait, decreased blood flow in the test subjects. Bad rap, if you ask us.
Sunday, September 04, 2011
Entertaining Mother
Janet took Mom to the Arts in the Square festival yesterday. There was a big crowd despite the high heat and humidity, and a good time was had by all. Dan Opalenik took this photo. Mom & Janet do not look amused, but only because of the bright sun. Put your shades on, girls!
Friday, September 02, 2011
Thursday, September 01, 2011
Relax Relate Read Book Bundle Giveaway
Shiva's Arms: Relax Relate Read Book Bundle Giveaway: Enter WLB's Book Bundle Giveaway on the Back to the Books Giveaway Hop and win a hardcover copy of Shiva's Arms amomg other goodies. Good ...
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