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June 15, 2017 Update

A composite of definitions found in many English language dictionaries for the word tool could describe a tool as anything (device, implement) used to as a means to accomplishing something -a task or a purpose.

I’ve been thinking a lot about tools lately. What tools do I use in my practice? What are the origins of these tools? How did they become a part of my practice? How do I apply a particular tool in my practice? Is there a hierarchy of use, and, if so, what is it and why is it?

Considering the focus of my research project in terms of its title Playing Personas Painting  I have been progressing towards an understanding of the personas I am working with as tool in my painting practice. This understanding ‘personas-as-tools’ is becoming more solid as I work with Petra, Franz and Melusine. What still remains less clear is the role of play(ing) and painting. On one hand I can see where play is the method by which the tool, persona, is applied within a methodology of painting. On the other hand a case could be made for the opposite: persona is the tool applied through methods of painting within a methodology of play(ing). As my research progresses over the next few months, and most likely through the absence from the daily visits to my studio during most of July and August, I imagine that this question of which is method and which is methodology will rise up further to the surface of my thoughts.

But for now in this post I want to delve a bit deeper into the idea of tools and my research-practice. After which I will review the postings I’ve made throughout the past month, highlighting discoveries which I see as containing potential for further development.

First, returning to tools I am not going to discuss the personas-as-tools here at this time. Instead I would like to discuss another tool applied in my research - the bibliography. Interestingly the past weeks I have also been ruminating on homonyms -words that are spelled the same but have more than one meaning- and the multiplicity of meanings found in most words which lead to the need for the reader/listener to understand the context in which the word appears in order to understand its meaning (at that moment). In this I draw an analogy to the fragments of identity -the words of the text- whose meaning can only be determined by understanding the context in which the words appear in order to understand the text. This is a circular relationship, drawn out it might look something like this:

Where I am leading with these thoughts, is, the relationship between the multiplicity of meanings of words -fragments of the text- which depend upon the context of the text, while simultaneously create the context of the text- and the multiple purposes of the bibliography AND the multiplicity of identity. In my research the personas-as-tools by which to explore the multiplicity of identity through painting are like the bibliography-as-tool applied to the scholarly research; both have the purpose of providing an approach to analyzing the research from (at times slightly) a different angle.

This past month alongside the continued daily paint practice, working with primarily Petra, less with Franz, and beginning to work with Melusine who is in the process of interviewing Petra for an essay she is writing on Petra’s studio practice, I have continued with reading, writing, watching, and thinking. One task I set for myself the first week of June was to take a first attempt at a longer bit of writing which may or may not become a chapter/essay -or portion thereof. The purpose was to sit down and write something in the 7,000 word range and for this I decided the question/topic Roberta brought up in our committee meeting in late April, Why not (just) Marcel Duchamp? would be a good one to begin with. The initial bit of writing is still very rudimentary, and definitely needs work in terms of expressing the criticality I have for the subject I am addressing, but it push me a bit into considering a few other things, like homonyms, particularly the word ‘gesture’, as applied conceptually and practically in the discussion of the practices of myself, the personas, and others -like Duchamp. Time is growing tight, but I hope to have one more larger bit of (first draft) writing done before Berlin. Additionally, I would like to focus my time in Berlin outside of/between the PhD workshops on producing another 1-2 longer bits of writing. This will provide me with material to review in first few weeks post-Summer residency, assessing the potential to develop into the example chapter for RDC2 either one or a combination of the writing, along with other bits I’ve posted in the studio writing blog since winter.

To end this post, here is are direct links to updates to the Making and Studio Writing sections between May 15 and June 15:

Making-

Good Witches of the Between, Part Six- applying Petra

Gestures of CillaVee - Gestures of Petra Nimm

Three more small asides

A little madness in the Spring, Part Three -part three

Good Witches of the Between, Part Seven -another start

 

Studio Writing-

Preliminary thoughts on the written exegesis

Petra’s Statement

Quotes and Notes on Performance Studies: an introduction

Schjeldahl on Rauschenberg

Important?

Authentic Drips and Ziggy Stardust

First, very rough, draft

Notes and Quotes from Serial Imagery: Definition by John Coplans

The pleasure of The Pleasure of the Text

From Death to Birth

Bibliography as a tool for reflection

Thursday 06.15.17
Posted by Robyn Thomas
 

May 15, 2017 Update

Like the April 15, 2017 update, this update is essentially a place from which to navigate to the postings of the previous month.

In addition to the work posted on this website on April 25, 2017 I had a Skype meeting with Andrew Cooks and Roberta Mock. During that meeting we discussed the steps forward as I begin to work on imagining the chapter I will submit next winter for RDC2, the RDC2 process -chapter and report lengths, as well as what, based on what I have been collecting here on this website might become fodder for the chapter. We also discussed the recent postings in the context of written feedback both had provided me via email.

Along with the painting of Petra, Franz and myself I have been focused on reading, some of which has fueled writing I’ve posted, and the beginnings of writings that I have not yet posted. It is my intention to post an updated bibliography to the website prior to June 15. Although I am not posting writing on a daily basis I am still dedicating time each day to write; this seems to be resulting in a number of writings developing at their individual pace, yet often a few reaching the point of posting together.

Thinking ahead to the summer I know there will be an extended period where I am not in the studio, therefore the ‘making-painting’ portion of this research will no longer be the focus. Therefore I am spending as much time as possible on that portion of the research this spring. During the period I am traveling and when I am otherwise unable to get into the studio, meet and work with Franz and Petra, I will focus on the chapter writing. During the writing Melusine will be more present than the other two.

Until then, here are direct links to each of the recent postings.

In Making:

A little madness in the Spring, Part One- part two

A little madness in the Spring, Part Two

A little madness in the Spring, Part Two- part two

A little madness in the Spring, Part Two- part three

A little madness in the Spring, Part Three

A little madness in the Spring, Part Three- part two

Good Witches of the Between, Part Five- Franz’s Intervention

Franzi blue

Three small asides


 

In Studio Writing:

Vygotsky in Context, Part One

Sara Berman’s Closet @ The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Shock and Awe, Part One

Vygotsky: The Psychology of Art, Part One

Painters of Place

The digital continuation of a walking-talking conversation between two painters

Maskenfreiheit

Smoothing the edges: an observation

(How) is adult play/creativity different?

Notes on a search of adult play

Roland Barthes on Cy Twombly: play not game

Waiting for Franz: May 8 11 AM

Philip Guston, Part One

Warm spring night

Monday 05.15.17
Posted by Robyn Thomas
 

April 15, 2017 Update

This update is essentially a place from which to navigate to the postings of the previous month. Other than through the links it provides little insight into the period of mid-March to mid-April 2017. Just as could be considered typical in the part of the world I find myself the activities I took part during this time in were focused on preparation and the early stages of cultivation for a harvest that will take place months from now. I’ve spent my time divided between reading/re-reading, writing and painting -as myself, but also as the channel for the three personas.

The recent postings are fragmentary works and thoughts that are very much in process, will continue to be for quite some time, and are at what still seems for me at least to be an early stage; therefore, I am not going to spend time now on an extensive written reflection as the reflection will come, like the work, in fragments of future postings.

Instead, I am laying out some of these scraps gathered over the past thirty days here with the additional note that I will continue to post frequently (almost daily) to the Studio-Making and Studio-Writing pages of this website.* A week ago I traveled to New York City and Philadelphia for a few days during which I collected a number of bits and pieces which I am still working through but are slowly finding their way to the surface, both that covered in paint and the digital display.

 

New postings in Making are:

A little madness in the Spring, Part One

Good Witches of the Between, Part Four

 

Just as I try to paint (either as myself, Franz or Petra) each day I have been attempting to post some form of writing or notes (almost) daily** in Studio Writing. Here they are:

The trick of replication

A path to Vygotsky

Mary, Mary quite contrary

Voices of a Nomadic Soul

Thoughts on Pessoa and Duchamp

Slant

Boxes and Bins

Joe Fig’s Questions, Part One

A child’s solution to the limits of space

Codes of Dressing Up, Part One

Vygotsky 101

Joe Fig’s Questions, Part Two

Notes from: Play and Its Role in the Mental Development of the Child by Lev Vygotsky

Fragments from a Fragment

Considering Narrative

Petra paints with her left hand

Random Notes, Part One

Thoughts and Questions by Melusine Van der Weyden

Now, until the next summation, back to work.

Escaped Bachelor: Mr. Mutt flees the scene. R.Thomas April 9, 2017.


*There is more documentation than I’ve included in these postings, including videos of myself and Petra painting. These could possibly be posted in an edited form at a later date, but for now they are being collected, watched, thought about...and that’s all.

**On days when I have not posted writing I still write. At times these are notes for future postings or emails from myself or one (or more) of the personas; bits and pieces of the emails may eventually find their way into the posting as well.

Friday 04.14.17
Posted by Robyn Thomas
Comments: 1
 

March 15, 2017 Update

I'm posting this month's update two days earlier than originally planned in anticipation of a late winter snowstorm/blizzard bearing down on the Northeastern coast of the US that could cause power and Internet outages.

Although I had intended to post some writing for this month's update I am not going to. It has been a very productive month painting with Petra and Franz therefore I want to direct this blog post to that work. I will be traveling for approximately a week at the end of March, painting less but writing, reading and writing about the reading more, so it seemed logical to postpone the studio-writing updates until April.

Here are the direct links to this month's studio-making-painting updates:

Good Witches of the Between, Part Three

Influential Dressing

Franz Painting, Part One

Petra Painting, Part One

One Painting Three

Since the February update I have traveled to NYC to attend a session at CAA and de-install an exhibit, visited the ICA Boston to view current exhibitions, attended an evening of performance as part of XFest 2017 in Holyoke, MA and delivered to works for a group exhibition at University of Rhode Island Providence Campus. I have continued to review sources on my initial bibliography and the suggestions that came from Caroline Koebel, external reader of my RDC1. As of March I have officially completed that first stage and am working towards the next stage of the process- RDC2.

Tuesday, February 28 was a full committee Skype with Andrew Cooks and Roberta Mock. Main point of our discussion was next steps forward in the studio from which the writing emerges- the connection between the two process. Andrew brought forth the suggestion of drawing on the process from the Patchwork Surfaces into the writing; we discussed ways in which small bits of writing- sketches, chapters, paragraphs, sentences in whatever form might become collaged together as the basis for a chapter in a process or style similar to what occurred with this group of paintings. From that body of work also came the suggestion of working with Franz and Petra to copy one of the paintings -the results of this to date can be viewed in the post One Painting Three . Roberta questioned how much I am 'working with them' as opposed to channeling; and to consider how I describe my relationship to them in the studio- how I articulate this- with, through, as and/or between. Why now and not another time/place? For the time being I am building ground (surface) and documenting more than analyzing the methods documented. Roberta likened it to a process that is continually evolving rather than one with a finished product insight...which is a continual conversation point with Andrew, when is the work 'finished' and when do I just get tired of it and put it away? We discussed my questions of focus, how to 'be in the moment' and its relationship to what I am doing; and how I perceive what I am viewing- the 'loopiness'- in the videos as I reflect on what I see being done. It is a making strange of looking at the self (not as the self) from the outside. Andrew asked if Melusine can come in and make trouble? Quite possibly, although she doesn't appear to be a painter, so the trouble she makes most likely will be elsewhere....Petra on the other hand did stick her hands into Good Witches of the Between when it was not her place to do so! [See second video in link] A few ideas floated about the videos as I eventually edit them together- the ones posted this month are raw and unedited- including directorial voice overs (personas) and commentary (mine, theirs). Also, how the camera is placed, what it records- what the persona is seeing or what the persona is doing?  Andrew reminded me of the first 20 minutes or so of The Diving Bell and The Butterfly; the point of view is that of Jean-Dominique, the voiceover we hear of his response to what is happening around him/being done to him was recorded separate from the conversations of the people in the room. However, the key question remains: How do you explain this to others from the outside? Our next full committee meeting will be in the second half of April.

Currently Petra and I are working in a shared sketchbook doing basic drawing exercises from the photos using the same materials. I'll end this update with two images of drawings done a few days ago from a photograph I took of the movement artist Claire Elizabeth Barratt in performance at XFest 2017.

Petra gesture drawing with charcoal.

Robyn gesture drawing with charcoal.

Monday 03.13.17
Posted by Robyn Thomas
 

February 15, 2017 Update

Yes, it has been two months since the last blog update due to the January 'break' for Winter Residency. This could be an incredibly long and detailed post, but I have decided against doing this today.

Instead I will return between now and the next mid-month post with a few shorter postings about writing, reading, meetings, presentations, crit group, Franz, Petra, Melusine, shopping and dressing up, playing, videoing and Vimeo, YouTube surfing, TOC et al, and a lot of other thoughts and recollections I have swimming around in my head and want to give individual, focused attention to.

This blog is a key tool of my artistic practice-led research, as such it is first and foremost the place where I take apart through a reflective process what is happening in the studio, my writings and scholarly research. It is the most accurate archive of my process and the journey I am currently undertaking. At times it may seem excessively detailed or downright dull to a reader who is not already or does not have the desire to become embedded with me in this project. It is not meant for that reader. However, it is meant for me as a virtual space where I can take apart my thoughts and actions, analyze and re-approach by whatever means necessary those pathways or dark alleys that beckon for further exploration.

I decided the best use for me of this month's post is to present the process of three pieces I am currently working and are near 'completion' in the studio because this project is not just about painting as another, it is also about how I paint. Until now I have only provided a brief glimpse in December's post of work that was currently on the wall or specific exercises I have given myself in relation to the development of the personas. So it is time to take a look at what I do hours each day: paint.

The first post is the continuation of the work Good Witches of the Between, Part Two
 While creating this post I became aware of the next (side)step this work will take.

The second post is Und das Lied .

The third post is Patchwork surface.

During the posting of those two groups of work it suddenly dawned on me how the process of over-painting older work and working on surfaces with a painted history is related to what I am aiming to do with the personas. Really, I had not seen this relationship before...hence the value of stepping back and looking at the arc of the development of not just a single body of work.

To end with a snap of a postcard I picked up in late January while visiting the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art in Hartford, Connecticut.

Frederic Edwin Church (American, 1826-1900) Coast Scene, Mount Desert, 1863. Oil on canvas, 36 1/8 inches x 48 inches

Tuesday 02.14.17
Posted by Robyn Thomas
 

December 15, 2016 Update

Another month has flown by.

My focus this month has been on the RDC1.

This has involved drafting, revising, re-drafting, revising (so on and so forth) the text which will comprise the prospectus: project aims, questions, background, methodology; along with the bibliography, abstract (form) and timetable. As I come closer to completing the draft I am feeling the ground beneath my feet has grown more solid and I am ready to move forward. This became even clearer to me as I recently created the spreadsheet visually depicting the next 3 years of this project and formatted the draft version of my bibliography. Here is a picture of my timetable/spreadsheet, printed at actual size and hung on the only wall in my home/studio long enough (and it isn’t really) to accommodate it. It is just outside my bedroom, the first and last thing I see each day...it may have to go...but for now I am enjoying the rhythms and patterns created by the colored bars as I walk past or while I make my bed...a reminder that I’ll have to lie in it.

 

In part as a means of archiving out here in the cloudy Never-land of this website, I decided to create a blog-gallery for Diagrams and Figures within the section ‘Other’. Here is the first post: Picture the Process. These diagrams (and one existing figure culled from the web) I created as I wrote the prospectus text to visualize my methods and the relationships within. Some I’m keeping in the prospectus I’ll submit, some I’m saving for later, and they will probably all change as the project progresses.

I have participated in two MPhil/PhD group Skype sessions with my colleagues this past month; had a face to face meeting with another colleague to discuss the current state of our projects and preparations for Winter Residency; received written feedback from external sources on my writing; and communicated with my committee via email and a brief Skype meeting (6. December).

In terms of visual ‘making’ compared to the previous three months I have less to show; not because I have been making less, but because what I am making has not reached a stage that could be seen as a good stopping point, or would make any sense to an outside viewer. When it gets cold between the easel and the wall the flow slows down like molasses in January, but warmer weather will come, eventually.

The painting I’m doing has been mostly a continuation of previous work; including a group of smaller canvases and paintings on board done which I began over-painting in the past six months. This over-painting is about responding to the work, once deemed ‘finished’ and seeing where it goes. It is about playing with the paint and seeing what happens...keeping my chops up, remembering old paths and discovering new one. There is nothing really there to ‘see’, so instead of creating a blog-gallery post with these images I am going to post a few detail images of these paintings. Eye candy.

 

I continued working on the next phase of Good Witches of the Between begun last month. I am now collaging the pieces of the painted over photo-collage onto the larger sheet of paper, adding acrylic medium for physical texture and as a resistant surface for the oil paint that I am also using. Again, not really far enough along to see or understand what is seen, so I am posting a few detail pics here instead of adding to a separate blog-gallery posting.

 

Playing with prints of the diagrams I pulled some more older, once finished paintings from the storage shelf and began collaging and over painting in acrylic and oil. Here are some details of the works in progress.

 

Now, to look ahead.

This week and early next I’ll wrap up that full draft. I have begun thinking more on the presentation I will give at Winter Residency in NYC Friday, January 13, 2017. And there is plenty of smearing to be done!

As to the alt-personas: Melusine disappeared around November 10, but I suspect she might be back...my wallet and credit cards went missing for about half a day yesterday. I finally found them in the guest room, a sure sign of her presence as I never take them into that room. Petra, as usual, does not have much to say. When I tried to talk to her recently she quietly responded by quoting Milton Avery “Why talk when you can paint?” and returned back to her spot in that between-space. Franz has been trying to be helpful and supportive, as is his nature. It is clear he is worried, but then he usually is. He spends a lot of time watching Petra work. I am hoping he will join me in NYC, at least to help install some work of mine in a small show a friend has put together. Franz always has mixed feelings about going to the City… I think he might find it a traumatic place; and today he just found out the state police might have found the remains of his paternal great-uncle, a notorious rum-runner who disappeared in the early 1930s, in a church yard in South Kingstown, RI. Whatever happens, I’m sure all three, Mel, Franz and Petra, will make their presence known in one way or another in the coming weeks.

In the spirit of how I ended last month's post I’ll also end this post with two short, calming videos I made last Friday standing on the strip of beach between the Atlantic Ocean and a salt water pond at Goosewing Beach, Little Compton, Rhode Island.

Tuesday 12.13.16
Posted by Robyn Thomas
 

November 15, 2016 Update

  

A stressful, blood pressure raising month in multiple ways...but still working, although not as focused as I’d like to have been. It has felt like being in a pot of boiling molasses.

Links to Studio/Making Blog posts since last month’s update, most recent to oldest:

Good Witches of the Between

References

Dissecting Double Portrait: Self and Petra Nimm

 

Under the Writing section I added the blog Misc Writing. All posts in this section were added since October 15 update. Here are direct links to each post, oldest to most recent:

 

Gerhard Richter I

Notes to and from my self

Gerhard Richter II

Peter Schjeldahl on Agnes Martin

Gerhard Richter III

Notes: Rick Lowe, Julie Mehretu and Shahzia Sikander in Conversation

Milton Avery

 

Other items of note:

Re-watched Ways of Seeing and Gerhard Richter, Painting on YouTube. Began watching the series Chance on Hulu.

Re-read the Preface, Lecture I and Lecture II of Richard Wollheim Painting as an Art.

Reading the Milton Avery catalogue text.

Attended Rick Lowe, Julie Mehretu and Shahzia Sikander in Conversation sponsored by the Painting Department at the Rhode Island School of Design [RISD] on November 10, 2016.

Had initial full committee meeting with Andrew Cooks [DoS] and Roberta Mock [2nd] via Skype on Tuesday, October 25, 2016. The agenda and additional notes were logged in grad book on Thursday, November 3, 2016 which was the first day I had access to it. I followed up with the suggestions both sent to me in the feedback/notes prior to the meeting.

I judged my first high school parliamentary debate tournament on October 29, 2016. I mention this here because it did make me think about how to structure an argument for or against something and then the live presentation of that argument. I will judge another debate in December.

November 1, 2016 I was finally enrolled and able to access my PU email account and set up automatic forward. Most importantly I was finally able to login and access the online resources of the library. Since then I have been playing catch up reading articles I’ve found through searches I’ve been waiting to do since Berlin. Two articles of significance for my thought process that I have accessed and worked my way through thus far:

Painting As Performance: Charlotte Salomon’s Life? Or Theater?

Claudia Barnett

The Drama Review, Volume 47, Number 1 (T 177), Spring 2003, pp. 97-126. Published by The MIT Press.

And

The Paintings of Carolee Schneemann

Maura Reilly

Feminist Studies 37, no. 3 (Fall 2011), pp. 620-648.

Aside from all of the above my main focus this month has been the next revision of my proposal for RDC1. I have sent the body of a revision to the MPhil/PhD crit group requesting feedback either in writing or during the Skype call we have scheduled on November 16.

It is my intention to revise the revision later this week and send on November 22 to Andrew and Roberta for their comments/feedback.  

                

            

        

    

            

        

 

  

Monday 11.14.16
Posted by Robyn Thomas
Comments: 1
 

October 15, 2016 Update

This blog post covers the period from September 15 to October 14, 2016 and will include a brief explanation of the website structure, links to work posted, summary of meetings and reflection on the past month, and some considerations for moving forward. The purpose of this blog page is to serve as a general index for documentation of my project. I am first and foremost the creator and consumer of this blog, hence it is structured in a way that will best serve my needs in the development of my project through a reflective process. At the same time I am aware this blog also serves as a portal through which others can access what I am doing, trying to do and not always succeeding in doing, therefore I will try to formulate these blog postings in a manner similar to french doors through which the reader can peek into the rooms but not necessarily enter into unless he or she is drawn to do so by something on the inside.

Website Structure

The home page is titled Research; underneath the title are four subheadings linking to other sections of the website: BLOG, CURRENT, PRESENTATIONS, ARCHIVE. The first three sections are password protected. ARCHIVE contains the pages of the website documenting my MFA project and thesis. BLOG is the section you are currently reading, and, as stated, it is the general index and first point of entry. CURRENT has the subtitle Research and contains five subheadings linking to the following sections: STUDIO, a blog documenting the making, the practice-led research; WRITING, where the drafts, bibliographies and other written portions [which are not ‘the making’] of the project are documented; CRIT GROUP, where any direct feedback from my colleagues will be documented; OTHER, the location of anything else; BLOG, links back to this section, the general index blog.

Links to Work

September 15, 2016 revised proposal.

All studio work is documented in the Making blog; organized from most recent to oldest post [reverse order].

This month my focus is on learning more about my three existing alter egos and our relationship to each other in order to develop a greater understanding of who they are and what their specific role in this project might be. I did this through a series of three collage/print Double Portraits and writing. Details to the process of each can be found in the individual blog postings.

The written exploration postings are divided into three sections. The first section is creative exposition of my knowledge of and relationship to the alter ego, the second is more of a reflective, exterior observation of the alter ego from my point of view and information to his or her entry into my life, and the third section is a descriptive explanation and reflection of the process of making the collage. Below are direct links to the blog postings of the collages and the corresponding writings for each alter ego.

Double Portrait: Self and Franz Walsh

Franz Walsh

Double Portrait: Self and Melusine Van der Weyden

Melusine Van der Weyden

Double Portrait: Self and Petra Nimm

Petra Nimm

September 26, 2016 I gave a visiting artist talk for a Photography workshop on collage at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. An adaptation of the notes and slide presentation can be found here.

Summary

Meetings

Since returning from Berlin I have taken part in three group Skype calls with other MPhil/PhD candidates [September 13 and 25, October 12]. I have requested to present my work and project proposal to the group for feedback during our November 16 Skype call.

Due to not having a full committee [two supervisors] in place after leaving Berlin I have had Skype meetings with Anya Lewin, Andrew Cooks, Deborah Robinson and Roberta Mock to rectify this. Each meeting provided additional insight and thoughts to my project. I now have a full committee together with Andrew Cooks as primary supervisor/DoS and Roberta Mock as second supervisor.

The following abbreviated notes are bits and pieces of my notes from the insightful and thought provoking conversation with Andrew Cooks in New York City on September 30. [recorded here to  digitally preserve them for myself outside of the Moleskine notebook]

  American Beauty/Alan Ball

  Review DTC handbook/Plymouth papers,guides,summer workshopPDFs

 Think of it as a project, not application--look at the parts/editing/defining--make an argument of all the things you’re doing and why--then be as specific as you can in the report

Play-Make

Ruth Rendell/Barbara Vine

Outline the identity of the characters-clothes-handedness

Rosanne oldest daughter-the different, but the same

Methodology- the How and the Internal Structure- the Why --- with a robust why [internal structure] and the how [methodology] will logically develop out of it

Van Morrison/Coney Island--”Wouldn’t it be great if it was like this all the time?” NO

Bowie- all of hims

DeKooning quote...[ask a., I forgot what it was]

fractured point of views...perspective [visual and mental]

My Dinner with Andre

French New Wave jump cut

Hockney’s photo collages -Pearblossom Hwy--the sky

The logic of cubism [analytical cubism]

Go back to some basic definitions- break out the survey books--explaining pictorially points of view

Are you a different person when your point of view [visual/mental] changes?

The Lure of Paris/Stephen Bush--undermining seriality, marrying early and late 20th c.

Is it convincing? [what I am doing]

Michael Blackwood’s Philip Guston film/ Dore Ashton’s Guston bio

the fewest…[something?] possible

Figure-Ground reversal

Alain Nuis [Nuit sp?] French Garden- our dependence on peripheral vision- back to

Hockney [video installation at Pace two years ago]

The magic--show me something I have not seen before

Julie Mehretu -current show, article in NYTimes that previous weekend

Take a look back at what I’ve done, what I was looking at before…

searching for the kernel at the center of/from the self

Random thoughts, notes, read and seen...

Some of the questions I’ve asked myself about the alter egos:

  What images would he or she put on an identity board project of his or her self?

  How does he or she look, sound, smell?

 What hand or foot does he or she favor?

 How might his or her personality be reflected or formed by handedness, birth date   [astrologicalsign], childhood, education, life experience?

What does he or she like? What are his or her passions?

What music does he or she listen to?

Thinking about alter egos, painters and celebrities. Identity being subsumed by the alter ego…parallels between celebrity and ‘signature style’. Warhol and Monroe versus Picasso and Meryl Streep. Authorship? Space of identity- the Warholian transformation- 15 minutes of celebrity- the anti-liminal space of identity formation?

Tony Oursler Imponderable [MoMA and Bard CCS]-- the archive, the research, the film. How does the artist communicate the research through the work, how does the curator/artist communicate the research sources parallel to the work? Structure.

Author: The JT Leroy Story-- literary hoaxes, the desire to believe fiction as fact no matter how clearly it is presented as fiction.

Deep Play, Dianne Ackerman-- how do I use play as a method?

American Beauty--the images of magazines posted on a teenager’s bedroom wall, the bedroom/home space as mirror of identity

Star Island, Carl Hiaasen-- celebrity, the double, and the author who writes in multiple genres under a single identity

Miles Ahead-- non-linearity of the film speaks of the music [the How and the Why]. Structure.

Marilyn: An Untold Story (Norman Rosten) versus Legend: The Life and Death of Marilyn Monroe (Fred Lawrence Guiles) versus Fragments: Poems, Intimate Notes, Letters by Marilyn Monroe (edited by Stanley Buchthal and Bernard Comment)--A Painter of our Time (John Berger) and And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief As Photos (John Berger)--The Argonauts (Maggie Nelson)----ways of telling of our own identity and the identity of others, fact, fiction and the in-between. Structure.

Make Me Yours (Laura Gonzalez)-- reading for outline of structure/methodology of research, remembering workshop Summer 2015 built around this. Structure.

My daily playing with paint between easel and wall...continually adding layers to older paintings, what does the paint do, what am I doing? Playing, notating, waiting, keeping up my chops and building an archive of the material. Another structure.

paint play October 2016

Moving Forward

-I will continue with what I have been doing in the studio: playing, making, learning what the structure is at the core of the project.

-Focus on revising/detailing project proposal for the RDC1 submittal; addressing the two points noted in my meeting with a. on 9/30:

-Think of it as a project, not application--look at the parts/editing/defining--make an argument of all the things you’re doing and why--then be as specific as you can in the report

-Methodology- the How and the Internal Structure- the Why --- with a robust why [internal structure] and the how [methodology] will logically develop out of it

-A full committee meeting will be held via Skype.

-Look closer at my bibliography, sort, analyze and map to identify what it is saying about the project. Structure.

-I will present my project to the MPhil/PhD crit group for feedback.

 

Friday 10.14.16
Posted by Robyn Thomas
 

Revised PhD Proposal Questions

PROJECT TITLE:

One is lonely. Two is company. Three's a crowd. And four?: Identity, Liminality, Materiality and the Fourth Wheel.

 

DESCRIPTION (max. 600 words):

Artists create works of art and the persona creating the artwork.  

Beginning with this statement as the premise of my research I disrupt the triangular relationship between artist-artwork-spectator proposed by Richard Wollheim in 1983 through the introduction of a ‘fourth wheel’: the creating-persona. While the creating-persona and the artist in this relationship are physically the same, and the artist is the one making the objects or serving as a conduit for the production of the artwork, the persona responsible for the creation of the artwork possesses an identity different from the artist’s own. The extent to which these identities are in any way separate varies depending upon the degree to which the persona has been formed by the artist. From a simple nom de plume to a full-grown heteronym the complexity grows, impacting the artwork and this quadrangular relationship.

I propose to examine how artworks created through an alternate identity are impacted by questions pertaining to identity, liminality and materiality which arise within this four-cornered relationship. I will also address through these same questions how work created by an alternate identity impacts work created through an artist’s primary identity. The core of my research will be supported by my inception of a number of different creating-personas, each of whom will create artworks in parallel to work I create in my own painting-and-writing-based studio practice.  Both myself, the artist, and my heteronyms, will explore the impact of the questions in and through the work we create. Additional layers surrounding my practice-led research will include qualitative case studies in historical and contemporary works by visual artists, writers and icons of popular culture relevant to their creation and use of alternate identities and personas; and studies of conceptsfrom the fields of philosophy, psychology, sociology, literary, visual arts and performance art theory & criticism relevant to the questions of identity, liminality and materiality arising from my research. This will include addressing identity as a constructed relationship; the relevance of liminality as the space of betweenness or the threshold upon which identity is formed when internal and external elements meet, mingle and manifest themselves in relationship to each other; and materiality in regard to choices made by the creating-persona and the artist of materials and methods to underscore the identity of the artwork as a tactile object and impart intentional understanding of liminality and identity through the object.


We are living in a time that not only houses but nurtures broad approaches to the exploration and understanding of identity, recognizes the liminal spaces in which we exist, and confirms the continuous value of the material object during this age dominated by rapid growth of the virtual world. The questions I am addressing in and through my research will provide a solid foundation for further questioning and contextualization of the relationship between artworks and the makers and spectators who engage with them. Like an Everlasting Gobstopper envisioned by Roald Dahl, my research and its themes of identity, liminality and materiality consists of endless, hard layers of varying colors and flavors surrounding a center potentially filled with answers. Reaching the center is not what this is about. There will be no biting into or smashing through the layers; it will be a slow, pleasurable process of experiencing and savoring the melting of those different colors and flavors in the mouth to create an image in the mind, not of what is at the core of the relationship but rather to spark a vision of the potential contained at the nub of this sweet treat we call art.

 

RESEARCH QUESTION[S]:

  

1.    How does the addition of a fourth entity, a creating-persona, into the relationship  formed by artist-object-spectator as defined by Richard Wollheim [1983] impact the nature of this now quadrangular relationship in terms of the identity of each party within the relationship, the liminal space in which this relationship occurs, and the communication of intention through the object’s materiality?

2.    Is it possible to expand from a triangular to a quadrangular relationship within a non-liminal space, or is the nature of this relationship such it can only occur on a threshold due to the role of identity within it?

3.    Is the addition of a creating-persona feasible to maintaining the identity of the artwork as an object, ie. painting or sculpture; thus preserving the role of materiality in communication of intention? Or, does this construct only function with artworks with a non-material identity, such as conceptual works, texts [literary works], performance [theater, dance, performance art] and new media-based artworks [film, video, digital Media]?

4.    How is the identity of the creating-persona differentiated from that of the artist producing both the persona and fabricating the object on behalf of that persona within the artwork? How is this relevant to the materiality of the object?  How is this relevant through the artwork to the spectators' understanding of the liminality of the space he or she co-occupies with the object, with the creating-persona and with the artist.

 

   

METHODS:

i. in the studio

My research begins with the creation of personas through written and pictorial experimentations. My writing methods will include: short character biographies progressing to autobiographical texts, memoirs, poetry, prose, correspondences and social media postings. The last two will be generated from the personas’ personal email and social media accounts. Pictorial experimentations in character development using a variety of 2D media will serve to: 1. aide in developing physical identities and presence for the personas; 2. begin making and writing by the creating- personas. The experimentation will include external input via the qualitative case studies and concepts from other fields of study relevant to the research questions; this input will feed back into artworks produced by myself and the creating-personas in the studio. The experimentation process will be documented by photos, digital scans and journal/blog postings.

 

The next step in the studio will be active collaboration between myself and creating-personas through co-creation of objects and texts. We will document the process of our collaborative endeavors through photos and journal/blog writings attributed to either of us individually or together. To the works and documentation resulting from our collaborations we will apply an experiential methodology to analyze and discuss the relevance of our separate identities, the liminal space of our interactions, and the choices in material and making-methods (where applicable) within the scope of the research questions, and will be posted to our blogs.

 

After this period of collaboration I will separate myself, the artist, from the creating-personas so that we are no longer creating works in collaboration or individually in a shared, physical space [place]; although I will serve as the physical conduit, the hand and body, through which the personas create. I will attempt this through implementing knowledge acquired of acting methods learned through case studies and research in the field of theater studies. My experience and the experience of the creating-persona in these instances will be documented in videos, photos, and journal/blog writings. During this period I will continue my own creative practice in my home-studio; using the same methods of documentation. To the documentation and work we will again apply an experiential methodology to analyze and discuss the relevance of our separate identities, separation of the physical space [place] relevant to the liminal space, and the choices in material and making-methods (where applicable) within the scope of the research questions. 

The final step in these studio based methods will be to revisit the art pedagogical practice of learning through copying. The act of copying will only be applied to physical objects created by either myself or a creating-persona. Each of us will copy works by the others; this will be documented in videos, photos and writing which we will analyze and discuss in the same manner as the previous steps.

ii. written exegesis/dissertation

Writing is a well integrated part of my studio practice and a large amount of text will be generated by both myself and the creating-personas in the course of this research project. In addition to creative writings, written documentation, and the analysis and discussion of work produced in each step of the process there will be a significant amount of writing related to the case studies and research on theories from other fields of study. These last two might appear to be separate from the practice-led research the creating-persona and I will undertake in the studio, however it is my [intention with this project is to integrate them fully into our ‘in the studio methods’.

Therefore the information and knowledge obtained through the case studies and other theory-based research will appear as content within the writing generated in the studio; in the creative writing, in the journal/blog postings and documentation, in the analysis and discussion of each step undertaken. This information and knowledge will be reflected and commented on not only by myself, but also by the creating-personas; each of us processing the knowledge and information relevant to our own practices and identities, and to the research questions asked in this project.

I envision this writing coming together in the form of a book; a catalogue to accompany a joint exhibition of my work and the work of the creating-personas. This book will serve not only as the written dissertation, it will be an artwork, an object of the project, created by the artist and creating-personas to be engaged with by the spectator. I will serve as editor of the book, bringing together the separate writings generated throughout the process, adding commentary-text, of an academic nature where needed, to tie the work together.

 

 

BIBLIOGRAPHY (LIST) OF ARTISTS, ARTWORKS, TEXTS:

 

ARTISTS

Eleanor Antin, Suzy Lake, Martha Wilson, Julie Mehretu, Rubens Ghenov, Louise Bourgeois, Elina Brotherus, Polixeni Papapetrou, Cindy Sherman, Olivier Castel/Louise Weiss, Guerilla Girls, Andy Warhol, Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray,  Marilyn Monroe, Madonna, Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson, Walt Whitman, Robert Musil, Fernando Pessoa, David Bowie, Joseph Beuys, Ern Malley, JT LeRoy/Laura Albert.

ARTWORKS

Winesburg, Ohio; Eleanor Antin's "selves"; A Painter of Our Time;  A Year with Swollen Appendices; Rrose Sélavy & Co.; Andy Warhol's Self portraits and his cast of characters; Marcel Duchamp’s self portraits; Michael Jackson’s plastic surgery; the many ages of Elvis; Norma Jeane/Marilyn; Song of myself; Kaprow’s Happenings; A Giacometti Portrait; Olivier Castel’s blog; Spoon River Anthology; Louise Bourgeois’ insomnia drawings; Marilyn Monroe’s writings; Die Verwirrungen Des Zöglings Törleß; Der Mann Ohne Eigenschaften; Musil’s poetry; Pessoa’s poetry; The Book of Disquiet; The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis; Desperately Seeking Susan; Intentionalities-Rosmarie Waldrop; Artists at Work, Artist and Her Model, Wrong Face, Howl- Elina Brotherus; Lost Psyche, It’s all about me, Searching for Marilyn- Polixeni Papapetrou; Cindy Sherman’s most recent series of portraits and series based on historical Paintings; Accoutrements in Marwa, an Interlude in Silver- Rubens Ghenov; Liminal Squared-Julie Mehretu

TEXTS

Ackerman, Diane. Deep Play. New York: Random House, 1999. Print.

Als, Hilton. "Immediate Family: The Unclassifiable Writer Maggie Nelson." New Yorker 18 Apr. 2016: 30-35. Print.

Anderson, Sherwood. Winesburg, Ohio. New York: Viking, 1960. Print.

Antin, Eleanor, Huey Copeland, Malik Gaines, Alexandro Segade, Henry Sayre M., and Emily Liebert. Multiple Occupancy: Eleanor Antin's "selves" New York: Wallach Art Gallery, 2013. Print.

Aviv, Rachel. "Captain of Her Soul: The Prolific Philosopher Martha Nussbaum." New Yorker 25 July 2016: 34-43. Print.

Bachelard, Gaston, M. Jolas, and John Stilgoe R. The Poetics of Space. N.p.: n.p., n.d. Print.

Barthes, Roland. Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography. Trans. Richard Howard. New York: Hill and Wang, 1981. Print.

Barthes, Roland, Richard Miller, and Richard Howard. The Pleasure of the Text. New York: Hill and Wang, 1975. Print.

Baum, Kelly, Andrea Bayer, Sheena Wagstaff, Carmen Bambach, Thomas Beard, David Bomford, David Brown Blayney., Nicholas Cullinan, Michael Gallagher, Asher Miller Ethan., Nadine Orenstein, Diana Picasso Widmaier, Susan Stewart, Nico Hout Van., Elisa Urbanelli, and Anne Blood Rebecca. Unfinished: Thoughts Left Visible. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2016. Print.

Baumann, Gerhart. Robert Musil: Ein Entwurf. Bern: Francke, 1981. Print.

Bellaiche-Zacharie, Alain. "Kierkegaard and Pessoa: The Use of Pseudonyms and Heteronyms." - Cairn International. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Feb. 2016.

Benedetti, Robert L. The Actor in You: Twelve Simple Steps to Understanding the Art of Acting. Boston: Pearson, 2015. Print.

Berger, John, and Jean Mohr. Another Way of Telling. New York: Pantheon, 1982. Print.

Berger, John. And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief as Photos. New York: Pantheon, 1984. Print.

Berger, John. A Painter of Our Time. London: Writers and Readers Pub. Cooperative, 1976. Print.

Berger, John. Portraits: John Berger on Artists. London: Verso, 2015. Print.

Bloch, Ernst. The Principle of Hope. Cambridge, MA: MIT, 1986. Print.

Bollen, Christopher. "The New Abstract." Interview Dec.-Jan. 2014: 163-73. Print.

Brownstein, Carrie. "Unevent This: Call Me Crazy." New Yorker 16 May 2016: 60. Print.

Bull, Malcolm. Inventing Falsehood, Making Truth: Vico and Neapolitan Painting. N.p.: n.p., n.d. Print.

Bundgaard, Jesper. "Julie Mehretu: The In-Between Place." Louisiana Channel. Louisiana Channel, 2013. Web.

Camus, Albert. "The Myth of Sisyphus." The Myth of Sisyphus, and Other Essays. New York: Vintage, 1955. 119-23. Print.

Chekhov, Michael. To the Actor: On the Technique of Acting. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1953. Print.

Chiang, Ted. "Unevent This: Bad Character." New Yorker 16 May 2016: 77. Print.

Chiasson, Dan. "Mind the Gap: The Poetry of Rosmarie Waldrop." New Yorker 18 Apr. 2016: 82-83. Print.

Cooks, Andrew. "Between Shadow and Memory (imagining the Garden): A Ramble through the Paradoxes of Space." Thesis. 2015.

Coplans, John, and Stuart Morgan. Provocations. N.p.: n.p., n.d. Print.

Dillard, Annie. The Writing Life. New York: Harper & Row, 1989. Print.

Diski, Jenny. A View from the Bed, and Other Observations. London: Virago, 2003. Print.

Eno, Brian. A Year with Swollen Appendices. London: Faber and Faber, 1996. Print.

Facetti, Germano, and Alan Fletcher. Identity Kits; a Pictorial Survey of Visual Signals. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1971. Print.

Forrest, Nicholas. "Review: Cindy Sherman’s Potent Portraits at GOMA Brisbane." Blouinartinfo. N.p., 6 June 2016. Web.

Freud, Sigmund, and James Strachey. The Ego and the Id. New York: Norton, 1962. Print.

González, Laura. Make Me Yours: How Art Seduces. N.p.: Cambridge Scholars, 2016. Print.

Goodman, Elyssa. "A Touch of Autobiography in Cindy Sherman’s New Classic Hollywood Portraits." Hyperallergic RSS. Hyperallergic, 06 June 2016. Web.

Goodyear, Anne Collins., James McManus W., Janine Mileaf A., Francis Naumann M., and Michael Taylor R. Inventing Marcel Duchamp: The Dynamics of Portraiture. Washington, D.C.: National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, 2009. Print.

Green, J. C. R. Fernando Pessoa: The Genesis of the Heteronyms. Isle of Skye: n.p., 1982. Print.

Gross, Jennifer R., and Ruth Bohan L. The Société Anonyme: Modernism for America. New Haven: Yale UP in Association with the Yale U Art Gallery, 2006. Print.

Guiles, Fred Lawrence. Legend: The Life and Death of Marilyn Monroe. New York: Stein and Day, 1984. Print.

Guiles, Fred Lawrence. Norma Jean: The Life of Marilyn Monroe. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1969. Print.

Gustafson, Donna, and Susan Sidlauskas. Striking Resemblance: The Changing Art of Portraiture. New Brunswick: Zimmerli Art Museum, 2014. Print.

Hall, James. The Self-Portrait: A Cultural History. London: Thames & Hudson, 2014. Print.

Harrison, Charles, and Paul Wood. Art in Theory 1900-1990: An Anthology of Changing Ideas. Oxford ; Cambridge: Blackwell, 1997. Print.

"Heteronyms." Nym Words Heteronyms. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Feb. 2016. <http://www.fun-with-words.com/nym_heteronyms.html>.

Hickey, Dave. Air Guitar: Essays on Art & Democracy. Los Angeles: Art Issues., 1997. Print.

Iyer, Lars. "Spurious: The Heteronym." Web log post. Wittgenstein Jr. N.p., 06 Dec. 2003. Web. <http://spurious.typepad.com/spurious/2003/12/the_heteronym.html>.

Jones, Amelia. The Artist's Body. Ed. Tracey Warr. London: Phaidon, 2012. Print.

Kaprow, Allan, and Jeff Kelley. Essays on the Blurring of Art and Life. Berkeley, CA: U of California, 2003. Print.

Kierkegaard, Søren, Howard Hong V., and Edna Hong H. The Essential Kierkegaard. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 2000. Print.

Kleeman, Alexandra. "Unevent This: Seeing Double." New Yorker 16 May 2016: 70. Print.

Klobucka, Anna, and Mark Sabine. Embodying Pessoa: Corporeality, Gender, Sexuality. Toronto: U of Toronto, 2007. Print.

Kotowicz, Zbigniew. Fernando Pessoa: Voices of a Nomadic Soul. London: Menard, 1996. Print.

Lacan, Jacques. Ecrits: The First Complete Edition in English. S.l.: WW Norton &, 2007. Print.

Lange-Berndt, Petra. Materiality. London: Whitechapel Gallery, n.d. Print.

Lord, James. A Giacometti Portrait. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1965. Print.

Lorz, Julienne, and Bart Baere De. Louise Bourgeois: Structures of Existence, the Cells. Munich: Prestel, 2015. Print.

Lowenthal, Jessica. As If in Turning. Providence: Burning Deck, 1996. Print.

Luserke, Matthias. Robert Musil. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 1995. Print.

Masters, Edgar Lee. Spoon River Anthology. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1993. Print.

Meisner, Sanford, and Dennis Longwell. Sanford Meisner on Acting. New York: Vintage, 1987. Print.

Mileaf, Janine A. Please Touch: Dada and Surrealist Objects after the Readymade. Hanover, NH: Dartmouth College, 2010. Print.

Molderings, Herbert, Frederick Kiesler, and John Brogden. Marcel Duchamp at the Age of 85: An Incunabulum of Conceptual Photography. Köln: Verlag Der Buchh. Walther König, 2013. Print.

Monroe, Marilyn, Stanley Buchthal F., and Bernard Comment. Fragments: Poems, Intimate Notes, Letters. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2010. Print.

Moore, Sonia. The Stanislavski System: The Professional Training of an Actor. 2nd ed. New York: Penguin, 1984. Print.

Musil, Robert, and Adolf Frisé. Gesammelte Werke. Reinbeck Bei Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1978. Print.

Musil, Robert, and Werner Bellmann. Die Verwirrungen Des Zöglings Törleß. Stuttgart: Reclam, 2013. Print.

Myers, Terry R. Painting. London: Whitechapel Gallery, 2011. Print.

O'Brien, Tim. The Things They Carried: A Work of Fiction. Boston: Mariner, 2009. Print.

Olson, Melissa. "Evolution of an Artist." Kent State Magazine Summer 2016: 20-23. Print.

"Onetrickwords.com." Onetrickwords.com. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Feb. 2016. <http://www.onetrickwords.com/heteronym.html>.

Ott, Gil. Within Range. Providence, RI: Burning Deck, 1986. Print.

Pessoa, Fernando. Always Astonished: Selected Prose. San Francisco: City Lights, 1988. Print.

Pessoa, Fernando, and Georg Monteiro. The Man Who Never Was: Essays on Fernando Pessoa. Providence: Brown U, 1982. Print.

Pessoa, Fernando, and Nuno Ribeiro. Philosophical Essays: A Critical Edition. New York: Contra Mundum, 2012. Print.

Pessoa, Fernando, and Richard Zenith. The Book of Disquiet. London: Allen Lane, 2001. Print.

Pessoa, Fernando. A Little Larger than the Entire Universe: Selected Poems. Ed. Richard Zenith. Trans. Richard Zenith. New York: Penguin, 2006. Print.

Pessoa's Alberto Caeiro. Dartmouth, MA: Center for Portuguese Studies and Culture, U of Massachusetts Dartmouth, 2000. Print.

Pfohlmann, Oliver. Robert Musil. Reinbek Bei Hamburg: Rowohlt-Taschenbuch-Verl., 2012. Print.

Pointon, Marcia R. Portrayal and the Search for Identity. London: Reaktion, 2013. Print.

Robinson, Elizabeth. My Name Happens Also. Comp. Rosmarie Waldrop. Providence: Burning Deck, 1987. Print.

Rorty, Amélie, ed. The Identities of Persons. Berkeley: U of California, 1976. Print.

Rosten, Norman. Marilyn: An Untold Story. New York: New American LIbrary, 1973. Print.

Saramago, José. The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1991. Print.

Schwabsky, Barry. Fate Seen in the Dark. Providence: Burning Deck, 1985. Print.

Schwenger, Peter. At the Borders of Sleep: On Liminal Literature. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota, 2012. Print.

Solnit, Rebecca. "The Mother of All Questions." Harper's Magazine Oct. 2015: 5-7. Print.

Solomon, Deborah. Utopia Parkway: The Life and Work of Joseph Cornell. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1997. Print.

Stoeber, Michael. "Elina Brotherus." Artist Jan. 2008: 28-33. Print.

Tomkins, Calvin. Lives of the Artists. New York: Henry Holt, 2008. Print.

Tufte, Edward R. Visual Explanations: Images and Quantities, Evidence and Narrative. Cheshire, CT: Graphics, 1997. Print.

Tufte, Edward R. Visual Explanations: Prints and Sculptures. New York: Artists Space, 2000. Print.

Vasari, Giorgio, and George Bull. The Lives of the Artists. Harmondsworth, Eng.: Penguin, 1987. Print.

Waldrop, Rosmarie, and Ben Lerner. "Poem: New Work Rosmarie Waldrop." Harper's Magazine June 2016: 67-70. Print.

Waldrop, Rosmarie, and Nikolai Duffy. Gap Gardening: Selected Poems. New York: New Directions, 2016. Print.

Warhol, Andy. The Philosophy of Andy Warhol: From A to B and Back Again. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1975. Print.

Warhola, James. Uncle Andy's. New York: Putnam, 2003. Print.

William Kentridge No It Is. Berlin: Walther König, 2016. Print.

Williams, Gilda. How to Write about Contemporary Art. London: Thames & Hudson, 2014. Print.

Wilson, Martha. Martha Wilson Sourcebook: 40 Years of Reconsidering Performance, Feminism, Alternative Spaces. New York: Independent Curators International, 2011. Print.

          Wollheim, Richard. Painting as an Art. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1987.

 

SHORT DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY (max. 150 words):

Artists create works of art and the persona creating the artwork; with this premise I introduce the creating-persona to the relationship between artist-artwork-spectator [Wollheim 1983]. Physically the same as the artist, the creating-persona possesses a separate identity; the artist is the conduit for the production of the artwork created by the persona. Extent of separation varies; from a simple nom de plume to a full-grown heteronym complexity grows, impacting artwork and this now quadrangular relationship. Through the creation of personas, collaboration in my/our studio practices, and work created separately I will examine how this additional entity impacts identity, liminality, materiality in the four points of this relationship. Exploration of multifaceted identity, liminality in our existence, and continuous value of the material object drive my research as I seek to provide a solid foundation for further questioning and contextualization of the relationship between artworks, makers and spectators.

 

Saturday 09.10.16
Posted by Robyn Thomas
Comments: 1
 

Refreshed, Refocused and Reconfigured

This website is dedicated to documenting the research I undertake through my artistic practice.  I launched this website in 2014 as part of my studies for an MFA Creative Practice with Transart Institute in partnership with Plymouth University [UK]. All pages associated with my MFA studies, including my blog, reading diaries for workshops and residency documentation can be found for the time being under the top menu heading Archive.

I am currently in the process of re-designing this website as I refocus my research towards the MPhil/PhD Creative Practice program with Transart Institute in partnership with Plymouth University [UK]. Due to an overlap in the end of my MFA and beginning of my MPhil/PhD studies during the Berlin Summer Residency 2016 information that pertains to both can be found in the Archive, or accessed directly through the following links.

The blog post with links to Berlin Summer Residency 2016 reading diaries can be found here.

Here is the link to the blog post documenting my first summer residency MPhil presentation.

Wednesday 08.24.16
Posted by Robyn Thomas
 
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