Monday, November 18, 2013

File This Under: SURREALISM by @DiamondHeadSDG


When it came to surrealism, painter,  artist and self-promoter Salvador Dali was the undisputed personification of it. Dali considered himself to be something of a genius. And frankly, I think that was a pretty darn good assessment of his talent. 

To me, Dali was brilliant. Here was an artist with the imagination and chutzpah to not only think outside of the box but to also act upon it. With his melting clocks, double images, levitating objects and loads of symbolism, Dali ingeniously proved over and over  and over again, that art could consistently be intriguing, delightfully otherworldly, mysteriously surreal, uber-imaginative and always fun!

The Persistence of Memory


It can be said that if he managed to accomplished nothing more in the eyes of his critics, they must at least admit that Dali demonstrated that when it comes to art, it is okay to think outside of the box.  In an interview with Mike Wallace, when asked what are artist's contributions to the world? Dali responded with, “Every painter paints the cosmogony of himself”—the origins, the evolution of themselves.  Dali would be happy to know that someone was paying attention.  The Dalian method--his surrealist approach to art has had a profound and far-reaching influence in art, fashion, media and more.  Surrealism shows up in some incarnation or another in many places. 




I was first introduced to the art world of Salvador Dali through the movie Spellbound with its famous “Dream Sequence”.  To Dali's credit, these images he created for this part of the movie remain intriguingly seductive. It's unorthodox imagery immediately grabbed my attention and pulled me in. It is the type of creative imagery that one does not often see in film, but I personally would like to see more of.  I will also add that this scene is enough to give a person a real thing for eyes. And story-wise, what could be more compelling than a helpless character who is suspended in a mystery he can't understand or remember, haunted by a shadowy  faceless villain, in love with woman he admires, sexually repressed  and all caught up in psychoanalytical intrigue? Now, add to that, Dali! The result is wonderful...Hollywood at its best.  Spellbound is an unforgettable film immortalized in large part (let's be honest here) by the indisputable genius of Salvador Dali (Shhhh! Don't tell Hitchcock).



Thank you Dali (wherever you are) for your bold-as-you-please imaginations; for your unconventional daring;  for your surrealist approach to art...to life, your delightful self-promoting showmanship and for showing anyone who happened to be paying attention, that when it comes to art and to life, it is in fact, a very good thing to think outside of the box! 






Links:



Media:





Sunday, November 10, 2013

Not Arrived At Soylent Green, Yet

We live in a beautiful world—I mean physically, the world with its vast array of animal and plant and marine life is extraordinary. Just recently as I was editing photos of some rather friendly seagulls that I took the other day.  I had to pause. I could not help but admire the beauty and gracefulness in their movements. In a photo that I took, one bird appeared to be standing, supported by his tail feather while hoovering almost motionless it seemed. The sight to me was fascinating.



 



Yet again, this... 

                           ...a small reminder to me of the amazing design of nature—this meek co-existence often residing so quietly in the background of our lives.



Whatever may become of nature in the future—of animal life, plant life or the entire earthone thing is for certain. We can all say that once...once we were given an exquisitely beautiful planet on which to live.



G-d in kindness, did not just callously plunk us down on a rocky barren wasteland, giving us good reason to dread the earth around us. No. He gave us a lush home—an entire planet which He abundantly filled with some pretty awesome forms of life—a planet of limitless beauty. Even today in this age of global warming, there's still a lot of unspoiled beauty in nature. We have not arrived at “Soylent Green” yet


Perhaps we never will. Perhaps...

Somehow I have the awful fear that long before that could happen man, in his quest to dominate and control others, would probably devise some high-tech contraptions with which he would be able to bore massively deep holes into the earth, cause cataclysmic and unalterable changes in the atmosphere or frack us all to to the point of no return!


 In the meantime, those of us who appreciate nature, will continue to capture birds in flight,  sunsets...

                                            ...and the moon...

                                                             ...and the stars at night.