What kind of water person are you? Years ago an artist I knew decided to leave his small river town residence and business in order to move to the ocean. He said
"I hate river people. River people are just slow and dull." I'd never heard anyone before stereotype people's personalities according to what kind of water they resided near, so his pronouncement surprised me and stuck in my memory. I love living near the river. I think I must certainly be "a river person" by now, having lived by the Delaware River for many years. It wasn't always so.
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THE RIVER DREAMS HERSELF INTO EVERYTHING,©JoyKreves '13 |
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I grew up in the land-locked Midwest where the sky is the main event due to the flatness of the land. Trees and tall buildings seem to just perch on the land while they grapple with the sky. The uninterrupted acres of cornstalks in my home state had plenty of sky to rustle against. When I moved from suburban Chicago, Illinois, to New York City, I definitely noticed a difference in people's personalities. A Midwesterner was not so likely to have a public quarrel. Arguing was saved for the privacy of your home. Politeness was valued and practiced much more amidst the land-locked. In NYC I was amazed to hear people unselfconsciously shouting, arguing, or expressing all sorts of emotions in front of whatever public surrounded them. Without the sense of pressure from all that sky bearing down, people seemed to spark with an electric energy. "Please" and "thank you" were not a main staple of interactions or words to be thrown out from habit, but were
more selectively doled out. I've barely been back to the Midwest since moving east decades ago; certainly much has changed now, but back then people from the two environments acted significantly different. Undoubtedly some of the difference was because the population in the Midwest was so much more homogenized than that on the East Coast, but was any of it caused by features of the landscape? How much
does the landscape affect a person's personality?
Having lived on the East Coast, close to the Delaware River for years now, I've grown very fond of the river landscape and it's surrounding environment. Admittedly, I haven't spent enough time near the ocean to conclude anything about "ocean personalities," but I surely must be among the ranks of the
"river people" my friend detested! The water that flows in earth's rivers is mirrored in the blood running in our veins. Although I am far from a traditional artist, living near the Delaware River has definitely influenced my creative thinking so that many of my artworks involve water somehow. I truly understand why so many painters have flocked to this area and found it a rich source of inspiration for their landscape paintings.
I, however
, am inspired by the river in a different way. The river flows, and along the way the water collects stories and builds history. You can never see an entire river at once except perhaps from space, so you have to experience a river one section at a time. This is how you view a hand scroll, also. You wouldn't expect to take in the entire scroll painting at once. I've been thinking about this aspect of rivers and hand scrolls for several years and have been interested in creating artworks that unfold in a cinematic time.
I finished two such works this past week. Because I wanted to make artworks that imply a continuation beyond their immediate boundaries, I decided to make ceramic scroll stands with paper art that one could either scroll through or experience in a non-participatory way.
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ON TALKING, graphite & colored pencil on mylar on stoneware scroll stand, ©Joy Kreves |
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In
"ON TALKING" I wrote a narrative about talking in my family. Because I hear conversations as sound
weavings, I wrote as if on a loom's warp and weft. In the center of the scroll the writing almost forms a kind of plaid. The resulting words can be read with some focus, but also function in a purely visual way.
This piece can be viewed in the juried "MERCER COUNTY ARTISTS 2013" exhibition opening at Mercer Community College Art Gallery, Communications Bldg, 2nd fl, 1200 Old Trenton Rd., Trenton, NJ, beginning on Wednesday, March 5th, the reception on Wed. March 13th from 5-7pm. The show runs through April 4, 2013.
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ON PRACTICING RESTRAINT, ©Joy Kreves '13, mixed media. |
I left the pure beauty of the paper unmarked in the second scroll sculpture,
"ON PRACTICING RESTRAINT." You can scroll beyond the title writing, but all you will find is the lovely translucent mylar paper hanging above the textured and glazed slab base. I'm working on more of these scrolls, intending to paint and write on them. I love the format. It is the format of a walk along the river. Perhaps I just see it that way because I am "a river person." What kind of water person are you?
So interesting, Joy, that you would define yourself in that way. Many, many years ago as a H.S. yearbook adviser, my staff decided to feature the "kind of water person" each faculty member was...very interesting to link personalities to ponds and rivers and oceans, waterfalls or streams...the teacher identified him or herself accordingly; the students wrote the essay. I think I assigned myself as a 'river person'...every running...even then!
ReplyDeleteLove the scrolls; a great idea! Hope to see them.