
Tag: Art
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Using Your @Livescribe pen with Gimp Shop
There are many amazing things you can do with a Livescribe pen, and while I believe it is playing a revolutionary role in the business and education world, I think we have yet to scratch the surface of what this pen will allow artists to do in the future.
I am, by no means, a skilled graphic artist or a sketch artist for that matter. I was simply excited the Pulse pen lets me have instant digital copies of my doodles from my journals. However, I can see the possibilities. Especially when it only takes a few simple steps you to import any of your livescribe sketches into a photo editor, allowing you to mix graphic and hand made art.Here is all you have to do:1. Open your livescribe desktop application and find the page with the image which you wish to alter.2. From the file menu, click ‘Print’, and then select ‘Save as PDF’ (PC Users, your process for saving a PDF may be slightly different)3. Open your Gimp application4. Click on ‘Open’ Select your pdf file and the image should appear ready to be altered to your hearts content.Continuing the adventure, JessPS: Have you heard the rumors? They are working to make the echo a digital pen which will interface directly with your photo editor. Check it out. -
Painting in Progress 5
I have let my Spirited Dreamer lie still for too long. Since my own dreams and sleep were being very elusive last night I decided to give another try and getting her finished. I really love her now. I think I might put her up for sale next week. I haven’t totally decided yet. What do you think?-Jessica
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Gender in Art
Copied from the Art News Blog:“Jerry Saltz has published an interesting article over at the New York Magazine. Saltz asks where are all the women? (at the MoMa)“MoMA is our fountain of youth, our Garden of Eden, our Promised Land. But all these things will not last much longer if this institution continues excluding women from the display of its permanent collection of painting and sculpture from 1879 to 1969..”and continues with..“I’m not declaring them sexist bigots. Nor am I a quota queen, advocating that women be allotted their 51 percent: Art history isn’t about fairness. Nevertheless—and this is a vital point—MoMA’s master narrative would not be disrupted if more women were placed on view. In fact, that narrative would come to life in ways it never has before, ways that would be revitalizing, even revolutionary. Ask yourself if hanging any of the following artists would really ruin the narrative espoused by the museum: Barbara Hepworth, Louise Nevelson, Louise Bourgeois, Joan Mitchell, Dorthea Rockburne, Yoko Ono, and Florine Stettheimer.” Read the full article at NY Mag here.I think it would be political correctness gone mad if museums were forced to purchase art because the artist is female, a particular skin color, or any other categorization of person that has ever felt neglected at some point in time. Which doesn’t mean that I don’t think more women artists should be bought by museums, but they definitely shouldn’t be bought just because they are women.Art should be bought on merit, not the sex of the artist. The sex of the artist is the last thing on my mind when I’m looking at good art.”I found myself at an interesting crossroad after reading this article. Really I clicked on it because it was titled “Women in MoMa” and since I really had no idea what MoMa is and what women were doing in it I thought it would make an interesting read. Interesting and thought provoking were more then I bargained for.My thoughts that were provoked centered around the idea of gender. I began to wonder how anyone could seriously view art without thinking about the gender of the artist. There are a few reasons why I think this. The first one is that gender is something that is physical, emotional and societal.If we start purely with the physical aspects and how it affects an artist there are obvious differences. A woman has a vagina and a man has a penis. There are differences in the hormones that each body holds, each sex faces different dangers and pitfalls as well as similar ones. If art is a expression of a culmination of experiences, how can we ignore the physical experiences that are tied into emotional ones?The emotional aspects of gender play a huge role in how an artist expresses themselves as well. Men and women respond to stresses and emotional triggers differently. There are expansive amounts of literature discussing how each gender responds to the messy journey we call life.The emotional and physical aspects of gender are just the foundations that affect expression. On top of these foundations are built the norms and mores of societies gender roles. These vary as well with the artists society. It would be foolish to assume that a woman determined by society to be “masculine” would express herself in the same way as a woman determined by society to be “feminine.”All these ramblings to say that while I agree that quota systems and political correctness are foolish dreams; I would challenge anyone who says that art is merited on its own without consideration to the artists gender.I shouldn’t read these things late at night.-Jessica
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Fearing Failure…
I usually don’t get freaked about failure. Usually, its a scrape on the knee, a chance to learn, a chance to grow. I usually get freaked about not trying.Right now, I’m freaked about about failure. As I check to see how many people have registered for Marchen Studios first workshop and I only see two, my heart starts to sink, first a little, then a lot.I keep praying that the 7th will be amazing. That it will be full house of family and friends laughing and embracing my hearts desire with me. That desire is to give everyone an opportunity to be creative, to step outside their box, to be an artist.Then that fear gnaws at me a little: what if you’re wrong? What if no one really cares about being creative, about art?So, do you care? If so, sign up.
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Spirited Dreamer: Painting in Progress 4
Spirited DreamerOriginally uploaded by marchenstudiosShe is coming along. I am calling the painting “Spirited Dreamer”. It is based on the idea that sometimes dreams and reality seem to blend together and that we can dream with as much of our spirit and passion as we live with. I think she still needs some work but I am going to leave her for a little while. I’ll come back to her when I feel ready.By the way, sorry about the lack of creative confession this week. I know many of you are very distressed about it 🙂 Its getting to be crunch time for our art party/sale/workshop/other stuff and so we really truly just ran out of time and didn’t want to make another confession about how we are tired and don’t have any time. But keep an eye out for us next week when we’ll be back.-Jessica








