ArtPerth
Saturday, June 5th, 2010Nice surprise… I’m newly informed that I’m the feature artist on artperth.com and will be until next Saturday. Neat.

Nice surprise… I’m newly informed that I’m the feature artist on artperth.com and will be until next Saturday. Neat.

So quirky. I just love it. Don’t blame me if you’re humming it for the rest of the day! This was originally played by a band called The Boy Least Likely To… but I saw this version first on Ukulele Underground.
Every David Has It’s Goliath played by Lisa
So who (or what) is my Goliath? Not saying.
Have fun
Amanda
PS I haven’t been posting because I’ve been tied to my desk writing essays and (occasionally) to the bench binding books and, even more occasionally (on the cooler days) outside welding bits together to make a 4.5m tower. I guess the latter should be another story.
PPS Also been spooked by the bushfires just up the road. The temps here for the past three days have again gotten up to 48°C and the paddocks around us are so dry they’re crackling. So I’ve been outside making sure of the firebreaks, clearing stuff away from buildings etc. Yeah, we did do all that at the beginning of summer but the late rains undid most of it! Have also been installing irrigation in the dry gardens around the house - feels good to be doing something. Like I said: spooked. And grateful to be humming.
PPPS The uke is one hell of a versatile instrument. Catch Jake Shimabukuro.

Stage Rehearsal, 1878-1879, by Edgar Degas
One must do the same subject over again ten times, a hundred times.
Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.
Painting is easy when you don’t know how, but very difficult when you do.
Phew…
Amanda
You Tube.
One can spend a lot of time looking at You Tube.
The MOMA suggests that one should spend a lot more time looking at art.
One could also spend more time making art rather than looking at You Tube…
Can be fun looking,
Amanda
Yours truly trundled of to the Midland Town Hall yesterday to be photographed for the local newspaper, alongside Puff the Magic Dragon, as part of the promotion for the Myths, Stories, Legends exhibition. The telephone interview turned out to be the easy bit.
Out of respect for the occasion I went to the trouble of makeup and hairspray as well as changing the paint stained rags for something clean and tidy (fashionable or elegant being somewhat beyond my meager dress sense or wardrobe). That, of course, was reason sufficient for the skies to open up to a downpour minutes before I HAD to get out of the car. I don’t mind stomping puddles at all and in fact, love walking in the rain, but making a dash for it in unaccustomed high heels was not in the same league.
Thus, if you notice a picture of a bedraggled rat (trying her best to smile) in the community newspaper it was me - looking worse than usual.
Hope you were having more fun than I was,
Amanda
My recent post getting all nostalgic about vintage Tetris reminded me that I was going to wax lyrical in a wistful response to James Gurney, of Dinotopia fame, over his coining the phrase “dead-tech”. You’re not following his blog? You should be.
James has begun a series of articles on old graphic arts equipment and the first thing he hauled out to show the young ‘uns was the waxer. Ah… it was enough to send me hunting through my own cupboards.

Pictured right, is what was my trusty forerunner to repositional spray adhesive, which was in turn the forerunner to Ventura Publisher for the bookish (remember that?) or Quark Xpress for the hip.
Said implement, was the means to making stuff stick temporarily. After rolling the reverse of a bromide to the sound of… dunno how to explain it… it would be pasted down with a good rub using the heel of the palm. Not in the right spot? It would be peeled up to be moved with the mere flick of a blade at the corner. The bit of bromide would then be lifted with the blade (so as not to touch the wax with ones fingers) and put lovingly in the new position. Or should this be the umpteenth round of changes: slammed down in disgust.
Oh, yes, the scent of molten wax wafting across a light-table…
Have a good laugh,
Amanda
(wondering if there’s a use for it in the studio…)

Do your remember Tetris? Well, if you were a sharp-eye’d Googler today you’d have noticed the special version of their logo celebrating 25 years of addictive block-plonking. It was an occasion fit to be reported by the UK Telegraph and WMBF News.com (among others).
Then, if you clicked on the Google logo, you got a list of lots of relevant places - including links to sites where one can play Tetris. That’s how I found that tetris.com have an online adaptation of the old ‘89 version… yep, monochrome - complete with the old music. Guess who didn’t get quite so much done in the studio today? (You didn’t need to know where to find it either, did you?)

My excuse is that stuff’s been a bit tough in Studio A these past weeks and more than a few games of my old favourite was somehow soothing this morning. And, when I interrupted my typing to go find the name of the music - so I could tell you that listening to bla bla bla was a lot better than humming the ancient campfire number “No body loves me, everybody hates me, I think I’ll go eat worms” (I told you it was bad) - I discovered, courtesy of Wikipedia, that more than a couple of people (who appear to know about these things) confirm that the mood-enhancement wasn’t all in my head… (so to speak).
According to intensive research from Dr. Michael Crane and Dr. Richard Haier, et al. prolonged Tetris activity can also lead to more efficient brain activity during play. When first playing Tetris, brain function and activity increases, along with greater cerebral energy consumption, measured by glucose metabolic rate. As Tetris players become more proficient, their brains show a reduced consumption of glucose, indicating more efficient brain activity for this task…
In January 2009, an Oxford University research group headed by Dr Emily Holmes reported in PLoS ONE that for healthy volunteers, playing ‘Tetris’ soon after viewing traumatic material in the laboratory reduced the number of flashbacks to those scenes in the following week. They believe that the computer game may disrupt the memories that are retained of the sights and sounds witnessed at the time, and which are later re-experienced through involuntary, distressing flashbacks of that moment. The group hope to develop this approach further as a potential intervention to reduce the flashbacks experienced in PTSD, but emphasized that these are only preliminary results.
So, there we go. Stressed out? Play Tetris.
Have fun,
Amanda
Sorry about the late notice (I just knew I’d lost a list in the madness of the past week). Tonight is the opening night of the 24th Western Australian Printmedia Awards 2009 (phew…). It’s at the Moores Gallery, 46 Henry Street Fremantle and starts at 6.30pm.
I won’t be there cos I worked through the night last night after a week of the same. I got 8 hours sleep total over 3 days… I’m not going into the saga except to say it wasn’t my fault - the logs were large and frequent.
All was overcome and, I gotta say, I’m fairly pleased with the result but at the same have mixed feelings. Not new thoughts but reinforced this morning (tired and miserable) by a growing disillusion. Working so hard on stuff like this means I’m not in my studio making art; I’m submitting work that’s not really suitable for this event because I don’t have time to get something else on the press; and, thus, know up front that I’m not even in the running for the kudos. I think we have a problem Scotty.
Right now, I’m going up the hill to close (slam) the studio door behind me and try to work off the funk. Paint, play with the clay or just clean up the mess. Printmaking? Not very likely.
Amanda
PS For what it’s worth, this pair are what I entered - renamed Stockyard 1 and Stockyard 2. They were, in fact, a diptych but had to be submitted as individual pieces because of the size limitation. It’s a hybrid work - digital imagery but using an etching press to transfer the image to plywood. 600 x 900mm.
As a pair the work was called Puff the Magic Dragon. The image and the title look innocent enough for those who can’t face digging any deeper… The ambiguity intentional. The stockyard is significant. It’s a comment on lots of things. Made me cry after I realised what I’d made. But art is like that.


Out of character for the blog? Nah, this lady is making art.

You-Tube (grrr…) won’t let me embed Susan Boyles amazing performance here, so you’ll have to go look.
All I’ll say is: what have you done today?
Have a good one
Amanda
(Photo of Susan from USmagazine.com. Many thanks.)
Calling all Artist’s - Bush Fire Appeal - Art Auction in support of the rebuilding of Bruno’s Sculpture Park & Garden
at Marysville, Victoria.
Do You
Scribble
Draw
Paint
Sculpt
Please support this appeal
The auction of artwork will be held at Caversham House 27th April 2009 from 1pm Onwards
Drop off points
Whiteman Park - Whiteman Village, Mal’s Art Studio 7 Day’s 10am - 4pm. Contact - Malcolm Craig - 0408354228
Battistessa Studio - 12 Neuman Road, Herne Hill 7 Day’s 10am - 4pm. Contact - Antonio Battistessa - 92964121
Midland Town Hall - 2009 Observing the human Form Exhibition 7 Day’s
10am - 4pm until Sunday 22 March Only Contact - Rachel Birighitti - 0424023871
Please forward this Email to your networks
My offering, if anyone’s interested in bidding, is my favourite of my prints from my own collection - it’s framed because it’s coming off my wall - Victa, 30cm x 30, linocut, oil-based ink on 100% cotton paper
