Word Art: Alien Life

Lake Sirmon is one of the reasons I am irretrievably barred from saying I have not had an interesting life.  We met at an art show that my friend Steve took me to.  It was supposed to be the grand opening of her new art gallery and studio space.  Unfortunately, an ice storm hit the area and made the opening a little less than grand.  Nevertheless, we braved the slick roads and I fell in love with one of the masks that Lake had made–a half-mask covered in red glitter with beads and red and black plumes.  Steve still owed me money (I have a tendency to fall for men in less-than-stable financial situations, but I always get it in writing when I help them out) and the mask in question was about the price of his final payment, so he bought me the mask and we called it even.

Because of Lake, I have posed for photographs in the ruins of an abandoned steel mill, wielded a wand as the Art For A Buck Fairy, covered myself in lipstick and body paint while completely nude in front of an audience and helped paint a hearse to turn it into a multicolored work of automotive art.  Lake proved to me beyond all doubt that you don’t need to be a rich person to live a rich life.

Lake has a thing for aliens.  She’s made art of spaceships, dressed up as an alien, put on an “Alien Luau” and collects the odd bits of ephemera depicting aliens that have made it to the thrift shops.  One of her artworks comes with a story about a girl from an isolated planet who builds a spaceship to explore the universe with.

It was at Lake’s house that my art career began.  I knew I had until June to come up with a birthday present for her.  True to form, I was ridiculously late, but I wanted this piece to be worth it.

Alien Life

Alien Life

We have always looked up at the stars and wondered if anybody up there was looking back.

As, over time, we reduced what was unknown through adding to what was known (and as we realized how vast indeed was the unknown) we cast our various fears and our hopes into that void and asked ourselves what kinds of beings would arise from it.

Perhaps it says something about ourselves in what things that we expect will come.

We have told tales of being invaded by those who would take what we have and make use of it.

(Perhaps we secretly fear that all the things we did to others will one day be in turn done to us?)

In other stories, they come in the guises of our highest selves, being the beings we wish that we could turn into ourselves.

We wish that we could fly and so we gave them flight.

We wish that we could be rational, and so we give them logic.

We wish the rules for life would be clear, and so we give them purpose.

Some people are convinced beings from distant planets have already come to this place, even as the traces left behind are transient and uncertain.

(Should you suggest that past stories of humans were have been captured and released by the fae are really stories of those who have been captured and released by extraterrestrials, my question would be how can we indeed be certain that the abductors are not, in fact, the Fair Folk in suitable disguises?)

Other people make claims that the pyramids and other exceptional achievements of times past were in fact works of visitors from other worlds.

I find that this comes across as a bit of a slight to humanity.

We are, as a whole, far more remarkable than we give ourselves credit for.

And I also suspect that we all feel a bit like an alien from time, as we behold the peculiar customs of these human creatures and wonder why they act that way.

Anybody who explores the inner and outer spaces of the realms of creativity will find this to be especially true.

So perhaps the eyes that stare back from the skies are our own.

Lake loved it when I gave it to her and I’m honored to have my work added to her art collection.

Printout of this work (3 MB .jpg file) available here.  Please read the license details.

The original has been given to Lake Sirmon.

Word Art: A Brief Message to the Class of 2010

At 2011 Bolton Road, in the northwest part of Atlanta, there is a relatively new commercial building that lacks tenants in its upper floor.  The owner is amenable to letting artists use the space while nobody else is, and thus I’m now participating in my second art show there.  The first show was the Upper West Side Folk Art Market, where I made my first sale in the midst of a snowstorm.  The second is the Upper West Side Fringe Festival (which is still open from noon to six through May 21, 2010, if you’d like to drop by) which was where, indirectly, I made my first commission.

Since the space is intended as commercial space rather than a gallery, the lighting is not exactly amenable to an art show.  My brother graciously donated some lighting equipment that he’d had in storage and I spent the Monday before the show unpacking these large boxes and cataloging everything.  While I was there I met Ernest, my first proper art patron, and his sister, Margaret.  Margaret was impressed with my work and when I mentioned I did custom work as well, she offered to commission a piece as a gift for her niece, Ernest’s daughter Candace.  Ernest showed me the pictures he carried in his wallet of Candace–a pretty girl with a radiant smile, dressed in graduation robes.  We decided on the size (the equivalent of Fire Meets Water–seven square inches) and Margaret specified that she wanted the white space to be “2010” and the color to be burgundy, to match Candace’s class colors.

I pondered what to write for a day or two, drafted a few notions in my notebook and then began:

A Brief Message to the Class of 2010

A Brief Message to the Class of 2010

You have emerged from the classroom into the world.

Whatever you choose to do from this point forward, even if you re-read these words years from now, know that the best life is the life of one who never stops learning.

These new ways to learn might not test you in a paper way, but you will still be made to prove what has been taught to you.

But if the proof does not come all at once you will know where to look to find out.

You were born in the 20th century but you come of age in the 21st.

How blessed you are, to witness and to shape amazing time such as this!

As you can see, so many things were at one time thought impossible and are now surrounding us.

Remember this–with courage and persistence “Impossible” becomes “not just yet” becomes “very soon” becomes “now.”

I presented the result at the opening of Fringe Fest and both Margaret and Ernest were quite pleased.  I hope Candace will like it.

Prints of this work are available here.

The original has been purchased.