Showing posts with label poor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poor. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Artwork of the month: Wassily Kandinsky.

Kandinsky is and always has been my biggest influence (aside from Caravaggio) in abstract art. I have read everything he wrote attentively.  I have traveled to museums simply to view his works of art.  I have visited the Guggenheim in New York 17 times only To spend a few hours in front of "Composition #8" his finest work. I studied his life, his works, and his impact so completely I feel as if i kew him personally.

I can conclude that I truly admire his work, and I would never have liked him as a person. Kandinsky was a spoiled rich kid infused with the misguided plight of privilege. Albeit, his works of art, his thesis, is more insightful than any artist in our recorded history. Bold statement, yes it is and I stand by it.

I have been studying this painting periodically since 1996 at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.

Wassily Kandinsky
Russian, 1866-1944
"Study for Improvisation V"
1910, oil on pulp board

Kandinsky painted on both sides of the work.  It was a common practice artists of early 1900s to paint on both sides of fiber board, and then split them up and sell them as separate pieces.  I have painted on both sides of a canvas several times. 
The sibling to this painting is in a private collection as far as I know.  I have only seen it in person once in 2005 when the two paintings were exhibited together for the first time.

"Two Riders and Reclining Figure"
1910, oil on pulp board

So the original "Two Riders and Reclining Figure/Study for improvisation V" oil on pulp board was separated until 2005 when exhibited as "Kandinsky: A Relationship Revealed" at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.  The $ tier made a huge international deal about how amazing this was and how great to have the two works reunited again, even if for only a moment.  The reality is that Kandinsky was poor at the time he painted these works and it wasn't because he wanted the extra money from a double sale for the cost of one...
...it was because he had to paint no matter what the consequences.  historians, curators, directors and investors love the tales but lack the understanding that an artist has about another artist.  


"The artist must have something to say, for mastery over form is not his goal but rather the adapting of form to its inner meaning." 
-Wassily Kandinsky

Thursday, February 2, 2006

"666" series of paintings

To continue catching this blog up to the present let us take a look at my past again...

When I was working on this sextet things were not going my way.  Just before this painting I was selling my work on a regular bases.  I was also spending money like there was no tomorrow, thinking that this sales wave would never end.

It did, and as sales of paintings had stopped for several months, I was less than broke and fast going into serious debt to characters that I should have just stayed away from.  I started throwing parties where I sold paintings for next to nothing just to get some cash together for food, which sucked as I was only eating rice because I could buy a 50lb bag for twenty dollars.  If I was lucky I had canned tuna to go with my rice.  Things sucked.


This 6 panel work is a self-portrait from a previous studio.  It was painted to simply reflect the moment in a clever way. 


Adam M. Considine  1998



666 a
oil on canvas

666 b
oil on canvas

666 c
oil on canvas

666 d
oil on canvas

666 e
oil on canvas

666 f
oil on canvas


We all go through the self imposed lessons of being broke...
...It sucks, we find a way to survive and do better next time.