XVIVO Blog

Archive for the ‘Stuff & Nonsense’ Category

The Zen of Creativity

John Daido Loori, a photographer, videographer, and Zen Roshi, always believed that art and spiritual enlightenment went hand in hand. He used photography as a lens to glimpse into what it means to really awaken both body and mind, and to point the way to truth. And, similarly, he used the principles of Zen to unlock his creativity and help guide his artistic endeavors.

Loori felt that people should try and dissolve the barriers between art and spirituality. He believed that the creative process should be uncluttered and unlimited, and, using Zen practices like “still point,” he was able to focus on his inner stillness in order to increase his creative output.

His Zen Mountain Monastery up in the Catskills of New York was built in 1980 to house and train students of his unique style of spiritual training. And even though Loori is no longer with us, his beliefs and teachings are still very much alive there today. Check it out!…Anybody can attend retreats at the monastery, where you will sit, work, and contemplate. I just attended a retreat there a couple of weekends ago…very intense!

ommm!



Books and cells

XVIVO is showing up in all sorts of places! The Madison Public Library in Madison, Wisconsin, held a seminar last Thursday where they showed off our cell animations to anyone interested in the life of the cell. It was part of their “Discovery! Thursdays” science seminars, a partnership between the University of Wisconsin and the Madison Public Library. These seminars are a great chance for children (and adults) of all ages to learn about the inner workings of their bodies. It’s nice to think that our animations are making teaching a little easier!

You can read about the seminar here: http://www.madisonpubliclibrary.org/events/xvivo-animations-lives-cell-molecular-level-21073



TED

Taking a break from medical animation for a week….Going to TED on Monday! I am sure most of you know what TED is, but If my mom is reading…TED (among other things) is an amazing conference, where innovators, artists, scientists, teachers, entrepreneurs, and generally way cool folk come together to be inspired and to inspire. Last year i had the fortune to have drinks with Dr. Richard Rockefeller, Hang with Kary and Nancy Mullis, and discuss film with Jesse Dylan .

But TED is much more than the brilliant, well heeled and well connected people one meets. To me it is fantasy that inspires dreams and innovation… a diegesis where I can disconnect from reality for a week and allow my creative self to come alive!

Disconnecting from reality ;-)

So Roz and Anneliese…please hold all calls at XVIVO while I recharge my batteries!



Going Creative

Been reading a lot of PJ Eby’s work lately http://dirtsimple.org/ and I am slowly uncovering new insights.

After much work I found that living a creative life is my purpose…not only my purpose but I have a real sense that I exist within a 3d web of creative possibilities in both thought and action. Almost where living a creative life is to live like a spider… always aware… eyes all around it’s form that allow it to see wonder and creative opportunities from all directions.

Why the spider? Because I have always hated spiders, and no image or past experience will stand in the way of a fulfilling creative life….(working on that as I write)

When a stress impulse arises, like a spider, I will immediately “move” to a new creative web. I will Go Creative…like Going commando.

Going Creative implies no protection..letting it all hang out, allow myself to be vulnerable and free.

more to discover!

-michael



The vocabulary of art

Thank you for all the online and offline compliments on my previous posting.  It is my hope that I can shed some light on the realist tradition that so many artistic hopefuls lack… to give an appreciation for the vocabulary of art.

I receive dozens of portfolios a month from recent grads and honestly, most of them stink. It is very sad to realize that these students go through four year programs and many even get advanced two year degrees and somehow they never learn basic art technique.  At the end of all that study a large percentage of students still can’t paint, either in pigment or with pixels, a faithful representation of reality.

The residual effects of modernism is still alive and well in many art programs and that trend is doing a great disservice to many art students and visualizers alike. I recognize that there are many excellent schools that produce extremely talented artists, but there are far too many programs that ignore basic art training. This is particularly harmful In the world of 3d animation where students need to have a strong foundation in realism. Understanding the vocabulary of art…light, shadow, value, chroma, edge, line, shape, composition, etc is essential to excel in their career. But all too often, students today only learn to paint what they feel and thus technique becomes irrelevant.

This “paint what you feel” teaching method might inspire the latest modern art trend…but it will never properly develop a realist artist.

So if you want to be a 3d artist, and your teacher is asking you to paint what you feel…run as fast as you can to a real art school.

Art vocabulary can be learned.  Through training and practice, students can develop an artist’s eye.

This artist’s eye is similar to a musicians ear. Where a musician has the ability to hear a chord and know the notes, major or minor, diminished and so on…The artist’s eye can discern hue, value, chroma, form, plane, edge, etc.  Understanding and putting into practice this vocabulary of art is the necessary first step to becoming a competent artist.

-mike



Airbrushed portraits using a controlled palette

Just got back from a week in Portland Oregon, where I visited family and participated in the annual AMI (Association of Medical Illustrators) meeting. I was so impressed with the fun, bright and creative people who make up the AMI.

It was really interesting to learn how many of you came to where you are now…it’s certainly a varied route we all take.

My own path, that everyone seemed to find unusual (in a good way) …was via: Airbrush T-shirt artist -to- traditional artist -to- a medical artist

While still airbrushing I studied classical technique. At this time, I modified the typical neon T-shirt airbrush palette to a “controlled palette” consisting mostly of opaque flesh tones and a few transparent colors for glazing. This odd technique gave me a bit of notoriety in the airbrush world…

And since you were all so nice sharing your techniques and ideas, I wanted to give something back…

In this “how to” video i use a controlled palette to paint a portrait of Sir Patrick Stewart (Jean Luc Picard.)

Don’t be fooled by medium of the T-shirt…there is some real art knowledge in this video.

BTW, this was done in 1997 so please ignore the big glasses!

Enjoy!

-mike



The artist’s mind

Portrait of My Father

Steven, an old friend and I made facebook contact after 30 years, he was surprised I became an artist. Perhaps he forgot that I was doodling constantly in school but more likely he was surprised because he thinks, as many people do, that artists have a difficult time making a living…the “starving artist stereotype”

I thought I would try to answer him through my first blog post.

He said, “My wife and I are trying to figure out what her (his daughter) career possibilities are in the art world since we don’t understand too well. Maybe you can give some advice.”

Before I go into the practical side of being an artist I thought it would be good to ramble a bit about what I think makes a good realist artist first…then we can get to all that career stuff.

I was trained as a classical artist, in the Frank Reilly technique…value, line, color, edge, plane, form, composition etc. I was instructed to not paint what I feel, but rather paint what I see. And learn to see I did.

I guess before my classical training when thinking of a leaf, my mind would fix upon a bland green spear shape thing with little resemblance to an actual leaf. As Lao-Tzu said “the five colors make a man blind, the five tones make a man deaf” But while studying and painting and drawing I began to see a “leaf”, with a multitude of colors, patterns, textures …and it was beautiful.

This is mindful observation.

The artist in seeing this way can begin to represent, as my business partner David says, “the truth and beauty” in life.

This artist can see the patterns and beauty of life. Through this type of observation the quieting of the labeling, judging mind happens immediately.

This state of mind does not come easy, but through proper training, and experience an artist can realize their best work.

This state of observation must be coupled with intense study in how to represent what you can now see. Classical art technique has been taught for hundreds of years and some of the best schools still teach these techniques. It is no easy task to become an artist, it takes talent, dedication and a lot of practice!

I know …just food for thought, but I promise Steven, I’ll try my best to answer your question next time.

- mike a

Links to Frank Reilly

http://www.dhfa.net/Artiststatement2.html

http://todaysinspiration.blogspot.com/2008/05/frank-reilly-could-teach-wooden-indian.html

http://apollodorian.tripod.com/