Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Um Livro Sobre A Morte at MuBE


_New works will be exhibited in Brazil to coincide with A Book About Death this February


_Finally a post that isn’t about hands or stamps or grids and choice. Not because I’m done riding that train; but there are other projects in the works.

One of these is the artist call for works to compliment the A Book About Death exhibit that will open in São Paulo, Brazil at MuBE, Museu Brasileiro da Escultura this February.
A new blog by Angela Ferrara details information for the call as well as the continuing life of the ABAD project, originated by artist Matthew Rose.
A Book About Death is Um Livro Sobre a Morte in Portuguese and seems to roll off the tongue as it highlights the international contributions of this exhibition.
Ferrara’s blog continues to build on the original ABAD blog with the new works submitted to the project exhibited online as they are received. The blog is nicely done with information about MuBE, the original exhibition of ABAD as well as downloadable poster art. The artist’s works as well as links to their websites and blogs are posted making this a great global networking opportunity.
With many new artists contributing to the MuBE project the range of dialogue and voice continues to expand and refresh the original exhibition. Submissions deadline is January 30, 2010 but be forewarned that regular mail to Brazil can take several weeks.



My submission: No Books for the Dead ©evertson09

Both my original piece for the Emily Harvey exhibit and the second piece I made for the Queens Museum’s Dia de los Muertos exhibit contained a insert with poetry. This latest piece continues the insert tradition while the imagery diverges. Although I’ve long used type, topography and words in my art, it really has only been in the last year or so that I’ve had any confidence or desire to include any “real” writings as part of a work. Thinking that the images needed to stand-alone for the viewers interpretation to work, I avoided the literal use of words in favor of their shape or their use as a compositional element. An element that usually played a rather minor role in the overall effect I wanted in a work. The mail art nature of this project allows me to use the envelope nature of my images to include a “letter”.


Poetry insert to my card ©evertson09

The three pieces I’ve created to date for the ABAD projects involve differing methods of creating the word and image interaction. My original piece began with the writing portion. Afterwards I staged a photograph to accompany the word. In the second piece (for the Queens Museum) I created the image and worked out a poem based on the image. In this piece for MuBE, the image and word creation intermixed and I found myself back and forth as I modified each in tandem.

Sitting in front of the TV and watching death a step removed from its reality is something we live with at an ever-increasing rate. Never mind make believe video game violence; we are exposed to sanitized death at a velocity unimaginable to our generations before. Welcome to virtual death or abstract death. The individual visual and sound bite describing extremely horrific events are sandwiched together; and glossed until the scale of our collective death toll is incomprehensible. A famine, a genocide, a homicide and war casualties can fit easily in the first five minutes of news spilling from the lips of our news anchors.

In our surreal situation, death is not real unless it happens to you on TV; and a significant market share sits back and watches.

4 comments:

Gwen Buchanan said...

Bill, fabulous poem.. Love that descriptive poem near the end of your post, so right on... Neil Young comes to mind again as he did on Owen's computer problem.. guess it's because Neil tells it like it is, too.. I never watch TV anymore, I detest the newspaper and I guess we all know why... the best to you

jill z said...

The best part of reading, learning and being enlightened by this wonderful community's blogs- is to have an alternative to another form of expression- other than tv. The Death piece is intriguing- I can also think of death- in other than human terms- but in ideas, things we have, thoughts- as well as dreams. But, on a positive light- we can think of death as the end of bad things- if - of course, it's not innocent people dying that shouldn't have, and the one's we love who die before 'their' time'. Death, as in the leaves of the trees, and flower bulbs that die, also come back equally if not more beautiful than before!

Debrina said...

Hi ya Bill - just catching up with all my blogging friends now to wish you a merry xmas and a magic 2010! I see you've done a hands up for Seth (no pun intended, of course) and I see Jill Z has found you too. Jill and Seth have collaborated just recently on a book, so synchronicity once again plays its part?
Well, I have so much stuff on the burner right now, but I'm real tempted to contribute to The Book of Death. Gwen Buchanan's avatar has already got me thinking!

William Evertson said...

Thanks Gwen - Btw, I love your crow avatar too.
Nicely put Jill Z. Since I became involved with ABAD my eyes have opened to the multiplicity of feelings and opinions to this universal topic.
Hi Debrina - You really should! It is a great project and think how cool it would be to have a piece in the collection at MuBE.