Wednesday 11 February 2015

Elephant No. 124: Jean-Michel Basquiat Elephant





Last week, I edited an article on the new Basquiat retrospective at the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO), and it occurred to me that it might be interesting to try and create a Basquiat elephant.

Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988) was born and bred in New York City. He first came to fame in the late 1970s as a member the graffiti group SAMO. Blending street art with hip-hop and post-punk, Basquiat was soon exhibiting in major galleries and museums around the world. The first retrospective of his work was held at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City in 1992.


Untitled (Fallen Angel), 1981
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988)
Acrylic and mixed media on canvas
Source: indiecolors.com

Something of a child prodigy, Basquiat could read and write by the age of four, and was fluent in three languages by the age of eleven. His artistic ability was evident early on, and was encouraged by both his mother and his teachers.

At fifteen, Basquiat ran away from home. Returned to his father within a week, he later dropped out of school, at which point his father banished him from returning. Basquiat eked out a living selling t-shirts and homemade postcards, while staying on friends' couches.

In 1976, Basquiat and a friend began spraypainting graffiti on buildings in Lower Manhattan, often with cryptic messages. Three years later, Basquiat began appearing on a local television show, and played a local bar with his "noise rock" band, Test Pattern, showing pictures of his art at band gigs.


Untitled (Fishing), 1981
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988)
Acrylic and mixed media on canvas
Source: wikiart.org

By the early 1980s, he was being asked to take part in group exhibitions, and had his first solo show in March 1981. That same year, his work was featured in the prestigious magazine, Artforum, and his career took off. In 1983, he even collaborated with Andy Warhol on a series of paintings.

In 1985, he was featured on the cover of the New York Times Magazine; but privately he had begun to unravel. As his heroin addiction worsened, he destroyed a number of relationships with gallery owners and others. After Warhol died in 1987, Basquiat began isolating himself even more, and had essentially started to self-destruct.

Although he made a serious attempt at sobriety in Hawaii in 1987, Basquiat was found dead of a heroin overdose on August 16, 1988. He was only 27.


Bird on Money, 1981
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988)
Acrylic and mixed media on canvas
Source: wikiart.org

Despite his relatively short career, Basquiat has had a major influence on contemporary art. His style was unusual for its time, and had a take-no-prisoners attitude towards social issues such as poverty, racism, and class struggles. He combined bold graphics with text that was sometimes obscure, and sometimes taken directly from commercial packaging, advertising slogans and even children's picture books.

In 1996, artist Julian Schnabel made a feature film called Basquiat, and in 2009, Tamra Davis debuted a documentary called Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child at the Sundance Film Festival. He has also been referenced by other visual artists, and a number of recording artists.


Trumpet, 1984
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988)
Acrylic and mixed media on canvas
Source: wikiart.org

By 2002, Basquiat's work was selling in the low seven figures. The highest price paid for a Basquiat to date, however, is a record $48,843,750 paid for Dustheads at auction in 2013.


Dustheads, 1982
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988)
Acrylic and mixed media on canvas
Source: Christies

I'm no expert on Basquiat, although I love his work. A quick study of his visuals, however, gave me a few hooks I could use to produce some sort of elephant homage: a limited palette in each work, splashes of bold colour, lots of scrawled black and white lines and cryptic text. So all of that went into the design of my Basquiat elephant.

I decided to paint on a piece of artist-quality bristol board measuring 11 x 14 inches (27.9 x 35.5 cm). I began by splashing on some broad strokes of colour. Because Basquiat seemed to like various shades of mid-blue, I started with that as my main colour. I never slop paint on like this, so it was kind of fun.




Since he also seemed to like a lot of yellow and a sort of salmon-tinged red, I used those next.




Finally, since I planned to write a few words on the final work, I added some areas of white. For the rest of the white and black, as well as any accent colours, I planned to use markers.




I tried drawing on the blue central section next with a white paint marker, but was somewhat underwhelmed. I should have gone for an oil stick. Instead, I overpainted it with white acrylic paint.






After this, I used markers to draw in some evil poachers with guns, crowns (both because I like elephants with crowns, and because Basquiat often used crowns in his work), some words, and various other stuff. Many of the words were taken from quotations and poems about elephants. I think I would add different words and think the verbiage out a bit more if I were ever to try something like this again, but I'm not completely displeased with it. I also usually have much nicer printing, but I let it go for this.

I added some splashes of red as well, because I wanted to add a bit of contrast and visual zing, as well as the hint of the relatively blood-soaked reality of today's elephants.



To finish up, I added some more scrawls and scribbles, and then let it be.

It's obviously nothing like an actual Basquiat, but it was an interesting exercise, and so far out of my comfort zone that it was kind of fun. I also have a new appreciation for the skill behind his work. I always knew, as he famously reminded people, "Believe it or not, I can actually draw." What I didn't realize is how complicated and layered his compositions actually are. Hope there's a catalogue for the AGO retrospective that I can buy.





Elephant Lore of the Day
Elephants are highly social creatures, and function within tightly structured groups. When that structure is disrupted, however, elephants can go off the rails.

In the late 1990s, rangers in South Africa's Pilanesberg Park suddenly began coming across white rhinos that had been brutally attacked and killed. Because the horns had been left behind, they knew poachers weren't to blame.

Instead, it was soon discovered that a group of elephant delinquents had begun picking off their fellow pachyderms. This is extremely abnormal among properly socialized elephants; unfortunately, this group had been left essentially without adult supervision from a very young age.

The problem originated in a major elephant cull 20 years earlier. In South Africa's Kruger National Park, elephant populations had grown too large for the park to support. Because there was no way of relocating large adult elephants back then, a number of adult elephants were killed, while the babies were saved. The babies were then taken to other parks, such as Pilanesberg. At the time, the supervising veterinarian worried that the baby elephants might not be properly socialized without adults to show the way, but there was no other option.

The cull was nothing short of catastrophic. Elephants learn from one another, passing down knowledge from mother to child. In effect, an entire generation of traumatized orphan elephants had been thrown together without adult supervision. And 20 years later, they were essentially troubled teens with raging hormones. In elephants, raging hormones generally lead to murderous behaviour—in this case, taking the form of rhino murder.

Pilanesberg rangers began tracking and observing the elephants, which had also taken to attacking tourist vehicles. The worst offender was an elephant named Mafuta, de facto leader of the unmanageable herd. So out of control was Mafuta that he would fly into a rage if a rhino escaped him, and would seek out and attack the same rhino weeks later.

At their wits' end, rangers feared they would have to shoot the rogue elephants. Luckily, someone raised the idea of bringing in older bull elephants to teach the teenagers some manners. By 1998, rangers from Kruger National Park had figured out how to transport fully-grown adult elephants, and brought some older bull elephants to Pilanesberg.

The older elephants quickly established a pecking order, which also has the net effect of reducing a younger elephant's hormone levels. As one ranger put it, it was like suddenly confronting a group of out-of-control teenagers with their fathers.

The juvenile delinquents got the message, and since the arrival of the adults, not a single rhino has been killed by an elephant.


Male elephant and rhino, South Africa, 2011.
Source: malamala.com



To Support Elephant Welfare


Tuesday 3 February 2015

Elephant No. 123: Foam Stamp




I was in a thrift store earlier today and found some bags of foam blocks. My first thought was that they would be great for carving into stamps. At $1.99 a bag, they were inexpensive enough that I bought a few different shapes.




I decided to make something small, so I chose the round yellow shape, which is a little over an inch (2.5 cm) in diameter. I began by drawing a design on the end, using a plain HB pencil.




Taking a craft knife, I began cutting away everything that wasn't the elephant. It didn't take long—way less time than either lino or the rubber lino substitute—but, because it's springy, it sometimes caught on the blade.





To make some of the lines a little more defined, I used a nail file to squish them down a bit. The final stamp looked kind of cute, I thought.





I started by pressing the stamp into a thin layer of acrylic paint. This was a bad idea, because the paint tended to collect along the edges and in the cracks, making for a very messy impression when I used the stamp on paper.





Next, I tried some actual printing ink and a brayer to roll the ink onto the stamp. This made a cleaner impression, but not as crisp as I would have liked. The series below is about all you get out of one thin layer of ink.






Because the foam is much softer than any actual lino material, my theory is that it can't be pressed too heavily into the paper, or it will smush and spread out the design. On the other hand, if you don't press with at least a bit of pressure, you get nothing.

In the end, I was much more enamoured with the stamp than with any of the impressions it produced. I will still try this again, perhaps with a bigger foam shape next time, but I'll leave the detailed work for proper lino blocks.





Elephant Lore of the Day
This story comes from a news clipping included in the book Behemoth: The History of the Elephant in America, by Ronald B. Tobias.

In November 1865, a cantankerous Quaker known as Friend Shavery was sitting on a fence watching his bull snorting and pawing in a field, when an elephant from Van Amburg's Menagerie passed by. Expecting trouble between the bull and the elephant, named Tippoo Sahib, the elephant's keeper called out, "Take your bull out of the way!"

Shavery was an unpleasant man, generally disliked in the county, and seems to have eagerly anticipated the outcome of a dust-up between Tippoo and the bull. "Proceed with thy elephant," he calmly replied.

The elephant's keeper, a man called Nash, insisted that Shavery move the bull: "If you don't move that bull, he will get hurt."

Confident of his bull's ability to take on any elephant, Shavery replied: "Don't trouble thyself about the bull, but proceed with thy elephant."

Nash let Tippoo Sahib continue across the field. The bull charged at Tippoo. Tippoo didn't even break stride as he picked up the bull in his tusks, crushed its ribs and tossed it aside. The bull hit the ground head first, breaking its neck.

"I'm afraid your bull has bent his neck a little," Nash shouted over his shoulder as he continued on his way.

Enraged, Shavery shouted that his bull would have won if the elephant hadn't been so "hefty". To make sure Nash knew how displeased he was, Shavery added: "I was going to take my family to thy show, but I'll see thee and thy show blowed to blazes before I go one step!"

Nash's response is not recorded.


African bull elephant.
Source: wjuegos de cocina


To Support Elephant Welfare

Monday 2 February 2015

Elephant No. 122: Clothespin Critters





Although I've painted clothes-peg elephants and once tried (unsuccessfully) to make an elephant by attaching spring-loaded clothespins to one another, I like this version of clothespin art much better.

I was reminded of this idea in Martha Stewart's Favorite Crafts for Kids, but I'd seen it before. The concept involves simply folding a piece of paper in half, cutting out an animal shape (keeping the fold intact), decorating both sides, then clipping on clothespins for legs. For a great tutorial on a more elaborate clothespin animal, click here.


Clothespin animals
Source: PSXO


I had two kinds of wooden clothespins, so I decided to make an elephant using each.




The first thing I did was gauge the size of elephant I could make using each type of clothespin. The only thing you need to do after this is draw an elephant shape (without its legs, of course) and colour it in any way you like. To make the elephants sturdy enough to avoid flopping over, I used artist-quality bristol board.




I made these two. Usually the instructions say to colour both sides of the design, but I only had time to do one side of each. I used permanent markers in various colours, just for fun.





Once the designs were done, I cut them out and clipped the clothespins to the bottom. Most sources use only two clothespins, even for four-legged animals. I decided the elephants looked better with four.





I like the fact that I have a big elephant and a little elephant, and I like the highly unrealistic colours. Best of all, this was really simple, and would be a great activity for young children.





Elephant Lore of the Day
In 1886, James A. Byrne was commissioned by the Denver Soap Company to sculpt what was surely the largest bar of soap ever made.

Using 7,000 pounds of Denver Best Soap, Byrne created a life-sized elephant as the centrepiece of an exhibition promoting Colorado industry. As the Rocky Mountain News described the elephant:
[It] is a very perfect model and represents an elephant of unusually large size. The ears, trunk, tusks, sides, legs and feet are all wonderfully like those of the [animal]. The expression of the eye and the general contour of the forehead and head is excellent.
There is little other information on whether it was an Asian or African elephant, nor how large it actually was. The trading card below commemorates the elephant, but hopefully it looked better than this.

The elephant cost a total of $300, which in today's dollars is equivalent to about $7,410.



Commemorative card for life-sized soap elephant.
Denver Soap Company, 1886
Source: eBay



To Support Elephant Welfare

Sunday 1 February 2015

Elephant No. 121: Feature Artist Aggie Zed





I have to admit that I didn't know the work of Aggie Zed before Ken Wilson sent me a photo, but now I'm hooked.

Dividing her working life between sculpture, painting and drawing, Aggie Zed describes her drawings and paintings as being "informed by a lifelong celebration of the beauty and strangeness of dreams, posed against the absurdity and poignancy of supposedly rational human activity." Playful yet vaguely unsettling, her work often includes animals as either observers or bewildered participants in some strange human pastime.


Oh grow up by Aggie Zed
Pastel, ink and acrylic on paper
Source: aggiezed.com


Her sculpture similarly toys with reality, with human and animal figures that are vaguely "off". Humans bear the heads of animals, or have animals perched on their heads. Monochromatic men hold brightly coloured hand puppets. Animals mill about in groups.


Boxman with Elephant by Aggie Zed
Ceramic
Source: aggiezed.com



Puppetman-Horse by Aggie Zed
Ceramic
Source: aggiezed.com



Elephants by Aggie Zed
Ceramic
Source: aggiezed.com

What first caught Ken's eye, however, was one of Aggie Zed's "scrap floats". Made of various metal parts, wire, paint, and ceramics, these intriguing creations feature humans and/or animals deconstructed, reconfigured, floating, pinned to the ground, and integral to complicated machines that would give Heath Robinson a run for his money.


Brainchild by Aggie Zed
Ceramic and mixed metal
Source: aggiezed.com


Because I love anything that looks mechanical, I gravitated to the scrap floats right away. Intended, as Aggie Zed says, "as entries in a parade of the future," they are both amusing and disturbing, while also quite beautiful.

To see more of Aggie Zed's work, visit her website here.


Another Heaven by Aggie Zed
Ceramic and mixed metal
Source: aggiezed.com




Elephant Lore of the Day
For some reason, elephants have been wildly anthropomorphized throughout history. They've been given human emotions, have been dressed up in human clothes, and have been made to carry out human activities.

I'm not a big fan of anthropomorphizing live animals. However, if an elephant is allowed to keep its dignity in a pretend tintype like the one below, perhaps it serves as a reminder that animals are not overgrown clowns, and that we may not be so different after all.


Hortence J. Pacadorf
From the Grand Ole Bestiary
Source: Etsy



To Support Elephant Welfare