Showing posts with label random thoughts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label random thoughts. Show all posts

Friday, April 25, 2014

1 + 1 = the answer

As an artist, one of my main tasks is to ask questions. Yes, art is about the subjective expression of emotions and experience, but it is just as much about objectively finding facts and representing the current state of affairs in the time and climate that we live in.

I ask questions. A lot of them. Especially about the way that we interact with our environment - whether this be our social, urban or natural environment. I ask questions about the way we are living, conducting our work and using resources available to us. I ask questions about where our food comes from, our water flows from, and how our electricity is generated.

Those who know me well, know how passionate I am about nature conservation and how eagerly I support the work of Greenpeace, WWF and 350.org. Some people may think that I do this blindly. I don't. I repeatedly ask questions and source my information from a variety of sources. And when assimilating all the information, and doing the maths, I always arrive at the same answers.

Historically corporations and governments have been joining hands and heads to make profits at the cost of the environment and the people living around affected areas. And when they are caught out, or asked to take responsibility for the damage they inflict, they act swiftly - sowing seeds of doubt about the truth of the allegations, silencing whistle blowers and journalists through various tactics, and shoving as much as they can under any rug that they can find. The oil spills in the Niger and the Gulf of Mexico are two devastating disasters that has been downplayed very cleverly through expensive and well-driven media campaigns. The impact will be felt generations ahead, if not for the next two thousand years, but nobody is being held accountable.


Have you ever stopped to think about what climate scientists, environmental activists, whistle blowers, and other 'greenies' have to gain from 'pushing their agenda'? They stand to gain a healthy environment, they stand to gain knowing that they have done their job in conserving our resources so future generations can enjoy the quality of life that we are having, or better. Most of the time the people who win battles for the earth die without any recognition or fame for the hard work they do. Environmental organizations do not make profits, the little money they get are spent on the costs of doing their work and surviving as individuals, just like any of us. Have you thought about this?



The corporations, however, including the government, stand to gain A LOT, however, by denying their responsibility for cutting carbon, investing in sustainable development and supporting self-sustaining communities. The government is a corporation, remember - they deliver services to us, the tax payers or clients, and they have products, such as the natural resources of our country that they sell to other countries. The enormous global corporations such as gas companies make money from fossil fuels - and now shale gases obtained through hydraulic fracturing. Profits drive the vision and mission of the big corporations and governments, and I am not fooled by their propaganda and distraction tactics.



Remember how people in our country had to fight for the right to vote, for equal rights; how women had to fight for their rights? It's time we fight for our human right to have healthy air to breathe, and clean water flowing in our rivers. Do you know that Eskom, as well as Sasol, Total, Engen, ArcelorMittal and Northam Platinum has applied for the postponement (and and effectively exemption) from complying with the Department of Environment Affairs' Air Quality Act, because of the cost of applying technology to curb pollution? Do you remember the advertising to convince people it's perfectly fine and healthy to smoke cigarettes?



Yes, I get emotional and angry. Yes, I even seem to get irrational and unrelenting. But we cannot idly sit back and wait for things to get better, because they won't, unless we stand together and demand better solutions from our governments and the corporations. With the elections coming up, I dare you to raise your voice and demand a better life ahead. I dare you to step out of apathy and into the light of the truth that you can feel bursting from your heart. I dare you to claim the life that you and your family deserve. A healthy, inspired life, that is sustainable and in harmony with other people, with animals, and with our natural environment. There are SO many solutions, the people who are making all the money are just denying it, distracting you from it, or blatantly hiding these solutions from us. As humans we are resourceful, intelligent, and the technology has advanced incredibly in a very short time, wake up and demand real GOOD change.


Friday, March 23, 2012

Aiming to understand the self

We all experience doubt and a lack of self confidence every once in a while. The secret to lifting out of the dip is to know and understand that it's just a phase and that you have everything you need to feel 'better' again within yourself already. You just need to ask, trust and have faith... And then usually the answer will come to you.

We all have different ways of dealing with life's challenges, even if one of those challenges is a lack of challenges within your daily activities. And so each of us have different personalities, skills and careers. I stumbled upon a useful resource today that could give you guidance towards the right career for you, your life purpose or even just towards finding the ideal hobby for yourself, or understanding yourself better.

The Holland Code is a type of simplified personality classification used to help people decide what type of career they should follow. Basically it implies that each person is a unique combination of the following characteristics:

  • Realistic - People who loves working with their hands, tools and machines. Usually practical, conservative and "normal", sometimes lacking interpersonal things since they prefer working alone on projects requiring manual skills
  • Investigative - Explorative people who love shaping an understanding of things, focused on the development of knowledge. Analytical, intelligent and skeptical.
  • Artistic - People with a literary, musical or artistic interest or passion, who have a need to give creative expression to ideas or emotions. Open to experience, innovation and usually opposes routines and conformity to established rules.
  • Social - Helpful teachers, healers and people who live to serve others through personal interaction. Empathic, patient and nurturing, with good interpersonal skills.
  • Enterprising - Persuasive people who are able to direct and lead others, but usually value social status and material accomplishment highly. Energetic and assertive, with sales and manipulation skills.
  • Conventional - People with an inherent need for order, routine and an application of set standards. Careful and conforming, with technical skills in business or production, with the ability to work systematically and precise.

I think it is also valuable to realize and accept that while we all have different personalities, we all have different things that we value and find important. Being tolerant and accepting of other people are one of the greatest gifts that you can give to your family and friends, our society and yourself.

My Holland Code is ARI, ARS and ARE in equal amounts (My artistic rating high, then realistic being my second highest score, and my ratings for Investigative, Social and Enterprising being the same).What is yours? Have a look at Rogue Community College's quiz to calculate your Holland Code(s). Or do you think that this classification method is too simplified, restrictive or lacking in depth? There is of course also the Myers  Briggs personality test, which classifies sixteen personality types according to combinations of these four traits or temperaments:

  • Extraverted or Introverted
  • Sensing or Intuition
  • Thinking or Feeling
  • Judging or Perceiving

HumanMetrics Jung Typology Test

Is there inspiration for an artwork in this? And should I pursue it even though it's so far removed from my usual themes?

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Glimpses from a bus seat









Beautiful images from my journey home. These have been taken from my seat on the Intercape Sleepliner from Vanderbijlpark to Cape Town. And yes, the white on that mountain is snow!!

I also had the good fortune of waking up just before sunrise when we were driving through the Karoo!! I didn't take any photos this time, just soaked up the scene with a huge grin on my face - enjoying in awe every moment of the beauty and splendor.

Today is 5 June, and World Environment Day - why not go and enjoy nature? Go for a hike, go to a nature reserve, go to the beach or climb a mountain... I'll go for a Lion's Head or Deer Park hike today, or at least go to the beach. Bliss....


Monday, May 9, 2011

Two different perspectives



With a view over mountains and sea
One day with peace and tranquility
The next day with storm and wind

Near the foot of Africa
And part of the Sun Path of our ancestors
With age-old rocks around the sands of time

Here we find peace and truth
Here we can find ourselves.

Kalk Bay, 2011



Leaves on a table within my studio. Hidden underneath a roof. Captured within 4 walls. Contained within the control of my hands, my will, my ego. Control. Fear. Anger. Despair. We all long to feel connected again. Leaves plucked from a tree - death, decay and renewal.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Dreams inspire and guide





The above two small watercolour sketches are already a bit old, but it's always good to look back at what you've been doing a few months ago, as it gives you perception into where you're going and how far you might have come already.

Thanks to the Concept Development workshop by Kai Lossgott at VANSA earlier this month I have started to develop good, sustainable and easy-to-follow methods and habits that's already proving to work. I'm creating and producing new works, and also working on some projects that are more focused around action rather than merely creating an artwork. New artworks will be exhibited in May in Vanderbijlpark, after which I will add them onto my website. I'm also still expanding the Nuances series, which are becoming quite popular at the moment, I am happy to say!


As 'n klein voorsmakie vir Meimaand se uitstalling: die werke - gemengde media werke, drukke, tekeninge, skilderwerke asook 'n uitvoerstuk en installasiewerk - vorm deel van die Scapes projek, wat fokus op die landskap en menslike interaksie daarmee. Vir Scapes & Scrapes, wat in Bodutu Gallery by die Vaal Universiteit van Tegnologie uitgestal word, word teenstellings getref tussen ongeskende landskappe en natuurlewe teenoor areas waar besoedeling en omgewingsbeskadiging plaasvind. In laasgenoemde is die fokus op die manier wat die landskap geskend word en die gesondheid van minderbevoorregte gemeenskappe benadeel word vir die finasiƫle baat van 'n selektiewe groepie oor-bevoorregte mense.




This really caught my attention in my reading list on Blogger this morning. Read more about a story that will unfurl about this bird's journey or travels on the Resurrection Fern's blog.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Voel en Vertrou



I'm currently partaking in a workshop called In Focus, hosted by VANSA, which focuses on concept development for artists. I'ts presented, facilitated and driven by visual artist and poet Kai Lossgott and even though today was only the second day of the 5-day workshop, I already feel that I've gained a lot from it. The focus, chance and encouragement to really delve into my subconscious for new themes and concepts about... myself. Something I haven't really done in quite a bit of time. Since I've been focusing so much on themes and concepts around nature conservation, or even just inspired by nature's beauty, I've been ignoring and even suppressing personal themes or 'issues'. This could easily be seen as me only being 'half' of an artist, since an artist's biggest source of inspiration is and should be personal experience and the self as source. This is authentic, and gives your art that honesty and uniqueness that makes the viewer really LOOK at your art, wanting to know more. Because you've put in your heart, soul and passion into a piece...

I feel peaceful, and also excited.

Monday, February 21, 2011

All about perception



Dry leaves pinned onto pieces of bark with thorns, in Deer Park, Cape Town.



"Weg in die hoekie waar die spinnerakke
strek tot in die donker stofstilte,
kruip die vergete herinnering weg
totdat jy weer besluit om dit
'n tweede gedagte te skenk"

Hierdie was gekryf terwyl ons op die lughawe gewag het vir 'n vlug Johannesburg toe. Dit bly steeds net so universeel en geskik te alle tye.

We are our past, our present and our future. The choices we made yesterday shapes who we are today. This does not mean that we should be bound by these choices, but that we should accept them and learn from them - being aware of what they mean in our lives, but also being able to move past them towards new things, change and improvement, and accepting that where and who we are today is exactly the right place for each of us. Live fully, proudly and freely, and never lose your authenticity.

My thoughts for a Monday morning....

Monday, January 31, 2011

Quote

"Here's to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square hole. The ones who see things differently. They are not fond of rules. And they have no respect for the status quo. You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you can't do is ignore them. Because they change things. They push the human race forward. And while some may see them as crazy ones, we see genius. Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do."

--Jack Kerouac


Monday, December 13, 2010

Rethinking and Reviving

For a little while I thought that I need to create art that people want to see, admire and buy. That I need to try and follow a trend, choose my subject matter more wisely or even change the way that I create my artworks.

Change of direction and perception

I have since, however, revived and remembered that I need to stay authentic and true to myself, and follow my heart and passion. The rest will follow. I just need to stay on my own path that makes the most sense to me. Everything is relative in this complex and beautiful world of ours. There will always be people with criticism and cynicism to make you rethink your perception about life. And there will also always be people who you can count on to be encouraging, supportive, wise and loving. To all those who love, support and encourage me - especially those who give constructive criticism and motherly preaches - you know who you are and I thank you from the bottom of my heart.



Landscape in progress

So now onto the juicier bits - I am working on new landscape works, found object sculptures and collages, and also veering more into botanical art. I'm continuing my explorations with watercolour and will have more to show soon!

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Re-awaken, Express and LIVE


This was an idea I had a while back, for a triptych that shows both the Cape Town and Joburg skyline on either side of a hand with roots at the end of the forearm. If and when I do it, the leaves might be a tattoo on the arm, rather than just twisting around the arm.

On quite another note:

For too long I have stared blindly at the solutions and aspects of myself begging for attention/to be expressed that are right in front of me...

I have been trying to integrate focus, balance and simplicity in my daily life, but constantly fail to bring it into practice in my art. I have constantly been aware of the cycles that happen throughout our years, seasons, relationships and lives, and also the interconnectiveness of everything, but neglected to express these realizations and truths in my art. I have also been trying to focus and move towards re-awakening my own connectiveness and knowledge of nature, as well as re-awakening my body through movement and exercise, but because art is so central to my life and I have NOT fully integrated nature and movement into my art, I have not succeeded or made much headway in either.

So the path that I will follow from here on will lead me towards exploring and expressing balance, focus, simplicity and cyclic processes in my art, which will more and more take shape in the process, and documentation of Land Art, performance art and other more 'transient' forms that capture the essence of the above elements.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Relevance is Relative

What is art's relevance in our modern society where almost every fourth middle-class person can take a photograph with a digital camera and transform it into a passable artwork by utilizing imaging software such as Adobe Photoshop or Gimp?


Photograph by Holly Raider. Model...me.

I think its value lies in the artist's interpretation/expression, the integrity to his/her medium, as well as the opportunity for the viewer to interact honestly and freely to an artwork. We are constantly guided and told what to do by advertising, our bosses, our religions, our families, and our peers or friends. However, when viewing or buying art you are given the opportunity and right to judge, criticize and express your opinion about the piece of art. And the beauty of this: you will never be wrong. The person who loves a certain piece of art is no more wrong or right than the person who hates looking at the same piece of art.

There is no wrong way to do art either, as the "invalidity" of an artwork can easily be debated by referring to previous artists and artworks through the centuries and decades, such as Marcel Duchamp's ready-mades or the performance art and happenings by artists in the 60's and 70's. Art usually reflects on the society and environment that it happens in, and since we live in a very diverse world with limitless possibilities, different cultures living together, and a never-ending range of visual stimuli and subject matter for artwork, the forms that art could, does and will take, are just as limitless and unpredictable.


...And I read this on a blog I follow, called New Art:

What if there was nothing to discover? No story, no thousand words, no answer to a non-riddle? What if it was really, really, just a game of forms and colors?
Would it be a sin?
Does this lady need a past?
Is it really so bad for something to be "just" a pretty picture?
We know of the danger of beauty, we know the seductive spectacle means flirting with submission, yet is it really so immoral?

Read the full blog (with pics, etc.) here

Monday, May 31, 2010

Exhibitions and a bug





A recent commission for Heyns and Partners Inc. for their Cape Town branch in Keerom Street.

So, current exhibition that I'm participating in:

African Oddyssey at Raw Vision Gallery, Sir Lowry
Road, Woodstock, Cape Town (Almost diagonally accross from the Michael
Stevenson, and just down the road from Blank Projects)

VAN-guard Winelands Group Exhibition, opening on 8 June 2010. My work will be exhibited at Durbanville Hills, Western Cape.

South Africa at the Gallery at Duncan Yard, cnr. of Duncan &
Prospect Street, Hatfield, Pretoria.


I am, of course, still working on artworks for the exhibition "Dare to dream in silent moments". Lucy Skinner and I are exhibiting our work under this title or theme in September at Wessel Snyman Creative, at 17 Bree Street.


...And giving art classes on a Monday and Tuesday evening from 5pm-8pm in my studio in Woodstock. Interested? Send me an email at art@janetbotes.co.za for more info!

In the meantime I am also hard at work at managing Ecojunki (http://www.ecojunki.co.za/) and Arteviate (http://www.arteviate.blogspot.com/), keep an eye and ear open and let me know if you'd like to help or get involved!

And now for a bit of randomness:



While on my way to White Rabbit Studio in Gardens (Cape Town), I saw this old Volksie in Lingen Street. I started chatting to the owner of the beetle, who was right there at the moment! Miro Kloosterman is from the Netherlands, if I remember correctly, and after living in Cape Town for a while he is back in Europe. Now he is selling this very cute and charismatic VW beetle for R10 000. If you're interested, contact Richard watson at 0737800566.