Archive for the ‘Art Events’ Category

What Is Art?

September 27th, 2007

I have to admit to being more schooled in science than in art, having been forced in the Jefferson County, Alabama, public school system to choose only one art. I chose the high school band and played the drums. So I never got to take an art class.

Even in college, as a print journalism major and a political science minor, I never had to take an art appreciation class.

Into my master’s and Ph.D. years in the 1990s, I spent most of my time studying science and communications research.

But as I crest middle age and once again take up the camera, I find myself more and more interested in art.

What is art? What makes it special or mundane?

I learned something of art from my close friend Spider Martin, an artist turned photographer. He idolized the artistic genius Pablo Picasso, not only for his art but for his personal life as a renowned womanizer.

I can only know what I read about his personal life, but looking at his art work it is clear he has impacted the development of modern and contemporary art with unparalleled magnitude.

His prolific output includes over 20,000 paintings, prints, drawings, sculptures, ceramics, theater sets and costumes that convey a myriad of intellectual, political, social, and amorous messages, according to James Voorhies with the Department of European Paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Picasso’s creative styles transcend realism and abstraction, Cubism, Neoclassicism, Surrealism and Expressionism.

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Photo by Glynn Wilson
Pablo Picasso’s depiction of the dying bull at the end of a Spanish bullfight

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Willie Morris in Oxford in Black and White

July 27th, 2007

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Photo by Glynn Wilson
The Southside Gallery in Oxford, Mississippi was the scene Thursday night for award-winning photographer David Rae Morris’s show “Willie and Katrina” about two emotional mine fields in his life, the death of his father Willie Morris, the writer, and the devastation of his home city, New Orleans. That’s photographer Dave Stueber on the bench with his dog Dupre. We’ll have more to say about this later after a catfish lunch and a tour of William Faulkner’s house and grave site. We’ve had a bit of a time finding free wireless Internet access in this largely rural area of Northeast Mississippi, but finally got on this morning at the University of Mississippi library after camping at the Puskus Lake Recreation Area last night.
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Exhibit Features Photographs of Willie Morris, Hurricane Katrina

July 18th, 2007

Award-winning photographer David Rae Morris will present “Willie and Katrina” at the Southside Gallery in Oxford, Mississippi July 9 to Aug. 4.

The first half of the exhibit, “Willie Morris in Oxford,” is a series of portraits he took of his late father, the noted writer Willie Morris, in the early 1980s. The second half, “The Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina,” is a sample of Morris’ extensive coverage of the storm and the resulting tragedy that has befallen his adopted city of New Orleans.

Although he evacuated the city two days before Katrina made landfall on August 29th, 2005, Morris returned almost immediately, first to the Mississippi Gulf Coast and then into New Orleans in early September.

“The only way for me to make any sense of what had happened, was to throw myself into my work,” Morris said. “New Orleanians are a very resilient bunch. The designers of the levees and flood walls failed us, the federal government has failed us, and our local leaders have failed us. We are truly on our own.”

An exhibition of portraits of his father was already on the schedule at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans for the Spring of 2006 when Katrina struck.After almost two years of non-stop coverage of the aftermath of the storm, Morris turned his attention back to the portraits of his father. The majority of the 25 black and white photographs, were made between 1980 and 1985.

“I’m moving from one emotional mine field to another,” he said. “There’s a lot going on in these photographs. My father had returned home to live in Mississippi after almost 30 years in self-imposed exile, and I was in college and still trying to determine my own direction as a photographer.”

At the same time, his relationship with his father was also undergoing a transformation.

“As a young man in my early 20s, I was trying to establish my own independence and I often used the camera as a way of setting new boundaries,” he said.

The images range from his father’s walks with his beloved black Lab, Pete, behind William Faulkner’s house, Rowan Oak, to driving in the country, to staying up late with friends at his new house at 16 Faculty Row on the Ole Miss Campus.

A reception will be held July 26, from 6:30-8:30 p.m. An expanded exhibit of the Morris’ portraits of his father entitled “Letters From My Father,” will open at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans October 6, and continue through December 2007.

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Willie Morris from North Toward Home

To see one image, go to: WilliePete.jpg.

Willie Morris and The Southerner magazine

When Southern American writer Willie Morris died on Aug. 2, 1999, at the age of 64, I was the editor and publisher of a new online magazine called The Southerner at Southerner.Net. We put out a special issue on Morris with some of the top writers in the country weighing in on this special character in Southern literary history.

This was the first attempt in the world, as far as we know, to develop a Website that tried to live up to certain standards of a print magazine, down to a cover photo and printable content. The style of it seems sort of antiquated now, although it is an interesting look at the early days of the Web. We even had maybe the first audio file ever linked from a Website, an interview I did with author Gay Talese. You can still listen to it.

If you don’t know who Willie Morris is, here’s one way to find out.

The Southerner: A Tribute to Willie Morris

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