About Me

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Massachusetts, United States
I am a painter in search of an audience! Here are words to catch search engine hits: painting artist RISD New England Longmeadow Amherst Boston...more as I think of them. Check out my portfolio on a seperate website. The link is on the top of the righthand column

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Post-mortem #11


This crime scene photo from the 30's or 40's was shot from the ceiling looking down. At the time this view was required in many jurisdictions. If you look carefully you can see the legs of the tripod that was used by the photographer to "float" over the victims without disturbing anything.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Francis Bacon - On Life, Death, and Gambling

The Art of the Mug #2


What Keeps Me Awake #10

Because of Dark Energy the Universe is expanding faster and faster. In perhaps as few as 100,000 years all the celestial objects will be so far spread out from each other that the Earth's night sky will be totally empty and completely black! Whatever intelligent life there is then will have no empirical basis for knowing the universe is expanding or anything about the rest of the objects in the universe. This calls into question whether what we observe now has any relevance to the true nature of the universe or is just a relatively, equally distorted view of the cosmos. Maybe more importantly, as scary and humbling as the vastness of the night sky is, would not a perpetually empty dark sky be existentially devastating?

Monday, February 21, 2011

The Art of the Mug #1



Photographers and their Cameras #6

Another Weegee




Weegee and Andy Warhol

One is a cool individual "Artist" and one is not...... you decide! Sometimes contrast helps.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Artist Spotlight: Andy Warhol Eats a Hamburger



I would love to see a video of Max Beckmann pounding the crap out of Andy. Or maybe Mary Cassatt?

The Crimes of Andy Warhol #10



Andy's 8 hour film "Empire" is screening tonight at MOMA. That is 8 hours of the 6 minute snippet above. Nothing else but this slowed down view of the Empire State Building. And apparently a lot of important art world types will be in attendance and...wow...some of them will be "Twirping" about it LIVE! Now I have no doubt that hours can be spent analyzing and expounding on this cinematic delight but actually watching it? I think a better project would be to secretly film this "heads up their asses" crowd watching the film. That way we could determine which viewers were the shallowest.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Attic Find for the Archives

"Art New England" Ad

"Lust", "Me,Myself & I" and "Reflex"

Show Postcard: "In the Garden (Black Pelican)"

Left: "Gaslight (for Paul Celan)"

"Grafted (Icarus)", "Temple Melancholia" & "Aegean Crucifer"


"Aegean Crucifer"


Wall of Drawings each drawing 38" X 50"

"The Allegory of Good and Bad Government"

All of these paintings for this 1994 show were 66" X 76" (except "Allegory" was 72" squared) oil on canvas. All of them were long ago destroyed. The drawings still exist.

Excerpts From A Strange Medical Notebook #4




Sunday, February 13, 2011

Favorite Artist #11

Leon Golub






Spanish Dictator Francisco Franco

Mark Warren "Leni Riefenstahl" 48" X 58" oil on linen


A Modern Day  Masaccio




I recently published my current top ten artists. Now I will display # 11-20  one at a time.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Harry Gross






Harry Gross (1918-1979) was a photographer, photo historian, camera collector & gallery owner. In the 1940s, he owned a lucrative seed, feed & insecticide business in Spokane, WA. The financial success of this business enabled him to amass one of the world’s best collections of daguerreotypes, wet plate cameras, antique photographic equipment & photography books. Drawing upon this collection, in 1964 Gross wrote the first book ever published about camera collecting, Antique and Classic Cameras. His collection is now the core of the camera collection at Japan’s Yokohama City Museum. In 1955, Gross moved to Eugene, Oregon & was employed as staff photographer for the City. Working in a position at the Eugene Water & Electric Board, Gross was active in photographing their large-scale hydroelectric construction projects. In the early 1960s, Gross attended classes held by Ansel Adams & it was likely this experience that marked a shift in his picture taking toward art photography. In 1966, he opened a gallery in Eugene just blocks from the university campus called Gross Gallery. Dedicated to contemporary photography, the gallery staged several significant exhibitions, including works by William Mortensen. Yet Gross primarily used the gallery to showcase his own work, a mix of landscapes, abstractions, nudes, political figures & photographs documenting the peace movement that so defined the late 1960s. Growing his hair long & fully immersing himself in the youth movement, Gross traveled the country with his Nikon SP documenting the scene, including a stop in San Francisco where he photographed the anti-war demonstrations & street life of the Haight-Ashbury district. In 1979, at the age of 61, Harry Gross took his own life after a prolonged & hopeless fight against cancer. 

The above description accompanied these photos on sale on Ebay. Also this is the above mentioned book also for sale on Ebay: