Friday, October 9, 2015

October 9, 2015


October 9, 2015

I am going to admit that I like Bubble Gum Music.  If you aren’t a 60s child, you may not know what that is.  It was light, catchy, upbeat music with simple harmonies and it was aimed for the younger audience.  I was not exactly in that category being 20 the year that the bubble gum sound started, but I guess that I looked it.  The next year, at 21 I went to Marion Jr. High to do my student teaching.  I told the secretary in the office that I was to be with Mr. Stobel.  She got the forms and started enrolling me in the 8th grade to my great embarrassment. Bubble gum music is happy and cheerful, the words were simple, the refrain was catchy.  Most of the bubble gum sound was created by studio groups hired by a producer and given a name just for that song.  The Archies may be the most famous of these studio groups; they were named for the comic book characters.  If you check out their hit, ‘Sugar, Sugar’, on u-tube you will see a cartoon with Archie, Jughead, Betty and Veronica performing.  I loved Tommy Roe who had bubble gum hits as well as the Monkees who were a studio group hired to have a television show about an imaginary rock group.  They actually became a performing band because they had such great songwriters. Boyce & Hart and Neil Diamond wrote hits for the Monkees and they eventually became a real rock band.  Anyway I wanted to include a bubble gum song and I decided to make it a 3D piece with a small manikin.  I decided to go with ‘Sugar, Sugar’ and she is full of it!  Her dress is collaged with candy wrappers, sugar packets, cupcake papers and candy images.  There are some adult visual puns which are not hard to find.  I wanted her hair to look like icing or cotton candy.  Come to the show to check out the puns and see how I made permanent icing for her hair.

October 8, 2015


October 8, 2015

I already mentioned that three dimensional work was not a consideration when I first started preparing for this show one year ago.  So I had not been going to garage sales and looking for possibilities.  However, as a mixed media artist, I have a gigantic space full of potential treasures.  (This is the reason that this new house is perfect for me.)  I started looking among the stash and found a violin.  Violin = music, a nice match.  But what 60s song do you think of when you think violin?  I asked my daughter, Lisa, and she said “Eleanor Rigby.”  Of course.  What a depressing song.  Who wants to buy depressing images?  Well, I hope that someone does, because that is the only song that I could come up with for the violin.  First I painted the violin with purple and grey shades, then I studied the song lyrics for images.  The front of the violin has the church and a cemetery scene with only Father McKenzie present at Eleanor’s burial.  The back of the violin has Eleanor (faceless) with her face in a jar—no, make that 7 faces in jars by the door to choose from.  I decided that she could choose her mood and expression for the day by picking a face.  I have already been told how warped my sense of humor is.  Actually I really think that my humor leans toward stating the obvious which is what I do for the Family Album cards.  If you look at them closely I am only picking up on what the picture shows and verbalizing it.  With the violin I took the words at face value and created an image to go with them.  Come to the Prairie Art Alliance to see this and other unusual 3D pieces which I will tell about in the week to come.  Again, the show runs from October 17 until December 3. 

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