The act of removal - then putting back (the hard way).

homage n a public show of respect or honour towards someone or something: the master's jazzy - classical homage to Gershwin

narrative n 1 an account of events 2 the part of a literary work that relates events> adj 3 telling a story: a narrative account of the main events 4 of narration: narrative clarity

= homagenarrative

Friday 31 December 2010

Quote about Drawing by Valentin Tristain Boiangiu

Sometimes it (drawing) involves a great deal of Narrative. It could encapsulate and transmit huge vistas, large perspectives, numerous planes, hundreds of miles of coverage, wide birds (or satellites) eye views of places, towns, whole districts and even continents. Some other times drawing deals with complex situations full of characters, figures of all sizes, ages, class, race or/and gender. Drawing can be the most democratic situation on earth. Anybody can come together and do whatever in a drawing. The artist is always included through her/his touch, mistakes, fingerprints, physical discomfort, humane clumsiness, artistic expertise or inabilities, emotional insecurities and always exposure. It can be therapeutic, analytical and often a necessity. It always pushes things further or/and constitutes an essential translation between brain and any other form of artistic representation/medium. Sometimes drawing is a plan which is then used to build homes, hospitals, parliament buildings, army bunkers, guns, weapons of mass destruction, clothes, utilitarian, and space shuttles. Some other times it is religious, it has spiritual values. It has the power to tell us things or shows people/characters that couldn’t normally see or perceive. Drawing can design fairies, princesses, saints, god, heaven and hell. Drawing can provide homes for the homeless, lovers for the unloved, company for the solitary. Drawing has the ability to transmit anything, anything whatsoever to generations and future societies, it can even change political systems (look at the Nazis and Communists) the symbols, visual propaganda, logos, emblems of these political systems were first to influence the masses, and to obtain their votes and ultimately change their minds. For example the swastika was already embossed on people’s brains before bread filled a hole in their stomachs.
A DRAWING CAN HAVE THE POWER TO BE A HUGE LIE, SOMETIMES A BEAUTIFUL ONE; OTHER TIMES A DISASTEROUS ONE.

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