Thanks, Max. Dynamic a suitable term for the painter's process--he told me he has to work quickly before the acrylic dries. One take only, within 45-90 minutes.
Sorry about the link, which just worked for me, perhaps because I'm an "official" friend. Though one image of a painting finally surfaced here:
http://www.dcartscenter.org/
Barry
On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 09:06:28 +1100, Max Richards <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>Two dynamic pieces, Barry.
>Tried Facebook - came up: unavailable.
>
>Max in Melbourne
>
>Quoting Barry Alpert <[log in to unmask]>:
>
>> RICHARD SIEGMAN PAINTING
>>
>>
>> I drop trowel and sprint over to . . .
>> Gorgeous! The color is more Washington School.
>> Dries fast. Mention how thick.
>> I drop trowel and guard color.
>> Peruse already displayed serration.
>> Save markings.
>> Full finish shall inside stripe.
>> Modular circles show you the most.
>> Chance/slice each.
>>
>>
>>
>> RICHARD SIEGMAN PAINTING
>>
>>
>> Trowel the positive material.
>> Save markings.
>> Full finish shall inside stripe.
>>
>> Peruse already displayed serration.
>> Upswing valance with serpents serrated.
>> A circle serially serrated.
>> Serrate chance. Slice each copy.
>> Trowel trousers. No chance.
>>
>> Trounce trowel-led troweler.
>> Traffic stripes shall be loosened /
>> modular circles show you the most.
>>
>> Full finish shall inside stripe.
>> Save markings.
>> Trowel the positive material.
>>
>>
>> Barry Alpert / Silver Spring MD US / 1-12-11 (2:13 PM)
>>
>> While retrieving the first text (posted here years ago) because a show of new
>> work by the artist opens this Friday, another poem on the same page surprised
>> me by its very existence. Counting 14 lines, I knew that I had tried to
>> "finish" this poem with the title "Out-takes", and that its source had
>> initially been generated via a modulated flarf engine. While reading it a
>> few times, I knew it needed revision. That turned out to be not as difficult
>> a process as presented by the cine-poem via Straub/Huillet I had been working
>> on for 22 days, and then I went ahead and finished the cine-poem. You may be
>> able to view examples of Richard Siegman's paintings by visiting the facebook
>> page for him and his gallery PASS at:
>>
>> http://www.facebook.com/Pass.Gallery.DC?ref=ts
|