What if everything we imagine were to become real? Let's try it and see what happens.
Follow the Magic of Hartvig H. Kunts in Action
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If you visit Hartvig Hansen Kunts' FB page, you can watch him create this one of kind beast. The webpage is here http://www.hartvig-hansen-kunst.com/ but to watch the videos go search for him on FB.
While visiting New Mexico in October, I met Arthur Manchego at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque. I found his booth inside the interior courtyard at the IPCC and spoke with him about his work. Manchego is a man of few words. His work speaks volumes. One of the few purchases I made in NM is what Manchego referred to as one of his "quick sketches," and I loved this original drawing for the emotions reflected in the soft contours of the face, entitled "Horse Killer." (Top) The other portraits on display he had taken much more time to complete, and his skill as an artist highlights exacting detail. "Red Earth" (above) is a giclee print I had to take home with me, as well. The motion of line and color pulsate to the rhythm in my head as the rich colors compete with one another to move forward and back on the paper, just like the dancers I watched perform in the circle of the IPCC while I spoke to Menchego. Ka Whe Tewa ("here there ...
"Sleep, perchance to dream." And in dreaming the imagination lives unfettered by mores, physics, or boxes. We can let a little dream into the daily life we call reality. If in my dream, what appears in the dream sequence feels real, i believe that when i'm wakeful all that i conjure in my imagination can be real. Art allows for imagination on the canvas or sketchbook page or on the back of cereal box. Written stories and even written non-fiction on a page or screen flow from my head to your head, popping up inside your mine with complete images to define better than words what i have imagined. Like the liquid that flows at Yellow Stone Park geysers to create images that appear in the blink of an eye and disappear almost as quickly. A camera captures the lines, shapes, and beautiful juxtaposition of colors. Without the stop frame of that moment, what has been created changes, leaving no trace of the original.
Today I sent my Sketchbook to the Brooklyn Art Library, NY, where you can go to visit it anytime. The deadline for this year's project is April 30, and I mailed it off a few days early. Every page contains a watercolor on tea bag paper. I drank the tea. Let the paper of the tea bags dry each time. When it dried thoroughly I painted on the paper with watercolor. The sketchbook contains a chronological story of tea time during the sketchbook project period of about 6 months. This page has the only tea bag with tag attached. The image is inspired by a tile in my shower. Sometimes I drink tea in the shower. In part 2, the afternoon comes to an end and leans into evening. A good time for tea. We have owls and sometimes I can hear their hoots. All together there are 16 watercolors on tea bags in this sketchbook.
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