![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgQfm8PzH9CFXTWxa6VtP_R6X-pxeMOU3j8EaRMNiPgll5QYDC2-LhwjgHfNvBbbXPVF5kEwv7xL9OlNhJNX8FZfShN-Jje1pZg8X676KNQ2JnF33KIAmV3HE9_XHS486tUIndRLvJwQnk/s200/100915.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhU7cd5r1dLf3jeh9pBAjEPh0RSEomdkcX-Ns3O5R1V-GEdTeZyMWf40mmL5RV691SqAEXxVLvxR-aZkByxbyhKh-jGlWLo01tbmX2v8uQ2auA8T1eeRxEMR6F71-F9UW_gwI4q1NqWNG0/s200/100915-back.jpg)
Form is inevitable in the visual arts. It is the language with which we, as artists, give voice to our ideas. Poetry and politics frames competing issues – at least for this artist. Poetry is something mysterious, that ultimately goes beyond words or forms to an un-nameable. Politics is the art of engaging in discourse and persuasion. This blog and the work within reveals a struggle.
No comments:
Post a Comment