My dear friends!
Participants of the project!
I have finally finished working on my web page and…
…here it is:
best wishes from sunny Berlin
Misha Shenbrot
My dear friends!
Participants of the project!
I have finally finished working on my web page and…
…here it is:
best wishes from sunny Berlin
Misha Shenbrot
Categories: art
Tagged: collage, focus shift, Misha Shenbrot
I thought a good start might be to talk about the main project I’ve been doing, since May 2006. Our two year lease is up this May and we’ve decided not to renew, so as I’ve been thinking about it, I will be planning for the residency in the summer leading up to August, and planning to move, either going for something in Europe or moving to another city in the United States. So I will also be thinking of this summer, and the residency, as a way of synthesizing what I’ve been doing and figuring out where to go from there.
The Fort Grunt project was also a fairly intense collaboration that had some successes and some failures and I think could be good for everyone to think about, for how we want to do the folio in Belgium, and maybe more focus for this blog?
(that’s me on the right, ben on the left.)
After grad school I was in Venice, Italy for a year, teaching printmaking and getting some projects going but in general not too happy with my post-grad school work. I moved back to the states in October 2005 (after a month in Holland and a show in Berlin) with live with my fiance at the time, and I had several pending jobs- but the relationship and the internship/teaching positions all fizzled within a month of being back, and I was left with very little options. Ben and I had discussed doing a project together if we lived in the same city- and since I had no pending plans, I moved down here to Durham, NC and managed to find a studio. This took unexpectedly long, as Durham is a growing city that’s quickly turning out most of it’s warehouses and cigarette factories for lofts and upscale restaurants. Nicer to live in, sure, but not so easy to find cheap space to work in. So we did find a space in the newly formed Bull City Arts Collaborative, along with a letterpress printer, a video documentarian and a musician. The space is downtown, and our studio is in the front, with several large windows- this wasn’t something we planned on, but were happy to work with. We have turned the one large window into the Aquarium, where Marcus and Dustyn have shown work, and we’ve been open for the monthly art walks in Durham, and somewhat successful at selling work.
The location in a way influenced the work a lot more than I would have thought. The public location, and the number of random people who would come through, had us thinking of working on small, discrete objects that would be ready to hang and sold for reasonable amounts (between $10 and $60)… more about this in part two. Another, lesser factor, but a factor nonetheless, was being next to a local gallery, Branch, that is a really nice space and sometimes has good shows, but mostly has tasteful hipster-minimalism type work, which I think led us to move against that and make more crowded, rough/painterly work with garish colors. This may have in fact kept the sales low, but it felt way too easy to make the clean stuff..
The first 4 months or so (May to August 2006) was spent working up a random number of things, getting the name (chosen from a list of several hundred we came up with, for it’s military-ness and also for how dumb it sounded), and in general just working up a number of possible ideas. We settled on working with a series of characters and scenarios that drew on comics, biological creatures, invented characters and desolate scenes. We had two solo exhibitions early on, in November 2006 and February 2007, then there was a lull until this past winter- no solo shows but numerous group shows.
Things that worked really well were in the first year, working together figuring out how to build a body of work, getting sets of work to a finish, experimenting (the large 20 x 8 ft wall allowed for working on numerous pieces at once), and planning new projects. In the second part I’ll write more at length, but this arrangement didn’t last- something perhaps of more interest for this group.
So I think some of the positive things to take away from this project have been:
1. Working out a number of ways for conceptual and formal collaboration.
2. Having the opportunity to have a store-front studio, being able to bring in a wide variety of people into the space, get reactions, etc.
3. The freedom of having a finite body of work, that I can break from, mine for further projects, etc.
That’s all for now. Hope to get the next post up more quickly.
Categories: Creative Challenges · art · installation · lou · painting · process · studio
Hi everyone-
I have enjoyed reading your ideas and seeing images of your work. I’m sorry that it has taken me so long to contribute to this blog again.
I want to share some images of an installation I have started called Lessons in Expansion. At this point it is not a site-specific installation, but rather the genesis of a multi-component environment that will eventually make its way out of my studio and re-form in another setting. It began with a drawing (approximately 122cm square), which is expanding to include other 2-d and 3-d elements and related handmade nonverbal “research and analysis” books.
In the initial dialogue about Love/Death/Life/Soul, Michael mentioned “increasing our creative challenges” and moving out of “comfort zones.” I have a tendency to jump from one piece to another, or one body of work to another, without fully exhausting enough possibilities for that work. Or if I have explored several possibilities, for example in a painting or drawing, those possibilities are usually buried under layer upon layer of reworking. Nothing wrong with reworking, but it might be beneficial to see those possibilities extend outward rather than being hidden forever.
By allowing 2-d and 3-d elements to be created as an extension of this initial drawing, I am challenging myself to stay with the Lessons of Expansion project for a while. By creating “research and analysis” books in which I observe steps of the project and respond visually to those observations, I am constantly excavating rather than covering. Some of the books so far include: Comfort in reproduction; Fear of expansion; Fear of compression; Random possible connections; and Documentation of documentation.
In the first photo, you can see the original drawing (still in progress), connected to 2 smaller pieces of paper by thread and glue. Photos 2, 3 and 4 are close-ups of the connecting area. The rest of the images are of handmade paper with monotype. I made the paper in such a way that it is thinner and more translucent in areas (the ovals), and has actual holes in some places. Each sheet was formed by two very thin sheets being laminated together, with thread embedded between the two layers. As of now, these are raw materials, but I will experiment with making 3-d forms out of this paper, perhaps lit from within.
Thanks for reading and looking. I will continue to post images of this project as it progresses… or digresses… or transgresses. To see my previous work, visit http://www.marysdrawings.com . I look forward to seeing you all in person, and continuing a discussion via blog in the meantime.
Mary
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Categories: Production Motives · art · drawing · mary · painting · printmaking · process
here is a temporary page of mine
in a couple of weeks the main site (www.shenbrot.org) should be ready
http://shenbrot.wordpress.com/ - is a place (on this blog-server), where I show my present works untill than…
Categories: Production Motives · art · collage · misha · process
Categories: art · drawing · process · studio
Categories: Creative Challenges · art · michael · painting · process · studio
Well all, I am back to the blank canvas, today felt good working again. The museum asked me to keep working, thank god… so now I can create some new larger works. The space has effected my work in ways that are so simple and yet it has me wondering what will occur once the residency is over.
Basically I can get back from my work so I can see the whole work. Further just the ability to move around unhindered has me more relaxed, loose. As I was working I thought, “hey I take space for granted.” Some of our production can be totally affected by studio space, working space in final installations, and thus creative space. Space is often the last thought when working, one thinks I just have to make do with what is here. Its a financial factor of course.
A friend in Holland started a project recently that is a “gallery” but it moves, it adopts spaces and presents projects. Maybe its not too far to adapt that idea to form a global network that can share spaces for working. This space wont be mine much longer to trade. ; -)
Photo by Dordrechts Museum
Categories: Creative Challenges · Production Motives · art · michael · painting · process · space · studio
I’ve been thinking about the residency project since last summer, when Markus told me about it. A few weeks later I met Michael and he invited me to participate in it.
To say honestly, I have never been involved in such kind of group - residence - work before. Working a lot with other artists together (it was mostly “long-time, duo-relationships”) I made different experiences but nowadays use to work alone.
Expecting to spend 3 weeks of intensive work with six other artists (half of them I haven’t even seen before) I came to the question: is it possible to get know that people before the event starts? That’s why I was positively surprised when Michael suggested to create this blog. Unfortunately, it took a couple of months before I have found myself able to join it. There are always some “long-time-frequency-waves” running parallel to the “short-ones” through my life. And all ideas, linked to this project are sequenced with those long waves inside my mind.
A few months ago I started to think about a textual event, that would precede our real one in Belgium the next summer. I found those short stories, where each one of us writes about him/herself as about the 3rd person very interesting. But that was not enough to start the communication process. So I started to write down my ideas on 4 basic frame-terms, that Michael proposed for the residency.
First I was thinking about one single text (pro person) where each one expresses his/her own experience and attitude toward Love/Death/Life/Soul. And I’m still sure, it would be great, if every one of us will post such writing. But as for my one, I found it growing bigger and bigger, so it is too long for one post, it’s too long for one to read it at once. And, besides that, it’s in russian. I use to write in russian when I dont have enough time to relax, to concentrate and have so many other things to do. So i divided the written stuff into 3 (or 4) parts. The idea is to publish one text after another with about 2 weeks tempo.
For those of you, who are English (American) native-speakers:
I hope you can excuse me if something is wrong or hard to understand. If the sentence is too long and has a monstrous construction. If THE article is missing or it is in THE wrong place. I have learned english at school more than 20 years ago, I have been only one week in England (since that time) and that was my only visit to the anglophone country.
The following text is the first one in the row. It is very pathetic. It probably reflects my “other” side because in the everyday life I’m just so unserious as serious this writing is.

Any cosmological narrative, striking through the culture as string starts with a word. Out of nothing starts the time. Out of the whiteness of blank paper, one letter after another appears the reflection of story, mirroring the act of creation. Sometimes it is just an ink-spot. Sometimes the word is wrong and could be erased or deleted with the backspace. “Out of nothing” are coming the basics and leading through their further development to the current moment. This process divides all created forms of being into inner and outer, future and past, reader and writer, creation and it’s consumption…
An Artist just as any creator in his work repeats the sujet, the basic pattern founding any cultural tradition. The act of creation stays there as the tower of Babylon, joining not only heaven and earth as elements of the same plane. It connects all those different levels, dimensions such as man, the nature that he created as well as the nature, that created himself.
A man conceives the world around through his compassion for it, looking for and taking place in it. He is a musical instrument and a musician playing it the same time. A man writes a text being the text himself.
One brave traveller, taking a vornehm into the world outside could meet, once, another one, who has started his voyage in opposite direction - to the inside world of himself. And even more: in the crossing where they meet they could change their directions adding or multiplying them. The “inner” one starts his journey also in outer space and the “outer” one continues his expedition finding another dimension of the world inside himself.
Somehow every human being is a traveller. But most of us are choosing only one direction and this choice is far to be conscious.
Fear of the “other” who also reflects the “dark side” of self prevents peole to come over to the crossing/meeting point.
Is it possible to reach this point without love? Or is it first this point, which allows to see no difference between yourself and the other and, so, be able to love life as such? To be able to see the strings of light which connect every form of life, showing the way between two abysses - the fear of life and the fear of death… to be able to see the strings of souls…
Understood in the paradigm of Aristotelian logic, the language can not describe adequate all those phenomena, which lays behind the horizont of time and space. The language itself, even if we try to imagine it alienated from it’s bearer, is changing and transforming in time and space anyway. To break through into another (spiritual) dimension we have to use a kind of non-euclidian geometry of language. Abstract models and patterns used in order to realize some complexe phenomena are projections of higher dimensions into the space of our everyday perception. It is not objective but truly reflects the poly-dimensional object on the surface.
I do not belong to any religion or confession. Born and grew up in a family of scientists, I inherited a pragmatical way of thinking, based on experiment or, rather, experience. Instead of blind faith I learned to know. Probably that ’s why it took almost 30 years before I could prove elementary basics the other people learned to believe in from their childhood. In my life I have brought those pragmatical principles to their marginal or sometimes even absurd developments. But it is this invaluable experience, which I got in my life-travel, which is founding my inner world and it’s projection to the world outside in/through my artworks.
Categories: art · death · life · love · misha · soul
Hey all:
I apoligize for neglecting to post on the blog. I like the going ons here. Mike, It was good to see your recent work as per Lou’s suggestion– I will follow suit and post some recent images/ work in progress. I have been continuing my experiments with pattern and surface. A few of these are etchings with plaid and patterning, I have a number of plates that I have that I can switch and recombine to explore color and layering.
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These other two are fro a series of minimal relief prints (in progress). These black and white prints are floating relic-like shards with grid like patterning on them. In my work (unlike Mike) the “trash” is part of it. I recycle forms from found sources. I layer to build up a sort of history in the process. I am looking forward to working with all of you in the exchange. If you have commments,let me have it. –Dustyn
Categories: Creative Challenges · art · dustyn · printmaking · process
Tagged: death, dustyn bork, mixed media, printmaking, process, recent work, studio
Hi all, Lou suggested we add photos of works in progress, I thought I would kick it off. I am working out the final installation of a new show.
This was from today. I had originally planned to cut the wall in half but now I think I may draw on it and create an installation, that merges with the rest of the space. What you cannot see is the other side of the space is selectively painted white, although this view shows mostly the white area. I will have more details next week. No the trash is not part of it. At the moment I am just moving things around and working it all out.
Wall blocking entrance to space. Up until now, viewers could only peer through several holes.
Above View 1 wall on its way to something else.

Above: View 2
Categories: art · exhibitions · installation · michael · painting · process · studio