Author: Melissa Schilling

الشمس لم تقل للأرض ابدا "أنت مدينةً لى". انظر ماذا حدث لمثل هذا الحب. لقد أضاء السماء كلها

2013 *girls only* English Class

Our english class will run from August, 2012 through April, 2013, on Saturdays at the Project HOPE Art Center. The class is structured for girls and will be taught by a woman instructor from the English in Mind Institute.

Together, we are creating an opportunity for girls of different neighborhoods, backgrounds, education levels and ages to come together and learn a skill that will help them mature into smart young ladies.

The young ladies in the class range across five neighborhoods and span educational, income and resource levels. They are 11 to 22 years old. All incredibly motivated to learn english.

Support this Girls Only English Class with a tax-deductible donation, here.

2013 Ladies Arm Wrestling Tournament

VOTED BEST OF THE BAY 2012 BY SAN FRANCISCO MAGAZINE!

Check it out here!

print (24 of 92)

print (48 of 92)

print (37 of 92)

The 2013 Bay Area Arm Wrestling Ladies (BAAWL) Tournament, a raucous performance-based women’s arm wrestling competition, was held in San Francisco at 9pm on Saturday, July 20th at Public Works. Funds raised from the tournament will directly benefit 12 young girls living in Haiti and enable them to enroll in English Classes at The Project HOPE Art Center.

Each 2-hour weekly class costs just $40. If you would like to donate to keep the classes going, please click here.

The tournament is intended to empower women while raising funds and awareness for Project HOPE Art’s ongoing art healing and education workshops for young girls in Haiti.

BAAWL arm wrestlers are strong, rowdy women who toe the line between theatrical antics and hardcore athleticism. Each wrestler has an outrageous costumed persona, which she can work to her advantage by winning the adoration and dolla billz of the crowd. Wrestlers compete tournament-style in matches of sudden death elimination.

Rules are determined and managed by the referees, whose judgment can be swayed by “BAAWL Bucks” collected from crowd hecklers and wrestlers’ entourages. BAAWL Bucks will be sold for cold hard cash by our official BAAWL bookies, and can be used to grease the palms of the judges, get a favorite wrestler out of the “penalty box,” or participate in a grudge match against the wrestler of your choice, including our current champions, “The Iron Fist” and “Black Dahlia Parton.”

WANNA WRASSLE?

print (86 of 92)

print (82 of 92)

print (75 of 92)

print (67 of 92)

All female-identified persons age 21 and up are welcome to participate. To compete in the tournament, please fill out the form below. All proceeds from the event go directly to Project HOPE Art’s ongoing education and art healing programs in Haiti.

All wrestlers are highly encouraged to be as outrageous, creative, and bad-ass as you know you can be.

Bring your theatrics. Your flair for the dramatic.
Bring your game face and your lipstick too, and
GET IN THE RING!

Click here to Register for the next Tournament
!

rothko, round one at RAJEPRE

**art project in progress**

July_2013_Rothko_RAJEPRE (40 of 50)

Fearing that modern American painting had reached a conceptual dead end, Rothko was intent upon exploring subjects other than urban and natural scenes. He sought subjects that would complement his growing concern with form, space, and color. The world crisis of war lent this search an immediacy, because he insisted that the new subject matter be of social impact, yet able to transcend the confines of current political symbols and values. In his essay, “The Romantics Were Prompted”, published in 1949, Rothko argued that the”archaic artist … found it necessary to create a group of intermediaries, monsters, hybrids, gods and demigods” in much the same way that modern man found intermediaries in Fascism and the Communist Party. For Rothko, “without monsters and gods, art cannot enact a drama”.

Rothko’s use of mythology as a commentary on current history was not novel. Rothko, Gottlieb, and Newman read and discussed the works of Freud and Jung, in particular their theories concerning dreams and the archetypes of the collective unconscious, and understood mythological symbols as images that refer to themselves, operating in a space of human consciousness that transcends specific history and culture. Rothko later said his artistic approach was “reformed” by his study of the “dramatic themes of myth”. He apparently stopped painting altogether for the length of 1940, and read Freud’s The Interpretation of Dreams and Sir James Frazer‘s The Golden Bough.

Rothko’s new vision would attempt to address modern man’s spiritual and creative mythological requirements. The most crucial philosophical influence on Rothko in this period was Friedrich Nietzsche‘s The Birth of Tragedy. Nietzsche claimed that Greek tragedy had the function of the redemption of man from the terrors of mortal life. The exploration of novel topics in modern art ceased to be Rothko’s goal; from this point on, his art would bear the ultimate aim of relieving modern man’s spiritual emptiness. He believed that this “emptiness” was created partly by the lack of a mythology, which could, as described by Nietzsche, “[address]… the growth of a child’s mind and – to a mature man his life and struggles”.

Rothko believed that his art could free the unconscious energies previously liberated by mythological images, symbols, and rituals. He considered himself a “mythmaker”, and proclaimed “the exhilarated tragic experience, is for me the only source of art”.

Many of his paintings of this period contrast barbaric scenes of violence with those of civilized passivity, with imagery drawn primarily from Aeschylus‘s Oresteia trilogy. In his 1942 painting, The Omen of the Eagle, the archetypal images of, in Rothko’s words, “man, bird, beast and tree … merge into a single tragic idea.” The bird, an eagle, was not without contemporary historical relevance, as both the United States and Germany (in its claim to inheritance of the Holy Roman Empire) used the eagle as a national symbol. Rothko’s cross-cultural, trans-historical reading of myth perfectly addresses the psychological and emotional roots of the symbol, making it universally available to anyone who might wish to see it. A list of the titles of the paintings from this period is illustrative of Rothko’s use of myth: AntigoneOedipusThe Sacrifice of IphigeniaLedaThe FuriesAltar of Orpheus. Judeo-Christian imagery is evoked: GethsemaneThe Last SupperRites of Lilith, as are Egyptian (Room in Karnak) and Syrian (The Syrian Bull). Soon after the war, Rothko felt his titles were limiting the larger, transcendent aims of his paintings, and so removed them altogether.

At the root of Rothko and Gottlieb’s presentation of archaic forms and symbols as subject matter illuminating modern existence had been the influence of SurrealismCubism, and abstract art. In 1936, Rothko attended two exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, “Cubism and Abstract Art,” and “Fantastic Art, Dada and Surrealism,” which greatly influenced his celebrated 1938Subway Scene.With mythic form as a catalyst, they would merge the two European styles of Surrealism and abstraction. As a result,Rothko’s work became increasingly abstract; perhaps ironically, Rothko himself described the process as being one toward “clarity”.

New paintings were unveiled at a 1942 show at Macy’s department store in New York City. In response to a negative review by the New York Times, Rothko and Gottlieb issued a manifesto (written mainly by Rothko) which stated, in response to the Times critic’s self-professed “befuddlement” over the new work,

“We favor the simple expression of the complex thought. We are for the large shape because it has the impact of the unequivocal. We wish to reassert the picture plane. We are for flat forms because they destroy illusion and reveal truth.”

rothko, round one

**art project in progress**

July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (20 of 38)Fearing that modern American painting had reached a conceptual dead end, Rothko was intent upon exploring subjects other than urban and natural scenes. He sought subjects that would complement his growing concern with form, space, and color. The world crisis of war lent this search an immediacy, because he insisted that the new subject matter be of social impact, yet able to transcend the confines of current political symbols and values. In his essay, “The Romantics Were Prompted”, published in 1949, Rothko argued that the July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (10 of 38)“archaic artist … found it necessary to create a group of intermediaries, monsters, hybrids, gods and demigods” in much the same way that modern man found intermediaries in Fascism and the Communist Party. For Rothko, “without monsters and gods, art cannot enact a drama”.

Rothko’s use of mythology as a commentary on current history was not novel. Rothko, Gottlieb, and Newman read and discussed the works of Freud and Jung, in particular their theories concerning dreams and the archetypes of the collective unconscious, and understood mythological symbols as images that refer to themselves, operating in a space of human consciousness that transcends specific history and culture. Rothko later said his artistic approach was “reformed” by his study of the “dramatic themes of myth”. He apparently stopped painting altogether for the length of 1940, and read Freud’s The Interpretation of Dreams and Sir James Frazer‘s The Golden Bough.

Rothko’s new vision would attempt to address modern man’s spiritual and creative mythological requirements. The most crucial philosophical influence on Rothko in this period was Friedrich Nietzsche‘s The Birth of Tragedy. Nietzsche claimed that Greek tragedy had the function of the redemption of man from the terrors of mortal life. The exploration of novel topics in modern art ceased to be Rothko’s goal; from this point on, his art would bear the ultimate aim of relieving modern man’s spiritual emptiness. He believed that this “emptiness” was created partly by the lack of a mythology, which could, as described by Nietzsche, “[address]… the growth of a child’s mind and – to a mature man his life and struggles”.

July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (12 of 38) July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (7 of 38) July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (15 of 38)July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (10 of 38) July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (13 of 38)

Rothko believed that his art could free the unconscious energies previously liberated by mythological images, symbols, and rituals. He considered himself a “mythmaker”, and proclaimed “the exhilarated tragic experience, is for me the only source of art”.

July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (11 of 38)

Many of his paintings of this period contrast barbaric scenes of violence with those of civilized passivity, with imagery drawn primarily from Aeschylus‘s Oresteia trilogy. In his 1942 painting, The Omen of the Eagle, the archetypal images of, in Rothko’s words, “man, bird, beast and tree … merge into a single tragic idea.” The bird, an eagle, was not without contemporary historical relevance, as both the United States and Germany (in its claim to inheritance of the Holy Roman Empire) used the eagle as a national symbol. Rothko’s cross-cultural, trans-historical reading of myth perfectly addresses the psychological and emotional roots of the symbol, making it universally available to anyone who might wish to see it. A list of the titles of the paintings from this period is illustrative of Rothko’s use of myth: AntigoneOedipusThe Sacrifice of IphigeniaLedaThe FuriesAltar of Orpheus. Judeo-Christian imagery is evoked: GethsemaneThe Last SupperRites of Lilith, as are Egyptian (Room in Karnak) and Syrian (The Syrian Bull). Soon after the war, Rothko felt his titles were limiting the larger, transcendent aims of his paintings, and so removed them altogether.

At the root of Rothko and Gottlieb’s presentation of archaic forms and symbols as subject matter illuminating modern existence had been the influence of SurrealismCubism, and abstract art. In 1936, Rothko attended two exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, “Cubism and Abstract Art,” and “Fantastic Art, Dada and Surrealism,” which greatly influenced his celebrated 1938Subway Scene.With mythic form as a catalyst, they would merge the two European styles of Surrealism and abstraction. As a result,Rothko’s work became increasingly abstract; perhaps ironically, Rothko himself described the process as being one toward “clarity”.

July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (25 of 38) July_2013_Rothko_OJFA (24 of 38)

New paintings were unveiled at a 1942 show at Macy’s department store in New York City. In response to a negative review by the New York Times, Rothko and Gottlieb issued a manifesto (written mainly by Rothko) which stated, in response to the Times critic’s self-professed “befuddlement” over the new work,

“We favor the simple expression of the complex thought. We are for the large shape because it has the impact of the unequivocal. We wish to reassert the picture plane. We are for flat forms because they destroy illusion and reveal truth.”