Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Big Eyes Keane Paintings

The Story of Margret Keane

this lens' photo
Sad Eyed Children, Big Eyed Art, Doe Eyed Orphans or Sorrowful, wide-eyed waifs, whatever name you used to describe them, there's one thing for sure, with no grey areas, you either loved them or you hated them.

Artist Margaret Keane was born in 1927, by the 60's she was a pop art sensation. Margaret was married to Walter Keane for ten years, from 1955 to 1965. A film about her life is being made called "BIG EYES". Tim Burton, a fan of Margaret's work, will co-produce the film. Early rumours had Ryan Reynolds and Reese Witherspoon in the staring rolls. The latest to be put up for the lead roles are Christoph Waltz and Amy Adams.

The script was penned by Larry Karaszewski and Scott Alexander and Tim Burton will direct the movie said to be released in August 2014.

The film will start just before Margaret and Walter meet up, and ends in a spectacular court scene where Margaret gets her day in court.

Margaret now lives in Napa County, California.

Personally I can't wait until the film comes out. Now I have to go and find all those paintings my sister had hanging up on her anaglypta-wallpapered bedroom walls in the seventies, as they should skyrocket in price after the film.

The script

BIG EYES by Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski


At the beginning of the script the year is 1955 and Margaret with her eight-year old daughter Jane, leaves her first husband, and lands in the wild and cool beatnik epicenter of San Francisco. The place is foreign and strange, yet she gets a sense that this would be a great place to settle as an artist.

Margaret runs into Walter Keane whilst sketching tourists for a few dollars at Fisherman's Wharf. Walter made an impression on her dressed like a Parisian Artist in a turtle neck and black beret flogging his Paris street scenes with the gusto of a fairground sideshow boss. As soon as Walter meets Margaret he foreshadows his future actions by criticizing her for selling herself and her artwork too short.

It's not long before they pitch their easels next to each other in the park and start a courtship. Jane, Margaret's daughter notices that Walter's canvas is always blank. We learn that Walter is really a commercial realtor. They soon get married and honeymoon in Hawaii. in this script version, they decide not to delve in length into the reason why they get married so hastily, just a letter from Margaret's ex-husband accusing her of being an unfit mother.

Walter's artwork is shunned by a Gallery owner which motivates him to rent wall-space in the hungry I, a hugely popular and hip jazz club, and he exhibits his and wife Margaret's work. At this time they both sign their works as Keane and Walter is soon credited with the sad-eyed-girls, hungry for sales he takes credit for the works. The Jazz club is further instrumental in their success when the club owner and Walter come to blows and are caught on camera; this catapults both the club and the paintings to overnight popularity and Walter deeper and deeper into his lie, a lie that eventually becomes real to him.

The paintings start shifting even though art critics snubbed them, one critic suggested they were "the very definition of tasteless hack work". The layman loved them, and Walter found they had to start printing off posters and framed prints to keep up with demand.

There's not doubt Walter had a flair for marketing, he opens up a gallery across from the first gallery that shunned him and started giving paintings away to famous and influential people including, Natalie wood, Jerry Lewis and Kim Novak also sending one of John Jr. and Caroline Kennedy to the White House.

Walter Keane churned out work, sausage factory style, well before Warhol and his helpers. Walter's sweat shop consisted of Margaret only, whilst she grafted he wallowed in his self-promotion, and the secret was kept even from Margaret's daughter.

Margaret becomes more and more depressed, which reflects in her artwork, almost self-portraits, which makes it more difficult for Walter to explain his inspiration.

The script heads towards the climax, where Margaret gets her day in court after remaining silent for years. A radio interview in 1970 prompted Margaret to admit she and she alone painted the wide-eyed waifs, and at this time challenged Walter to a public painting contest, Walter was a no show.

A couple of years go by and Walter surfaces suggesting to USA Today that Margaret thought that he was dead and that's why she was making her claims. This led to a slander suit from Margaret.

When they both walked into the Honolulu federal court, 20 years had passed since either one had seen each other. Walter was 70 and Margaret 58, the whole trial lasted for 3½-week with plenty of sparks. According to Margaret the only reason she was obsequies and gave into Walter's wishes was because she feared for her and her daughter's lives.

Margaret brought into court paintings from her childhood, and clinched it when she painted a boy's face in fifty three minutes, showing obviously that she is in fact the creator of Big Eyes. Walter was challenged to pick up a paint brush but declined clutching his should, saying he was taking medication and declined the challenge. The court awarded Margaret $4 million for damaged reputation and emotional distress at the hand of Walter's false statements.

At the end of the Script a reporter asks Margaret if she feels vindicated by the high award, she replies that it was never about the money and anyway she doesn't think that Walter would pay up. Margaret adds that she just wanted rightful credit for her work and to get her art back, my prayers are answered.

This was an early draft of the script and there will be many changes to the finished film.


Christoph Waltz and Amy Adams to Star in Big Eyes




The eyes were asking

'Why are we here, why is there suffering? What is the purpose of life?'
 

Girl with abstract lines

1997

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Artist-Margaret-Keane-Rare-Limited-Edition-Giclee-Print-Canvas-1997-/180985910530 
 ''I think what Keane has done is just terrific. It has to be good. If it were bad, so many people wouldn't like it.'' -- Andy Warhol on Keane in 1965

Hibiscus Miss

1968

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Artist-Margaret-Keane-Rare-Limited-Edition-Giclee-Print-Archival-Paper-/180985216192

No Dogs Allowed



The Gypsies



Child with Gauguin 1964 Keane


Image ShearartImage Shearart 

Margaret Keane





Walter Keane
 Image ShearartImage ShearartImage ShearartImage ShearartImage ShearartImage ShearartImage ShearartImage Shearart
 

Monday, February 24, 2014

Book Cover Design by ShearArt




BUY
More Book Covers at - http://goo.gl/l5l1Ry

http://bookcoverdesignshearart.wordpress.com/
www.shearart.blogspot.com 

Saturday, February 22, 2014

The Stump Game - Nail Game

Nailspielen

I came across this game in Zinner a small village in Germany near Torgue, the game consists of a tree stump waist high, nails and a bricklayer's hammer.

Everyone involved in the game circles the tree stump nail in hand and the hammer is past around, the players tap their nail in to start.

Using the thin wedge side of the hammer each player has one shot at their nail and then passes the hammer on. The object is to sink the nail into the tree in as less hits as possible, the last person standing has lost and buys everyone a schnapps.

They had their traditions you must put the bottle in your mouth and tip your head, screw the top back on and lay it on its side. If someone stands the bottle up, they  buy another round Cheers!

The Nail Game - Hammerschalgen

The Nail Game - Hammerschalgen

Friday, February 21, 2014

Mojo Sauces From The Canary Islands

Canary Island Garlic Sauces

this lens' photo
Housewives have been preparing mojo sauces for centuries to accompany a variety of dishes, usually preparing two flavours for one sitting, from red, green, mild and hot.

The main ingredients of a mojo, which is pronounced "mo-ho" are olive oil, garlic, white wine vinegar for the base ingredients, adding various flavours to create different mojos include avocado, oranges, almonds, cheese, tomato and red pepper.

Red or green mojo sauces, usually accompany fresh bread and "papas arrugades" wrinkled potatoes eaten with the skin, which are covered by a thin layer of salt.

I first tried this delicious dish in a small village halfway up Mount Teide, Tenerife, the largest of seven islands in the Canneries. The village would eventually become my home for a year, which was plenty of time to learn how to cook these dishes authentically, with local produce, and a critical eye from one of the locals. Who kindly gave me her grandmother's recipes to work with. She also gave me permission to share them with you - disfrutar -Enjoy!

Image Source
 

'Papas arrugades'

Wash and place small size potatoes into a pan and cover with water. Add rock salt until the potatoes no longer sink to the bottom this means you have enough salt. Simply boil until the water is evaporated and the potatoes have a wrinkled salt skin.






Red Canary Island Garlic Sauce 

 Canary Island Green Sauce 

 

Mojo verde y papas arrugás

 

Papas arrugadas con mojo

Canary Island Potatoes with Red Mojo Sauce

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Papasarrugadas.jpg  
 

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

The Flight of the Eagle - Per Olof Sundman


The Amazing Story of an ill-Fated Balloon Flight from Norway to the North Pole

this lens' photo
I read this book a few years ago in paperback form. I found it on a dusty stall at a Rastro (Spanish Flea Market) and after reading it I lent it to my neighbour and like my hedge trimmer, drain rods and chest expander, the neighbour has since disappeared forgetting to return my goods, unlike the other items, I've often wanted to revisit the place this book took me and an even stronger desire to get a copy of the fully illustrated version.

Twice, I have made an online purchase for this book from a book shop, and both times the book was lost in the post, so now I really need to get a copy.

I have been waiting for a copy to come available from a more reputable source, like Amazon or Ebay, of which I have now found, but as my birthday is coming up, I have it on my wish list, and so I can't buy it for myself, just in case.

The Story


In 1897 an attempt to fly to the North Pole in a hydrogen balloon was undertaken by the explorers Andrée, Fraenkel and Strindberg.

Their peers were skeptical of their success and it was said that they had a slim to no chance of succeeding.

30 years later their bodies were found along with documentation and photographs, up to the point where they had died in their final camp. Until they were found, huge mystery and speculation was thrown out there about what had happened to them.


SPOILER ALERT

Evidence found suggested that they died from eating the uncooked flesh of a polar bear, which was infected with trichinosis.

This is an interesting read and a fascinating story.

The book has been translated from its original Swedish version by M. Sandbach.


Many of the photographs of this failed expedition of 1897 was recovered in 1930.


Eagle Crashed


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Eagle-crashed.jpg The Balloon crashed after only two days on the pack ice after leaking hydrogen another thing Andrée's ignored.
Image Source

Planning stage with Swedenborg, Strindberg, Fraenkel and Andrée



Balloon Explorers


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Balloon.explorers.jpg Andrée, Fraenkel and Strindberg a few minutes before they take off on July 11, 1897.
Image Source

Frænkel and Strindberg


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Polar.bear.jpg The explorers shoot their first polar bear, which eventually would kill them.

Image Source

Trichinosis


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Trichinella_larvaeG.JPG Once their bodies were discovered, it was ascertained that they died from trichinosis, infected with the larvae of a species of roundworm, a polar bear nearby, had parts of its carcass infected with Larvae of Trichinella spiralis.

Trichinella spiralis, commonly called the trichina worm.

Image Source

Andree Expedition



S. A. Andrée

(1854-97).



Knut Frænkel

(1870-97)



Carrier Pigeon


http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dr_Julius_Neubronner_patented_a_miniature_pigeon_camera_activated_by_a_timing_mechanism,_1903.jpg The explorer's balloon had two ways of communicating to the rest of the world - homing pigeons and steel cylinder buoys encased in cork.

Image Source
 The Flight of the Eagle
Max von Sydow, Göran Stangertz and Sverre Anker Ousdal
(1982)
Nominated Best Foreign Language Film for the 55th Academy Awards

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

The Man Who Would Be King


Rudyard Kipling's "Daniel Dravot"

this lens' photo
Rudyard Kipling's novella, The Man Who Would Be King (1888), follows two British adventures, Daniel Dravot and Peachey Carnehan in British India, and how Daniel Dravet becomes king of Kafrirstan, a remote province of Afghanistan.

The book was inspired by the adventures and exploits of two men, an American, Josiah Harlan, who became the Prince of Ghor, Afghanistan, and an Englishman, James Brooke who was the first white Rajah of Sarawak, Borneo.

John Huston adapted the book and directed the movie version in 1975 starring, Michael Caine and Sean Connery as the two adventuring heroes, whilst Christopher Plummer played Kipling.


Image ShearArt 

The Man Who Would Be King


The two main characters are jacks of all trades, masters of none, and done the rounds in India, from soldiers, contractors, rail-workers and photographers. A British journalist touring India happens across the two main characters and immediately likes them.

They turn up at his office a few weeks later and tell him of their plan to leave Indian and become kings of Kafiristan, and asks him if he could give them any maps of the area, after all, they were also freemasons. They set off with pack horses loaded with twenty Martini-Henry rifles, which at the time were thought to be the best in the world and of some value.

They both set off for Afghanistan with the hope of finding a village and help its ruler to fight his enemies. First by training his men and using the riffles and then when the time is right, take over as kings themselves.

Two years later one of them sneaks into the British journalist's office, and he hardly recognises him, as he looks like an old broken and crippled beggar. Flabbergasted at his dishevelled appearance, he sits and listens to the story of their exploits and how one of them did achieve their initial goal and became King of Kafristans.

Rudyard Kipling


 

The First American King



Josiah Harlan, a Quaker, young adventurer, writer and naturalist from Pennsylvania was the first American to venture into Afghanistan.

The year was 1838 and Josiah Harlan with a strong desire to be a king, declared himself Lord of the Hazarahs and Prince of Ghor atop the summit of the Hindu Kush, complete with the American flag in hand and surrounded by his troops, as he sat on an Elephant, like Alexander the Great.

Ben Macintyre researched in great depth the life and exploits of this American explorer, and only American King, Elvis notwithstanding.

Macintyre was a correspondent for the London Times, and had travel to Afghanistan a few times, eventual hearing stories of Josiah Harlan's adventure and could not help notice that they sounded similar to Rudyard Kipling's "Daniel Dravot" from his story The Man Who Would Be King.

All documentation, including Harlan's autobiography, were thought to have been lost in a house fire in 1929. Back in America and a small museum in Chester County, was home to a worn out manuscript, letters, drawings together with a hundred and seventy year old document naming Harlan the King of Ghor, Afghanistan.


Read this Amazing Story

Image Source

The Man Who Would Be King

The First American in Afghanistan

 

Monday, February 17, 2014

Spanish Grass - Esparto Grass




Esparto - Grass Roots Of History

this lens' photo
The first time I came across Spanish grass, was in the Valencian countryside, refurbishing an old farm building. The terracotta floor was down and the grouting done, the Spanish chap threw me a bunch of light brown strands and suggested this will clean it up best - he wasn't wrong.

Spanish grass is as durable and formidable as the skilled craftsmen that work it, and turn it into superb and highly desirable products that not only have a purpose are aesthetically pleasing to have in the home.

Spanish grass or Esparto is one of the products that made the world go round for thousands of years and has almost disappeared today but the old skills are still remembered In Spain's only Esparto grass museum in Murcia, alongside skilled craftsmen keeping this artisan work alive.




Esparto Craftwork



Esparto, is a type of grass that grows wild on the hillsides all along the Spanish coast, and its tough, flexible fibers, were used from ancient times to make shoes, belts, baskets, fans, paper, mats and thousands of other things.

Historically, one of the most important things made from Esparto were the ropes used by sailing ships.

Decades ago, hundreds of people where employed in the esparto industry and the first stage is to gatherer the grass on the steep Spanish hillsides - no easy task, especially in the baking summer months.

A palillo, a metal spiked hand loop, pulls the fibres from the ground and wraps them together.

Next, it was stacked in heaps to dry out in the sun and then soaked in large ponds for up to 40 days, to allow for a chemical change in the fibre, after this, it was pulled out and stacked to dry again.

Now it was ready to be pulverised, using a huge wooden mallet over a tree stump or two timber beams, belt driven in a factory.

The next stage is to comb the fibres through with metal rakes, a process that proved hazardous to the health of the workers, causing espartosis from airborne fibres.

The fibres were then spun into threads and woven together into bands, spun into 15m length cables ropes for shipping.

Esparto today, has been replaced by modern materials, like plastics to make most of the heavy industry products, but In Murcia and other parts of Spain craftsmen still keep this process alive by making house hold products.


All photographs in this lens are being used with kind permission from Señor Jesús María Quintero Gómez - www.esparte.es
Image Credit




Craftsmen working on his stall

 





Esparto display