joe...how wonderful..yes i am familiar with concerning the spirituality of 
art...book... and miro... love the art...u have described it well
 
miro is brilliant
 have a great day...cheerio merle


  
Thank you Merle.

Yes, observation is a penchant of mine.  Since age 5 I have been an astronomer. 
 Long time, now.  ;-)

Observing has been my bread and butter.  But I have always been hands-on, too, 
building and designing equipment for the work (and for the hobby, while it was 
a hobby).  In fact, it was all a Yoga.

So, the eye is good, the hands are good, and now they are coming together in 
this "new" art form for me, Painting.

Meanwhile, the woodworking and the making of temple-fittings for Zen Buddhist 
temples, teachers, and practitioners continues.  I make rakusu rings, teachers' 
sticks, kyosaku (sticks), han (sounding boards), mallets, altars, lathe-turned 
wood incense-burner vessels (to fill with sand), dokusan bell holders, plinths 
for Buddha statues, and other things I forget.

I had a good background 40 years ago in Western Art from college courses in art 
history, and spent years in museums, but I have never had a practical studio 
class, yet, in painting.

I've got Kandinsky's obscure and wonderful little book, CONCERNING THE 
SPIRITUAL IN ART, and will re-read it now while I am making my first baby-steps 
in painting.

Maybe over the decades my favorite painter remains Miro.  Such spirit, such 
power from rather spare uncluttered organic and animated elements.  His work 
always makes me smile, it just happens automatically.  I say "favorite", but 
it's just an expression of an affinity.  Other painters challenge me more, and 
may become favorites.

--Joe

--- In [email protected], Merle Lester <merlewiitpom@...> wrote:

> joe did i not send this to you before?
> as you say practise so with art... start observing..look at the simplicity of 
> all things..and note they are all very basic shapes..


 

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