Friday, December 25, 2020

Coach Red

 







Eyes open, feet on the ground;

The  alarm sounds.

Sipping from his coffee cup;

Optimism abounds.

 

Good morning Coach Red;

Again, It is that time;

Just as you said;

It will be fine.

 

Walking the fine line;

You care and it shows;

It is going to be fine;

The schedule goes.

 

Another Day;

Bocci, Bowling, Fishing;

Details executed and Underway;

Each day wishing.

 

This is our place and time;

Adding up a lot of little things,

Together we find a frame of mind,

The Intangibles our coach brings.












Thanks Coach! Safe, Cooperative, Peaceful, Kind.

Readymade

 









The poet packs into a box;

Rocker, singer-songwriter, rapper;

Stickers, stubs, buttons, painted rocks;

Postcards, programs, pages, drafted chapters.

 

A collection larger than the sum of its parts;

It ain’t no thing. Bring it. Sing it. Do it.

Scribble, type, meter, rhyme, for love of arts;

Drum beats, Scraps, paper clips, poker chips, made to fit.

 

Artifacts, art and facts, paintings, pain and suffering;

Sculpture, texture, contour, negative space;

Ephemeral printing, consumer packaging, pandemic timing;

Reuse, recycle, reclaim, never the same face.

 

Fear the consequences, count the blessings;

Cut, paste, hesitate, fascinate;

Freezing, warming, climate change, confessing;

Appropriate, mitigate, celebrate.


Marcel Duchamp 1887–1968  Nude Descending a Staircase, No.2, 1912 (Philadelphia Museum of Art), created a sensation at the 1913 New York Armory Show. Duchamp did very little painting after 1912, creating the first of his 'readymades' in 1913. These were ordinary objects of everyday use, sometimes slightly altered, and designated works of art by the artist. His earliest readymades included Bicycle Wheel (1913), a wheel mounted on a wooden stool, and a snow shovel entitled In Advance of the Broken Arm (1915). One of his best-known pieces is a urinal, titled Fountain and signed 'R. Mutt', which he submitted to an exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists in New York in 1917.


Monday, July 27, 2020

Covid - 19 Mosaic Art Project Gallery



(c) Wesley A. Morgan

All of the featured pieces in this blog are part of a series of works created from March through July, 2020 in the Covid - 19 Mosaic Art Project, They use chips cut from commercial packaging (e.g. cereal boxes), reclaimed cardboard (e.g. from local Aldi's) affixed with Elmer's glue.