Roller Doors are the new Skip Bins! MMMM lots of cool subject matter! Ok, I have man Flu so I’m not thinking straight! Got to love that colour though!
Roller Doors are the new Skip Bins! MMMM lots of cool subject matter! Ok, I have man Flu so I’m not thinking straight! Got to love that colour though!
Please God cure him quick so he can think straight again !!!
Yep we’ll take you there this week as a prelim to the speeches…it should inspire you to greatness!
kool an outing to see a shopping trolley!
I know of some great derelict stuff to shoot when you make it over this way next mate… that door looks far too new for someone to choose that colour :O
great Tone, I like big piles of sh1t.
So shooting piles of sh1t is the next big thing – excellent
We are drawn into this image by the leading line in the foreground but quickly reach a barrier of the artist’s careful creation. This is both physical and metaphorical, with the door being a familiar obstacle to all of us. However on this occasion, the oft seen vertical or portrait format of the ubiquitous door has been replaced by this version in landscape and further to this, it’s boundaries are rendered not by the physical frame of the door, but again, by a dimensional restraint chosen and invoked by the artist himself. This choice of size and orientation indicates the confinement that the artist feels he is bound by, with the depth and breadth of his creativity curtailed by his own design, both at a conscious level and also subconsciously. We are held in conflict also by the enforced inactivity at a point which the linguistic inclusion would lead us to believe should instead be a point of activity and this metaphorical immobility reinforces the artist’s state of creative inertia and frustration at such.
A text book case of “artist’s block” and his pitiful cry for help. In it’s favour, there is positivity in the lateral lines that lead us out of the image to places where the artist may find answers to his artistic being, where his muse may be waiting patiently for him to rid himself of the shackles of his doubt and fear, and where his creative bounds may roam freely and unhindered to forge triumphantly to the peak of new and unexplored genres. It is indeed an image of hope.
Dr Rudi you rock!
You’ve had a visit from Dr Rudi as well . I was fortunate to get a critique from him for my “BINS 1.1″ and as far as I could tell he liked it …… I think !!!