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Monday, August 11, 2008
Making Life Creative
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Interview: Miltos Manetas

At what point in your life did you realize that you wanted to become a painter and what influenced you?
I used to be a conceptual artist before, I was working with video. I
made "Soft Driller", a movie where two thugs threat each other, " I"ll
fuck you up", says one, "No way", replies the other. It was
successful and coherent but in 1995 I was fed up with this kind of
Art so I changed perspective and became a Painter. It all started at the point where- to say it with Mary Shelley's words-" I had lost all my hopes for Utility and Glory" and I decide to abandon Art altogether. But before doing so I made a painting, I actually did 4 copies of it (the Sad Tree, 1995) and send it to 4 exhibitions. they were supposed to be the final shows for me, my farewell. But some Museum curators loved the work and asked me for more and that's how I
got in the business of Painting.
My basic influences-in terms of Painting- are mainly RRR (Rubens, Rembrandt Rafaello) and PPF (Picasso, Pollock, Fontana) while in terms of Art in general - which means "how to influence your own Future by some self-made Magic" is GGG, (William Gibson, William Gibson and William Gibson)
What inspires works such as the ones at Neen.org and Jesusswimming.org?
The beauty of the Internet, the possibility of re-inventing yourself there as well as re-making the rest of the World too if you so wish. "Jesus" is in itself a boring concept but Jesus on the Internet can be suddenly interesting again if instead of walking on the waters you have him swim- a miracle in reverse. Of course you could do that before on an exhibition but you would address yourself only to a small public while making it online you communicate it globally.
I love the idea of the Electronic Orphanage. What is the longest time one person has participated?
Well, the EO is still happening, we are planning of opening it in Bombay and from there launch it in Asia but I can't disclosure any details yet..
What is the most difficult/frustrating part of navigating the art world?
We are such lovers of Yesterday-in the ArtWorld- such groupies of everything that has a commercial success. We can namedrop for hours and in order of doing business with us you will need to participate to some degree in our faith and rituals. Ours is a Tribe and as such it
has its own Totems and it doesn't care much for anything else unless it relates strictly with these revered symbols. Just look at Artforum, the square holy grail of the ArtWorld. Look at its website Artforum.com. Artworld is a new Africa, with a few powerfull people who are feeding from each other and the many rest dying slowly in misery and ambandonance.
If you will decide to invent your own tribe-as we did with Neen- it can be risky because you become an outsider and they will eliminate you by simply ignoring you. Its not a concious decicion of course, single people in the Artworld are positive and creative but in decision making they behave behave like a herd.
The ArtWorld doesn't want to hear about anything that it is not known already, the unknown will upset its order and offend its principles. So if you want to introduce 'new" you need to apply some dust of "obsolete" over it to make it recognisable to the tribe.
What gives you comfort and joy?
Consuming, what else? I am joking : )
The existence of people who do Neen things, that's what gives me joy.
Friday, January 18, 2008
Interview: a gorgeous situation of goodluck

Is Emma Magenta your given name?
Magenta was the name given to the female character that i would draw on everything and everyone for many years....over time i became known as Emma Magenta...now i am officially Emma Magenta.
What/who are your influences?
So many things...memories, people whom i meet in passing, whom i observe from a distance and those whom i have worked with. Animals of all kinds, nature in general...different objects that overtime become like a talisman, music especially, books in a big way, humour, my life experience and the conversations that emerge with friends out of intense personal histories...
Is Third Drawer Down Gallery the first place you were shown and how did it come about?
No, i have been exhibiting since about 1994 in various places, but TTD is the first place where i have agreed to representation. I was approached to create a limited edition Tea Towel and handkerchiefs and then Abi Crompton (Director of TTD) decided to start a gallery to exhibit all the original works of the artists with whom she has worked...we each have an annual solo exhibition.
What are the challenges you face when creating?
Not boring myself or seeking familiar ground as a way of safety...to constantly surprise myself and amuse myself by what i am doing and to at least break through into a new area of my own creative potential. To always be honest and not seek confirmation from anything other than my own feeling of delight in the process.
How did you first come to be published?
i was working in Berkelouw Books in Paddington and i had alot of my work on the wall that i had been creating while i sold books...a man involved in publishing came into the book store and saw my work and offered me a book deal...it was pretty much like a gorgeous situation of goodluck meeting joyful hard work.
What measures did you take in order to get your work shown? How did you know what exactly to do?
i gave up doing the typical method of hunting down gallery space and decided to embrace the limitations of my situation (ie: being stuck in a casual job to fund the creative life) and make the bookshop which is such a public space; my own domain...my gallery and just do the work and connect with people passing through and by and i just gave my work away for free if anyone was into it... until after awhile people began to commission me. Now i work full-time as a writer and artist. i just got into the magic that coincides with being non-attached to outcomes and after awhile i ended up just finding myself where i wanted to be before i stopped trying to make it happen.
Saturday, January 5, 2008
A Gorgeous Sense of Hope

Fab title, don't you think? Emma Magenta has quickly become a favorite artist of mine. Her quirky "Magentaisms" combined with her seemingly guileless drawings make my heart giggle! Her books can be found at Amazon and her art is featured at Third Drawer Down Gallery - when you get there, click on the Emma Magenta link under Stockroom Artists.(pic from Random House Australia)