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Tag Archives: american visionary art museum
In Pursuit of Art and Happiness… The Mini Museum and Rocaterrania
I mentioned that last weekend we went downtown for the new show at AVAM — Life, Liberty & the Pursuit of Happiness
October 3, 2009 – September 5, 2010
“The quest for human rights and the search for personal fulfillment, as proposed in the 1776 American Declaration of Independence, provide the starting point for this international exhibition. Works by the last surviving descendant of the Tsars of Russia, Iroquois Indians, French Revolutionaries, illegal immigrants, Algerian War veterans, Guantanamo Bay detainees, Holocaust survivors, incarcerated prisoners, African-American civil rights activists and Iraqi doctors are among the 86 visionary artists to be featured.”
It was, as usual, a joy. Many emotional and touching pieces. Explorations of freedom– what it means, and what images it conjures for each of the artists. The artist who was the last surviving descendant of the Russian Tsars chronicled his adventures on shrinky dinks.
Two of my two absolute favorite encounters of the day were related more to the freedom we have to be outrageously creative, even to create our own world and reality.
First, the incredible genius (in miniature, no less) that is Richard McMahan. (A great site on him.)
Here’s from the Raleigh City Paper–
McMahan’s Mini Museum exhibition features over 1,300 miniature paintings that are replicas of the world’s finest art, some of which now reside on canvases no larger than a postage stamp. Miniscule Egyptian tombs, cave drawings, and handmade furniture are included as well.
McMahan is a resourceful artist. Most of his collected paintings have been copied from photographs taken for National Geographic. So while he may not have gone far to see them, the paintings, and by extension McMahan’s work, represent the creative process and all its varied journeys. Examined from this angle, McMahan’s work is extensive not only in its scope, but also by way of its impact.
Take for example the work of Pablo Picasso. National Geographic decided to write a story about his work. A journalist and cameraman were dispatched. When the piece went to print, it traveled to homes across the United States. One of the magazines wound up in Richard McMahan’s hands (He owns every single issue of National Geographic from 1939 to the present). McMahan was captivated; he read the story and studied the photographs. He took his brush and did his best to recreate the artwork. He completed his rendition and kept it in his home. This process was repeated hundreds of times for various painters.
I am not sure how many pieces AVAM actually had in the display… there was a WALL of them… A sampling that gives a taste of R.M.’s talent and single minded focus to represent for himself and others these pieces of work which he feels are important/noteworthy. It wasn’t just the sheer presence of so much TINY ART, which was enough to make me twitch with glee… It was the obvious and obsessive care and craftsmanship that went in to this collection. His tiny reproductions are pretty fanatical in their quality and accuracy. I loved this comment made by him on another blog which made the statement “McMahan’s sculpture work (the “twigs” in the second image are carved pieces of wood) is wonderfully exact.” (Here is the borrowed image as I could not find another.)

The artist himself responded–
- Richard W.McMahan said…
- Hi there to everyone in cyber~space who have questions about my show I just want to give a clarification on a comment made on this blog about one of the paintings in my show,the question was asked about the twigs in one of the works at the mini museum show,Well those are not carved,they are tree roots that I found in my back yard,I had to find some that were small enough for the project,I usually make everything from scratch because I make everything from paper & cardboard as well as other things before they go into the trash,the artist who did the work in question used real twigs & other found objects for his work so that’s what they are,I hope you will enjoy the show even more after knowing this bit of information because I get a lot of questions about what everything is made from.
Love.
Remember that AVAM shows art by “outsiders”, folks who are untrained formally but chock full of the muse, determination and indomitable creative spirit. He hand-makes the frames / display after the ones of the original pieces as well. Painstakingly Glorious.
My only complaint was that there were maybe 2- 3 shelves of them that were way above eye level. So, while one definitely got to appreciate the prolific scope and amazement of the mini-museum, I wanted to really look at them. I read that at another show they displayed his artwork with magnifying glasses. That would have been really appreciated. It’s really just crazy-beautiful. Here is a nice little documentary on Mr. McMahan.
Second on the wow-o-meter was New Jersey-born illustrator Renaldo Kuhler, who created an imaginary country universe called Rocaterrania, somewhere between the border of New York and Canada. He created it’s entirety –it’s past and present, culture, society, language, alphabet…
“Fantasy is like fruit and desert, and reality is like meat and potatoes and green beans, or beef stew. Something like that…”


These two pieces are not really representative of the bulk of his work shown…. The details of this invented and imagined culture are stupefying. Journals that depict the gorgeous hand-drawn alphabet, sketches of street lamps and ornamentation on the buildings, a re-creation of his desk and part of his work area…. There was a wonderful drawing of the Rocaterrania Sewage Treatment Plant which was exquisitely “prettied up” to make beautiful the messy business thereof.
There is also a documentary on Mr. Kuhler which they were showing as part of the exhibit and which could be purchased a the museum store.
He spent most of his working life at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, making painstaking portraits of various animal species, though he was primarily a self-taught artist. He claimed that art-school was a disaster for him as a younger man and that he learned more about drawing “by talking to an art teacher in a barroom.” Amen. Also, “I would prefer to be known more for my scientific drawings than my imaginary country,” he says, “but I don’t have any objection. Either way is fine.”
Indeed. I recommend that you should stop by and “meet” his work if you are local. I loved the new show and our family will certainly return– I could spend another few hours just exploring the work there of these 2 artists.
Posted in Delight
Tagged american visionary art museum, mini art, mini museum, renaldo kuhler, Richard McMahan, rocaterrania, TEENY-TINY
8 Comments
Whirligig mischief managed!
That little whirligig shrug was finished by Sunday afternoon! We had a really adventure-full weekend. Next post I will tell you all about our trip to AVAM and the new show, until then here is the almost completed shruglette with a wonderful specimen of it’s namesake.

and here it is taking some morning air in the garden today. All done and ready to fly to a very cute little fae-girl.

The front is just a little raglan sleeve-slope with a bit of a rolled collar. It is WAY adorable. I highly recommend it as a quick and fun knit. Double-plus bonus that it looks so damn cute on! The handspun was glorious for it– and I have so much left! Marigold has started a pair of charmed fingerless mitts with it– looking really sweet already!

Tomorrow I want to talk about ART, so here is my favorite photo of the girls from yesterday–

Those my dears, are Super “Magnify Your Faith Binoculars!” Extreme faith for extreme times the box says… also it says “WARNING: Do not look directly at sun through binoculars.” You wouldn’t think you’d have to remind your children of basic truths like that, but you DO! REALLY! They looked right up there! Plus tried to WALK with them on. DANGER BABES, they are.
I aquired a pair myself, which I am counting on to give me super powers for that tiny knitting and miniscule art.
“happiness is a form of courage”– Jackson, Holbrook
I read that on a wall yesterday. Take it to the bank. Or at least stuff it in your mattress for safe-keeping.
sweet dreams.
PostSecret and a serious note
This post is in honor of my dear friend Catwoman. She turned me on to PostSecret a long time ago and she remains a faithful and fanatical admirer of the work. Thanks kittycat.
from wiki–
PostSecret is an ongoing community art project in which people mail their secrets anonymously on one side of a homemade postcard. It is an ongoing community art project in which people mail their secrets anonymously on one side of a homemade postcard.
PostSecret began as an art installation for Artomatic 2004 in Washington, D.C.
The simple concept of the project was that completely anonymous people decorate a postcard and portray a secret that they had never previously revealed. No restrictions were (or are) made on the content of the secret; only that it must be completely truthful and must never have been spoken before. Entries range from admissions of sexual misconduct and criminal activity to confessions of secret desires, embarrassing habits, hopes and dreams.
Since Frank Warren created the website on January 1, 2005, PostSecret has collected and displayed upwards of 2,500 original pieces of art from people across the United States and around the world.
The site, which started as an experiment on Blogspot, is updated every Sunday with approximately 20 new pieces which share a relatively constant style, giving all “artists” who participate some guidelines on how their secrets should be represented.
At the Visionary Art Museum I got to see in person for the first time part of the POSTSECRET project. These all dealing with issues of faith and spirituality as that is what the current “All Faiths Beautiful” show is about. It is so poignant and touching. Sometimes humorous,inspiring, thought provoking and sometimes makes your heart hurt. Check out the PostSecret link above if you are not familiar with it. Anyhow– they are trying to help out the Hopeline program. You can watch the video and particpate if you are so inclined.
Love your life.
Dawn
Simultaneous contrast and Visionary Art
So we had the birth and the half-birth day. I just want to show you the cakes we ate to celebrate. ‘
See if you can figure out whose is whose.

and

There was fairie princess world-for-a-day, and then, um, Friday-the-13th birthday turns into Saturday’s The Unfortunate Party with a few friends from school. Tiki torches. Cookies shaped like real LADY FINGERS ( pegaloo of course) Voodoo-baby-esque dolls ( thanks to Aunty Matryoshka’s brilliance) and death-by-chocolate flourless torte with shrunken heads. y.u.m. The day was masterfully pulled together by Jim, said Pegaloo and Carol– Thanks from the bottom of my Davey Jones Heart. I just sat around winding string dolls.



All were happy. That’s what counts right?
Today
It’s finally Summer Veecation as Rosie calls it. I have lost track of what day of the week it is– mostly because we have been so b.u.s.y. I am hoping next week to settle in to a sort of groove where we work on things we want to create, experience and accomplish –balanced with a good healthy dose of summertime serendipitous spontaneity. We couldn’t really keep it all together otherwise.
Grandparents are visiting from a plane ride away. For an adventure today, we had a pilgrimage down to the American Visionary Art Museum. My favorite museum EH-VAH!– and one of the gems of Baltimore that makes me happy to be right here now.
I get sooooo inspired there. Just crazy. I am a nut for mosaics, and junk and the stupefying gorgeousness of Outsider Art. The kids loved it. My brain is just buzzy with it. The whole family was pretty well spellbound. I wish we could spend days there. Maybe move in? There’s loads of room, anyway.
Here are some photos to tell a sliver of the story. The current show ALL FAITHS BEAUTIFUL ends in August. I hope we get to go and spend some more time with it.
This is one of those days that I think my cell phone camera sort of rocks. It’s only a stand in, but it did O.K.

(fuzzy art photo… not the cell phone rocks variety
)






ART COMA

Loads more pics of the day on flickr
Lastly– Here’s some spinning from last week. I have a bit over 400 yards of this. Don’t know what it wants to be yet, but I am digging the colors.

There’s creative lava flowing around here– bet you get to see more in the next few days.
Gnome-out.
