Stan Berning
STAN BERNING
SANTA FE, NM / PRESCOTT, AZ
928-460-2611
stan@stanberning.com
(please write or call for further information)
Uncategorized, about painting, art critique, gallery/museum presentation, presentations, the book
STAN BERNING
SANTA FE, NM / PRESCOTT, AZ
928-460-2611
stan@stanberning.com
(please write or call for further information)
Uncategorized, about painting, art critique, gallery/museum presentation, presentations, the book
the blue cup
Jimmye has been talking lately about energies; precognition and the nature of time and space.

Yesterday, as we worked in the yard, she served me a cup of coffee. I later carried the cup to my house. This morning I stood, still dazed with sleep, washing dishes at the kitchen sink. As a weak western light filtered through the window I came upon this beautifully proportioned little cup. Seen against the sink’s cold white porcelain surface, its turquoise blue glaze took on a life of its own and I thought, “I should ask Jimmye if she thinks certain objects have souls.”



Dear Alberto,
I was on artmesh tonight, landed upon your photo and thought, ‘You know, I would really like to see more of Alberto’s face!’ I am fascinated by the portrait photos people choose to represent them on this site. More often than not they seem to mirror the quality and substance or their work. This half-view portrait implies a beautiful symmetry. The space to your right suggests an out of body connection to something greater than yourself. Your eyes (eye) closed makes you less approachable and more mysterious. The portrait photo’s perfect lighting lends a persona of professionalism. All these attributes are evident in your work and so I am assuming that this portrait is a very good representation of what you are about and that you are completely happy with it.
Still, I landed upon your photo again tonight and thought, ‘I wish I could see more of Alberto’s face.’
I suppose I would not even think to write this if you had not posted your ‘study for hovering bodies’. It has me thinking that maybe you are smart enough and genuine enough to need no secretiveness.

I received your email and I’d like thank you so much!..so Cool!!! I wish to have this conversation face to face one day. Maybe my lack of english skills turns it into less or more than it really is? Your text is deep and asks questions that concern me too. I believe the anima is behind the creation, and behind the creator. Maybe the difference is to be found in the nature of our trajectory.
Yes, we’re able to access the importance of a piece of art through its process, but also we can taste a hint, or maybe sense completely, the quality of a Rembrandt, Ingres, or Bonnard painting seen reproduced in the magazine which we are looking through while waiting on the street corner for a friend to arrive. The eletricity you mentioned and the capability of an image to turn into a light for the world (a light which makes colors exist even in the dark) are part of the same visions artists have applied since the first paintings on cave walls. Traditional art to nanoart, creativity is inner.
To me it is a challenge to all my senses. The hovering bodies, for example, I had to draw in digital form using a mouse device and, more difficult still, with a right hand device. I’m left handed. All efforts and results (good or not) must live in the elements which constitute what you’ve created. Painting or photography, they are both manipulated with an eye toward the platform that it is intended to “reach”.
I’m so excited about this issue that I created a series of works called “Practical Manual to the Intangible”. I love painting. I love the process and the studio environment, the smell of paint. I love painting in early morning; that universe of white canvas waiting for my appearance. And I believe these feelings can be transported to any media. If you believe so, its there. The value is also there and present for everyone who creates, who feels it, who sees it. There is a part in Aldus Huxley’s book, Brave New World. He mentions something called Sensitive Cinema; a place where you watch a movie and feel exactly what the characters feel.
And honestly, all in all, I undertand that artists need to have talent, vocation, and technical development but, behind all of these, the aim is to create sensibility (and more and more, re-sensibility) to experience and make connections to others, to create extensions….
Well, 2 am here. My mind is fading too :) I don’t know if what I have said is exactly what you were asking about or if what I have said makes sense but, anyhow, I’d like to thank you so much for considering my art and this discussion….. honestly.… thank you very much.
Kind regards from Brazil,
Alberto
(authors note: To see more of Alberto’s work click on Alberto’s face.)



Thank you so much for your genuine letter. It was a pleasure to read it.
I was introduced to The Garden of Earthly Delights in early age as well.
As much as I love this painting, my favourite work of art remains the Arnolfini “Wedding” Portrait.
The question you asked may not be answered by someone like me.
I prefer not to use words and I am not good in using them.
I prefer to look, to enjoy the artwork consciouslessly. I had to learn the theory of art and even though the knowledge of it opens a lot of secrets, it leaves no space for imagination.
I am sure my point of view is acceptable.
Are you an art critic? Do you write for pleasure?
Tatiana
(Authors note: Soon after this exchange Tatiana disappeared. I have no way of getting her approval to publish this letter.)