&efiT,w?fta''',''. Page 8 Tha Nebraskbn Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1961 Of Monkeys and Machines (Continued from Page Two) ometric, cubist paint ings executed in his later periods. The uneducated believes that the contem porary painter does noth ing more than smear paint on a canvas with his fin gers as he would mud on a wall, or stands a few feet from the easel and throw paint at the canvas by the fistful with no thought. It looks easy. That is why I hear innumerable times from some of the viewers of the works in the gal leries, "I could do that." But it is far from easy. Smearing paint with the hand,, even "throwing" it at the canvas, is a per fectly "legitimate way of painting. Many profession al v painters do just that. But to be able to do it so that the result is aesthetic ally and technically pleas ing is the test. To be able to do it so that there is a strong compositional ar rangement, an illusion of space, a three-dimensional ' relationship of forms through a relationship of colors, and a technical pro ficiency in the application of paint is the proof. With a little practice, just about anyone with one arm . and one eye could repro- duce nature, as closely as the medium allows, in a drawing or painting, some better than others, but there are cameras for this purpose. Today, creativity goes beyond merely copy- " ing nature. Copying nature as closely as possible with no deeper feeling is not art. Besides it is dull. If o n e wants to look at a land scape, he does not have to look at a painting. He can see the real thing merely by looking out his window. Today, naturalistic sub ject matter means nothing. liipwiiyi L James A. Johnston was born in Lincoln and is a sen ior in the School of Fine Arts. He is a staff member of the University Art Gal lery and plans to do gradu ate work at Berkeley, Calif., upon graduation. The emphasis is on emo tionalism, heightened ex citement. The contempor ary painter is more ego centric, more concerned with the way he feels, more intent on his own ex periences than he is with his environment, but this is not to say that he has last touch with his surround ings, because it is from his surroundings tha his feel ings are derived. It is this endeavor to express h i s feelings, an intangible, in visible thing, and a reliance more or less on the help of his subconscious which re sults in abstraction. So what? So what the hell do we care how the artist feels, or felt, or why? That is not the point. We do not care how or why, and prob- Be perspicacious! :k mm I S I"" K t ... V ThUl Portplcoclout . . . thorp 1 NSDox keep. yo crwoke and alert uridyl Not this: a student who Studies drowsily no matter how much sloop ho got. If you find studying sometimes soporific (and who doesn't?) the word to remember is NoDoz. NoDoz alerts you with a tafe and accurate amount of caffeine the same refreshing stimulant in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. i-8 tl'$l fin trt Ittfn nontnimninna ftiirina sturlv anil Vv-. jsi exams and while driving, too ! L JL3 always keep lDoz in proximity. Tot sets stay iwiht UMet-available swjwosie. Aoatkoi ho oraovct tl 9m ably, neither does the artist. It is the end product, the result of the artist's experi ence that, we are interested in. You may say "so what" again. You cannot recognize anything in it that you know to be true, but you do not have to. Abstraction is a visual experience like any thing else like the movies, or looking at the physiog nomy of a beautiful female. Beautiful form, color rela tionships, and shape can be pleasing and exciting in themselves whether we rec ognize anything in them or not. An abstract painting can be just as stimulating, if not more so, as anything Norman Rockwell ever did. Why do we look at a vase full of roses and think "My, my, aren't they lovely," then in turn look at a well done abstract painting and feel either insulted or re volted? What is the differ ence? What are roses but shapes and elegant color? Is the difference in the fact that we recognize roses as roses and refuse to accept anything tint we cannot recognize, no matter how beautiful it might be? It is pretty ridiculous. There is no doubt that there are in dividuals who are insensi tive to the beauty of form, recognized or not, and even to the grace of the female anatomy which has been a traditional subject for many ages. Most people though, are more perceptive and sensitive than that and with a little understanding can gain greater pleasure in life through the visual arts. A middle-aged woman walked into the gallery of fice one day and asked me, "what's it all about? Can you explain these paintings to me?" I asked her if she understood music, to which she replied, "certainly." When I asked her why, she could give me no answer. When I mentioned that mu sic could be thought, of ,as being audible abstraction that it is not composed of ' naturalistic sounds bird twitters (with the possible exception of Martin Denny's . arrangements), the wind rustling through trees, the sound of a babbling brook and that it could be com pared to abstraction in the visual arts, nothing hap pened. She looked just as blank as ever. When I then, by chance, mentioned "ex pression," the key word, her eyes lit up as if she had been hit by the greatest in sight. This induced me to elaborate. Think of contem porary .art, I said, first, in terms "of a visual experi ence, secondly, as emotion al expression, and thirdly, in terms of symbolism and simplification. 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