S_V_H In The Mood image 2

Glen Miller made In The Mood a classic as an instrumental, but I also like this vocal version by the Andrews Sisters. The Andrews Sisters sound makes me think of the time when my parents where young, rock & roll was still a few years away, and  the middle class American was beginning to prosper like never before. Of course my generation helped to changed all that.

You can see in image two the influence of Mondrian that I talked about in the earlier blog entry.  I like directly using the style ideas of other artists to shake up my style, to connect to the past, and to learn from them.

Scott Von Holzen

S_V_H In The Mood

 

In the Mood, is a big band classic from Glen Miller & his Orchestra. This song topped the charts for 13 weeks in 1940.  I remember playing my Mom’s 33 1/3 albums on the console record player when I was young. That is when I first heard big band music, of Glen Miller, and Tommy Dorsey.  We moved a lot back than so all those albums are now long gone, but I did not lose my appreciation for the sound of big brass.

In college, in the 1960’s,  I listened to one of my favorite albums by Blood Sweat & Tears, made all the more enjoyable by their use of brass instruments.  I remember In The Mood resurfacing as a single released by Bette Midler in 1974.  All through my musical life, probably from my Mom,  I have enjoyed the music of Frank Sinatra. What especially appealed to me where his songs that featured big band brass  His album Live at the Sands released 1966 and made into audio DVD in 2003, is still a favorite of mine today. However,  my decision to paint In The Mood came from a different direction.

My artworks have always provided me with entertainment, that is up to the point that I begin to tire of them.  When that happens, and it always does, I than push to complete the work. My last artwork, I Will Always Love You, took forever to finish. That extra time needed to complete that work exhausted my want to use that same style for my next project.  Finding a new direction started from a casual mention, in an art video series I was watching, of an old favorite artist of mine,  Mondrian.

Thinking about Mondrian,  I pulled from my bookshelf,  one of my earliest art books: 125 Paintings from the Museum of Modern Art.  With the copyright year of 1973,  that book was pivotal in the early development of my passion for art.

The Mondrian’s artwork,  titled Broadway Boggie Woogie,  appears on page 39,

That image than brought to mind my visit to the Museum of Modern Art,  with my good friend Tom, where we explored all six floors of the museum in record time.  I saw a lot of the paintings that day that I recalled from the book.  I than checked the photos from that trip. To my surprise I had not taken a lot of pictures of the artworks, but there was an image of Broadway Boogie Woogie. No portrait with me, but that I took the photo confirms that on that day I had searched for it knowing it was a favorite from the art book.

Here is that photograph of Broadway Boogie Woogie,  taken in the fall of 2015 at MoMa in New York City:

After the finishing of my last artwork, and knowing I needed a fresh approach, the Mondrian artwork offered possibilities.  The title, Broadway Boogie Woogie, caught my curiosity so I search boogie woogie to learn about this music genre that originated in the 1920’s. It was not long after listening to a few examples that I came across one of the big boogie woogie hits, In The Mood.  I now had my next art project of a long remembered song, with a fresh approach from a favorite painting from an old art book.

Scott Von Holzen

 

S_V_H So What final Image

L70.25″ x H12″ x D 2.5″

So What, a Jazz artwork using Miles Davis as its theme was actually finished a few days ago. This is my 2017 Birthday painting.  My past plan was to finish Birthday paintings on my Birthday.  What changed was that I wanted to take this work to an Art Fair in Appleton.

On Sunday I showed So What and 11 other paintings,  and one nicely framed and matted print. The print was the only item sold yesterday, and although that sale helped, I certainly came of short of covering expenses.  Of course the purpose of attending any Art Fair was to have artworks out in the public view. My reasoning is that no matter what I do and how I good I present my artworks on-line, all those images are two-dimensional.  Actually seeing So What, like many of my newest works, you are viewing are three-dimensional artworks.  The depth in these artworks can make all the difference.

Scott Von Holzen