S_V_H Vivaldi 4 season image 2

The completed music for this artwork project spread out on the floor with the artwork’s canvases leaning up against previous projects.

This project began on January 11th. It is now nearing the end of February, and I am only at the point of completing the artwork’s music for each of the four seasons. With that part completed I can now turn my attention to the electronics for this artwork. This challenge is that when a visitor presses the green button, the Spring canvas will light up and play its part. When finished, the artwork will then, in series, light up the next three seasons, playing that music, ending in less than 90 seconds.


Scott Von Holzen

S_V_H The Artist’s dealing with a positive rejection.

An image showing the progress on Antonio’s 4 Seasons artwork after five weeks. The studio looks becomes this when creating four different artworks simultaneously, all of which must fit together as one work. I hope and need to complete this project soon.

The ARC gallery in Chicago turned down my application in an email without actually telling me (see below PDFs Winners & my Submission). This was a surprised thinking their lack of acknowledgment unusual. The point of this rejection is to say that although I am disappointed in not even making the first cut on the ARC Gallery exhibition, I kinda saw this coming from checking multiple times my YouTube link to an audio file I listed in the application. What I found in my YouTube statistics is that there had been only one unique (me) visitor to this post. If you wish to double the views, be my guest supporter of this blog post.

Art show rejections for this art are common and expected. But for some unknown reason, I thought I might have a slight chance. I like the ARC Gallery which is run by women, who I came over time to feel are genuine about their support for the visual arts. Their exhibition entry application is very detailed and demands a lot of effort to complete. I completed this application several times. Each version required me to spend many hours writing, rewriting, and then rewriting over months’ updated answers to all their application questions. I believe their demands are the most I have ever come across in a submission. But every question that I answered, and re-answered, gave me a better understanding of the artist and what this art truly means. Difficult as their application is, it is well worth a look at. Therefore, I hold nothing but the feeling of another disappointment that falls in place in a very long line of rejections I have received over the years. So, it goes.

For the twenty-five bucks it cost me to apply, I come away with the positive I have given to a good gallery that just might someday change its mind and actually listen to my music. It’s completing that first step, being recognized, that is always the hardest.

Scott Von Holzen

S_V_H Vivaldi’s Four Seasons & a photographer’s regret.

Vivaldi_4Seasons Feb 10th
Length 7 feet.
Vivaldi_4Seasons January 26th
Vivaldi_4Seasons January 22nd
Vivaldi_4Seasons January 19th

The following is an early draft of this artwork’s soundtrack. The flow between concertos is lacking, but each season includes a short intro, a main verse, and an outro to achieve a complete track. I have my template to build the artwork and the cover music.

The rough draft of excerpts from Vivaldi’s the 4 seasons January 11th.

I have spent a lot of valuable time planning and making and painting the wooden parts for each season, and putting them all together, as one artwork. I am already feeling the strain of time and effort. Because so much of this project is do, do, do, do a step, then repeat, repeat, repeat, repeat, this has taken it toll on my drive, appreciation for what I am trying to accomplish, and for what reason. The only time saved should be the single stereo system. If I can sync the lighting with the music, to all flow together.

My first thought for the new project was to create a nice short, even soundtrack from the four concertos, and then “sample” each season on the canvases. That is my current practice. Instead, after some thought and testing if practical, I decided against sampling the cover music. Instead, I picked 8 measures from Spring, 5 from Summer, 4 from Fall, and 5 from Winter as my cover music. I then made and found the room on six canvases to display the entire soundtrack. Looking at the current image, what I see is a 3D version of the artwork’s sheet music.

It is nice that the music opens with the Spring concerto, one well-known classic melody. From there on I am less confident of any other connection by causal listeners. What makes this cover harder to compose is setting a limit to less than 90 seconds (My limit to a viewer’s attention span) That restriction then made it possible to fit all the music onto to the artwork.

This is going to be the last project from my short-lived EmptyWallsArt group with three members gone already. It is also being hung in March at a wine and art bar downtown. How important is this show for this art? I would say it has little to no value. The reason I went along was loyalty to the group and the manager of the wine bar insisting on a show theme. I have always thought that building an exhibition on a theme was a great way to bring this apathetic group together. But, all the creative genesis at the table had nothing good to suggest. Luckily, out of desperation, the easy theme choice that found unanimous support was the four seasons. Thanks to Vivaldi, that theme I thought would be an interesting challenge.

Photography____________________________________________

When I booted up my aging Windows 10 computer, there appeared an image of two dolphins jumping out of the water, seen from the water, looking to the shoreline that looked like a wooden campground. The first thing I thought was as a photograph, this image was fake.

For many years before I returned to painting I was a dedicated follower of Ansel Adams and his Zone system. I was a decent photographer but only functional in the darkroom, no matter how much money I spent on equipment, and no matter the hundreds of hours spent in the dark. Of course I had my successes, but over many years and attempts, I never achieve my goal in photography, becoming the next Ansel Adams.

What made Ansel, Weston, Stieglitz, Frank, Winogrand, Steichen, Friedlander, and many more that inspired my camera grip, was they all knew how to capture the moment. That is the essence of what all great photography excelled at. That is until Adobe Photoshop became a much more powerful alternative. Are the Dolphins fake? I don’t know, but it is the year 2025, and the current Photoshop release is 25.12.1. The ability to change an image has reached a near peak in abilities from when I first started learning and following Photoshop using version two, has gradually, then quickly, allowed me to change with the times.

I am all in on Photoshop and digital photography, replacing all the tedium, expense and time I spent years ago in the dark to create a single good photographic image. How much of today’s photography is actually real? I do not know. But I have my doubts about any unknown image I see on my computer screen. I believe that the images which once defined photography as great will survive. But Photoshop’s skill at altering an image has lowered today’s photography to the status of a tired outdoor billboard, on a 6.5 inch screen. I will always be grateful to all the great darkroom photographers from the past that inspired me to learn their techniques to manipulate, to enhance contrast, and getting there to be there at just the right moment. Regardless of what is and what is not, I’ve moved on. No matter if the Dolphins are real or not, there they are flying in the air in a photo that appears to be in the moment. Despite this, the heart of this photographer, once devoted to capturing the thrill of the moment on film, now feels photography to be a self rewarding, fleeting indulgence. Today’s photography is much too much like enjoying a donut, only to regret it later.

“Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?
A nation turns its lonely eyes to you, ….
What’s that you say, Mrs. Robinson
‘Ansel’ has left and gone away….”

Ansel Adam: Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, 1941 (image courtesy of Wikipedia)

Scott Von Holzen