S_V_H Make you feel my Love final image

Make you feel my Love ≈ H45xL30xD9 inches
The project, Make you feel my love, the video recap and other things that come to mind.

Make you feel my Love and Flowers where both started in 2024, and finished in 2025. Whatever happened to “We will score in ’64, even ’24? Where has the time gone? Back to the Art.

I like the feminine colors chosen for this music. Compared Adele to Myles Cryus’s Flowers on the left to see these singers’ differences. I am all in on my handling of color. What I am feeling is that I control the effects of color, therefore denying any one color to dominate. My goal in these artworks is a mix of abstraction of colors that flow together. Let on close inspection show the depth of my use of color and not just the color itself.

________________________

I can speak through thoughts in these summary videos, for there is no downside to my art. All these videos exist mainly to document this journey without a concern for views, likes, or an obscure chance of discovery. The question that follows is if there is no monetary or social gain, why do it?

My best guess is that I do it for the Art. When I am spending my valuable time and limited monies, I start each project knowing not to expect any of the other 8 plus billion people walking this planet will think as I do about Art. I kept steadily stumbling ahead in the search for the ultimate display of my “God-Given Talents” (The only positive take away from my youth education and Catholic teachings).

That then is why I have over 19 years, been on a lifetime journey of living that goal, that in this moment appears to be all for the Art. The Art, and not about a vision, skill, creativeness, uniqueness, originality, money, fame, or having a butterfly effect on the history of Art.

I have mentioned my art motives many times in a plenty of my blog posts. That brings up another question of why keep repeating the obvious? I do not know that answer beyond a thought. After 19 years, my preaching is clearly not being heard. Maybe that is to be expected. I have always known, never expecting, it would be easy.

Scott Von Holzen

S_V_H Flowers

Flowers ≈H45xL31xD9 inches

Signed and dated, the only task left to do on Flowers is to add the LED light strip, which I will do in a couple of days. My main take away on this music box is I like the strong contrast between the canvas and the music. I will follow this trend into the future. The chosen colors work for the music and for the final lyrics I added the words “you can.” I forgot them at first and had to paint over sections to match the background to add them. I had the same issue with Make you Love Me when I chose the wrong color for that artworks lyrics. To my surprise, I could repaint and match the background for that work. That gave me the confidence to fix my word error on Flowers.

I will mention this one last time: I like this 30 x 40 inch sized artworks. What I mean by like is the look of the artwork because of its rectangle shape has the feeling of classical artworks. That works for me for two reasons. First, the size is large, but not too large to fit comfortably on a wall in any upscale home. Also, each finished artwork becomes the template for the next project, making production and storage a lot easier. I will continue this vertical look, that to me feels well balanced, and a radical change from the last 19 years of sheet music length art. This art current look is sophisticated, classy, and invitingly simple in appearance.

Final thoughts on the project Flowers. Music Box Cover begins at 8:22.

I stated in the video that much of today’s art, and this includes popular music, suffers from same old, same old overproduction. I acknowledge the high quality production skill and craftmanship, but find the results, at last, to be boring. Beautiful and attention grabbing art is being created. It just all seems like one continuing movie sequel, that charges more for diminishing returns. And then there are the artist statements that seem desperate to add depth and meaning to the work. I can go on, and on about ” much ado about nothing,” or “in the moment” art and music, but I think this quote for Peggy Lee’s 1969 classic hit sums up my feelings about today’s art and music:
“Is that all there is
Is that all there is
If that’s all there is, my friends
Then let’s keep dancing
Let’s break out the booze and have a ball
If that’s all there is
” – Peggy Lee

For giggles here are examples of random artist’s statements online, with little thought that I quickly pulled from the largest Gallery in the world, Gagosian. The actual art I see as “oh well, this is the art that is oozing money out of galleries today?

The Baroque always connects two extremes, like light and shadow, in one body, one painting. History outside against a wild body inside, cultured and uncultured, cooked and uncooked, greed and expressionism, rationalism and irrationality, cold and hot.
—Adriana Varejão

Painting is an act that connects reality and consciousness. It is more than a collective codification of signs. It is a performance that awakens the delirium of vision.
—Richard Wright

Most are afraid of total freedom, of nothingness, of life. You try to control everything, but nature is uncontrollable. It doesn’t matter how you express yourself (words, image, electric guitar), what matters is that you have something to express.
—Steven Parrino

(If you have a long enough attention span, this statement says a lot about today’s art and music production for me)
Christopher Wool is best known for his paintings of large, black, stenciled letters on white canvases, but he possesses a wide range of styles; using a combined array of painterly techniques, including spray painting, hand painting, and screen-printing, he provides tension between painting and erasing, gesture and removal, depth and flatness. By painting layer upon layer of whites and off-whites over screen-printed elements used in previous works—monochrome forms taken from reproductions, enlargements of details of photographs, screens, and Polaroids of his own paintings—he accretes the surface of his pressurized paintings while apparently voiding their very substance. Only ghosts and impediments to the field of vision remain, each fixed in its individual temporality. Through these various procedures of application and cancellation, Wool obscures the liminal traces of previous elements, putting reproduction and negation to generative use in forming a new chapter in contemporary painting. His paintings can therefore be defined as much by what they are not and what they hold back as what they are.

Scott Von Holzen

S_V_H 2nd images Miley & Adele

To get this project going, I had already started with a canvas base color of light orange that luckily worked with the image above I found later. Finding an artworks color theme comes after first choosing the music. For me it is important to learn an artist’s choice of colors to better connect this art to the music. At first, my search for Adele’s live performances of Make you feel my love all showed her dressed in black. That was a disappointment. I then widen my live performance search to other songs of hers. I noticed quickly the color of turquoise in her lighting. Then I found my color jackpot in the above image from Adele’s video, of Send My Love. There was the color turquoise, but also shades of red, pinks, greens, and pale beige. They all show up in the image below.

In the center is Make you Feel my Love. Left is Bryan Adams, I do it for you, and on the right is The Scientist, with the notes from All too Well leaning against the wall.

I have a deadline of January 4th 2025 to submit to the ARC gallery call. Therefore, I physically built together both artworks for Make you Feel My Love, and Flowers. I first completed the artwork for Make you Feel. Because of my limited time, I then switched to Flowers by Miley Cyrus. Once I complete that artwork, I will return to finishing the cover music for both works.

Flowers on the wall left of the Adams and Adele artworks.

Scott Von Holzen