Monday, November 2, 2009

More about that ongoing Website



A month into terrysawatzky.com and
everything is now in the background
as I transition to action script 3.
It's not as different from as2 as I initially thought.
Apparently I'm a tweener as I'm inbetween being a designer and
a developer. (or is it Deviner?)
I thought I was an Artist, but apparently
that category is right off the map ...
No Worries though it's like life...
Space is Infinite
Time is Undefined
and
there is only One Soul,
and we are all sharing .

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

terrysawatzky.com


Is this terrysawatzky.com phase one,
or what?
I've decided to let it grow,
organically,
instead of trying to design it,
complete.
'cause it will never be
complete.
Tune-In daily to discover what,s new in the
wonderful world
of
Terry,s Brain.

{Note: the apostrophes - otherwise known as "flying commas"
have been intentionally grounded for effect.}

This concludes
the text
of the
blog entry
of the
officious opening
of the
first phase
of
terrysawatzky.com

Friday, September 25, 2009

An Unmodified Self-portrait

I tried to photograph myself
in the pose/expression
I frequently draw.
Like most things in my life
(I know)
this is absolutely
backwards.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Bill Fold


In a different vein...
I used Photoshop to propagate an
old money folding routine.
I'm still having way too much fun
with PhotoBooth!
Can the analogue/digital dialog come
to a happy fusion?
Or will it all fall apart and run in opposite
directions?
Stay tuned...
(I've always liked that advice...)
{same Bat-time, same Bat-channel}

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Wave Fractionation

Triple self portrait letting the background
show through.
Creating the imagery is so much easier than
writing a comment.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Di-Fused

I am still enjoying the simple
and silly aspects
of self portraiture with Photoshop.
There is an inescapable hybrid nature
of using a computer as
a drawing tool.
All my analog and digital experiences
and background knowledge
fuse-
Programing;
Photography;
Drawing;
etc.
They can be simple.
They can be multi-layered monsters.
This one is simple.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

fuse two

Another self-portrait in the
(con)Fused Series.

Friday, July 10, 2009

The Documentation is the Art


This is another Photoshop/handdrawn hybrid.
It also incorporates a file from the "Built-in Frame" collection.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Cypress with Car and Fake Glasses


Another example of further attempts to fuse
photography,
Photoshop
and drawing.
Collecting pictures with the webcam in my laptop can be awkward,
especially in those handheld situations.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Terry Sawatzky - In the Gallery


Here's an obvious regression of the self-portrait and frame series.
I am going to remain stubbornly unapologetic for this one.
It was fun to do and a shining example of not editing one's Artwork prior
to doing it.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Next!


This is how my head feels as I try to sort out my current direction in Art projects.
Not only am I doing a balancing act between the digital and the analogue worlds, but I'm searching for the border between the conventional, the expedient, and where I want to go.
Having spent more than a few years, and more than a few thousand dollars learning how to get these programs to achieve a conventional result, I'm now curious to know which parts I can tweak and by how much.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Aron Sawatzky


Dad
Three weeks ago Dad turned 86, less than a week later he left this world.


Probably the first thing that comes to mind when most folks remember Dad was his
extremely economical use of language. On occasions when others might say “ That is
precisely how I feel, Terry, I concur with your position on the matter quite emphatically!”
– Dad could cover all that with just one word – “Yup.”
Or on occasions when he was displeased his kids (I’m sure Sandi, Lorraine, Naida, and
Will, can think of one or two occasions, as do I) he wouldn’t need to go into a lot of
detail (that was Mom’s job) he could show his displeasure by frowning and packing a
long lecture into a single word like “EH?”
Other times when he felt he just didn’t have anything useful to add to the conversation
he’d just shrug.
Another example of Dad’s visual language was “The Sawatzky Finger”: While sitting
at the dinner table Dad would merely have to point at the salt and one of his kids would
pass it to him. Or if you had your back turned you might get a gentle poke in the ribs, or
if he had just come in from working outside on a winter day you might discover those
cold hands on the back of your neck! And you would turn with a start to discover Dad
laughing at this, simple, wordless fun.
I once saw a documentary of a man called the “Horse Whisperer” – it turns out that
there is no whispering involved with Horse Language, you just have to learn their body
language and watch for the signs... a toss of the head, a turn of the ear closest to you ...
I realized, while watching that show, that I had been watching Dad all my life –
watching for the signs. (No wonder I became an Artist!)
Of course Dad loved horses. If you wanted to hear him talk just get him going on the
subject of horses! Working on Chaddsy’s Farm, or riding horses or the time the horse he
was on fell sideways and he had to lift his leg out of the way, but he stayed in the saddle.
I asked him once how old he was when he rode a horse last – he thought for a moment
and said “Fifteen”. Those big, gentle, animals obviously left a lasting impression on him.
The last time we visited Uncle Jack I sat and listened as he asked Dad “Hey, Ron,
remember that time we moved the barn with horses?” –All “Dad’s side” of the family call
him “Ron” (or Uncle Ron), I remember being a kid and wondering who they were talking
about at first.
Much later, I hoped to give my son, Dylan, the opportunity to hear his Grampa tell a
story, so I asked him about this “moving a barn with horses tale.” Dad just shrugged and
said, “It was just a chicken coop.”
Back in the Summerland days we would often go for a “walk around the block”. The
“block” that we lived on was over a quarter of a mile on the two longer sides, so we
would typically cut through the orchard when we got around to the point opposite our
house on the far side. By then, typically, Dad would be at least thirty feet behind
everyone else, no matter how many times Mom went back to speed him up. Dad liked to
take things slowly, many times I heard him say, “Why run when you can walk?”
I always enjoyed the many visits with the Shramm families; Louis and especially his
brother Johnny, had a talent for getting Dad talking. I especially liked hearing some of his
stories from WW II when he was in the Air Force.
Like, how he would break regulations by taking off his tie while doing aircraft
maintenance and hastily replace it when an officer approached.
Or the time when once, near Kamloops, the train he was on while moving to a different
base, made a long stop. He and some others figured they had plenty of time to go for a
beer. On their way back they noticed the train was already moving, so they had to run and
jump on.
That seems like a lot of UN-Dad-like things in one short tale. Although if you wanted to
see Dad move fast Uncle Arnie’s suggestion was to just say, ”Do you want to go Fishing,
Aron?”
Dad worked at The Summerland Research Station (which we always called the
Experimental Farm, or just ‘The Farm’) for over thirty-five years, doing mostly outdoor
work like picking fruit or spraying pesticides on fruit trees. Although, they sometimes
had unusual tasks due to the ‘experimental’ nature of the place- like tying apples back on
to the trees.
For awhile Dad worked in the lab and recorded data from the weather station, however,
rule changes required him to finish high school in order to continue doing those tasks
which he opted not to do.
In the winter after a particularly heavy snowfall Dad would get an early morning phone
call from work asking him to plough the treacherously icy, snow covered road up the hill
to The Farm. So he would climb into his old two-wheel-drive pickup and drive up that
road to the garage where the snow-plough was kept and THEN plough the road for
everyone else that worked there. Before the regular starting time!
Another ‘special’ job was driving the mail van. This, Dad referred to as Stan’s Job.
Whenever Stan took his holidays Dad would do “Stan’s Job”, a change that he enjoyed a
lot.
When I was a kid, at Christmastime, we didn’t just dust off the fake tree or even go out
and buy one in a lot –We “Hunted” a wild tree. Off we would go to the woods “behind
The Farm”. I remember walking through the deep snow to find the perfect tree and then
Dad would climb up and cut off just the top, and we’d drag it back to the truck (or was it
a car back then?), and bring it home. Those trees that looked tiny in the woods often
turned out to be over nine feet tall.
The things I did with Dad : walking in the woods; picking up prunings; gardening; fixing
machines (lawnmower maintenance comes to mind) ...many of these things have become
some of my favorite activities.
Mom left this world quite suddenly, and unexpectedly, but Dad was taken away slowly,
bit by bit- for about five years his abilities have escaped him - walking, standing, eating, -
breathing...
But now Mom and Dad are together again – with wings! That’s pretty cool, right, Dad?
-Can’t you hear him saying it?-
“Yup.”




Friday, March 20, 2009

Donna Cowan

This is Donna in the woods,
collecting reference photos for her paintings.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

No More Upgrades


That's It!!
I want my old computer back.
I want my old car back.
I want Flash ActionScript One back.
I don't want to go faster.
I don't want to replace drawing with coding.
I don't want more features.
I don't want fast food.
I don't want to do six things at once.
I don't want eight optional ways of doing the same thing.
How would you Really feel if something you liked was Upgraded out of existence?
You go out to your car in the morning and you can't find the ignition.
You can't find the radio.
The steering wheel is in the trunk.
Your ipod is talking.
The trunk won't even open unless you say "Please."
Why draw a picture when you can just write a few lines of friendly code????

Thursday, March 12, 2009

I Don't Know Why, It's Just A Title


It's another Photoshop Self Portrait
If you have a foto you want me to mistreat
send it to Firedog Media
...just don't cry.
And I don't work for free ... anymore.
You want Original Artworks
ya gotta pay,
I need to eat, Y'Know?!
Enjoy the Jay-Pegs!

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Dark Times

Reducing Light
instead of the usual
Balancing Act

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

It's In The Bag


Orange peels, of course.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Self-Referential Day




talking about my blog
way too much fun

Friday, January 9, 2009

Kite-Eating Tree


I've been documenting the descent of last summers kite-in-tree sighting.
About half way down now.
Covered in snow.