The Alpha Seer understanding true art

April 28, 2011

CREATION IS ENTERING INTO THE UNKNOWN

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 10:00 am

Figure 1 : From top to bottom: Going from the unfinished stages to the finished stage,  entitled Cat with Woman 996.

With each new composition, the true artist steps into the UNKNOWN.

They will be quoting the Alpha Seer like hell one day ( that is why the highlighting to make it easier for them to read,–tee hee,…!)

Academics! Thy name is Horseflies- Over- Poop!

Unless you are one hell of a genius, like Titian, or Knox Martin, you cannot really escape the fate of self-doubt, as there EXISTS NOT a formula to be followed, like J. Krishnamurti used to say,” There is not a path to TRUTH!”

Balancing a composition is no easy matter,–so much harder than balancing a mathematical equation, or a check book…!– if only you guys knew what exactly the Alpha Seer is doing. Yet it was Knox each time who first observes the endgame and informs the Alpha Seer that the latter has successfully pinned his composition down. To get to the endgame, or to balance the composition, can be like catching a walleye with the teeth,–  or catching it without hook!

Come now, you guys,–those on the front rows!!! Yes, you, the entrepreneurs, you, the CEOs, you, the PhDs, you, the professors and you, the attorney,… But wait, there are no doctors in here, nor pilots, nor cops, nor art dealers, nor hookers, nor politicians… guess what? I have never known anyone in those categories. I mean,– I know quite a few hookers or politicians, for example, but they have never really existed as real people.

Why so?

Now that’s a story for another day,…

Figure 2 shows the final block print based on Woman With Cat 996, now entitled WOMAN & CAT 419 , which allows the subtleties in the Yin and Yang interactions to show through without overburdening the eyes with details.

Figure 2: WOMAN & CAT 419

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THE GREAT MASTER KNOX MARTIN HAS SPOKEN   ( www.knoxmartin.com)

THE ALPHASEER IS SO SHARP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!   KNOX

April 18, 2011

TITIAN’S LAW OF GENERAL COMPLETION OF POETRY

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 6:33 pm

Figures: from top to bottom: Rubens’ Portrait of Helena Fourment 384, Rubens’ Portrait of His Family 385, The Alpha Seer’s Yogawoman 387, The Alpha Seer’s Woman With Cat 388

The Alpha Seer was explaining composition to an audience at an art school and someone said, “Fuzzy!”

So he turned to him and said, ” Son, I hear you. But granted an addition or elimination in a composition, no matter how insignificant it might appear to you, particularly when it has changed all the dynamics in that composition,–how can you possibly call that action fuzzy?”

I did not know if he had understood what I meant. Indeed very few people from that particular audience did, as their questionings later on had testified. If a person had been asking stupid questions regarding the same issue, over and over again, for example,– the Alpha Seer would have known he was not getting it!

We have two cases in point here:
Woman with Cat 388 looks almost exactly like the one shown earlier, has now officially become a complete painting.
So has Yogawoman 387.

The additions and eliminations that have taken place seems insignificant to the uninitiated, but they have definitely changed all the dynamics in the composition.

Rubens is the First Student of Titian. I call him that because no one can understand Titian better than Rubens. Rubens is a great master in his own right, of course. The Alpha Seer calls him a student of Titian simply because he had studied Titian in his youth.

Rubens knew all of Titian’s Laws of Composition, especially the one that I had coined “Titian’s Law of General Completion of Poetry,” which deals with finishing touches.

If you take a quick glance at the Yin and Yang dynamics in Rubens’ compositions as shown here as 384 and 385, i.e. take in Yin (black) with your eye at its totality, remember the general form of it. Take a break, then quickly glance at the Yang (white) at its totality,…
What greets your eyes are two gigantic forms embracing each other intimately and snugly.

Until that happens, a composition can only be called unfinished at best!

A law is a law!

Imagine the stars do not follow the Law of Gravitation, you will surely yield a better disaster than a mere tsunami.

I can behold Joe laughing. Excellent lawyer, this Joe! He knows what I am talking about… .

I had a couple of Wahyanite lawyers here in this hall some time ago. Actually we had grown up together in Hong Kong. But they had requested to leave the hall… . They did not get it! Their request was granted forthwith, and they would not even get billed,–for the Alpha Seer teaching them Laws and Dynamics that they had failed to see! And they call themselves “lawyers,” too!

Provincial lawyers are they!

It does take a lot to be an international lawyer.

Ask Joe! Joe can tell you what it takes to become an international, or even cosmic lawyer, Joe used to teach in a law school too.

In any case, just consider this:

If Titian wants civilization to admire him for 10000 years, can he afford to be not “fuzzy ?”

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THE GREAT KNOX MARTIN HAS SPOKEN:

On Sat, Apr 16, 2011 at 12:09 PM, Knox <knox@nyc.rr.com> wrote:

DEAREST BEN
BRILLIANT WRITING !!!!!    WHERE IS THAT RUBENS OF SEATED WOMAN—–
I WOULD LIKE TO HAVE A COLOR-REPRODUCTION OF THIS PAINTING OF HIS WIFE???     KNOX
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In understanding Titian’s Law in reference to Modern Art, one must not forget to behold the great master Knox Martin (www.knoxmartin.com) and recognize him as the First Student of Titian in Modern times. (There is no such thing as “postmodern”, which is a dumb twist, or a cunning spin, in the play of words by a bunch of artists wannabe, such as Marcel Duchamp, Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, Damien Hirst, Chuck Close, Michael Foucault, etc. They do not even know what “art” means! “Postmodernism” is a scam,– a better way of looking at it,– a shoddy mind game!)

In addition, Knox is also the super-creator who has transcended Titian’s Laws, taking them to the next levels. He has created the Knox Martin woman, which is a big deal, — a big leap upward,– if you really know,– and exactly,–his invaluable contribution to Modern Art!

THE ALPHA SEER


April 1, 2011

WHAT DID MASTER BEN LAU (a.k.a the Alpha Seer) DO WHEN HE WENT TO GRADUATE SCHOOL?

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 2:30 am

What did the Alpha Seer do when he went to graduate school?

He entertained himself by going after every impostor in the so-called “artistic” industry, as the following article testifies.

An impostor is one who claims to have knowledge of spiritual truth.

(To find out about the hidden secret message, click on the brown bar above, hold, and drag it from right to left.)

The Alpha Seer is the original discoverer of the great Knox Martin, — since no one else,- let me repeat, NO ONE ELSE, in the whole wide world can really understand the enormously great impact of the super-creator called Master Knox Martin, (http:// www. knoxmartin.com) in  modern art more than the Alpha Seer does.

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First, let’s see how the great Knox Martin has always thought of the Alpha Seer,… .

Mr. Lau, in my considered opinion, is truly one of the greatest artists of our time, unknown, unsung.Knox Martin

Ben is the third son of General Lau Tung Choi, the Commander of the 63rd Chinese Nationalist Army (circa 1948).
刘栋材
1948年刘栋材任国民党第63军军长.  蔣介石當時就任中華民国總統, 抗日戰爭结束後, 中国再進入全面內戰

Both General Lau, Ben’s father, and his maternal grandfather are accomplished calligraphers. Ben had no idea that he would become an artist when he went to New York from China. His meeting with the great American master, Knox Martin (www.knoxmartin.com) in 1976 set Ben up for his artistic career because Knox Martin told him that he was the greatest Oriental artist since Hokusai.

In Ben’s works can be found the strong calligraphic and poetic elements. Ben believes that the true artist is a mediator between beauty and the material world since he is able to work magic with his subjects. For example, the material apples in Cezanne’s painting and the material sunflowers in Van Gogh’s are transcended to take on a spirituality that cannot decompose and have become timeless. That is the lesson of the mainstream masters, whom Ben believes himself heir to.

Ben is also the author of www.trueartblog.com, an art blog dedicated to teaching our society on how to appreciate true art.



The Inner issues of Painting Vs the Outer, Circumstantial Issues

Ben Lau MFA

Introduction

I have always wanted to examine the issues of interpretation, fetishism and gender- issues claimed by art historians and critics alike as significant elements in any work of art. The purpose of that is to see how research in that direction may yield something useful pertaining to a better understanding of art. However, I always think that a full understanding of a work of art must be attained through an examination at its core, that is, the art’s own reason for being, NOT by proving its relevance to outer issues which reside at the circumference of art. Of course, I am referring to that specific kind of art that steadfastly refuses to be governed under the jurisdictions of those outer issues.

A work of art’s reason for being can be found within the internal considerations of that art regarding its potency as an agent of communication, such as its structure, balance, movement, composition, inventiveness and its metaphors. Those are the inner issues of a work of art as compared to the outer ones. In other words, the reason for the art’s being lies in the consideration of those inner issues- enduring factors that may or may not provide beauty, sensuality and harmony. Those internal issues, if understood intuitively and approached appropriately, forms the core of that art. The issues of interpretation, fetishism and gender concern only with the external and circumstantial effects of that art. They have attracted attention only because of the art’s presence on the art historians’ radar of time and space.

Since contemporary discourses and critiques have placed such an extraordinarily high value on those external issues, I shall examine the New York master, Knox Martin’s works in the light of their relevance within the cultural context of the contemporary world. Eventually, I shall be able to compare such discourses with Knox Martin’s own criteria about his art in order to reap a greater clarity of vision for the viewers.

A brief biography of Knox Martin

Knox Martin was already famous in the 50s- before his protégé, Robert Rauschenberg even became an artist. He was represented by Charles Egan in the 50s sharing the same galleries with such heavy weights as de Kooning and others. He is well respected and has been thought of as an artist’s artist by contemporary artists, art historians, and critics alike. According to Edward Leffingwell, Knox Martin has an “extensive exhibition history beginning with Stable Gallery in 1953.” ( Edward Leffingwell  December Art In America).

I have chosen the art of Master Knox Martin to be the subject of my study because he proclaims his own works as heir to the tradition of painting represented by Picasso, Matisse, and de Kooning.”( www.knoxmartin.com). To be heir to such a tradition generates particular interest because many of the issues in the postmodern world can be understood in terms of their theoretical opposition to such a tradition.

Interpretation

Figure 1: Knox Martin  Caraha! Magna on Canvas 1968

Figure 1 shows Knox Martin’s Caraha! ,a painting of magna on canvas in 1968. It was the painting shown at Janos Gat Gallery in New York City in the Fall of 2001. According to Jonathan Goodman, it is “a large, sensuous work that can be read in both figurative and abstract terms.” However, I think this painting can only be read figuratively since the Knox Martin I am familiar with has never painted abstract art, if “abstract” means “non-figurative.” This is a very important point of clarification since one should not point to a deer and say, “That is a dog!”  The structure on the left represents the erect phallus and it boldly enunciates the painting’s erotic status. On the right are two breast-like forms painted in orange, white and blue stripes. Goodman said, “For all its abstraction, Caraha! is clearly meant as a deeply erotic presentation of male and female forms.” (September 2001 Art in America). That assessment is a contradiction in terms because with “abstraction” (generally understood to mean “paintings that do not deal with the representations of reality), we cannot yield “figurative!” And if it is “non-figurative,” how can there be “an erotic presentation of male and female forms?” Looking at this painting while retaining the fond memory of Knox Martin’s vast oeuvre in my mind, I can explain why it is a simple matter to decipher its meaning and to know the exact intent of the artist. The fact is that the Knox Martin I know has adopted the woman theme extensively in the vast majority of his paintings and erotica is his perennial, even lifelong subject matter.

Contemporary art critics and historians alike have assigned an important place to the interpretation of a work of art. According to Umberto Eco, the sign is a gesture produced with the intention of communicating (Eco 25). In Knox Martin’s work, the viewer receives his signs of deeply erotic connotations and the artist’s intention to communicate something erotic is therefore quite conspicuous. Umberto Eco thinks the sign is also revelatory of a contact, in a way that tells us something about the shape of the imprinter (Eco 27). In this case, the contacts are geometric forms as well as erotic forms. Umberto Eco also elaborated that texts generate, or are capable of generating, multiple (and ultimately infinite) readings and interpretations (Eco 43). In the interpretation of Knox Martin’s painting, that “text” is not a verbal one, it is a text in the form of iconography. That “text” takes the erotic forms of the phallus and breasts. In the context of Knox Martin’s usual subject matters my interpretation is predictable, reliable, and concise. This assessment of stability is at loggerhead with Eco’s claim of “infinite readings and instability of meanings.” The interpretation for Knox Martin’s works is as stable as the consistency in his art, because, firstly, Knox had pointed out in a recent interview with me ( Knox was my painting teacher at the Art Students League) that every single one of his canvases is figurative and representational (that is to say, he has never produced abstraction and has never been interested by abstraction) Secondly, his declared goal in bringing out the sensuality and voluptuousness of the transfigured female form directly point to a predictable, stable and constant artistic intent of erotica. Lastly, the meaning of his themes is only of secondary or circumstantial importance because Knox Martin, like Picasso, treats the subject matter as “an excuse for painting (Huffington 130).” Knox Martin even goes beyond that: on his website he speaks of painting itself as his subject matter!

According to Umberto Eco, “without the fluidity of meanings, what we call metaphors would be equivalent simply to say that something is something. But metaphors say that one thing is at the same time something else (Umberto Eco 40).” It appears that contemporary art critics follow this line of thinking quite often regarding interpretation and they revel in “the fluidity of meaning and the multiple readings of metaphors.” Interpretation, after all, is the stage craft of critique and it provides an incentive for an infinite number of readings, thereby keeping the readers of art criticism entertained. But entertainment does not require clarity or understanding. Neither does Arthur Danto’s statement about the works of Knox Martin bring us anywhere closer to that clarity. In his “Adventures in Pictorial Reason” (Danto /articles/ www.knoxmartin.com), Danto claims that Knox Martin’s works evoke “the circus” and they “remind” him of Andy Warhol’s Campbell Soup. If comparing real Art to “Pop Art” is a way of entertaining his readers, it is a most uninformed way indeed! And with all his prestige as a renowned art critic, Mr. Danto never has the need to revisit his fallacies and examine his poor judgment!

As I have said before, interpretation has never been a central issue with Knox Martin, as virtually all of his paintings, which are geared toward a singular, erotic reading, attest. The art critic’s blind- men- feel-the- elephant- sort of interpretations only serve to muddy the water further.

Another critic Julio Congora, obviously in deference to Danto, wrote in the Janos Gat Gallery catalogue: “In Arthur Danto’s essay on Knox Martin, Adventures in Pictorial Reason, Martin’s stripes and circles are ‘striped tents, loudly patterned costumes of clowns.’ Let us also include flamenco dress, polka dots, the contrasted black and white of the male Spanish dancer.” ( Congora 2)

At the same time, Congora concluded his essay on Knox Martin by asking: “What is the promise? What are the antipodes of the knowable?”  His answer to that question: “A basic intuition, displaying the shadows of creation at their most elemental!( Congora 2)” Here, Congora and Danto’s readings of the metaphors suggests everything from clowns to flamenco dress and polka dots to Spanish dancer, even to Andy Warhol’s Campbell Soup! In my opinion, precisely none of those interpretations has anything to do with a “basic intuition, displaying the shadows of creation at their most elemental!” (Congora 2) On the other hand, understanding the metaphors in terms of a singular and stable erotic intention can point us in that direction. It is the appropriate interpretation if we want “a basic intuition, displaying the shadows of creation at their most elemental!”( Congora 2) as Congora’s own statement attests. With the proper approach the promise of a communion with Knox Martin’s art can be realized.

Knox Martin himself, regarding his Black and White exhibition at Janos Gat Gallery said in 2001 said, “These Black and Whites are about creation and, for the most part, women and flowers. Under the new science, woman is cousin to plants; women are mobile plants (Congora 3). Knox continued to say, “Cezanne, writing about Tintoretto: He worked in black and white and red. I know what that is. Colors are painful.” (Congora3)  One can feel his powerful erotic intent in a statement like that. By referring to women as plants, he extends his eroticism to everything he touches. What is sexy is neither women nor plants but his artistic touch. By stressing the importance of black and white, he brings our focus back to the form, as the pure form has no color.

What I have tried to point out is that art critics are mostly concerned with the external or circumstantial aspects of a work of art while the artist himself is mainly concerned with the internal aspects of his own production. This issue of interpretation only represents one of the many theoretical conflicts between the artist and the art historian. It shows that each party has different interests as well as opposite agendas when looking at the same work. As a third party, I must admit that I am biased towards the artist’s opinion over that of the art historians. The reason is never convoluted: the artist is the creator of his work and he is therefore a better spokesman regarding its interpretation.

Fetishism

Charles de Brosses said that fetish is the worship of material objects originated from the primordial psyche for the individual to derive an inexplicable comfort or pleasure for such a fixation (Nelson/shiff 307). Louis Althusser appropriated the Lacanian theory, claiming that because of the split ego, an alleged development in the infant’s mirror stage, the fetishist misrecognizes his socially constructed persona as his true self (Nelson/ Shiff 315). Luce Irigaray and Julia Kristeva (Nelson/Shiff 315) held feminist views and their reading of fetishism cannot depart from their own aversion against a phallo-centric, patriarchal construction. Without exception, the contemporary art critics and writers have found fetish to be an extremely undesirable thing that confuses the split ego to fix on as a kind of comfort-yielding substitute, psychologically speaking. Fetish, according to those writers, does not just construe guilt but is also something that needs to be actively avoided in order to make inroads for the “enlightened” re-development of culture in a society.

The Enlightenment theory of fetishism decries fetishism as an idiosyncratic worship that cannot distinguish between subjective desire and objective causality. In this light, Immanuel Kant’s observation can be expected to provide a “clear” solution to the problem of fetishism. In Kant’s essay, Critique of Judgment (1790), Kant noted that the aesthetic faculty of a self-critical mind is one that is capable of distinguishing within sensuous experience between the purposive-ness of its own subjectivity and the objective purpose found in teleological systems such as biological organisms. In other words, Kant was saying that because of the debased quality of fetishism, i.e. one that is not worthy of a critical mind- an enlightened subject must be able to distinguish the aesthetic of the beautiful from that of the ugly.

Figure 2: Knox Martin Woman 2001

In Figure 2, the face of the woman occupies much of the upper left quadrant of the painting with a pair of very prominent eyes. The right ear is partially covered by a set of powerful calligraphic lines denoting the woman’s hair. The slanting nostrils pay tribute to a pair of breasts which are planted obliquely orienting toward the north-western corner in the painting. They are in much smaller proportion than the face and they take on the strange forms of cucumbers. Such a depiction is both erotic and inventive. The rest of the painting depicts the woman’s buttock, legs and other parts of her body including her organ (possibly to the left of the artist’s signature). Knox always remembers to place the organ in the majority of his paintings entitled “woman” so this one should not be an exception. The visual movements offered by powerful calligraphic lines delightfully forming the flowing cress are framed within a vast oval form, counterbalancing the firm white thigh oriented toward the northeast direction, and if connected to the nose, an S structure in the composition takes shape and looms large.

Figure 3: Zaire wood carving                       Figure 4:  African Art         Figure 5: Matisse The Blue Nude 1952

The painterly rearrangement of the various parts of the bodies, their depiction in exaggerated proportions and the way in which the metaphors are posited within powerful, calligraphic lines suggest a primitive style, which in turns implies “fetishism.” After all the visual representations from figure 2 through 5 have been carefully examined, it is not difficult to see the tribute Knox Martin pays to African art for its primitive, wildly sensuous, but pristinely geometric attributes.

To the uninitiated, the Zaire wood carving takes on a “bizarre” look, suggestive of a “fetishist” kind: the elephantine ears, the huge conical breasts, the limbs that look like bamboo trunks, the drooping inner labia of the vagina and everything else about the figure serve to “subvert” the Renaissance norm of Classicism. To eyes little accustomed to African art, the statue could even assume an aspect of “ugliness!” Figure 4 through 6 similarly suggest primitivism and “fetishism.” It may be true that African art does not conform to the usual norm of beauty in the West, yet if one looks at them with rapt attentions, an exotic kind of beauty slowly comes through.

In Figure 4, for example, the African carving of a mother antelope and her piggy-backing offspring takes on a dignified magnitude of transcendental and sensual beauty. The extremely sensuous forms and the space in between those forms suggests an uncanny geometric groundwork in the composition. The same can be said about Matisse’s Blue Nude in Figure 6, where the forms and the space in between are woven into an enduring composition. As we size these works of art up (figure 2 through 5) for the sake of comparing, it is not difficult to note Knox Martin’s allegiance towards primitive African art. If there is the evidence of a geometric groundwork (as in Classical Greek sculptures) responsible for timeless beauty and if such beauty can be felt throughout these works of art (figure 2 through 5), then the claim that fetishism is the aesthetic of the ugly is plainly unfounded and not worthy of further contemplation.

In my MFA Graduate Thesis paper, I have attributed the essence of my works to a design principle grounded in mathematical relationships that promote timeless beauty. My aesthetic is therefore one that dismisses the cultural border in art and diminishes the effect of existential relativity. Hence there is to be neither a European nor an African styled- beauty. There is only beauty! Just as one cannot describe mathematics as hermeneutical or fetishist, an art based on mathematical relationships as a ground-plan for the expression of beauty has none of that in its purity and serenity. That kind of  beauty, noted by Knox Martin in his essay in the 2001 Black and White Exhibition catalogue at the Janos Gat Galllery, is something that causes in us “an awakening beyond reservation!”

In the same essay, Knox Martin also noted, “All great works made its appearance, the poems, sculpture, paintings, music, were presented crystal clear and the nonessentials fell away.” (Congora 3). What are the nonessentials? They are those elements that are not found at the core of the work. They are called nonessential because they only refer to the work circumstantially.

Gender

According to Whitney Davis, representation is always gendered and gender is, to adopt Foucault’s thesis, a social construction (Nelson and Shiff 332). The important thing, he said, regarding the gender aspect of a representation, is “gender agreement rather than gender difference” because agreement governs difference. He also said, “ Any depictions of women and of things or environments are bound and governed by the gender with which they must all contextually agree, namely, the male inflection spread through the enunciation (Nelson and Shiff 331).” He stresses the importance in the gendering of a representation by saying, “To insist that gendering is the constitution, interrelation, and transformation of agreement classes is not only to observe how social interests, distinctions, and hierarchies in the designation of sex difference are carried through representation.”  He claims that the marking of difference cannot be seen outside of the thematic agreement. He said, “The marking of gender difference depends on and can generate an extensive and complex systematicity through agreement.” ( Nelson/ Shiff 338) As a result of this agreement and inflection, even the objects normally regarded as neutral, such as the hills and the trees, also take on their various genders.

Looking at just two paintings of Degas, Whitney Davis has already felt an urge to make the claim that he is able to identify certain gendering traits inherent in Degas’ painting (he shows two versions of Degas’ Young Spartans.) Those traits, according to Davis, are: misogyny, feminism, fetishism, pedophilia, and homoeroticism (Nelson /Shiff 340). Having said this, I presume he would imply that Degas is found guilty of all that! My critique of Whitney Davis’s observation is, even without faulting him for his pretension of authority in predicating his views on a purely external, existential and circumstantial conjecture about Degas’ painting, is that he is simply too ready to make assumptions as evidenced in many of his views. As a result, he tended to construct his thesis of gender in representations on mostly faulty and self-deceptive premises. I will adopt Knox Martin’s 2003 drawing to prove this point.

Figure 6: Knox Martin Pleaser 2003 (detail)

Figure 5 shows the detail of the 2003 drawing on paper of Knox Martin, Pleaser. It was exhibited at the Janos Gat Gallery that year in New York City. In an article written in Art in America regarding this group of drawings, Edward Leffingwell said, “There is substantial whimsy to Martin’s recent phantasmagoria of animal and human forms.”

Leffingwell also noted that Knox Martin has taken an unexpected turn into an irrational world of lust and vanity and that grotesques disport on the relatively open, glittering gold field of Pleaser.  In the drawing, an aroused male nude at the edge of the lower left quadrant bows his back in orgasm in the general direction of creatures that resemble a alligator and a bird. A horse dressed in a hide of blue flowers cavort across the drawing’s field. Leffingwell further noted that “Martin takes pleasure in his images and process, in the authority of his draftsmanship and the incisive nature of his wit, and with the simplest of mediums he invests these teeming bestiaries with the life of dreams.” ( Art in America December 2003)

However, Leffingwell also mentioned that this new work comes as a surprise to those who have long associated Martin with resolutely geometric, brightly colored abstractions, familiar to millions of New Yorkers through the vast, intersecting geometries of massive public wall paintings. To a viewer familiar with the long artistic career of Knox Martin like me, this set of new works is fully consistent with his usual operation of design within the framework of a geometric ground plan, and hence this work, Pleaser, is by no means surprising in that respect. What is truly surprising is the outpouring of curious forms and exotic associations in Knox Martin’s production. His imagination is both wondrous and inspiring considering the fact that the artist has celebrated his 82nd birthday last February. But with an astonishing I.Q. of 196, that does not surprise me at all!

Now let us return to the geometric core of his art in this drawing. As we can see, the line separating the horse-looking creature from the dog-looking one is straight and resolute. The darkly shaded area, if connected and taken in at one glance, suggests beautiful Oriental calligraphy writ large. The composition is resplendent with circles and rectangles, weaving the various forms of animals and humans into an extremely rich orgy of painterly narrative and the exotic fabric of a fable. The work is compact, powerful and transforming. In other words, Knox Martin has never abandoned his regular mode of creative operation. As an artist paying tribute to the art of Cezanne and Picasso, he is persistently working out the mathematical relationships in his composition in the same way as Matisse with his Blue Nude III.

Were Whitney Davis to look at this Knox Martin drawing, with the former’s emphasis on the need to determine the gender of representation, he would probably think of the art as assuming the gender of the heterosexual male because the images in it invoke the phantasm peculiar to the sexuality of a heterosexual male. Without dealing into the inner working of the art, which is at the core of creation, Whitney Davis has failed to explain the reason for the art’s being with that assessment- nothing more than a circumstantial speculation. To speculate on the gender of a painting cannot lead us anywhere beyond a mere inconsequent chattering about the status of the art being one of male heterosexual. It has preciously nothing to do with the potency of the art as a powerful vehicle of erotic, sensuous, geometric form of communication. In other words, Whitney Davis has failed to see the true Degas. Mr. Davis can only pick up the crumbs fell from the extravagant banquet offered by Master Degas and may he enjoy such beggary! Such a speculation by an established art critic can only lead an art student farther and farther astray and the central question of “what makes this thing tick?” can never come to its justified conclusion.

Conclusion

The issues of interpretation, fetishism and gender are issues posited at the circumference of a work of art. Arguably, they may be important points to contend with because such contemplations provide a frame of relevance for the art historians in the description of an artist’s work in the contemporary cultural context. However, I think that such contemplations are idol because any discourse of those issues can only be an outside, circumstantial depiction of that art, and it does not allow the art student a chance to visit the core of art. In order to find out about a work’s reason for being, one must examine art at its root. A tunnel vision on art is detrimental to its understanding. Instead, one must look at the big picture with the broad vision capable of scanning greatness and timeless beauty from past civilizations. The consideration of inner issues inherent in a work of art is a reliable strategy in determining an art’s calling, or its reason for being. It is vital in providing an explanation of why the work can be so enticing and engaging. In other words, to understand what makes the thing tick, one must examine it at its fundamental. Through looking at Knox Martin’s work, it is possible for the viewers to “trim away the nonessentials” (Congora 3) to finally arrive at the inner core in a work of art. The long career of this venerable artistic genius indicates that he has consistently created his art from an underlying geometric ground plan of design, the mathematical relationships of which point to the notion of sensual, sublime and transcendental beauty.

March 19, 2011

Basho, a great Japanese spirit!

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 12:45 am

Are you the butterfly
And I Chuang Tzu’s
Dreaming heart

Any parallel to Picasso’s one- line composition in poetry? You betcha!
The above Basho represents some of the greatest Japanese spirit!
But any lineage is universal, from China’s Chuang Tzu to the universal spirit of making metaphors, it belongs to ALL HUMANITY–whether it is with a line or with a slight collection of words… .

March 9, 2011

The Great Master (http://www.knoxmartin.com)In Praise of the Alpha Seer, a.k.a Master Ben Lau

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 11:15 am

Master Knox Martin says:

Shortly after teaching at the Yale Graduate
School—I left because of interim politics—I find
myself teaching at the Art Students League, my
alma mater, with hilarity in kiddo plangent ricochets.
Meeting with an extraordinary cross-section
of so-called artists, painters, sculptors, poets,
and people like others. Seeing a thousand people,
gigs at other universities and schools—I meet Mr.
Ben Lau at the Art Students League—sort of like
James Joyce
meeting Svevo-—in his classroom,
reading his effort and proclaiming “Sir, you are a
genius”—I let fall this intelligence on Ben. I have
said of Ben, “If you fell off a ladder—and your
brush hit the wall—it would be beautiful.”What
gives me the status, position, altitude to make
such a hootsy-cootchy? Same thing what gives
James Joyce clang—perfect pitch. That’s me,
which makes me the ultimate cigarro. It’s as it is,
does Ben get this? Some of it, part of it, all of its
stuff? Or does he take this to Ben’s domain—tee
hee!
Now, Ben picks up my notion of alpha art, and
takes off on the Alpha Seer puts that all into true
art blog and creates a miracle, some of it pure Ben
Lau, the rest is sweet truth. In several Titian
paintings the surface subject matter repeatedly
GIVES the message that you could not look upon
truth with impunity, to look upon truth all
mechanical things would vanish!
This is what I see as the working basics of this
book, a two edged sword cutting both ways and
being wounded at the same time in a highflying
clearing cutting a swath. Hopefully, not like a bull
in a china closet, but nailed down to specifics,
which is the way of the Alpha Seer book.
The Alpha seer burns with intelligence to torch
the doldrums of the insipid, the laughter out of
fear, herd consumption, leaders, dead fashion,
architects of rewards to no talent. Yes, no talent is
rewarded big time very fast and full so that the
vested interests won’t be threatened in their life
times(we don’t want any thing around we can’t
see) a-a-a-a-all is the same every thing is art, we
can now live the life of an artist. Tee hee, falderol.
Bruce Nauman displays a film on digging a fence
post hole on his property and says “this is art:”—
The position of the won’t be taken in, the Alpha
Seer is, nothing that Nauman has ever done is art!
Renoir said of Cézanne,“Man, he can’t put down
but three strokes, and it’s good”—good for what?
Aye—there’s the rub. Can it be, can it be, can it
really be that what is truly really essential in art be
so rare as to be done by us so very few in the face
of an ocean of art that comes out of the world
from the universities from the academies from the
rafters from the streets, it rains so-called artists,
the Turners,Monet, Pissarro, the German
Expressionists, the futurists, the ash can school—
Luks, Sloan, Bellows, Glackens,Whistler, Sir
Joshua Reynolds, South American art, all Latino
art, modern Japanese, modern Chinese, Russian,
American art,Mark Rothko, Clifford Still, Ad
Reinhardt, Gottlieb, Hans Hoffman, Jackson
Pollock—
There’s an immense sheet of wonderful people
who are not doing the central fire of art the same
way that all the rest on the list are not doing.
Francis Bacon, Turner, Damien Hirst may feed us
to the domains of non-monkey Cocco, the place
where reside—all those that promote only harmless
novelty and creatures from the id and dread
pool the drively unconscious as a Francis Bacon
painting a man on the toilet masturbating with
throat cut, lousy mealy colored and dead brushstrokes.
Of course this is button pushing
supreme—if your buttons are pushed you don’t
have to inspect the work!
All that bonafidely moves in the ultimate creation,
where creation is the subject matter—
which is anathema to what obscures, attempts to
remove all traces of whatever points to the real
thing.
Mephistopheles and a foul henchman while out
on a walk spot a man who has picked up something
in his hands glowing with a preternatural
grace, and he radiates enlightenment! The devil’s
companion asks his master, “What is that?”
Answer—“He has found truth”.””Well hell, isn’t
that bad for you?”“No” says Devil, “I will help him
to organize it.”
Would it be helpful to see a partial list of those
condemned on account of the subject matter of
their work is creation? Okay!—it’s Titian,
Velasquez, Adrien Brouwer, Franz Hals, Cézanne,
Matisse, Picasso, de Kooning and us chickens.
“On the smithy of my soul I go to create the yet
not created consciousness of my race.”—James
Joyce
As with the real stuff, which I have not included
here—ya gots ta read into the warp and weft of
the above and with rare intelligence come to grips
with what it is posited here.Who knows, Ben
Lau’s book The Alpha Seer will save the world.
—KNOX MARTIN

Professor Leander S. Hughes on His Former Mentor Master Ben Lau

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 11:12 am

PROFESSOR LEANDER S. HUGHES SAYS:

There is a crisis in the modern world of visual art.
Art has lost its taste; or rather, we have lost our
ability or will to distinguish between tastes. A
stack of Brillo boxes (Warhol, 1965) is displayed
in the
same institution as a Van Gogh and we are told
that both works should be treated as equally
great. Of course, we have the right to hold a different
opinion, but not to speak it if we have any
interest in
maintaining our appearance as educated and cosmopolitan.
Instead, we are encouraged to work
out for ourselves ways in which a stack of cardboard
boxes that once contained steel-wool scouring
pads could
somehow rival the Van Gogh: “The boxes speak to
us by depicting the pervasiveness of commercialism
in all aspects of modern life, even fine art!”
we might exclaim. And we would not be wrong.
But what about
enjoyment? What about beauty?
The modern fine art expert will tell you that
beauty is just a matter of personal taste or a figment
of our culture’s collective imagination.
There is no sense in discussing it, since even those
who claim to see it,
disagree on what is beautiful and what is not. But
are we all really so different?
If you were allowed to take either the Brillo boxes
or the Van Gogh home (and assuming the monetary
values of both were equal), which of the
works would you take? Before you answer, let us
add one more element to the above scenario:
When you get home you will be locked
in a room with nothing in it but the work you
have chosen set behind glass, and you will not be
allowed to leave the room except to use the bathroom
for seven years.
Congratulations to those of you who would
choose the Van Gogh over the Brillo boxes. You
have provided hope for the possibility of beauty
that transcends individual differences. If you are
feeling condescended right now thinking, how
could anybody not choose the Van Gogh, take a
trip to your local art museum and look at what is
on display there. How many of those works could
you call beautiful? How many of
them could engage you visually for any significant
length of time? The unfortunate but probable
answer is few, if any. “Ah, but who says those
works are meant to be beautiful?” retorts the fine
art expert.
The expert seems to have a point.Maybe a given
work was created to shock the viewer or to
encourage the viewer to re-contextualize or
deconstruct some aspect of life, society, gender,
politics, etc. Thus, even if there is some universal
element to beauty, beauty was probably the last
thing on the artist’s mind when creating the work.
More likely, the artist made a conscious attempt
to avoid beauty. “Now you’re
catching on,” says our expert.
Let us imagine that, after your thought-provoking
visit to the local modern art museum, you decide
to try out a new restaurant nearby.When the food
comes, you are amazed; you have never seen cuisine
like this before and you wonder what it is
made of, from what
country it originates, and what techniques were
used to create it—very interesting. Then you take
a bite and find to your surprise that the food has
absolutely no taste. You try another bite; again, no
flavor at
all. You complain to the waiter, and he brings you
another dish, but again, the food has no taste! You
are beginning to think you have lost your mind,
when the chef storms out of the kitchen and
demands to know what all of the fuss is about.
You explain that the food is completely tasteless.
The chef looks at you as if you were a complete
dunce and says, “Who says it’s supposed to have
taste?”
Our modern artist-turned-chef would not be in
business very long. However, museums and
schools of the fine arts continue to thrive, accepting
and producing work that lacks what would
logically seem to be the most important quality
for a visual work to possess: the
potential for long-term visual engagement and
enjoyment, aka beauty.Worse, we have been persuaded
that this situation is not a problem; that
the equivalent of a lifetime eating occasionally
thought-provoking, but utterly flavorless food is
the norm, if not the ideal. In fact, many of us have
been so focused on everything but the visual flavor
of the works we view as to lose or even fail to
ever gain the awareness that some works really do
have the power to visually engage us and provide
lasting enjoyment. Lacking the awareness of beauty,
we doom ourselves to a world in which there is
no difference between a Van
Gogh and a stack of cardboard boxes or a
Cezanne and jar of human feces (ala Manzoni,
1961).
The purpose of this book is to awaken us from
the purgatorial dream cast upon us by modern art
aficionados.“Alpha Seer” is a term invented by the
author referring to one who is fully awakened to
beauty. Through his lectures, master painter and
Alpha Seer Ben Lau helps summon and deepen
our ability to sense and appreciate the dynamic
interaction of form, line, and color in great works
of art. Although this
dynamism, which the author describes as a
supreme mathematical relationship, cannot be
distilled into a formula or recipe for beauty, it can
be pointed to through leading the viewer’s attention
to certain characteristics in a piece. To lead
our attention thus,Master Lau brings out the
geometric ground plan of masterworks in detailed
diagrams, while describing the relationships highlighted
in his commentaries.
Through the development of well-defined terminology,
eyeball comparisons of different works
and succinct logical arguments, Master Lau brings
the attentive reader to an understanding of
metaphor and the difference between a masterpiece,
which possesses metaphor, and an illustration,
which does not possess it. Throughout the
book,Master Lau makes clear that the views
expressed are not his alone but are also held by
other Alpha Seers including master painter Knox
Martin, who has contributed the preface of this
book, and other great masters who have come
before him.
Ultimately, the Alpha Seer helps us achieve an
understanding of great visual art as just one manifestation
of the rhythms and poetic movement
which also underlie master works in music, literature,
dance
and other forms of artistic expression. Moreover,
through sensitizing the reader to the supreme
mathematical relationships in masterful art, it
leads the attentive reader to the experience of
beauty which goes beyond the individual, beyond
culture, and beyond thought itself.

Leander S. Hughes is currently
teaching at Saitama University, Japan.

Professor Leander S Hughes (Saitama University) on Master Ben Lau

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 11:05 am

PROFESSOR LEANDER S. HUGHES

ON THE ALPHASEER

More than a decade has passed since I first met Ben Lau, but I remember the occasion well. I was a student at the Rudy and Lola Perpich Center for Arts Education, and Ben was a special guest at our school, invited to present before our entire student body. Things got off to a rocky start when Ben put a black and white copy of a Cezanne and one of a Pissarro side by side on the overhead and asked the audience which was a better composition. Ben never had a chance to move forward from this initial question, as students around me jumped up in protest: “How can you say one work of art is better than another?!” one student shouted, “It’s just your opinion!” Soon the hall was consumed in chaos with students interrupting Ben, talking over each other in their self-righteous tirade against this apparent act of artistic discrimination. For all of their talk about equality and mutual understanding, my classmates showed themselves to be thoroughly bigoted in their refusal to even allow Ben to explain himself. So, the first time I ever spoke to Ben was when I went up to him that day to apologize for the rude treatment he had received and to tell him that I would have liked to hear what he had to say. A year later, Ben came back to our school offering to be a mentor to anyone interested. I applied straight away, and Ben has been a mentor and good friend to me ever since.

There was no sudden enlightenment studying under Ben. I was a very skeptical student in the beginning. I did not see the beauty in his work. In fact, I did not see beauty in anyone’s work, including my own. Sometimes I liked a painting because it got me fantasizing or philosophizing about this or that, but my ability to take pleasure in something at a purely visual level was close to nil. Gradually though, over countless Saturday afternoons spent with Ben looking at the paintings in his many art books- engaging with Titian, Hals, Matisse, Van Eyck, Hokusai, and Knox Martin to name just a few- I began to feel something in those works: the way the dark and light embraced and intertwined, the energy and certainty of the brush strokes. Slowly, I began to taste, if ever so slightly, the dynamism and vitality of those great compositions, and in time, my appreciation went deeper- to a level which may well be impossible to explain: when a painter takes something essential to the human experience and reinvents it in the two-dimensional space of a canvas, letting the power of that thing guide each line and tap out the rhythmic dance of dark and light, then that painting becomes a thing onto itself- a small universe into which we can step and exist indefinitely, if we wish, simply by giving it our full attention. If this isn’t Beauty with a capital “B,” then it is at least one very important kind of beauty- one that has added immeasurable richness to my life and one that is clearly present in some paintings more than others.

Ben has a website at www.thealphaseer.com upon which he refers to himself as the Alphaseer- I laughed when I first read this self-bestowed title, but the title is not a product of an enflamed ego: Rather it is an honest appraisal of Ben’s own ability. Ben could see Beauty (yes, I think it deserves a capital “B”), whereas my art school classmates and I could not. Now thanks to Ben’s mentorship, I too can catch a glimpse into Beauty’s secret chambers, and for this I am truly grateful, but Ben remains light-years ahead of me- he can actually CREATE Beauty consistently with every new work he produces. Thus, I think “Alphaseer” may actually be a shade too modest- Ben, to me, is the Alphacreator: he creates Beauty on a daily basis and that Beauty is a gift to everyone willing to take the time to really see it. If I had the money to be Ben’s patron, I would buy up all of his work in an instant- not because doing so would be a wise investment (as it surely would be), but just so I could surround myself in the timelessness of his art. For now though, I can only offer this humble endorsement along with my heartfelt thanks to Ben and my hope that, in some small way, I may help bring to him the wider recognition he so deeply deserves.

Professor Leander s. Hughes is currently teaching at Saitama University, Japan.

*********************************************************************************************

Lee,

That was a beautiful statement, Lee, thank you for writing with such
heartfelt honesty. It’s always good to hear about my dad’s work from
someone else. Growing up in a household where I’m constantly
surrounded by these works and where the Alphacreator is also my dad
(you know how that is), I often take for granted my seemingly
effortless ability to discern Beauty from non-beauty – but I realize
time and again it is only because my dad raised me this way, so that
seeing art is like a native language.

I hope this can be published some day.

Love,
Isabella

Isabella is the daughter of Ben Lau, a.k.a. the Alpha Seer

Karen Monson

to me

show details Dec 6 (2 days ago)

This is so Beautiful and so true, Ben.  I remember the first time I met you … and that day very well.  Thank you for sharing this.  Karen

Karen M. is the lady who, in Leander Hughes’ youth had brought about the meeting of the latter and the Alpha Seer.

Master Knox Martin on Ben Lau

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 5:38 am

Shortly after teaching at the Yale Graduate
School—I left because of interim politics—I find
myself teaching at the Art Students League, my
alma mater, with hilarity in kiddo plangent ricochets.
Meeting with an extraordinary cross-section
of so-called artists, painters, sculptors, poets,
and people like others. Seeing a thousand people,
gigs at other universities and schools—I meet Mr.
Ben Lau at the Art Students League—sort of like
James Joyce meeting Svevo-—in his classroom,
reading his effort and proclaiming “Sir, you are a
genius”—I let fall this intelligence on Ben. I have
said of Ben, “If you fell off a ladder—and your
brush hit the wall—it would be beautiful.”What
gives me the status, position, altitude to make
such a hootsy-cootchy? Same thing what gives
James Joyce clang—perfect pitch. That’s me,
which makes me the ultimate cigarro. It’s as it is,
does Ben get this? Some of it, part of it, all of its
stuff? Or does he take this to Ben’s domain—tee
hee!
Now, Ben picks up my notion of alpha art, and
takes off on the Alpha Seer puts that all into true
art blog and creates a miracle, some of it pure Ben
Lau, the rest is sweet truth. In several Titian
paintings the surface subject matter repeatedly
GIVES the message that you could not look upon
truth with impunity, to look upon truth all
mechanical things would vanish!
This is what I see as the working basics of this
book, a two edged sword cutting both ways and
being wounded at the same time in a highflying
clearing cutting a swath. Hopefully, not like a bull
in a china closet, but nailed down to specifics,
which is the way of the Alpha Seer book.
The Alpha seer burns with intelligence to torch
the doldrums of the insipid, the laughter out of
fear, herd consumption, leaders, dead fashion,
architects of rewards to no talent. Yes, no talent is
rewarded big time very fast and full so that the
vested interests won’t be threatened in their life
times(we don’t want any thing around we can’t
see) a-a-a-a-all is the same every thing is art, we
can now live the life of an artist. Tee hee, falderol.
Bruce Nauman displays a film on digging a fence
post hole on his property and says “this is art:”—
The position of the won’t be taken in, the Alpha
Seer is, nothing that Nauman has ever done is art!
Renoir said of Cézanne,“Man, he can’t put down
but three strokes, and it’s good”—good for what?
Aye—there’s the rub. Can it be, can it be, can it
really be that what is truly really essential in art be
so rare as to be done by us so very few in the face
of an ocean of art that comes out of the world
from the universities from the academies from the
rafters from the streets, it rains so-called artists,
the Turners,Monet, Pissarro, the German
Expressionists, the futurists, the ash can school—
Luks, Sloan, Bellows, Glackens,Whistler, Sir
Joshua Reynolds, South American art, all Latino
art, modern Japanese, modern Chinese, Russian,
American art,Mark Rothko, Clifford Still, Ad
Reinhardt, Gottlieb, Hans Hoffman, Jackson
Pollock—
There’s an immense sheet of wonderful people
who are not doing the central fire of art the same
way that all the rest on the list are not doing.
Francis Bacon, Turner, Damien Hirst may feed us
to the domains of non-monkey Cocco, the place
where reside—all those that promote only harmless
novelty and creatures from the id and dread
pool the drively unconscious as a Francis Bacon
painting a man on the toilet masturbating with
throat cut, lousy mealy colored and dead brushstrokes.
Of course this is button pushing
supreme—if your buttons are pushed you don’t
have to inspect the work!
All that bonafidely moves in the ultimate creation,
where creation is the subject matter—
which is anathema to what obscures, attempts to
remove all traces of whatever points to the real
thing.
Mephistopheles and a foul henchman while out
on a walk spot a man who has picked up something
in his hands glowing with a preternatural
grace, and he radiates enlightenment! The devil’s
companion asks his master, “What is that?”
Answer—“He has found truth”.””Well hell, isn’t
that bad for you?”“No” says Devil, “I will help him
to organize it.”
Would it be helpful to see a partial list of those
condemned on account of the subject matter of
their work is creation? Okay!—it’s Titian,
Velasquez, Adrien Brouwer, Franz Hals, Cézanne,
Matisse, Picasso, de Kooning and us chickens.
“On the smithy of my soul I go to create the yet
not created consciousness of my race.”—James
Joyce
As with the real stuff, which I have not included
here—ya gots ta read into the warp and weft of
the above and with rare intelligence come to grips
with what it is posited here.Who knows, Ben
Lau’s book The Alpha Seer will save the world.
—KNOX MARTIN

February 15, 2011

THE ONLY WAY to view Cezanne’s painting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 8:18 am

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Ben Lau <alphaseer@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Feb 14, 2011 at 9:24 PM
Subject: Fwd: Cezanne
To: Ben Lau <alphaseer@gmail.com>


Thus has the great master Knox Martin spoken…!

(Referring to the forwarded Knox Martin e-mail at the second half of this post.)

Cezanne is such a holy man, a true hero,– yet illiterates everywhere in the world have cheapened him unto a type of commercial bargain that whosoever can mutter a line of gibberish and subsequently get it published somewhere may walk away with a piece of him, believing that no one under the holy sky is watching,–or even can, as far as our good intuition goes, fully acknowledge that as an act of shameless looting.

ADMIT IT:

Cezanne has not been admired so far out of an ounce of my own understanding in art, but rather because of my own fear,– a morbid fear that my neighbor will laugh himself into hysteria, beginning to treat me like a bunny face dummy should I fail to align or attune my own share of admiration for one who had consistently and unremittingly attracted such universal awe– for reasons beyond all pale,– probably even for no obvious reason at all…!

I wonder how many here in this room ( i.e. the group that the Alpha Seer regularly corresponds with) would look at our Cezanne painting here, and with total candidness, admit to having no understanding of it at all?

Let splendid truth be told,–and by the Alpha Seer’s estimation through his uncanny scanning across all light obstructing things,– perhaps not even 10% in this vastly enlightened hall, so filled indeed to the beam with such extremely smart folks,– can legitimately claim to have even an ounce of understanding for our Cezanne here!

Without having fully consulted the Yin and Yang apparatus in composition as expounded in previous chapters on this website, www.thealphaseer.com, the Alpha Seer will have to doubt that any person in the world, however smart he/she is, can legitimately claim to have successfully taken on The Card Players by Cezanne!

To the effect that my observation is correct, one must admit this: art can be a very difficult subject indeed,– made even more so, just as a mysterious book being misleadingly camouflaged with a straightforward and easy cover to trick the uninitiated into believing it as a simple or even simplistic matter for the mind.

Had folks flocked to see the Knox Martin show purely for its own merit,( alas, more than 800 counted in a single evening!) –not just because the man had once taught at Yale, known to be a genius (the Alpha Seer had repeatedly said so,) nor had his works not been collected in major museums everywhere in this country, nor because he had taught at the renowned, historic, and privileged Art Students League and so forth, I would simply open my arms and proclaim that the Alpha Seer may now retire into the peaceful seclusion of universal enlightenment without guilty of being indifferent to the predicaments of his fellow men,…– but the situation is unfortunately a more complicated one.

On the other hand, art can also be such a simple thing, a thing of such pure unalloyed poetry and beauty,– yet have we so barbarically, and mechanically turned it into such twisted notions and irrelevant ugliness!

All because of what?

E    G    O        !

And consider the following question:

HOW MANY HERE WILL NOT, FROM NOW ON, LOOK AT A CEZANNE DIFFERENTLY,– AND PROBABLY WITH A DIFFERENT KIND OF AWE,–THE AWE THAT HAS ARISEN FROM THE BOTTOM OF ONES HEART, FOR THE ENORMOUS GENIUS OF A GREAT MASTER? –INDEED TO EXPERIENCE THE AWE OUT OF TRUE UNDERSTANDING, RATHER THAN BECOMING FEARFUL OUT OF HERD INSTINCTS?

MAKE THIS YOUR RESOLUTION THEN:

UNTIL I HAVE FULLY UNDERSTOOD THE ART OF PAUL CEZANNE, HOW HIS ART HAS BEEN PASSED ONTO THE NEXT GENERATIONS OF SUPER-CREATORS SUCH AS MATISSE AND PICASSO, THEN GORKY, DE KOONING, ELIAS GOLDBERG, KNOX MARTIN AND BEN LAU, I CANNOT POSSIBLY THINK OF MYSELF AS AN ENLIGHTENED BEING IN THE WORLD, OF HAVING THE SUBLIME GIFT, –OF THE SEEING OF BEAUTY AND POETRY.

INDEED, WITHOUT SUCH UNDERSTANDING,–I.E. THE SUBLIME UNDERSTANDING OF BEAUTY AND POETRY, YOU REMAIN MERELY AS ONE OF THE HERD, MY FRIEND,–OF THE CATTLE SOCIETY!

DON’T BELIEVE ME?

JUST ASK THIS:

CAN ONE REALLY BE CALLED HUMAN WITHOUT BEING ENLIGHTENED?


———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Knox <knox@nyc.rr.com>
Date: Mon, Feb 14, 2011 at 4:47 PM
Subject: Re: Cezanne
To: David Kramer <dhkramer@verizon.net>

THROW UP MY HANDS !!!  NO CLUE  !  WHAT IS TALKED ABOUT IS
SHEER GOBBLEDYGOOK !  THE PAINTING IS DESTROYED BY CRIMINALS———-HOW TRULY BEAUTIFUL THIS PAINTING IS !
IT IS SAD THAT CEZANNE IS IN THE HANDS OF PORNOGRAPHERS WHO PRETEND TO KNOW!  ART IS KILLED, A HOT DOG IS OFFERED —-NO ONE KNOWS !!!  POP ART,POST MODERNISM IS HOT DOG THAT ATE THE WORLD!!!!!!!!                              KNOX
—– Original Message —–
To: Knox
Sent: Monday, February 14, 2011 1:35 PM
Subject: Cezanne
ART REVIEW

Workers at Rest: Smoking and Playing Cards

By KAREN ROSENBERG
Published: February 10, 2011
“Cézanne’s Card Players,” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, sounds like a show for our high-stakes moment. But the real appeal of this mini-blockbuster is its modest vision of a rural pastime, rendered with infinite patience. The big players who dominate the art world today would have a hard time identifying with Cézanne’s peasants and laborers: men quietly passing the time, happy enough with the hand that life has dealt them.
Samuel Courtauld Trust, The Courtauld Gallery, London
Metropolitan Museum of Art “Cézanne’s Card Players” features the artist’s family gardener and a farm worker.

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With his series of “Card Players,” Cézanne reclaimed — and transformed — an activity from 17th-century genre painting. He dispensed with the sermonizing implicit in most earlier images of card playing, replacing sloppy-drunk gamblers with sober, stone-faced tradesmen. Yet he stopped short of portraiture, keeping his subjects — who were also his employees — at a socially appropriate distance.

“Today everything is changing, but not for me,” Cézanne said. “I live in my hometown, and I rediscover the past in the faces of people my age.” He found at least two such faces close at hand, on his family’s estate outside Aix-en-Provence: those of the gardener Paulin Paulet and the farm worker Père Alexandre.

At the Met these rugged characters appear again and again in the paintings and in numerous individual figure studies. Yet we never really get to know them; they remain “types,” as defined by their leisure activities —card playing, smoking — as they are by their métiers, their work.

In that sense the “Card Players,” which all date from the 1890s, romanticize agrarian Provençal culture and reaffirm centuries-old French social hierarchies. They’re the product of an isolated man in his 50s, living and working on his family estate hundreds of miles away from an uproarious Paris. But it’s impossible to ignore the paintings’ overtures to Modernism: their patchy surfaces, compressed spaces and figurative liberties, which have moved Léger and Jeff Wall, among others, to pay tribute.

“Cézanne’s Card Players” was organized by the Met in conjunction with the Courtauld Gallery in London, where it appeared last fall. The Met’s version of the show has fewer major works, even without accounting for the absence of “The Smoker,” from theHermitage in St. Petersburg; a recent legal dispute has prevented that painting from traveling to the United States. Two important versions of the “Card Players”— the Barnes Foundation’s large one, which never travels, and a smaller canvas from a private collection — are here only in reproduction. But the Met’s incomplete deck is still deeply engrossing.

The Met curator Gary Tinterow has fleshed out the show with a small gallery of works from the museum’s collection that typify the card-playing and smoking genres. These include 17th-century Dutch and Flemish etchings of jolly taverngoers, politically incisive 19th-century cartoons by Daumier, and Manet’s print of a philosophical-looking smoker.

The players in most of these works are prone to greed, lust or acts of violence — sometimes all three. An etching after Caravaggio’s “Cardsharps” carries an inscription from Horace: “That game indeed gives rise to restless strife and anger.”

Cézanne had clearly studied images like this one; he called his “Card Players” “souvenirs of the museums.” But he managed to separate the motif from its attendant morality.

Wine? In Cézanne’s paintings there’s sometimes a bottle on the table, but no glasses. Women? Not a one. And gambling? We don’t see any money changing hands. Nor do we have any sense of who’s winning or losing.

Much wall text is devoted to the curatorial parlor game of sequencing the paintings in the series; new research indicates that Cézanne worked on the four- and five-figure groupings first, then moved on to the two-player compositions.

More intriguing, to the nonexpert, is Cézanne’s way of shuffling the cards: making individual studies and then assembling them on canvas, in various permutations. This explains the curious lack of interaction between the players — “a kind of collective solitaire,” in the words of the critic Meyer Schapiro.

The alienation is most pronounced in the Barnes painting, but it’s apparent enough in the Met’s version. The table seems hardly big enough to accommodate the three broad-shouldered men, yet each is absorbed in his hand. A fourth, standing, waits his turn.

The mood is more intense, and the dynamic a bit less stable, in the two-player groupings on the opposite wall. (One hails from the Musée d’Orsay, the other from the Courtauld.) The peasants, seated on opposite sides of a table, mirror each other’s gestures; a wine bottle divides the scene neatly in half. But the scene, though exquisitely balanced, isn’t symmetrical; the table is slightly askew, and you can tell from the men’s shoulders — one pair thin and rounded, the other broad and square — that they would not be well matched in a fight.

The angular physique belongs to the gardener, Paulet, recognizable from several studies. The other man, with the pipe and the more Gallic profile, also appears on paper but hasn’t been conclusively identified. Both, along with Père Alexandre, return in a final and phenomenal gallery of single-figure paintings.

Here smoking, not card playing, is the main activity. You can almost smell the tobacco in “Man With a Pipe,” with its proto-Giacometti, nicotine-stained palette, and “The Smoker” (from the Kunsthalle Mannheim, the only one of three “Smokers” to have made the trip). Looking at the able-bodied yet vacant-eyed figure of Paulet, in the riveting “Smoker,” you sense that Cézanne needed his subjects to be as absorbed in their leisure as he was in his work.

It’s strange, then, that the young peasant in another standout painting — from a private collection — isn’t smoking or playing cards or doing anything at all. His eyes are downcast but expressive, shaded with anxiety or exhaustion. Here Cézanne comes close to portraiture. Otherwise, he is a master of the poker face.

“Cézanne’s Card Players” continues through May 8 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; (212) 535-7710, metmuseum.org.

A version of this review appeared in print on February 11, 2011, on page C28 of the New York edition.


THE ALPHA SEER

January 17, 2011

COMPOSITION IN ART: THE EMBRACE OF YIN AND YANG

Filed under: Uncategorized — MASTER BEN LAU @ 11:45 pm

Knox

to me

show details Jan 7 (10 days ago)
STUNNING!!!!!!!!!!   KNOX
Figure 1: Satyr and Nymph Series 941 by the Alpha Seer formerly called Ben Lau
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The great master Knox Martin (www.knoxmartin.com) says “Stunning!!!!!!!!!!”, and please note the number of bars in this hearty exclamation….
When Knox Martin says stunning, no one in the world can argue against it, since he is the ULTIMATE authority in this game.
So are you saying you don’t believe in authority…?
BRAVO, my son…!
No,…don’t get me wrong! Now wait a minute: I was just about to applaud you, except for the fact that, when all of a sudden, looking out from my car going down Lyndale Avenue S. by Uptown, I saw this huge crowd scrambling for  tickets in subzero weather, with everyone squeezing into Walker Art Center for a glimpse of the universally admired Andy Warhol, his Brillo Boxes, his Campbell Soups, Monroe silkscreens, Mao in heavy cosmetics and all,…Aha, I almost forgot, the renowned critic Mary Abbe had earlier spoken fondly about the whole racket, declaring that Warhol had successfully made a sociologically relevant statement for our times and so forth… !
Ah! Pop art, the rage of the 21st Century!
Thus had the renowned Mary Abbe from the Star Tribune spoken…!
And in that crowd I saw YOU !
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I heard Andy had, before dying of AIDS, made a big pile of money after pulling off this trick of a make-believe-it -is- art game,– he and accomplice Robert Rauschenberg, allegedly supported by the broadest of a general public ever recorded in the history of mankind, especially by those citizens who had loudly proclaimed their sacred independence from the influence of all authorities, and had challenged authority ferociously,–while ironically under the horrendous influence of the same anyway,– in whatsoever way, form, color or smell they had proceeded by….
Can the Alpha Seer not see this coming ?
Impossible!
He has not called himself the Alpha Seer for some idol reasons!
And now he must also call himself the Clarifier, “to clarify for Humanity” is the meaning of that term, quite a strange one, eh? ( I know Kate would laugh right out again…, she is sunbathing in Thailand now, but who cares,–as long as it does not mean “the Pope!”…?)
But there, I am not withholding my applause, son, I have yet to dispense it like every single permissive parent you find in this country, as you have the gut to stand up and protest against authority! And really some gut,– and oh, by that I mean courage, (aside) –He, hee,… truly not bad for a blind fish who is entitled to fully nothing but darkness, and the murky river to swim in,…–where the arse of an elephant might be just as good as his balls,… and if I could remember correctly: someone from Harvard University with Ph.D had put that in your fine head, and instantly you were charmed,– and full credibility was given him without question… by you , son!
Nevertheless, even with that dismal recall I still won’t let thing stand in the way, your daring has impressed me, and that would still set you apart, at least,–from the crowd who obey nothing but their own herd instincts!
Well, if nothing else, the Clarifier is hereby giving you his approval for your boldness– following some good examples of contemporary parents whose indulgence in their child’s immense ego, while dwarfing it with theirs, ( the parents’ indulgence, obviously is so much more immense that the boy’s ego is no match for it…,) applaud the little brute’s ignorance, incompetence and laziness….!
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Had Knox Martin passed a comment without the slightest deliberation on whatsoever was being said, unaware of how others might be thereby affected, or in so doing, forgetting that he has a fine reputation to protect, being a serious master as he is, on the art scene of New York city for the past 60+ years, then we can surely argue that Knox is just voicing his own opinion,–and nothing else but that…!
However, any full bloomed idiot who has been following the Alpha Seer for any number of years, or someone who has paid attention to the Alpha Seer’s art blog for the last 7, will know very well this is hardly the case at all!
Were Knox to act like the deluded buffoons who are currently running the shows of art criticisms in all of our U.S. academia, and who do not know what exactly they themselves are talking about,–then we can all agree that, here too, we have a most careless man, by the name of Knox Martin, whose judgment and character we question… !
However, a reasonable and careful research on Knox Martin, his profile, his art, or his humanity, will yield nothing but the finding that none of the above is true! And knowing where Knox is coming from is an additional piece of excellent data that can be played like a trump card, to dispel any lingering doubts on his character or judgment!
Knox the artistic genius has indeed based his critique on such great masters as Titian, Van Eyck, Frans Hals, Adriaen Brouwer, Rubens, Ingres, Cezanne, Matisse, Picasso, and de Kooning, etc.
Now one can see that his statement of “Stunning!!!!!!!!!!” is not by any means, just blabbering from  his personal opinion, nor is it careless utterance, since, with the supreme backing of the masters that had existed before him, whatsoever he is saying about art can be found to be fully substantiated.
In other words, in whatever artist statement that those aforesaid masters had been in consensus of, there is nothing that will prevent Knox Martin from knowingly concurring on the same !
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Why has the Clarifier made that long drawn-out, yet logically sound, step-by step, reasoning? Is he trying to prove something? Sometimes it just might appear to be so redundant or childish about this Clarifier, since it certainly appears that he had argued something similar before… .
And the answer to that is, my son, were it not for this notion that, seeing art, or its existence thereof, is indeed hard for most people, the Clarifier would have contentedly retired into oblivion. And, as I recall, it has taken someone with great honesty, some heavy- weight in art, by the name of Henri Matisse, to persistently spell out the following:
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“IF CEZANNE IS RIGHT, THEN I, HENRI MATISSE, AM RIGHT TOO!”
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So folks, since most of you here may not be as artistically endowed as Henri Matisse, it is therefore pertinent to admit full ignorance, be genuinely humble, to rein in the ego and its indulgence, before one can get even the slightest chance of an induction into enlightenment!
You cannot get enlightened simply because you have desired it. If you were ever enlightened, it is a happening !  So my proposal is, why not simply return to the real authorities in art, — the REAL THINGS, — like Van Eyck, Titian, Frans Hals, Rubens, Adriaen Brouwer, Cezanne, Degas, Ingres, Picasso and Matisse, etc.? Then the next step is to fortify yourself with the passion of diligence and focus, before embarking on the study of art from its sacred source ?  Once you are armed with that noble knowledge of composition, this is what I will say to you, lad: Welcome back to the current conversation! Take a serious look at our art here. Look again and again before beautiful things come your way like breeze in Spring, then properly relax and allow more pleasant surprises to overwhelm you throughout this religious viewing, eventually to decipher the underlying wisdom of Knox’s critique of “Stunning!!!!!!!!!!”
May the Clarifier himself also make an addition here then,

This art, entitled Satyr and Nymph Series 941, IS TRULY ONE POETRY OF AN EXPOSITION,–one hell of a significant phenomenon,– not to be repeated again for the next 200 years!

The Clarifier must blow his own trumpet since there is not another art critic out there in the whole wide world who is up to it and therefore, has a single clue about it!

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This art therefore deserves better and more profound scrutiny,– and of course it takes more than just the simplistic reaction, one of robotically reacting to existence, following the instincts of the herd, and of mindlessly answering an all-call from sad looking Mary Abbe of the Star Tribune, to eventually getting into line,– all stupidity piling upon one frigid day at Walker Poverty Center, for a clueless glimpse of one con-man, Andy Warhol, pulling his trick of “Everything is art,–and mark my words for it: Nothing in the world can therefore be non-art!
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WHY WOULD MILLIONS OF FOLKS SEE A SHOW SO DISMALLY DEVOID OF EVEN THE FAINTEST OF SUBSTANCE–WHEREIN NO MERIT IS EVER DETECTABLE, NO VALUE EVER REDEEMABLE,–WHERE NOT EVEN A FORMER GHOST OF ART IS PRESENT…?
That question, just as “Why Hitler had succeeded in killing so many Jews?” EQUALLY relevant,–always baffles the mind!
But this dialog must be kept valid, and this question constantly asked, so the mind may snap to attention, become vigilant, and become aware again!
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The moment you have realized that none of what you used to do,– especially when it comes to art, can make any sense in life anymore,–that same “million- dollar moment” experienced by my former protege, Professor Leander S. Hughes, of Saitama University, for example, then you know you have arrived–inside you!
When that happens, may you have my heartfelt blessings, son! And may I assure you that it is just the sweetest moment of your life!
How so?
You have hit ENLIGHTENMENT, yes, the jackpot that is ENLIGHTENMENT!–and you alone would know it!
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Until then, my son, you are simply as blind, and as miserable, as a bat.., or even blinder than one!
And why do I care? I will tell you why some other days, but for now it suffices to say simply this:
You’ve got to understand your own predicaments, as
YOU HAVE STUPIDLY SQUANDERED YOUR HUMANITY: THE RARE OPPORTUNITY FOR BEING HUMAN, THROWING IT OUT like a manic spendthrift, the rare, golden opportunity for being human….!
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The CLARIFIER, formerly known as the Alpha Seer
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