'Unexpected Art' - finding beauty everyday
By Jody
Ewing
09/02/04
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photo by
Jody Ewing |
As Sioux City's annual ArtSplash Festival kicks off this Labor Day weekend, art aficionados will once again trek to the Anderson Dance Pavilion for some family entertainment and to search for what they have come to expect: featured artists from around the country with arts and crafts for sale. For those paying close attention, however, the art may find them first: the cracked windshield making a rainbow as the sun shines through, or even the label on the can of soda sitting in the car's console. It is "unexpected art" - the kinds we find in our everyday lives but seldom take note as art.
And, according to 19th-century novelist Henry James, "It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes importance and I know of no substitute whatever for the force and beauty of its process."
Art as nature's child
In "American Beauty," the Oscar award-winning 1999 film starring Kevin Spacey and Annette Bening, the movie trailer's narrator invited the viewer to "look closer." Through the young character Ricky Fitts (played by Wes Bentley), one sees that beauty is indeed all around us, if only we take time to look, and look closer.
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Eye catching labels help the consumer identify the product and express individuality with art. For more information on wine or cigar labels, visit www.stratsplace.com or www.instoneinc.com. |
Art, like beauty, takes on many shapes, sizes, colors and forms. Unexpected art can be anything from a dazzling sight that suddenly catches our eye to something we've seen dozens of times but all at once witness with newfound acuity.
Nature
provides us ample opportunity to appreciate its basic handiwork. Few
have not seen a baby robin in a nest. A closer inspection reveals
multi-layered details: a reflection of sun bouncing from the sky-blue
eggs, a nest of loosely woven twigs and branches at the base spread out
for reinforcement, and the top of nest wrapped as tightly as a ball of
twine. Sturdy branches of green and red leaves buttress the nest from
high summer winds.
With
the winter comes tree riming, when ice crystals fall from a cold layer
aloft and converge with supercooled droplets below. The particles break
and splinter, resulting in different sized crystals that adhere to the
tree on contact. The result is a picturesque postcard of a sparkling
crystallized tree.
Art unwrapped
Unexpected
art is carried into households on a regular basis, and almost just as
quickly tucked away in cabinets and drawers. It is as close as the soup
can on the second shelf or the bottle of fabric softener in the laundry
room.
As
consumers we have grown so accustomed to our regularly purchased
products that their labels merely serve as markers of what brands we
normally buy. Yet some of the highest quality art resides on those very
product labels. The labels and the packaging are likely what inspired
us to try the product to begin with.
Two
image-oriented product labels have been admired and studied for
centuries. Wine labels range in artwork from wild horses to Ancient
Egyptians, while cigar wrappers depict everything from the bald eagle's
freedom to gold diggers striking it rich. Collectors of both cigar and
wine labels often pay top dollar for original decals.
Art
& Betsy Stratemeyer have devoted their website "Strat's Place" to
wine, gardening and the arts, and with their reader's help have posted
thousands of historical and contemporary wine labels, including those
unusual and handmade. In addition to U.S. labels they also include
striking labels from Germany and New Zealand, as well as Australia,
France, Italy and Spain. They dedicate a special section to Mouton
Rothschild's artwork, from 1873 through 1999.
For
consumers who have yet to sample a specific wine, labels draw them in
with elaborate colors of blues and bronze, and reflect the "luxury
status" of some using silver and "rich" gold. Others project peaceful
imagery of isolated vineyards.
The
1990 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve from the Robert Mondavi
Winery features a sketch of the winery's entrance against a backdrop of
rolling hills and mountains. The 1997 La Sirena Sangiovese portrays a
blue mermaid holding a golden spear with gold lettering wrapping above
her like an enveloping ocean top.
The
printing on labels also defines the product and is no accidental
artwork. When the Egyptologist Howard Carter entered King Tutankhamen's
tomb in 1922, he found 26 years whose labels were written in a
simplified form of hieroglyphic with names of the vineyard along with
the chief vintner. Lettering often is bordered with handmade pictures
of everything from vines to the type of grape.
Cigar
makers use these same techniques, combining various forms of gold
lettering with photos of tobacco fields or art that defines American
culture. The colorful recreational designs help sell the public one of
life's basic pleasures.
InStone,
Inc. out of Encinitas, Calif., dedicates its Website to fine cigar
label art while appealing to the advanced collector. Like Strat's
Place, InStone also invites viewers to submit unusual artwork or labels
not already featured on the site. Collectors have more than a few from
which to choose; at the turn of the 19th century more than 350,000
brands were marketed in the United States alone.
photo by
Jody Ewing
Even somethings as simple as a winter's day can create
a picturesque scene.
Expect the unexpected

To
experience art in all its forms and colors is to gain a better
understanding of one's self. Unexpected art, and where we choose to
find it, reflects our goals and values and how we define our own
American beauties.
"Art
is a selective re-creation of reality according to an artist's
metaphysical value-judgments," wrote author Ayn Rand in her 1965 essay,
'The Psycho-Epistemology of Art.' "An artist recreates those aspects of
reality which represent his fundamental view of man's nature."
Looking
for unexpected art can be as simple as a visit to our own back yard or
a trip down the aisle of the local grocery store. The beauty is there
in our lives every day, waiting only for beholders.
Look, and then look closer.


