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Post Info TOPIC: a curio: something written by Nic and published in JUXAPOZ magazine back in ī98


a grateful fan

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a curio: something written by Nic and published in JUXAPOZ magazine back in ī98


Our Nic is the proverbial jack-in-the-box. Found this gem in an old artsy 1998 magazine called JUXTAPOZ. Nicīs interest in art is well known, but here we have the chance to read his own words on the subject.

Seems Nic wrote an introduction to a piece on his admired painter Robin Williams (the first link is to give you an idea of who this guy actually is). Nic bought a painting by Williams which has hanged on his Bel Air mansion walls all these years (guess itīs being taken somewhere else now... maybe to Midford?).

The thing is, Nic writes about what this painging means to him. Itīs always interesting having a peek into his artistic ideas... Youīre gonna love it.

The links below are of the issue of the magazine. But, as youīve got to be patient and play with the menu to be able to read Nicīs text, I simply transcribed it below for your reading pleasure.

The paiting itself you can find also in the links below. Go to the last link Iīm posting, write "67" above on the blank space (itīs on page 65 of the printed issue, but on page 67 of the scanned issue of the magazine). Then hit the zoom (the icon of the magnifier above). Nicīs painting is on the top right corner. Drag the page to have a better look at it.

BTW, very intriguing art by Mr. Williams. And itīs true that itīs reminiscent of Dali, in a way...



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Williams_(artist)

http://www.juxtapoz.com/Archive/juxtapoz-archive-issue-14


http://issuu.com/juxtapoz/docs/juxtapoz_14?mode=embed&documentId=090203175523-88783136dbb244ee857065c8ab66d7c8&layout=grey

Introduction on page 60
Nicīs painting on page 65


JUXTAPOZ MAGAZINE, Issue #14, 1998


AESTHETIC PATHOLOGY

NEW YORK by ROBERT WILLIAMS

by WALTER HOPPS

INTRODUCTION by NICOLAS CAGE


Back when I was a kid growing up in Long Beach, California, Iīd go around the block to the corner market and spend all my money on bubble gums packs filled with monster cards and Iīd collect them. Later, when I saw Robert Williamīs paintings for the first time, I instantly felt a nostalgic connection with both my childhood and those cards, and with the anger and rage I felst as a young adult. Over the years Iīd been buying watches and had amassed quite a collection and was really attached to them. When I first saw a Robert Williams painting in the early `80īs I knew I had to have one, but at the time it was $7,000 -which I didnīt have. I had to hock the entire watch collection to get it. It was worth it.


Iīve always felt Robertīs paintings had a strong connection to sound. When I bought Death on the Boards, I felt like I could hear the roar of cars in it. I feel they have that connection with comic books where they actually write sounds on the pages as an effect. A lot of people compare whim to Salvador Dali, but I feel heīs much closer to Hieronymus Bosch. His imagination and the monsters he creates with their unabashed attack on the viewer is a lot like Boschīs perspective. Robert for me is a new perspective on something. Heīs a creator of modern myths, constantly tapping into our urban consciousness.


The reason Robert Williamsī paintings have such staying power is because heīs pure, and whatīs important to me is purity. Pure expression of self, without trying to fool somebody, trying to get at whatīs really there. In a Robert Williams painting the vision he presents, whether itīs purely disturbing or purely violent, is purely Robert Williams and it will not be ignored.


- Nicolas Cage






-- Edited by mara on Friday 4th of September 2009 03:08:31 PM

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