Category: Uncategorized

  • March 6, 2018 – Abstract art.

    When I sat down to write you a page this morning, I needed to make it quick.  Why? ’cause I spent all morning making a painting.

    We have all seen abstract paintings, but if asked to paint an abstract, we brand new digital artists,  have no idea how to begin.

    A simple change in mindset is needed to start an abstract. A move away from the need to copy and toward the understanding that the artist is in charge of what he thinks he sees.

    Does his mind see a pattern that is fun to look at, or is it a pattern that clearly reveals a hidden images, or is it surreal where some images are quite clear but can’t be real – except in the artists mind of course.

    Here is one I made this morning:

    My morning chair 600
    MORNING CHAIR – Come sit a spell.

     It is most often a beautiful morning in our Florida home in the winter and in our summer home on the northern Island. So as I sat down to think abstract here is what happened – on my iPad of course. My mind combined the the north and south into this image that is fun to look at but can not be real except in my mind.

    confused old man m
    Until the next time – maybe we can ponder all this stuff together.
  • March 5, 2018 – more examples of a Pareidolia

    In my last post I said, pareidolia describes our tendency to see patterns in random data.  A study undertaken by Canadian researchers has added further evidence to the theory that we just can’t help seeing faces in random data. We’re hard-wired to recognise human faces.

    I would like them to study me, because I think I am hard wired to see many more things than human faces in clouds, and everyday scenes.

    Now, I am learning to paint over photographs and merge photographs on my iPad. I am also learning to send the results to all my other devices and then I can send them to this web site!

    I create strange images but I hope you find some of the images pleasant to look at:

    2 600 Second abstract

    1 600 First abstract
    I see a reflection
    3 600 Third abstract
    Study this and tell me what you see
    4 600 computer worked
    Hey, I see me reflected a little more clearly on the left.

     

    You might have to study the last one awhile to see me reflected on the left.

    Anyway, when you are sitting and enjoying a rest, having a drink of water, or looking at the snow bank, the flower bed, or what ever – see if your mind can create a mix of colors to mentally view a piece of abstract art.  Be a pareidolia person.

     

     

  • February 27,2018 – Oh my. I have it! What do I have you say? I have Pareidolia – pronounced “Pari-DOH-lee-a”

    Should I see a doctor? – Wonder if Medi Care will pay to get me fixed?

    Oh, did you want me to tell you what I am talking about?

    Pareidolia is a term for seeing patterns in random data. Some of my examples are seeing a likeness of a teddy bear in the clouds, maybe a hole in the clouds that looks like an eye,  or an image of a dog that is really a tree trunk.

    In general Pareidolia describes our tendency to see patterns in random data.  A study undertaken by Canadian researchers has added further evidence to the theory that we just can’t help seeing faces in random data. We’re hard-wired to recognise human faces.

    I would like them to study me, because I think I am hard wired to see many more things than human faces in clouds, and just everyday scenes.

    1 dog 600 DSCN2750
    While walking the Nature Trail near home in Florida I spotted this palm tree stump.
    2 dog 600 DSCN2750
    While walking the Nature Trail near home in Florida this palm tree stump was converted, in my mind, into a funny looking dog – I had to go pet it – of course I got no response!.

    I think I have some form of Pareidolia. I see more than human faces. But I really love it! This sickness helps me have fun with PhotoShop each morning. It lets my mind see things  the good old Pareidolia doctors probably never thought of.  For example:

    2 me b
    This is a formal photo of me when I was quit young – My Mom liked to do things like take us to town once a year, at Easter, for clothes and a photograph!
    350x700px-LL-02d69391_082812_christie_gop_keynote2_dngso
    This is Christy giving the keynote address.
    2 _christie_gop_keynote2_dngso
    See, I combined the two previous photos to show how my Mom would have seen the Keynote Address. She had a form of Pareidolia too.
    2 31 _christie_gop_keynote2_dngso
    Well, she most likely would have seen me giving a fire and brimstone sermon!

    Now you know what Pareidolia is – Pareidolia is a term for seeing patterns in random data.

    Most people think you have to be mentally abnormal to see these types of images, I see nothing abnormal about it – but it can be dangerous.  While riding bikes, you can crash. We are studying the clouds and not watching where we are going. 

    I added the following paragraph from the internet report by the Canadian research:

    “But our findings suggest it’s common for people to see non-existent features because human brains are uniquely wired to recognise faces, so that even when there’s only a slight suggestion of facial features the brain automatically interprets it as a face.”

    The research is in line with previous studies on the subject, and adds evidence to the theory that facial pareidolia emerged from an evolutionary need to recognize other friends – and foes – in a pinch. Doing so could have meant the difference between life and death tens of thousands of years ago, and modern humans seem to have just hung on to the skill.

    Writing in his 1995 book The Demon-Haunted World, Carl Sagan theorized that “As soon as the infant can see, it recognizes faces, and we now know that this skill is hardwired in our brains. Those infants who a million years ago were unable to recognize a face smiled back less, were less likely to win the hearts of their parents, and less likely to prosper.”

     

    GOOD BY – FOR NOW – Go look at clouds, trees, other people – what do you see? Oh my!

     

  • Feb. 24, 2018 – Reflective art, Oh my. Next time you see a reflection – stop and ponder.

    Every morning, when the wind is still, I sip my coffee, and study the lake behind my house, mesmerized by the houses and landscape reflected on the water. That caused  me to think of reflected photo art.

    I read somewhere – “If you want to engage more thoughtfully with the world around you, consider reflective art.”

    So, I tried a few reflective photo art images using PhotoShop. It did make me think about the world around me out there on the lake.

    Hope I trigger some thoughts in your mind as you see the next reflection in your world.

    1 abstract racoon 600 IMG_2197
    Abstract photos are not what the camera see, but what you can make your mind see.
    1 perl rose 1 600
    As my mind saw an artist in the sky – reflected on the lake behind my house through my coffee cup – as I spipped coffee – honest it was only pure coffee!

     

    My quote for the day: Now, reflect upon your next reflection!  Oh my.

     

  • Feb 20, 2018 – Oh my, look up and see things of wonder & smile at the view.

    1.  Vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others. by Jonathan Swift
    2. The sky “is but a canvas to our imagination.” by Henry David Thoreau
    3. Art is not what you see, but what you help others see. by Edgar Degas
    4. Look at the clouds, see things that are invisible, imagine beauty, and help others look up and smile.  by Jim Brubaker

     

    Start DSC_0006 600
    The view while having lunch yesterday on the back porch.
    start isolate DSC_0006
    My mind isolated the upper left, turned it 90 degrees clockwise. An animal appeared.
    start 2DSC_0008 600
    The first step in my artistic imagination.
    this is it
    The artistic liberty of my mind makes me smile sometimes – Photoshop helps me show it to you.

    Look up and practice your own artistic liberty.  You need not show it to anyone.  Just show it to your own mind and smile.

    Oh my, that was fun.  I wonder what our minds will see next.

     

  • Feb 14, 2018 – Oh my – It is Valentine’s Day! Be wary of the trustworthiness of a beautiful brown eyed maiden.

    As, you know, I am trying to become a computer artist – with PhotoShop and Corel Painter. I play around a lot with eyes and facial expressions. I make tronies. Go ahead read on.

    The artist and the eyes
    “Study the FACE and EYES” – This is not my art work.  I took it from some art magazine I was studying on-line.

    Do you know how many young boys with fire in their blue eyes look into the eyes of a young girl and say “Will you be my valentine?”

    And maybe even attempt to sing the old song:

    “Would you be my, honeybee ye ye..
    sweet kisses all the time, be mine..
    Be my…. Valentine…    Ohhhh Ohhhh Ohhhh, Be My….Valentine…!

    And then get the reply:

    “Noooo, Noooo, Nooooo”

    I know it was not the eyes that were driving the young man but there are a lot of love songs about the eyes.

    Anyway, at this point the young man had to attempt to sing the song: “Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue.”   I know I said earlier the young man had blue eyes BUT it was blue eyed Crystal Gayle who had the hit song in the “70s: “Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue” Despite the title, Crystal herself has blue eyes.

    Do you know these facts?  The color of your eyes depends on how much of the pigment melanin you have in your iris—the colored part of your eyes. The more pigment you have, the darker your eyes will be.

    Newborn babies have little melanin in their eyes, so they begin life with blue or almost colorless eyes. The melanin gradually increases, and by about three years of age, their eyes will have darkened to their true color.

    Did you know that having brown eyes may make you appear more trustworthy?

    pain one love
    On Valentine’s day – what do you think? Blue Eyed trust?

    In the Czech Republic, university students were asked to look at photographs of 80 fellow students.  Results of the study revealed that people with brown eyes were perceived as significantly more trustworthy than those with blue eyes.

    But it’s a little more complicated than that.  I did a lot of corporate research over the years and I know you have to be careful of conclusions.

    Brown-eyed faces tended to have a rounder and broader chin, a broader mouth with upward-pointing corners, relatively bigger eyes, and eyebrows closer to each other.  Some or all of these could be the real factor driving your perception of trustworthiness.

    Oh my – now go look in the mirror and tell me truthfully are you perceived to be trustworthy – of course you are and the eye color has nothing to do with it – It is because you are a good person.

    i duck 600
    As I practice painting I even like to study the impact of animal eyes.

    As a young Corporate manage I had to take Dale Carnegie courses to understand how the eyes and  facial gestures help manage business situations – different ones when seeking trust, when leading others,  when pushing others,  when competing with others, and when intimidating others.

    From the course I also learned,  by studying the eyes and facial expression of the young brown eyed maiden, just maybe, the Nooooo, Nooooo, Nooooo, was really Maybeeeeeeee, Maybeeeeeeee, Maybeeeeeeee.

    The course was worth it!

    Rembrandt, and other Dutch artists of his day,  made many Tronies – Small studies of eyes and the face. Here are some of my tronies:

    pain one
    My fist painting of this face
    pain one redevil
    Scary
    pain one green envy
    Green with envy
    pain one fire
    Fire in her eyes
    pain one dollar signs
    I see dollars in the man! “Did you say his names was Stump?”
    pain one apple
    The apple of my eye.
    pain one conflicted
    Conflicted
    I see 600
    Will not be caught and eaten
    I see 600 not
    I am sleepy. –  Oops – there may be two tomorrows – The third one may be missing.

     

    Oh my – The End

     

     

     

     

     

  • February 9, 2018 – Oh my, Let us think about the art of thinking about why there is art.

    Did you know there are World Heritage  Sites – There are hundreds of them.  United States has 23 and France has 43. Did you know that many of these sites in France are preserving art that is 30,000 years old?

    The Great Ceiling of Rouffignac, one of the world’s oldest and most beautiful art galleries,   is located in Southwest France.  Cro-Magnons, the first members of Homo sapiens, settled in Europe 45,000 years ago.  They most likely were the first artists. They worked on the walls and ceilings of the caves at Rouffignac and many others caves in Europe.

    images
    Area of the caves

    Let us, you and me, think about why they created art.  – Some say it was just doodling, some say it was done by folks high on weed, some say it was like a book  to record history, but most likely it was part of some form of clan ritual.  But, were the artists men or women?  How many artists painted in the caves?

    Now that got me to researching a little more. In the caves of Dordogne, more than 60 images of mammoths, horses and ibex are depicted in simple, confident lines that show the artisthad startling talent.  Researchers determined there may have been 5 or more artists working together on a single cave wall. They speculated on that count by looking at how many art styles there were. Each artist had different views in their mind.

    cave 4

    This cave art is declared a World Heritage Sites.  The Cro-Magnon’s were true artists.  They did not have an iPhone camera to record what they saw.  Nooooooo, Nooooooo, they created what was in their mind.   Whether they were driven by idle doodling, smoking a little pot, or depicting what the invisible Gods needed, they presented what was in their mind.  They remembered what they saw and then made it a little more startling by letting their mind create ART!   That is what I do with PhotoShop and Coreal Painter.

    Let us, you and me, think about why I create art.   I take reality and let my mind create art as my mind sees it.  Noooo, Nooooo, I do not smoke a little pot.  I do not casually doodle.  I work hard at my art and I do not create images for the invisible Gods, I create art for you.

    I really do create art for two reasons:

    1. To take on the challenge offered by the computer’s software.  I been taking on that computer software challenge ever since I first met a computer in 1956.   The computer has not won yet!!!

    2. To bring a smile to your face.  Some people really laugh when they view my art. I am not sure if they are laughing with me or at me. – In any case, they laugh and that makes me smile.  THANKS

    So, those are the two reasons I do computer art and write these little stories.

    POSSIBLEwas
    In the waiting room, I stared at this real wall.
    POSSIBLE
    My mind saw this and I created this art wall in  PhotoShop
    dual
    On the left is Charles looking at Breakfast – On the right is Grandpa’ vision of the Breakfast he will make for Charles.
    1sx600
    As I saw the Heavy Rocket go up this week.
    1sxcf600 ready twin
    My mind went to work, created it’s own image, and drew it on the PhotoShop cave. “God Bless America”
    sunrise as takenIMG_0764
    Another “God Bless America” scene. A foggy sunrise from my back porch yesterday.
    God Bless 600 crop America to flat
    But, Gloria misses the excitement of New York City. So my mind went to work in the PhotoShop cave and created this scene off our back porch for her! Oh my, God Bless America.
    bear as is
    Every day you are blessed with potential art. Just look at the clouds in the sky, or a moon in early morning, or the falling snow making a halo around a street light.
    bear 600
    Your mind will create an image. Put what your mind saw on paper, challenge the computer software and digitize it as I did, or just visualize it and move on to the next time you look up at the sky — In any case you truly are an artist.

    Being an artist is fun even if you never put your art image on paper.   Just helping your mind create the art is a fun way to study and appreciate the sky, the moon, the snow, and anything else that is around you.  That is why I think there is art.

     

    THE END

     

  • Jan 27, 2018 – Oh my, Confused? I think so!

    “Brainy people make brainy quotes.” – That is my quote for the day!

    ME BRAINThis week I created four more brainy quotes  for you:

    1. “I have learned that I have a lot to learn.”
    2. “The older I get the more I re-learn the same old thing each day.”
    3. “Teenagers know things Grandpa’s have yet to learn.”
    4. “Keep the Tech Dictionary open when you call Tech Support.”

    I pondered on number three – the teenager thing.   I grew up in a family of old Pennsylvania Dutch farmers.  JIM HOMEThe outside world thought we Brubaker’s talked a little funny.  Many of our own words and dialect were established in the 1700’s when my forefathers sailed from Germany.  If the teenager in the family said “I am going to redd up the table for you.” Brother, Mother, and Grandpa all knew what was going to happen.

    But, this week, I over heard two teenagers talking: “Set your ISO to a max of 2,000.” In the next 5 minutes these words were used: HDR  “blinkies,”  PhotoShop, mask tool, adjust the contrast,  RGB, Lightroom, WordPress, Drop Box, white balance, RAW, TB storage, PSD file.

    I am sure Brother understood the language and words, but Mother and Grandpa could only say:confused old man m

     

    “Oh my, what are they talking about?”

    My brainy brain went on to say, “Ok Brubaker, do not brag about having a common language for all ages.” We Brubaker’s were not very adventuresome, so we did not deal with new things – We did not invent them and we did not use them – so all ages knew everything there was to know – no forward progress.

    Non-Brubaker’s teenagers ran off to California, maybe smoked a little Pot, put a couple wires together – and wham, there was Apple, Microsoft, Drop Box, Google, IKEA, and Lord only know’s what else.  Those non-Brubaker’s created a bunch of forward progress stuff and thus my quotes: “Teenagers know things Grandpa’s have yet to learn.” and “Keep the Tech Dictionary open when you call their Tech Support.”

    Lets go back 40,000 years. confused not at allThat cave was nice but the the teenage lovers said “This cave is getting crowded and so are all the other caves in the mountain.”  Maybe those teenagers went to the California of the day and thought about this situation. She turned to him and said “I bet we could build a cave” He said “How do we do that?” She said “I will go get a bunch of women together, We will all march and carry banners that say “Get out of the way, we  women have a house – I mean a cave – to build.”  They marched because they knew they were not equal – they were Superior!

    confusedd   That, my friend, is how the first house was build. It was the beginning of a dictionary of  new words – Windows, Doors, Mortgages, Chimneys, Real estate offices, Zillow, Multi-listings, Real estate Taxes, Condominiums, and city.

    confused neo Soon Grandpas were saying “Oh my, what is she talking about?”  “What is a city?”CITY NY

     

    That is not the end of the story.  Grandpas of the future will always be saying “Oh my, what is she talking about?”

    I sure wish I could stay around to see it all.  It will not be long until they will figure out how to keep us living forever.   Maybe my Great Grandchildren will get to say at age 280 (the new age to be called Grandpa or Grandma) “Oh my, what is she talking about?”

    One more TXT word – QED (In texting on your i-phone, it is a Latin phrase “Quod Erat Demonstrandum” or “It has been proved.”

    I say QED.

    We Grandpas, regardless of our age, will always say “Oh my, what is she talking about?”

    Hope that all was LOL.

    THE END