RonPrice
Newbie

Posts: 5
With fire We test the gold...Baha'u'llah
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« on: July 17, 2009, 11:34:26 AM » |
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THE BIRTH OF ART
I’ve never known a great deal about art. Visiting art galleries has always had a soporific effect on me—making me want to sit on one of those soft couches in the big rooms with their wall to wall art and have a sleep. In 1974, the year that Ian Fairweather died, I taught the sociology of art at a technical college in Launceston while I was working as a senior tutor in human relations and education studies at the Tasmanian College of Advanced Education. I knew nothing of Ian Fairweather then and until last night I still knew little to nothing about him.
But being a man of selective gregariousness myself, somewhat like Fairweather, only a man into writing rather than painting; being somewhat reclusive, a solitary man who cares passionately with some inner compulsion, some self-consuming orientation to writing similar to that of Fairweather for his painting; being a wanderer, a traveller, who has lived in more houses than I want to count as well as being an eccentric but nowhere near as eccentric as Fairweather who you might call an eccentric’s eccentric—I was immensely fascinated by the doco on ABC1 TV1 last night.-Ron Price with thanks to ABC1 TV, “Fairweather Man,” 9:30-10:30 p.m. 16 July 2009.
While I was settling into my embryonic career in education in ’74 and into an equally embryonic group of Baha’is in Tasmania, you died, Ian, after an incredibly hectic gregariousness and I hardly knew you—one of the multitude of names I had then begun to collect in my own life of selective gregariousness in this Downunder Land at another end of the Earth, after Baffinland in ’67, after southern Ontario and the beginnings of my eccentricity born of bipolar disorder after my own solitary childhood where, perhaps, my own art was also born.
Ron Price 17 July 2009
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