![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ84FtQ83bc2-t6r_io6z3Zcj_wfBqE-QmTVZxAri1xg1QNR4LoiS-Y5RL5NDeGkrhAYv2lD2ApQpXr1HOo7IU5CWfH0YG3lyp5p5fzj_y9HqlSwgpx5eyyHpqs3J8drPS9aajcW2QBfw/s400/afro-peruecke_big.jpg)
So it’s my turn to mind the store today, and I’m hoping that my piece may still look okay after 3 weeks of prodding. I’m still interested in ‘looks’, in making something beautiful. As an artist operating in these times, I’m not supposed to talk about beauty. Frankly I’m not immune, I aspire to many of those societal ideals, high production value being one of them. That said I do admire artists who don't prioritise looks, leaving the outcome as a consequence of an action or sequence of events. That kind of praxis is more cerebral, for me sensation is a big part of how I engage with things…
I’m kinda ole school… and some of those ole school encounters are still circling in my head. I’m often reacquainting myself with texts I vaguely remember, or didn’t understand in the first place – I must admit that some inspiration for the Dilston piece came from a very old essay (Hairstyle politics by kobena Mercer). The essay attempted to navigate through the socio-political debates surrounding hair, using (as one example) the rise and fall of the Afro as a symbol of pride to something silly and kitsch.
So I reckon I’m a little behind on current debates surrounding non-European art, but as things are becoming increasingly ‘international’ I find ‘Black Abstract’ still relevant, and although fluidity is still part of the exploration its not about water…
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