Category Archives: visual language

sexy defloration by Stelly Riesling gif

Once the pseudo invisible art of the type of artists as Sehgal (he creates limitations on how his “performance” could only be “coming to life” at the museum show) and other artists who find ways to conceptualize “invisibility” become the “collectibles” it is followed by the Attention Deficient Disorderly Art Collectors.

These art patrons are just like the rest of the folks nowadays in constant need of stimulus and to reinforce their habits with constant supply of something New or Newsworthy – “it’s happening” type of thing.

This is not the worse way of dealing with their uneventful life – seeking art additions.

The art collectors think that process of growth in their ways of seeing something so special that others had missed out on is so unique.

So your next art wizard with a trick up his sleeve provides the collectors with the “fix” / another “awe moment”.

Cat – The emptied plate

“The emptied canvas”
“The emptied plate” for instance has more depth to me. Someone loved the meal…
“Almost invisible art”
Could go under a wider category I offer: “Pseudo Invisible Art”
“Uncopy – paintings” could also be “Not backed-up” paintings.

Monochrome painting claim being INVISIBLE. 

message sent message received gif (version)

On the recent art events that involve to some degree concept of invisibility.
Various artist do a one-shot attempt at the invisible concept. As a rule it happens one time in the given artist’s career. (Rest assured that nobody except Paul Jaisini had their life time spent in the Invisible creativity premises).
The Invisibility one-shooter artist would not continue in this direction to be repetitive or simple do the same gig unable to develop further as the original attempt failed to be profitable or even promising.
The titles of some works:
“You are invisible”

For philosophers this wouldn’t present anything new as a topic worthy discussion. 

robocat in neon glow gif

One might want to argue that this is how the male nature is known to be and manifests in the need for real experience. No arguments here, indeed moved by the all-mighty testosterone there are many demanding qualities that manifest in men.

While its all good and true in the art history that knew mostly male creators with their best human qualities except the personal ones, there had never been an artist of a significantly strong artistic talent who would make most unusual breakthrough in very early life (when as philosophers would put it a child is not yet a human but a work in progress) and find his “true” artistic media that could only satisfy him.

hypnotic geo dot gif – real amazing watch it to startle you :)

Paul Jaisini doesn’t know much of his “being a child prodigy” and any such distinction as being especially gifted, rather a genius with his eidetic memory.  His own explanation of such things is simple, he just doesn’t have much time for all things he does and this pushes him to do what he does much faster or with higher skills to just have enough time for everything. So the life time habit of pushing the barriers worked same way even when he was a child.
He didn’t like to read with only exception of science and few adventure books. He never read novels as his friends or other kids.
He didn’t really LIKE making artworks.
As his interests were in things opposite of what I would constitute here as “artificial language” (art, made-up stories in books) the only interest for Paul was experiencing real life and have real knowledge of things from “truth” – real experience of these things. 

hypnotic teal liquid gif – message sent message received Paul Jaisini Invisible Paintings from 1994 gignyc ’14mint

message sent message received Paul Jaisini Invisible Paintings from 1994 gignyc ’14mint

From what I gathered is that Paul Jaisini’s understanding of why he never cared about his art activities is quite simple. He wasn’t a nerd to concern himself with good grades or arts.

(Random Thoughts on Paul Jaisini… .

Paul Jaisini is not Marcel Duchamp, Yves Klein and all others.
There is a complex way to try to explain why, but there is also a less complex way. Not Duchamp, nor Yves Klein, etc came to the REDUCTION of visual means as early in Life as Paul Jaisini who started the GREAT REDUCTION as early in life as at the tender age of 10.
Clearly at such age there could be no such thing as artificiality or true sensitivity to what is called “the environmental trauma” with such a consequence to cause a young child- artist to refuse the LANGUAGE – visual or spoken. 
At the age of 10 a child doesn’t know the philosophical depths of why any language could be deceiving.And yet at the age of 10 a child such as Paul Jaisini acts out straightforward without understanding or thinking about what he/she is doing. 
The age factor is what significantly or completely opposes the artists such as Duchamp, Yves Klein who had arrived to the art reduction or destruction ideas at their mature age with long art career behind it.
Therefore to me any such attempt for reduction (on any scale from minor to major) of visual means is nothing but a self-serving attempt to reinvent own art. The only “true” “reductionist” among the existing visual artists was and remains Paul Jaisini. 
He made his great breakthrough (the reduction of visual language) as early as at the age of 10.
This places him on the winning pedestal of the only known artist who from the very beginning of his artistic endeavors was already oriented not to accept what is known as visual language. 
If someone wonders why wouldn’t Paul as a child artist just turn away from the arts if its known visual language had no appeal to him,  just don’t get involved if you don’t believe in this visual or other languages (and since a child can’t really understand these sort of things written here still the child could find other interests in life…) 
Paul can’t turn away from his gift in arts I assume due to his genetic predisposition to it.
He probably had little choice with his eidetic memory, the prodigious art talent manifested almost instantly after he was born.
Herewith having “no choice” he also is not “sold” to the visual language and its limitations.By the age of 10 he arrives to his own Great Reduction knowing nothing about art history and having zero interest in art. His “new” art must had proven truer to him if he continues. 
As to what he creates on surface (paper, photography, etc) he calls it “killing time” at school and doing it without any pleasure. Any “normal” child gets huge pleasure from dealing with paints, drawings and crafts. Paul on the other hand has not experienced any such pleasure while drawing/painting on paper. He did it as I already mentioned to kill time and to give his artworks away to his peers who liked what he did. 
Being popular among the school kids and especially girls was his only motivation. I find it very unusual that Paul as a child felt burdened by creating an artwork, that he never liked his artworks that were and remain quite notorious for their aesthetic beauty and mature technique. 

At 5 years of age he shocked his father who is an accomplished sculptor when his son had made a three dimensional composition in a drawing for kindergarten, when what is commonly expected from a child would be a stick figures drawing. Paul created a detailed realistic drawing of a human figure, animals, landscape and so on with perspective of which he knew nothing… He was not trained in any art school growing up as a “normal” kid.
I want to point to what I find to be some striking things about P. Jaisini. 

1) When he is asked about his childhood or past times he describes things in such detail that to someone like me would be inconceivable. 

In short he remembers absolutely everything to a minute what was happening to him ages ago and can give the exact photo-like description.

If he perhaps (I don’t know anything about his present life what he once told me I do know for a fact) doesn’t have the same eidetic memory in present times, nevertheless what was once processed by his eidetic memory in the past remains memorized in such particular to eidetic memory quality.

It seems to me that Paul Jaisini sincerely doesn’t like most visual arts. This must be due to the way how he sees things differently from how majority of us could see, the visual artists including.
He never really cared about his artworks he produced for whatever reason ever since he started producing from early childhood.
Same as child-artist same the adult visual artist might not be well-organized to collect own work but at least they love to see what they’ve made. Paul took no interest in his artworks he would typically give away.

From what I gathered is that Paul Jaisini’s understanding of why he never cared about his art activities is quite simple. He wasn’t a nerd to concern himself with good grades or arts.)

you will like what I see (with animation effects)

It seems to me that Paul Jaisini sincerely doesn’t like most visual arts. This must be due to the way how he sees things differently from how majority of us could see, the visual artists including.
He never really cared about his artworks he produced for whatever reason ever since he started producing from early childhood.
Same as child-artist same the adult visual artist might not be well-organized to collect own work but at least they love to see what they’ve made. Paul took no interest in his artworks he would typically give away.

hypnotic amazing sparkle shine glow texture gif

I want to point to what I find to be some striking things about P. Jaisini.

1) When he is asked about his childhood or past times he describes things in such detail that to someone like me would be inconceivable.

In short he remembers absolutely everything to a minute what was happening to him ages ago and can give the exact photo-like description.

If he perhaps (I don’t know anything about his present life what he once told me I do know for a fact) doesn’t have the same eidetic memory in present times, nevertheless what was once processed by his eidetic memory in the past remains memorized in such particular to eidetic memory quality.