Sunday 13 January 2013

Yellow Dresses

Source(google.com.pk)
Yellow Dresses Biography
In the weeks following Kristin's death, and the establishment of The Kristin Rita Strouse Foundation, we began to search for a symbol that would represent our mission around mental health issues. We turned to Kristin's art work as the source of that inspiration. We were immediately drawn to a 24 by 48 inch oil painting of a single pale yellow dress, completed by Kristin in the spring of 2001. It was the fourth in a series of paintings on the yellow dress theme, that had begun in 1999. On April 30, 2001, Kristin wrote in her diary, "I am happy with my painting of the yellow dress." Indeed, she was extremely proud of her creation and decided to take it to Parsons School of Design, to hang in her dorm room. It turned out to be her final work in oil.

Joseph Campbell stated that "Art is the reflection of ones inner most truth brought to consciousness." A painting can be understood as a language in which the artist's, line, color and form, replace words. The yellow dress painting came out of the creative imagination of Kristin, and is a living symbol of her being. We are invited into her world and by the same token into the depths of our own worlds too, as we reflect on this work of art.

The color yellow bathes the whole canvas, reminding us of the life giving energy of the sun. It is delicate and inviting as it mixes with whites and grays. On April 26, 2001, Kristin wrote, "my favorite color is pale yellow - why because it is soft, calm - makes me happy - it's my soul color." There is strength and creative abandon to the application of paint. We know there was obvious joy and pride in her completed work of art. Her choice of painting a dress, was a tribute to her passion for beautiful clothing, so fitting for an aspiring fashion designer!

The imagination is naturally opening and include the daunting negative as well as the uplifting positive. Ann and Barry Ulanov write, "Imagination delivers us over to paradox, to the contradictory, where positives and negatives collide as the struggle between the ideal and the reality take form." Kristin consciously left us with the bright and positive creation of her yellow dress. In her death we have searched for answers and considered the possible unconscious processes at work, as represented in the image.

The form of the dress merges with the background, giving the impression of something that is there and yet not there at the same time. There is a transparent quality to the dress form, in addition to a certain lifeless and flat rendering perhaps suggesting a depressed mood. The dress is loosely hung on a hanger with the actual hook, bent upside down, in the pictures frame. Together, the dress and hanger do not appear to be secure or attached to anything, giving rise to a sense of ambiguity. In consideration of the final elements of the painting, we may have an unconscious indication of the results of Kristin's struggle with herself, in a less than perfect world. We believe the painting portrays her paradoxical struggle between life and death, joy and sadness.

Carl Jung stated, "An image is symbolic when it implies something more than the obvious and immediate meaning." We offer to you Kristin's image of The Yellow Dress as a symbol of life, in all its complexities. We envision The Yellow Dress as a timeless and powerful symbol of our promise to bring life, light and hope into this world, through education and awareness of mental health issues.

New project of OC’s The Paper Orchestra founder Alex Poska, Your Yellow Dress’s latest full-length, “Orange County, We’re Nothing At All Like The Shows,” was released May 2009.

Your Yellow Dress is currently embarking on a project to record some sort of release about every county in California similar to Sufjan Steven’s 50 States project. The releases will vary from full length albums to EPs to singles, and as of now there are only 56 counties left to write about.

New project of OC's The Paper Orchestra founder Alex Poska, Your Yellow Dress's latest full-length, "Orange County, We're Nothing At All Like The Shows," was released May 2009.

Check out a slew of re-releases and reissues put out by Pacific Nature Recording to hear more, in fact you can download many of their major releases for free!

Your Yellow Dress was embarking on a project to record some sort of release about every county in California (similar to Sufjan Steven's 50 States project.) There was only two releases, and as of now there are only 56 counties left to write about. The releases about the first two counties, Orange County and El Dorado County, can be downloaded for FREE:
Blanket Truth, essentially Jon Manning, is an amorphous, folky, indie pop band based in Seattle, WA via Thousand Oaks, CA. They have released many, now out of print, cassette tapes since 2005 and have no intention on stopping. Spurred on by a love of Casiotone for the Painfully Alone and the Mountain Goats, Jon realized that it was possible to record songs with very few musical instruments and simple recording devices that can be found in most homes (hand held tape recorder, answering machine, boombox, etc).


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