Art Fuels Art

The other day someone asked Eva (the better half of the Underground Art Project) where she gets the inspiration to keep painting. My thoughts immediately turned to the often repeated remark attributed to Brian Eno, that while the Velvet Underground’s first album in 1967 sold only a few thousand copies, every person who bought it formed a band and made more music.

That’s the great thing about art. It fuels itself. That is why art in all its forms continues to evolve. Take tango music for example. It all began in Buenos Aires with Carlos Gardel in the '30s. Now more than 70 years later we see new artists still redefining tango. There is neo tango like the electronic beats of the Gotan Project and the Bajo Fondo Tango Club. Then there is the tango fusion of Tango Crash who fuse neo tango with experimental jazz and Otros Aires who mix tango with the milonga of Barcelona.

Andy Warhol's Banana for the VU's first Album | 1967The question of course is, who inspired the likes of Carlos Gardel or the VU? I do not know, but of this we can be certain, it was art in some form. Art fuels art. Whether you listen to great music, read a captivating book, fall in love with a beautiful oil painting, savor a perfect shot of espresso (yes, it is art, why you even have latte art, but that is for a future article), or get lost in the complex aromas and flavors of a hand-crafted, hand-pulled, cask-conditioned India pale ale, you are fueling your artistic creativity. All forms of art converge into inspiration, motivating us, fueling us to produce more art.

The music we play in our studio affects the way we paint that particular day and what we write about or how much kerning I want to apply to my favorite font. Art inspires us all to be artists in some way. Artists will continue to redefine and reinvent their art and other people’s art. That is why art has, is, and will always stay original. Stay original… fuel up.

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Article Author: Bill Soukoreff

The lesser half of the Underground Art Project and the Underground Art Blog: The home of two artists who tirelessly fight against giclées and prints, championing original oil paintings with each brush stroke.

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