[accessibleimage] book review, David Tineo,TacTiles, Monet


links Recipient: An honor that 'came out of the blue' http://www.pal-item.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061013/NEWS01/610130305/1008 Minding the Brain http://www.nybooks.com/articles/19510

Monet
http://www.fayettevillenc.com/article?id=244508

David Tineo articles
http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/specialreports/112438
http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/specialreports/125946
http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/specialreports/117622
http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/specialreports/151208
Fashion award excerpt
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/4920960.stm
Articles

Minding the Brain
By John R. Searle book review of
Seeing Red: A Study in Consciousness by Nicholas Humphrey
John R. Searle is Slusser Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley.


excerpt
According to Humphrey, the audience, whom he told to look at the red screen, did not consciously perceive the screen at all. They had conscious red sensations, but these were not sensations of the screen. As he tells us, the "red" sensations experienced by his audience were directed at something entirely within their bodies; the sensations were of events occurring in their eyes.


I said the arguments for these remarkable views were complex, but the heart of Humphrey's hypothesis concerns the distinction between sensation and perception. He has several arguments to support this, but the most important is about "blindsight." There are patients whose sight is impaired by brain damage in such a way that though they can see most of the visual field, they are blind in one part. For example, in a famous case a patient D.B. was blind in the lower left quadrant of his visual field.[3] (If the part of the world you can see at any moment is like a round clock face, D.B. was blind between roughly six o'clock and nine o'clock.) But in that quadrant D.B. could, to his surprise, detect the presence of certain sorts of stimuli. In one of many experiments he correctly "guessed" the presence of an X or an O in the blind part of his visual field. He could even guess the presence of colors in the blind area. Furthermore, Humphrey once had an experimental cat, Helen, who was totally blind because Visual Area 1 of her visual cortex had been removed, but she could still make her way around the room and even pick up crumbs off the floor.


excerpt

Like Hoffman, by simply doing something she enjoys, Joyce Acton began helping others and earned the Citizen of the Year Award.

An artist who is legally blind, she started painting when she lived in Florida. After moving to Richmond, she wanted to get involved with other artists with disabilities and ended up founding the Artists with Disabilities of East Central Indiana. The group is having an art festival Oct. 28.

Upcoming events -- The Artists with Disabilities of East Central Indiana group will have its initial October Arts Festival Celebrating Diversity from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Oct. 28 at Charlie's Coffee Bar and Gallery, 401 N. 10th St. in Richmond. Artists with disabilities are invited to participate. There is no booth rental charge, but space requests should be made by calling Joyce Acton at (765) 962-1070 or Eldonna Deaver at (765) 939-9226.

excerpt Monet
In 1907 Monet began having eyesight problems, and by 1922, he was almost blind. His sight improved after a cataract operation, and he reworked some of his water lily canvases. In 1926 Monet was still painting but he suffered from lung problems. He painted up to two weeks before dying on Dec. 5 at age 86.



excerpt Published: 10.15.2006 Making murals with help from his friends By Tom Beal ARIZONA DAILY STAR Articles in this series

Part 1: As the light fades

Part 2: Blindness gags help keep muralist going

Part 3: Art's 'eagle' renews his murals and his spirit

Part 4: Making murals with help from his friends

Tucson muralist David Tineo is going back to the wall next month, supervising his first outdoor mural since his eyesight started deteriorating two years ago.
At first glance, the blank wall on North Linda Avenue in Menlo Park seems an odd canvas for a mural in the Chicano tradition. It stands behind a California-style bungalow on a street of similar homes, built in the 1920s on subdivided farm land along the Santa Cruz River west of Downtown. When the subdivision was created, Mexican-Americans were excluded from living there.
Over time, though, Menlo Park became "the pre-eminent Mexican-American neighborhood in Tucson," said Mac Hudson, president of the Menlo Park Neighborhood Association.
A mural celebrating the neighborhood's past and present is a perfect complement to its plans to restore the crumbling bungalow and adapt it to public use, Hudson said.
Just across Congress Street to the south, land is being leveled for the Rio Nuevo project, which will include reconstructions of Tucson's earliest buildings and exhibits that celebrate the many cultures that built the city. The Linda Avenue project will bring that history into the present, Hudson said.
Tineo won't be painting the mural himself. He will have a crew of 36 youngsters from Menlo Park Elementary and Maxwell Middle schools, together with their individual mentors, University of Arizona students in a Chicanos por la Causa after-school program.
"The kids are going to be my eyes now," Tineo said at a community gathering to bless the project. "It's up to the kids to bring this vision to life — their vision, our vision, the community's vision."
Tineo will also have professional help from his colleagues at Raices Taller, a cooperative art gallery that Tineo and others created to promote Hispanic art.
Tineo, Menlo Park's most celebrated artist, was always first choice for the project, even though he had decided to give up outdoor work, said Hudson. "It was pretty clear, with David's eyesight getting so bad that we had to include others, like Raices Taller," said Hudson.
"This is right up our alley," said John Salgado of Raices Taller, who has had preliminary discussions with Menlo Park about relocating the gallery to the Linda Avenue house.
Fall softer after harsh summer
It's shaping up to be a good fall for Tineo. The softer sunlight is easier on his eyes, and the promise of a satisfying mural project in his own neighborhood is rewarding.
Summer was difficult at times for Tineo, the prolific muralist whose vision and ability to live his art are being eroded by macular degeneration.
Tineo has lost most of his central vision. Some mornings he can paint details on the smaller canvases he is preparing for a Día de los Muertos show at Raices Taller. On other mornings, the detail work is difficult and he paints on larger canvasses, relying on imagination and muscle memory to guide his brush strokes.
On some mornings he runs up nearby "A" Mountain and attends yoga classes at Pima Community College in an effort to keep his stress level down. He is certain that if he can stabilize his emotions and exercise his body, his eyes will not continue their downward slide.
Other days are more stressful. He worries about his mom, recently hospitalized for her diabetes after David found her nearly comatose in their Menlo Park home, or he argues with his patrons.


excerpt

The awards will also honour two individuals being inducted into the Scottish Fashion Awards Hall of Fame. .... The second is photographer Albert Watson, whose images have appeared on more than 250 Vogue covers.

Though blind in one eye, Albert studied graphic design at the College of Art in Dundee and film at the Royal College of Art in London.


Excerpt: Art Institute gives blind a chance to 'see' art Author: Andrew Herrmann The Chicago Sun-Times Date: April 20, 2006 Publication: Chicago Sun-Times (IL)


Do Not Touch is the general rule of thumb in art museums. Which, for the blind, pretty much leaves them out of the art museum experience. But beginning today, the Art Institute of Chicago is offering the sightless and vision-impaired the opportunity to "see," through touching, replicas of a few of its most popular works.


The Michigan Avenue museum has re-created a handful of its art on portable, machine-etched plastic, which will help the blind to imagine what they...

TacTiles Art Institute of Chicago
http://www.artic.edu/aic/visitor_info/access.html#escorts
Touch Gallery
http://www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/touch.html

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