I Continue To Wake Up—

—and keep observing the world and the times that I live in.
The on-going artist task of choosing what to do next requires thought. After all, producing art takes commitment and mental exercise. If chosen well, what is created may inspire fellow humans to a more benevolent, empathetic, and ethical world. It could happen!
Following are a few examples of profound insight by artists in history:

“…the Depression woke me up to the fact that I had a part in all this, as an artist.”
–Maynard Dixon, painter, circa 1934

“You quickly forget yourself in your desire to do something that needs to be done.”
–Dorothea Lange, photographer, circa 1933

“I am in the world to change the world,”
Kathe Kollwitz, printmaker, circa 1930-40s

“The sleep of reason produces monsters…”
Francisco de Goya, painter, circa 1797


“Art for me must…answer a question, or wake somebody up, or give a shove in the right direction–our liberation.”
Elizabeth Catlett, sculptor, circa 1960s

“I will show your illustrious Lordship what a woman can do.”
Artemisia Gentileschi, painter, 1600s
And so, I am embarking on my own series of ‘profound insight’. In 2025 I joined thousands in four different protests of “No Kings” and “Hands Off” against authoritarianism, immigration brutality, executive overreach, and in defense of democracy. Looking through the photos I took while at those protests I was emotionally touched by the determination in faces and accompanying statements of my fellow humans. More powerful than simply pretty smiling faces (although those have their place too) I have begun to explore my insights through the following portraiture.

Has begun…
January 26, 2026 | Categories: Art With A Social Conscience, Social Conscience Art, Uncategorized | Tags: Ann Telnaes, Artemisia Gentileschi, artists, Ben Shahn, Dorothea Lange, e pluribus unum, Elizabeth Catlett, Francisco de Goya, Gerald Herbert Holtom, injustice, Kathe Kollwitz, Maynard Dixon, observing the world, protesting, responsibility, Seitu Jones, social conscience, starting an art project, we the people | Leave a comment







