Calendar of Events

The Emporium Center: Robert Simon: Meanderings of the MIND

Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event

A free reception with the artists will take place on Friday, February 5, from 5:00-8:00 PM. All visitors to the Emporium are asked to wear a mask and maintain physical distancing guidelines. Most of the works will be for sale and may be purchased through the close of the exhibition by visiting in person or the online shop at www.knoxalliance.store.

The Universal Artist Within: Recipe for Visual Jazz
Step 1. Start with simple shape – circle, triangle, square – applied to illustration board
Step 2. Draw outward using free-flow stream of consciousness
Step 3. Redirect, drawing inward by thoughts and mood
Step 4. Turn board repeatedly
Step 5. Randomly add colors as directed by the mind’s eye; return to black
Step 6. Mix in a dash of mind-freeing pattern repetition
Step 7. Fill in all empty space
Step 8. Add generous amounts of feelings and uncertainty
Step 9. Carefully blend in chaos and order
Step 10. Do not set the timer. You will know when it is done
No two creations will be the same because one’s mind is never in the same place twice. There are no mistakes. One cannot color outside the lines if there are no lines.

Robert Simon was born in 1949 in East St. Louis, Illinois. He spent most of his early life in small railroad towns in southern Illinois and West Tennessee. He began teaching in 1972 and spent 40 years teaching US History, Government, and Sociology, in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, where he still resides in retirement. Simon began drawing about age twelve, penciling and shading boxes, triangles, and circles in the margins of his school books and notebook paper. He has never taken an art class and, until his early fifties when he sold his first piece, he never considered himself an artist. He hid his work from outside eyes and it remained “his secret” for years, stacking up in closets and under beds, becoming his own private gallery. Overtime, his drawings became significantly more complex, the shading gave way to brilliant, vivid colors, the shapes and figures became ever more diverse and multifaceted. Today, with each drawing, a new expression of his changing inner consciousness emerges. For more information, visit www.mindmuses.com or www.facebook.com/mindmuses.

The exhibitions are on display at the Emporium Center, 100 S. Gay Street, in downtown Knoxville. The Emporium is open to the public Monday-Friday, 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM. For more information, please see www.knoxalliance.com or call (865) 523-7543.