Dexter
SOURCE: Confessions of a Paintaholic – Read entire story here.
"Red Up On"
I’ve roamed thru the Art Institute of Chicago a dozen times, barely noticing those six, large, colorful, geometric panels hanging high on the top floor of the American Art gallery. They’re titled ‘The Chicago Panels’ by Ellsworth Kelly. To be honest, modern art doesn’t grab me like realism does – only because, often, I don’t understand it. And being an artist myself, that’s a pretty shallow comment.
There’s many important 20th century artists I’ve never heard of or paid little attention to until I read their obituary. After I read several moving obits about Ellsworth Kelly this week, so much made sense. This man saw patterns in shadows, shapes and colors in nature and in life which he transformed into sculptures and paintings like no other.
Take the example of ‘White Curve’, which hangs on an exterior wall in the Pritzker Garden at the Art Institute.
By most accounts, Mr. Kelly was a delightful, warm, friendly, humorous, creative man who lived in the moment. That should always be one’s New Year’s resolution – every day, every year – to live in the moment and appreciate the beauty around us. And never judge or dismiss what we don’t understand. We’d all be better for it.
Speaking for myself, I find it hard to appreciate vegetables and Indian food, hot summers, crowds, crowds who sing, performance art and Donald Trump to name a few – but life is long and I’m willing to learn, except for the Trump thing.
Wishing you a Happy and Healthy and Creative New Year ~
SOURCE: A Painting Today – Read entire story here.
Two Coats of Paint Resident Artist: Gyan Shrosbree
I am excited to welcome Gyan Shrosbree for a seven day residency at Two Coats of Paint in February. An assistant professor of painting and drawing at Maharishi University in Fairfield, Iowa, Shrosbree works with fabrics, tarps, paint, glitter, scissors, and tape to create sprawling site-specific installations that lift geometric abstraction off the canvas, and hurl it into the viewer's space.
[Image at top: In Gyan Shrosbree's Iowa studio, work in progress.]
Click for full story / links
SOURCE: Two Coats of Paint – Read entire story here.
Some paintings considered offensive or innaccurate might be removed from the … – KMSP-TV
KMSP-TV |
Some paintings considered offensive or innaccurate might be removed from the …
KMSP-TV PAUL (KMSP) – During the renovation at the State Capitol, some of the paintings currently hanging on the walls may be replaced. The reason is some of the paintings have been deemed offensive and historically inaccurate. A special subcommittee will be … |
SOURCE: paintings – Google News – Read entire story here.
Paintings for Ants
I love these works by the South African artist Lorraine Loots. She started out back in 2013 doing a painting a day for a whole year which became the 365 Paintings for Ants project. Her miniature a day challenge was a success and she has continued the practice each year since. In 2014 she produced the 365 Postcards for Ants series where she explored her home city of Cape Town each day. Lovers of her work can bid on the original miniature painting or a very limited edition print of each piece is also sold.
In 2015 the artist is doing 100 miniatures with 10 prints of each work to be produced. She’s working on themed days like Microcosm Mondays, Tiny Tuesdays, Fursdays and Free Fridays. Potluck 100 is the name of the newest project. I couldn’t find an unsold work anywhere on her page so I’m guessing there’s a whole lot of people out there liking her work just as much as me.
Lorraine Loots – Giraffe | Giraffa camelopardalis giraffa. 15 x 23 mm (2015)
Lorraine Loots – “A Clockwork Orange” by Anthony Burgess. 18 x 26 mm (2015)
Lorraine Loots – Bill Murray as Steve Zissou in Wes Anderson’s “The Life Aquatic”. 29 x 20 mm (2015)
Lorraine Loots – Chacma Baboon | Papio Ursinus | Cape Baboons. From the Old World monkey family (and one of the largest of all monkeys). 26 x 24 mm (2014)
Lorraine Loots – “Dobby is free.” – JK Rowling. 25 x 25 mm (2013)
See more of her wonderful little miniatures at her website here, her Facebook page here, or at her Tumblr page here.
SOURCE: Art News Blog – Read entire story here.
RitaMarie Cimini: Show Business: Reflections on an Art Opening
As 2016 approached, I found myself looking back and thinking about the the many gifts I have in my life.
This is also a time to reflect on our achie…
Read more: Slidepollajax, Art Exhibitions, Painting, Art Openings, Success, Success and Motivation, Redefining Success, Sales, Arts News
SOURCE: Painting on Huffington Post – Read entire story here.
The World Goes Pop @ Tate Modern
Opening today at Tate Modern: The World Goes Pop, an exhibition presenting less known – or, in many cases, virtually unknown – artworks linked to the Pop Art movement. While formally inspired by the pop aesthetics, the artists exhibited (most of them Eastern European, Asian, Latin American and/or Mid-Eastern) used the easily recognisable visual language in a more critical context. See our photos on Flickr.
SOURCE: Happy Famous Artists » Blog – Read entire story here.
Only Pieces of Perfection
It always gives me a kick of inspiration to see that a superb art piece way out of my league began as a rough sketch that's closer to my level. Emokih's realistic hand drawn portraits are not doodly at all, but I can’t resist sharing the WIP photos she posts. It's so intriguing to see a portion of meticulously perfected detail surrounded by the very basics of a sketch. One little corner that she labored intensively on, while the rest is left in its bare bones. I can't help finding it more interesting than the completed pieces sometimes.
SOURCE: Doodlers Anonymous – Read entire story here.
Mike Kelley: Single Channel Videos at REDCAT
Nearing the fourth anniversary of Mike Kelley’s death, REDCAT presented a theatrical screening of six of his video works, curated by Steve Anker and Bérénice Reynaud as part of the Jack H. Skirball Series. The selection of works in Mike Kelley: Single Channel Videos included a one-act melodrama based on a black-and-white yearbook photograph, a hammy and melancholic Superman reciting Sylvia Plath, an invocation of power through juvenile imagination, and collaborations with Paul McCarthy and BDSM dyad Sheree Rose and Bob Flanagan.
A little over a year ago, MOCA curator Bennett Simpson arranged the Los Angeles iteration of Kelley’s posthumous retrospective, Mike Kelley, at the Geffen Contemporary. First organized by the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam and curated by Ann Goldstein, the exhibition included a number of Kelley’s major installations. There, his video works were part and parcel of a larger whole, submerged into hilarious, exploded altars to the American ritual. In its entirety, the exhibition was loud, stimulating, and messy—and rightly so. Like Frankenstein’s monster, Mike Kelley was a chaotic assemblage whose sensitive eloquence gained psychic strength from the dissolution of the singular, rather than a distillation toward the sublime. There is no way to neatly separate and isolate light and sound within the box of a building that is the Geffen, and there is no reason to pursue that kind of purity with Kelley’s artworks, which are so much about the uncanny—how near-familiar images and objects can push their fingers into our psyche, beyond the clean boundaries of conscious control.
Nonetheless, at REDCAT’s presentation on December 14, 2015, curator Bérénice Reynaud framed the screening as arising out of Kelley’s MOCA retrospective, her idea being that the video works necessitated a theatrical screening so that they could be experienced in a facility specifically built for viewing films. As promised, REDCAT provided a space that enhanced the innate qualities of the medium, which in effect changed the experience of the six presented video works in varying ways. In the organized darkness of the theater, I could see the moving image projected in front of me, but I couldn’t see my hands. The sweet boozy scent of my neighbors became all the more palpable. The theatrical seating and its positioning of bodies created a sort of nonconfrontational, gentle sense of community—one unified by a common focus and consolidated by sharing a point of reception and reaction in space and time.
In this way, I enjoyed the strange intimacy of knowing the range of laughter that Kelley’s 100 Reasons (1991) elicited from my tipsy, unseen companions. My happy, drunken neighbors were brought to a new height of hilarity each time Kelley’s voice read aloud another one of the hundred names for a spanking paddle, while Mistress Rose swung her paddle, slapping Bob Flanagan’s ass and swelling his flesh into a plum hue. By the time Kelley read “board of education,” I was tearing from laughter, too.
The histrionic dialogue and melodramatic framing of Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstruction #1 (Domestic Scene) (2000) brought out a similar set of communal responses. Laughter bubbled up throughout the exaggerated overtures of the simplified, dramatized dynamics of two figures whose relationship is marred by oppositional forces—desire and guilt, empathy and torture, acceptance and repression, among others—in the nearly thirty-minute act. Laughter stopped in a caesura of seriousness when the two actors looked toward death—an open oven with a tiny dancing ghost of Sylvia Plath inside—until the dialogue broke through the veil of austerity with a sharp return and reminder of the overplayed power dynamic of sexual dominance and submission. After a descent into a romanticized narrative of suicide, the submissive character is reminded that even though he may be Sylvia Plath’s in death, his ass is still his partner’s in life; at that moment, laughter burst out in the theater.
Likewise, in Bridge Visitor (Legend–Trip) (2004), the juvenile incantations of power in projections of the satanic touched upon childlike ideations of the occult. The resurgence of faith in the unknown exploded when the audience realized the orb of bubbling liquid in the video was a skillfully shot point-of-view take of the speaking figure pissing into a toilet, prompting the theater to burst out laughing once again.
With the freedom to move at one’s own pace, walking through an exhibition is a much more isolated experience than sitting in a theater. Though the body’s individual relationship to the chaos and scale of objects was heightened in other presentations of Mike Kelley’s work, REDCAT’s theatrical screening of his video work opened up another kind of productive confusion in being a part of a collective audience, and in unraveling reactions in real time.
Editor’s Note: Special thanks to the Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts.
Mike Kelley: Single Channel Videos was screened at REDCAT in Los Angeles on December 14, 2015.
SOURCE: DAILY SERVING – Read entire story here.
Amelia Marzec: Building Radical Networks
We are enslaved to systems that don’t have our best interests at heart, in order to fulfill a basic human need: communication. We need to seriously consider creating alternatives to the internet, which would allow our communities to have ownership over how we talk and share information.
Read more: Net Neutrality, Eyebeam, Nyu, Art Meets Science, USA Freedom Act, Internet, Activism, Women in Tech, Arts, Mobile, Technology News
SOURCE: Art Meets Science on Huffington Post – Read entire story here.
City-Like Patterns by Damola Rufai
What would a pattern look like if it was inspired by the hustle and bustle of city life? It might look something like Isorinths, a series of isometric patterns designed by artist Damola Rufai.
Like Piet Mondrian’s “Broadway Boogie Woogie,” which brings together the city grid of Manhattan with the music he loved to dance to, Rufai captures the maze-like nature of Lagos, Nigeria with the vibrant and colorful spirit of the city in these intricate patterns.
Rufai also drew upon personal experiences to design the series, using stylistic influences from African wax print patterns, pastel colors of South Beach, and even a popular puzzle game called Monument Valley!
Isorinths is also digitally printed on 100{b29860ee6b7af5bf99d3058cca3182816eed414b47dab251265e93b8c00e69b1} cotton fabric in 6-yard bundles, which you can preorder here.
SOURCE: Design Milk » Art – Read entire story here.
Doctors without Borders: Exploring Connections between Art and Medicine
How have the fields of medicine and art intersected over the past few centuries? We visited the Guggenheim’s neighboring institution, the New York Academy of Medicine, and looked for answers in their extensive collection of rare books.
SOURCE: Guggenheim Blogs – Read entire story here.