News
Follow that robot: the hi-tech tour guides taking over Tate Britain at night

Art lovers all over the world can log on to the Tate website and control four robot guides that were test-driven by Space Oddity astronaut Chris Hadfield

Robots’ eye view: watch an exclusive video of the robots on the move

In the small hours of the next five nights, things that absolutely will not go bump in the night will be roaming the galleries of Tate Britain.

After Dark will use four robots which move at surprising speed despite looking like the love children of a close encounter between a coat rack and a standard lamp to let the public experience the eerie thrill of visiting the sleeping art. It has won the first IK Prize for a project that widens access to art through digital technology.

Continue reading…




SOURCE: Art and design | The Guardian – Read entire story here.

charlotte van der waals’ world watches indicate multiple time zones

the unique design of 10-minute marks on its face and major cities engraved into its shell allows users to tell time at any given moment all around the globe.

The post charlotte van der waals’ world watches indicate multiple time zones appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

SOURCE: designboom | architecture & design magazine – Read entire story here.

Sneak Peek Behind The Scenes Of Josh Groban’s Summer Tour

Acclaimed recording artist Josh Groban is set to embark on a new North American tour in promotion of his chart-topping ALL THAT ECHOES album with a new East Coast Summer tour kicking off this week and a new behind the scenes teaser of what attendees can expect from the event is now available to view.

SOURCE: Arts News – Read entire story here.

Malevich – Revolutionary of Russian Art @ Tate Modern

Tate Modern stages a unique retrospective of Kazimir Malevich, offering a view of the artist’s oeuvre from his early figurative paintings, through the invention of Suprematism in 1915, to a late period during which he returned back to figuration. With many of the artists’ greatest works, it offers a possibility to witness his vision and revolutionary spirit in a thorough and unprecedented way. (Photos on Flickr)

The chronological setup of the retrospective positions Malevich’s work in a direct social and political context of the late 19th and the early 20th century Russia. And what an exciting period indeed! Born under the Tsar’s regime, Malevich started his artistic career – heavily influenced by Italian futurism and French cubism – at the outset of the WWI. His proclamation of radical Suprematism movement came just before the October Revolution in 1917, a unsettling time soon to be followed by the Civil War in 1919. During this period Malevich worked as a teacher in Vitebsk and formed an artistic collective UNOVIS.

In 1924, after Lenin’s death and with Stalin in power, Russia witnesses not only forced collectivisation and wide-spread famine, but also a growing persecution of the artistic avant-garde. Socialist Realism is soon to be established as the sole style of the new USSR. Malevich answers with new figurative paintings that nevertheless clearly retain the marks of abstraction. His final works, figurative in style, are signed with a black square symbol.

Malevich’s Suprematist period is represented in the show by several surviving paintings from The last Futurist Exhibition of Paintings 0.10, a legendary show held in Petrograd in 1915. There’s also a large number of his famous geometric compositions and series of white canvases and architectons that marked “the end of a painting” era. Definitely worth a closer look is a room dedicated solely to the artist’s works on paper, which span Malevich’s entire career.

No doubt ‘though that the biggest crowd magnets will be 2 versions of the Black Square (from 1923 and 1929 – the original 1915 one being too fragile to travel from Moscow) – Malevich’s signature piece and one of the most radical statements in art history. Quite a treat to stand right in front of it!

Malevich is curated by Achim Borchardt-Hume. The show opens today at Tate Modern and will be on display till 26 October 2014.

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SOURCE: Happy Famous Artists » Blog – Read entire story here.

4 Tips for Drawing People

I was recently on the train with a friend who caught the
attention of an artist sitting across from us. She started drawing my pal. We
were thrilled! It was an exciting moment as we watched my friend's face appear
on the paper in front of us. As the artist went about her work, I observed her
in action–and then went home and did a little more research to pull together
these tips on how to draw people that might be useful.

Self Portrait by Jon deMartin, 2011, chalk drawing on toned paper, 17 x 14.
Self Portrait by Jon deMartin, 2011,
chalk drawing on toned paper, 17 x 14.

Different lines are essential when drawing people–denoting
volume and light and dark means remembering the diversity of line. It can be
thick or thin, jagged or smooth-edged, dabbed and dotted or unbroken. Figuring
out how to draw someone's face with just line is a lesson in itself in how
useful and dynamic lines really are.

Move your hand–and the paper. I was initially surprised at
how often the artist drawing my friend would move around. But in hindsight,
this makes perfect sense. The gesture of our hand when staying in one place can
only change so much, so altering the position of the hand or the surface we are
drawing upon can help you get the marks you want.

You are not connecting the dots. My impulse is always to
draw people starting with a bold outline that goes all around their body or
face. But that's an elementary urge, and in reality I don't need a rigid
enclosed outline to create dynamic drawings of people. I can use intermittent
lines, marking the nose or the hand for example, and the viewer's eye will
often fill in the rest.

Julie in Profile by Jon deMartin, 2009, chalk drawing on toned paper, 24 x 18.
Julie in Profile by Jon deMartin, 2009,
chalk drawing on toned paper, 24 x 18.

Crosshatching is never extreme. When I first learned about
crosshatching, my teacher reinforced again and again that it should never be
too crossed. What I mean is that the two lines of the mark should not be drawn
perpendicular to each other so you have a true "+." Instead, the lines of a
crosshatch are usually at a much more acute angle to each other.

This is only the tip of the iceberg of what it takes to
learn how to draw a person, but it's definitely a place to start. For more
in-depth instruction on drawing people, consider the Anniversary Edition of Drawing People. Enjoy!


SOURCE: Artist Daily – Read entire story here.

Can You Outgrow Your Art?
Train Tracks by Valerio D'Ospina, 2011, oil on melamined MDF, 30 x 24.
Train Tracks by Valerio D'Ospina, 2011, oil on melamined MDF, 30 x 24.

Some artists such as Jackson Pollock discover and use their
own visual language to communicate with the world, and this singular voice
takes them through an entire career of putting oil on canvas. Others—Picasso for
instance—pass through several stages of change in their work, whether by theme,
technique, or style.

Artist Valerio D'Ospina believes that his own artistic
growth is in direct correlation with how he grows as a human being. "My
personality, my character, and even my taste and style have been constantly
changing throughout my entire life. Inevitably, my artistic needs are involved
in this flow of changing," he says.

I identify with D'Ospina's point of view because I think—or
hope—that I am constantly growing as a person, gaining wisdom and new
abilities. And how can that not impact the art we make?

Just a few years ago, D'Ospina was a graduate student in
Florence using a more traditional-classical approach to oil painting. The oil
painting techniques
that he used are for the indirect way of painting and
included priming his linen with rabbit skin glue and gesso, toning his surface
to a mid-tone value, making preparatory drawings and underpaintings, and using
layers and glazes.

F. Galano in His Studio by Valerio D'Ospina, oil on canvas. Ragazza con tre oecchini by Valerio D'Ospina, oil on canvas.
The artist's early work:
F. Galano in His Studio

by Valerio D'Ospina, oil on canvas.
An early portrait:
Ragazza con Tre Oecchini

by Valerio D'Ospina, oil on canvas.

The approach dates back to the Renaissance but D'Ospina
found that painting this way was driving him to photorealism because of its
emphasis on refining technique and virtuosity. He knew it was time for a change
when he realized that his first sketch of a painting rather than the end result
with successive layers and rendering brought him more satisfaction. "The first
sketch was faster, gestural, and more fresh. I thought it was a shame to cover
all that with the heaviness of the defining layers," he says.

For D'Ospina, realizing he wasn't satisfied with the way he
was working meant that he needed to disrupt the habits of his previous
comfortable techniques by trying different surfaces, materials, and, most of
all, by changing subject matter and experimenting with dramatically different
themes. He also started painting alla prima, applying paint straight on the
surface without using a pencil drawing sketch beforehand.

Now D'Ospina works on bringing a three-dimensional quality
to the surface of his oil paintings and a sketchy rendering aspect to his
compositions that still delivers a lot of meticulous detail. He also
transitioned from painting more academic subjects to industrial scenes. All of
this was uncomfortable for the artist at first, but it was exactly this
challenge that led him to embrace a more expressionistic attitude and gave him
the growth he needed to find continued satisfaction in his painting.

Naval Field (study) by Valerio D'Ospina, 2010, oil on melamined MDF, 31 x 24. Via Roma by Valerio D'Ospina, 2011, oil on melamined MDF, 18 x 12.
Naval Field (study) by Valerio D'Ospina,
2010, oil on melamined MDF, 31 x 24.
Via Roma by Valerio D'Ospina, 2011,
oil on melamined MDF, 18 x 12.

I'm incredibly inspired by D'Ospina's openness and his commitment
to change his painting approach from what he first learned to what felt right
to him as an artist. He was honest with himself about what he needed as an
artist, and went after it. And that is what we should all do more of! If you
want to explore the techniques that allowed D'Ospina to grow and refine his
work, it is a great idea to start with Michael Wilcox's book on Glazing and other Old Master techniques. Enjoy!


SOURCE: Artist Daily – Read entire story here.

Can Art Save a City?

Can Detroit be saved? With pledges of major funding now in place, one can hold out hope for the Detroit Institute of Arts. And now that court rulings have cleared the way, one can imagine a sounder financial footing for the city as well. Still, Detroit intends to deal with decades of abandonment not by reviving old retail and housing stock, but by leveling them. Apparently, this is one exercise in urban planning that does not count on artists and hipsters to inhabit the margins. But can a city save entire communities by destroying them? Julie Mehretu's Atlantic Wall (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 2008-2009)

Maybe, or maybe it will have to settle for watching them go. One might say the same, too, about the city’s art. “Another Look at Detroit” features more than fifty “artists, designers, and cultural contributors” through August 8. Together with my wrap-ups from last time and a bit earlier on summer group shows, it is also the subject of a longer review, as my latest upload.

The exhibition spans two Chelsea galleries, Marlborough and Marianne Boesky—with a portrait of Boesky’s grandfather, in a family better known for a chain of delis, some topless bars, and Ivan Boesky, the center of a Wall Street trading scandal. It has contemporary artists as familiar as Mike Kelley, Scott Reeder, James Lee Byars, Julie Mehretu, Dana Schutz, Cyprien Gaillard, Tony Matelli, Jim Shaw, Nick Cave, and Jennifer Jason Reeves, who died of cancer only days before the opening. The funny thing is how little one associates them with Detroit and how quickly they left it behind.

Kelley all but exemplifies LA art and Reeder the Lower East Side. Byars discovered himself in Kyoto and died in Cairo. Mehretu, born in Ethiopia, also has something of a global identity. Diego Rivera worked in Detroit, but on a portrait of the eponym for failure, Edsel Ford. The Cranbrook Academy can count the Eames brothers and Eero Saarinen among its alumni, but their furniture here looks a little ratty. So for that matter does the show’s layout.

The curator, Todd Levin, speaks of “a sprawling tone poem evoking the city where I was born and raised,” but he has no illusions about its present or future. Each gallery opens with a pile of Ray Johnson’s slim Detroit Artist Monthly, a limited sign of life from an artist who died in 1995. Then comes a dark room with only three works—two markers of a contentious history in one corner and a portrait of present-day decay in another. They include Bill Rauhuaser’s photo of a multiracial city in the 1960s and Scott Hocking’s New Book of Knowledge from 2010, but the first is barely composed and the other in tatters.

Finally, one passes through a second black curtain and into a cluttered installation with little in the way of narrative, chronology, or organization. You decide what survives from the ruins, it seems to say, and you determine the future.

Levin insists that he is out neither to document “a place of perpetual flames” nor to paper over it. He is after neither a comprehensive history nor the particulars of today. One sees little of its museum, beyond a stiff group portrait of its first board of trustees. One sees an early modern Detroit, in a painting touched by expressionism and the Aschcan school, but nothing of Charles Demuth, Charles Sheeler, and prewar tributes to Ford’s Rouge River Plant. One sees techno recordings from Metroplex records, but not the classic Detroit sound. One sees old Ford ads and a parody of them by Liz Cohen, with a woman seductively straddling an automobile hood, but not enough of the city that the industry produced and left behind.

The obvious question is what that leaves beyond missed opportunities. One can sense a shared intricacy bursting the picture plane, especially in the present. One can look for its roots in a Crankbrook degree—or the energy of a city. And one can see the importance of African Americans to that energy, as far back as Robert S. Duncanson, a descendant of freed slaves in the Hudson River School.

So can Detroit be saved by its diversity, and can art count among its saviors? Maybe, the exhibition seems to confess, but they may not stay for long.

Read more, now in a feature-length article on this site.

SOURCE: Haberarts – Read entire story here.

Light Tornado Photography – Martin Kimbell Captures a Magically Ethereal Phenomenon

The light tornado photo series of Martin Kimbell, a photographer that hails from England, is absolutely incredible.

SOURCE: Photography News – Read entire story here.

Trust (and Verify) Artist Opportunities

There are all kinds of opportunities for artists to show and to sell their work.

Your inbox probably has an email from a rich oil sheik in Qatar who wants to buy your art right now.

What do you do?
How can you tell the good opportunities from those you should avoid?

My advice is always to trust first and to be cautious second and most importantly.

Janice McDonald, Helen Hiebert, and Alyson. Helen had a fantastic working experience with a Denver-area library that purchased her piece (above) titled The Wish.

Janice McDonald, Helen Hiebert, and Alyson. Helen had a fantastic working experience with a Denver-area library that purchased her piece (above) titled The Wish.

As with everything in your art business, the onus is on you to verify all of the facts. Here’s how you do that.

Visit When You Can

Peruse online gallery sites for signs of business legitimacy and also to see the range of art they’re showing.

Do you like the work?
Would you be proud to have your art shown alongside that on the site?
Is the photography of high quality?
Are all works credited?
Do they make it easy for customers to buy the art?

Visit brick-and-mortar spaces to check out cleanliness, professionalism, and staff manners. Look for red dots on the walls, keeping in mind that not all galleries mark artworks as Sold.

Inquire From All Angles

After thanking the sheik from Qatar for his interest, ask how he found your site and what he liked most about the artwork he’s interested in. (This is too much work for the phonies.)

Ask venues how long they have been in business.

Ask organizers of juried exhibitions how many years they have been operating, and what the traffic and sales volume have been in the past.

Ask everyone for references from happy artists or clients.

Ask artists associated with the venue or organization what their sales have been like.

Have they been paid in a timely manner?
Has communication been good?
Has the other party lived up to their promises?

Research Online

Vertigo Art Space, curated by Michael McClung

Visit the Better Business Bureau site and enter the business name to see if any complaints have been filed against it.

For any organization, exhibition or venue, a little googling can answer a lot of questions.

What’s the website like?
Are they active on social media?
Do you see their calendar listings in local publications?
Do they advertise?

Search online for the sheik’s name to see if it has been associated with fraudulent email.

Get It In Writing

Read the client agreement carefully.

What is the duration of your commitment?
What is your financial commitment?
What are the venue’s obligations to you?

Don’t ship or sign anything until everything is in writing and the money, if it’s part of the transaction, has cleared the bank. This could take up to a month, so don’t let anyone rush you. (Honestly, when has any art-buying experience ever been urgent?)

I’ll leave you with this thought: I know several artists who have received phishy-looking emails from far-off countries that turned out to be legitimate.

Remember that I said to trust first. You just never know.

SOURCE: Art Biz Blog – Read entire story here.

We were young boys; we saw those things that caught our attentions like that, by chance. When you are 16 you kind of absorb everything. If something…

SOURCE: – Graffiti and train blog – – Read entire story here.

“Untitled,” Drew Doggett

Omo-People-Drew-Doggett-boy-goat-africa-tribe-portrait-Untitled-44Drew Doggett: “I search for subjects with unique stories in corners of the world available only to those purposefully seeking them … I’m preparing to release my latest collection which features the epic dunes of Sossusvlei, Namibia. The images capture the spirit of this vast and desolate area characterized by organic geometric shapes, the intersection of lines, the textures and layers and the subtle shifts in tonal values.”

drewdoggett.com

SOURCE: Art Business News – Read entire story here.

Speed, Space, and Satire—Italian Futurism on the Blog

Detail: Carlo Carrà, Interventionist Demonstration(Manifestazione Interventista), 1914. Tempera, pen, mica powder, and paper glued on cardboard, 38.5 × 30 cm. Gianni Mattioli Collection, on long-term loan to the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice © 2014 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/SIAE, RomeAs we near the close of the Guggenheim’s Italian Futurism exhibition, we revisit an array of blog posts that explored works in diverse mediums and provided a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the making of this unparalleled retrospective. Read through our Futurism series and get a chance to win a Futurism prize pack plus two admission passes to see the exhibition.


SOURCE: Guggenheim Blogs – Read entire story here.

Fight war not wars

https://artsnews.turnkeywebsitesforsale.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/82a620140805_ElbitFactory.jpg
nice bit of direct action

SOURCE: HURTYOUBAD SUPERBLOG – Read entire story here.