Art News Blog
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
  Art and Spirituality
Brian from MyArtSpace has asked some interesting questions on his Spiritual Side of Art post..

"Has a specific work of art touched your soul? Can you recall a specific work of art that helped your through a difficult time or defined a time of joy for you? I know that some people suggest that there is no longer room for the spiritual in the art of today-- do you agree? Or would you say that the spiritual aspects of art surround us just as they did in other periods of time? In your opinion, why does visual art have this power-- why do viewers establish these personal connections?" My ArtSpace


I think most of the spirituality in art is in the making of art, with the artwork simply being the byproduct. So a painting can be of something unspiritual, if there is such a word, but the artist may have felt that he/she was touching god while painting it.

I have never seen an artwork that has "touched my soul" or moved me to tears, even though I have looked at lots of art and think of myself as a reasonably sensitive person. Installations and moving images have come close as they have more tools to play with. A painting or sculpture has to work harder to affect the viewer as it simply sits there with no movement or sound, so we have to do all the work ourselves if we are to end up in tears. Film on the other hand has more tools available to press our emotional buttons at will.

Art affects us on a more subtle level, it seeps into our soul rather than blows our mind on the spot. Good art will linger, it will hang around for weeks and months after viewing it, but it probably won't make you cry or save your life. I think the viewer has to be content with knowing that the artwork is just the waste byproduct of something spiritual, which doesn't necessarily make the finished piece spiritual. Sometimes that waste product works as a mirror or points to something greater and it affects a person deeply, but usually it just ends up as something pretty hanging a wall.
 
Thursday, May 21, 2009
  Mary Cassatt
google logoGoogle is celebrating the birth of the American impressionist painter Mary Cassatt with a Cassatt-ized Google logo.

It's one of my favorite artist tributes from Google. Google does loud and colorful logos well, but this Mary Cassatt logo shows that they can do subtle and neutral colors too. See more Google logos here.

Mary Cassat was born on the 22nd of May, 1844 in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania and died near Paris, France on the 14th of June, 1926 at the age of 82.

The Mary Cassatt painting in the Google logo is "The Child's Bath" from 1893. It is owned by the Art Institute of Chicago.

Mary Cassatt - The Child's Bath
 
Sunday, May 10, 2009
  Travel Photos
Yes, it's an art blog and doesn't have much to do with travel, but such is life. I have been ping ponging all over the place lately but I keep forgetting to take my camera with me. I managed to take a few snaps though.

(Click to see larger images)

In a hotel in Canberra I had this trippy ceiling that didn't let my eye rest. I think as an artist you just let an image take you where it wants to go, but this wallpaper on my ceiling just made me dizzy.
hotel ceiling in canberra

Most trees at home are green all year, so I found these trees interesting. There was something romantic about walking down this path, even if I was alone.. and freezing.
Autumn trees in Canberra

See the parrots in the grass? That's why they're called Grass Parrots I guess. I have always loved birds and get pretty excited when I see them in the wild. Click on the image to see a larger version.
Australian Grass Parrots in Canberra

Here's the view from my hotel in Melbourne.
Melbourne City view from Hotel

Here's another view of Melbourne.
Melbourne City Photo

One more photo of Melbourne city.
Melbourne City Picture

Then I felt like I needed sun and warmth so I jumped in the car and headed North again. I have landed in the commercialized hippy town of Byron Bay. It's a strange combination of weekend hippies, far out hippies, wealthy retired people, surfers, and BMW driving yuppy types. Along with lots of Germans, Brits, Japanese, Americans, and a number of other nationalities.
byron bay lighthouse australia

Everytime I go to the Byron Bay lighthouse I seem to get wet.
byron bay photo australia

One more Byron Bay photo.
byron bay picture australia

I haven't decided what I'm doing or where I'm going next, but I check out on Wednesday so I better hurry up and figure it out ;-)
 
Saturday, May 09, 2009
  Vincent van Gogh Poem
I don't know who wrote this poem as it was left by "Anonymous" on an old Vincent van Gogh Quotes post. The only details he/she left was.. "A friend of mine wrote these words today after we spoke of the life of Van Gogh and the recently published book on his history."

Anyway, here's a Vincent inspired poem by "HK"

Hands of colors Dutch

Swirl like a painter’s hand gone mad
Canvas of face and time reflect
Bristles of lead give hues of past
Brushes like swords are in array.

I stand in front of the easel like a jury
Words like paint on white torture my hands and eyes
They taunt me like an old pavement princess
Wanting to believe that the brush is still gold
Music I hear or is that the ringing from glimpses of you

Paint away the now. Paint with colors only seen by angels
Colors that hide and feel like a blanket on a cold day
My stand in a broken seal, trembles with dread
Hoping to cure the demon that makes me paint away the now in me

I taste the colors of your soul. I wish that I could write the words that are
In my soul. Words of color and hope. Words that make the pain stop.
Paint. Paint away the pain.
My canvas is my life, and I give you the colors and brushes of me.

HK
 
Friday, May 08, 2009
  Nicole Danes is a Scammer
I received a few emails and comments left on the art scammers list about Nicole Danes nicodanes@live.com

She/he must be hitting a lot of artists at the moment. So I'm just publishing this post so that her name and/or email address shows up on Google, letting artists know that she is a scammer.

Here's an example of an email sent by it..

From: Nicole Danes <nicodanes@live.com>
Date: May 7, 2009 10:45:58 AM EDT
To: <----->
Subject: artworks purchase


Good day to you.

I am so excited that I came across of your work on internet search,I am interested in purchasing these creative artworks from you.....................

Construct Series 7,Construct Series 1,Slab,juncture and evanesce

Let me know their various prices.and how much discounts are you going to give?I will be happy to have these selected artworks hanged in our new home in South Africa. As well, I want you to take out the shipping cost.I have been in touch with a shipping firm that will be shipping other house decoratives.

We are traveling from our Dallas home to our new apartment as soon as possible.On Paying for the artworks,I will be glad to pay you with a Money Order or Cashier`s check in US funds that can be easily cashed at your local bank,please let me know on how to proceed for the payment of the creative artworks.

I will await your advise on how to proceed.Have a wonderful day.

Take care,
Nicole Danes

>> List of Cockroaches
 
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
  Painter Riding on the Back of Photographer?
A photographer recently asked an interesting question on an old post called Painting from Photographs.

He asks..

What should a photographer do after receiving a request from a painter who wants to paint loads of his images?

- a fee per image?
- % when painter sells this painting?
- just agreement about a credit line for the photographer?

I consider my photography as art on its own and somebody would like to do his/her art with my art.
Any suggestions?
I have no problem with 1-3 images painted and a credit line but more than 20???
 
Monday, May 04, 2009
  ArtPrize.org - The $250,000 Art Prize
ArtPrize has created some debate among artists recently. The Grand Rapids, Michigan based art prize is offering the winning artist $250,000, 2nd place $100,000, 3rd place $50,000 and $7000 for the next 7 artists.

That much money on offer gets a lot of attention from artists and the media, but the thing that artists are discussing most is the judging process; there is none. OK, not none, but the public vote for the winner. This has made many artist afraid, especially conceptual artists, and I think they have good reason to be afraid as most people have no reason to be in a gallery. I know that I wouldn't be a very good judge of hairy footed pheasants at a cock show as I don't know anything about them, which is the same reason that people who wouldn't know a poster from an oil painting wouldn't be very good at judging art.

It seems to be an experimental art prize though, which hopes to involve the public and get them looking at art, so it's all good. It will be interesting to see the winning work. The choices of art experts often have me scratching my head, so the public can't do much worse in choosing a winner.

ArtPrize is open to artists worldwide and judging is open to anyone that attends an exhibition space throughout Grand Rapids, Michigan. See the ArtPrize website for more information on entering the art competition. They also have a blog discussing the prize.

Thanks to Susan and those that let me know of the art prize.
 
Saturday, May 02, 2009
  John Brack in Melbourne
Two things that I have quickly noticed about the city of Melbourne is their love for AFL (Australian Football League) and their love for Melbourne artists. I passed thousands of supporters dressed in brown and yellow everything yesterday, so I'm glad I wasn't wearing the colors of the opposing team. It's not just guys that are fanatical about the sport, everyone seems to be. If I hang around Melbourne for much longer I might even go to a game to see what they're all so excited about.

John Brack Collins St 5pmAfter reading a few reviews in local newspapers of the current John Brack exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria, it makes me think that they love their artists as much as their athletes. I can't remember the exact words of one glowing review in a major newspaper but it called it a perfect exhibition and urged anyone with an Australian bone in their body to rush down and experience this art utopia.

I wouldn't dare tell this to a Melbournite, but I wasn't that impressed with the John Brack exhibition. Although he does have a few iconic pictures that depict a particular time and place in Australia like Collins St, 5p.m. from 1955 (pictured), The Car from 1955, and The Bar from 1954.

After the 1950s I started to lose concentration. It was like he was trying to be something that he wasn't, trying to be new like a lot of art being produced in America around the same time. I became a little more interested in the 1980s when he was painting pencils, but I eventually returned to the 1950s rooms to leave the exhibition on a high note.

John Brack the Battle Pencils
The Battle - 1983 - John Brack uses pencils to depict French and British soldiers in the Battle of Waterloo

I was much more impressed by a room of Fred Williams paintings in the free section of the gallery. Here's some work by Fred Williams online. Fred Williams is also from this area, so I probably wouldn't be hung for admitting that I like him more.
 
Friday, May 01, 2009
  Joan Mitchell Sunflower Paintings
One of my favorite female painters is showing at the Hauser & Wirth Zürich gallery in Switzerland. "Joan Mitchell - Sunflowers" runs from June 6 through to July 25.

Joan Mitchell Sunflower Paintings

I like paintings that look like they were fun to paint. Art doesn't have to be any more complicated than that for me. Concepts and theories come a distant second. If I can't relate to the painting of a picture, I move on to the next one.

From the exhibition press release..
"Joan Mitchell’s Sunflower paintings count amongst the most experimental and vibrant of all
her works. In the upstairs gallery at Hauser & Wirth Zürich, six canvases dating from the
1960s and the year before her death, etchings and drawings host an extraordinary diversity of
marks with compositions whose ungovernable vitality refuse to comply to the rules of image
making. Mitchell considered sunflowers to be 'like people' — subjects to empathise with
whose life cycles were played out with exuberance but brutal swiftness. 'If I see a sunflower
drooping, I can droop with it,' she explained, 'and I draw it, and feel it until its death.' Like
van Gogh whose precedent she was brave enough to summon, she embraced sunflowers for
their hopefulness as much as for their assertive and undeniable splendour. Her images do not
much resemble the plants themselves: they are blue and red as well as golden, erratically
dancing sweeps of colour that communicate internal as much as external landscape."

Here's a link to the Joan Mitchell Foundation too.
 
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