Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

The Wassaic Artist Residency project

July 3, 2010
invites all artists to apply:
Artist Residency: September / October
2010 Session EXTENDED! Application for September 1 – October 31 is NOW AVAILABLE! Residencies are 1 to 2 months.
APPLICATION DEADLINE: July 23, 11:59pm
Please see guidelines and application HERE.
Pics of the studios can be seen on facebook HERE.

— The Wassaic Project Team
2010 Artist Resident Hope Gangloff’s Studio.  Images courtesy of the Artist and Susan Inglett Gallery.
2010 Artist Resident Breanne Trammell’s Studio.
The Wassaic Project Residency Program has been created to cultivate and support community for emerging and professional contemporary artists. Housed in a historic re-purposed livestock auction barn, the Residency Program offers eight artists the opportunity to live and work in the heart of a rural community and offers three local artists studio space. The Wassaic Project seeks a group of artists working in a diverse range of media who want to produce, explore, challenge, and expand on their current art making practices, while participating in a grass roots, community-based arts organization. Resident Artists are invited to participate in The Wassaic Project Summer Festival 2011.

The Wassaic Project is an artist-run sustainable, multidisiplinary arts organization that focuses on community engagement and facilitates artists and participants to exhibit, discuss, and connect with art, each other, our unique site, and the surrounding community.
We seek to make connections between artists of all disciplines. We facilitate interaction and collaboration among artists and the public by utilizing our historic location to create new ways of working in the arts and to inspire new ways of seeing art. The Wassaic Project’s activities include an annual summer festival, a year-round artist residency, studio visits/critiques for artists involved with the organization by guest curators and visiting artists, artist workshops with community members, published catalogs, and fundraising exhibitions in Wassaic and New York City. Our programs intend to generate dialogue and collaboration across geographic, ideological and disciplinary boundaries.
WassaicProject.org location: 37 Furnace Bank Rd, Wassaic, NY 12592
mailing: P.O. Box 220, Wassaic, NY 12592

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1st thursday in Dumbo

July 2, 2010

last night mary and i went over to dumbo to see her postcard exhibit in ‘Wish you were here 9’ at A.I.R gallery as we had missed the actual opening of the show. the show runs from 6/23 thru July 18 at the gallery located 111 front street, Brooklyn ny.

sign

from the press release: A.I.R gallery is pleased to announce Wish You Were Here 9, on view in Gallery III from June 23- July 18 2010. the proceeds from this exhibition od this postcard-sized works support our mission to advance the status of women in the arts and benefit the A.I.R Fellowship program for emerging and underrepresented artist.

wish you were here 9

mary & postcard

so if you’re in the neighborhood do stop in as there is some really wonderful affordable art work with lots sold so far with lots to be sold. it’s really nice to see how others have dealt with the size restrictions and used their creativity.  i’ve always been impressed with how others create, it makes me think about how i might solve the problem and how different someone else solves the same problem.

that evening ‘the 1st Thursdays in dumdo the galleries are open late so we wandered around the hallway down to the Amos Eno gallery to see a group show where i met an artist who’s work i linked to here on fuzzy Marina Reiter. i had missed her solo show ‘Endless Summer’ but we had a chance to talk to her tonight. life is really wonderful once you get out into it.

marina reiter

no that’s not her work in the background but a good picture of her, see below or her web site.

Marina is a painter who works in oils, something i had started when i painted.  i love her work, maybe it’s the musically of it or the cleanness, something not often found these days in this messy world. talking to her is a joy because she gives one attention not like so many other artist at these kinds of affairs where they are looking around to the next person to talk to about themselves.

art truck

quite a crowd

wandering around we found an artist using her imagination as to showing her work not quite on the street but close to it. her name is Orianne Cosentino and she’s a painter. that’s her signing the truck wall. so it’s pretty wonderful just being out and about seeing all there is to see.

after a couple of sips of wine and the time of night hunger creeps up on one so we went off to find a place to eat. i had passed by a very cute place at 55 Water Street during nyp festival called 55 water street. i was very disappointed in the food, so much so i’d never eat there again. the provincial stuffed chicken i had was over cooked with a canned tomato sauce spiced with hot sauce and lumpy mashed potatoes. mary had a mediocre penne in a cream sauce.

windy night for eating lobster

but we were luck we weren’t trying to eat a lobster outside as was this woman on a  windy evening. mary found this shot looking through the window venetian blinds. they did finally move inside, guess it got too much for them.

so life can be interesting even when not the best, the important thing is for one to be there now.

so long for now lots of other news will have to wait because i’ve a meeting to go to.

jene

not sure what i like anymore

July 1, 2010

here are some images that i am not sure which ones i like or that really work so i am asking you for help in pointing me in a direction

1.

female semi nude profile

female semi nude profile

2.

3/4 female nude

3/4 female nude

3.

covered up

all though i do like the one looking at us i do have another preference but i’ll keep that to myself and hopefully see which one you like.

jene

couldn’t get to sleep tonight so lucky you

July 1, 2010

another single strobe test, trying to make my life simple

female nude

dark shadows

while still looking for detail

hands

and then do they tell a story?

hands again

i told you it was late, think it’s time to go to bed now

jene

just to keep things interesting; a female nude

June 30, 2010

female nude from a session a while ago.

female nude

female nude

interesting landscape of hills and valleys one could almost imaging skiing across this terrain if covered in snow. but then again the human body is always interesting coming or going.

female nude

more hills and valley's

in both of these images i had to retouch her body. the top image she had shaving bumps in the folds of her raised leg and some other stuff going on but this was the simpler of the two images. the bottom i had to remove panty lines from her rear and legs and touch up stretch marks on her breast, seems even young women get them. all bodies have some imperfections bumps, pimples or discolored areas. no big deal but that’s the price i pay for being a small operation. so much goes into just taking a picture and showing them.

advice to young female models: take care of yourself, cream your skin, it’s your best asset.

oh well

jene

chase and adobe the new neanderthals along with elected members of congress

June 30, 2010

things that piss me off

adobe software,  purchases or non purchases  from their web site. i thought LR 3 was on the way but my chase credit card was suspended for suspect usages. so adobe called me right in the middle of a project to reconfirm the order and get a new credit card number. like this is all i have to do is purchase their products.

then the next day when i had the time to reorder on the web it wouldn’t let me for some reason. when i called india tech support and spoke with a nice person, i assume but had limited english capabilities i just gave up. so i’ll pick it up in my wanderings.

one of the nice things to happen to me of late is helen from adoroma, hi helen, who monitors the web for adoroma mentions sent me a coupon to use at their store for the frustrating experience i had with them over a color cart. it wasn’t something that i expected nor was looking for and maybe that was what made it so nice. i do respond to acts of kindness by shopping at vendors who do the right thing.

as for chase credit card services i think they are being run by neanderthals these days. they stopped usage on my card for a suspect charge with a vendor that they had approved two weeks before and another charge to the same vendor the month before and a vendor i buy a lot of stuff from.

has the whole world gotten stupider from this security stuff? one would think so. as i spoke with chase customer support last night i was convinced this person sat at his computer with his shoes untied from lack of ability and not comfort.

reading in the papers this morning, ‘can we say financial reform’ or don’t forget to pick up your campaign contribution on the way out, or do they just drop the check in the mail ? what ever happened to a goverment by and for the people, panama looks better and better each day.

Heat Waves in a swamp,The Paintings of Charles Burchfield

June 25, 2010

NEW YORK, NY.- The Whitney Museum of American Art focuses on the work of the visionary artist Charles Burchfield (1893-1967) in an exhibition curated by acclaimed sculptor Robert Gober. Heat Waves in a Swamp: The Paintings of Charles Burchfield features more than one hundred watercolors, drawings, and paintings from private and public collections, as well as selections from Burchfield’s journals, sketches, scrapbooks, and correspondence. Organized by the Hammer Museum, in collaboration with the Burchfield Penney Art Center in Buffalo, the exhibition provides the most comprehensive examination to date of an underappreciated modernist master. Whitney senior curatorial assistant Carrie Springer is overseeing the installation in the third-floor Peter Norton Family Galleries, where it will be on view from June 24 through October 17, 2010.

Born in 1893 in Ashtabula Harbor, Ohio, and raised nearby in Salem, Burchfield spent most of his adult life in upstate New York, in Buffalo, where he moved in 1921, and the neighboring suburb of Gardenville. Working almost exclusively in watercolor on paper, his principal subject was his experience of the natural world, which led him to create deeply personal landscapes that are often imbued with highly expressionistic light. His works quiver with color and the almost audible sounds of humming insects, rustling leaves, bells, birds, and vibrating telephone lines. In 1945 he noted, “It is as difficult to take in all the glory of a dandelion, as it is to take in a mountain, or a thunderstorm.”

Charles-Burchfield-Autumnal-Fantasy

Contemporary artist Robert Gober has curated previous exhibitions, most notably The Meat Wagon at the Menil Collection in Houston, in 2005, drawn from the diverse selection of works in the Menil’s holdings. With this exhibition, Gober – who discovered that his interest in Burchfield was shared by Hammer Director Ann Philbin and coordinating curator/Hammer Deputy Director Cynthia Burlingham – is for the first time curating a large-scale monographic show of another artist’s work. The exhibition is arranged chronologically, with each room presenting a distinct phase of Burchfield’s career. Exploring both physical and psychological terrain, Gober has augmented the selection of Burchfield’s works with extensive material that sheds light on the artist’s thoughts about his work and artistic practice. Burchfield (with much help from his wife, Bertha) left a trove of well-maintained sketches, jottings, notebooks, journals, and ephemera spanning his entire career. This material is now part of the Burchfield Penney Art Center at Buffalo State College.

an april mood

Charles Burchfield – “An April Mood”, 1946–55. Watercolor and charcoal on joined paper, 40 x 54 inches Whitney Museum of American Art. Purchase, with partial funds from Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Fleischman.
The title of the show, Heat Waves in a Swamp, comes from the title of a Burchfield watercolor. Gober writes of Burchfield in his catalogue introduction: “He loved swamps and bogs and marshes. He loved all of nature and was torn as a young man between being an artist and being a nature writer. He liked nothing more than to paint while literally standing in a swamp. Liked the mosquitoes and the rain and the decay of vegetation. I felt early on that this title had a metaphorical sweep that captured Burchfield’s enthusiasms at their deepest and best.”

Charles Burchfield – “Black Iron”, 1935 (detail) Watercolor on paper, 281⁄8 x 40 in. Private collection.The exhibition begins with work Burchfield created in 1916 while living in Salem, Ohio, and follows his career with particular attention to transformative and reflective moments in his life and work. Among the earliest works is a 1917 sketchbook entitled “Conventions for Abstract Thoughts,” which includes a series of symbolic drawings depicting human emotions. The abstract forms in these drawings would reappear in Burchfield’s work for years to come.

A room is dedicated to a series of works that were shown in a 1930 exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art, Charles Burchfield: Early Watercolors, 1916 to 1918, the first show at MoMA devoted to a single artist. Correspondence between Burchfield and MoMA’s legendary curator/director Alfred Barr will be shown alongside the work. As Gober notes, “Burchfield’s complex communion with nature, as seen in these early watercolors, would resurface later, becoming the inspirational touchstone for the work of the last two decades of his life.”

From 1921 to 1929 Burchfield worked as a designer at the M. H. Birge & Sons wallpaper factory in Buffalo. His designs, like all his art, were based in nature and reveal such diverse influences as Japanese woodcuts by Katsushika Hokusai and Ando Hiroshige, Chinese scroll paintings, and the illustrations of Arthur Rackham. Burchfield’s work as a wallpaper designer during the 1920s is featured in a room that includes watercolors from the same period hanging on walls covered in a reprint of one of his designs. When the opportunity arose to show his paintings at the Frank K. M. Rehn Galleries in New York, Burchfield gave up his job and decided to paint full time.

Burchfield accepted commissions from Fortune magazine to paint railroads in Pennsylvania, sulphur mines in Texas, and coal mines in Virginia. Many of his paintings of this period deal with the rural and industrial worlds around him and present these worlds in a less fantastical way than in his earlier watercolors. By the mid-1930s, Burchfield was celebrated for his realist depictions of the American landscape. In 1943 Burchfield faced a creative crisis as he was approaching fifty and the country was in the middle of World War II. At that point he began to look back at his earlier watercolors and to expand them. The exhibition reunites two pivotal paintings, both completed in 1943 within a month of each other, although one was begun in 1917 and the other in 1934. These two paintings, The Coming of Spring and Two Ravines, were the works that marked Burchfield’s transition from crisis to the extraordinary achievements of his last two decades. Gober notes, “He felt that his work had lost the intensity of his early watercolors, and in his struggle to make works that he felt reflected the best possibilities for his creativity, he took early drawings and physically expanded them to make these two landmark works.”

Although he struggled with health problems during the 1950s and 60s, until his death in 1967, Burchfield created some of his most vibrant and fascinating works toward the end of his life. As Gober writes, “The works from this period of Burchfield’s life are immersed in what he perceived as the complicated beauty and spirituality of nature and are often imbued with visionary, apocalyptic, and hallucinatory qualities. In these large, late watercolors, Burchfield was able to execute with grace and beauty many of the painting ideas that he had developed as a young man…And in so doing, he transformed himself and his practice, producing one of the rarest events in the life of any artist: great art in old age.” Visit The Whitney Museum of American Art at : http://www.whitney.org/

www.artknowledgenews.com

see  a review in todays nytimes ‘Nature, up close and personal.’ http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/25/arts/design/25burchfield.html?th&emc=th

what’s new in adobe lightroom 3, whoopee

June 23, 2010

well i saw a video introduction to new features in lr 3 and this one feature had me drooling, tethered capture. i’ve been looking at capture one software for a while but it’s expensive for my needs so i’ve rushed my order and gleefully await my new disk.

http://tryit.adobe.com/us/lightroom/?sdid=EPIHJ

http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshoplightroom/features/

Adobe Portrait Commissions Available

June 23, 2010

here is something i came across the other day that might be of interest to some of you. i know nothing more about it than what is written here. good luck

Sun Jun 20, 2010 10:28 am (PDT)

Adobe Portrait Commissions Available
If you are interested in doing a series of portrait posters in any 20/21st
century art style or media preferably the one of the Pop Art Portrait Styles
or anything that can be produced by Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator ,
Coreldraw, Paintshop Pro or a similar software package, please contact me to
receive more information and a few dozen examples of the submissions we have
received .

Examples of Pop Art Portrait Styles
http://www.google. com/images? um=1&hl=en& client=gmail& rls=gm&tbs= isch:1&sa= 1&q=Pop+Art+ Portraits& aq=f&aqi= g1g-m1&aql= &oq=&gs_rfai=<http://www.linkedin .com/redirect? url=http% 3A%2F%2Fwww% 2Egoogle% 2Ecom%2Fimages% 3Fum%3D1% 26hl%3Den% 26client% 3Dgmail%26rls% 3Dgm%26tbs% 3Disch%3A1% 26sa%3D1% 26q%3DPop% 2BArt%2BPortrait s%26aq%3Df% 26aqi%3Dg1g- m1%26aql% 3D%26oq%3D% 26gs_rfai% 3D&urlhash= 97uU>

Clearly the Andy Warhol style is preferred and the most easy to use, but
other unique styles are also of interest including caricatures. This project
has now been running for 9 years and over 70% of the posters that have sold
very well are variations of the Warhol Art Style.

Graphic, charcoal, crayon, pastels, pencil and ink portraits are also of
interest. As are acrylic and oil portraits but the end product is posters.
Original art may be bought for Israeli Art Museums but this is secondary to
the primary objective of turning a portrait into a poster…The print run
for the Icon series is 8,000 with commission of $1.00 per copy per digitally
signed copies which will then be numbered and embossed by hand and $2.50 for
copies signed by the artist. Up to 1000 copies will be signed by hand by the
artist in London. (at our expense entirely) All printing in London is
audited by a Big Four Auditor ( E & Y) . Payment in full and immediate is
made when the print run is completed and the hand signing of the posters is
completed. We expect at least 16 different posters from each artist in more
or less the same style and background themes..

If your style of art is original and you are interested in trying the
portrait in it. I would be more than happy to consider your portrait style
for current and future commissions.

The 4 Icon Series are
1. Jewish and Zionist Icons ( the main series) anyone who has appeared on an
Israeli Stamp
http://www-personal .umich.edu/ ~szwetch/ Stamps.of. Israel/<http://www.linkedin .com/redirect? url=http% 3A%2F%2Fwww- personal% 2Eumich%2Eedu% 2F%7Eszwetch% 2FStamps% 2Eof%2EIsrael% 2F&urlhash= GXZy>
( click on the stamp and it will enlarge)
2. Icons of the 20th Century ( 100 Time Magazine Icons)
3. Thinkers of the 20th Century ( again as listed by Time Magazine)
4. Supplementary List ( Open to Suggestions)

If you are interested in more information and couple of dozen examples of
submissions we have received over the last 8 years that have been turned
into posters , please send me an email to my gmail address.
Roger Golden .
Rogergolden8@ gmail.com


Dr Roger Golden
Golden Art Group
New York / Jerusalem/ London

Address for drop shipments and correspondence is
Dr Roger Golden
Golden art Group
Yefet Street 199/9
Tel Aviv 68061
Israel

The Golden Group have been International Interior Decorators since 1912.

The Golden Group is an active buyer of art ,particularly pieces that can be
hung that says “Have a Good Day”. For more details please ask for them. We
accept unsolicited consignment which we deal with within 4 days. Please
ensure that your parcels are described as “Media consignment ” and its value
is recorded as “nominal”. We are very active buyers of reasonably priced
art ( below $1000 a piece) for the Interior Decorating Business. We weekly
receive 8 to 12 consignments and buy over 85%. We only buy art that we
physically see, Over the last decade we have found digital images to be
extremely unreliable..

[Opportunities] Apply for LMCC’s Swing Space: Project-based residencies for Visual and Performing Artists and Arts Groups

June 18, 2010
LMCC is now accepting applications for its Swing Space residency program, providing studio space at Building 110: LMCC’s Arts Center at Governors Island, and rehearsal space at The Vaults at 14 Wall Street.

Application Deadline

Thursday, July 22, 2010 at 5PM

Residency Dates

Studio Space residencies will take place in five-month sessions between March and December 2011.

Rehearsal Space residencies will take place in six-month sessions between November 2010 and October 2011.

About Swing Space

Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Swing Space program works with downtown building owners to make vacant space available to artists and arts groups for the development and presentation of new projects in the visual and performing arts. Since its launch in 2005, Swing Space has placed hundreds of artists in over 20 different spaces, including ground floor retail spaces, gutted industrial spaces, upper level office floors, and subterranean bank vaults. Swing Space is designed to address short-term space needs for a wide range of projects, and to encourage creative, experimental, and collaborative approaches to artistic practice in unconventional spaces.

How it Works

LMCC accepts applications for Swing Space once per year. Please note: this is a change from previous six- or nine-month placement periods. Each application is reviewed by a discipline-specific panel of artists and arts professionals, who rate and select projects based on the Swing Space selection criteria. Selected projects are then matched with available space.

Info Sessions

Applicants are strongly encouraged to attend an information session before applying for Swing Space. LMCC staff will review the application guidelines and project categories, and answer questions about the selection and placement process.

RSVP is required, and space is limited. Click on a date above to reserve a spot.

To Apply

Please visit www.lmcc.net/swingspace/apply and follow the instructions to learn more about the program and submit your application.


Swing Space is made possible with Public Funds from

NYC DCA, NYSCA, NEASwing Space is made possible with generous space donations from Capstone Equities and through a partnership with Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation (GIPEC).

Additional support is provided by Ameriprise Financial; The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.; The Cowles Charitable Trust; Jacques and Natasha Gelman Trust; JPMorgan Chase; May and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation, Inc.; Mertz Gilmore Foundation; Milton & Sally Avery Foundation; New York Community Trust; New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver; and the Starry Night Fund of Tides Foundation.

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