Friday, May 04, 2007
We're on Myspace...Oh yeah.
Not that we want to sound like hipsters, but EVERYONE is on there now, and so are we!

Visit our new Myspace profile, create your own unique profile and send us an add request. We promise to be your friend.

By Lisa Wurster | Random Thoughts
5/4/2007 4:10:50 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Edward Hopper and Mark Rothko

At the Art Institute, when I came upon the place where Edward Hopper's Nighthawks usually resides, I saw instead a small photo and a sign announcing Nighthawks was travelling to Boston, where it would be part of a comprehensive show of Hopper's work at the Museum of Fine Arts from 6 May to 19 August. Holland Cotter today in the New York Times takes issue with the show's being billed as a retrospective, since it lacks many drawings, some signature works, and any examples of Hopper's work as an illustrator. Indeed, it's odd that the show has neither title nor theme and is simply called Edward Hopper. We at The Artist's Magazine have been thinking a lot about Hopper, since his Second Story Sunlight will be on the cover of our July-August issue. Managing Editor Chris McHugh deftly negotiated with the Whitney Museum of American Art to secure permission; curators were justifiably worried that we'd jeopardize the picture's integrity with cover lines, but when Senior Art Director Daniel Pessell submitted his elegant, austere design to the Whitney for approval,  the curators said Yes.

In a fascinating article upcoming in the July-August issue (on sale on newsstands June 12th) Sheila Hollihan Elliot breaks down Hopper's creative process by focussing on three signature works. Hopper transmuted what he saw, playing with elements of composition until he'd discovered the precise ratio of radiance and shadow. Today, in the Times, too, I saw Sotheby's  announcement that one of Mark Rothko's most gorgeous works (fields of rose, yellow, red with bands of black and also of white) was for sale. Rothko's soul was tortured; whenever I see a photo of him, I wince, but even in front of his most painful, darkest works, I feel a quiet elation.
Maureen


By Maureen Bloomfield | Random Thoughts | Shows and Events
5/4/2007 1:59:56 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, April 27, 2007
Visit to the Art Institute of Chicago
Of course, I wanted to catch the Cézanne to Picasso show at the Art Institute, so I made a dash on Friday. It was a treat to climb the main staircase to find excited middle-school children on a treasure hunt through the Modern galleries. “I found it,” one exclaimed. “A woman with two faces and a green dress on; it must be Picasso!”  The special exhibit, Cézanne to Picasso: Ambroise Vollard, Patron of the Avant-Garde, celebrates the influence of the Parisian dealer and collector who gave Picasso his first show and was a friend to Auguste Renoir, Pierre Bonnard, Edouard Vuillard, Henri Matisse, Mary Cassatt, Andre Derain, Maurice Denis and a host of other avant-garde artists. The story of the way Vollard acquired his collection shows how important it is to have a pocketbook at the right place and time. Vollard bought paintings Theo van Gogh had on hand when his brother Vincent died; he also seized the opportunity when Paul Gauguin, embarking on his second trip to Tahiti, left the Breton scenes in the studios of friends. The later, haunting masterpiece Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?, on loan from the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, commanded a wall.

Many of the rooms were dark, because Vollard prized works on paper; one small room displayed three breathtaking, late pastels by Edgar Degas; also memorable were works in charcoal by Odilon Redon. It was lovely, too, to see portfolios of stunning prints by two of my favorite artists, Vuilllard and Bonnard. And since Vollard commissioned his friends to try their hands at ceramics and illustrated books, there were gorgeous examples of vases and livres d’artiste, as well.

The exhibition has many pictures (photographs and paintings) of Vollard himself, as well as a short film that shows a genial Vollard asking an eagle-eyed Renoir, whose hands by then were crippled from rheumatoid arthritis, to sign a painting. To read more about this wonderful show, which originated at the Met and next travels to Musée d’Orsay in Paris.

The next day Lisa and I walked to the Art Institute School’s sale of students’ works. Interesting prints and lovely handmade books were on sale for 30 to 40 dollars; there were fabrics and textiles, as well as plaster buddhas and unusual jewelry (I bought a necklace for my older daughter and a woodblock print for my younger one). Across the street, the snaking line waiting for entrance to the Art Institute seemed not to move at all.
Maureen

Photo by Stephen Freas

By Maureen Bloomfield | Shows and Events
4/27/2007 1:27:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Report from NAMTA at Navy Pier


What fun to walk around a vast convention hall filled to the brim with striking displays of art supplies! How frustrating that nothing is for sale! The Artist’s Magazine and North Light Books had booths across the aisle from one another. Our booths were fairly simple, but it can take days for a crew to lay carpet and set up the elaborate manufacturers’ displays. Jack Richeson’s area showed classic easels and other signature art supplies, along with a newly acquired line of student and professional grade acrylics. The display for Golden Artists Colours encompassed a whole wall of the immense hall; to encounter the myriad variations on molding pastes, gel mediums, flow enhancers, etc., lined up in uniform rows, was an impressive (and somewhat intimidating!) experience. Also notable were the displays of Col Art, particularly tubes of Winsor & Newton’s newly released historical pigment, smalt, in honor of Winsor & Newton’s 175th anniversary. Cobalt blue balloons and absinthe green modernist chairs, as well as a daily high tea, enhanced the air of festivity. Indeed, quite a few companies had celebrations: Golden commemorated the 10th anniversary of its Working Artists Program with martinis; Masterpiece Canvas honored the artists whose paintings had won awards in its first-ever contest with a champagne reception on Thursday.

Many manufacturers had something newly packaged or newly formulated to show off. Singular among them was Bernadette Ward, who has created an entirely new product called PanPastel. Packaged like a compact of face powder, PanPastel is pressed pigment, which gives, according to Ward, “artists uncomfortable with using their hands an opportunity to use a tool as an applicator for pastel.” Applicators, sponges, knives, and shapers in clear plastic bags accompany the product. Ward will sell the pan pastels in sets as well as individually. The 60 colors are beautiful, lightfast, and packaged in a way that makes them irresistible.

--Maureen

By Maureen Bloomfield | Shows and Events
4/27/2007 1:23:43 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Show Time

Editor-in-chief Maureen Bloomfield and I drove to Chicago to attend the NAMTA trade show. We made good time, only having trouble in finding our exit, which became a matter of confusion and then faith. Luckily, the hotel was close enough to the convention that we decided we could walk to it the next day.

The Hyatt we stayed at is the largest in North America and check-in was a little like arriving at an airport. I was pleasantly surprised to find that my ninth floor view allowed me to look down on the Chicago River and out across to the NBC building, Chicago University and the gothic Tribune building. The hotel room also featured an enormous flat screen TV with cable (!), a luxury which I don’t have at home.

After a night of relaxing (and watching The X-Files movie), I made off for the trade show in the early overcast morning. Walking along Navy Pier, I watched as the sea gulls flew past making their welcoming calls. The ferris wheel hadn’t yet started and kids had not yet descended upon the pier, so it was just me, the gulls and some boatmen readying their vessels. I made my way to the exhibition room, got my nametag and found our booth, which was manned by the ever-sunny Cherie Haas.

After finding Maureen and some of my other coworkers, we began stalking the exhibition floor to find what was new and cool in the world of art manufacturing. 

I also paid a visit to Patti Brady who I’d just interviewed for an upcoming feature and wanted to show her the design. It was easy to pick out Patti with her flame-red hair and dark-framed glasses. Later on, that booth would offer a “happy hour” in which I would get a complimentary Cosmopolitan, which warmed me up quite a bit to meeting new people.

As time allowed, I took breaks and rested my well-worn feet outside, savoring glances at Lake Michigan as its gently rippling waves glittered in the April sun.


Lisa


By Lisa Wurster | Shows and Events
4/24/2007 1:28:29 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, April 18, 2007
News from the National Art Materials Trade Association (NAMTA)

tam_blog1.jpgAt this immense art materials fair, manufacturers large and small are presenting new products, reformulated and/or improved product lines, new instructional videos and lots more. Artists Betsy Dillard Stroud and Patti Brady are just two of the many artists who will be demonstrating how to work with gel mediums, molding paste, and new or unfamiliar products. The Artist’s Magazine will be filming videos and interviewing art manufacturers and artists on the floor of the NAMTA show at Navy Pier.

 

Check back with us to learn about the goings-on at Navy Pier—and the latest in the world of art!



At the NAMTA Convention in Chicago, from left to right: Mike Amman, Steve Koenig (back row) and Jamie Markle from North Light Books; Maureen Bloomfield, Cherie Haas (back row) and Kelly Kleiner from The Artist’s Magazine. Also in attendance (but not pictured) is associate editor Lisa Wurster.


By Maureen Bloomfield | Shows and Events
4/18/2007 1:33:30 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
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