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 Wednesday, May 16, 2007
Artist Father and Filmmaker Son: Auguste and Jean
“In nature, nothing is created, nothing is lost, everything is transformed.” Jean Renoir A few days ago someone asked me what my favorite movie of all time was. I had an answer immediately, but realized, with a pang, that I hardly ever see movies anymore——and when I do, they star Johnny Depp or Lindsay Lohan (both of whom I have to say I'm fond of) and are rated PG. When my husband and I were first married, however, we’d often start watching movies at 10:00 in the morning—traipsing from one film class to the next, checking to see what Andrew Sarris had to say in The Village Voice or American Cinema, and then dashing by night to catch yet another movie, often a double bill in the Illinois Room at the University of Iowa. My favorite movie remains La Regle du jeu (called, in English, Rules of the Game) by Jean Renoir, who was the son of the painter, Pierre-Auguste. Auguste and Aline Renoir had three sons, Pierre, Jean, and Claude ("Coco"), all of whom worked in theatre and cinema. Jean actually filmed a short movie of his father painting and talking with the art dealer Ambroise Vollard; the reel was recently recovered from an unmarked vault. (An edited clip is part of Vollard exhibit now in Chicago.) To read the fascinating story behind the film, click on www.hno.harvard.edu/gazette/2001/07.19/07-renoir.html.Of course, Renoir pere’s most famous work—treacly portraits of women and children—is easily derided, but take a look at his early portraits and the rigorously beautiful landscapes and still lifes he created throughout his life ( www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/renoir_pierre-auguste.html and www.abcgallery.com/R/renoir/renoir.html) tell me if you think he’s better than you thought. Do you have an artist you'd like to nominate for a re-appraisal? And, by the way, what is your favorite movie of all time? --Maureen Bloomfield By Maureen Bloomfield | Random Thoughts
Wednesday, May 16, 2007 4:19:53 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, May 14, 2007
Il Lee: Ballpoint Abstractions
It's sometimes difficult to appreciate a work of art until you see the actual work that goes into it. The exhibit Il Lee: Ballpoint Abstractions—on view at the San Jose Museum of Art through July 8—illustrates the creative possibilities of drawing with "common" tools like a blue Papermate pen. The museum has posted a video preview of the artist's ballpoint pen handiwork on YouTube. The fascinating video is accompanied by Martin Brenick's lovely and frenetic musical composition. --Lisa By Lisa Wurster | Notable Artists | Shows and Events | Videos
Monday, May 14, 2007 3:25:21 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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Dreaming of Prague
I fell in love with Prague the first time I saw a photograph of the looming statues in the mists enveloping Charles Bridge. My brother Kevin, whose business requires that he travel all around the world, has often told me how beautiful Prague is. Thus, when Nan Sinton, who is the mastermind behind the ever-popular Horticulture Magazine tours, suggested Prague as the destination for The Artist’s Magazine’s first-ever art tour, I was thrilled. Prague has everything: Gothic cathedrals, Baroque palaces, stately gardens perfect to sketch and paint in, an Old Town and a New Town, and— not incidentally—fabulous public and private collections of art ranging from Etruscan to Renaissance, Mannerism to Modernism, Art Nouveau, and Expressionism.
Prague was home to Kafka, Schiele, and Smetana; Mozart conducted the first performance of Don Giovanni there (and we’ve got tickets for a performance in the same opera house, where Milos Forman actually filmed Amadeus). I can’t wait to go! Up until now my favorite cities have been Paris, New York, Florence, Venice, London, and Nice; I have a feeling I’ll have to revise the list come October.
Please consider joining Nan Sinton and me on our 9-day tour (October 3-11 2007) of Prague; we’d love to have your company! To learn more about the tour, call toll-free 800/422-2550 or e-mail arttours@fwpubs.com. And please tell me your favorite places in Prague or any other traveler’s tips by writing a comment below. —Maureen By Maureen Bloomfield | Random Thoughts | Shows and Events
Monday, May 14, 2007 2:23:14 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Thursday, May 10, 2007
In Memory of Patricia A. Renick, Sculptor (1932-2007)
I just learned that Patricia A. Renick, a renowned sculptor, impassioned advocate for women in the arts, gifted teacher, and great spirit died on May 7th, as a result of complications from leg surgery. She was 75, a professor emerita at the University of Cincinnati’s acclaimed College of Design, Art, Architecture and Planning. I met Pat more than twenty years ago, after I’d reviewed a show of contemporary sculpture at the University of Cincinnati’s Tangeman Gallery. She showed a silvery life cast of a woman encased in a shell/boat that was suspended from the ceiling. The haunting work had been previously shown as part of a large installation, and because it was positioned among disparate works by other artists, I didn’t know at first what to think of it. I came to admire that piece and, indeed, everything Pat did, because she had an unerring eye for design and an unswerving commitment to the integrity of the object and to the craft of making art. I loved Pat, and whatever I can say about her art has to be accompanied by an appreciation of what can only be called her vigor. She was a life force; she could sweep you away. Her enthusiasm for the first international women’s sculpture conference was a case in point. She and Laura Chapman had a vision, and the world acquiesced, possibly out of fear. Pat was persuasively eloquent, always curious, and enchantingly funny: she delighted in anything silly. I once walked through a flea market with her and, believe me, it was a treat. She had an unbridled laugh that was sometimes like a whoop; her eyes were astute and kind; her heart was broad. Pat was indefatigable if the cause was just. All of her causes were just. I have so many memories of Pat and of Laura and of that wonderful space they created for their work. Pat always valued work. For her, work was a manifestation of the great love she had for the world.
Maureen To see some of Patricia A. Renick's sculpture and to read about her life, go to http://www.sculpture.org/documents/scmag03/oct03/renick/renick.shtml. By Maureen Bloomfield | Notable Artists
Thursday, May 10, 2007 5:28:31 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, May 09, 2007
Poetry and the Visual Arts
 Last night I went to a wonderful poetry reading at the Elliston Poetry Room at the University of Cincinnati. David St. John, a Pulitzer-prize winning poet and this year’s Elliston Poet in Residence, read to a packed house. David’s poems are lyrical but cerebral with elegant and devious shifts in tone. Next week he’ll give a lecture on Larry Levis, a poet of great gifts who died of a heart attack when he was forty-nine. One of David's books, Prism: White Light (Sausalito, CA: Arctos Press), was a collaboration with photographer Lance Patigian. Responding to Lance's photos, David wrote poems about individual colors; the poem he read last night was an intricate meditation on saffron .I love going to the Elliston Room, not only because of its fabulous collection of modern and contemporary poetry, but also because of its gorgeous collection of paintings by Cincinnati artists. Too few institutions support regional artists! James Cummins, curator of the Elliston Collection, is to be commended for filling the room’s walls with the best works of some of the best artists living in Cincinnati. (It's just a shame that there are more deserving artists than space.) The Artist’s Magazine featured one of those artists, Cole Carothers, in the November 2007 issue. Cole is having an opening this Friday that I can’t wait to go to. Cole and David Miretsky, equally interesting as an artist, are showing new work at the Phyllis Weston-Annie Bolling Gallery. (Above left is Cole's Cat's Away (pencil, acrylic, wax, and oil, 67x84) that's part of the Elliston Collection.)
George Elliston was a Cincinnati journalist at a time when few women braved the misogyny of the newsroom. She lived like a miser and wrote poems by candelight. By the time of her death, she had amassed quite a lot of money; she gave it all to the university specifically for the advancement and study of poetry. Maureen By Maureen Bloomfield | Random Thoughts | Shows and Events
Wednesday, May 09, 2007 4:06:54 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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MySpace and copyright
Recently, one of our ArtistsNetwork forum users asked about the benefits of using MySpace. Some artists don't have their own websites, and for those artists, I think MySpace can be a wonderfully helpful tool. But many artists are fearful that their images will be used without their permission. This is a valid concern--no one wants their ideas stolen. According to their terms, Myspace can use images that you post, but they only get limited rights to your work. You are, afterall, using the site as a service to promote yourself and your artwork. You can rest assured that you retain the copyright to your work. Unless you sign away the copyright, that image belongs to you. If you're still worried about people using the images that you might post on your profile, you can simply create a link to your own website from your MySpace account. That way, the gazillions of people who might find you on there can still be directed to your art. Lisa By Lisa Wurster | Random Thoughts
Wednesday, May 09, 2007 3:28:01 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 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
Friday, May 04, 2007 9:10:50 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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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
Friday, May 04, 2007 6:59:56 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 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  By Maureen Bloomfield | Shows and Events
Friday, April 27, 2007 6:27:00 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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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
Friday, April 27, 2007 6:23:43 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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