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 Thursday, April 03, 2008
Friday Flowers for April
 Every Friday this month, The Artist's Magazine is bringing you a step-by-step flower painting demonstration on our website, www.artistmagazine.com. Today watercolor artist Birgit O'Connor shares "Painting Flowers Step by Step: Radiant Reds" for painting gorgeous red tulips. She explains step by step how to achieve a vibrant, clean red and the
right value contrasts to make your tulips blossom beautifully. See her finished piece, Parrot Tulips (at right; watercolor, 30x22). Don't miss more flower painting demos the next three Fridays in April! (OK, Grace, enough galavanting on the West Coast! Time to come back and tell us all about it!) By Chris McHugh | Notable Artists | Projects
4/3/2008 8:17:36 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, April 02, 2008
On Poets and Painters
"April is the cruelest month," and perhaps not incidentally, National Poetry Month. You can find the entire text of T.S. Eliot's Waste Land (whose opening lines describe April as "breeding/ lilacs out of the dead land, mixing/memory and desire...") at the marvelous site of the Academy of American Poets. Edna St. Vincent Millay's " Spring," actually addresses April: "To what purpose, April, do you appear again?" And, of course, it was in April that Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury pilgrims, in a far more convivial spirit, convened for their pilgrimauge. Poets and painters are natural allies. I recently saw a beautiful show at the Tibor de Nagy Gallery of paintings by Jane Freilicher, who was a friend of the poets of the New York School (of the four most prominent—Frank O'Hara, James Schyler, Kenneth Koch, and John Ashbery, sadly only Ashbery is still alive). Freilicher often made appearances in Frank O'Hara's poems, as did other painters like Larry Rivers and Mike Goldberg. A lovely and jovial poem on the painter's and poet's art is " Why I am not a Painter." An art critic and curator as well as a poet, Frank O'Hara (1922-66) worked at the front desk of the Museum of Modern Art and famously wrote poems while walking around the city during his lunch hour. His tragic death in a freak accident on Fire Island has inspired several elegaic pictures. Jasper Johns has an homage to O'Hara currently on view ( Jasper Johns:Gray) at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. To read more about Frank O'Hara and the New York School of Poets, take a look at David Lehman's Last Avant-Garde: The Making of the New York School of Poets (Anchor Books, 1999). Sign up to receive a poem a day during April in your inbox at www.poets.org./poemADay.php. Still Life Before a Window (below, 2007. oil on linen, 32x40) by Jane Freilicher. Photo courtesy of Tibor de Nagy Gallery. Coreopsis (below, 2004, oil on linen, 14x12) by Jane Freilicher. Photo courtesy of Tibor de Nagy Gallery.  By Maureen Bloomfield | Notable Artists | Random Thoughts | Shows and Events
4/2/2008 11:06:18 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Sunday, March 30, 2008
On hiatus!
Hello from half-sunny, half-rainy Portland! I was just checking to see if there were any new comments on the blog (I can't stay away!) and realized I never wrote a see-you-in-two-weeks post! So, my esteemed colleagues have promised to post once in a while when I'm gone, but I will return, rested and rejuvenated, on April 8. See you then! By Grace Dobush | News | Random Thoughts
3/30/2008 9:29:43 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, March 26, 2008
 Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Now online: Ask the Experts archive!
The latest exciting addition to our new website is the archive of Ask the Experts questions from The Artist's Magazine and Watercolor Artist! We're continually adding more content to this Q-and-A category, where you can find information like this: Q. I normally paint on stretched canvas or
gesso-primed Masonite panels. I've noticed a growing number of artists
in my area are gluing canvas to Masonite and I'd like to try this
myself. What type of glue would you recommend for this process? A. If you’re going to glue canvas—either preprimed
or primed after attachment—to a panel, I'd recommend using a panel of
Luan plywood, birch plywood or Masonite. All of these create very
sturdy, durable supports.
Read the whole answer here. ( And you can click here to see all Ask the Experts questions with their categories showing to browse according to your interests.) If you've got a burning question, log in to the Ask the Experts forum and post it there, or send us an e-mail, or write to us at The Artist's Magazine, "Ask the Experts," 4700 E. Galbraith Road, Cincinnati, OH 45236. (Unfortunately, we can't respond to all letters personally.) Advice | By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites | Tips
3/25/2008 9:56:00 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, March 24, 2008
A Gauguin rarity
By Grace Dobush | News | Notable Artists
3/24/2008 4:10:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, March 20, 2008
Art travel tips needed!
Dear blog readers, In just a little more than a week I will be leaving the Queen City behind for a week's vacation in Portland, Oregon, and San Francisco. I have a few favorite spots in Portland from my last visit, but this will be my first time in SFO. If you have any suggestions (for either city) of museums, galleries and other oddities that I must see, please post them in the comments! When I get back, you can bet there'll be boatloads of photos. xo Grace By Grace Dobush | Random Thoughts | Tips
3/20/2008 4:41:07 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Quick link: Color Chart
By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites | Exhibits
3/18/2008 10:09:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, March 17, 2008
Poussin's Intense Classicism

Landscape with Calm by Nicholas Poussin. Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
"A Provencal Poussin—that would fit me like a glove … like Poussin, I would like to put reason in the grass and tears in the sky"—so wrote Paul Cezanne.
Poussin and Nature: Arcadian Visions now on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art until May 11 is revelatory in the way that's rare. In the first room, the fervid eroticism of the early (influenced by the painter's sojourns in Venice and Rome) works seems almost comic, but as the exhibition proceeds, the pictures grow in serenity and in ambition. By the final room, in front of works that attested to the artist's struggle with failing vision, it was easy to be close to tears; indeed, there were clusters of viewers who lingered, retracing their steps, as if reluctant to leave Poussin's luminous presence.
As a painter, Nicholas Poussin (1594-1665) was incredibly literary; almost every picture refers to or is informed by a text, often by Virgil or Ovid. Nothing was offhand; the artist expected his pictures to be scrutinized with the ardor one devotes to a poem, but these poems were odes, less romantic outburst than systematic meditation. Of the forty paintings on view, quite a number were painted en plein air, an accomplishment that's amazing, given the pictures' complexity. As befits a classical vision, Poussin’s Arcadia is orderly; planes unfold in sequence; the sky is its own terrain of air. The stillness is a characteristic of the vantage point; from far away, catastrophe looks controllable because small. This stately and deeply affecting exhibition puts to rest the notion that classicism is cold. In picture after picture, the trees and figures are equally expressive; often the posture of a figure will find an analogue in the disposition of a tree. Just as often, Arcadia is a backdrop to despair; in the midst of tranquilly the imposition of violent death is another element, not dramatized. Poussin’s landscapes are thus the setting for momentous events; nature is a stage.
Many of the paintings were commissioned, so they were designed to fit over a doorway or to illustrate a moral, for instance, Et Ego in Arcadia (I, Death, am here, even in Arcadia), where shepherds come upon an ancient tomb and read the inscription that informs Poussin's oeuvre. Because death is here, life can be interpreted; like a text or a picture, it can be read. The possibility of meaning is thus a consolation, as is beauty. As Poussin himself observed and vowed: "It is said that the swan sings more sweetly when death approaches; I will try to imitate him and work better than ever."
Poussin and Nature: Arcadian Visions was organized by the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museo de Bellas Artes, Bilbao.
Above right: Arcadian Shepherds or Et in Arcadia Ego by Nicholas Poussin. Devonshire Collection, Chatsworth. Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
By Maureen Bloomfield | Notable Artists | Shows and Events
3/17/2008 9:05:36 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, March 14, 2008
Artists go for the gold
If you're going to be near Western Pennsylvania next month, it'll be worth making a detour to check out the third annual Art Olympic Theatre on April 5 in Pittsburgh.
Picture something along the lines of performance art meets Iron Chef. Over two hours, three teams compete to build the best sculpture out of materials provided at the event, plus one suitcase of stuff they've selected to bring with them. The shebang is masterminded by Tom Sarver, of the Tom Museum, who's got a reputation for wacky puppeteering. The event takes place at the Union Project, which is an awesome community center/cafe/art space.
The details: Art Olympic Theatre III, 6:30 p.m. Saturday, April 5. Union Project (801 N. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, www.unionproject.org). $10. If you go, tell Pittsburgh I said Hi!
Check out a video of last year's event here:
By Grace Dobush | Shows and Events | Videos
3/14/2008 10:56:30 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Art with an expiration date
By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
3/12/2008 2:53:29 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, March 11, 2008
What's new on our website
 We're trying something new here at The Artist's Magazine with the April issue. If you're a reader, you know we include lots of valuable Web links in each article. Unfortunately, our magazines are not yet so high-tech that you can browse the Web on them. But we've come up with the next best thing— a page with all the issue's external links. You get one-click access to everything you read about in the pages of TAM. Also new on our website is the March artist of the month (whose work is at right). Ester Curini was a finalist in last year's competition. Click here to read all about her. By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
3/11/2008 12:43:50 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, March 10, 2008
Quick link: Pencil drawing
By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
3/10/2008 4:38:13 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, March 06, 2008
Jasper Johns and Gray
 Jasper Johns is perhaps best known for his flag and target series, both meditations on signs, both exploratory in technique. In Johns’s pictures, surfaces are multi-layered, often encrusted; stenciled letters, actual objects like forks, or collage fragments appear; the pictures are often bright and primary in chroma. Alongside that body of work is another, now on display at the Metropolitan Museum until May 4th, one that explores the nuances of subtle color, "Jasper Johns: Gray." Johns made sketches after paintings rather than before; he worked through formal problems by painting or drawing the same painting, modifying elements or not, again and again. In his work we see the intersection between a compulsive temperament and masterly craft. Every piece in the show has a vitality; many of the 119 works have beautiful passages, but only one or two in any room are majestic. The show thus reminds us that in order to create a major work it’s necessary to falter or fail at least three times and usually more, and the only solace lies in the act of working—painting, writing, whatever. The show opens with False Start (highly colored) next to Jubilee (roughly the same but in grays). In Memory of My Feelings, which takes as its title a poem by Frank O’Hara, broods on the work of Hart Crane. Both poets died untimely deaths: O’Hara in a freak accident on Fire Island and Crane as a suicide jumping into the sea. The pictures accordingly are elegiac, conflating death, art, eros, and water. Near the Lagoon is made of salvaged fragments and layers of unpigmented wax; it invokes Manet’s Execution of Maximilian as an ellipse is transformed, in a series of elegant permutations, until it evokes a noose and a shroud. Fool’s House comically deflates the rarefied notion of the artist by showing an actual broom making a broad sweep as if it were a paintbrush. Johns is an admirable artist and it is wonderful to contemplate his devotion to craft, as well as his stamina. The show is accompanied by an excellent catalogue that collects essays on Johns’s work. Especially worthwhile is one by James Rondeau who examines Johns’s “production of meaning.” The exhibition was organized by the Art Institute of Chicago in cooperation with the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Visit the Met’s Web site to see more at www.metmuseum.org. "Jasper Johns: Gray" was on view at the Art Institute of Chicago from Nov. 3, 2007 through Jan. 6. Image above: Jasper Johns, Fool's House (1962, oil on canvas with objects, 72x36) Collection of Jean-Christophe Castelli, on loan to the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis © Jasper Johns/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY. Photo: Jamie M. Stukenberg / Professional Graphics Inc., Rockford, Illinois. By Maureen Bloomfield | Exhibits | Notable Artists
3/6/2008 11:15:51 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, March 04, 2008
The real Super Tuesday
The polls have been open for more than three hours in Ohio and two in Texas on a day that I like to consider the real Super Tuesday. (You help too, Rhode Island and Vermont.) Whether you're still making up your mind between Clinton and Obama, counting on McCain to bring it all home or hoping that Ron Paul will come up from behind to take the White House, if you're reading this blog you probably hope that the next president will be a supporter of the arts. Some senators and representatives are already getting a head start on the sea change in creating more support for artists. Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont), and dozens of other lawmakers, are rallying support around the Artist-Museum Partnership Act, a proposal that would change the US tax code in favor of artists. Right now when artists donate their work to museums, they can claim only the value of the materials used as a tax deduction. (OK if you're working with platinum, bad if you're working with recyclables.) The act would allow artists, writers and composers to use the market value of the donated work as a deduction, something collectors making donations are already able to do. You can listen to a story on NPR about Leahy's push for the bill, and read the full text of the bill on the Library of Congress site. Obama and Clinton have both voiced support for the bill, and you can check out ArtsVote for a listing of candidates' arts policies. Want to take action? Tell your representative you support the Artist-Museum Partnership Act. Find out how to contact your senator here, or find your representative in Congress here. And if you're a Texan, a Vermonter, a Rhode Islander or a Buckeye, get out and vote! By Grace Dobush | News
3/4/2008 10:13:36 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, March 03, 2008
William Steig, from The New Yorker to Shrek
William Steig's illustration for Shrek, 1990 (Collection of William Steig Estate)
The exhibition " From The New Yorker to Shrek: The Art of William Steig" at New York City's Jewish Museum on Fifth Avenue at 92nd Street, presents the work of artist, author, illustrator and cartoonist William Steig (1907-2003) who started drawing for The New Yorker as a young man and who, at the age of 61, embarked on a second career as the author/illustrator of gloriously odd children’s books. My daughters’ and my favorites are Brave Irene (Windmill Simon, 1986) and Sylvester and the Magic Pebble (Windmill Simon, 1970), which won the Caldecott Medal as "the most distinguished American picture book for children" of that year. Sylvester is the story of a donkey who finds a magical pebble and, in a moment of panic, makes an ill-considered wish. After a desolate winter as a stone in a field, Sylvester, returning to sentient life, is reunited with his loving parents. Brave Irene is the stalwart daughter of a seamstress; Irene braves harsh winter winds to deliver the dress her ill mother has sewn for a duchess, just in time for the ball. The pivotal point, especially resonant for girls and mothers of girls, is the moment Irene defies nature by shouting she will not fail because it is her mother’s work. (Steig’s own mother was a seamstress.) Steig had an imagination that was abundant and sly. His stories are never, not even for a moment, saccharine. The feelings are as intense as the images are sophisticated: not a common conjunction. The exhibition is beautifully installed, with two rhapsodically decorated reading rooms, glass cases showing adulatory letters from legendary New Yorker editor William Shawn, philanthropist and collector Nelson Rockefeller and others, along with a movie in which Steig talks about his childhood in the Bronx and its abrupt end, when, in reaction to the Great Depression, his father informed him that supporting the family was "all up to you." Accordingly, Steig started drawing cartoons, which he could sell for as little as $5 or as much, at The New Yorker, as $25. It’s fascinating to see the progress of his work—from rough caricatures of scruffy street kids to lyrical drawings of elegant, gently satirized swells. I'm perhaps too fond of picture books and New Yorker covers, and William Steig was one of my favorites, but this exhibition, especially the filmed interview with Steig, affected me very much. Steig was a fabulous artist/author and a gentle, also prescient, man, as evidenced by this segment from the speech he gave at the Caldecott ceremony in 1970: "I am well aware not only of the importance of children—whom we naturally cherish and who also embody our hopes for the future—but also of the importance of what we provide for them in the way of art; and I realize that we are competing with a lot of other cultural influences, some of which beguile them in false directions." Steig's work beguiles children and adults in the very best direction; it proclaims the authority and freedom of the imagination, the importance of family, the imperative of kindness: an estimable legacy that this beautiful exhibition honors and extends. The exhibition at the Jewish Museum closes on March 16. There are panel discussions, book chats and other related events; to find the schedules, visit www.thejewishmuseum.org.
By Maureen Bloomfield | Notable Artists | Shows and Events
3/3/2008 10:01:34 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, February 29, 2008
Lucky winners and a boxmaking demonstration
Congrats to the three commenters who won the three calendars! Those are being shipped out today.
In unrelated news, I just posted a demonstration of how to make a book box for my other job. You can watch it below and download a PDF with detailed directions on the Family Tree Magazine website. Happy weekend!
By Grace Dobush | News | Projects | Videos
2/29/2008 3:38:42 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, February 28, 2008
Jacob Lawrence, American Master

I caught a retrospective of Jacob Lawrence's brilliant work at DC Moore Gallery at Fifth Avenue and 57th Street. Lawrence (1917-2000) was a little late for the Harlem Renaissance but was nonetheless influenced by it; he shared with Romare Bearden a commitment to casting light on the African American experience. Lawrence's pictures tell stories; the characters are usually expressive, elongated and bunched together in postures indicative of their isolation. Whether working with gouache only or with elements of collage, Lawrence portrays figures as distinct shapes; he tended toward primary colors and energetic diagonals. His composition are sometimes hectic, always highly charged. He often depicts children as mute witnesses; in one picture, a white woman draped in a mink coat is illumined as she walks out a door; inside the room she left, a naked baby is splayed, face down on a bed in a posture that embodies his family's desolation. It was wonderful to see works dating from the Migration series, which chronicled the cycle of African-Americans' journey from the rural south to the industrial north, but I was most taken by the Hiroshima sequence from 1982, designed for a limited edition of John Hersey's book. It was one of Lawrence's convictions that human experience transcends race; accordingly, the figures in the Hiroshima series are not identified as Japanese. Using skeletal figures stained with blood, Lawrence presented vignettes that speak to the horror of August 6, 1945 and, given the context of our times, argue against the atrocity of any and all wars. Above: Jacob Lawrence, Hiroshima Series: Boy with Kite (1983, tempera and gouache on paper, 23x18). Courtesy DC Moore Gallery.The DC Moore Gallery is the exclusive representative of the Jacob Lawrence estate. A catalogue with essays by David Driskell and Patricia Hills is for sale. For more information, call Sandra Paci at 212-247-2111, By Maureen Bloomfield | Notable Artists | Shows and Events
2/28/2008 9:50:26 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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