Tuesday, February 03, 2009
Get noticed in our Gallery!
The Artist's Magazine is starting up a new thing in its May issue—a special Gallery section where artists can advertise themselves! The deadline to get into the first edition is Thursday, February 5, so act fast if you want in. (Contact Suzanne Meyer at suzanne.meyer@fwmedia.com or 513/531-2690 x11380 for more details or to reserve your spot.)

This is what it'll look like:


By Grace Dobush | News
2/3/2009 12:49:38 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Art museum installs wind-powered funding
When the going gets tough, the tough get blowing. The Maryhill Museum of Art in Goldendale, Washington, anticipates it will earn $100,000 a year by leasing part of its 5,300-acre property to a wind energy company.

Maryhill, which has an operating budget of $1.1 million annually, says it's the nonprofit museum to pursue wind energy generation as a source of income. The 15 turbines will be built later this year and go online by the end of 2009.

The turbines will be placed so as not to obstruct the scenic views of the Columbia River or of the museum's Beaux Arts building. Maryhill is currently closed for the season; it reopens March 15.


By Grace Dobush | News
2/3/2009 10:34:08 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [2] 
 Monday, February 02, 2009
Legacy planning for artists
Rutgers University is holding a free symposium March 20 on legacy planning for artists.

"Etched in Memory" focuses on protecting artists' professional legacy through planning and archival practices. The program will include artists, attorneys, archivists and other professionals, addressing "the concerns of building and maintaining artistic reputations and creative output." You'll learn about preserving personal papers, business records and artwork, and assisting surviving partners, families and friends with decisions on financial issues and estates.

If you're near New Jersey, I recommend stopping by! You can see more detailed info at the Rutgers WAAND website.


By Grace Dobush | Free Stuff | News
2/2/2009 11:03:50 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, January 29, 2009
Cincinnati's snow day
The Artist's Magazine's offices were closed yesterday, as it was illegal to be on the roads in the city. We got probably 8 inches of snow over two days, with an interlude of ice rain, as you can see in the archaeological evidence from excavating my car:



Driving hazards aside, it's really beautiful out:



I feel bad for the over-eager trees, though:



Those little buds are goners, for sure. Anybody else get hit by the big storm?

By Grace Dobush | Photography | Random Thoughts
1/29/2009 2:22:00 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [3] 
Tip file: Altered watercolor paper
From Cathy Johnson in the April 1984 issue of The Artist's Magazine:
Incising, scraping, gouging or otherwise bruising the unpainted surface of your paper will affect the way it takes pigments. Fine lines cut or scrapedinto the surface with a craft knife will colect paint, making tiny dark lines in the surface of a wash. A scraped area, made with the sie of a knife blade, will cause larger areas to absorb the color more deeply into the paper fibers.


By Grace Dobush | Tips
1/29/2009 9:12:41 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Zoom in with 2GB inauguration photo
Feel like you didn't have the best view for the inauguration? (First choice La-Z-Boy doesn't count.) Photographer David Bergman took a 2 GB photo of the inauguration using new Gigapan technology, which stitches together hundreds of photos to make a high-resolution, zoomable image.

This is the whole photo, made up of 220 images and 24,658x59,783 pixels:



Double click or use the buttons to zoom in, where you can see President Obama giving a speech:



Zoom in even further, and you can see Bush and Cheney's reactions



You can see really well into the crowd, even in the distance. What's that on the horizon? Rooftop security?



Yep! Crazy, huh?


By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites | Photography
1/27/2009 12:43:00 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, January 26, 2009
Does the US need an art czar?
Music producer Quincy Jones is leading a call for President Obama to appoint a Cabinet-level representative for the arts—an "art czar," if you will.

The Washington Post reported that the exact duties of a secretary of culture or the arts are unclear, but the main goals are supporting arts education and unifying cultural policy:
"We need a voice that looks broadly," said Robert Lynch, president of Americans for the Arts, a national lobbying group. He is advocating a senior position, not necessarily a Cabinet post. "We are calling for a person at the executive office level who understands there is a National Endowment for the Arts, but also understands the arts portfolio in the Education Department, the State Department—and in addition to the nonprofits arts, is looking at cultural tourism, broadband access and trade through records, movies and videos."
Obama has said he would increase funding for the NEA and arts grants, and ensure artists would have access to health care and fair tax deductions. Establishing a Cabinet-level position would require the assent of Congress.

The online petition has garnered more than 200,000 signatures. What do you think about appointing an art czar?


By Grace Dobush | News
1/26/2009 10:02:06 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [3] 
 Thursday, January 22, 2009
Tip file: Great grays
From Charles Sovek, in the November 1992 issue of The Artist's Magazine:
The easiest way to make gray with an opaque medium is to mix black and white. The richest grays, however, are made by mixing complementary colors.


By Grace Dobush | Tips
1/22/2009 10:33:50 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Coming soon: Artists Nework News!
This is where I spent my afternoon:



Filming a segment for a new project: Artists Network News! It only took us about an hour and a half to film a two-minute segment. (The ArtistsNetwork.TV director threatened to put together a video of my outtakes.)

You'll be able to watch the news clip around the middle of February here and on the Artists Network YouTube channel.

By Grace Dobush | News | Videos
1/21/2009 3:52:43 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Monday, January 19, 2009
Announcing our Artists over 60!
You know this has just been boiling up inside me, waiting to get out, and the time is finally right: The March 2009 issue of The Artist's Magazine includes the results of our call to artists over 60. (It has started going out to subscribers already and goes on sale on newsstands Feb. 3.)

Drum roll please...



The 2009 Artists over 60 are:
(Like my little map? It helped me remember which time zones people lived in when I was calling them.)

You can see some of their work in our online gallery, but to read their inspiring stories, you'll have to pick up the March issue, which I'm sure you were going to do anyway. ;)


By Grace Dobush | News | Notable Artists
1/19/2009 12:58:39 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [3] 
 Friday, January 16, 2009
RIP Andrew Wyeth



Andrew Wyeth's Winter (1946, tempera on board, 31 3/8x48)


So sad about the passing of modern master Andrew Wyeth, who died this morning at the age of 91. The New York Times obituary is moving and right on target:
Wyeth gave America a prim and flinty view of Puritan rectitude, starchily sentimental, through parched gray and brown pictures of spooky frame houses, desiccated fields, deserted beaches, circling buzzards and craggy-faced New Englanders. A virtual Rorschach test for American culture during the better part of the last century, Wyeth split public opinion as vigorously as, and probably even more so than, any other American painter including the other modern Andy, Warhol, whose milieu was as urban as Wyeth’s was rural.
You can read more about the artist's life at the Farnsworth Museum, and you can add a comment to the Andrew Wyeth memorial blog.

By Grace Dobush | News | Notable Artists
1/16/2009 11:54:10 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [2] 
 Thursday, January 15, 2009
Tip file: Be professional
From David Pyle, in the January 1994 issue of The Artist's Magazine:
Act like a professional. "I don't have to be businesslike; I'm an artist." If you've said this before, you're fooling yourself, and you'll probably be taken advantage of. Successful artists place a premium on professionalism and good business practices.


By Grace Dobush | Tips
1/15/2009 1:07:26 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, January 14, 2009
National Portrait Gallery obtains Obama street art
Los Angeles artist Shepard Fairey's iconic image of President-Elect Barack Obama will be on display in the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery before he takes office, according to the institution.

The original is a 5-foot-high mixed-media collage, but versions of the image were widely replicated on stickers, posters, T-shirts and buttons leading up to the election. (At right is a popular version.) The image was also used on the cover of Time for its Person of 2008 issue.

Shepard Fairey is best known (to me, at least) as the guy who did the Obey Giant stickers and the art for a lot of rock albums.

By Grace Dobush | News | Notable Artists
1/14/2009 9:16:42 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Movie poster contest


Independent film company Ellipsis Entertainment is having a poster contest for its next film, "The Moon Under Glass." Here's the synopsis:
Hal is living a perfect life. Everyone adores him and everything always seems to fall right into his hands. He's got the looks, he's got the charm and he's got Dali, his new girlfriend. Little does Hal know...his whole world is built around him.
You can use photos from the film to create a poster, or create your own artwork—I think that'd be really cool, to use the photos and film description to inspire a new piece of art. The first place winner gets a full size print of the artwork, two tickets to the premiere of the movie, a copy of the DVD upon release, and acknowledgment in the film's credits. Two runners-up get copies of the DVD.

The deadline for submissions is March 14, 2009. Click here to see all the guidelines and download the poster kit.

By Grace Dobush | Projects
1/13/2009 10:42:33 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, January 12, 2009
Daily paintings from Detroit


Stephen Magsig paints scenes from the rust belt every day and sells the paintings on eBay. Above is Detroit, Paris of America! (oil, 5x7), number 507 in the series from Postcards from Detroit.

Via Visualingual

By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
1/12/2009 11:29:58 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [3] 
 Friday, January 09, 2009
The biggest book you will ever read
Ironically, comics and art anthology Kramer's Ergot began as a mini-comic. Its seventh volume comes in at a whopping 21x16 inches and 96 pages.

For the steep $125 sticker price, you get large-scale stories from 60 esteemed cartoonists, including (my faves) Gabrielle Bell, Ivan Brunetti, Dan Clowes, Matt Groening, Jaime Hernandez, Kevin Huizenga, Anders Nilsen, Seth, Adrian Tomine and Chris Ware.

Book by its Cover wrote a review of KE7 that almost convinced me to shell out the cash for it—Amazon's got it for less than $80...

Photo by wendypants

By Grace Dobush | Random Thoughts
1/9/2009 4:19:02 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, January 08, 2009
Art created by focus groups
In last weekend's "This American Life" (a repeat from the late '90s), there was a hilarious segment on these two guys who hired a polling firm to determine what makes people like art.
Using the data, they painted what people want. It turned out to be a landscape, with a mountain and a lake, and deer, and a family, and George Washington.
As such:



They also created most liked and least liked paintings for each country, and the most wanted and least wanted songs. The most wanted song is bland and schmalzy, but the least wanted song is charming! It includes all the elements people said they hated in music: opera, rap, children's choirs, songs about holidays, songs about cowboys, accordions, bagpipes and tubas.

Click here to listen to the whole podcast of "This American Life" for free.

By Grace Dobush | Free Stuff | Random Thoughts
1/8/2009 2:47:27 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [3] 
Tip file: Draw something white
Advice from Tim Iverson in the January 1994 issue of The Artist's Magazine:
Draw something white. Find a white object, or paint any object pure white, and then, with a strong light source from one direction, draw the shapes and values in charcoal with as much detail as possible. This is a great exercise in studying values, and you might try it as a painting exercise, too.


By Grace Dobush | Tips
1/8/2009 9:16:47 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Miniature Art Society of Florida show
If you're a snowbird (or a full-time Floridian), check out the Miniature Art Society of Florida's annual exhibit, which opens Jan. 18. About 850 works will be on view, plus the society's permanent collection of 100 more miniatures.

The top awards went to:
  • Best of Show: Jane Mihalik, Taneytown, MD
  • Judge's Second Joice: Judith E. Johnson, Riverview, FL
  • Excellence in All Entries: Richard William Haynes, Fairfield, NJ
  • Best Work by a Young Artist: Rebecca Latham, Hastings, MN
  • Best Work by a First Time Entrant: David Drummond, Albuquerque, NM
  • Best Traditional Portrait Miniature: Rachelle Siegrist, Townsend, TN
Miniatures are a fascinating breed. Portrait miniatures (such as the one pictured here, Self Portrait by Sarah Goodridge, watercolor on ivory, 4x3, 1830) were very common until the advent of photography.

You can see the show at the Dunedin Fine Art Center, 1143 Michigan Blvd., Dunedin, FL 34698. It runs from Jan. 18 to Feb. 8 and is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturdays; and 1 to 4 p.m. on Sundays. Admission is $6 for adults, $5 for seniors and $4 for kids 6 to 18. Click here for more info.


By Grace Dobush | Exhibits | Shows and Events
1/7/2009 10:12:52 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, January 05, 2009
Awesome blog: VisuaLingual


I've become completely taken with the VisualLingual blog, run by a Cincinnati designer with great taste. Maya's recent post about public art in San Francisco is just gorgeous. 

By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
1/5/2009 4:51:24 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [4] 
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