Thursday, May 14, 2009
Tip file: Donating art
From Cathy Johnson, in the February 1995 issue of The Artist's Magazine:
Donating your work is a good way to help a worthy cause and use your art for a noble purpose, but be prudent. Make sure it's to a cause you really believe in and an organization you trust. And don't donate your inferior pieces; if a work isn't good enough to sell, it's not good enough to give away, either.
And that reminds me of the Artist-Museum Partnership Act. Whatever happened to that? Well, it seems to have died in committee each of the last few years it's been introduced. The act would allow artists, writers and composers to use the appraised value of the donated work as a tax deduction. Right now, you can only deduct the cost of the materials. It's been introduced in the House and Senate again this year. Here's hoping the 111th Congress does something with it.


By Grace Dobush | News | Tips
5/14/2009 9:50:11 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Get your art published
Ever wonder how artists get into magazines like ours? We're revealing how the publishing industry works in our live, online seminar, Get Published: How the Industry Works & How You Can Make an Impression. You'll learn:
  • How publishers and editors discover artists
  • What you can do to get noticed
  • How to pitch an idea
  • What editors expect
  • How an article or book evolves
  • How to work with book and magazine editors
Mark your calendars now for the live session at 1 p.m. Wednesday, May 27. Everyone who registers for this event will receive, in addition to a download of the seminar, submission guidelines for The Artist’s Magazine, North Light Books, The Pastel Journal and Watercolor Artist.

An online workshop—also called a "webinar"—is a lot like a live workshop or seminar, only it takes place over the Internet. That means you can “attend” the workshop from the comfort of home. All you need a computer and a broadband Internet connection—no special computer skills required.

You just log in at the special URL provided when you register, then listen and follow along as the presenter shares helpful tips and advice on the workshop topic. As you listen, you can pose questions for the presenter to answer during the Q&A segment of the workshop. A "host" will also be available to help if you encounter any technical issues.

Visit our Online Seminars page to learn more and reserve your spot!


Advice | By Grace Dobush | News | Shows and Events
5/13/2009 12:41:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Peter Fiore's landscape a day


Peter Fiore is putting up a landscape study every morning on his blog, Landscape a Day. (You might've seen him in the September 2008 issue of The Artist's Magazine.)

So far it seems the paintings have been selling out! He's also been selling prints for $25—a very good moneymaking idea. I'm sure it keeps people coming back every day to see the latest offering!


By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
5/12/2009 10:55:49 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, May 11, 2009
Easy Rider anniversary brings Hopper back to Taos


Above: (from left to right) Ron Davis, Ron Cooper, Robert Dean Stockwell, Dennis Hopper and Larry Bell. Photo courtesy of William Davis. Below: a silver gelatin photo taken by Hopper on view in the exhibit (click to enlarge).

The original Summer of Love took place in San Francisco 42 years ago. But Taos, NM, has cooked up its own version with actor and director Dennis Hopper. Hopper first rode into town in 1968 to direct the iconic counterculture film Easy Rider. He ended up staying 15 years.

Now, 40 years after the release of the film, the town is paying homage to Hopper, who was just named honorary mayor of the historic art colony. On Saturday, an exhibit curated by Hopper opened at the Harwood Museum of Art. In the show, Hopper brings together works by a pantheon of his legendary artist friends, including Ron Davis, Ron Cooper, Robert Dean Stockwell and Larry Bell.  

Before Hopper moved to Taos, he was part of vibrant art movement in Los Angeles that centered around the Ferus Gallery—a magnet that drew up-and-coming L.A. artists such as Bell. Some of Hopper's photographs from the period also are on display at the Harwood and capture these artists brimming with youthful bravado and L.A. cool. "Hopper at the Harwood" is on view through Sept. 20.
—Bonnie Gangelhoff

Dispatches from the West | Notable Artists | Shows and Events
5/11/2009 9:07:11 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, May 08, 2009
Fantastic Renaissance resource
I am absolutely stunned by the Circa 1440 Flickr photostream. It's this collection of images from the early Renaissance that include a staggering variety of oriental carpets.

The photos (called The Carpet Index) seem to be curated by Lauren Arnold, an independent art historian. Go have a look—I bet you'll end up looking at these pictures for hours!

At right: The Ambassadors by Hans Holbein (1533, oil, 81x82)

Learn more:


By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
5/8/2009 1:33:52 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, May 07, 2009
Tip file: Paint relationships, not things
From Carl Samson, in the June 1994 issue of The Artist's Magazine:
Paint relationships, not things. The immediate effect of a painting comes primarily from values. By getting these relationships right at the beginning, you've nailed the "big look," regardless of what you're painting.
Learn more:

By Grace Dobush | Tips
5/7/2009 12:24:13 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Art collecting for the people
I absolutely must see "Herb and Dorothy," a new documentary about a couple that has amassed one of the best private collections of contemporary art, and all on a working person's wages. (Their criteria for buying art are that the work has to be affordable, it has to fit in their one-bedroom apartment, and they have to just like it.) Check out the trailer below—aren't they adorable?


By Grace Dobush | News | Videos
5/6/2009 12:26:34 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, May 05, 2009
Book: Gauguin cut off van Gogh's ear
Everyone's heard the story of Vincent van Gogh cutting his own ear off in a fit of madness. But a new book claims Paul Gauguin actually sliced off the organ, either in anger or self-defense. German art historians have analyzed correspondence between the artists that lead them to believe they kept it quiet to avoid prosecution.

At right: Self-portrait (1887, oil, 16.5x13.25)

In the shop:

By Grace Dobush | News | Notable Artists
5/5/2009 10:39:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, May 04, 2009
Going for the Gold: California Art Club Awards


Above: Danielle at the Los Angeles Theatre Gala by Lindsay Goodwin. Below right: Seated Figure by Ignat Igantov.

I'm just back from the opening of the California Art Club Gold Medal Exhibition in Pasadena, CA. What a gathering of great artistic talent—and what a scary moment for this visitor from Boulder, CO. Right before the rooftop awards ceremony, Peter Adams, the president of the CAC, announced that the fire marshal wanted some people on my side of the roof to move to the other side pronto because the building was "shifting." I found this call to action unnerving and moved pretty fast. But the mostly California-based art crowd just calmly ambled over to the other side as if such requests were part of their routine.

Meanwhile, a few minutes later, Lindsay Goodwin and Ignat Ignatov, who have appeared in Southwest Art's annual "21 Under 31" themed-issue, received awards. As I perused their paintings that night I was struck by the similarities of their models' poses. Each painting featured a young woman slumped in a chair, one with clothes on and one without.

Tony Peters, yet another 21 under 31 alum, also took home an award for his intriguing self portrait. Among the other top award winners were Adams, Daniel Pinkham, Jove Wang, and Dennis Doheny. Southwest Art's award of excellence went to Huihan Liu.

By the way, paintings by two new emerging artists caught my attention—a moody portrait by Julio Reyes and some awesome thorny flowers by Candice Bohannon. Keep an eye on them. The CAC show is on view through May 17 at the Pasadena Museum of California Art.

—Bonnie Gangelhoff

Dispatches from the West | Shows and Events
5/4/2009 11:02:43 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
Competition deadline extended!
Just a heads up: We extended the deadline of The Artist's Magazine Annual Art Competition to this Friday, May 8, 2009, so if you were thinking of entering but didn't get around to it last week, there's still time!


By Grace Dobush | News
5/4/2009 10:45:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, April 30, 2009
Cartoonist Jim Borgman at work


Our art director, Dan, recently found this old Polaroid of Jim Borgman at work in his Cincinnati studio. Borgman was a longtime editorial cartoonist at the Cincinnati Enquirer, where he won a Pulitzer for his work, and he still does the comic strip Zits.

If you like cartoons, (I hope) you'll love my feature on modern cartooning that I wrote for the September issue of The Artist's Magazine! It's not out for a while yet (August 11 is the newsstand date), but I'm already excited about it. I talked to Ivan Brunetti, Esther Pearl Watson and Ed Piskor about the new wave of cartooning. To get your fix in the meantime, check out IMPACT Books and (one of my favorite comic publishers) Fantagraphics.

By Grace Dobush | News | Notable Artists
4/30/2009 2:13:29 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Tip file: Start big
From Bill Tilton, in the January 1994 issue of The Artist's Magazine:
Always start a painting or drawing with big shapes and tools—big brush, big charcoal or large graphite stick—anything that precludes your getting prematurely enmeshed in details. Beginning with something big forces you to see the underlying masses and shapes that tell viewers what the subject is.
Learn more:

By Grace Dobush | Tips
4/30/2009 11:13:56 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Artist reaches out to Ugandan children
Painter Ross Bleckner traveled to Uganda on an official United Nations mission, where he worked with children who were abducted by the Lord's Resistance Army. The New York Times reports:
Using thousands of dollars' worth of paint, brushes and paper shipped from New York Central Art Supply in the East Village, Mr. Bleckner, 59, worked with a group of 25 children — former abductees and ex-soldiers — for more than a week at a Roman Catholic aid center. The children made 200 paintings that will be sold at a benefit at the United Nations headquarters next month at which Mr. Bleckner will be appointed goodwill ambassador.

He said that after several days of teaching them rudimentary painting and drawing skills, many began to open up to him and to create work that powerfully expressed their experiences. ... "What this mission accomplished is what I call microcreativity," Mr. Bleckner wrote in a catalog of the children's work. "It is a personal interaction which gives someone the tools to create something that they can be proud of, and which can help them on the arduous path to restoring their dignity and sense of self-worth."

See a slideshow of the children's work here.


By Grace Dobush | News | Notable Artists
4/29/2009 1:24:10 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Tuesday, April 28, 2009
George Tooker retrospective
We're sending the July issue of The Artist's Magazine to the press this week, and one of the artists in the issue is George Tooker, an egg tempera painter and Magical Realist. (The issue goes on sale June 6.)

The Columbus (Ohio) Museum of Art is showing a retrospective on Tooker starting May 1 through Sept. 6. The CMA also released a mini-documentary about the artist. You can watch the first part below and see the rest on the CMA's YouTube page.


By Grace Dobush | Exhibits | Notable Artists | Videos
4/28/2009 1:38:50 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Monday, April 27, 2009
Extreme plein-air painting


Check out these adventurous plein-air artists based in Minnesota. In the dead of winter, Mike Rada and Scott Lloyd Anderson like to paint and do a little ice fishing simultaneously. All looks well above, but Mike recounts a time when tragedy struck in the frozen tundra. He was trekking across a lake with his painting gear when suddenly he heard a loud crack and plunged through the ice.

Fortunately, his backpack caught on the ice and it stopped him from going totally under. Mike managed to crawl away on his stomach but his clothes were soaked. Determined to paint and still bring home the catch of the day, he shed his wet overalls and hung them out his car window until they were frozen solid. Then he slid the frigid duds over his dry clothes.

The icy overalls served as a top-notch windbreaker. "As long they're frozen, you're warm enough to paint," Mike says. Read more about this intrepid duo and six other plein-air painters in the June issue of Southwest Art magazine.
—Bonnie Gangelhoff
Learn more:

Dispatches from the West
4/27/2009 12:34:04 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Friday, April 24, 2009
My kind of tea party
Zach over at Portland Studios is experimenting with tea painting.

After early attempts were too washed out, he bought an economy pack at Dollar General and made "The Tea of the Hundred Bags." I think the art turned out lovely!

(Reminds me of the coffee painters from a while back...)

By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
4/24/2009 9:32:06 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, April 23, 2009
Tip file: Exaggerate for Impressionism
From Hilda Neily, in the June 1990 issue of The Artist's Magazine:
When you're just beginning to paint in an impressionistic style in oils, it's useful to exaggerate the color somewhat. On a sunny day, for instance, make the light places brighter than you think they are, then bring the work inside and see whether it looks like a sunny day. If not, exaggerate the color some more.
Learn more:



By Grace Dobush | Tips
4/23/2009 11:14:46 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, April 22, 2009
The art of Rust Belt cities
We're wrapping up the July/August issue here at The Artist's Mag HQ, and I'm especially proud of a story I wrote on how Rust Belt cities are redeveloping themselves as grassroots art hubs. Lo and behold, the Wall Street Journal wrote on the same topic just a few days ago. (It's hard not to curse the production gods when I get scooped!)

WSJ mainly focuses on the art revitalization happening in Cleveland; my story examines equally projects in Cleveland, Detroit and Pittsburgh. Here's a little taste:
"There’s a challenge of rebounding from economic disaster and from people moving away after the collapse of the steel industry," says Curt Gettman of Pittsburgh's Sprout Fund. "But what was left was a really great infrastructure, a lot of assets, and a city that understands the value of art and that quality of life isn’t necessarily measured in dollars and cents."
Read the whole story in the July 2009 issue of The Artist's Magazine—on sale June 9 and shipping to subscribers around May 20.


By Grace Dobush | News | Random Thoughts
4/22/2009 9:34:38 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Bill Cone show in SF

Iceberg Outlet (pastel, 10x10.5) by Bill Cone

Bill Cone, the pastel artist behind Pixar movies such as Cars and A Bug's Life, sent us the beautiful painting above and this note:
"I am about to have my first one man show in San Francisco of four years of work from painting in the Sierra Nevada mountains. The show is at the Studio Gallery in San Francisco, and runs April 15-May 10. I have also put together a catalog of work from the show, which will be available at the gallery, and through my blog."

We wrote about Bill in the March 2008 issue of The Artist's Magazine—it's worth digging through your stacks of old magazines to find!

Learn more:

By Grace Dobush | Notable Artists | Shows and Events
4/21/2009 2:17:33 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Monday, April 20, 2009
The fish, the polar bear and the Coke can


One of the pleasures of my Monday mornings is sifting through the weekend email and discovering an utterly intriguing image. Call it a good omen for the week. Reef Madness (above) is such a piece. Dawn Siebel, a painter based in Boulder, CO, sent along this bold, hyperreal painting as an example of a fresh direction in her work.

The brilliant colors belie a subtle, provocative message. The eye travels around the lush fish and coral underworld until it finally rests on a discarded Coke can. Trash amid the beauty. "My new paintings are all rooted with an environmental commentary but it is oblique or even humorous," Siebel says.

A few months ago Siebel sent an image of a polar bear (Afloat, at right) as one of the very first examples of her new direction—an image that still haunts me. The animal appears to be in shock or hollering in a fashion reminiscent of Edvard Munch's The Scream. "Help. My home is melting," the bear cries.

Siebel says that although her paintings are full of commentary, it is up to the viewer to interpret the meanings. What do you think about the fish, the polar bear and the Coke can paintings? And is it my imagination or are there more and more messages of concern for the environment popping up in artwork these days?
—Bonnie Gangelhoff

Dispatches from the West | Notable Artists | Random Thoughts
4/20/2009 10:55:54 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2] 
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