Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Saul Steinberg

On Sunday a friend and I stopped in at the Cincinnati Art Museum for the exhibit, Saul Steinberg: Illuminations. For those who are unfamiliar with the name, you may recall Steinberg's charactersitic line on the cover of numerous New Yorker magazines.

Steinberg may be best known for his humorous cover A View of the World From 9th Avenue. All told, the Romanian-born artist did 85 covers and 642 drawings for the publication. On view in the show were 60 years worth of drawings, paintings, collages and even sculptures. One drawing ran 33 feet (although, for some reason, not fully shown under glass). 

One thing I found so refreshing about the exhibit was that one could see the pencil lines in many of the drawings, gouaches and watercolors. Some of the drawings didn't completely make their way to the cover—they were edited. In one drawing that played on the use of acronyms (Steinberg considered himself a writer who happened to paint), the letters "LSD" ended up on the cutting room floor.

Anyhow, it's nice to see, not really the mistakes an artist makes, but the progress. To know that even the hand of a genius wanders.
Lisa


By Lisa Wurster | Notable Artists | Random Thoughts | Shows and Events
7/31/2007 3:33:32 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, July 26, 2007
Simpsonize Me
I've joined the masses and jumped on the Simpsons Movie extravaganza bandwagon by "Simpsonizing" myself. The website I used for this transformation is sponsored by Burger King and is so popular you have to check back often to try again, as the page gets overloaded with users. But it's truly worth it to see yourself as a Matt Groening-styled cartoon. Here's me...

By Lisa Wurster | Random Thoughts
7/26/2007 10:51:44 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2] 
 Wednesday, July 25, 2007
Art of Meditation
In a unique (and relaxing) conjunction with its current Asian-inspired exhibition, Stefano Arienti: The Asian Shore (on view through Oct. 14), the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston is holding in-gallery meditation workshops Aug. 7, Sept. 4 and Oct. 2.

Participants will sit on rugs dyed by the Italian artist and will be surrounded by zen-like black-and-white drawings of Isabella Gardner's former Chinese Room. Boston spa Exhale will have wellness experts and licensed acupuncturists on site to conduct the guided meditation and "vibrational therapy" which uses a tuning fork to produce a "unique physiological response."

The Gardner Museum is home to world-class art by Rembrandt, Degas, Michelangelo and Raphael. After the meditations, guests are welcome to peruse the three floors of outstanding art. The sessions are free with standard admission, but reservations are needed. To learn more, click here.

I don't know about you, but I'm already starting to feel mellow.

Lisa

By Lisa Wurster | Notable Artists | Shows and Events
7/25/2007 4:30:09 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, July 19, 2007
Podcast on Hopper Painting
After editing Sheila Hollihan-Elliot’s article “Edward Hopper: Composing for Impact” for our July/August issue, I was intrigued about some things I’d learned about Hopper’s private life, about the role his wife Jo played in his painting—and he, in hers.

So I ordered Edward Hopper: An Intimate Biography by Gail Levin (Rizzoli International Publications, 2007). I thought I could find some compelling anecdotes to blog about—for example, what was going on when Hopper was working on such-and-such a painting. A week later the book arrived—a 2½-inch-thick, 777-page tome left balancing precariously on top of the huge stack of proofs in my in-box.

Maybe I was intimidated by its heft, fearful of blogging about a book I might never finish; perhaps locating those tantalizing bits of their lives seemed more difficult than I’d originally thought; or, after spending 10-hours a day working on the magazine and related duties, it could be that I was more attracted to lighter, “summer” reading, gardening and walks in the park. At any rate, it’s three months later and you’ve seen nothing from me on this Hopper biography—rather, I should say, you’ve seen nothing from me at all.

Yet I remain interested in Hopper's work and his life, and, if I ever get to it, the book promises to be a fascinating read. But for now I thought I'd share this Metropolitan Museum of Art Special Exhibition Podcast that sheds some light (no pun intended) on Hopper’s A Lighthouse and Two Lights. I hope you enjoy it. --Chris McHugh

Learn more about the book here.
View the painting here.
Listen to the podcast here.

By Chris McHugh | Notable Artists | Random Thoughts
7/19/2007 3:49:36 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
A Bridge That Sings
 Imagine a man with mallets striking the suspension ropes, the metal plates, the rails and grates on a bridge. Imagine the attendant sounds as cars whoosh across the bridge and rain pelts the steel cables. Joseph Bertolozzi is at work as I write this. He is recording the sounds he can derive from the Franklin D. Roosevelt Bridge so he can replay them and create a 45-60-minute suite called "Bridge Music," which will have its inaugural performance next year. An orchestra of percussionists will, in effect, play the bridge. I love this image and I love that  it's not imaginary.

An esteemed composer and Grammy winner, Bertolozzi makes his living as an organist. "I only play big instruments," he says. His initial idea, actually his wife's, was to play the Eiffel Tower. The civic leaders of Poughskeepie, at first skeptical—they in fact "wondered whether he had his head screwed on straight"—are now besotted, won over by a performance of a preliminary compostion called "Bridge Funk." (This piece is available through http.//www.josephbertolozzi.com).

"Bridge Music" in performance will celebrate the 400th anniversary of Henry Hudson's trip down the river Walt Whitman called "the lordly Hudson."--Maureen


By Maureen Bloomfield | Random Thoughts
7/19/2007 9:57:36 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Summer Sun
It's mid-summer and you'd think the sun would be shining to correspond with the 90 degree weather (and 90 percent humidity) we've been having. It's always sunny in my workspace though as I have art by Patti Brady hanging around. How is it that some images just brighten your day immediately? Visit her website and you'll see what I mean, or take a look at one of her works on paper, Belly Button, below. I can't think of a more adorable name for a painting. Even the title makes me smile.

We feature Patti's work in the July/August issue, one of my favorite issues we've done. On the cover is a Hopper painting of a couple (alone-together, in true Hopper form) on a sun-drenched porch. Also in the issue is work by Bryce Cameron Liston. He and I spoke on the phone a while back about the state of Romantic art. Some people may find the style old-fashioned or sappy. I agree with Liston who said that romanticism is simply a filter—similar to Impressionism—another angle from which to view the world. I can deal with a rosy-tinged filter now and again.

I hope you enjoy our summer issue as much as I do.
--Lisa

By Lisa Wurster | Notable Artists | Random Thoughts
7/18/2007 1:55:40 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Thursday, July 12, 2007
Where's Artist's Sketchbook?
We've been posting many obits lately, and it seems to me things might be getting a bit morbid. So, one last (belated) obit—for a time.

Artist's Sketchbook magazine was full of creativity and had a zest for life, yet met with its untimely demise in June 2006. Sketchbook was the beloved step-child of The Artist's Magazine and she leaves behind several editors (and art directors) who worked on her pages and who still inhabit these halls.

We do miss her and want to get the word out that she is no more--no, you cannot subscribe. However, you can order old issues by doing a "quick search" here, on our back issues page.

R.I.P. Artist's Sketchbook
SKB0206_cover.jpg


--Lisa

Random Thoughts | By Lisa Wurster
7/12/2007 3:11:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3] 
 Monday, July 09, 2007
Philip Booth (1925-2007)
Philip Booth, who studied with Robert Frost and taught at Wellesley and Syracuse University, died July 2nd. Identified with the New England landscape, especially the coast of Maine, he wrote of everyday occurrences, and while his poems are modest in intent, they are vast in their effect. To read some of Philip Booth's poems, go to http://www.poemhunter.com/philip-booth/.
("Parting" and "First Lesson," which recounts a father's teaching his daughter to float, are particularly beautiful.)
I read of Booth's death today after a weekend in which my children, husband, and I serially re-read Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix and Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince in anticipation of the release of the newest movie and final book. Our own little Phoenix, the starling, last week flew from my daughter Margaret's hand toward the mystery of the sky.--Maureen


By Maureen Bloomfield | Random Thoughts
7/9/2007 9:21:45 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]