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 Friday, February 27, 2009
High-tech sketching
By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
2/27/2009 2:52:08 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, February 26, 2009
Tip file: pastels like Degas
From Don Walker, in the October 1988 issue of The Artist's Magazine: To create a striking surface texture, Edgar Degas would steam the pastel with boiling water. Depending on the thickness of the pastel layers, the steam might produce a paste, workable with a stiff brush, or a wash that could be spread with a soft brush.
By Grace Dobush | Notable Artists | Tips
2/26/2009 9:09:54 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, February 25, 2009
News tidbits
Got a lot of stuff going on at The Artist's Mag HQ this week: By Grace Dobush | News | Projects
2/25/2009 12:32:59 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Artists Network News debuts!
By Grace Dobush | News | Videos
2/24/2009 1:47:42 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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Tom Bacher at the Weston Art Gallery
Installation view of Luminous: Paintings by Tom BacherArtists are supposed to love light, but Tom Bacher actually works with crystals of phosphoresence that he mixes with acrylic gel medium and/or acrylic paints. The amalgam that results has a half life. The paints on the canvas absorb light during the day; as light fails, the colors change, and when darkness invades the studio or gallery, the pictures start glowing, popping off the wall. "I do paintings that actually incorporate an element of change," Bacher says. In an article ("Night Visions") in the June 2008 Artist's Magazine, he described his complicated process and recalled that his fascination with phosphorescence stems from the glow-in-the-dark toys, religious statues, and rosaries popular in the 1950s. The show, which represents an overview of the artist's work, portrays the city as fragments of radiance—joyful and gorgeous schemes of chaos. The pictures that stayed with me longest, however, seem like meditations on, rather than snapshots of, the city. The vantage in these pictures is often from the bank of a river (the Ohio or Hudson); the city appears over the edge, across the water, with the flickering, ghostly validity of a dream. Luminous: Paintings by Tom Bacher will be on view at the Weston Art Gallery until March 21st. To see more of Bacher's work, visit his Web site. By Maureen Bloomfield | News | Shows and Events
2/24/2009 1:08:53 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, February 23, 2009
Artful Equine or Demon Stallion?
Note: Bonnie Gangelhoff is the senior editor at Southwest Art, a sister publication of The Artist’s Magazine . This is the first in a series of a weekly dispatches on art issues out West. A war is raging in Denver over a 32-foot-tall fiberglass blue mustang that greets visitors at the Denver International Airport. A local developer, Rachel Hultin, has mounted a campaign to get the eye-popping equine corralled and moved to another locale. Her anti-stallion Facebook group is rife with support from people who call the sculpture fiendish, heinous and evil. One woman even said the scary steed makes her afraid to board a plane. The airport commissioned sculptor Luis Jimenez to create the piece as a symbol of the West and of Denver. But as one naysayer declares, that’s not the message the sculpture sends, "because of this thing, people think they are in hell, not Denver." Apparently, a main complaint is that the equine's glowing red eyes make it seem possessed by the devil. (One Denverite has dubbed it "Bluecifer.") Meanwhile, the monumental mustang comes with some serious baggage. In 2006, Jimenez was killed when a piece of the horse fell on him in his New Mexico studio. Family members later finished the sculpture and it was installed in 2008. Since the city says public art can’t be moved for five years, the horse detractors may be the ones moving on, not the sculpture. But the blue horse has its fans, who say art is supposed to stir up unbridled passions. And it could be that the renowned sculptor meant his icon of the West as a wry comment—we travel on red-eye flights rather than our trusty steeds. What do you think? Is the anti-stallion faction over-reacting, or do they have a point? —Bonnie Gangelhoff
Dispatches from the West | News | Notable Artists
2/23/2009 9:26:48 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, February 19, 2009
Tip file: Draw all the time
From Bill Harvey, in the June 1993 issue of The Artist's Magazine: Carry a 3x5-inch pad of drawing paper and some kind of ballpoint pen and use it. Get the idea that everything around you, everything you see, is worthy of your attention. It's like practicing the scales. A musician can play incredibly complex compositions, but these basic exercises strengthen the muscles and impulses used to paint or perform.
By Grace Dobush | Tips
2/19/2009 10:25:22 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Society of Illustrators exhibition
The final phase of the Society of Illustrators' annual exhibition, Illustrators 51, goes live March 4. The Advertising, Institutional and Uncomissioned Exhibit features the work of Marc Burckhardt, Jody Hewgill, Brad Holland and Frances Jetter, among others. You can see the show March 4 through 28 at the Museum of American Illustration, at 128 E. 63rd St. in New York City. The museum's open Tuesday-Saturday, and admission is free. If you can't make it to NYC for the show, you can catch some of the works on a US college tour through June 2010.
By Grace Dobush | Exhibits | Shows and Events
2/18/2009 3:20:17 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, February 17, 2009
A typographic pick-me-up
After a long weekend, I'm feeling a little sluggish today. Keetra Dean Dixon's type art makes me feel cheery, especially this piece: I've been thinking of you for a while (54x12x6, layered wax) I can't believe it's wax! Doesn't it look like a geode? Found via HOW. By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
2/17/2009 4:04:36 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, February 13, 2009
 Thursday, February 12, 2009
Tip file: Competition consolation
From Debora Meltz, in the April 1994 issue of The Artist's Magazine: Don't be discouraged by show rejections. No artist is accepted into every juried show. As in any other aspect of life, there are trends in art that you shouldn't care to follow, but jurors are human. What looks passé may look fresh and exciting in a few years down the road. So hang in there.
By Grace Dobush | Tips
2/12/2009 9:02:27 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Somebody's not following art auctions...
ARTINFO.com reports that robbers plundering a home in England stole about $14,000 of jewelry but passed on a Banksy work valued at $28,000. Shame, the state of art education these days! By Grace Dobush | News | Random Thoughts
2/11/2009 3:44:28 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Art for sale on Etsy
Are you familiar with the crafty superstore Etsy? If not, ho boy, are you in for a treat. Artists (from knitters to collagists to painters to haberdasherers) post their handmade items for sale on Etsy for a small listing fee and get access to a pool of almost 2 million registered users. I've been a seller on Etsy for more than two years, and I'm constantly exploring the wares people put up. You can search by material, tag or description, or browse by color or location. And it's not only handmade stuff for sale—there are separate categories for vintage items and supplies. Like WoodWorkDesigns, which sells custom panels for artists. I've been searching for painters and mixed-media artists, and here are some of my favorite finds: - pepperminte (stylized watercolor portraits)
- kelcan (abstract oil landscapes)
- rplowman (collages—I interviewed him for the June issue of The Artist's Magazine!)
- jezze (gorgeous prints—I interviewed her for my book!)
I could browse through Etsy all day. (Glad I can count it as working!) By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
2/10/2009 4:09:11 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, February 09, 2009
New, curated watercolor blog
Chris Beck, an artist familiar to many of us here in the office, has a new(ish) blog where she posts work from a different artist every week. BRUSH-PAPER-WATER is a growing collection of stunning work by watercolorists of all temperaments. (The image at right is a detail of one of Beck's paintings—cutest profile icon ever!) By Grace Dobush | Cool Web sites
2/9/2009 9:31:15 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, February 05, 2009
Tip file: Let your mind wander
From Ellen Fountain, in the July 1988 issue of The Artist's Magazine: To limber up your imagination, find a quiet spot, shut your eyes and call up an image of something you know very well, perhaps your cat. Take time to let the image form clearly in your mind. Then change it—make the cat another color, give it wings, watch it fly.
By Grace Dobush | Tips
2/5/2009 10:18:36 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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The miniature art of 'Coraline'
 Have you seen the trailers for " Coraline" yet? It's a new movie by the guy who did "Nightmare Before Christmas," and though the incredible landscapes and characters look digital, it is all DIY. The stop-motion 3-D film, based on a Neil Gaiman story, comes out tomorrow. For example, in the image above, Coraline's hair is styled strand-by-strand and the mittens were knit with tiny, tiny needles. WIRED has an awesome slideshow with images from the making of the movie. The crew created 150 sets and 250 jointed puppets, plus countless plants and toys with moving parts. You can see the trailer (and lots of making-of clips) on the Coraline Films YouTube page. Below is a look at how they rigged up some of the plants with every-day objects:
By Grace Dobush | News | Videos
2/5/2009 9:32:27 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, February 04, 2009
 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)
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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)
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 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)
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