Archive for October, 2009

Encaustic Icon: Lepidopteran Still

Posted in Art, Painting, Stephanie Gerolimatos with tags , , , , , , , , on October 31, 2009 by ssstephg

encaustic icon by stephg
moth, encaustic, eggshells on cradled panel
6 x 6 inches

Another in the encaustic icon series, this one will probably require more work. There are times when I seem to find dead moths everywhere. Unfortunately, I’ve lost some of my best finds–I’ve somehow misplaced all of my big pale green luna moths and the perfectly preserved face complete with spiral tongue of the Sphinx Moth I found was eaten off by hungry ants. Damn ants always ruining the picnic.

detail photo and thoughtflow after the jump! Read more »

Saturday Morning Cartoon-ish: Happy Halloween

Posted in Miscellaneous, Stephanie Gerolimatos, video with tags , , , on October 31, 2009 by ssstephg

Because I’m fine with being thoroughly predictable, here’s the Marilyn Manson version of This Is Halloween set to scenes from The Nightmare Before Christmas.

Steph technically has it, but here’s some Halloweenage anyway…

Posted in Art with tags on October 30, 2009 by Jason Gray

Raked Mog

Posted in Jason Gray with tags , , on October 30, 2009 by Jason Gray

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Here are a couple of new images that I took the other night. I wish that I could share what I have been working on, but not yet.

Both Nikon D300 with Nikon 50mm f/1.8E Lens (30 year old lens that Nikon refused to label “Nikkor” because of plastic components; what happened to that approach?)
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I think that I have a new favorite band video…

Posted in Art with tags , on October 29, 2009 by Jason Gray

The People Ride in a Hole in the Ground

Posted in Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, gesture, geture drawing, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , on October 29, 2009 by Tom Bennett

More drawings from the New York Subway. Tired, quiet, thoughtless, thoughtful, drunk, sober, stoned, demented, peaceful and depressed people who none the less are quite patient with me and suitable to draw. Click on the thumbnail if you care to see these up close and personal.
T.B.

ink on paper

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More Lou Reed

Posted in Art, Photography, Toni Tiller with tags , , , on October 28, 2009 by Toni Tiller

Collect ‘em all!

Electronic Collage

Posted in Art, Collage, digital with tags , , , , , , on October 27, 2009 by jdhastings

That title should be pronounced in your best approximation of the vocoder voice, such as was used by 80s greats Zapp on such hits as Computer Love. Why doesn’t anybody make music like that anymore?

Anyways, here is my electronic art, baby:

Meta-scrap Small

Just like the Zapp song was being played on Vinyl, this is not entirely digital. In fact, it is built from 4 different sheets of scanned scraps of paintings.

I explain more and embed Computer Love after the jump. You know you want to embed computer love.
Read more »

paper and glue

Posted in Art, Collage, Daniel Allyn Lee with tags , , , on October 26, 2009 by Daniel Allyn Lee

Here is a new collage I made. I’m not sure if its complete, but I seem to always get that feeling after I make a collage. I guess, I can always go back and glue more stuff onto it.
Newton's Favorite Parable
Newton’s Favorite Parable, paper collage, 11″ x 8 1/2″, 2009

Sunday Sidewalk Doodles: Bubblehosenose

Posted in Art, Miscellaneous, Stephanie Gerolimatos with tags , , , , , on October 25, 2009 by ssstephg


by StephG

a few more after the jump! Read more »

Encaustic Icons: Herpetological Relic

Posted in Art, Painting, Stephanie Gerolimatos with tags , , , , , , , , , , on October 24, 2009 by ssstephg


encaustic, snake and eggshells on cradled panel
6 x 6 inches
Yup, that’s a tiny little dead snake I found flattened on the road.
click to see larger image

This is an example of a series of encaustic works I started a couple of years ago and am about to pick back up. I’ve never gotten around to deciding how to present the work. I thought I wanted to build fancy guilt frames for all the pieces, but at this point I’m thinking that might be a little unnecessary, and maybe I should just stick with something simpler–no framing at all. I’ll let you know when I decide for sure.  There are more in the works.  I think so far I have started pieces using this snake, a moth, a frog and some hornets.

Some of you may be wondering, “What’s with the dead things?”  Here’s the explanation I wrote for my website where I still haven’t posted any of the actual work: Read more »

Saturday Morning Cartoons: Blu & David Ellis

Posted in Art, Stephanie Gerolimatos, video with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on October 24, 2009 by ssstephg


COMBO
collaborative animation by Blu and David Ellis for Studiocromie’s Fame festival in Italy 2009
music by Roberto Lange

White People like both Banksy and Kinkade

Posted in Art, banksy, Miscellaneous, Tom Bennett with tags , , , , , on October 24, 2009 by Tom Bennett

From the site
“Stuff White People Like”:

October 4, 2009 by clander
Keeping up with art is hard; trips to galleries, enormous books, and costly bi-annual magazines are just a few of the many expenses you will incur during the process of attempting to stay current with art. While the challenge and difficult of this proposition would seem to actually attract more white people than dissuade them, the amount of work required to become and remain an expert on art is simply too much for the majority of white people.
Of course there are exceptions such as the people who have invested both their money and their lives into the appreciation of art: people with Art History Degrees. But as you have probably noticed, they have very little value to both you and society. The latter is evidenced by their annual salary while the former is to be determined on a person by person basis.
Currently, the artist who is both cutting edge and easy to keep up with is Banksy, and white people love him. He is anonymous, British, easy to understand, and he works in the medium of graffiti! This last bit is very important since all white people consider graffiti to be art when it looks like something other than a bunch of squiggles. In every other instance, they consider it vandalism.
As with any conversation involving white people and taste you should be forewarned that you are walking into a potential minefield. However, art does not work the same way as Indie Music when it comes to the need to like the obscure.
Here’s how it works: if you say your favorite artist is Vincent Van Gogh, MC Escher or Monet, you will appear as though your taste in art is derived entirely from college posters. This is unacceptable. Conversely, if you list Jeff Koons, Laurie Anderson, Damien Hirst or Basquiat, you’ll look like you are trying too hard but don’t really know what you are talking about. Chances are that white people will assume your art education consists entirely of documentaries, bio pics, and looking up references from Gossip Girl on Wikipedia.
Finally, if you list your favorite artist as a current, bleeding edge visionary who white people have not heard of, they will immediately recognize you as a threat and dislike you. It is also a certainty that they will call you pretentious behind your back.
Needless to say, it’s complicated. But Banksy is just right. He’s just edgy enough to be outside of the mainstream, but popular enough to be available in coffee table book form at Urban Outfitters. Though if you spot this book on the coffee table of a white person it is strongly recommended that you imply they got the book at a Modern Art Museum gift shop and not at an Urban Outfitters. This will make the evening far more enjoyable for everyone concerned.
If you find all of this to simply be too much work and wish to ensure that white people will never speak to you about art again, there is an easy escape. Simply mention your favorite artist is Thomas Kinkade and that you are in negotiations to purchase an original from the store in the mall. This will effectively end any friendship you have with a white person.

Valuable Artists’ Resource

Posted in Art with tags , , , on October 23, 2009 by jdhastings

Just found this blog or automated feed or whatever it is. Accurately titled, “Hot Chicks At Art Openings.”

So, if you’re a hot chick looking to be recognized, or a dude looking for the aforementioned ladies, you now have a reason to support the arts.

-JD

PS- The hottest chicks are the ones who buy art. And they are always totally impressed by dudes who buy art.

Fall

Posted in Art with tags on October 22, 2009 by Jason Gray

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Finally felt like fall around here on monday and tuesday (it’s been unseasonably cold otherwise), but at least it’s looking like it everywhere. Those red trees around the art museum strike me every time that I see them. I’ve got some plans for some new paintings that I don’t think will hold off until the spring, so maybe the early chilly weather is a good thing!

All Nikon D300 with Nikkor 28-80mm f/3.3-5.6G Lens.

Read more »

On Soda, Vodka and Tapioca: The Art of Modern Art Conservation

Posted in Art with tags , , on October 22, 2009 by jdhastings

Art Info has an interesting story about modern (or postmodern) art conservation today.

The story itself is pretty short and shallow, but does raise the question: Which is more audacious- Kicking or drinking a public installation piece, or hanging a bunch of soda from trees and expecting people not to mess with it?

If the topic interests you to pursue it further, I recommend this article from a year ago from the UK’s Independent.
Read more »

Hollow Mantle

Posted in abstract, Art, art on paper, figurative, landscape, monotype, nude, printmaking, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , on October 21, 2009 by Tom Bennett

This started out with an intention of abstracted landscape and something else happened. Metamorphosis. This is indeed the nature of art making. This is the monotype. This is melodramatic, isn’t it? I’m on a weird schedule, little sleep. That’s my excuse.

Hollow Mantle

Tom Bennett
Hollow Mantle, 2009, monotype, 18″ x 12″

I Have A Bunch Of Lou Reeds

Posted in Art, Photography, Toni Tiller with tags , , , , , on October 21, 2009 by Toni Tiller

I thought about giving them out all at once but I thought that it would be too much, so today I will only post one.

How Not To Win Your Copyright Case

Posted in Art with tags , , , on October 20, 2009 by jdhastings

I am not a lawyer and this should not be construed as legal advice, however, when it comes to defending yourself in a high profile Copyright Infringement case, willfully destroying evidence is probably NOT the way to go with it.

Shepard Fairey, creator of the formerly ubiquitous “Hope” posters of Obama (now ubiquitously re-appropriated for ironic use), has been sued by the Associated Press for using a photo they own the rights to to create his image. One of the questions of fact was the exact image he used.

Well apparently Fairey figured out the AP was right on this issue “early on in the case” and subsequently “submitted false images and deleted other images” to avoid copping to this fact.

Again, I’m no lawyer, but in legal parlance I believe this is called, “Stupid.” Whatever the merits of his original defense, Fairey has now admitted to what sounds like evidence tampering or worse. I don’t know if charges are being brought against him for such things, but subjecting yourself to potential further jail time and/or fines in addition to the trouble you’re already in is rarely a good idea.

Especially since, in my considerable ignorance regarding this case, I don’t see how this specific dispute over which photo was used matters to the overarching point. If, as he’s claiming, he is protecting the higher principle of fair use here, why act illegally in an attempt to weasel out of the true fight on a technicality?

Now he’s made himself look slimy and destroyed his credibility. While I’m not exactly on the side of the AP no-fun machine on this fight, it’s clear that Fairey is a pretty weak champion for the cause.

I wish Jeff Koons would swoop in and save the day…

-JD

Self Portrait with Stargard

Posted in Art, Collage, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , on October 20, 2009 by jdhastings

The word “Genius” is bandied about far too often in our mediocrity infused society. The word has become watered down to the point that it can no longer do justice to works like this one, which deserve more than simple, Earthly praise.

Self Portrait wStargardWEB

Obviously a work like this transcends our regular notions of art and I wouldn’t blame you if you asked if you could make pilgrimage to worship in its divine presence. Unfortunately, I have to deny you the opportunity. I fear that too much exposure to humanity will weather it, so that future generations would be robbed of it. None of us want that.

You may, however, donate as much money to me as you like for giving you the opportunity to view this here, for free. Contact me for my Pay Pal info.

If you are interested in the two ladies (who I believe stand about 9 feet tall each, if I’m gauging the scale here properly), I’m including a video from them after the jump Read more »

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