Archive for blue

Saturday Morning Cartoons: Autotuned Red

Posted in Stephanie Gerolimatos with tags , , , , on November 20, 2010 by ssstephg

A li’l adolescent humor to start your day off right.

On Representation: a Self-Indulgent 3 Part Expose

Posted in Art, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , , , , , on July 20, 2010 by jdhastings

In order to get to the post I want to make, I feel like I need to lay some background. So please bear with me for a few posts.

Earlier in the decade I used to experiment a lot with what I called “washes,” puddles of paint, ink, and watercolor that I’d photograph to capture the wet effects that only persisted before the puddle dried:

Wet Blue
“Photograph of a Wet Painting” 2002

While this was a practical solution to a problem I had getting the image I wanted, it presented new issues of representation that my mind loved.

Paint is a medium of representation. It was used in lieu of photographs for hundreds of years, but here the paint can’t be counted on to represent itself. It requires the photograph to lock in it’s form. At the same time, the photograph couldn’t capture this image without the paint. Both media needed each other to be able to create this form of art.

Anybody who follows me on Twitter may have caught my spiel on Postmodernity on Friday and why this is relevant, but I’ll spare you that.

While this was the first time I delved into the subject, it’s definitely not the first time it’s come up (especially in the postmodernist age).

Whenever you see paintings in books, pamphlets or online, you are seeing photographs of them. Its necessary, but there is distance between the viewer and the piece. A few weeks ago I had problems because the photo of the piece I took gave a very misleading image of the piece in question. That is, the photograph poorly represented the painting. So the relationship in the previous post is actually endemic to our contemporary art experience. Its just that when done well, nobody recognizes it.

In photorealism you have the opposite relationship. The painting requires a photograph. When Robert Bechtle painted a station wagon, he was referencing the type of snapshot a family might take. He turned the throw away image into something more grand by painting the image much larger: his painting required the photo as much as the paint.

So there’s a long history of this relationship, beyond my entrance into the dialogue

For those interested in seeing what a man looking like an 80s male porn star would look like doing cheesy art with similar relationships between media, I give you:

Next I’ll go through the next level of representation.

From the Archive: Thrtee Stage Blue Cascades

Posted in Art, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , , , , on December 29, 2009 by jdhastings

Crap, it’s Tuesday, isn’t it?  The Holiday “schedule” has destroyed my sense of time.  And Space, but that’s something else entirely.

This is from 2006.

Three Stage Blue Cascades
“Three Stage Blue Cascades” Acrylic on Canvas, with Safety Pins

The size of this piece varies because you can position it in different ways, but it’s roughly 4 feet wide by 5 feet long or something like that. It’s kind of a pain to store anywhere but on a wall because it gets tangled no matter what you do and you end up having to unhook safety pins and re-attach them in their new confriguration. It is currently hanging in an upscale eyeglasses shop in Southern California. Obviously.

Next week I’ll be more responsible with my post, I promise. Happy New Years, everybody.

Sunday Morning Sidewalk Doodles: Drippy Whatnot and Blue Sperm

Posted in Art, Miscellaneous, Stephanie Gerolimatos with tags , , , , , , , , , on November 8, 2009 by ssstephg

A friend of mine told me this week that experience has taught him that women complain alot. Today, I have nothing to say about the weather. The above drawing is a self-portrait. Screw you, Matt.

Blue sperm and more drippy whatnot after the jump! Read more »

Old & Blue: Three More Encaustic Paintings

Posted in Art, Painting, Stephanie Gerolimatos with tags , , , , , , , , on September 19, 2009 by ssstephg

Yeah well, the post title may or may not be an indication of how I’m feeling. I don’t have anything else to say right now.

5 x 3.5 inches
encaustic on panel

Two more after the jump so CLICK!  please. Read more »

Non-corporeal

Posted in Art, Daniel Allyn Lee, Illustration, Painting with tags , , , , , on August 31, 2009 by Daniel Allyn Lee

I’ve been working on a couple paintings. I’m still experimenting with my monster illustrations and using different mediums. I’m not completely happy with this one, but enough to call it finished. I have lots of things I want to try.

non-corporeal creatures
Non-Corporeal Creatures, acrylic on canvas, 16″ x 24″, 2009

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