Archive for mixed media

Signed, Sealed and Delivered

Posted in Art, art on paper, art school, current events, events, exhibits, figurative, Miscellaneous, mixed media, monotype, nude, oil painting, openings, Painting, printmaking, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on October 6, 2011 by Tom Bennett

Silvermine Art Center in New Canaan, CT is organizing a fundraising event it has hosted for 10 years now, Signed, Sealed and Delivered. It’s an art sale and auction designed for collectors and art lovers featuring over 500 small, 4″ x 6″ original works in all media for sale at $50 each, to benefit the Center’s programs and outreach.

I’m contributing these 3 tiny paintings, all oil over monotype on Rives BFK printmaking paper. I rarely, if ever, paint this small with oil and I find it to be a disciplined exercise in control and direct manipulation of materials and form. Hellzalotta of fun.

Tom

ssd1

SSD 1, oil on monotype on paper, 6″ x 4″

ssd2

SSD 2, oil on monotype on paper, 6″ x 4″

ssd3

SSD 3, oil on monotype on paper, 4″ x 6″

Oslo

Posted in Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, gesture drawing, mixed media, nude, Painting, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , on July 28, 2011 by Tom Bennett

oslo

Oslo
india ink, benzyl ink, pencil, graphite and gouache on paper

Salad days

Posted in Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, mixed media, portrait, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , on July 21, 2011 by Tom Bennett

Greens were eaten that hot day at the neighborhood bar in Carroll Gardens. She was amused that he had ordered a Greek Salad as the Japanese team brought honor to their distraught nation.

Salad Days

mixed media: graphite, pencil, goauche, benzyl alcohol ink, india ink

Unconscious Crab Roll on the Beach

Posted in Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, gesture drawing, mixed media, nude, Painting, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , on July 14, 2011 by Tom Bennett

Another quick sketch between lunch and the next thing.

I’m thinking about the cottage and the lobster and the sea. Not that this image necessarily says that.

crab roll

mixed media: pencil, graphite, ink, benzyl ink, gouache on paper; 9″ x 12″

Making Art is All About the 4 year-old.

Posted in "But Is It Art?", Art, art on paper, Drawing, gesture, mixed media, technique, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , , on June 30, 2011 by Tom Bennett

I’m tired and when I’m tired I throw stuff down on paper and slop it around, pretending that my subconscious has something to do with the chaotic garbage that is left.

But is it art?

Humans are full of sh*t , huh?

PIG, mixed media on paper, 11″ x 7″

Sketch of a Nude

Posted in Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, mixed media, nude, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , , on June 23, 2011 by Tom Bennett

another pencil/ink/mixed media sketch

Nude as Landfill 2

Nude as Landfill 2, mixed media on paper 8″ x 10″

Drawings

Posted in Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, geture drawing, mixed media, nude, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , on March 3, 2011 by Tom Bennett

from the NYC subway this week:

And not from the subway:

pencil, graphite, gouache and ink:

Undercooked

Pear

The Ice Woman Cometh

Posted in Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, gesture, mixed media, nude, Painting, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , , on December 16, 2010 by Tom Bennett

The dead of winter is upon us here in the Northeast. But I’m free from the corporate chains I’ve been carrying, at least for a little while.
Now I can whip myself back into painting full time. Flagellation, begin!
In the meantime, here’s a trifling mixed media drawing on paper.

Darkness Falls(

Darkness Falls
india ink, graphite, letraset ink and gouache. 9″ x 12″

Pole Dance

Posted in Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, gesture, mixed media, nude, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , on December 9, 2010 by Tom Bennett

The figure in a dance of distortion. ink and graphite with gouache on paper. 11″ x 8.5″

Elin Pole 12-10 (L)

Disturbing

Posted in Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, homage, mixed media, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , , on November 18, 2010 by Tom Bennett

Someone recently suggested these were disturbing in a Tracey Emin kind of a way. Peculiar. That is scary. I don’t know.
These may have some autobiographical connections. The first is loosely based on a Van Dyke.

Mixed media: india ink, letraset ink, graphite

drunken silenus 1
Drunken Silenus 1

drunken silenus 2
Drunken Silenus 2

Nude study. (and a blog post about Harry)

Posted in Art, art on paper, figurative, gesture, Harry Bennett, Illustration, nude, oil painting, Painting, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on October 28, 2010 by Tom Bennett

A mixed media study:

10/27/10 nude
ink, graphite, gouache on paper, 10 x 14

….and more stuff about my dad. He deserves it. A fine and fun blog out of England called Existential Ennui(<click in the hyperlink) pays tribute to him and his paperback book art. The blogger, Louis XlV, even mentions our blog.
Tom Bennett

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The Man with a Getaway Face, 1963, Pocket Books division of Simon and Schuster

Dee Jay: Ruff Draft

Posted in Art, Collage, Drawing, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 28, 2010 by jdhastings

This, as the title suggests, is a rough draft of a portrait of J Dilla aka Jay Dee. Because it is the first time I’ve attempted a collage piece this size, I viewed this as a draft from the beginning to help myself stay loose with it.  The result is not subtle.  The forms lose definition among the mess of the component parts.  I’m not sure how people will react to the sheer noise of it, but my original subtitle for this post was “An Ambitious Mess”.  Fortunately, from this exercise I feel confident that I can tighten it up (or make it much worse) on command next time(s).

RUFF DRAFT

“Dee Jay: Ruff Draft” 36″ x 30″ Mixed media collage

Dilla, who died in 2006 at the age of 34 of a rare blood disease, was a DJ of significant influence to the hip hop industry.  Over the last 2 decades, he collaborated with A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, Common, D’Angelo, Eryka Badu, the Roots, Talib Kweli, Madlib, the Pharcyde and many, many others.  In addition he released 2 solo albums during his lifetime, and has had several more compilations and albums released posthumously.

Despite his specific influence upon the genre of music and Hip Hop, I chose Dilla as a subject because of the contributions I feel he’s made to art generally.  I have personally found his method of appropriation, re-contextualization and combination of both pre-existing and custom made components invaluable to myself in my own work, and believe the same could be true for anyone in many fields. 

While most of his basic methods are comon in hip hop, Dilla’s signature, to me (and I’m not trained in music so pardon me if I butcher this going forward), is his fine control of the scalpel.  Samples begin and end in sudden, precise, fashion, whether to increase the action of the track or to create a novel form of lyricism.  As an example, this is a track off his album “The Shining,” completed shortly after his passing.  It features d’Angelo and Common.

This is a very pretty, flowing song, yet every component within it, except Common, is warped and distorted in some way.  D’Angelo’s part, which I believe was recorded for this session, sounds much like a sample itself.  I don’t know the precise effects, but his various vocal and piano parts have been cut and spliced together in a way that emphasizes the basic studio process at the expense of a more traditional “live” feel.  These parts were created in order to be distorted.  D’Angelo’s talents are enough to carry a piece on their own, but Dilla sought to make something more of them, a hybrid of their natural, acoustic qualities and digital manipulation.

Now listen to the straight instrumental version (its not necessary to listen to the full thing to get the basic idea).

And here is the one song sampled to create this song.

He has created something entirely new from the source material.  Its roots can be traced, but Dilla’s song is its own entity.  It’s sped up, but that’s too simple a term for what’s going on.  I’m guessing as to the exact mechanics, but it sounds like the original rhythm section has had snippets cut from between the beats, in addition to whatever simple speeding up may exist (and Dilla’s own inserted rhythm elements).  Both the bass line and the lighter, strumming guitar of Ernie Isley that establishes the basic chords sound as though they’ve been cut and re-assembled into a melody I’m not sure ever existed in the original song.  Added to that is the second guitar part, Ernie’s tiny flairs that I describe as “blurpy.”  These are interspersed widely throughout the original, but Dilla separates them out and makes them a much more important piece of his own work than they were.

The way Dilla has treated his materials here shows an astounding mastery.  Its a complete and intrusive imposition of his will on the entire proceedings.  However, instead of feeling forced or overwrought, the result is a simple and beautiful song.

These traits come to their logical head on the album “Dilla Donuts,” released on Dilla’s 34th birthday, 3 days before he died.  The album was largely created in a hospital as he was very ill.  Amir “Questlove” Thompson of the Roots and others have suggested that Dilla knew this album would be his final document, and he treated it as such.  Within the dense layers of sounds he included messages for his friends and family.  The result is an album unlike pretty much anything else I’ve listened to.  I know of other mash-ups and DJ albums of voluminous samples and whatnot (The Avalanches, Madlib, DJ Spinna, all have excellent examples), but this work has an intentionality even the best of these lack.  Each song, while only 1-2 minutes in length, is a work in itself contributing to the overall suite.

Here are 2 tracks from the album, which I consider indispensable and would recommend to anyone.  I particularly like the video of the first song because it uses editing to partially convey what’s going on in the song itself.

The extent to which these clips have been cut up and re-purposed dwarfs even that of the examples above.  Single words, if not syllables, are used, repeated and toyed with to create short, but complete statements of music.  As I said, it is necessary to hear the full album to really appreciate the entire piece, and how these parts relate to the whole, but the same basic principles apply.

The result is a layered experience by the listener.  There is the surface level of the songs and album, which can be listened to casually, aesthetically, without too much analysis.  But once one does begin to analyze the pieces unveil a densely packed world of information.  Hidden statements and inside references allow the works to exist on an entirely analytic, intellectual level, like the Hip Hop equivalent of Joyce’s Ulysses (But, you know, with the aesthetic portion still in tact)

This is what I take from J Dilla.  This is what I would hope to learn from him.  Without spoiling this post with a discussion of my own history, at my best I think I’ve succeeded at part of this.  What he accomplished is a good statement of the level I one day hope to reach and what I’ve attempted to study in this portrait of J Dilla himself.  As d’Angelo said in the top song, I have a ways to go, but I can’t think of a better subject to keep me striving to get there.  I also take each of these lessons to be equally applicable to any artform, whether writing, film, or whatever one applies themselves to.

Below I’ll post a few more examples of Dilla’s work, and a detail shot of the top piece.

Dee Jay
James Dewitt Yancey (February 7, 1974 – February 10, 2006)

-Hastings

Like Any of My Shit is that Important: Matisse, Monotypes and Moma

Posted in Art, art on paper, collection, current events, events, exhibits, figurative, homage, mixed media, MOMA, monotype, museum, nude, printmaking, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , , , , on August 12, 2010 by Tom Bennett

I ran over to MOMA ( the Museum of Modern Art, for all those neophytes) the other night and zipped right in with a membership card through the thousands of tourists and what seems like -every friday night at MOMA- a holiday weekend at JFK. I visited a great show from their Contemporary collection, and a mind-blowingly large retrospective of Henri Matisse. Among the intense range of his paintings and drawings from his years in Paris, Morocco and Nice were some monotypes which he obsessively did for several months in 1914. He made 70 that year, 10% of his lifetime total. The simple, rich, heavy, flat yet deep black with contours drawn to reveal stark white lines against said black were powerfully elegant.

I came home and played around with the black that I had drifted away from. Here is a figure I made using tools like a screwdriver, pencil, knife and razor blade. I’m also including a related but tonally very different image, one from a series made with india ink, pencil and letraset ink on paper.

neverland 2
Neverland 2, 2008,monotype, 14″ x 10″

neverland
Neverland 1, 2008, mixed media, ink, pencil, 11″ x 8″

Upset Stomach

Posted in abstract, Art, art on paper, Drawing, figurative, Harry Bennett, homage, mixed media, nude, Painting, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , on March 11, 2010 by Tom Bennett

I’m really sick. Some virus thing or food poisoning. Here’s a small work on paper. I call t homage to Harry, because I think there’s something about the stylization of the figure. Ok, I’m going back to sleep.

homage to harry

Jeff Youngblood Exhibit NYC: Reception Oct 26

Posted in Art, events, exhibits, Painting, Stephanie Gerolimatos with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on October 20, 2009 by ssstephg

Missouri artist/gallerist and d’Arte Board friend Jeff Youngblood is exhibiting a fun new series of paintings at Spina Restaurant in the East Village.  Visually, the work is an exploration of bold blocks of layered pattern and texture rendered mostly in flat dimension, punctuated  occasionally by areas of thick drippy paint and found images.  There will be a reception with the artist Monday October 26 from 6 – 8 pm at Spina.   Partial proceeds from art sales will be donated to Mwangaza International, a charitable organization that helps to rescue and rehabilitate child soldiers who have been kidnapped and ravaged by the war in The Congo.  A good cause, free wine, hors d’ouevres, great art and fun people–it should be an awesome night!  Hope to see you there!

New Paintings by Jeff Youngblood
RECEPTION
Monday, Oct 26th
6-8 pm

www.spinarestaurant.com

175 Avenue B @ E. 11th St.
The East Village
New York City
212-253-2250

saturday night froufrou

Posted in abstract, Art, art on paper, Drawing, mixed media, Painting, Tom Bennett, work on paper with tags , , , , , , , on June 27, 2009 by Tom Bennett

Mixed media exercises. I throw down pantone ink and add water, which repels and creates some interesting reactions. pencil, gouache, and indai ink are also in the mix. Better than cursing my neighbors.

Photobucket

Photobucket
Photobucket

Back to Bontecou

Posted in Art, Miscellaneous, Stephanie Gerolimatos with tags , , , , , , , on June 14, 2009 by ssstephg

All work by Lee Bontecou. Images compiled from various sources.   Credits given in photobucket album descriptions. All pics clickable for larger images and detail info.

Lately I’m feeling a little restless when it comes to making art.  As is often the case, I’ve got lots of stuff in the works and am starting to get anxious about actually finishing something.  That anxiety tends to manifest itself in the form of a shorter than normal attention span and a desire for something new–not a particularly helpful state to be in when trying to finish work.  I’ve been thumbing through old art books and googling in hope of stumbling onto the work of some forgotten or as yet undiscovered (by me) artist–work that will scratch my itchy brain and keep me engaged for long enough to lose this undercurrent of mild frustration I can’t seem to escape.

The one artist I do keep coming back to lately is Lee Bontecou. I’ve always loved her work and was lucky enough to catch her 2004 retrospective when it travelled to MOMA’s temporary Queens location.  The show was thrilling and enormous, and it cemented my complete love for the artist’s work.  One of the things I find so exciting about her work is that she isn’t just a sculptor or a painter–she works with and combines all kinds of media in equally compelling ways.  Her impressive body of work spans a wide range–from imposing, sometimes monolithic, welded steel and canvas sculptures to sensitively rendered, meticulous drawings and Read more »

Woven Weaves

Posted in abstract, Art, J. D. Hastings, mixed media, Painting, Textile with tags , , , , , , , on April 14, 2009 by jdhastings

When I first started wrecking canvases for reassemblage, I mainly wove various paintings together. At the time I didn’t know it but this is a fairly common practice, springing as far as I can tell from the steady merging of fiber arts into the traditional, paint-dominated “fine arts” canon. This piece is made of woven paintings that I’ve stabilized with acrylic medium, then cut up and wove a second time.

Hopefully the detail after the jump makes it clear what’s going on here.

The blue bar and red square are my standard saefety-pin style. They and the vertical black bar are stretched to separate bars that are mounted atop the main canvas and frame, giving the piece a three dimensionality tht is probably impossible to convey here.

WovenWeavesWeb

24″ x 24″ acrylic on canvas, with safety-pins. Click for access to larger versions. Detail shot after the jump.

Read more »

I Love Facebook

Posted in Art, mixed media, Toni Tiller with tags , , , , , on January 12, 2009 by Toni Tiller

I used to hate it, because I was used to Myspace and set in my ways (and yes I realize the fact that devoted any amount of thought to this at all is embarrassing) but then I discovered that I can type in the name of just about anyone I have known in my life ever and find them again and this makes me very happy. So now when I have one of those moments where a person pops into my head attached to a “I wonder what happened to (insert name here)” I can find out. So yesterday my mind wandered to my friend Rob Mars, who I knew years ago back when we were both at school, he was studying art and I was avoiding studying anything. I was excited to see that he is now an internationally represented artist and I really enjoy what he does, but I’ll let him tell you about it in his own words.

My work is a chronicle of Americana. I am determined to capture the independent aesthetic of the not-so-distant past that has been replaced by homogenized corporate culture and standardized cityscapes. Industrial design, graphic design, architecture, vintage neon and mid-century icons all render important roles in my work.

My paintings employ layers of color, subtly collaged printed matter from the 1950’s and 1960’s, and stark, black imagery. Remote, indistinct landscapes capture the once poetic, and now nearly lost highway strips of the American past. Formerly the promise of hope and prosperity; these icons are now a sign of desperation and ruin.

To see more please go to RobertMars.com

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