Free Updates

Let us tell you when new posts are added!

Email:

Navigation

Search

Archives

<November 2009>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
25262728293031
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293012345

Categories

Links










Searched for : video
Wish Big
Posted by jessica

gift.jpgOur holiday wish list doesn't include much: a pastel shopping spree, a few good reads, a painting trip to Provence—hey, a girl can dream. With this in mind, we've added a wish list feature to our online shop.

You can now make your art wish list, then e-mail it to those who love you. Even better, anyone who makes a wish list by Dec. 4 will be entered to win $100 worth of merchandise—from his or her wish list!

Click here to go to northlightshop.com and start your list.



MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos



Art Inspiration | North Light
Friday, November 20, 2009 4:52:15 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Create a Spark
Posted by jessica

"The artist must create a spark before he can make a fire and before art is born, the artist must be ready to be consumed by the fire of his own creation." —Auguste Rodin

WilliamsBug.jpgWhat better day to take on Rodin's maxim than on the day he was born (in 1840)? The Pastel Journal hopes our latest Creative Spark challenge will put a little fire in your own work. And who knows? You just might be the next winner (deadline is Dec. 22).

Click here to take The Pastel Journal's latest Creative Spark challenge

Pictured: Don Williams, Night Bug (pastel, 32x52)


MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos




Art Inspiration | Tips and Techniques
Thursday, November 12, 2009 3:43:16 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Southwest Pastels
Posted by jessica

The Pastel Society of the Southwest is currently holding its 28th Annual Members Exhibition, juried and judged by Bob Rohm, at the ArtCentre of Plano, in Texas. Best of Show went to Marian Hirsch for Grazing; Kathleen Cook won First Place for Rapunzel; Second Place went to Patricia King for Blue Quilt; and Barbara Strasser took Third Place for Cactus Flower. The show runs until Nov. 14.

Thanks, PSSW, for sharing the good news!


Best of Show: Marian Hirsch, Grazing



First Place: Kathleen Cook, Rapunzel


Second Place: Patricia King, Blue Quilt


Third Place: Barbara Strasser, Cactus Flower



MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos



Overheard | Shows and Events
Wednesday, November 04, 2009 3:47:56 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
A Step-by-Step Sunset
Posted by anne

Just today on the Pastel Pointers blog, artist Richard McKinley talked about those images that are almost too dazzling to work as a painting. Fall foliage was one example, and sunsets another. "These spectacular subjects, unless finessed properly, become a postcard," McKinley writes. "To make them work, we need to step back from the high drama of the moment and allow the viewer a little more to anticipate, engaging their imagination in how beautiful the subject matter might become."

It was funny that, minutes after reading this, I came upon this new video demonstration on the PanPastel website with pastel artist (and Pastel Journal contributing writer) Deborah Secor, in which she walks viewers step by step through the painting of a dramatic sunset sky. Not only will you see how Secor uses the pan-format pastels and applicators, but you'll also see a good example of a sunset painting that does work—for exactly the reasons described by McKinley. Secor avoids the danger of an overdone result by carefully composing the painting to offer just a hint of the spectacular color—and leaving some of the drama to our own memories of blazing skies.





MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* More online videos with Deborah Secor
* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos



Tips and Techniques | Tools and Materials
Monday, November 02, 2009 5:52:18 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Spooktacular Artwork (Inspired by Poe)
Posted by jessica

"Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there wondering, fearing,
Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before"
                                                                —Edgar Allan Poe, "The Raven"

raven.jpgThere's really no better time of year to turn to the macabre and mystery of Edgar Allan Poe—and even better, some master art works to go along with it.

You can see first-hand how works like "The Raven" influenced works of art at The Baltimore Museum of Art's special exhibition, Edgar Allan Poe: A Baltimore Icon. The show includes 80 prints, drawings and illustrated books by artists—such as Gauguin, Manet, Matisse, Odilon Redon, René Magritte, Robert Motherwell and others—whose works were inspired by Poe's sinister stories.

Happy Weekend!







Pictured: Édouard Manet, The Raven. 1875. The Baltimore Museum of Art: The George A. Lucas Collection, purchased with funds from the State of Maryland, Laurence and Stella Bendann Fund, and contributions from individuals, foundations, and corporations throughout the Baltimore community, BMA 1996.48.5172




MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos



Art Inspiration | Overheard
Friday, October 30, 2009 6:47:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Awesome Opportunity for Oil Pastelists
Posted by sarah.strickley

For those oil pastelists among us who might be looking for a way to earn recognition (and cash!) for their work, check out the All-Media Online Competition, sponsored by our sister title, The Artist's Magazine. Here are the pertinent specs:

PRIZES:
Grand Prize Award: $500
7 First Place Awards: $100 each
The Grand Prize winner and all 7 First Place Winners will receive complimentary subscriptions to The Artist's Magazine and $100 worth of North Light Books.
Honorable Mentions receive complimentary subscriptions to The Artist's Magazine and $50 worth of North Light Books.
Winners will be featured on The Artist's Magazine website along with a list of Honorable Mentions.
All Winners and Honorable Mentions will receive a certificate suitable for framing.

7 CATEGORIES:
Acrylic, Digital Art, Graphite/Charcoal/Colored Pencil, Mixed Media/Collage, Oil/Oil Pastel, Pastel, Watercolor.

DEADLINE:
All entries must be postmarked no later than November 2, 2009.

Find out how you can enter your work by clicking here.


MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos





Overheard
Wednesday, October 28, 2009 2:03:24 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Art Works Defined
Posted by jessica

National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Chairman Rocco Landesman defined "art works"  three ways Wednesday at the National Grantmakers in the Arts conference: It's a noun, verb and declarative sentence.

In an effort to learn more about the ways in which art works around the country, Landesman will begin a six-month national tour next month—and the NEA has launched a blog where you can post your account of how art works for you. Check it out at www.arts.gov/artworks.



MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos



Art Inspiration | Overheard
Friday, October 23, 2009 4:24:39 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Eight Great Pastelists
Posted by jessica



"Many artists put the cart before the horse and they apply technique with such rigidity that it suffocates the art. Technique has to come out of the search for the art."
                                                                            — Jimmy Wright


In celebration of a Pastel Journal milestone, in the June 2009 issue we debuted the 10th Anniversary "Artist Interview Series"—a series in which we reconnected with eight beloved pastelists who had been featured in the magazine over the years—with pieces on Jimmy Wright and Elizabeth Mowry. We're pleased to now offer the entire series in one digital download, which includes those interviews with Wright and Mowry, plus more with Albert Handell, Daniel Greene, Fred Somers, Lois Gold, Sally Strand and Brennie Brackett (all pictured above, L-to-R). At $6.99, it's an affordable treat!

The download is in PDF format, so you'll need Adobe Reader (a free program, which you can download here).

Click here for the download, Eight Greats: The Pastel Journal's 10th Anniversary Artist Interview Series.



MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos



Art Inspiration | Tips and Techniques
Wednesday, October 21, 2009 7:31:59 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
As Seen on TV
Posted by jessica

Artist newlyweds Justin Gignac and Christine Santora joined forces a couple of years ago on a project, Wants for Sale, wherein they paint items they'd like to own, sell them for the actual price of the objects and then buy the objects (a painting of a gold Nixon watch went for $287.19; Sleep, however, was free).

In 2007 they modeled Needs for Sale, a site that offers paintings of specific items that others need—for example, a painting of a fish to benefit City Harvest, a New York organization that "rescues" excess provisions from the food industry and distributes it to community programs.

Now they're back with a new batch of acrylic-on-canvas works, the "As Seen on TV" series. This series includes the—you guessed it—infomercial-influenced ShamWow, the Chia Pet, Snuggie (pictured below), and so on. The set goes up for sale today at noon (EST); check out the site for details.





MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos



Overheard
Wednesday, October 14, 2009 4:06:34 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Indulge Your Wild Pastel Side
Posted by jessica


Snow Angel, Siberian Tiger (pastel, 24x36) by Leslie Delgyer

Our October 2009 issue features wildlife pastels by Deb Gengler-Copple and Leslie Delgyer, both of which are members of the international organization Artists for Conservation—wherein artists from all over the globe promote preservation and protection of the natural world.

Click here to view an online-exclusive gallery of additional wildlife pastels by Gengler-Copple and Delgyer.




MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network demos



Art Inspiration | Overheard
Wednesday, October 07, 2009 7:31:14 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Notes from North Light Books
Posted by anne

Just about two aisles down from The Pastel Journal's offices sit the editors of North Light Books, publishers of all kinds of art instruction titles on topics ranging from pastel and watercolor to fantasy and manga. We've invited the book editors to visit us on the blog a few times each month to share some news and notes from their side of the business. Today we'll hear from Mona Michael, managing editor of North Light Books, with an introduction to one of the authors she's been working with recently:

Z2252.jpg
It generally takes one to two years to create a North Light Fine Art book. That means that those of us who are North Light Books editors generally get to know our artist/authors pretty well. Or do we? To find out, we’ve begun sending authors little “Q+As” once their books come out. For this, our first Pastel Journal blog, I thought I’d share a little insider info with you. First up is Ann Kullberg.

Ann’s most recent North Light Book, Colored Pencil Secrets for Success: How to Critique and Improve Your Paintings was featured as one of Jen’s North Light Picks not too long ago. I spent a year (or more? I can’t remember now) working with Ann on this compilation book, and I can tell you she’s a delightful person who holds up like steel under pressure and aggressive deadlines. But what else? Here are a few factoids:


PJ guest blog 100609.jpg
Hometown: Forest Grove, OR

Current residence: Federal Way, WA

Kids and/or pets?  Both a daughter and a son, but no pets

Favorite food: My mom’s Lemon Pork Chops…yummmmmmm!

Favorite movie: Cool Hand Luke

Favorite website(s): Huffington Post

Favorite artist: Mary Cassatt

Favorite book (art instruction or other): To Kill a Mockingbird

First job ever: Picking strawberries every summer, starting at age 9! 

Best job ever: Teaching colored pencil workshops

When did you know you wanted to be an artist? I’m not sure I ever did want to be one as much as it just seemed I was one, and I could choose to nurture those talents, or choose not to and pursue others.

Give us a taste of your latest project?  Creating the first online colored pencil directory, listing hundreds of colored pencil websites, blogs, books, videos, etc.

What’s the best piece of career advice you’ve received? I didn’t actually receive this advice, but it is advice I could pass on, just the same. It’s never about the “big break.” It’s about all the baby steps that move you forward in your career inch by inch by inch.

Websites:  www.annkullberg.com and www.ColoredPencilCentral.com


Check out (and save on) Ann’s previous book, on portraits, Colored Pencil Portraits
Follow North Light Books, Fine Art on Facebook
Check out the latest video workshops from Artistsnetwork.tv




Art Inspiration
Tuesday, October 06, 2009 8:27:04 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
New Pastel Download
Posted by jessica

pase.jpgWhen combined with an understanding of basic color theory, a passion for color is great ammunition for more powerful pastel paintings. Maggie Price walks you through some key color concepts—hue and intensity, value and contrast, color temperature, simultaneous contrast, and more—in our latest digital download. With a price tag of $1.99, you can afford to treat yourself to a little in-home art instruction. Look for more digital article downloads in the future.

Click here for the Pastel Journal download, "Color Concepts."







MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos




Art Inspiration | Tips and Techniques
Wednesday, September 30, 2009 8:42:21 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [2]
IAPS 2009 Web Show
Posted by anne

hassard_lightIndia-lg.jpg
Maggie Price, president of the International Association for Pastel Societies (IAPS), informs me that results of the 2009 IAPS Web Show have been posted on the IAPS web site. Check out all the accepted entries as well as the award-winning pastels by Joan Dromey, Ray Hassard (whose pastel, In Light of India, left, took second place), Vianna Szabo, Lyn Diefenbach, Melanie Watrous, and Susan Grinels.

Maggie also had news about plans for next year's 15th juried exhibition, which will be shown at the beautiful Brea Gallery in the city of Brea, Calif., to be on view from January 23 to March 5, 2010. "This is an exceptional venue for our exhibition," she says, "and we are quite excited about the opportunity." Learn more about the gallery here, and download the prospectus from the IAPS web site.

Keep in mind that acceptance into an IAPS juried exhibition gives you a point toward IAPS Master Circle status. Award winners receive a second point. New recipients of Master Circle status are presetned with gold medallions at the IAPS biennial conventions. Maybe IAPS 2011 is the convention where you'll get yours?!


MORE RESOURCES FOR ARTISTS

* Online Seminars for Fine Artists
* Instantly download fine art magazines, books & video workshops
* Sign up for your Artist's Network email newsletter & receive free fine art tips & demos








 



Shows and Events
Monday, September 28, 2009 3:37:39 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Lois Gold Pastel Gallery
Posted by anne


Art Inspiration
Thursday, September 24, 2009 7:14:33 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
A Little Pastel Video for Your Afternoon Edification
Posted by sarah


Art Inspiration | Tips and Techniques
Wednesday, August 19, 2009 8:24:44 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
New Creative Spark!
Posted by sarah






Using the finished work, Red, Yellow, Blue (top; pastel on paper, 29½x22½) as a model, Jimmy Wright painted Study From Red, Yellow, Blue (bottom; pastel on paper, 10½x14½), a more graphic and turbulent version of the same composition. To read the full text of Wright's challenge, cick here.

To join in the fun, show us an example of a pastel painting in which you reinterpreted a previously finished work. E-mail your image/s (4x6-inch JPGs with a resolution of 72 dpi) and a description to pjedit@fwmedia.com by June 22, 2009. Type “Creative Spark” in the subject line and include your name, e-mail and mailing address. The “editors’ choice” will receive a $250-value fine art media gift basket, including a six-month subscription to ArtistNetwork.tv online video workshops, $60 worth of North Light art books or DVDs; the 2006, 2007 and 2008 Pastel Journal CDs; and a one-year subscription (or free renewal) to The Pastel Journal, The Artist’s Magazine or Southwest Art.

Come back soon to see the winners of our last Creative Spark challenge, Perpetual Motion.

Art Inspiration | Tips and Techniques
Thursday, April 30, 2009 2:34:40 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Shipping to Subscribers Next Week!
Posted by sarah

PAS_0609_160.jpg
Features

One Still Life, Three Visions
By Anne Hevener
Explore the power of creative expression when three painters—Leslie Lillien Levy, Claudia Seymour and Rainie Crawford—paint from a single still life setup.

Bold Variations
By Sarah A. Strickley
In the first of our 10th Anniversary “Artist Interview Series” installments, we chat with Jimmy Wright about his latest encounters with the still mesmerizing sunflower.

Sacred Silence
By Deborah Secor
Elizabeth Mowry, the second painter in our “Artist Interview Series,” talks about her current experience with pastels, landscape painting, and how her creative goals have evolved.

Regal Resonance
By Ken Gofton
British artist and Royal Academician Anthony Eyton, who finds inspiration in a variety of subjects, turns his artist’s eye to everything from portraits, to botanical gardens, to abandoned power plants.

The Pastel Royals
By Ken Gofton
Four members of Britain’s Royal Academy also share the distinction of honorary status in the Pastel Society UK, making them the “crown jewels” of England’s pastel scene.

Cosmos of Pattern
By Tamera Lenz Muente
Rick Stevens’ abstracted landscapes burst with colorful patterns that mimic the naturally occurring patterns of the land.

Columns
Art Matters
By Jessica Canterbury
Find out where pastels and pigs meet, celebrate Old Masters, and discover new online videos.

Pastel Pointers
By Richard McKinley
When a photograph must be your reference, use your tools to make sure it captures the live experience as much as possible.

Artist’s Viewpoint
By Margot Schulzke
When it comes to the use of black and white in painting, there are some gray areas.

Studio Smarts
By Deborah Secor
Discover a few illuminating tips for creating a well-lit studio.

Creative Spark
By Jimmy Wright
Sharpen your descriptive powers by returning to a subject you know for reinterpretation.

To order your copy of the June 2009 issue of The Pastel Journal, click here.

Art Inspiration | Tips and Techniques | Tools and Materials
Thursday, April 16, 2009 4:09:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Obama: The Art Show
Posted by anne

Obama.jpg
A new exhibition, sponsored by the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, explores art inspired by the city's most famous recent resident. "Officially Unofficial: Inspired Art for Obama" is a multi-media display of prints, posters, photographs and videos that surfaced during the campaign—the artistic reaction to Obama's candidacy.

The show—curated by Chicago designer Scott Thomas, former Design Director of the Obama Campaign; Chicago artist Ray Noland; and Nathan Mason, Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs—will feature both materials designed officially for the campaign as well as the independent work created by artists and designers from across the country, including Ray Noland’s “GoTellMama!” poster series and Shepard Fairey’s controversial “Hope” poster.

The show opens April 1 at the Chicago Tourism Center, 72 E. Randolph Street, and runs through May 15. For more information, visit www.explorechicago.org.

The exhibition poster, "Officially Unofficial," above, was designed by exhibition co-curator Ray Noland.



Shows and Events
Monday, March 16, 2009 3:49:50 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Deborah Secor Video Workshops Now Available on DVD
Posted by jessica

Secor_landscape.jpgThe popular ArtistsNetwork.tv video workshops are now available on DVD! Now you can start your own fine art instruction library at home—with two workshops by pastelist Deborah Secor.

In Get Started in Pastels: Deborah Secor Paints The Landscape, the artist shows you how to get started with pastel the easy way. She covers basic strokes, tools, techniques, elements and principles of design, and finishes by completing a landscape painting.

Secor_shadows.jpgSecor shows you how to use light, photo references, nearby vs. distant shadows, color recipes and more in Painting Outdoor Shadows in Pastel with Deborah Secor. You'll finish by completing a painting using a reference photograph, defining color layers and shadow edges.

Both are available for $29.99. Click here for ordering information.







Art Inspiration | Tips and Techniques | Tools and Materials
Friday, February 13, 2009 4:11:32 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
An Armchair Tour of France
Posted by jessica

Flattmann_france.jpgMade a resolution to travel more in 2009, did you? Start today with a video slide show of Alan Flattmann’s trip to Puy L’eveque, France, with Great American Artworks’ Box Top Tours. Flattmann was one of the featured artists in the February 2009 issue’s special report, “The French Connection,” which explored the thrill of painting in the South of France—both from an instructor’s and painter’s perspective.

Click here to watch the video.

Bon voyage!




Art Inspiration
Friday, January 02, 2009 2:47:47 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
A Nice, Long Odilon Redon Video
Posted by sarah

Enjoy!



Overheard
Tuesday, November 25, 2008 6:23:26 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Pastel Potraits in Motion
Posted by sarah

Check out a video of pastelist Mike Beeman's fine portraits. And in case you haven't visited recently, click here to visit the artist's painting blog.


Art Inspiration | Overheard
Wednesday, October 22, 2008 4:10:31 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Now Available: Deborah Secor ArtistsNetwork.tv Workshops
Posted by jessica

We’re extremely pleased to announce two new workshop videos just launched on ArtistsNetwork.tv, a new site from F+W Media that offers instructional (streaming) videos from today’s leading artists. These new workshops feature none other than Deborah Secor, popular artist, instructor and regular contributor to The Pastel Journal. In the first workshop, she explains everything you need to know to get started in pastels and shows you her favorite tools. In the second, Secor teaches you to paint realistic shadows.
Click below to see a preview of the videos.



You can also watch previews of the other seven 40-plus minute videos to help you decide if you’d like to subscribe to an individual workshop ($14.99) for a six-month period with unlimited, 24/7 viewing access, or subscribe to all of them for a six-month period ($69.99) with unlimited, 24/7 viewing access. You don’t have to download anything, and you can watch any time of the day as long as you have a high-speed Internet connection.

If you haven’t already, sign up to receive our e-mail newsletter for advance notice on new workshops. (Go to our homepage and enter your e-mail address in the left-hand corner.)




Shows and Events | Tips and Techniques | Tools and Materials
Friday, August 29, 2008 3:44:06 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [2]
Freeze Frame
Posted by sarah

Watch more than 200 people freeze on cue in New York City's Grand Central Station and experience something akin to what I experience when I'm served regular coffee instead of decaf: I'm moving and everyone else is standing still. My favorite part of this film is the level of committment the "frozen" people demonstrate, some of them balancing on a toe or arranged in heated conversation over maps. This group (Improv Everywhere) has also staged such "missions" as the No Pants Subway Ride, the Best Buy uniform prank, and the U2 Rooftop Hoax. Check out their site to see images and video of their work.


Art Inspiration | Overheard
Thursday, July 10, 2008 1:47:48 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Introducing ArtistsNetwork.tv
Posted by sarah

Outlook.jpg
We've been busy little bees behind the scenes for months, arranging the production of a wonderful new tool for artists: ArtistsNetwork.tv

ArtistsNetwork.tv was launched today to provide online instructional videos from leading contemporary artists. The videos are streamed to ArtistsNetwork.tv members so that they can be viewed 24/7 from any computer with a high-speed internet connection without requiring software downloads. You can choose to subscribe to any of our individual workshops for a six-month period or you can subscribe to all ArtistsNetwork.tv video workshops for a six-month period.

Check it out. Right now you can watch free previews, sign up and get a free gift (Paul Dorrell's "How to Market Your Art"), or get unlimited videos for six months. All in all, it's very exciting news for all of us here at F+W Publications. We've been chomping at the bit to tell you about it. And by the way, if you're wondering where the pastel demonstrations are, stay tuned. We'll be rolling out new offerings every month, including pastel-exclusive material.



Art Inspiration | Overheard | Shows and Events | Tips and Techniques | Tools and Materials
Wednesday, May 14, 2008 8:22:46 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
We Are One!
Posted by jessica

gift_cake.jpgToday The Pastel Journal blog celebrates its first birthday! Over the past year, we’ve shared random thoughts, videos, society news, notes from the road, exhibition notices and just made fools out of ourselves—and we’ve loved it! What was your favorite moment on the PJ blog this year? Let us know by posting a comment or e-mailing us at pjedit@fwpubs.com (and we’ll add it to this post).







Overheard
Friday, May 09, 2008 9:45:55 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Go Speedpainter Go
Posted by sarah

Looking for a way to rejuvenate your painting process? Try putting yourself on the clock. Force yourself to complete a painting in one session, for example, or take it to extremes like the artist featured in this video. He completes an entire work in spraypaint, in less than one minute. We might advise you not to try this at home, unless you have a supply of drop cloths at the ready. This may be the one painting process more messy than painting with pastels.



Art Inspiration | Overheard | Tips and Techniques
Wednesday, May 07, 2008 5:46:30 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
'Grate' Public Art
Posted by jessica

While in Manhattan two weeks ago, I read a most intriguing New York Post story, which has since been reported by various outlets, including NPR. Joshua Allen Harris, a Brooklyn artist and student at the School of Visual Arts, has created unique street sculptures known as “subway bears”—plastic bags tied together and then to subway grates in such a way that when a train roars by underground, the polar bear-looking assemblage of bags slowly rises to a stance, somewhat resembling a barking dog, and then lays back down to rest. Sadly, I never happened upon any of these bears—which is surprising, considering our many, many subway rides. How do I know what the bears look like? I found a YouTube video, natch.

Guess that’s one way to recycle plastic shopping bags!


Overheard
Friday, April 18, 2008 4:23:49 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
Animal Art
Posted by anne

We're just wrapping up the May/June issue of the magazine and readying it for the printer (on sale at newsstands May 13). In it, we're running a special feature with short profiles of five pastel artists whose art is inspired by animals and wildlife. Perhaps because I've just been reading about animals and art, I was particularly amused to run into this video on YouTube—a surprising twist on the idea of animal artist! After watching the video, you can read about Paya's first gallery show here.








Monday, March 31, 2008 3:53:07 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
A Large Slice of Monet
Posted by jessica

monet12.jpgIf your plans find you in New Mexico next weekend, here’s something you might want to see: On March 29 (1-5 p.m. in Los Alamos, New Mexico), Karen West and Santa Fe artist Ke’vin Bowers will unveil Bowers’ newest work, A Slice of Monet—the largest pastel Bowers has created—which was commissioned by West. Here’s the story on its origins, according to the two:

“Ke’vin met Karen in October of 2007 at an Arts and Crafts fair in Los Alamos, where they began talking about his creating a work of art that would fill her 14 ft high wall. Her love of Monet’s water lilies was the beginning of a conversation that led to the commission. Karen had been admiring Ke’vin’s water lily series that Ke’vin had been working on.

“After several months of work, going up and down the scaffolding, A Slice of Monet was finally completed. For protection, it was covered with a piece of Plexiglas measuring 126x54 inches. It took three people to install the piece on the wall of Karen’s home; they stood back and gazed with great satisfaction: It definitely fills the wall and room making a dramatic statement.  

“Ke’vin video taped the time spent working on A Slice of Monet and plans to make a DVD showing the whole artistic process.”

Check out more of his process on his website.


Overheard | Shows and Events
Friday, March 21, 2008 8:35:04 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Lights, Camera, Paintbrush, Action
Posted by anne

quiller.jpgThe F+W fine art magazine team has an exciting new project in the works—a series of e-workshops with fabulous artists in a variety of media. The very first shoot took place last week here in Cincinnati, and several of my fellow fine art editors and I got to be there to watch oil and pastel artist, M. Katherine Hurley, a recent cover artist for The Artist's Magazine, and watercolor genius Stephen Quiller demonstrate their extraordinary skills. (See Stephen in action in the photo at left. Also pictured is Karyn Meyer, lead administrator for WetCanvas! and coordinator of the ArtistsNetworkTV project.)

The filming took place in Hurley's beautiful seventh-floor studio (huff, puff) in Cincinnati's Pendleton Art Center, where both artists created material for two 30- to 45-minute videos. Whether or not you paint in oil or watercolor, pastel or acrylic, there is so much to learn from different artists about composition and color, value and shape, and other vital art fundamentals. Both artists were a pleasure to meet and fun to watch. I can't wait to see the finished videos, which will hopefully be on the market later this spring! Stay tuned for further details.


Some of Hurley's pastels

Overheard
Monday, March 03, 2008 10:33:39 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Come and See the Sites
Posted by anne

Our new website is now live, and I invite you—if you haven't already—to come for a visit. Before you do, take a moment to bookmark the new URL for The Pastel Journal homepage which is http://www.artistsnetwork.com/pasteljournal. While you're at it, bookmark the new URL for The Pastel Journal blog too, which is http://pastelblog.artistsnetwork.com.

Picture 51.pngThe Pastel Journal homepage will be your easiest path to finding out what's new on the site for pastel artists, but you can also search articles by pastel under the drop-down list of media. Note too that each image in the visual slideshow is a live link to an article, gallery, current issue or video.

When you look around, you'll soon discover that The Pastel Journal site is only one neighborhood in a larger community for fine artists, because the new site combines our content with that of our sister magazines, Watercolor Artist and The Artist's Magazine, and you're sure to find a lot to inspire and inform from these publications as well. A few hints: Anytime you click the magazine logos at the upper-left of a page, you'll return to the main page for this larger Artist's Network with content from all three publications. But, any time you want to return to The Pastel Journal home page, click the magazine title in the very top right of any page on the site.

It may feel at first like you're driving through unfamiliar territory, but we hope you'll take the time to look around and get acquainted. And then, ya'll come back now, ya hear?




Overheard
Thursday, February 07, 2008 3:29:11 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
All Hallows Eve for Artists
Posted by Sarah

1727016159_260f6d5a2a.jpg
It's not too late to create your own Robotic Snap-O-Lantern in time to impress the socks off your trick-or-treaters this evening--Evil Mad Scientist Ladoratories can show you how. Visit their site (where you'll find lots of other interesting projects, by the way) for a step-by-step and to watch a video of one of these pumpkins in action.


Art Inspiration
Wednesday, October 31, 2007 1:18:14 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Maggie Price Workshop Diary: Plein Air Indoors
Posted by Sarah



The sun doesn’t always shine, even in sunny Spain, and contrary to the saying, the rain in Spain may fall in the mountains as well as on the plains.

We were scheduled to have a day trip to the nearby village of Alpandeire, but the clouds loomed and the forecast was not encouraging. Knowing we’d have no shelter there in an open plaza, our group of 15 artists and companions elected to stay indoors here at the hotel. While the non-painters enjoyed the library and video collections, the painters scattered upstairs and downstairs and throughout the halls.

Painting from life is good indoors as well as out, and there were so many subjects here in the hotel and just outside the windows that none of us lacked for inspiration. Our group painted stairways, still life compositions of dried flowers in vases, chestnuts from the trees in the valley, and views of the buildings and streets from windows and terraces.

We had a lovely lunch served in the hotel, and at the end of the day as we watched the rain come down, none of us felt we’d missed a thing.

Tomorrow the sun’s supposed to shine and we’re going to Zahara in Cadiz Province. It should be another wonderful day.

(Photos of paintings:  Copper Bowl, by Janette Dickerson; Looking Up, by Len Slesick; Reflections, by LaDonna Escamilla. Photo of painter: Len Slesick working on one of his hanging plant studies.)



Art Inspiration
Friday, October 26, 2007 4:33:13 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
Artist of the Week: Diana Lehr
Posted by anne

47.184.jpgDiana Lehr works in pastel (usually with a watercolor underpainting) and in oil. See Rolling Field (pastel, 22x30) at left, available at Patricia Cameron Fine Art in Seattle.

Artist John Burns, who I met at IAPS in May, said he walked into a gallery in Hawaii where her work was hanging, and his jaw dropped. "I couldn't remember being so moved by an artist's work," he says. "Her pieces are extraordinarily powerful, grabbing your attention from a great distance. Then, when you get close, you are rewarded again with her wonderfully textured layering."

Lehr is certainly interested in light and color as tools for expression. In an artist's statement, Lehr also speaks of a close connection to the natural world: "Our interior world and the internal states that interest me most are stimulated by our experience of being alive in nature," she writes. "Exploring the dynamic relationship between Earth, the atmosphere and the sun is of particular interest. I am especially fascinated when the elements and forces of nature combine to form strange appearances; allowing a glimpse into an ever-changing, shifting reality."

I was fascinated, too, to watch Lehr's art video—another medium that she has begun to explore (click here to watch a video). Her interest is fueled mostly by the fact that it allows her to capture movement, adding another path—beyond light and color—for her artistic expression.



Art Inspiration
Monday, October 01, 2007 5:01:08 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
Engine-Powered Art
Posted by Sarah

upcoming_events-greetingcard.jpgIf you're inspired by loud art with randy moves, the exhibition taking place at the Seventh Regiment Armory Conservancy in NYC is for you:

For his first ever public exhibition in NYC, Aaron Young has painted 288 panels of plywood in alternating colors of red, pink, orange and yellow fluorescent paint, finishing with an opaque coat of black paint to conceal the bright layers underneath. These boards were then laid on the massive Drill Hall floor, forming a 128x72-foot canvas. Ten motorcycle riders performed on this platform, following specific directions by Young, their synchronized movements forming a pattern of burnouts on the wood. The gestural residue of the performance remains - streaks of burned rubber, worn away layers of paint, and newly revealed neon colors. This 9,216 sq. ft. painting, inspired by the 1943 Jackson Pollock action painting, Greeting Card, is on view along with a video documenting the performance.

The show runs September 18 though September 23, 2007, 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM, and is free and open to the public.


Shows and Events
Wednesday, September 19, 2007 4:05:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
Fall Getaway: Youngstown, Ohio
Posted by anne

AH-04_500.jpgI'll give you not just one, but two good reasons, to plan a trip to Youngstown, Ohio, as a fall getaway. First, opening yesterday at the city's art museum, The Butler Institute of American Art, in the Giffuni Gallery, is an exhibition of works by pastel artist Albert Handell—works like Mountain Stream (at left; pastel, 21x27).

Handell was a successful and accomplished oil painter when he first gave pastels a try. The experience, in his words, was "like a fish going into water." I had the privilege of visiting the artist in his studio last May to write a feature, which you'll find in our current issue. As I mentioned in a previous blog post, parts of the conversation can be viewed on our website video player.

The exhibition, which features 46 paintings in oils and pastels from Handell's ouvre, will continue through November 18. The museum's director Louis A. Zona had this to say in the show catalog: "I would suggest that his understanding of the visual elements, and his mastery over them, places Handell within an exclusive group of living American artists." The exibition, he goes on to say, "pays tribute to a singular talent ... whose work advances the art of pastel as it contributes in a significant way to America's narrative art tradition."

One hardly needs another reason to race to The Butler, but I've got a good one: Also showing at the museum, beginning September 21, is "Andrew Wyeth: Watercolors and Drawings," an exhibition which I had the pleasure of seeing at the Cincinnati Art Museum last winter (my follow-up story appears in the June issue). From selections drawn from the Marunuma Art Park collection in Japan, viewers get a peek "behind-the-temperas" at the voluminous drawings and studies that have informed Wyeth's masterworks. In particular, the show focuses on a three-decade period when the artist drew his inspiration from the lives and surroundings of Christina and Alvaro Olson of Cushing, Maine. Among the 114 works are several finished watercolors, as well as drawings and studies, including 10 for Christina's World, Wyeth's iconic painting done in 1948.

Others may drive off to ooh and ahh at fall foliage this season, but if you really want to be awed and inspired, I'd suggest steering the car toward Youngstown instead!

Art Inspiration | Overheard | Shows and Events
Monday, September 10, 2007 6:55:41 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
A Visit With Albert Handell
Posted by anne

AlbertAnne160.jpgStudio160.jpg

Last May, after attending the International Association of Pastel Societies (IAPS) in Albuquerque, N.M., several of us from the magazine (group publisher David Pyle, managing editor Sarah Strickley and myself) rented a car and took a short drive north to Santa Fe, the beloved art mecca of the Southwest. Here we paid a visit to the celebrated artist Albert Handell in his picturesque adobe-style studio. We spent a wonderful morning talking about his life in art, his techniques and materials, while also enjoying a private showing of his artwork—mostly landscapes with esquisite color like the pastel landscape La Vista (16x17) below, but also pastel still lifes and figures, and a number of lively drawings, too.

LaVista1601.jpgOne result of our visit is a print feature about the artist in the new September/October issue of the magazine; the issue mails to subscribers this week and hits newsstands September 4. Also, because David was able to play the role of camera-man during our conversation, we also were able to create four short video clips with selections from our discussion. Mind you, I'm quite sure our videos won't be winning any awards at Cannes, but I know you'll enjoy hearing about the artist's methods and materials straight from the source.

Start your viewing with "Orchestrating With Contrast,"in which Handell describes how he came to use watercolor as an underpainting for his pastels. In "Plein Air Painting Trip," he describes the structure of a typical day painting on location—where to, how long, how many paintings, etc. In "Plein Air Setup & Supplies," you can see what Handell carries with him on location as he packs up supplies from trunk to luggage carrier. In "Managing Color With Value," watch the artist demonstrate how to find different colors of similar value. In workshops, Handell suggests this as an organizing method—a way to get a handle on the many colors in one's pastel box. But you'll see—in a peak inside his own box—that he doesn't actually follow his own organizational advice. He, personally, prefers a bit of chaos in his pastel box which he says keeps his eyes more awake.

Our thanks to Albert for graciously inviting David and Sarah and I (and our camera!) into his studio. And, by extension, inviting our whole family of magazine- and blog-readers too!









Tips and Techniques | Tools and Materials
Monday, August 13, 2007 3:15:34 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [2]
We (Paint) Jammin'
Posted by jessica

A friend directed me to this video this morning, and I then had to share it with the PJ team at the office. You might be familiar with "improvisational painting performer" Dan Dunn and his Paintjam events. Double-fisted with paintbrushes, Dunn spins his canvas and paints to music like a madman. Prepare to be dazzled by his lightning-speed artistry below.

Oh, and be sure to use sound. And watch it all the way until Dunn is done (sorry) for the finished painting.


Art Inspiration
Thursday, July 12, 2007 7:56:27 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
Google Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links