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# Wednesday, September 19, 2007
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]
# Monday, September 17, 2007
Tired and Inspired (and a Little Hungry)
Posted by anne

Well, that's it. At 4:45 p.m. this afternoon, the TPJ editorial team viewed the last of just over 5,000 slides and digital images entered into the 9th annual Pastel 100 competition. The process began last Tuesday, when Sarah, Jessica, Cindy and myself cloistered ourselves into a dark room here in the office and—together with a slide projector and laptop, Diet Cokes, and a towering stack of slide carousels—started the process of pre-jurying thousands of works in pastel. The task always leaves us feeling a surprising mix of exhilaration and exhaustion. And this year, because we happened to keep the still life category for last, we found ourselves adding "hungry" to our condition as we were treated to a visual feast of pears, blueberries, kiwi, tea cakes, jellybeans, and even cherry cheesecake.

So what happens next? Our selections will be sent to the five category jurors who'll select the top 20 winners in each of their respective categories. We'll start contacting winners in mid-October, and then we'll get to work on the March/April issue in which we present all the winning works of art (see last year's issue).

Our thanks to all of you who entered. It's always inspiring to see so much skill and artistry. And, though it's sometimes agonizing to pull out a piece that is "close, but not quite there," it's exciting because that artist's potential feels almost tangible.



Overheard | Shows and Events
Monday, September 17, 2007 4:10:04 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Friday, September 14, 2007
Meet Me in St. Louis … for Degas
Posted by jessica

Good news for St. Louis residents and visitors: The Saint Louis Art Museum has added Degas’ 1898 oil painting, The Milliners, to its collection. This painting is the first Degas oil in the museum’s collection—SLAM has two of the artist’s pastels, three drawings, nine prints and two sculptures—and was bought for almost $10 million, according to the St. Louis Post Dispatch.

Coincidentally, on the cover of our December issue you'll find Degas’ famous pastel, Four Ballerinas Resting between Scenes, from the upcoming 8 Wonders of the Pastel World feature. Look for it on newsstands Oct. 30!


Overheard | Shows and Events
Friday, September 14, 2007 10:28:00 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Paint the Parks with Pastel
Posted by Sarah

HyltonM_381.jpgPaintAmerica, a national, non-profit organization to support artists and promote the visual arts, has announced the winners of the 2007 Paint the Parks Top100 Artists’ Competition. And among those winners is artist Marion W. Hylton, whose pastel painting Sunset on the South Rim (pictured left), received the Grand Canyon Association $3,500 Purchase Award.

PaintAmerica’s “Paint the Parks” Art Competition is an open national artists’ competition, designed to illustrate the beauty and significance of America’s National Parks. All paintings entered must depict one of the nation's 390 National Park areas. A portion of the proceeds from “Paint the Parks” is contributed annually to the National Park Foundation and the PaintAmerica Scholarship Fund. The competition’s overall winner claims a $10,000 purchase award. Other artists in the “Paint the Parks” competition also have an excellent chance to receive additional cash purchase awards and prizes.

The 2008 “Paint the Parks” call to entries opens February 1, 2008 with a final deadline of May 31, 2008. Visit the PaintAmerica website for the full skinny and start painting the parks in pastel.


Wednesday, September 12, 2007 2:24:24 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Monday, September 10, 2007
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]
# Friday, September 07, 2007
Pastel Workshop in Scotland: Day Three
Posted by Maggie

maggieblog11.jpgWe are three days into the workshop in Scotland sponsored by Jack Richeson & Co. Our group is based in the village of Blair Atholl in Perthshire, just into the Highlands and in the center of the country. Day trips have taken us to Glamis Castle (home of the late Queen Mother), to the village of Kenmore and to a wild valley in the Highlands called the Sma’ Glen.

While I’ve enjoyed every location, so far my favorite is the Sma’ Glen. It’s the first time I’ve been in the Highlands when the heather is in full bloom—a wonderful experience. Yet it’s a painting challenge, too; the warm purples and roses of the heather-covered hills want to come forward in the painting, while the artist wants to keep them in the distance!

maggieblog21.jpgThere’s nothing like being on the spot to capture the colors, the feel and the excitement of the location. Photos just don’t do justice to subtle variations like the colors on the underneath arch of a bridge or the incredible variety of greens covering the hills.

Tomorrow we will paint at Blair Castle here in our home village, which features not just the castle and beautiful gardens but wooded areas and a wild stream. No shortage of painting subjects—in fact, I believe I could happily paint for a month just within walking distance of the hotel!  —Maggie Price



Our guest blogger, Maggie Price, will be posting here from time to time over the next month with news from her pastel journeys abroad.


Art Inspiration | Overheard
Friday, September 07, 2007 7:09:49 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Wednesday, September 05, 2007
Artist Website of the Week: APOW
Posted by Sarah



Self Portrait, Morning (15x21) by Melanie Peter
Winner of the 5th Annual APOW Contest


This week's artist website of the week represents a collective of artists: Associated Pastelists on the Web (APOW). Directed by PSA master pastelist Madlyn-Ann C. Woolwich, who I had the distinct pleasure of meeting earlier this year at IAPS, the site is a hub of pastel activity. Visitors can apply for membership, recieve written critiques of their work, read interesting and informative articles on the pastel medium, and see heaps of paintings from artists such as Wende Caporale, Anne Heywood, and regular PJ contributor Margot Schulzke. Spend an afternoon there. You so won't regret it.

Art Inspiration
Wednesday, September 05, 2007 3:00:54 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Tuesday, September 04, 2007
History of Art in a Matter of Minutes
Posted by anne

"500 Years of Female Faces" is a stunning slideshow on YouTube that celebrates the female face in art, smoothly moving from one inspiring masterwork to the next for an engaging 3-minute montage. It was posted in June and may be "old news" for some, but I decided that just in case even one of our blog-readers missed it, I'm hear to alert you—because it's just so fun!!


Art Inspiration
Tuesday, September 04, 2007 4:45:22 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Friday, August 31, 2007
Washington Square Outdoor Art Exhibit
Posted by jessica

wash_square_300.jpgFor those of you lucky artists near NYC this Labor Day weekend, take advantage of the 77th annual Washington Square Outdoor Art Exhibit along the sidewalks of Greenwich Village. Event promoters say the juried show, held every Labor Day weekend and the weekend following, as well as Memorial Day weekend and the weekend after that, features varying media—traditional and avant-garde—from pastels, oils and watercolors to graphic art, crafts, photography and sculpture. Some artists are up-and-comers, while others are well-known in esteemed galleries and museums.

The exhibit’s creation is noteworthy: According to the event’s website, it began in 1931 with Jackson Pollock and fellow artist Willem DeKooning. Desperate for rent money, they hauled their works to the sidewalk with the hope of attracting buyers. Pretty soon they caught the attention of the New York City art world—Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, founder of the Whitney Museum of Art, and Alfred H. Barr Jr., director of the newly established Museum of Modern Art—and the rest, as they say, is history.

Enjoy your long weekend.


Photo courtesy of the Washington Square Outdoor Art Exhibit



Overheard | Shows and Events
Friday, August 31, 2007 4:07:30 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Rendezvous in Monet's Garden
Posted by Sarah

Not that you'd need another excuse to visit Ohio (it is the official birthplace of aviation, after all, and the duct tape capital of the world) but an upcoming exhibition at the Columbus Museum of Art may give you cause to book your B&B now: Rendezvous in Monet's Garden; Ideas, Insights & Inspiration from the Painter's Garden Saturday, October 27, 9:30 - 11:30 AM.
header.jpg
Here's the skinny: Elizabeth Murray, photographer, author, and gardener, will share her experiences assisting with the restoration of Monet's Garden at Giverny. Her photographs, taken during all seasons, illustrate the story of Monet the painter, the gardener, and the man. She will reveal the design elements, color, and plant combinations that Monet used to create this great work of art—his garden. Following the presentation, guests will enjoy French pastries and coffee at a reception and book signing in Derby Court. The cost is $40 for members and $45 for nonmembers. Purchase tickets online or order by phone at 614.629.0309.

(Lest you think I don't heart the state of Ohio, I'll recommend two of Cincinnati's excellent museums: the Contemporary Arts Center, designed by renowned architect Zaha Hadid, and the Cincinnati Art Museum, which houses more than 60,000 works spanning 6,000 years. We also have very interesting ice cream and famous chili. And a theme park where they filmed an episode of the Brady Bunch.)

Shows and Events
Wednesday, August 29, 2007 5:12:08 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [0]
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