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 Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Breaking News from the Pastel Competition Scene
Posted by Sarah
This just in from from a pastel society near you:
The Maryland Pastel Society's biennial Shades of Pastel Show is currently on display at beautiful Strathmore Hall in Bethesda, Maryland through October 20th. Juror Bob Rohm chose 100 paintings from 275 submissions. Best in Show went to Bill James for Cuban Grandmother. Lisa Mitchell (MPS President) won first place for In Route to Taos, and Michael McGurk won second place for Blue Fenders.
Photos of the opening reception and a complete listing of the winners are available online here.
Thanks to Jean Hirons, MPS VP and SOP Chair, for giving us the skinny. Send news of your society's show to pjedit@fwpubs.com and see it soon on the PJ blog.
Cuban Grandmother by Bill James
Shows and Events
Wednesday, October 17, 2007 2:34:32 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, October 15, 2007
Year in Review
Posted by anne
 We just had our first taste of autumn weather last week, here in Cincinnati, so it hardly seems time to be talking about year-end, but the final issue of the year (November/December 2007) has just started to ship to subscribers (it will go on-sale on newsstands October 30). For the year-end issue, we planned some exciting features, including articles on the illustration work of Harry Potter illustrator Mary GrandPre (see our online gallery here). We've also included work by some fantastic international artists, too—the moody cityscapes of St. Petersburg artist Serguei Oussik, the realistic snowscapes of Canadian artist Susan Lampinen and the abstract expressions of UK artists Ingrid Wilkins and Jeanette Hayes. All of these pastelists (and more) will join the long list of our distinguished 2007 "featured artists." To get the complete list, you can consult the index of 2007 artists and articles in the December issue, but for those who enjoy visual reminders (and isn't that everybody?!), go to our website for a free downloadable Visual Index. Click on any highlighted name in the index to view a painting by the artist (see sample page above). It's our version of one of those year-end news montages, except the subject is exclusively pastels!
Art Inspiration
Monday, October 15, 2007 5:30:35 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, October 12, 2007
Kissing and Punching: The New Crimes of Art
Posted by jessica
Overheard
Friday, October 12, 2007 4:30:06 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, October 10, 2007
It's Pastel Competition Season Again
Posted by Sarah
  First Light Complementary Aspen Passages
A few months ago, you were putting the final touches on your finest
work in pastel and sending the results with absolute care to the pastel
competition of your choice. Then came the waiting. And then more
waiting. And then a little more. And now that you've finally learned to
relax and put it all out of your mind, the results are finally coming
in.
The Pastel Society of Colorado
has announced the winners of its annual open Mile High National show.
The event was held this year in Aspen, Colorado, where juror Bob Rohm
of Texas selected 80 paintings out of 250 entries from 12 states. The
Best of Show prize was awarded to Last Light by Roger Ambrosier; the First Place painting in the Traditional category was Carol Rothrock’s Complementary Aspen; and the First Place winner in the Abstract category was Passages
by Diane Fechenbach. Now in its 15th year, the Pastel Society of
Colorado has over 200 members around the state and across the Rocky
Mountains. PSC is a member of the International Association of Pastel Societies.
If you'd like to share the results of your pastel society's annual competition, please send them here. Stay tuned for more competition news here on blog, including notes from inside the Pastel 100. Shows and Events
Wednesday, October 10, 2007 3:01:22 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, October 08, 2007
Maggie Price Workshop Diary: From Sunny Spain
Posted by maggie
Our eight-day workshop here in Spain is based at Hotel Bandolero in the village of Júzcar, Malaga province. Júzcar has an average population of just over 150 residents, though summer homes are sometimes occupied. It's one of the beautiful "White villages" of the Genal Valley in Andalucia; all of the buildings are painted white and most have red-tiled roofs. We spent our first day painting in the village and around the hotel. With so many subjects to choose from, we were hard-pressed to select just one or two. I painted the flowering bush on the patio by an entrance (see the painting below at left), taking advantage of the shade, as did several other painters that day (L-to-R in photo below at right: Dauna Roberts, Memorie Williams and LaDonna Escamilla).  
The next day we took the first day trip to the village of Ronda. We painted in the early morning at the bottom of the famous bridge, El Tajo. This vantage point not only gives the artist an idea of the monumental structure, but a good view of the surrounding cliffs (see my painting below). 
While in Ronda, we attended an evening performance of flamenco dancing. The lively dance is too fast even for sketching, but we were able to take photographs throughout (see one of them here), so you may see paintings of the lovely costumes in the future. 
It’s already been a wonderful experience, and there's much more to come!
Art Inspiration | Overheard
Monday, October 08, 2007 3:46:02 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, October 05, 2007
O’Keeffe Opening in Minneapolis
Posted by jessica
 On Sunday the Minneapolis Institute of Arts unveils Georgia O’Keeffe: Circling Around Abstraction on its third and final tour stop. Through Jan. 6, attendees will be able to view in person 42 of the legendary artist’s pastels, charcoals, watercolors, pencil drawings, oils and sculptures embodying her creative voice and continued persuit of the abstract. Here’s a brief introduction from the MIA: O'Keeffe's exploration of abstraction placed her at the forefront of the American avant-garde. While most retrospective exhibitions of O'Keeffe's art begin, appropriately, with her breakthrough abstract charcoal drawings of 1915, the fact that she continued to paint in this mode throughout her career is almost always overshadowed by the popularity of her more representational canvases. Like many of her peers, she took daring risks as she worked, experimenting adventurously with color, scale, and composition. What truly distinguished O'Keeffe from her contemporaries, however, was her innovative and consistent approach to abstraction: an approach rooted not in esoteric theories and rigid, grid-oriented geometry, but rather in a highly personal interpretation of her subject matter that she consistently realized through a unique vocabulary of circular forms.Also on the site is a slideshow with audio from curator Sue Canterbury. Shows and Events
Friday, October 05, 2007 7:30:14 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, October 03, 2007
Maggie Price Workshop Diary: Painting (Almost) Every Day
Posted by maggie
Before setting out on this trip spanning two months and four workshops, I thought about what it might be like to paint outdoors from life nearly every day for such a long period of time. I’ve noticed before that whenever I can schedule other parts of my life to allow a number of days in a row to paint—whether in the studio or out, whether from life or from photographs—it has a positive  impact on my work. But while I enjoy plein air painting and get outdoors at every opportunity, I’ve never had such a long stretch of strictly outdoor painting. It has had a profound effect; I find I’m quicker to make decisions about composition, and that I come closer to finishing each study in the time I allow. (As a general rule, on a sunny day, I try not to work more than an hour to an hour and a half on each piece, as the light changes and the shadows move in that amount of time.) Drawing buildings has also gotten a little faster, though it’s still not easy. I want to get the elements of perspective and angles right, but if I spend too much time fiddling with that, then the pattern of light and shadow that originally caught my attention may be gone. So I’m pleased that I’m getting a little quicker with architectural subjects. It’s also interesting to paint the same thing or similar things more than once. After completing the painting Distant Villa (above), the light on the hillside just to the left of that composition changed and the village of Cortona began to be lit by the afternoon sun. I only had about 45 minutes left to work, so I turned my easel just a little and quickly painted Cortona View (below). What I learned about painting the trees in the first piece was useful in the second, and in the end I liked the second, quicker, study best.  In both the Scotland workshop and the one in Italy, we averaged 7-8 days of outdoor work. Now we are in Spain, and the first works   hop group will arrive tomorrow. That 8-day workshop will be followed by another of the same length. It will be interesting to see what my plein air work is like by the end of the trip, and it will also be interesting to see how my studio work is affected when I finally get home to paint indoors over the winter. Next: painting the white villages of the Genal Valley in the Andalucian mountains of Spain. --Maggie Price Art Inspiration
Wednesday, October 03, 2007 7:23:38 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, October 01, 2007
Artist of the Week: Diana Lehr
Posted by anne
Diana 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)
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 Friday, September 28, 2007
More PSA Notes: Tim Gaydos
Posted by jessica
 Artist and Pastel Journal contributor Robert K. Carsten recently had the pleasure of attending the Pastel Society of America’s 35th Annual Open Juried Exhibition at the National Arts Club (Sept. 7-30). Below he shares a snippet of his conversation with artist Tim Gaydos (featured in our October 2007 issue), who won the PSA’s Art Spirit Foundation, Dianne B. Bernhard Gold Medal Award for his painting, More Coffee? (at right).
“I made up this composition, More Coffee?, using two models and myself,” says Tim Gaydos. “I often use myself in my paintings, not with the intention of self portraiture, but because I’m cheap and available! I use double mirrors, both on easels. The one in front of me is a smaller one, which I can lean a little forward or backward to alter the angle of my view. The mirror in back is a larger one, maybe 4-by-5 feet, and both are wired to the easels for safety.
“The circular counter and rounded window come from my compositional sketch created at the White Manna diner in Jersey City, N.J. All of the figures, though, are changed from the sketch, as are the colors,” he says. “I’ve been painting diner scenes since about 1982, and I don’t see them as evolving so much as I do, capturing an emotion and a sense of alienation in the modern world. The figure on the right is perhaps thinking about her life, why she’s here, what she’s doing on this earth. She is in deep, if momentary, contemplation. Perhaps she’s thinking about an event in her past or yearning for a new future. The male figure, well, he’s intrigued by the daydreaming girl, while the other waitress, perhaps noticing, asks, ‘More coffee?’
“When I’m sketching in a public location such as a diner, I try to do it as anonymously as possible. Occasionally, people who have noticed me working have come up and complimented me on my drawing; I’ve never had a bad experience,” says the artist. Speaking of experiences, bringing home a PSA award is one to be remembered. “It is very, very gratifying to win this award,” he says. To read more about Tim Gaydos, his remarkable work, and his studio setup, see the October 2007 issue of The Pastel Journal. Overheard | Shows and Events
Friday, September 28, 2007 7:15:28 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Maggie Price Workshop Diary: Italy
Posted by maggie
 Our first few days in the workshop in Cortona, Italy, have flown by. Our workshop sponsor, Patrick Mahoney combined painting locations with a taste of Tuscany. We started with a painting day in Cortona, painting the views from the Piazza Garibaldi in the morning and in a nearby park in the afternoon. Patrick makes sure we get a literal taste of Tuscany, as well, so each day features lunches and dinners at different resta  urants, which we then try to work off by hauling our painting gear up the steep cobbled streets of Cortona. Rain was threatening one day and we found an archway to paint under, which gave us a good view of the central Piazza Republica and the famous Cortona clock tower and steps, a building dating back to the 12th century. After a couple of days of painting, we took a break for a day trip to Firenze, where we walked, shopped at a couple of fascinating Italian art supply stores, and visited the Uffizi Museum. Some artists  who hadn’t previously been there, went to the Academie to see Michaelango’s David and other works, while others walked across the Ponte Vecchio to the Pitti Palace and the Boboli Gardens, for a fantastic view of Il Duomo and the city. Back in Cortona, we continued to explore new areas each day, painting in the morning and afternoon, while trying to keep up with our hectic restaurant schedule. One evening we had a cooking class at Il Refugio, a beautiful Tuscan villa outside town which also hosts workshops in addition to cooking classes. We got to get our hands  in pasta instead of pigment, and had a great time making pici pasta (pronounced “peachy,” it’s a kind of fat spaghetti noodle) for our dinner. The location was so beautiful, we’ve arranged to go back there and paint before the week is over. Art Inspiration | Overheard
Wednesday, September 26, 2007 1:59:40 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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