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 Friday, April 11, 2008
Upcoming Pastel Invitational
Posted by jessica
 So much to see in Denver, Colo., right now! Next Friday Denver residents will have a great opportunity to see works by artists featured in The Pastel Journal. Abend Gallery opens its Pastel Invitational (April 18-May 10), an exhibition featuring paintings by Deborah Bays, Dan Beck, Doug Dawson, Ernie Gallegos, Bruce A. Gomez, Desmond O’Hagan, Ramon Kelly, Connie Renner, Elizabeth Sandia and Clive R. Tyler. An opening reception will be held April 18 from 5-9 p.m. As ever, if you get to stop by the show, let us know about it! Pictured: Pronghorn Summit (30x33) by Clive R. Tyler Overheard | Shows and Events
Friday, April 11, 2008 8:13:56 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, April 09, 2008
New Orleans in Pastel
Posted by sarah
 We love hearing word of pastel exhibitions and shows, especially when the news comes with stunning paintings such as Soft Glow, Casamento's (24x21) attached. Carol Robinson Gallery will play host to Sandra Burshell's new show, A Glance of New Orleans, featuring the artist's new figurative work in pastel, April 5th through 30th. Visit Burshell's website to see more of her work, including interiors and a series of Katrina photographs. And visit the gallery's website for more details about the show. If you'd like to see your show on our blog, send the details to pjedit@fwpubs.com. We'll be waiting. Shows and Events
Wednesday, April 09, 2008 5:50:20 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, April 07, 2008
Big Stories, Small Package
Posted by anne
 People are funny about their old books and magazines. Some readers swear by the save-everything-forever approach, secure in the knowledge that they can go back and find information that they may want some day in the future. Others, less comfortable with clutter, may be a bit more inclined to read and recycle. Many find themselves somewhere in between, cranky about clutter but unwilling to let go of anything (me, me, me). I know from our research (and from conversation) that most readers of The Pastel Journal fall into the keep-it-forever camp, at least when it comes to copies of TPJ. And I’d imagine that, depending on one’s skills (or interest) in organization, these magazine libraries may take the form of a cardboard box in the closet or a tidy shelf of labeled three-ring binders. But regardless of where you fall on the neat-freak scale, you're going to want to know about a brand-new option for maintaining your magazine archive that's compact and portable: We've just released a computer CD with digital files of every page of every issue published in 2007! Here’s how it works, just pop the CD into your home computer or laptop. (The CD uses a PDF format, making it compatible for PC and Mac with Acrobat Reader, a free program already installed on most computers). There at your fingertips you'll find each issue of the magazine, ready to read page-by-page, just as you might a print issue. Or, browse the Table of Contents, and click on a story title to jump to that article. You can even click on coverlines to get to the related story. Best of all, if you know you saw an article (or artist or product review) in 2007, but can't remember which issue, you can use keyword search to locate it—that's a whole lot easier than digging through that cardboard box for dog-eared pages! Click here to get more information about the CD (or to order your copy). And then, be on the look-out for a CD of 2006 issues later this year! Tools and Materials
Monday, April 07, 2008 6:58:03 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, April 04, 2008
Juried Pastel Exhibition
Posted by sarah
 Is it that time of year again? The Southeastern Pastel Society will host its 2008 International Juried Exhibition, June 12-August 10, 2008, at Oglethorpe University Museum of Art, in Atlanta, Georgia. This year's show will be juried by Bill Hosner, who will also teach a workshop. For more information, visit the society's website. Incidentally, Hosner was our cover artist for the February 2008 issue. Pick up the back issue to read about the challenges of painting the figure en plein air, if you're not a subscriber. If you'd like to see your society's news on our blog, send us an e-mail. Sunflower Tango by Marsha Savage Overheard | Shows and Events
Friday, April 04, 2008 2:30:22 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, April 02, 2008
National Poetry Month
Posted by jessica
"It would be tragic not to realize the extent of man’s dependence on the arts."—Wallace Stevens, "Relations Between Poetry and Painting"
Because most varieties of art inform and cross-reference each other—visual artists, for example, typically have other creative passions like gardening, classical guitar, writing—this month we celebrate National Poetry Month. Check the Academy of American Poets’ website for NPM events and celebrations. Coming up April 17 is Poem in Your Pocket Day. The Academy of American Poets has some great resources on its site, including a National Poetry Almanac that devotes a section to Poetry and Art. My favorite subject within this category is visual art’s (more specifically, Picasso’s) influence on Gertrude Stein. A friend of Picasso’s, and ever the experimental writer, Stein forayed into "verbal Cubism" in her 1914 book, Tender Buttons—poems modeled after visual effects she observed in the artist’s paintings. Art Inspiration | Overheard
Wednesday, April 02, 2008 3:51:11 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, March 31, 2008
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)
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 Friday, March 28, 2008
Inspiring Impressionism in Colorado
Posted by jessica
Through May 25, the Denver Museum of Art features Inspiring Impressionism, an exhibition of 100 works by Impressionist painters that examines the ways they were inspired by their Old Master predecessors—for example, looking at Putto next to Paul Cézanne’s Still Life with Stauette. Other artists and their influences include: Claude Monet and Meindert Hobbema; Camille Pissarro and Jean-Siméon Chardin; Mary Cassatt and Jean-Honoré Fragonard, and more. Check the museum’s website for details about the show, and a cool timeline that connects the Impressionists to the Old Masters. Art Inspiration | Overheard | Shows and Events
Friday, March 28, 2008 3:09:24 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, March 24, 2008
New Paintings by Alan Flattmann
Posted by anne
Heading south for Spring Break? If your travels should happen to take you to New Orleans, be sure to check out the Bryant Galleries' show of Alan Flattmann's latest work, opening this Saturday (March 29) at their Royal Street gallery in New Orleans.
As a Louisiana artist, Flattmann has long been drawn to the special qualities of New Orleans, creating wonderful pastels of French Quarter buildings and street scenes, as well as portraits of jazz musicians and other figures. His latest work reflects some of the emotion that has grown out of the post-Katrina era. See, for example, Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans? (pastel, 24x30) at left.
Flattmann is the author of The Art of Pastel Painting, a Master Pastelist and the 2006 inductee into the Pastel Society of America's Hall of Fame (see the February 2007 issue of The Pastel Journal).
Shows and Events
Monday, March 24, 2008 5:29:53 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Friday, March 21, 2008
A Large Slice of Monet
Posted by jessica
 If 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)
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