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 Friday, May 16, 2008
April Creative Spark Winner
Posted by jessica
 In the April issue of the magazine ("Creative Spark," in the Art Matters column), pastel artist Carole Katchen offered readers a Creative Spark challenge: "Take some time off, even if only long enough to walk around a park or visit a farmers' market—and let your surroundings inspire your work." We invited readers to e-mail us with their travel-inspired pastels. We received our largest response to date: more than 100 submissions! Congratulations to Julie Deane, of Gainesville, Ga., for her winning piece, Reverence (at right). “During a music and praise session one evening [on a mission trip to Peru]," the artist writes, "the man in the foreground of the painting came into the church and stood next to me. He was obviously very weary, but he stood for hours that night, worshipping quietly. The scene was a highlight of my trip." Deane won $150 worth of PanPastel colors and tools—many thanks to Colorfin for their generosity! Other favorite submissions included: (below, top row) Nature’s Cathedral by Cecilia E. Baker, of Ridgeland, Miss., and Karen Ann Patton’s Along the Ormond Loop; (second row) Grand Indeed, by Sandy Byers; (bottom row) The Grid by Trish Callaghan, of Murwillumbah, Northern New South Wales, Australia, and Lamar Valley, by Lisa Sheppard, of Westminster, Md. 
Thanks to everyone who participated in our challenge. You’ll find the next challenge
in the June issue, which is now available on newsstands. The winner of
that challenge will receive $200 toward the purchase of a Heilman
pastel box! Art Inspiration | Overheard
Friday, May 16, 2008 4:01:09 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Introducing ArtistsNetwork.tv
Posted by sarah
 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)
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 Monday, May 12, 2008
When the Weather is Fair
Posted by anne
 We're still two weeks out from Memorial Day and I'm already anticipating the arrival of summer. As my teacher-husband is fond of saying when he's weary of those piles of papers waiting to be graded: "June's comin'!" And likewise, even though I get no summer hiatus from my job, I still look forward to the season for the change in routine and the special activities summer brings—like picnics, vegetable gardens and summer art fairs! Two nearby fairs that I'd like to get to in the coming weeks:
The Broad Ripple Art Fair, sponsored by the Indianapolis Art Center, is a national juried fair and competition that takes place every May. This year's event is set for this weekend, May 17 and May 18. If you go, look for pastel artist, Brian Mathas Burt, a four-time winner in the magazine's Pastel 100 competition and a soon-to-be-featured artist in the October issue.
Summerfair is the official launch of summertime for the Cincinnati area. The national juried fair, which takes place at the historic Coney Island park, brings together artists working in paint media, printmaking, jewely, photography, fiber, ceramics and more. The dates are May 30 through June 1. To get more information, including a complete list of participating artists (and a list of food vendors, because as you know, cruising an art fair can really muster up one's appetite!), visit the website. The winning design in the Summerfair poster competition (shown here) was created by Michael Holder. If there are art fairs that you love to go to every summer, tell us about them right here on the blog! Art Inspiration | Shows and Events
Monday, May 12, 2008 9:35:56 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, May 09, 2008
We Are One!
Posted by jessica
Overheard
Friday, May 09, 2008 9:45:55 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, May 07, 2008
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)
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 Monday, May 05, 2008
The Power of the Portrait
Posted by anne
 The large-scale portraits of pastel artist Chin-Chen Hung ( Animosity, shown here, is 36x63) make a huge statement. But it is not the size alone that supplies the power and magic. The artist manages a contemporary expression out of his deft handling of the pastel medium and a bold approach to composition. Hung is one of the featured artists in our new June issue. In managing editor Sarah Strickley's interview with the artist, she asked what it is that draws him to the human subject: "The human form," Hung ssaid, "has been my main subject since I started painting. To me, the possibilities for creating refreshing and exciting figurative work are endless. I began painting portraits in 1998, right after I finished my first year of graduate study. At that time, I was trying to simplify the content of my figurative work. (From time to time, my figurative work transforms and becomes simpler in content.) Then the idea of challenging myself and creating a series of contemporary portraits was born. When people think of portraiture, they think of traditional portrait sittings. I’d like my portraits to look contemporary and still maintain their classical beauty." To read more of the interview, see our June issue. To see an extensive slideshow of the artist's work, visit our website. Art Inspiration
Monday, May 05, 2008 7:06:55 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Saturday, May 03, 2008
Live From NAMTA 2008
Posted by jessica
Greetings from Reno, Nevada, the “biggest little city in the world!” As I type, a group of us from F+W are at The International Art Materials Trade Association Convention and Trade Show to get the scoop on the latest and greatest art products. My purpose for The Pastel Journal, of course, is to deliver that info to you via the magazine, so be on the lookout for buzzed-about new materials in the future. Speaking of buzz, the unofficial theme of this year’s show seems to be green efforts in the art materials industry. We’ve seen the debut of all types of eco-friendly products, from aerosol paints and portfolios to brush cleaner and entire art studios. As soon as technology decides to cooperate, I’ll post some photos from the show room floor. Oh, and no joke—how surprised I was to discover a landscape by Mary Silverwood hanging by the elevators on my floor at the Grand Sierra Resort! It's a small art world after all. *update (5/5/08): a few photos  A seat cover on one of the buses that took us to and from the hotel to convention center. (Others promoted sister publications Watercolor Artist and The Artist's Magazine.)  Part of our space at the show  Advertising staffers Kristin and Suzanne, with Maureen, editor of The Artist's Magazine
 A view of the Sierra Nevada mountains, from the rooftop of the Nevada Museum of Art  A Mary Silverwood painting, on my very own hotel floor! Shows and Events | Tools and Materials
Saturday, May 03, 2008 5:27:58 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Mary Cassatt and Me
Posted by sarah
I may as well admit now that I've developed somewhat of a Mary Cassatt obsession. (It happens to the best of us, right?) In any case, that's why I can't help returning to the theme of news regarding her work. I'm posting this admittedly kind of sappy YouTube tribute to the artist's paintings of mothers with children as a segway into the news of a recent Cassatt sale: Artdaily.org is reporting that Cassatt's pastel painting, Mother With Child, is among four major works of art purchased by The High Museum of Art for its permanent collection. Other paintings include the oil painting Snowscape with Cows, Montfoucault, by Camille
Pissarro; the oil painting The Breakfast, by Pierre Bonnard; and the
painting on paper Villa les Écluses, St. Jacut, Brittany, by Édouard
Vuillard. Good company indeed. From Artdaily.org: The new acquisitions were purchased from the estate of longtime Atlanta
resident Kathryn Welch Hartzog. ... Beginning on Mother’s Day, Sunday, May 11, and running through August
17, the four new works will be on view at the High as part of a special
permanent collection installation of eight works titled “Cassatt,
Pissarro, Bonnard, Vuillard: New Acquisitions for the Collection.” The
four new works will be displayed with another Cassatt pastel, which was
gifted by Jacqueline and Matt Friedlander in 2005; a Cassatt oil
painting; and two Vuillard pastels, which were given by Mrs. Hartzog in
1992.
Art Inspiration | Shows and Events
Wednesday, April 30, 2008 3:38:31 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, April 25, 2008
Oil Paints' Real Origins Revealed
Posted by jessica
Detail from one of the paintingsContrary to popular belief, oil paintings weren’t first created by Europeans in the 15th century, but rather Asians, and in the 5th to 9th centuries—according to works discovered in caves behind the two Taliban-destroyed Buddah sculptures in Bamiyan, Afghanistan. The European Synchrotron Radiation Facility suspects the paint was made of walnuts or poppies, says the BBC, which isn’t surprising, as natural pigments have been used for coloring since the prehistoric era. For more tidbits on the origin of pigments, read this. Overheard
Friday, April 25, 2008 10:08:40 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Hey Ladies
Posted by sarah
 Check it out: On view at the Legion of Honor, Women Impressionists: Berthe Morisot, Mary Cassatt, Eva Gonzalès, Marie Bracquemond, a groundbreaking (and very exciting) exhibition, featuring a number of stunning works in pastel. From the press release: At the time Impressionism was born, female artists were starting to come to the forefront of the art world. Women Impressionists
breaks new ground by looking at the work and contributions of four
female Impressionists, shown together for the first time in the United
States. Many of the works deal with images of women—women at home,
women with family, and women at leisure—in addition to other themes
typical of Impressionism. June 21, 2008 — September 21, 2008. Mary Cassatt, Young Lady in a Loge Gazing to the Right, 1880. Pastel and gouache. Ann and Gordon Getty. Shows and Events
Wednesday, April 23, 2008 1:40:43 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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