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 Monday, June 30, 2008

Posted by anne

stitch_pont.jpgMembers of pastel societies can vouch for the advantages to having a community of fellow artists to support your pastel painting and your growth as an artist. The International Association of Pastel Societies (IAPS), which unites all of the individual pastel societies into one organization, is founded on that principle and the benefits of networking and sharing. If you have yet to become a member of a pastel society in your region of the world, there is no time like the present! The brand-new IAPS website offers a map, which locates all of the existing societies across the U.S. and around the globe. Find out what society is close to you, and if you find there isn't one, maybe you are just the person to get one started; IAPS offers some advice for doing just that in a downloadable PDF file here.

Pictured here: Stitch in Time, a pastel by Dianna Ponting, a member Pastel Artists Canada, one of several Canadian societies that belong to IAPS. We are currently working with Dianna on a feature article for the September/October issue of the magazine.


Tips and Techniques
6/30/2008 11:49:41 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, June 27, 2008
Online Pastel Demo with Deborah Secor
Posted by jessica

PAS0808_Secor_Molten_Moment.jpgPastel artist Deborah Secor, one of our beloved regular contributors at The Pastel Journal—and an artist on the ArtistsNetwork.tv workshop lineup—is typically the one showcasing an artist’s work, as she recently did with Marc Hanson in the August issue (which is now on its way out to subscribers). Now it’s our turn to display some of Deborah’s work: a demonstration of a stunning sky at sunset (Molten Moment (12x18)).

Click here to see the demo, and look for the August issue on newsstands July 15.





Overheard | Tips and Techniques
6/27/2008 10:50:14 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Pastel Deadline Approaching
Posted by sarah

AppalachianPastelSociety-Letterhead.jpg

The Appalachian Pastel Society wants YOU to know that the deadline for its 2008 Exhibition is fast approaching. Submit your CD entries by August 1, 2008. The juror for this year's competition is Margaret Dyer and prizes include $1000 for the best of show, as well as pastel sets (including greens, intense darks and true lights, with a total retail value of $518.00). A prospectus is available on the APS website. Or, for more information call Kay Gordon, (828)649-3363.




6/25/2008 4:29:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, June 20, 2008
Free Download: Guide to Pastel Supports
Posted by jessica

As you know, choosing a support for your painting is no easy task. Luckily, in our June 2008 issue, Maggie Price examined all the various surface options out there for pastelists. Click here to download the PDF, and keep the file handy on your desktop!

PAS_0608_spec_rept.jpg



Tools and Materials
6/20/2008 11:22:20 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, June 16, 2008
Four Prize-Winning Pastels for Your Edification
Posted by sarah

It's been our pleasure as Ohioans (and pastel enthusiasts) to draw your attention to International Association of Pastel Societies's (IAPS) Eleventh Juried Exhibition at The Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, Ohio. We're currently plotting an escape from the offices (shhhhh) to see this show and others in the area. Maybe we'll see you there? In any case, here are four more of the fabulous winners. Enjoy! (Thanks to Maggie Price for the skinny.)

will-painting-projects.jpg










Prix de Pastel: Painting Projects by Sharon Will


lundgren-reed-crescent.jpg










Gold Award: Reed Crecent by Richard Lundgen


seymour-mandarins.jpg
















Silver Award: Mandarins and Morning Glories by Claudia Seymour


gordon-blue-moto-1.jpg











Bronze Award: Blue Motorcyle
by J Kay Gordon


Overheard | Shows and Events
6/16/2008 2:52:37 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, June 13, 2008
Instant Art Critique Phrase Generator
Posted by jessica

rockwell_critic1.jpgHere’s a fun site for your Friday: The Instant Art Critique Phrase Generator. No longer will you rack your noggin trying to come up with something insightful—or perplexing—for your peer critique group. Just plug in any 5-number combination, and in seconds the generator will reveal your, um, “observation.” Here are a few generated for yours truly:

“I'm surprised that no one's mentioned yet that the mechanical mark-making of the negative space seems very disturbing in light of the eloquence of these pieces.”

“I agree/disagree with some of the things that have just been said, but the reductive quality of the sexual signifier endangers the devious simplicity of the eloquence of these pieces.”

“It should be added that the optical suggestions of the spatial relationships endangers the devious simplicity of the remarkable handling of light.”


*Thanks to Deborah Secor for passing along the link!


Art Inspiration | Overheard
6/13/2008 10:17:03 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, June 09, 2008
On With the Show
Posted by anne

IAPS.jpgMore exciting exhibition news: Over the weekend, The International Association of Pastel Artists' 11th Juried Exhibition opened in the Giffuni Gallery of The Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, Ohio. This showcase of pastel work, selected by jurors Urania Christy Tarbet and Duane Wakeham, includes work by Terri Ford, Maggie Price, Frederick Somers and Jerry Power, among others. The exhibition is an exciting opportunity to see the staggering variety of work being accomplished in the medium. Get there if you can!

Shown here: After the Storm (19.5x25.5) by Linda Gross Brown





Shows and Events
6/9/2008 2:06:53 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, June 06, 2008
Pastel News for Your Quiet Afternoon
Posted by sarah



Here's a little positive pastel news for your Friday afternoon: San Jose artist Terri Ford has won the Best Pastel Award at the 15th Annual Carmel Art Festival’s Plein Air Event. The winning painting, Carmel Dusk (above) was inspired by Ford's affinity for the Carmel landscape, the sand dunes at Carmel Beach in particular. “The dunes are most captivating to me in early morning and at dusk when the play of light and shadows is most magical,” she says. (Ford was our December 2006 cover artist.)


Overheard
6/6/2008 1:28:36 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, June 05, 2008
What Does the Magazine Mean to You?
Posted by anne

SillyStaff_300.jpgThe edit team and I have just spent some time sifting through recent reader survey results, and one of the survey questions prompted us to restart a conversation we haven't had in awhile (that's us, at left, mid-conversation, from left to right: Sarah, me, our art director Cindy, and Jessica). The discussion is about a little detail called the "tagline."

A "tagline" is that short, descriptive phrase that appears with the logo on the magazine cover (something like an advertising slogan) and there's debate over how important it is to have one; most wonder, for instance, if even devoted subscribers can tell you what a magazine's tagline is. That being said, it is an opportunity to offer potential readers at the newsstands an at-a-glance description of what your magazine is all about.

Right now, our current tagline for The Pastel Journal is "The Magazine for Pastel Artists" and, while this is certainly spot-on, I think it could be improved by telling us more about what the magazine does than who it's for (since the title of the magazine takes care of that).

What we learned in our survey is that 46% of readers think of the magazine as their "guide to becoming a better artist;" 40% view it as their "source for pastel inspiration;" and 13% as a "celebration of the best in pastel." So, with this information in hand, we've been trying to craft some potential taglines, and we'd love to hear your comments right here on the blog, or email us at pjedit@fwpubs.com.

For your consideration:

a. Your Definitive Source for Pastel Instruction and Inspiration
b. An Artist's Guide to the Medium
c. Creative Nourishment for Pastel Artists
d. Improve Your Skills. Inspire Your Art.
e. Cultivate and Celebrate Your Passion for Pastel

Tell us which is your favorite. Or, if you have another idea you want to have us consider, go for it. If we choose it, we'll offer you a new or renewed one-year subscription to the magazine.

And thanks for helping, everyone!






6/5/2008 12:01:13 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [11]
 Wednesday, June 04, 2008
Degas Pastel Society to be Honored in France
Posted by anne

une_depliant.jpgCongratulations to the Degas Pastel Society for being invited by the oldest pastel society in existence, the Pastel Society of France, to be the guest of honor at its International Pastel Festival this summer. Held in Feytiat, France (July 5 through September 7), the festival attracts more than 20,000 people.

Ten Degas Pastel Society members in the New Orleans area—including Alan Flattmann, Marcia Holmes, Darlene Johnson and Ed Dyer—were asked to submit two pastel paintings each for the exhibition. As the program says, “The Societe des Pastellistes de France pays homage to these American artists of Louisiana, who still preciously preserve the French district of New Orleans and who chose Degas as their emblem.”

Our thanks to Flattmann for sharing the good news. Have any announcements of your own? Let us know by e-mailing pjedit@fwpubs.com and you could see the news here.



Overheard | Shows and Events
6/4/2008 9:11:03 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, June 02, 2008
Glenna Hartmann, Remembered
Posted by anne

hartmann1.jpgPastel artist Glenna Hartmann, a beautiful plein air landscape painter, passed away last week. She was an inspiration to many and will be very much missed in the pastel community especially (See artist Richard McKinley's tribute to his friend on the Pastel Pointers blog here).

Ellen Easton, who represented the artist in her Easton Gallery in Santa Barbara, Calif., graciously shared her obituary with me. I'll print it here in full.


A thing of beauty is a joy for ever:
Its loveliness increases; it will never
Pass into nothingness; but still will keep
A bower quiet for us, and a sleep
Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing.
[John Keats]hartmann4.jpg
 
Born in Morristown, N.J., in 1948, Glenna Hartmann, the daughter of Erhard Hartmann (a scientist involved in the top-secret nuclear submarine project), studied mathematics and physics at Wells College in New York. Answering the call of her adventurous spirit, she transferred to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts where she was awarded a Schiedt traveling scholarship for independent studies in Europe and mural painting school in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. When she moved to Carpinteria in the 1970s, her mural painting skills were put to use in the high school and at city hall. For a period of time she concentrated on painting animal portraits in pastel and gradually moved to painting the landscape on location.
 
In her twenties, she battled Hodgkin's lymphoma. After that, her strong spirit willed her often-frail body to amazing feats of achievement. She and her former husband, Albert Stevens, spent considerable time exploring Baja California. Their many whale encounters and experiences diving with dolphins inspired Glenna to paint numerous large paintings of marine mammals, including a collaboration with fellow Oak Group member, John Iwerks, on a mural for remote Santa Barbara Island.
 
hartmann5.jpgIn 1987 Glenna was invited to join the fledgling Oak Group. She quickly became an indispensable force helping the group fly and then soar. She joined many other groups and participated in invitational trips that took her to the Forbes' Chateau de Balleroy in Normandy, a rafting trip in the Grand Canyon and to many other places, but her passion and commitment remained with the Oak Group and their causes. Of particular importance to her was the collaboration with the Nature Conservancy’s Santa Cruz Island project. She conceived the audacious idea of having a yearly art show on the island’s main ranch to benefit the island and its creatures.
 
Glenna enjoyed painting the historic ranchos and remote ranchlands of Santa Barbara and Marin counties; she also collaborated closely with her good friend Ellen Easton in the realization of a series of books published by the Easton Gallery, where her work was represented for 18 years.  Many of Glenna’s painting adventures culminated in important shows and sometimes in national art magazine articles. Ray Strong called her the most fully realized painter in California.
 
Despite her many accomplishments and recognition she remained unassuming, warm and accessible. She was down to earth and enjoyed simple pleasures. Through the years she loved her many pets, including the pair of geese that used to fly behind her as she ran down a hill behind her house. She always looked forward to her weekly outings to the movies with her beloved brother Robert of Santa Barbara. Her brother and her mother, Norma Jean Hartmann of New Jersey, survive her.

A memorial service for Glenna will be held sometime in the near future, its date and location to be announced in this paper [The Santa Barbara News-Press]. It is requested that in lieu of flowers donations be made to the Nature Conservancy’s Santa Cruz Island Project [
Santa Cruz Island Preserve. 3639 Harbor Blvd., Suite 201. Ventura, CA 93001]. Glenna leaves us in her paintings many things of beauty that “will never pass into nothingness.”

If you aren't familiar with Glenna's work, I am happy to be able to share some of it with you here (from the top): Approaching Storm (20x17), Estuary Cliffs (17x12) and Sunlit Cliffs (14x18). You can also find a feature on the artist in the July/August issue of the magazine, which is still available for purchase here.




Art Inspiration | Overheard
6/2/2008 4:35:22 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]