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 Friday, November 16, 2007
Andrew Wyeth Wins the 2007 National Medal of Arts
Posted by jessica

Wyeth&Bush.jpgCongratulations are in order for artist Andrew Wyeth, who was presented a 2007 National Medal of Arts yesterday by President Bush. According to the National Endowment for the Arts, “Wyeth received the award for ‘a lifetime of paintings whose meticulous realism have captured the American consciousness, and whose austere vision has displayed the depth and dignity of rural American life.’ ”

This isn’t by any means the first national honor the artist has received. In addition to earning the Presidential Medal of Freedom (1963) and the Congressional Gold Medal (1988), he’s been elected into the Académie des Beaux-Arts (1977) and the first living American artist elected into Britain's Royal Academy (1980). What more can we say? He’s a true modern master. His father N.C. would be proud.

Photo: National Endowment for the Arts


Overheard
11/16/2007 4:14:43 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
New Name, New Issue, New Web Address
Posted by kelly

778_870_large.jpgExciting News! Starting with the February 2008 issue, Watercolor Magic will now be called Watercolor Artist.

I know a lot of you have grown attached to "the Magic" in the past 15 years. Believe me, we didn't make the decision to change the name lightly. Rest assured, you'll still find all your favorite columns, as well as the inspiring stories and helpful tips and techniques from your favorite painters that you've come to expect. But, while the magazine will still celebrate the magic of watercolor, the new name puts the focus where it rightfully belongs—on you, the artist.

Be sure to bookmark our new address today, and join us in this exciting new chapter of the magazine's history!



From the Magazine
11/16/2007 4:01:56 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [3]
 Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Watercolor Magic 2007 CD Archive
Posted by jessica

WC07CD_CASE_300.jpgAs we promised in the Artists Network newsletter Tuesday, the Watercolor Magic 2007 CD archive is now available. Same enhanced PDF format as the 2006 Issues on CD, same principle: You can pop the CD into your computer, and with the click of your mouse go directly to the issue you want to open.

Once in the document, you can further explore ideas, topics, people and places mentioned in the magazine by clicking on hotlinked websites—meaning you go right online to the site. Also convenient is a comprehensive subject index; all content is fully searchable.

So what don’t these wonderful CDs do, you ask? They don’t play music, so we wouldn’t recommend testing them out in your car stereo. Get yours now at our online store.


From the Magazine | Overheard
11/14/2007 10:10:26 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, November 12, 2007
In Watercolor News
Posted by sarah

clark-jacqueline_web.jpg
Last month, the National Watercolor Society(NWS) announced the winners of its 87th Annual Exhibition. You can see the show through December 9, 2007 at the Brea Cultural Center. Or, catch the Travel Show when it passes through a town near you. Jurors selected 100 winning paintings from almost 1,200 entries, representing artists from every state and several foreign countries.

The winner of the Watercolor Magic Magazine Award was Jacqueline Clark of Florida. Her Homage to Degas (22x23) is shown here.

One way to to see all of the winning paintings is to order an exhibition catalog--we just got ours and it's luscious. You'll find a Watercolor Magic contributor on the cover: Nicholas Simmons won the NWS Purchase Award, with Silver Star for his painting Fresh Sushi.




Overheard
11/12/2007 9:19:20 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, November 09, 2007
Art in the Computer Age: Electronic Seurat Sketches
Posted by Kelly

Seurat sketch.jpgThrough January 7, the Museum of Modern Art (NYC) is hosting a unique exhibition of Georges Seurat’s works on paper—once described as “the most beautiful painter's drawings in existence.”

Though he’s perhaps best known for his stylized pointillist paintings, this exhibition demonstrates a livelier and often grittier side to Seurat’s oeuvre. With the touch of a finger, visitors to the exhibition can flip through electronic versions of four of the artist’s surviving sketchbooks (the real things are under glass nearby). In contrast to the refined elegance of "A Sunday on the Grande Jatte," these deftly crafted conté drawings of farmers wielding scythes, women scrubbing floors and men sleeping on park benches offer a glimpse of the shabbier side of late 19th-century metropolitan Paris.

But don't fret if a trip to New York isn't in your plans. You can enjoy a similar interactive experience on MoMA’s website, which also lets you “flip” through digital images of the artist’s drawings—likely the greatest access to a master’s sketchbook you’re ever going to get.

Photo courtesy of MoMA website.

Overheard | Reviews
11/9/2007 2:45:31 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, November 07, 2007
North East Watercolor Society 2007 Exhibition
Posted by jessica

Congratulations to the North East Watercolor Society on another successful show; its 31st annual International Open Exhibition just closed Sunday at The Gallery at Kent Art Association (Kent, Connecticut). We’re pleased to be able to extend the exhibition, so to speak, and show the top five award winners here.

North East Watercolor Society Award for Excellence: Robert Steinmetz, Island Interface (watercolor, 37x28)
1.jpg


Martin J. Scully Memorial Award for Excellence in Transparent Watercolor: Katherine A. Cartwright, All Cracked Up III (watercolor, 26x32)
2.jpg


Richard Ochs Memorial Award: Natalie Smythe, Colorful Character (watercolor, 26x31)
3.jpg


Arne Lindmark Memorial Award: Ratindra Das, Algona Fog Lifting (watercolor, 28x36)
4.jpg


Friede Strobl Memorial Award: Mel Stabin, Amigos, Patzcuaro (watercolor, 30x38)
5.jpg

The juror for the 2007 exhibition was Lalit Masih, signature member of the American Watercolor Society (Dolphin Fellow), National Watercolor Society and the Northeast Watercolor Society. Mark your calendar now for next year’s exhibition, Oct. 23-Nov. 9, 2008. For a prospectus, go to www.northeastws.com.


Overheard
11/7/2007 12:03:06 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, November 05, 2007
Chuck Close Encounters
Posted by Kelly

61zh3IbfRHL._AA240_.jpgI was surprised to learn recently that Chuck Close suffers from prosopagnosia (otherwise known as face blindness) and has difficulty recognizing or remembering faces. Yet, ironically, his iconic in-your-face (pardon the pun) face paintings have been his claim to fame for 40 years.

When Close first burst onto the art scene in the late ’60s with billboard-sized black-and-white portraits, he redefined what portraiture could be. His most recent work, painterly "prismatic grids," offers us yet another take on the genre.

In the book Chuck Close: Work, Christopher Finch brings all of Close's paintings together, as well as a selection of the artist's prints and personal photographs. The images lose something in scale, of course, but in terms of sheer volume (more than 300 illustrations) and insight into the artist's work and personality, the collection is awesome. I ordered my copy on Amazon.com.

Close is also the inspiration for a new ballet, C to C (Close to Chuck), which made its world premiere on October 27 at the American Ballet Theatre in New York. The ballet includes music composed by friend and frequent subject Philip Glass and backdrops designed by Close.

NPR recently rebroadcast an interview with Close on its Fresh Air program. Take a listen here.

Reviews
11/5/2007 9:46:21 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Joe Andoe’s Jubilee City
Posted by jessica

Andoe.jpgAlthough it’s laced more with musings on dysfunctional family ties and hard-knocks upbringing than his emergence into the New York City art world, Joe Andoe’s memoir Jubilee City does edify on why one pursues art and vice versa. It reads how I imagine Dukes of Hazzard might’ve played out if Luke and Bo had gone to art school—in a good way.

How Andoe, a Tulsa, Oklahoma, native arrived at art in the first place is odd. Where most artists come to it following a childhood dream, he admits it was because he discovered the teacher in his Tulsa Junior College art class sold his watercolors for $900 each—and he thought he could paint just as well as his teacher.

However, 25 years later, his commitment to a career in visual art remains; Andoe’s works are in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and the Whitney Museum of Art in New York, among other venues, and his short stories have been published as well in journals Open City, Bomb and Bald Ego. Particularly interesting in Jubilee City: A Memoir at Full Speed are stories of the NYC gallery scene, crooked art dealers and pseudo-artists.

Check out some of Andoe’s paintings and prints at www.joeandoe.com.



Reviews
10/31/2007 10:15:24 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, October 29, 2007
Lost & Found: Inspiration
Posted by sarah

img_0040.jpgIf you're looking for artistic inspiration--or just a way of avoiding the (sometimes very hard) work of painting--you might consider Found Photos, if you haven't already.imagem-217.jpg

Intrigued by the photos he found in a fileshare network, the site's creator Rich Vogel, began sifting through them and compiling archives of his favorite shots. Scrolling through his selections can get  heady--it's a bit like watching the secret lives of others--but at the same time, it's a good lesson in how the ordinary can become extraordinary. Sometimes it's all a matter of context and sometimes it's the audience that makes the art.

Join the Found Photos mailing list and recieve found images by e-mail here. I pulled the selections shown here from several different archives. I'd love to include about 110 more.
misc-army-pix-1950.jpg







Overheard
10/29/2007 3:54:17 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, October 25, 2007
A Window: The Joseph Raffael Exhibition at the Nancy Hoffman Gallery in NYC
Posted by sarah

JR07x9-1.jpg
In September of 2006, I began a conversation with artist Joseph Raffael that was to become what I can only describe as an experience, and certainly one of the best that I’ve had as an editor at the magazine.  It began simply enough—we talked about art and we talked about the artist's life and we talked about his big beautiful paintings and the big beautiful worlds happening inside them—but those early conversations were to become the root of one of the most meaningful features in the magazine, one that has reverberated in ways not even I could have expected.

Our June 2007 issue created a stir among our readers, many of whom wrote to us—and Raffael—of their admiration for his work.  They told us how inspired they felt and they sent us the paintings to prove it.  They said they wanted to see more, hear more, and be there when it happened.  And we promised to deliver:

With our first video exclusive, we take you inside the world of those big beautiful paintings. Join us on a guided tour of the most recent exhibition of Raffael’s work at the Nancy Hoffman Gallery in New York City: Curator/gallery owner Nancy Hoffman offers special insight into the show she describes as “a window to new artistic terrain” and the artist opens his journals to reveal the painting process that brought the work on display into fruition. Click here to enter.

Pictured above: Reflections (watercolor on paper, 56 1/4x86) by Joseph Raffael.


10/25/2007 2:29:56 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Watercolor Magic 2006 Issues on CD
Posted by jessica

748_808_large.jpgIt happens all the time: You’re having trouble with a passage in your painting inspired by New England architecture, and you remember reading a particularly helpful Watercolor Magic article on painting details in buildings. Exactly when that was published, you haven’t a clue, and your stack of archives is as tall as your desk.

Help is on the way. For reasons such as this, we’ve just put all of our 2006 issues on one CD—so now you can save both time and space, instantly accessing the entire year’s worth of articles and advice. Just pop the CD into your computer, click on the issue you want to open, and go directly to a specific article by clicking on the respective bookmark.

CD_WCMimage.jpgOther pluses: The articles are printable for your own reference or sharing with friends; websites are hot-linked, thus allowing you to click on them and go directly online; and a comprehensive subject index makes the content fully searchable.

They’re available now at our online back issue store for $19.96. Click here for details.

By the way, that column, “More Than Bricks and Mortar,” by Mark Willenbrink, ran in the April 2006 issue.





From the Magazine | Tips and Tools
10/24/2007 10:15:09 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Host an Art Installation on Your Computer
Posted by Sarah




The Holding Pattern Screensaver (available as a free download for Mac or PC), created by Los Angeles artist Cathy Davies, makes art that moves out of your computer's idle time:

The Holding Pattern Screensaver turns your idle computer screen into an airplane window, complete with a moving aerial view. Every time the screensaver launches, it plays a unique sequence of realistic, subtle animations.

I've only tried and tested the Holding Pattern Screensaver (you can upgrade to a version that runs without the occasional "nag screen" for a small fee, by the way) but Davies offers several other free downloads on her site, which is a screensaver development project "founded on the belief that screensavers are a hybrid form of cinema and installation (pun intended)--a unique and underexploited medium."  

Remember to adjust your screensaver preferences if you want to take "a relaxing meditative trip around the world," as Davies phrases it. If your timing is off and (like me) you're rarely idle, you may never get your window seat.


Overheard
10/23/2007 8:53:04 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]