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 Monday, April 21, 2008
Printastic: Jeanette Pasin Sloan
Posted by sarah

sloandotsII_lg.jpgIf you, like me, received your introduction to the art world from your mother (Mine went so far as to dress as famous artists, by the way. Her van Gogh was complete with bandanged ear.) you'll appreciate the excitement I experienced when my mother expressed an interest in buying work by one of the artists I'd recently interviewed. She was simply floored by Jeanette Pasin Sloan's remarkable still lifes. And I have to admit, I was thrilled by the prospect of seeing Sloan's work hanging in the family home.

If you (too) would like to see Sloan's work on your walls, you'll be pleased to hear that Landfall Press has collaborated with the artist to produce a brand new print: Dots II is one of Sloan's most ambitious prints to date, both for its impressive size (38x36.5) and the number of successive color overlays (nine). The painting represents the new direction Sloan's work is heading, a territory where the lines between representation and abstraction are blurred.

Incidentally, Landfall publishes work from a wide range of artists and has done so for more than 30 years. If you have an hour to get lost in the archives, you could wind up spending two.

Watch a video that takes you inside Sloan's studio here. And read the feature I wrote on on Sloan's work here.


Overheard
4/21/2008 8:52:02 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Art Chicago 2008
Posted by jessica

logo.jpgThose who live in close proximity to Chicago (or who happen to be visiting next weekend) will want to take advantage of the arts filled weekend ahead. Art Chicago, held April 25-28 in the Merchandise Mart, features international contemporary and modern art—painting, photography, drawing, prints, sculpture, video and special installations—by more than 2,000 artists (represented by 180 of the world's top galleries).

How delighted we (in Cincinnati) were to learn several months back that Cincinnati’s own Carl Solway Gallery had been chosen by a committee of esteemed names in the art world to exhibit in this year’s festivities! “Carl Solway Gallery can consider themselves among the finest company in the arts world today,” said Tony Karman, Art Chicago director of Sales and development. Check out their space if you go.


Overheard
4/16/2008 3:29:52 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, April 14, 2008
Watercolor for Sale
Posted by sarah

Picture 1.pngI must (first) confess a bit of an addiction: I love sifting through all of the beautiful handmade items on Esty. The amount of time I can spend doing this is not small, which is why I generally try to avoid the site altogether while I'm at work, but today I have an excuse!

I just wanted to draw your attention to many watercolor artists who sell their work there. You'll find watercolors as inexpensive as $0.20, ranging all the way up to $10,000, and a lot of interesting work in between. You'll also find some nice cards, illustrations, watercolor-inspired jewelry and giclee prints. If you can get past the inexplicable preponderance of faerie art (my apologies to those among us who are devotees), you can find at least an hour's worth of items to peruse and perhaps you'll even find yourself at home enough to consider selling your wares there.

If you're looking for advice on selling your work, check out the June issue of the magazine. We walk you through the in's and out's of choosing the best venues for selling your paintings with our special report, "Art for Sale." Maggie Latham, Robert Highsmith, Dwight Baird and Michael Chesley Johnson weigh in on art festivals, galleries and exhibitions and selling work online.



Overheard | Tips and Tools
4/14/2008 11:35:04 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, April 09, 2008
Colorful Thoughts
Posted by jessica

rebus.jpgHaving just returned from New York, where I caught Color Chart at MOMA, I’ve got color on the brain. Aside from the few waves of Stendhal Syndrome set on by the museum’s stellar collection, I found the exhibition as thought provoking as it was easy on the eyes. “Color Chart: Reinventing Color 1950 to Today” looks at contemporary artists’ color decisions for chance, readymade source or arbitrary systems and the beauty that follows.

Particularly interesting was viewing Robert Rauschenberg’s 8-by-almost-11-foot mixed media collage Rebus (shown here). The artist, influenced by Marcel Duchamp’s Tu m’ (also part of the show), wanted to depict paint as a commercial product and, as our docent explained, he bought unlabeled quarts of surplus paint because they were cheap and made a rule for himself that he had to use each can at least once, no matter the color. Talk about a limited palette! Check the website to view the rest of the exhibition online.

Speaking of color, that’s how social networking site for selling music Guitarati is organizing its music. Click here for details from Wired.


Overheard | Reviews
4/9/2008 1:14:29 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, April 07, 2008
Highsmith's Trains and Bison
Posted by sarah

TrainAtAntonito22x30.jpgWe love to hear from our featured artists that they're doing well (which, according to most artists' internal barometers, means that they're painting like crazy and loving it) and so it's with particular satisfaction that we get to share this kind of news with you:

If you've read the February 2007 issue of the magazine (one of my favorite covers, by the way) you've seen Robert Highsmith's fine southwest- and South Carolina-inspired watercolor landscapes. Now Highsmith is exploring two new dual interests: trains and bison. Marigold Arts has announced a solo show, Robert Highsmith: Into the West (June 6th through July 9th), featuring paintings done at Chama, one of New Mexico’s most scenic venues, and at Ted Turner's ranch near Santa Fe. Sounds tantalizing, eh? From the press release:

Highsmith’s paintings make strong, simple statements that capture the light and landscapes of the Southwest, evincing equal parts technical virtuosity and heart. He paints primarily landscapes, occasionally focusing on a cow or architectural structure. Highsmith’s paintings reveal a softness of light, shadow, and brush that can only be accomplished with the immediacy of watercolor, complimented by the stark contrasts that lend the work its photorealism.  

If this doesn't satisfy your craving for Highsmith's work, pick up the June issue of the magazine (on newsstands April 22, 2008). Highsmith is one of several artists who share their experiences in a Special Report on the fine art of selling your own fine art.

Train at Antonio (watercolor on paper, 22x30) by Robert Highsmith



From the Magazine | Overheard
4/7/2008 9:17:21 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, April 04, 2008
Sneak Peek at Zbukvic's Sketchbook
Posted by Kelly

horses.jpgOur June cover artist, Joseph Zbukvic, allowed us rare access to one of his precious sketchbooks. Filled with lively figure studies, dynamic trackside sketches of racehorses, and enlightening notes to self, the artist's sketchbook reveals a little of the magic behind the scenes of his beautiful paintings. We featured as many sketches as space allowed in the magazine, but couldn't bare to let this treasure go without recording a few more gems for you.

Of course, nothing can replace the visceral experience of flipping through an artist's sketchbook pages, lingering over the notes in the margins, and running your fingers along the edge of a particularly masterful line, but this video presentation may be the next best thing. Enjoy!

heads.jpg

Look for Zbukvic's cover story in the June 2008 issue, on newsstands April 22.


From the Magazine | Videos
4/4/2008 1:03:06 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Wednesday, April 02, 2008
Rosy Watercolor Illustration
Posted by sarah

Green2-th.jpgI was admiring some lovely watercolor illustrations in the last issue of Harper's magazine and thinking about watercolor illustration today when I came upon this nice little site (A Petal from the Rose) devoted to Elizabeth Shippen Green, one of yesterday's most brilliant talents in the field. On the site, you'll find an extensive biography of the artist, ruminations on themes such as gardens, darkness and youth in her work, and (most importantly) a treasure trove of bright images from the Library of Congress. There's even a link to the Library's site, where you can order prints from the originals. Green is pictured here in her studio at the Red Rose Inn, where she lived with fellow artists and lifelong friends Jessie Willcox Smith and Violet Oakley.

 




4/2/2008 9:23:06 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, March 31, 2008
American Watercolor Society 2008 Exhibition
Posted by Kelly

F+W has removed this thread at the request of Ms. Luxenburg's attorney, and the thread will not be accessible while we are reviewing Ms. Luxenburg's objections.

From the Magazine | Overheard
3/31/2008 12:19:22 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, March 26, 2008
National Women's History Month Celebration
Posted by jessica

poster_web.jpgAs featured in the April issue of Watercolor Artist, this year’s National Women’s History Month (March) honors “Women’s Art, Women’s Vision.” The following 2008 honorees will be celebrated in New York City this weekend for a culminating series of events (click here for the schedule):

Judy Chicago (1939- ), painter/printmaker/needleworker
Harmony Hammond (1954- ), painter
Edna Hibel (1917- ), colorist
Lihua Lei (1966- ), multimedia installation artist
Cecilia Rose O’Neill (1874-1944), painter/illustrator/sculptor
Violet Oakley (1874-1961), muralist/stained glass artist
Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith (1940- ), abstract painter/lithographer
Faith Ringgold (1934- ), painter/quilter
Miriam Shapiro (1923- ), printmaker/painter
Lorna Simpson (1960- ), photographer
Nancy Spero (1926- ), painter
June Claire Wayne (1918- ), painter/lithographer

Also this weekend (March 29), The Fund for Women Artists launches the first Support Women Artists Now Day, or “SWAN Day,” a solidarity movement scheduled for the last Saturday of Women’s History Month. Find out how to get involved by clicking here.


From the Magazine
3/26/2008 12:07:20 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Monday, March 24, 2008
Where's the Art?
Posted by sarah

images12345.jpegAccording to The Wall Street Journal, collectors are betting the next hot art hub will be in Cuba. As evidence of this phenomenon, the Journal sites Mario Carreño's modernist painting Danza Afro-Cubana, which sold for $2.6 million, breaking Sotheby's auction record for a Cuban work. For those concerned about the fact that it's illegal for Americans to travel to Cuba to buy art, there's this exciting little legal loophole: "Collectors are taking advantage of a little-known exception to the U.S. trade embargo with Cuba: It is legal for Americans to buy Cuban art. Unlike cigars or rum, which are considered commercial products, the U.S. government classifies Cuban artworks as cultural assets, and Americans can bring them into the U.S."

According to Der Spiegel, the desert metropolis Dubai has reinvented itself as the center of the art world. As evidence, the magazine sites Art Dubai, which runs from March 19th to 22nd: Art Dubai "spans over two massive grand halls (over 2000 square meters), across a sprawling outside palm-shaded pavilion, and into an underground garage, which has been dubbed the 'Art Park.' All of this was created in the past several weeks at the perfectly manicured Madinat Jumeirah Resort, located on the Gulf coast across from the Palm Jumeirah, the largest manmade island in the world." See a photo gallery of the show here.

If you're looking for an art experience a little closer to home, think about visiting Pennsylvania's  Laurel Highlands, where it's possible to visit three Frank Lloyd Wright homes within a 30 mile radius. They call it the Wright trifecta. Read one writer's description of the experience in The Washington Post.



Overheard
3/24/2008 11:13:52 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Downloadable Watercolor Glossary
Posted by jessica

While perusing the Brooklyn Museum’s past exhibition (“Brushed With Light: American Landscape Watercolors from the Collection,” which included some of the works our staff recently viewed at the Taft Museum of Art) on its website, I came across the museum’s excellent multimedia highlights. Go to the site for an audio slideshow, behind-the-scenes notes and a downloadable PDF watercolor glossary (on the right-hand panel). Here's a preview of the document:

wcglossary.jpg




Tips and Tools
3/19/2008 11:52:53 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Monday, March 17, 2008
Press Release Roundup
Posted by sarah

We often recieve news from museums and galleries that doesn't quite fit with our scheduled content, but is still interesting nonetheless. Rather than let it languish in our inbox, I thought I'd pull together a roundup of some of the most compelling tidbits. Enjoy!

clip_image001.jpgArizona artist, Diana Madaras, is working on a project that began with a casual meeting with a South African gentleman, who then sent her to Africa on safari. In exchange, she's creating a series of wildlife paintings. The African Sojourn show will feature watercolor, acrylic and oil paintings, and will kick off with a reception, May 18th. 100% of the proceeds from the show will benefit animals in Arizona and Africa. For more information visit Madaras Gallery online.

Why paint or draw the landscape when a click of the camera can capture any view orSpringThawOil24x36.jpg moment? David Inshaw and Bridget Macdonald provide the answer in their first joint exhibition of recent paintings and drawings at the Chapel Row Gallery from April 5th-22nd.

Natural Beauty is a solo exhibition of more than 50 new paintings by James McGrew. The show will include plein air and studio works depicting the beauty of the west, primarily landscapes of Mt. Hood, Columbia River Gorge, Yosemite, The Grand Canyon, Oregon Coast, and Mt. St. Helens. At the Lawrence Gallery, from April 1st-30th.

Picture.jpg
The directors of Marlborough Fine Art are delighted to announce the first UK exhibition of paintings by celebrated Chinese artist, Zhang Qikai. It will comprise twenty recent works, many using the image of the Panda, paintings for which he has been highly praised. Born in Sichuan Province in 1950, Qikai has shown extensively in China and Japan and in Germany, where he lived in the 1990s. The apparent loneliness of living in a foreign land and a deep understanding of the differences between east and west are ever present in his work. From May 29th-June 21st.

 
If you'd like Watercolor Artist to share news of your upcoming exhibition or opening, e-mail us.

 
 




Overheard
3/17/2008 12:20:54 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
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