Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Not that I thought that I was any great drawer, but I did feel like I was putting an orderliness to the chaos around-something like Red did,



A new world of art was opening up my mind. Sometimes early in the day we'd go uptown to the city museums, see giant oil-painted canvases by artists like Velizquez, Goya, Delacroix, Rubens, El Greco. Also twentieth-century stuff-Picasso, Braque, Kandinsky, Rouault, Bonnard. Suze's favorite current modernist artist was Red Grooms, and he became mine, too. I loved the way everything he did crushed itself into some fragile world, the rickety clusters of parts all packed together and then, standing back, you could see the complex whole of it all. Grooms's stuff spoke volumes to me. He was the artist I checked out most. Red's stuff was extravagant, his work cut like it was done by acid. All of his mediums-crayon, watercolor, gouache, sculpture or mixed media-collage tableaus I liked the way he put the stuff together. It was bold, announced its presence in glaring details. There was a connection in Red's work to a lot of the folk songs I sang. It seemed to be on the same stage. What the folk songs were lyrically, Red's songs were visually-all the bums and cops, the lunatic bustle, the claustrophobic alleys-all. the carnie vitality. Red was the Uncle Dave Macon of the art world. He incorporated every living thing into something and made it scream-everything side by side created equal-old tennis shoes, vending machines, alligators that crawled through sewers, dueling pistols, the Staten Island Ferry and Trinity Church, 42nd Street, profiles of skyscrapers. Brahman bulls, cowgirls, rodeo queens and Mickey Mouse heads, castle turrets and Mrs. O'Leary's cow, creeps and greasers and weirdos and grinning, bejeweled nude models, faces with melancholy looks, blurs of sorrow-everything hilarious but not jokey. Familiar figures from history, too Lincoln, Hugo, Baudelaire, Rembrandt-all done with graphic finesse, burned out as powerful as possible. I loved the way Grooms used laughter as a diabolical weapon. Subconsciously, I was wondering if it was possible to write songs like that.

About that time I began to make some of my own drawings. I actually picked up the habit from Suze, who drew a lot. What would I draw? Well, I guess I would start with whatever was at hand. I sat at the table, took out a pencil and paper and drew the typewriter, a crucifix, a rose, pencils and knives and pins, empty cigarette boxes. I'd lose track of time completely. An hour or two could go by and it would seem like only a minute. Not that I thought that I was any great drawer, but I did feel like I was putting an orderliness to the chaos around-something like Red did, but he did it on a much grander level. In a strange way I noticed that it purified the experience of my eye and I would make drawings of my own for years to come.




Source: http://museinspire.blogspot.com/2010/08/not-that-i-thought-that-i-was-any-great.html

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Wednesday, August 25, 2010

OMG I have time to paint again 2!!!


The weather's turning cold again, YAY!!!! Summer just sucks the life out of me. I never paint anything good in the summer, if I even paint at all. The return of cold weather is like waking up refreshed, inspired and ready to create again.

Source: http://mandiartblog.blogspot.com/2010/08/omg-i-have-time-to-paint-again-2.html

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Monday, August 16, 2010

Glidden Paint



This is a Sponsored Post written by me on behalf of Glidden. All opinions are 100% mine.





 If you're getting ready to do some painting around the house like I am, you should know about Glidden paint! Found at your local Home Depot, Glidden paint is the way to go for perfect coverage and overall appearance.  I'm getting ready to repaint my daughter's room and I know this paint is my ticket to a perfect look!  What's fun is you can even go to the Glidden website at www.Glidden.com and check out all their wonderful array of colors right from your computer before you head out to buy some!  My daughter and I decided on the color Lilac Shimmer. I think it's going to be perfect for her Tinkerbell themed room!



Glidden Paint wants you to take a colorful test drive of their Glidden Ready-To-Go Paint Testers!  What's so great about these paint testers you might ask?  For starters, these paint testers come with a handy mini brush built right into the lid, making trying before you commit to buying simple, easy, and fun!  You can also purchase these testers to match your Glidden paint for easy touch ups. If you have kids like me you know how handy these would be for lets say crayon or permanent marker art.



Glidden makes it easy to find an array of great projects using their Top 10 Color Palettes and XL Paint Chips!  These larger paint chips help you experience your color in your room's unique lighting.  I would recommend checking out the Glidden Room Painter to see how Glidden makes color easy at: 




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Also make sure to watch @Glidden_Paint on Twitter for fun tweets!


Visit my sponsor: Glidden

Source: http://textbookmommy.blogspot.com/2010/08/glidden-paint.html

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Real People, 2010

First-time visitors to Woodstock, Illinois usually get a sense of déjà vu if they ever saw the hilarious Harold Ramis movie, "Groundhog Day" starring Bill Murray and Andie MacDowell.


Woodstock has a charming downtown square with a green park at its center. One of the landmark buildings is the old court house, which is now an art center.


My oil painting "Meg" is included in the exhibition "Real People 2010," on view now through September 26th at the Old Court House Arts Center, 101 N. Johnson St. in Woodstock, IL.


The Artist's reception and awards ceremony on August 28th from 7-9:30 pm will coincide with the Woodstock Jazz Festival.



"Meg" is a painting of the well-known artists' model, Meg Guttman, sitting in a wooden chair, reading. The simplified interior evokes Francis Bacon's claustrophobic settings, as if she is inside a box. No smears or splatters, though, except maybe that wisp of hair.


It's funny, I ran into Meg last Sunday at the Gethsemane art fair where she was showing her own artwork. She said, "Hey, I heard you are exhibiting a painting of me somewhere!" She had heard from a friend that this was up.


Meg also sings with a beautiful soprano voice. My favorite is when she sings the Lakme Flower Duet "Sous le Dome Epais."


She's certainly a real person for the "Real People, 2010" exhibition! If you are up that way, stop in and take a look.


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"Real People 2010" Exhibition
August 5 – Sept. 26, 2010
Old Courthouse Arts Center‎, Woodstock, IL‎


The Old Court House Arts Figurative League and the Northwest Area Arts Council present: "Real People 2010" an exhibition of all media depicting the human face and form.


Juried by Gregg Hertzlieb, the director/curator of the Brauer Museum of Art at Valparaiso University in Valparaiso, Indiana, the exhibition was selected from entries by 115 artists from across North America, including Alaska and British Columbia, Canada. Cash prizes totaling more than $500.00 will be awarded.


Opening Reception: Saturday Aug. 28, 7-9:30 pm


The reception coincides with the Woodstock Jazz Festival.


Old Courthouse Arts Center‎
101 North Johnson Street
Woodstock, IL‎
(815) 338-4525‎



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Source: http://fletcherhayes.blogspot.com/2010/08/real-people-2010.html

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