Showing posts with label artists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artists. Show all posts

Saturday, December 23, 2017

New Beginnings




Studio wall 2017



I began this blog in 2009 with "some of this and that about art " and also featured artists working their studios. I have always been interested in artists' inspirations, story, personal history,point of view and studio life.

What inspires you? What makes the hair on your neck go up? What do you take pictures of? What is your personal history? What artist's work turns you on and why? What do you see outside your window in the studio? What's on your bookshelf? What do you listen to? Thoughts in the studio?

Those are the kind of questions I will be asking myself and others again.
Stayed tuned but meanwhile here are some interesting posts from the past:

Mine from 2009
Steven Alexander,Paul Benke,Hannalore Baron,Rebecca Crowell,Diane Englander,Lorrie Fredette,Brenda Goodman,Matt Langley ,Lucy Mink,Diane McGregor,Tim McFarlane,Nancy Natale
Leslie Neuman,Sue Post,Fran Shalom,Titles,Inside/Outside,Etiquette of the Studio Visit


"Talking" 48 x 38 pigment sticks on panel 2016    R&F Handmade Paint Collection




Friday, May 22, 2009

What artists have influenced you ? Nancy Tobin

Nancy Tobin is an artist living and working in Maplewood, NJ. She was recently in a show at the Parlor Gallery in Asbury Park, NJ and exhibits with Rupert Ravens Contemporary. She has a great new gig as a writer for the New York Times Local Blog interviewing artists in the Maplewood area. Bionic Fizz mixed media on panel 30 x 30 Nancy Tobin Here is what Nancy says about her work: My work deals with the power of memory. The human mind holds millions of snippets of visual memory. From the moment they are stored, memories become fiction; remembered, they become narrative. My art draws the viewer through that process. Organic forms (drawn out with scissors, paint, ink and pencil) are suspended in an atmosphere comprising layer upon layer of medium; the eye literally plumbs the painting’s depths in pursuit of meaning. My work spans cultures and media to include organic forms from nature, Asian art and textiles, cartoons, and decorative elements from around the world. Drawing is the genesis of my creative process; drawn forms imbue the work with organic unpredictably. It’s the most magical part of my paintings, representing a loss of control and an invitation to the viewer to follow. Representation is as powerful as it is futile. 1. Walt Disney- Love him or hate him, it's hard to deny his influence on our culture today. Saturday matinees at the local theater in Grand Rapids allowed me my first glimpses into the world of art. While the action was playing out in the foreground, I would find myself entranced by the captivating world created by the studio's background artists. 2. Hayao Miyazaki- Also inspired by Disney, Hayao Miyazaki weaves tapestries of make-believe where humans roam with fantastical creatures in glorious landscapes — with just enough creepy darkness to keep your teeth from rotting. 3. Islamic Miniatures- I'm amazed at the intricacy put into these tiny jewels. Oh, and WOW — the colors! 4. Richard Diebenkorn- I pored over his work when I was learning to paint in San Francisco. His color, his layering, his strokes seem effortless. Looking at his work makes me homesick for the Bay area. 5. Ernst Haeckel- His Art Forms of Nature is my Bible. 6. Paul Cezanne- I taught myself painting by copying his. 7. Andy Goldsworthy- His work is like a conversation with the Earth. 8. Chuck Close- His life-long commitment to the portrait provides continuity as he reinvents and challenges himself all along the way. 9. Mark Rothko- For his exploration into the dark — a place I'm happy just to skirt the edges. 10. The Universe- Maybe a cliché, but one of my biggest inspirations is what I see when I look out my window.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

What artists have influenced you ? Pam Farrell


Here is the work of Pam Farrell, her list of influences and her statement. She lives and works in Hunterdon County, NJ. Her work was recently exhibited at the Morpeth Gallery, N.J. and she is currently included in the Encaustic Works '09 show sponsored by R and F Encaustics, Kingston, NY.



Hypnotist Collector ochre 2 encaustic 18 x 18 2009 Pam Farrell
Just a note: As you scroll through the lists of influences you will find links to artists that you may or may not be familiar with- I have been introduced to a few, so far.

Pam says:
"Here's my list, in no particular order. Ask me again tomorrow and I'll likely give you a different list. Some of these are names of artists whose work I've looked to for a long time, others, more recent"

Kazmir Malevich
Jim Lee
Joseph Beuys
Susan Rothenberg
De kooning
Eva Hesse
Brice Marden
Diebenkorn
Milton Avery
Gee's Bend quiltmakers
Charles Mingus
Judith Streeter
Aaron Siskind



Ophelia Red encaustic on panel 36 x 36 inches 2009 Pam Farrell

ABOUT THE WORK:
My work explores issues of knowledge, experience, memory, and identity. I am interested in the spaces and places between the cracks of what I know—the areas tenuously marked by indeterminate boundaries.
In a formal sense, I am attracted to colors that are not easily nameable, form that is ambiguous and indefinable. In the work I seek to bring forward traces of memory and experience that cannot be expressed with words. Encaustic—molten, pigmented, beeswax—and oil with graphite are my primary tools for this nonverbal communication.
Pam Farrell
http://www.pamelafarrell.com/





Monday, May 11, 2009

What artists have influenced you and how? Leslie Neumann


Ghost Swamp 45 x37 encaustic and oil Leslie Neumann

I have had the pleasure of knowing Leslie since 1984.We had been in touch off and on for many years. Just recently we have reconnected and I am very happy to have her list of influences and her work on the blog.

Here is an excerpt from her statement:
"My home and studio are located on the Gulf of Mexico, where I’m surrounded by more than 14,000 acres of coastal wilderness. I hear no traffic, and at night I listen to the mullet jump, while seeing stars reflected in the water. All of this beauty has inspired and influenced me as a painter.

But my process and medium – encaustic (hot wax) and oil paint -- are equally influential. The wax is applied with a brush while it is still hot, and after it congeals, I scrape through to reveal other layers of color, incising pictographs, words, and marks into the wax. The encaustic is used to its full advantage to provide textural and sensual surfaces, while the images themselves are emotional landscapes."




Mist 40 x36 encaustic and oil Leslie Neumann

Artists whom I respect and admire:
1. cave art
2. Van Gogh
3. Cezanne
4. Picasso
5. Rembrandt
6. George Inness
7. Bruce Nauman
8. Squeak Carnath
9. Ida Applebroog
10. Gregory Gillespie
11. Russell Thurston
12. Sandy Winters
13. De Kooning

Leslie Neumann
http://www.leslieneumann.com

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

What artists have influenced you and how?




Lately I have been brought back to review my list of influences and artists I admire. Of course, the Cezanne and Beyond show is the obvious inspiration but I have had a list for quite a while.
I made it several years ago and I still stand by it with a few additions. It is a good way to clarify who you are, where you are, and where you want to be in your art-making. Today I look at my list and think I have a long way to go and that I am not looking at enough contemporary art. ( I will put that on my agenda.)

So, in the spirit of the interactive blogs of Pam Farrell, John Tallman and J.T. Kirkland I invite you to email your top 10-15 influences with a Jpeg of your work and I will challenge myself to figure out how to post them.

lpart@earthlink.net

My list is what inspires me in each artist's work (not in any order)
Eva Hesse: the oddness, the quirkiness, the beauty of the strange, the persona
Ree Morton: changed the way I looked and thought about sculpture

Philip Guston: the courage of his later paintings, humor, irony
Jackson Pollock: the power of the unconscious
Squeak Carnwath: use of words, stories, paint Rembrandt: lights and darks
Vermeer: the window light
Brice Marden: calligraphy is drawing, the meditative state
Matisse: the joy of color, the use of black
Rothko: emotive power of color light
Jasper Johns : intelligence
Giacometti: the isolation of his figures and mark making in his paintings
Joan Mitchell: her use of color, brushstroke, her abstract painting of nature and landscape
Amy Sillman: interesting, narrative paintings
Andy Goldsworthy: amazing use of materials, relationship to landscape and nature
Michal Revner: the real thing, image, depth, intelligence, personal yet political and her use of media (photography and video ) in a painterly way
Martin Puryear: his sculpture has it all

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Philadelphia

A year ago I was included in the New Talent Show at Rosenfeld Gallery in Philadelphia.



Since then I have been back and forth from NJ several times. What a great place - a city with many visual contrasts. There are a few galleries that I try to visit when I go-Gallery Joe , Larry Becker, Bridgette Mayer GAllery . I went with fellow artist Pam Farrell who lives close to Philly to see her show at the Ruth Morpeth Gallery in Hopewell,NJ Then we went to First Friday and met several artists including Michele Marcuse ,whose work was is showing at the Painted Bride Art Center and
Tim Mc Farlane at the opening of his show at Bridgette Mayer. Great art, nice people-a community!
I think I have been living under my rock too long! More about that later.

By the way, last Sunday I went to the Cezanne and Beyond show at the Philadelphia Museum of Art which blew me away. Brice Marden, Giacometti, Matisse,Picasso, Ellsworth Kelly, Jasper Johns ,(many more) and the influence of Cezanne on their work.

Very smart, informative and inspiring exhibition!