Tuesday, December 10, 2013

MONOCHROMATIC ART is COMFORTING

        Monochromatic Art is something I find very comforting.  I love to see it and I love to paint it.  But what exactly is monochromatic art?  Well anything done in the same hue, or different shades of the same color.




        The same monochromatic results can be achieved in floral art, using variations of one color.


           


        When my wife and I owned a flower shop, I 
especially enjoyed doing monochromatic floral designs.  They looked rich, much more classier than some arrangements you see that are just a bunch of colors that do not match and leave you with an unsettling feeling.





















        Monochromatic art whether it's paint on canvas or flowers in a vase is always more soothing to experience.


















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Tuesday, November 26, 2013

CARNEGIE INTERNATIONAL ART EXHIBIT with JOSEPH STERANKO

        A number of years ago I new a man named Joseph Steranko.  Joseph was 80 at the time and more creative than anyone I have ever met.  In his life time he achieved many things and had many interests, he was an artist, a floral designer, a carpenter, a book collector, an art collector, he new construction, sculpting and many many more interests that I can't even remember.

        He lived in the South Side of Pittsburgh, with his wife who was a fashion consultant, what a creative couple.  They purchased an old machine shop and converted it into a home.  The interior walls were all brick and from floor to ceiling, both floors were covered with art.

        He used to take me to art galleries and art museums.  In the early 2000's he took me to the Carnegie International Art Exhibition at the Carnegie Art Museum in Pittsburgh, PA.

Carnegie Art Museum Today

Carnegie Art Museum Today


        We toured the show and he examined every single piece of art very carefully, whether it was a painting, sculpture or an installation, it didn't matter to him, he loved it ALL.  Where some people at the show just strolled around, Joseph appreciated every brush stroke, every shadow, every color, it was amazing to watch and experience with him.

        I have never felt art the way I did that day, even as we were leaving, outside the building as we stepped off the curb to go to the car he stopped me and said look at the black skid marks in the parking lot against the grey asphalt and how they are placed with the yellow paint on the curb.  Now that's art he said!  And I got it, there is beauty every where, everything balances, even if it is unintentional.
     
        I have never looked at art or painted the same since that day, I can look at a tree or a sunset and appreciate it more than ever, every piece of art done by man looks good to me, I have 9 grand kids and I love every line they draw or every picture they paint me because they are expressing themselves.

     Life is truly great, stop to enjoy it.

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Wednesday, November 13, 2013

PAINTING SELLS FOR $142.4 MILLION

        That's what the headline read, Painting sells for $142.4 million, in U.S. dollars.  There is hope for all of us.

        So what would make a single piece of art so valuable you ask?  Well to be honest with you it makes no sense to me either.


Three Studies of Lucian Freud, Francis Bacon, 1969
       
 The painting titled Three Studies of Lucian Freud, by Francis Bacon, 1969.  So a little background on the artist.  Francis Bacon was born in Ireland in 1909 and died in 1992 and had gone through three different periods or fazes during his career; Expressionism, Cubism and Surrealism.  Although this style of art has always intrigued me, I have to admit I find Bacon's work rather unsettling and at times grotesque.

        I believe his life and bizarre background had something to do with the exceptional high price this painting brought in, and who actually purchased it, and why, that is another mystery.




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Tuesday, October 29, 2013

JACKSON POLLOCK-introduced-NEW TECHNIQUES


        Jackson Pollock revolutionized the modern art world with his new techniques of splatter and drip painting, which involved pouring dripping and splattering his paint directly onto canvases which were laying on the studio floor.






   By using this technique he was able to achieve a quicker way of creating his art and applying paint from any direction.  Also I might add, he was able to express himself while the thought he wanted to convey was fresh in his mind.





        I have always been inspired by his statement "I have no fear of making changes, destroying the image etc, because the painting has a life of it's own".

        I live by that statement with every painting I make, I let the brush take me to another place and I always love it.




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Wednesday, October 9, 2013

RUSSIAN AVANTE GARDE

        I have always felt a great sadness for the artists who lived in the Soviet Union during most of the twentieth century, free expression was always restricted and the message they wanted to convey to the world was silenced, due to an oppressive government regime


        My appreciation for Russian Avant-Garde Art runs deep, especially being an artist myself, living in America, where I was free to paint and express myself any way I'd like without consequences.

        Although the oppression started many years before I was born, several artists I have admired lived in that period of history.

        Among notable artists was Kazimir Malevich who's ideas of the avant-garde eventually clashed with the state direction of Socialist Realism.

Kazimir Malevich
Kazimir Malevich










        In search of new forms of expression, the artists of the day were highly eclectic in their art forms, and thus were prone to harsh criticism for inclusion of such modern directions as impressionism and cubism, since these movements existed before the revolution and hence were associated with "decadent bourgeois art".

        In the 1950s Moscow artist Ely Bielutin encouraged his students to experiment with abstraction ism  a practice that was thoroughly discouraged by the Artists' Union, which strictly enforced the official policy of Socialist Realism.  Artists who chose to paint in alternative styles had to do so completely in private and were never able to exhibit or sell their work. As a result, Nonconformist Art developed along a separate path than the Official Art that was recorded in the history books.

        The most infamous incident regarding nonconformist artists in the former Soviet Union was the 1974 Bulldozer Exhibition, which took place in a park just outside of Moscow, and included work by such artists as Oskar Rabin, Komar and Melamid, Alexandr Zhdanov, Nikolai Smoliakov and Leonid Sokov. The artists involved had written to the authorities for permission to hold the exhibition but received no answer to their request. They decided to go ahead with the exhibition anyway, which consisted solely of unofficial works of art that did not fit into the rubric of Socialist Realism. The KGB put an end to the exhibition just hours after it opened by bringing in bulldozers to completely destroy all of the artworks present. Fortunately for the artists, the foreign press had been there to witness the event. The world-wide coverage of it forced the authorities to permit an exhibition of Nonconformist Art two weeks later in Izmailovsky Park in Moscow.

        By the 1980s, Mikhail Gorbachev's policies of Perestroika and Glasnost made it virtually impossible for the authorities to place restrictions on artists or their freedom of expression. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the new market economy enabled the development of a gallery system, which meant that artists no longer had to be employed by the state, and could create work according to their own tastes, as well as the tastes of their private patrons. Consequently, after around 1986 the phenomenon of Nonconformist Art in the Soviet Union ceased to exist.

        And so it was, a creative struggle, that couldn't be contained, and eventually conquered in the end.
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Wednesday, October 2, 2013

PETER MAX the KING OF POP ART

        As you may have gathered from reading any of my posts, I am a child of the 60's, it has influenced my life and my art, and Peter Max was a large part of that influence.

        To quote from his own biography,"To the youth of America, the 60's was more than just another decade, it was the great American renaissance.  The Beatles sang about it, the musical Hair, brought it to Broadway stage."  One artist above all, Peter Max visually captured it's creative spirit and it's promise of the dawning of the Age of Aquarius."







      






       







      

I have always appreciated his style, his use of color and the message he seamed to always convey, but where did he come from and how did he get noticed.  Well to spare all the details of his early beginnings, he was a true student of his craft.

     




       Excited by the mid 60's counterculture explosion, Max turned to the medium of collage to create a mind expanding psychedelic vision.  Although the art of collage had been around for many years, the use of photographic images in kaleidoscopic patterns was pioneered by Max, and he turned his art work into posters which sold all across America.




















        When I was in college, his psychedelic posters were everywhere and the use of color to convey his message was exceptional.  His art was in sync with the times, so much so that it was said that his retail sales in a three year period topped $1 billion.  They even commissioned him to paint a commercial jet.





        Well it is now the 21st century and he continues to create art for this time as evident with his renditions of President Obama.




        I love this guy's art and I am especially happy to see that he continues to work and capture the moment.  It's an inspiration to any of us who ever picked up a brush.


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Tuesday, September 17, 2013

MAUI SUNSET

        In 2002 I painted Maui Sunset, it was something I had been wanting to do since our visit to Hawaii in the late 1980's.  The vivid memory had been burning in my head for about fourteen or fifteen years and in 2002 I finally did it.



Maui Sunset, 2002, acrylic on canvas

        While we were in Maui, we stayed on Kaanapoli Beach.  Our hotel room looked out over the Pacific Ocean to the west, with the island of Lana'i off in the distance.  Each morning we would wake up to the sound of the whales leaping out of the water then the loud splashing of them falling back into the sea.

        The days were beautiful, and every site was spectacular, from the mountains in the background and pineapple plantations at their base, to the blue ocean crashing onto the most fabulous beaches I have ever walked on, it was I believe the closest thing to heaven while still being on earth.

        But what left the most lasting impression on me was the fabulous Maui Sunsets.  Each evening we would sit on our balcony and feel the ocean breeze and experience one outstanding sunset after another.

        If you want to catch a glimpse of paradise, take you sweetie and book a flight to Maui, you'll never regret it


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Friday, September 13, 2013

ANDY WARHOL and POP ART

        If your ever in Pittsburgh, you must stop by the Andy Warhol Museum, it is Pop Art extraordinaire.  I consider Warhol as the original Pop Artist.





        In 1961 he made his first Pop Art paintings based on comic books and ads, in 1962 he debuted his famous Campbell's Soup Can series, which was a sensation in the art world.

Campbell's Soup Can

        He then made his now famous movie star portraits including Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor and Elvis Presley to name a few.

Elizabeth TaylorMarilyn Monroe


Elvis Presley


        From 1963 and 1968 he worked with many of his superstar performers to create many films.  In 1964 his first exhibition of sculptures was held in his new studio which was painted silver known as "The Factory".

        Through the following years until his death in 1987, he continued to produce groundbreaking art, sometimes very controversial, always Pop Art.

        I live only a few miles from his grave site and a few years ago several of my artist friends and I went to see it, and for a person who lived with such grandeur and his constant need to be in the limelight, the grave stone is very small and unpretentious with just his name and date of birth and death on it.

        As an artist, his contributions were great and his museum captures the essence of Andy Warhol, I recommend a visit.





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Friday, August 30, 2013

WHAT IS CONTEMPORARY ART?

        Contemporary Art to me is any painter or painting that has been created within our generation.  That would go as far back as the 60's or 70's.

        I have personally lived through those years to witness what I call a transformation in the art world.  I have always felt that the rise of social consciousness and feelings of helplessness after the assassination of President Kennedy, the struggles of the Civil Rights movement and the beginning of the Vietnam war in the 1960's, led to what we call our generation of Contemporary Art.

        Pop art which was a more care free and fun, had its influence in the 1960's with Andy Warhol and Peter Max to name a few.


Peter Max

Peter Max

Andy Warhol


        There was also art that depicted hardship and struggle.





        Also art that expressed tragedy. 







        That generation of art continues to this day with many new causes and social injustices to paint about and today's artists haven't let me down.


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Tuesday, August 20, 2013

WHAT IS MODERN ART?

        Modern Art as we know it began around the 1880's at the end of the Impressionists period.  At that time Post Impressionism began with the work of Van Gogh, Gauguin, Cezanne and Seurat, and what beautiful work it was.

Vincent Van Gogh

Paul Gauguin

Paul Gauguin

George Seurat

        Post Impressionism greatly influenced the 20th century abstraction of painters like Matisse, Picasso and Kandinsky, and they took it to the next level.

Henri Matisse













Pablo Picasso

Wassily Kandinsky













        And so it began, brilliant artists were unleashed, creative talent was permitted to think out of the box and we have been the beneficiaries.  The possibilities are endless.


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Tuesday, August 13, 2013

WHAT IS ABSTRACT ART?


        Abstract art to me is a collage of sights and sounds, memories of ones emotions, thoughts and experiences frozen in time on one canvas.

        Back when I began painting, we just called it modern art, but for me the abstract art style became my passion.

        Abstract art is a type of painting and sculpture that was actually developed in the early part of the twentieth century.  It is essentially a departure from reality or realism, yet in the eye of the artist it expresses something  very real.

        I view abstract as art work that alters form and space using shapes, lines, movement and color to relay a particular message.  I find the work of other abstract artists most intriguing, I enjoy the challenge of trying to imagine what they were trying to convey.

       There are many types of abstract art, but the following are two of my favorite;

        Cubism, was the first style of abstract art, pioneered by Pablo Picasso and George Braque, which  challenged conventional forms of representation.  Instead of painting a fixed object on canvas, Cubists gave you a view of that object from many angles all at once.


George Braque, Harbour in Normandy


        Fauvism, developed by French painters Henri Matisse and Andre Derain, who earned the nickname 'Les Fauves' which means wild beasts, used outrageously bold and sometimes distorted forms of vibrant and vivid colors.


Henri Matisse, The Hermitage, St Petersburg, Russia, 1905

Henri Matisse, The Snail, 1954

        So abstract art was and continues to be an exiting and wonderful journey, so climb aboard.


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Tuesday, August 6, 2013

AMERICAN BANDSTAND-BLACK AND WHITE WORLD



        In the early years when I was growing up there was no color TV, everything was black and white, even when I look at early photos of my family and myself, our cloths were not as colorful as they are today.  


         When I was fourteen years old we were in Philadelphia for a convention my dad attended and they took all of the teenagers to Dick Clark’s American Bandstand Television dance show.






When you were on American
Bandstand you didn't just sit and watch, everyone had to dance.  It was live TV in those days and black
and white, the set had no color, it didn't have to, no one who was watching could see it.  Even the kids who were there dancing, did not wear cloths as colorful as today.  Pretty drab I must say.  Can you see me in there?


       Then several years later, sometime in the sixty’s everyone got color TV.  It changed my world, I think it is what inspired me to use color as a main tool in expressing myself on canvas.


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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

MATTRESS FACTORY ART MUSEUM, Pittsburgh, PA

        There is an awesome Art Museum in Pittsburgh, PA called The Mattress Factory, which is a museum of Contemporary Art that presents art that you can get into... meaning room sized environments called art installations.

         Created on site by artists from across the United States and around the world, with unique exhibitions that feature a variety of media that engage all the senses.

        The first thing you notice upon arriving at the facility is that the building itself is an abstract design with an unusual shape on one side that jets up into the sky and ivy on the face of the building that is creating it's own art work.




        Secondly the garden outside the front entrance is a permanent installation that is made to look like an overgrown building foundation.



        The museum's unusual galleries are located in three creatively reused buildings on Pittsburgh's historic North Side.

        Since 1977, the Mattress Factory has supported more that 600 artists through a world-renowned residency program.  Each year artists come to Pittsburgh, live at the museum and create new work.  During that time, the museum supports them completely while they experiment, take risks and explore the creative process.



        Each exhibition is paired with a variety of engaging and innovative educational programs including hands on art projects, workshops, lectures and tours.




        
        If you enjoy contemporary art on canvas, then you'll love the Mattress factory, it takes you to a place where you can actually be a part of the art, it's quite an experience.
        

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