Category: Mixed Media

  • Artist Takeover, Day 4: Steve Williams

    Artist Takeover, Day 4: Steve Williams

    Steve Williams and I go way back, although he doesn’t remember.  When I was a college senior, my painting professor encouraged me to meet with two artists/gallery owners, Jim Draper and Steve Williams.  They liked my work and were very encouraging, wanting to see more and see it framed.. but I chickened out and didn’t follow through.  Who knows where my life may have led had I followed their advice and diligently pursued it?  Oh how stupid we are when we are young! 🙂

    A gallery owner and artist, Steve is always a source for interesting work, his own and what he features in his gallery, Florida Mining.  He is also a businessman running not only his gallery but his family’s sign business, Harbinger Sign.  So it’s no surprise his questions related to the business of making art!

    Jackson, mixed media, 60×30

    Steve Williams | What have you found to be most important to an artist’s success?  What do you see as the activities an artist does that puts them in an arena of “success”, whatever that means?

    Artsy Forager | Hmm.. I suppose to answer this question, you would first have to define success, which differs with each artist.  For some artists, financial success, i.e., selling lots of work, taking on commissions, making a living solely by art-making, may be their touchstone.  While for others, critical achievement is utmost in their minds– being lauded and accepted in the highest of art circles.  Or maybe they are looking for their Andy Warholish 15 minutes of fame.

    For success in both arenas, first I would say an artist has to just WORK.  Create all the time.  Creating work is the most important activity an artist can do because after all, it’s impossible to achieve financial or critical success without having the work to sell or show.  Second, use the tools at your disposal and use them smartly.  An online presence is more important for an artist now than ever– keep your website updated and make sure it loads and allows browsing easily.  Post regularly on Facebook and Twitter ( Hootsuite is a great tool for social media time management ).  Write a blog if you’re so inclined– but if you don’t have something interesting to say or share, whether about your work, other artist’s work, your interests, etc., don’t feel like you need to write a blog.  Do it well or don’t do it at all.  Third, be open to everything.  Opportunities come your way when you put yourself in their path.    Don’t be afraid to propose a collaboration with a dream brand or approach a dream gallery for representation.  You’ll never know if you don’t try.

    TV Exploration of Mars, mixed media, 12×12

    SW | Is there an area in America that seems to be enjoying greater success in art sales? Or an area that seems to have less?

    AF |  This is a really tough question for me to answer, as I’m so ingrained in the Southeast and Northwest and I’m not truly in the business of selling art ( yet..?  ).  There are exciting shows happening in Los Angeles and San Francisco, but is that translating into sales?  I can’t say for certain.  I see some Southern galleries and artists doing really well, but I can’t say if that is a product of their location or if the galleries are just working really hard to sell art and build up a following of collectors for their artists.  Artistic epicenters like NYC, Santa Fe and Miami are always going to be ahead of the game, sales-wise, I think.  But there are smaller cities like Austin, Asheville and Portland that are gaining in popularity as artistic tourist destinations, which could equal greater sales.

    Haiku Metaphor, mixed media, 22×30

    SW | Have you seen/done research to see if people are buying art more online now?  If so, what type of work is being purchased?

    AF |  I can only speak for what I’m witnessing on my own and hearing about from artists.  Collectors ARE buying more work online these days.  I see online buyers as more apt to purchase limited editions or less expensive originals than to purchase originals with a higher price tag over the internet. There is inherently less to lose by purchasing work online with a lower price tag.  Also, the intricacies and textures inherent in original work are almost impossible to truly see online, so that makes some originals a tougher online sell.  Perhaps as technology continues to advance, we’ll see more truly fine art originals being sold online.  For now, the online market seems to be made up more of prints, limited editions and lower priced originals.  I hope to see that change, as galleries continue to fold, the internet is soaking up the slack– but the technology of viewing originals online still has a long way to go. Hmm.. maybe I need to team up with a venture capitalist and some uber-smart techie and make that happen!

    Marco Polo, mixed media

    Thank you, my dear Mr. Williams for what may have been my toughest set of questions all week!  You never fail to make me think or smile.

    To see more of Steve’s artwork, please visit his website.  Don’t miss tomorrow’s final Takeover when artists reveal their favorite Artsy Forager finds!

  • Candied Graffiti: Line Juhl Hansen

    Candied Graffiti: Line Juhl Hansen

    I have a weakness for the pairing of feminine and masculine elements.  Like pairing a flimsy, flowing sundress with a motorcycle jacket.  The mixed media work of Line Juhl Hansen shows off characteristically male and feminine abstract elements in a way that results in work that marries the graphic and expressive beautifully.

    Graphic typography, scribbles and liberal touches of black temper the happy, candy colored swaths of painterly texture.  These evocative details lend weight and gravity to each canvas, inviting us in for a closer look.

    Like the strength of a woman, these touches are lingering just below the surface, peeking in and out.  We catch a glimpse of the resilience behind the sweetness and beauty.

    To see more of Line Juhl Hansen’s work, please visit her website.

    All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Enigmatic Entities: Jenny Brown

    Enigmatic Entities: Jenny Brown

    One of the benefits of our rural home for the summer is the large garden our landlords maintain on the property.  For the first time in my life, freshly picked vegetables and berries are mere steps from my door.  Pulling up fresh spinach for our salads a few nights ago got me thinking about roots.  And so does the artwork of Providence, RI artist Jenny Brown.

    Untitled Yellow, ink & found collage on paper, 8.5×11

    As people, we, in the same way as plants, are growing our roots and reaching for the sky at the same time.  The roots provide nourishment and hold us steady, while our very nature and soul fights against their pull as we stretch toward who we are meant to be.

    Untitled #1, ink, gouache, pencil and collage on paper, 8.5×11
    Flowering Crab, ink, gouache, pencil and collage on paper, 8.5×11

    Some people, like smaller plants, don’t grow far vertically, keeping very close to their roots.  But others, like giant redwoods, soar to unimaginable heights far above their rooted beginnings.  Yet, it takes incredibly strong roots to steady one whose reach is so high.

    Untitled #3, ink, gouache, pencil and collage on paper, 8.5×11

    To see more of Jenny Brown’s work, please visit her website.

    Featured image is Untitled #1, ink, gouache, pencil and collage on paper, 8.5×11.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Stranger Rememberings: Amy Pleasant

    Stranger Rememberings: Amy Pleasant

    There is a wonderful phenomenon that happens to me from time to time.  I call it “name serendipity”.  Every so often when I search an artist’s name on Google, I happen upon the work of another talented artist by the same name!  Which is exactly how I happened upon the work of Seattle artist Amy Pleasant.

    Free Spirit, mixed media, 36×36

    Like Amy, I too, have a collection of vintage photographs from my grandparents’ collection and they are among my most treasured possessions.  In her latest series, Lost and Found, Amy was inspired by the discarded memories of strangers.  Namely old family photos found in thrift shops and antique stores, now being sold along with old tablecloths and broken lawnmowers.

    Three Graces, mixed media, 40×30
    Kindred, mixed media, 40×30

    Captured moments of past lives now cast away like any other piece of household paraphernalia.  Pleasant rescues these memories that have been tossed aside, giving them new life in paint.

    Night’s Nest, mixed media, 36×36

    In them, we see not the memories of strangers but our own ancestral rememberings staring back at us.  To see more of Amy Pleasant’s work, please visit her website.  Her work can be seen in her show, “Looking For the Coolidges” opening August 2, 2012 at the Shoreline City Hall Gallery in Shoreline, WA.  And on August 1st, she  will be the featured artist (along with Dutch artist Janneke Van Leeuwen) at the Visual Thinking Strategies European Symposium in partnership with the Rijks Museum and will be showing at a gallery on site at a large hospital in Amsterdam(! ).

    Featured image is Three Graces, mixed media, 40×30.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Sensual Flora: Megan Cosby

    Sensual Flora: Megan Cosby

    There are some artists whose careers I’ve had my eye on for quite some time.  Florida artist Megan Cosby definitely falls into that category.  I’ve always loved her figurative work, but when I saw her beginning to move in a more abstract direction, I knew she was really getting into a beautiful groove.

    Bouquet Toss, mixed media, 40×30

    This new series of abstracts, inspired by flowers, is soft, sophisticated and sensual.  In these mixed media paintings, I see abstract representations of the emotion of flowers.  The happiness they bring, their lingering scent and fleeting beauty.

    Gardenia Perfume, mixed media on canvas 40×40

    Flowers, with their delicately temporal nature, are associated with both life and death.  An early sign of spring’s renewal, as well as a token of abashed apology.

    Bouquet Confetti One, mixed media on canvas, 18×14
    Bouquet Confetti Two, mixed media on canvas, 18×14

    To see more of Megan’s work, please visit her website.

  • Searching for Self: Anibal Vallejo

    Searching for Self: Anibal Vallejo

    I’ve always heard that it isn’t until we hit our 40s that we really come to know and understand ourselves fully.  While I’ve just entered my fourth decade, I can say, I wholeheartedly believe this is true.  The work of Colombian artist Anibal Vallejo reminds me of the searching for self that we do in our younger years.

    Untitled, acrylic, graphite and hand embroidery on canvas, 150×120 cm

    We might try on different styles of self– whether that be in trying out varied careers, trying on different types of relationships or merely figuring out just who we are and where we fit.

    Untitled, acrylic, graphite and hand embroidery on canvas, 120×150 cm

    Often we may feel like we’ve found the right fit at the time, but eventually, the “suit” loses its novelty and we look back, seeing how very far we were from who we really are.  We may look on that younger self as putting on the most ridiculous of costumes on our road to discovering ourselves.

    Untitled, graphite, acrylic and hand embroidery on MDF, 60cm

    In some cases ( but by no means all! ), with age and maturity comes a better understanding of who we are and a confidence in being exactly the person we were meant to be.

    Untitled, acrylic, graphite and hand embroidery on canvas, 120×150 cm
    Untitled, graphite, acrylic and hand embroidery on canvas, 120x150cm

    Maybe you’re one of the lucky ones.  You were born knowing exactly who you are and what you were meant to be.  But most of us spend our lifetimes figuring it out.  I feel like I’m getting closer each day.  How about you?

    To see more of Anibal Vallejo’s work, please visit his website.

    Artist found via Escape Into Life.

    Featured image is Untitled, graphite, acrylic and hand embroidery on canvas, 120×150 cm.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Artsy on Escape Into Life: Karin Miller

    The work of South African artist Karin Miller caught my eye on Pinterest and I was blown away after visiting her website.  Check out the examples of her work I’m featuring over on Escape Into Life today!

    Day Flying Insects of the Order Lepidoptera

    Karin Miller on Escape Into Life

  • Undone Beauty: Cristina Troufa

    Undone Beauty: Cristina Troufa

    Very often, negative space is just as important to our understanding of form as the form itself.  Think about clouds– their beauty is most apparent when surrounded by bright blue sky.  In Portuguese artist Cristina Troufa’s work, the painter uses simple lines and negative space to punctuate her compositions, choosing to highlight the flesh which makes her figures essentially human.

    Pedestal, mixed media

    Her concentration of color and light on the exposed flesh of her subjects speaks to our tendency to judge on appearance, often unable to look past the person we think we see and notice each other for who we really are.

    Pelo Ralo, mixed media

    Her compositions are simple, the backgrounds stark, only a detail left to us here or there.

    Degraus, mixed media

    What do we see when we fill in the blanks?  Who are these women, this boy?  What is this moment we’ve caught them in?  Have we been there before?

    Etapas, mixed media
    Sombras No Sotao, mixed media

    To see more of Cristina Troufa’s work, please visit her website and her page on Meseon.

    Featured image is Salto.  All images are via Cristina Troufa’s page on Meseon.

  • June Facebook Featured Artist: Geoff Mitchell

    June Facebook Featured Artist: Geoff Mitchell

    I first discovered the work of LA based artist Geoff Mitchell when he opened a solo show at Steve Williams’ Florida Mining Gallery last year.  Steve has impeccable taste in art, so of course, I was immediately intrigued and blown away by Geoff’s work.  In case you missed it, you can read my initial feature on Geoff’s work here.  Since that first feature, Geoff has been busy creating new work and collaborating on a book project– more about his book later today!

    The Emperor’s Night Garden, mixed media on panel, 97×105

    While the images with which Geoff works are representational in nature, his method of composition is free and intuitive.  Images are chosen for their sheer beauty, interest or what they may bring to the composition texturally.  Chosen found imagery doesn’t necessarily relate to the other images around it, or at least not intentionally.

    Crossing the Needles, mixed media on panel, 97×105

    Geoff works from the principal of the sensation of pareidolia, a “psychological phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus, often an image or sound, being perceived as significant”.  His works are telling stories, but not of the artist’s making, but of the viewers.  He provides the stimuli, we fill in the story with our own memories and meaning.

    Stage 3, mixed media on panel, 20×20
    Ivory Lolly, mixed media on panel, 20×20

    To see more of Geoff Mitchell’s work, please check out his ( newly designed! ) website and his cover image & album on the Artsy Forager Facebook page.  If you happen to be near Biloxi, MS, don’t miss his solo exhibition, Chaos at the Confessional at the Ohr-O’Keeffe Museum, opening June 12, on display until November 24, 2012.

    Featured image is a detail of The Emperor’s Night Garden.  All images are via the artist.

  • Friday Faves:  Canvas, Paper, Scissors

    Friday Faves: Canvas, Paper, Scissors

    I distinctly remember our section on collage in my Drawing 101 class.  It was kind of painful for me.  I wanted to create interesting beautiful work, but had a hard time getting past memories of third grade art class and Elmer’s glue.  So it isn’t any wonder that some of my favorite work is of the cut and paste variety.. These artists have found the secret to what I was longing to do!

    Ben Giles
    Giorgio Russo
    Nono Bandera
    Mario Wagner

    Be sure to come back on Monday to see more from another fabulous collage artist, this month’s Facebook Featured Artist Geoff Mitchell!

    Ben Giles | Giorgio Russo | Nono Bandera | Mario Wagner

    All images are via the artists’ websites, linked above.