Category: Mixed Media

  • Haute Off The Canvas

    Haute Off The Canvas

    The paintings of Wm. Coleman Mills have an undeniable texture– they make you want to touch them.  And they are full of gorgeous, saturated color, which makes you want to wear them.  So after hearing the pleas of fans of his artwork, the artist set about the task of recreating his artwork into textile designs, namely scarves.

    Sunset At Grand Lagoon scarf
    Sunset At Grand Lagoon by Wm. Coleman Mills, encaustic on canvas, 144×48

    Those who know me well know that I have a weakness for scarves.  It’s one of the reasons I was excited to move to the Pacific Northwest– scarf weather year-round!!  So when I heard that one of my favorite painters was debuting a line of scarves based on details of his work, I got just a little  OK, a LOT excited.  These lovely textiles beautifully capture the essence of a coastal Southern summer, but are versatile enough to wear any season of the year.

    Wind Swirling On Gulf Water scarf from WMCM Studio

    The scarves are made by photographing each inspiration painting and converting the photo into a digital CAD file.  It is then cropped and digitally screen printed onto a lightweight cotton voile and hand-finished in the artist’s hometown and current residence of Fairhope, Alabama.  Each scarf is 24×72 inches and made-to-order.  They can be backed with either silk or cotton and are signed and numbered by the artist.

    Water's Edge scarf from WMCM Studio

    This is your chance to own a beautiful piece of wearable artwork!  More info on the scarves is available on the WMCM website and pre-orders are being taken now!  I can’t wait to see what other textiles he comes up with next.. I’m thinking throw pillows, bedding, window treatments, etc!

    PS– Be sure to take a gander at Coleman’s artwork while you’re on his website.. not to be missed!

  • Fashion Forward Art

    Fashion Forward Art

    Kicking off artsyF A S H I O NWeek here at Artsy Forager!  Fashion and art have long been intertwined.  For centuries, artists have, perhaps at times unwittingly, been the recorders of the history of fashion and style.  It is in thanks to artwork that we can track what was worn by whom hundreds of years ago.  Paintings weren’t just art, but were the fashion magazines and blogs of their day.  For instance, thanks to Vermeer, we see a glimpse of the difference in the daily costume of the classes in a Mistress and Maid.

    Mistress and Maid by Johannes Vermeer, c. 1666-1667

    Today’s artists seem to have a bit more freedom to interpret instead of record.  Fashion is such an integral part of our modern culture, it is no surprise that it still holds a fascination for contemporary artists.  For some artists, the fashions themselves are worthy focal points.  Denver artist Roxanne Rossi elevates a simple dress’s silhouette into an artistic statement, a sculptural fashion plate, clean but heavy in texture, it seems like it could come to life at any moment.

    Afternoon Delight by Roxanne Rossi, acrylic, 36×60

    Sometimes the fashion media becomes a literal component to a piece of fashion-influenced art, such as in the collage work of Melbourne, Florida artist Derek Gores.  His imagery has the composition of a Vogue magazine spread and the collaged photos, magazine, labels, etc give each piece a painterly depth.

    All Summer Long by Derek Gores, mixed media collage

    Painter Kelly Reemtsen uses the constraints of mid-century era mindsets about fashion and juxtaposes them with garden tools and hardware, producing visual statements about the expectations placed on women, by themselves and the world at large.

    Throwback by Kelly Reemtsen, oil on panel, 36×36

    Celebrating the female form, both physically and spiritually, Leigh Pennebaker’s wire sculptures reveal designs that are sensuous and soft, despite their industrial materials.

    Madeline by Leigh Pennebaker, wire sculpture

    Like many fashion-forward artists, Megan Cosby began with an interest in fashion design, but decided she was more interested in the people themselves and what their style said about their personality, who they are, where they’ve been and where they are going.

    Better by Megan Cosby, mixed media on canvas, 14×12

    And then there’s the smart and cheeky work of Sarah Ashley Longshore, at once playing homage and poking fun to our culture’s obsession with fashion.  I’ve featured her Audrey Hepburn paintings several times on the blog, but she also has this fabulous series focused on fashion and pop culture.

    Trophy Wife Junk Drawer by Sarah Ashley Longshore, acrylic and high gloss reisn on canvas, 48×72

    More fashiony-artsy goodness to come this week!  Stay tuned.

    Featured image is Major Poontang by Sarah Ashley Longshore.

  • Sleeping With Peas And Toads: Deborah Scott

    Sleeping With Peas And Toads: Deborah Scott

    Sometimes a princess has to do what a princess has to do.  Like kiss a frog, get a horrible night’s sleep with a pea stuffed under the mattress or maybe just open her eyes and wake up.  Seattle artist Deborah Scott has created an intriguing new series, Waiting For Prince Charming, which explores how traditional fairy tale themes would be translated in our modern world.

    Snow White, oil and mixed media on canvas

    For instance, how would Snow White’s modis operandi of relying on her beauty and reputation as “the fairest in the land” work to secure her prince in today’s world?  Mass media advertising, of course.  Scott depicts her, perhaps this most vapid of the fairy tale princesses, as a purely passive participant in her own fairy tale.  Her happy ending isn’t a result of anything she does or who she is, but merely because of her famous looks.  Sound familiar?

    The Girl Would Believe Anything, oil and mixed media on canvas

    And then there’s the chick from The Princess & The Frog.  How many women have been deceived into thinking that warty, nasty toad would one day magically turn into a prince?  He may seem debonair and sophisticated, but he is a frog all the same.  And once we realize how duped we were.. we are horrified at our own stupidity.

    A Social Climber's Romance, oil and mixed media on canvas

    In A Social Climber’s Romance, we see a well rested young woman and a pea peeking out from under the mattresses– she obviously hasn’t passed the real princess test, but is oblivious to the meaning of her sweet slumber.  In this series, Deborah continues to hone her classical, figure-focused narrative style, which works tremendously well to carry out the themes in each work.

    Waiting For Prince Charming opens at All City Coffee in Seattle September 10th and will be on exhibit there until November 5th.  If you’re in the Seattle area, please check it out!  Better still, there will be an artist’s reception on October 21st, Deborah is a delight in person and meeting her will give you such deeper appreciation for her work.

    In the meantime, stop by Deborah’s website to see more of her work and check out her introduction on Artsy Forager here.

    Featured image is Princess And The Pea.  All images are courtesy of Deborah Scott.

    Special thanks to Deborah for giving me a studio tour and a sneak peek at this new work when George & I were in Seattle last week!  Look for features on some of her talented studio mates on the blog soon!

  • Friday Forager Faves: Treehuggers

    Please enjoy this oldie by goodie while I spend the next two weeks camping, packing, visiting with the mom-in-law and moving from WA to OR. See you in September!

    There is nothing I love better than a day spent walking in the woods or paddling down a slow moving river.  Nature’s beauty has a way of inspiring me to want to paint, write, cook, just create.  In celebration of Earth Day, this Friday’s Forager Faves round up includes a few artists who obviously feel the same way.  These are works insprired by the wonder of the earth in which we live.  Enjoy and get outside!

    Quiet Cypress by Jim Draper

    Sweet Grass No. 7 by Lori Keith Robinson 

    Riverbank Afternoon by Debbie Martin

     

    Tree Song No. 7 Colorshow by Kristi Taylor

     

  • Savage Beauty: Madeleine Peck-Wagner

    Savage Beauty: Madeleine Peck-Wagner

    Madeleine Peck-Wagner has a way of taking subjects that could be trite and making them extraordinary.  Her latest series features mythical wolves and horses, but in Madeline’s hands, they are treated in a way that is contemporary and elegant.  The cross-hatching & precision of the lines are reminiscent of architectural drafting, giving the figures depicted a strutctural, landscaped quality.  Conversely, blots and washes of brightly colored paints call to the spiritual significance such animals, both living and decayed possess.

    Fighting Hessians
    Russian Winter II
    Wolves At The Door
    We Are All Tragedies

    To see more of Madeleine’s work, visit her art blog, Art Isn’t Rocket Science or visit Jen Jones Art Consulting.

  • Friday Faves:  Wax On, Wax Off

    Friday Faves: Wax On, Wax Off

    Encaustic painting is a favorite medium of mine.  Their waxy, frosting-like texture sends me over the moon.  Every time I’m in a gallery, I will be drawn to the encaustics, guaranteed.  So for this Friday round-up, I’m sharing with you some of my favorite waxy painters.

    Why Stream Upstream by Mary Farmer, encaustic on canvas, 40×40
    Whirl #1 by Wendy Franklund Miller, encaustic on wood, 12×12

    Interplay by Nancy Natale, encaustic with fiber, oilstick and oil paint on birch, 24×24

    Do you have any favorite encaustic artists I should know about?  Do tell!  To see more work from these fabulous encaustic artists, please visit their websites.

    1.  Mary Farmer

    2.  Wendy Franklund Miller

    3.  Paula Blackwell

    4.  Nancy Natale 

    Featured image is Crossroads by Nancy Natale.  All images are courtesy of the artist’s websites.

    PS– As the hubby and I prepare to move from Aberdeen to his new assignment in Grants Pass, OR AND enjoy some camping and a visit from my mom-in-law, Artsy Forager will be rerunning some older posts over the next two weeks.  Hopefully, this will give new readers a chance to see some artists that were featured back when the only people reading were my family and friends. 🙂

  • The Neo-Luminist’s Vision: Steven DaLuz

    The Neo-Luminist’s Vision: Steven DaLuz

    The mixed media work of artist Steven DaLuz glows with an ethereal luminosity.  His atmospheric work explores the use of light to create ambience, whether it is a hazy and serene or deeply dramatic.

    Threshold, mixed media on panel, 48×60

    The self-described “Neo-Luminst” is creating work that is “concerned with the glowing effects of light”.  Instead of creating work with an inherent message or narrative, DaLuz instead prefers to let the emotionality of the light and color in his work allow the viewer to draw on their own perception and experience to invoke meaning.  Or to simply allow the imagery to speak for itself.

    Opus 110, oil on metal leaf on birch, 48×48

    For me, these seem to be rare glimpses into another world.  These are transcendent, the light, texture and composition all joining together to transport the viewer into a world that may or may not exist within our realm of experience.

    Ovum 2, oil and mixed media on panel, 36×36 

    What one viewer may see as delicate and heavenly, another may view as foreboding and alien.  Or, like me, you may be drawn to the richness of color and elegance of the composition, which is enough to spark my own imagination.

    Portal, oil and mixed media on panel, 36×48

    To see more of this artist’s work, please visit his website or stop by his Facebook page.

    Featured image is Cloud Bank by Steven DaLuz.  All images are courtesy of the artist’s website.

  • Friday Faves:  Map It Out

    Friday Faves: Map It Out

    My husband and I look at a lot of maps.  For the next several years, we’re moving to a new locale every three months, plus we spend weekends exploring the areas surrounding wherever we happen to be living.  Oh, and there are also all the future travel plans.  Like maybe a stint in Thailand in 2013.  ( I KNOW!.. so exciting!! ).  We use whatever maps we can get our hands on.. Google maps online at home, GPS in the car and of course, our good ol’ reliable atlas.  Currently, we’re pouring over maps as we anxiously await the locale of G’s next work assignment.  A month from now I will be typing the Friday Faves from a whole new setting, crazy isn’t it?!

    Turns out we aren’t the only ones inspired by maps.  Check out some of my favorite artists who incorporate these geographic illustrations into their own artwork.  Happy travels!

     

    Richardson by Rachel Ann Austin
    Richardson, mixed media, 5×5
    Navigate ( detail ) by Amy Rice
    Drifter’s Atlas No. 2 by Dolan Geiman
    Fear Hope Oblivion by Francesca Berrini
    A Good Mess by Wyanne Thompson

    How about it, Artsies?  Anyone mapping out adventures for the weekend?  Have a maptastic artist to share?  Do tell!

    1.  Rachel Ann Austin

    2.  Amy Rice  ( Featured image is Tandem by Amy Rice )

    3.  Dolan Geiman

    4.  Francesca Berrini, more of her map artwork can be found at G. Gibson Gallery, here.

    5.  Wyanne Thompson

  • Are Chickens the New Black?

    Are Chickens the New Black?

    I admit, I’m not always up on the very latest trends, I am in my 30’s after all.  I knew all about the “Put a Bird On It” trend, but had no idea that art featuring chickens had become such a big deal.  Chicken art makes me think back to my grandma’s house and her Americana farm scene prints featuring chickens.  And her ceramic chicken collection.  Needless to say, chickens aren’t the first subject that jumps to mind when I think of the latest in the art world.  But for whatever reason, these birds are fowls are ruling the roost.

    Roost by Brian McGuffey

    Seattle area artist, Brian McGuffey draws from childhood experiences in his creative process.  In “Roost”, pictured above, he elevates the rooster from lowly barnyard animal to a dignified, full-plumed specimen.  Just look at that profile.  You know all the hens would be clucking all over him.

    King of the Hill by Sydney McKenna

    Why did the chicken cross the road?  To attend a chicken-only art show, apparently!  St. Augustine, Florida artist, Sydney McKenna painted “King of the Hill”  specifically for a show at the W.B. Tatter Studio & Gallery celebrating not just chickens, but also the gallery’s sixth year anniversary.  I hope they served a vegetarian menu for the opening. 🙂

    But the Tatter who is by no means the only chicken show I’ve covered in recent months.  Remember Yvonne Lozano’s What Happened to the Chickens show?  Yvonne created an entire series of painting centered around a family trip to Colombia and a few friendly chickens she met there as a child.

    Here, Chicky Chicky by Yvonne Lozano
    Out and About by Hilary Williams

    But chickens in art aren’t just reserved for the barnyard.. In “Out and About”, San Francisco based artist Hilary Williams  depicts a little hen who seems to have escaped and is enjoying a lovely day on the town.  This chick is ready for a ladies lunch and some retail therapy.

    Speaking of plucky adventurers ( pun intended ), Dolan Geiman’s Blue Highway also shows how chickens in art aren’t just for grandma’s kitchen anymore.  Geiman’s graphic, mixed media approach results in work that is more contemporary than kitsch.

    Blue Highway by Dolan Geiman

    Where is this upsurge in chicken art leading?  Only the chickens know for sure.  The banty in Jim Draper’s Cross Creek seems ready to take the road less traveled.  And maybe that’s what the chicken art movement is all about.

    Cross Creek by Jim Draper

    The featured images is Laughing About This Life by Hilary Williams.  All images are courtesy of the individual artist’s websites.

    PS– I restrained myself from finding a Road Crossing Chicken joke to go with each piece of artwork.  You’re welcome.

  • Friday Faves:  Sugar & Spice

    Friday Faves: Sugar & Spice

    Maybe it’s the little girl inside me.  Maybe it’s a way to relive the days when my imagination was unshackled and my days were carefree.  Who knows.  Whatever the reason, I am always drawn to whimsical, fanciful imagery of girls.  The kind fairy tales are made of.  These Friday Faves are everything nice.

    Boundlessness in Bloom by Duy Huynh
    Migration by Shannon Richardson
    Migration by Shannon Richardson
    4 Keeps by Wyanne Thompson
    Wildflowers by Rene Lynch

    Stay tuned for features soon on each of these artists!  In the meantime, be sure to check out their websites!

    1.  Duy Huynh ( featured image is also by Duy Huynh )

    2.  Shannon Richardson

    3.  Wyanne Thompson

    4.  Rene Lynch 

    Hope you have a wonderful weekend, filled with fantastical fun!