Daily Artsy Figurative Paintings

The Awakening: Amy Guidry

Mr. Forager has just completed a course on Women’s Studies, in preparation to pursue a Master’s Degree, so we’ve had some interesting discussions around the dinner table of late.  There’s been talk of women’s rights, gender equality, etc.  It seems as women, we still struggle against the fairy tales we grow up with versus the reality of living as a contemporary female.  In her New Realm series, Louisiana artist Amy Guidry weaves a new kind of story, as surreal as any myth yet grounded in modern strength.

Release by Amy Guidry

Release, acrylic on canvas, 36×48

The heroine of Guidry’s tale embraces her situation.  Instead of being helpless and afraid, she is empowered to embrace the opportunity for transformation.  Knit throughout the series are symbols of growth and change, such as the butterfly and snail, as well as signs of freedom such as a bird in flight.

Awakening by Amy Guidry

Awakening, acrylic on canvas, 48×24

Renewal by Amy Guidry

Renewal, acrylic on canvas, 48×24

This heroine is not wallowing in her plight or withering away in a cage.  She is in control of her own story, her own destiny.

Was It a Dream by Amy Guidry

Was It a Dream, acrylic on canvas, 40×30

To see more of Amy Guidry’s work, please visit her website.  Be sure to check out the video for the New Realm series here!

All images are via the artist’s website.

Artsy Holiday Design Foraging

Artsy Holiday 2012: For the Artsy Design Obsessive

There is a glorious sweet spot to be found in design where form and function meet.  Lots of artsy folks out there prefer the objects they use every day to delight as well as they perform.  So, you Artsy Design Obsessives ( and everyone trying to find gifts for them ), this one’s for you!

DIY Flower Clock

DIY Flower Clock from Module R

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Casabella Silicone Measuring Cup Set

Casabella Silicone Measuring Cup Set from Neatly Smart

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Reusable Chopsticks and Case from IDEA International

Reusable Chopsticks and Case from IDEA International

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John Baldessari Notecard Set at LACMA Store

John Baldessari Notecard Set from the LACMA Store

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Eames, Beautiful Details book

Eames, Beautiful Details book from Amazon

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Poketo Tea for One Brewing Set

Tea for One Brewing Set from Poketo

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Pantone Chips Journal

Pantone Chips Journal from the MoMA Store

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If your in the mood for more Artsy Designery Obsessive finds, check out my Pinterest board similarly named!

Artsy On the Road Daily Artsy

Artsy on the Road: Tales from Florida

Since Mr. Forager & I made our trek West from Florida over a year and a half ago, I hadn’t been back to my hometown.  So we took advantage of finally being semi-close to a major airport, counted up our credit card reward points, and bought me a ticket home.  For a month.  Which turned out to be such a long time to be separated!  My main focus while in Jacksonville was to see my family, so artsy stuff was put on the back burner.  But I did see a few fantastic shows and enjoyed long chats with some of my favorite artsy folk.  Thought you might enjoy the highlights from my trip!

Ke Francis show at Florida Mining Gallery

Ke Francis show, Biloxi to Babylon at Florida Mining Gallery

Biloxi to Babylon, the Ke Francis show that was up at Florida Mining last month was incredible.  I wasn’t terribly familiar with Ke’s work but am now a fan.  Amazing dream-like imagery and delicious texture produce stunning and provocative paintings.  The gallery space at FM was just a gorgeous as in the photos I’d seen and gallery owner/artist Steve Willliams and Gallery Manager Aaron Levi Garvey were kind enough to share exciting upcoming shows and some of the incredible work hangin’ out in the backroom.. hello Mapplethorpes!

Cap Tossing Over the Wall of Space by Steve Williams

Cap Tossing Over the Wall of Space by Steve Williams

Steve & I were able to get away from the gallery for a bit of an artsy chat over lunch.  He filled me in on what’s happening in the art scene in Jacksonville and he asked that question dreaded by all aspiring artists.. “So have you been painting lately?”  Ugh.  Punch in the gut.  But we commiserated over the plight of just not knowing how to start and where to go with what we begin.

After much back and forth and rescheduling, artist Christina Foard & I were finally able to get a chat and studio visit in.  Sorry, no photos from C’s studio, currently set up in her home.  Christina, as  a person and artist, is often someone I just want to chat with.  Her work is incredible and I’m one of her biggest fans, but on this particular day, talking without focusing on taking photos for the blog just seemed right.  Seeing her work again in person just reiterated to me how powerful it is.  She’s working on a new project that will be unlike anything she’s done before.. I got goosebumps just hearing her talk about it!

Flow by Christina Foard

Flow by Christina Foard

Two museum visits were on my must-do list, first the Museum of Contemporary Art to see ReFocus: Art of the 1980s at  and then the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens to see two shows, Histories in Africa: 20 Years of Photography by Elizabeth Gilbert and Lois Maillou Jones: A Vibrant Life in Color.

My time at both museums left me filled with nostalgia.  The 80s show  at MoCAwas incredibly memorable, not just for the star power of the artwork show ( Warhol, Fischl, Basquiat, Sherman, Freud, and Close, just to name a few ) but seeing some of the work, especially pieces from the museum’s permanent collection transported me right back to my college days, when the museum was in a much smaller, more intimate setting and I was first able to see work of that magnitude up close & personal.

Then Came a Dog and Bit the Cat by Frank Stella

Then Came a Dog and Bit the Cat by Frank Stella, from Re:Focus Art of the 1980s at MOCA Jacksonville

Elizabeth Gilbert and Lois Mailou Jones at The Cummer Museum of Art

Elizabeth Gilbert and Lois Mailou Jones at The Cummer Museum of Art

My time at the Cummer filled me with a similar wistfulness, especially when left there to wander on my own while waiting for my sister-in-law to arrive with my nieces. It was there I truly fell in love with art history, where the paintings came alive and spoke to me as I sketched them as a young college student.

But soon, the true purpose for my trip home arrived.  The rest of our evening at the Cummer was spent with my nieces Kendall and Samantha, playing with art in the Cummer’s Art Connections area.

Playing with art at the Cummer Museum in Jacksonville

Playing with art at the Cummer Museum in Jacksonville

I miss being able to be an artistic influence on my nieces, hard to do from 2000 miles away.  Hopefully, the memories will remain vibrant in their young minds and they will become flourishing artsies themselves.

Steve Williams and Christina Foard images via the artists’ websites.  Frank Stella image via Jacksonville.com.  All other images by Artsy Forager.

Daily Artsy Figurative Paintings

Body Language: Anna Bocek

So much of our communication these days is in a non-face-to-face fashion.  We text, email, Facebook, and Twitter each other, but the subtleties of expression and eye contact is lost, making these a poor substitute for a live chat over coffee.  Perhaps too, that may be why we find ourselves drawn to work like that of Polish artist Anna Bocek.  We long to see another face gazing back at us.

Summer Wind II by Bocek

Summer Wind II, painting, 100×100 cm

Bocek chooses to isolate her subjects against a usually colorful, vibrant background, yet it is the person we focus on.  She captures each figure in the midst of movement, their motions as fluid as a dancer’s.

Jetty by Anna Bocek

Jetty, painting, 100×100 cm

El Circo III by Anna Bocek

El Circo III, painting, 100×100 cm

Swimming Pool by Anna Bocek

Swimming Pool, painting, 100×130 cm

The flesh of her figures is painted with a vibrancy and warmth, making them come alive as if the canvas was taking in breath.

Cafe Rose Series by Anna Bocek

Cafe Rose Series, painting, 100×110 cm

If you enjoyed Anna Bocek’s work, be sure to visit her website to see more!

All images are via the artist’s website.

Daily Artsy Mixed Media

The Stuff Maker: Thomas Campbell

In the creative world, there is a great deal of pressure placed on creatives to produce works of great meaning.  After all, art has to be about something, doesn’t it?  If the artist has nothing to say, then what is the point?  A great many artists struggle against the urge just to paint, sculpt, do vs. what the result of their creativity has to say.  Sometimes artists just want to play.  Create for the sake of creating, the way California artist Thomas Campbell does.

Big Flower by Thomas Campbell

Big Flower, acrylic, gouache, spray paint, money, thread, pencil on paper, 14×13.5

According to his Artist Statement, when pressed, Campbell will concede that his work is “affirmational in a self-referential sense”.  If his work must be about something, perhaps it is about the journey he takes each time he begins anew.

Give a by Thomas Campbell

Give a, acrylic, gouache, spray paint, money, thread, pencil on paper, 15.5×16

Umm to the Infinite by Thomas Campbell

Umm to the Infinite, acrylic, gouache, spray paint, money, thread, pencil on paper, 14.5×12

For surely within each creative path an artist embarks upon, there are new and wondrous lessons to be learned.  There is always deeper meaning to be found, if we look for it or read such things into the work.

YAR Exhibition Installation, artwork by Thomas Campbell

YAR Exhibition Installation

Studio of artist Thomas Campbell

Inside the artist’s studio

But perhaps in many cases, it is merely a matter of an artist caught in the act of creating.  Which is is what makes one an artist in the first place.

If you would like to see more work from this painter, sculptor, photographer, film maker, stuff maker, please visit his website.

Artist found via The Jealous Curator.  Images are via the website of Campbell’s representing gallery, Gregory Lind Gallery.

Artsy Around the Web

Artsy Around the Web: Guest Pinning for UGallery!

I have an insane love affair with Pinterest.  As in, I would barely know what to cook, wear, or blog about without it.  One of my favorite sources of Pinterly inspiration recently has been the Be Art Guest board hosted by UGallery, where each week UGallery features a different “guest pinner” to share whatever their heart desires with UGallery’s followers.   I’ve discovered new artists, amazing shots of artists in their studios, and a recent guest pinner opened my eyes to a whole new world of contemporary African art.  So needless to say, I’m pretty excited to be this week’s Guest Pinner!  You can see all my Artsy Foraging on UGallery’s Be Art Guest Pinterest Board, where I’ll be featuring the work that makes my heart stop through Friday, December 17th.  Come join in the fun!

Daily Artsy Sculpture

Threaded Fabrications: Jen Pack

When I was taking painting courses in college, we were required to stretch our own canvases.  At first, I was pretty horrible at canvas stretching.. as in there were about a gazillion staples in each side of the canvas!  But eventually, I got my hands on a decent staple gun and came to appreciate the act of stretching a canvas as part of the creative process.  The stretching of textile collages over deep, geometric-shaped frames transforms stitched fabric and threads into strong and delicate sculptures for Colorado artist Jen Pack.

I am a Cube by Jen Pack

I am a Cube!, chiffon, thread, and wood, 58.5×58.5×3.5

Some of Pack’s work, such as I am a Cube! ( above ) have a seemingly hard-edged sleekness to them, yet upon closer inspection, we see soft lines and gradations in the colored fabrics, giving the work a painterly feel.

Domesticated Thread by Jen Pack

Domesticated Thread, thread, chiffon, and wood, 59.5×35.5×3.5

Scrap 1 by Jen Pack

Scrap 1, chiffon, thread, and wood, 31.25x10x3.5

Then in other pieces, Pack’s purpose seems to be one  of deconstruction, as in Domesticated Thread ( above ) and Purple, Yellow, and Green Toadstools ( below ).  Here, what we are met with seems to be an unraveling of the more “finished” and “structured” pieces. It’s almost as if someone pulled a loose thread, which caused the slow unraveling of each piece.

Purple, Green, and Yellow Toadstools by Jen Pack

Purple, Green, and Yellow Toadstools, thread, moshi fabric, cardboard tubes or pvc pipe, dimensions vary

To see more of Jen Pack’s work, please visit her website.  If you’re in the Los Angeles area, you can see her solo show, UnQuiet Chroma at Taylor De Cordoba Gallery until December 15th!  Oh how I wish I was going to be able to get myself to L.A. this weekend!

Abstract Art Daily Artsy Paintings

Illusory Compilations: Sarah Awad

To me, the best stories are those that are carefully layered and woven together with a touch of mystery.  Artist Sarah Awad’s work intertwines seemingly disparate elements to create wonderfully complex and cryptic visual narratives.

Power of Aphrodisia by Sarah Awad, oil on canvas, 67x60

Power of Aphrodisia, oil on canvas, 67×60

In some of Awad’s work, we seem to be looking into a classical museum, filled with artifacts and precious antiquities.  These pieces have a eerieness to them that give us a sense of happening upon an unfolding story.

Tender Recurrence ( On Visitation ) by Sarah Awad, oil on canvas, 72x60

Tender Recurrence ( On Visitation ), oil on canvas,72×60

The Visit by Sarah Awad, oil on canvas, 24x20

The Visit, oil on canvas, 24×20

Gemutlichkeit by Sarah Awad, oil on canvas, 72x54

Gemutlichkeit, oil on canvas, 72×54

In each piece, we wonder what just happened here or what is about to happen?  There is an anticipatory feeling and a slight unease to each work.

Untitled ( Temple ) by Sarah Awad, oil on canvas, 24x20

Untitled ( Temple ), oil on canvas, 24×20

To see more of Sarah Awad’s work, please visit her website.  If you happen to be in the Seattle area, you can see Sarah’s work in person at James Harris Gallery.

Artsy Holiday Daily Artsy Design Foraging Jewelry

Artsy Holiday 2012: For the Artsy Modernist

For some Artsies, the holidays can be a bit of decorative overload.  I’m talkin’ about those clean line, simple shape loving Modernists who crave the sleek and spare.  For this week’s Artsy Holiday installment, here are a few ideas for the Artsy Modernist on your list!

Kaleidoscope Trays by Clara zon Zweigbergk for Hay

Kaleidoscope Trays by Clara zon Zweigbergk for Hay

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Eames Drop Necklace from Leif Shop

Eames Drop Necklace from Leif Shop

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Medium Geo Lacquer Box from Lief Shop

Medium Geo Lacquer Box from Lief Shop

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Striped Trinity Pouch from Anthropologie

Striped Trinity Pouch from Anthropologie

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Everything is Fine Throw Pillow Cover by Anai Greog on Society6

Everything is Fine Throw Pillow Cover by Anai Greog on Society6

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Maybe I’m a closet Modernist because I am loving all these bold colors and geometrics!  See more Artsy Modernist ideas on the Artsy Forager Pinterest boards!