Tag: art

  • This Artsy Life: Weekend 28 [ Forging Ahead ]

    This Artsy Life: Weekend 28 [ Forging Ahead ]

    Our weekend started off gangbusters with a fun surprise for me from Mr. Forager.  Obviously I love painting and all things artsy and a few times post-gallery hopping, Mr. F has  mentioned that he would like to give his creative wheels a spin.  So Friday night, Mr. F signed us up for a little painting & adult beverages at Mind Unwind in West Seattle.  Now normally, the art snob in me might think these kinds of places are super cheesy, but I loved seeing folks like Mr. F, who don’t consider themselves creative or “artists” tap into a completely different part of their brains.  A little wine and beer doesn’t hurt the loosening up the art making joints, either!

    IMG_1103

    [ blank canvas, beer ]

    Following our foray into couple’s painting, we arose super early on Saturday to go hiking in the Wenatchee National Forest.  It was a moderately cool, cloudless day, perfect for hiking. Wildflowers and waterfalls greeted us were plentiful, as well as mosquitoes once we reached our destination.

    IMG_1106

    [ weird balloon sighting on the trail.. can you spot Mr. F? ]

    About a mile and a half of the trail was a pretty grueling uphill climb, followed by a slow, try not to break any bones trek back down.  Although this was by no means the longest hike we’ve done, it was more strenuous than anything we’ve done since leaving Idaho last year.  These kinds of hikes always teach me a big lesson in perseverance.  I take each small victory, each rise conquered as testimony that big things can be done when taken in small steps.  The rest of the weekend was decidedly lazy, though we’re making headway on some big decisions and transitions.  More on that later.

    IMG_1100

    [ chinese takeout picnic ]

    IMG_1102

     

    [ nothing but blue skies ]

    Did you enjoy gorgeous summer weather in your neck of the woods?  Want to see more from This Artsy Life?  Follow me on Instagram!

  • One to Watch: Jason Lockhart

    One to Watch: Jason Lockhart

    When you think of a breeding ground for creativity, Tulsa, OK is probably not the first place that comes to mind.. but let me tell you there are some artsy folks in OK!  Mr. F lived in Tulsa for a few years, so we definitely know some cool and creative folks there ( and a few that have moved Northwesterly! ).  Tulsa is home to an awesome contemporary gallery, Exhibit by Aberson, which is showing an impressive round up of young Oklahoman artists, including Tulsa painter ( and musician, Tulsa is a hotbed for the musically inclined ), Jason Lockhart.

    Bita-Pita by Jason Lockhart
    Bita-Pita
    Alite by Jason Lockhart
    Alite

    I fell instantly in love with this Lockhart’s work as soon as I saw it in Exhibit’s newsletter.  The architectural elements juxtaposed with typography and painterly abstractions, then add in that color palette and BAM!  This is an artist to watch, folks.

    E4 by Jason Lockhart
    E4
    ET by Jason Lockhart
    ET

    It’s not just the elements being used, but the way in which he is fitting them together.  That slightly hidden “A” in Bita-Pita, the suggestive aviation shapes in E4.. It all just works.  Sometimes I get tongue tied, ok, keyboard tied when I try to describe why I love an artist’s work.  It’s just good.  Trust me.

    Ding-On by Jason Lockhart
    Ding-On

    Want to see more of Jason Lockhart’s work?  If you’re anywhere near Tulsa, don’t miss the show at Exhibit by Aberson, opening Thursday, July 18th.  You can also check out Lockhart’s blog.

    All images via Exhibit by Aberson website.

     

     

     

  • Artsy About Town: Art & Shadow

    Artsy About Town: Art & Shadow

    Pioneer Square Art Walk

    Last night, Mr. F & I ventured out for our first ArtWalk since arriving in Seattle.  I know, right?!! What took us so long?  And this city is by no means lacking in ArtWalking opportunities.  Like Farmer’s Markets, there seems to be one going on all the time.  I knew there were a few shows in the Pioneer Square district opening last night, so off we went to fight the traffic and walk some art!

    You can see all the photos of art I snapped over on the Artsy Instagram feed, but I wanted to give you a little sneak peek here on the blog.  Something you should know about Seattle– it’s gray a lot ( well you probably already knew that ), but when the sun comes out, the light is dazzling.  It was a beautiful light-filled evening last night and as I was going through the galleries, I noticed a theme of beautiful shadows cast by some of the work on display.

    Lindsay Pichaske at Foster/White

     [ Lindsay Pichaske at Foster/White ]

    Lindsay Pichaske at Foster/White

    [ Lindsay Pichaske at Foster/White ]

    Balloons at Greg Kucera

    [ at Greg Kucera ]

    Box installation[ Anyone know this artist.. Anyone? Bueller? ]

    Sherry Markovitz at Greg Kucera[ Sherry Markovitz at Greg Kucera ]

    So much artsy goodness!  Next time I think I’ll go early & let Mr. F meet me there.  Too much to see in just a few hours.  Any artsy plans for the weekend?

    All images by Artsy Forager.  More can be found by following Artsy Forager on Instagram!

  • Artsy on Film: (Untitled)

    Artsy on Film: (Untitled)

    Mr. Forager and I take turns choosing the films we watch together.  So hopefully for every documentary about beer or politics, I get a turn at an artsy flick!  Last weekend, we gave (Untitled) a viewing and although as a movie I didn’t find it anything to shout about, I did find the portrayal of the art world and its archetypes, hierarchies, pretensions, and perceptions really interesting.

    AOF_Untitled movie poster

     

    Adam Goldberg, an actor I’ve always loved since his turn as the too-good-to-be-true-turned-crazy roommate to Chandler Bing on Friendsstars as a struggling avant garde composer who falls down the rabbit hole of the contemporary art world.  Goldberg is the archetypical brooding starving artist, while his brother, played by Eion Bailey, is a “commercial” artist whose work is selling to a certain type of buyer, yet he longs for critical validation.  Enter love interest/contemporary gallery owner Marley Shelton.

    Adam Goldberg as Adrian Jacobs, photo by Parker Film Company/Samuel Goldwyn Films
    Adam Goldberg as Adrian Jacobs, photo by Parker Film Company/Samuel Goldwyn Films

    Shelton’s Chelsea gallerist with her ubiquitous collection of trendy, non-prescription glasses embodies the gallerists’ struggle between the work that sells and the work seen as innovative, evocative, and important.  While these two aren’t always mutually exclusive, there is often an art world snobbery that comes about when work is commercially successful or decorative rather than intellectual, isn’t there?

    Marley Shelton_Untitled_Parker Film Company:Samuel Goldwyn Films'
    Marley Shelton as gallery owner Madeleine Gray, photo by Parker Film Company/Samuel Goldwyn Films

    In addition to the main characters, the film also includes art world archetypes such as The Collector Who Will Buy Anything the Gallerist Tells Him To, The Maurizio Cattelan/Jeff Koonsish Artiste, The Artist Who Makes Art Out of Nothing ( but who are we to tell him it’s not? ), The Consultant With an Eye For Work People Actually Want to Buy and Live With, and of course, the Supportive Parents of Artists, who let’s face it, often don’t have a clue what exactly it is you do, they just want you to eat.

    Orth and Shelton_Untitled_Parker Film Company:Samuel Goldwyn Films
    Zak Orth and Marley Shelton as Collector & Gallerist, photo by Parker Film Company/Samuel Goldwyn Films

    Are the characters in the film stereotypical and a bit caricature-ish?  Absolutely.  Is there truth behind each one?  Most definitely.  Anyone who’s been around the business of art for any length of time has likely encountered some or all of these types.  But I think the film successfully gives us a glimpse into the humanity of these archetypes– how they struggle against who they are expected to be and as some accept who they actually are.  As there are millions of artists, so are there millions of opinions on what art is.  And there is room for all.

    All images by Parker Film Company/Samuel Goldwyn Films.

     

     

  • In the Atmosphere: Mimi Ko

    In the Atmosphere: Mimi Ko

    It’s so difficult to capture the feeling of a place, a moment, a mood.  Sometimes I get so caught up in the beauty of moment that I forget to snap a photo or more often, I don’t want to take myself out of the moment to grab the camera.  New York photographer Mimi Ko creates an ambience of feeling in each captured click of her camera.

    Mimi Ko Mimi Ko

    Though her subjects are occasionally dressed in period garb, there is a timelessness to the spells she is weaving.  The shadows and soft light create a quiet moodiness and feeling of anticipation.

    Mimi Ko

    With each image, she is letting us into a small part of the story.  The possible narrative is only one element in the composition, the scenes she is setting are more about what isn’t being said rather than what is.

    Mimi Ko Mimi Ko

    Want to see more of Mimi Ko’s work?  Please visit the artist’s website.

    All images via the artist’s website.

  • Wear The Artsy: Kokopelli by Ally Burguieres

    Wear The Artsy: Kokopelli by Ally Burguieres

    Summer always feels like the perfect time to bring out the graphic ethnic prints, comfy sandals, and color, color, color!  Living an artsy life means showing your artsy spirit in everything you do– including how you present yourself to the world through the clothes you wear.  Wanna channel your inner kokopelli?  This ensemble, inspired by this month’s Featured Artist Ally BurguiresKokopelli painting is perfectly comfy and colorful– perfect for an afternoon of gallery hopping in Santa Fe!

    Wear the Artsy_Ally Burguieres

     

    art | Kokopelli by Ally Burguieres

    necklace | Formosa 4 by Jessica Light

    tee | Trapeze Baseball Tee at Anthropologie

    clutch | Farrah Studded Foldover Clutch at Citrine

    skirt | Alopa Maxi Skirt at Anthropologie

    sandals | Masika Beaded T-Straps at Anthropologie

    Doesn’t a skirt like that just make you want to sashay when you walk?!  Or maybe do a wee little kokopelli dance. 😉  This pairing just makes my little artsy heart sing!

    All sources linked above.

  • Vanishing Nature: Myong Stebbins

    Vanishing Nature: Myong Stebbins

    For Mr. Forager and I, the natural world plays a big role in who we are, what strengthens and calms us. Getting out among the trees and streams renews our energy and every time we go, we are reminded how precious it is. The work of Berkeley artist Myong Stebbins captures that transportive feeling of our cherished natural world.

    Yeonkkoch II by Myong Stebbins
    Yeonkkoch II, mixed media on paper, 29.5×24.5
    New Morning by Myong Stebbins
    New Morning, mixed media on paper, 22.75×17

    Stebbins’ soft, translucent layers mimic the filtered light to be found deep in the forest. The isolated flora could be seen as a reinterpretation of scientific specimen drawings. Like dried and pressed petals, the flowers have a sense of papery fragility.

    Morning Calm II by Myong Stebbins
    Morning Calm II, mixed media on paper, 14×18

    Whenever we are out in the woods or beside the water, I try to capture the magic with my camera, but somehow, the lens never seems to do justice to the mystical beauty of the landscape.  In paint, Myong Stebbins has captured that essence that is so fleeting.

    Kibun II by Myong Stebbins
    Kibun II, oil on canvas, 24×32
    Echo by Myong Stebbins
    Echo, acrylic on paper, 31×38.5

    Want to see more of Myong Stebbins’ gorgeous work?  Please visit the artist’s website and the websites of her representing galleries, Pryor Fine Art and Bryant Street Gallery.

    New Morning and Morning Calm via the Pryor Fine Art website, other images via the artist’s website.

  • Artsy Spot: Seattle Art Museum

    Artsy Spot: Seattle Art Museum

    Every new place Mr. Forager & I go, I try to hit the local art museum.  Not only because I think it’s important to patronize local art resources ( artsy duh ), but I also find them to be an interesting gauge of the local tastes and what’s important to the surrounding culture.  After being in Seattle for six weeks, we finally ventured to the Seattle Art Museum last week.

    Seattle Art Museum exteriorIn addition to their current special exhibition, Future Beauty ( more on that in a separate post ), there were a few other intriguing exhibitions on display.  I was especially excited to see 50 Works for 50 States, selections from the Herb and Dorothy Vogel collection.

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    [ Codex Morales Braccio Sermugnano by Michael Goldberg and Untitled by Tony Smith ]

    I am continually amazed by the collection this couple put together on a modest income!  Truly inspiring to anyone who is intimidated by the prospect of collecting artwork.  The Vogels collected many smaller works and works on paper, making them more financially accessible but allowing them to build an enviable collection. Such a great example to follow!

    One of the things that impressed me the most about the SAM experience was the thoughtfulness given to how each exhibition was displayed and how the galleries interacted with each other.  Glimpses of work seen not just within each exhibition but from one gallery to another allow the work to relate and interact in a way that allows the viewer’s eye to flow naturally throughout the space.

    Thicket by Martin Puryear[ Thicket by Martin Puryear ]

    A delightful surprise was the small show currently on display in the Knight Lawrence Gallery, In a Silent Way, “a quiet reflection on African American identities and histories”.  This small gallery is tucked in a corner of the museum, away from the crowds and bustle of the larger galleries, which was perfectly fitting for such a thoughtful group of works.  The palette of the show was almost exclusively black and white, a subtle nod to the subject matter, but each piece filled with subtext of what it means to evolve as a person of African descent in America.

    Rashid Johnson at Seattle Art Museum

    From the museum’s permanent collection, an exhibition of mid-twentieth century work, From Abstract Expression to Colored Planes, features superstars of the era such as Frank Stella, Jackson Pollock and Helen Frankenthaler.  The progression of that era of modern art is always fascinating– you can literally see the artists deconstructing and reconstructing the meaning of form across time.  It is without a doubt one of my favorite periods of art history!

    Helen Frankenthaler at Seattle Art Museum[ contemplating Frankenthaler ]

    In keeping with the special exhibition’s focus on fashion, I was especially drawn to the work of Yinka Shonibare, whose Nuclear Family installation shows us a “traditional” family dressed in the structure of Victorian garb in textiles reminiscent of modern Africa.  In a different, but no less interesting textile sculpture, Walter Oltmann‘s Caterpillar Suit mixes two destructive species, the caterpillar and the conquistador, while exposing their vulnerabilities and tenuous existences.

    Yinka Shonibare at Seattle Art Museum

    [ Nuclear Family by Yinka Shonibare ]

    Caterpillar Suit III by Walter Oltmann[ Caterpillar Suit III by Walter Oltmann ]

    I love the way the Seattle Art Museum is blurring the lines between ancient and modern, leading the visitor down familiar paths only to introduce them to something new and exciting.  Can’t wait to see what else is in store!

    All photographs by Artsy Forager.

  • Paper Cuts: Atelier Bingo

    Paper Cuts: Atelier Bingo

    I’ve always had a love/hate relationship with collage.  My first college art professor loved collage and it figured heavily in her basic drawing classes.  At the time, I found the cutting, arranging, and pasting pretty tedious.  I was more of a thrown some paint around a canvas kind of art student.. but I did love how flexible a collage composition could be.  In their work, French artistic duo Max and Adele of Atelier Bingo utilize collage, gouache, ink, screen print AND digital media to create abstract compositions as expressive as any painting.

    Atelier Bingo

    ..

    Atelier Bingo
    The flattened panes of bright color immediately reminded me of the famed collages of Henri Matisse— his Blue Nude remains one of my all time favorite pieces of art, ever.  The layering of such simplistic shapes assists our eyes in completing the composition.  No details are needed– we are allowed to fill in the blanks– but only by choice.

    Atelier Bingo

    Atelier Bingo
    The flat planes of color are mixed playfully with pattern, keeping our eyes moving across the plane and helping us to add to the story our eyes are concocting along the way.

    Atelier Bingo

    Want to see more work from Atelier Bingo?  Of course you do!  Check out their website, Tumblr and Facebook page.

    All images via the artists’ website.  Artist found via It’s Nice That.

  • In Public: Scott Duce

    In Public: Scott Duce

    One of my favorite things about Seattle, or any big city for that matter, is the people watching. Anywhere we go, there is always such an intriguing array of humanity to be observed! New York artist Scott Duce must agree, because his latest series, In Public, focuses on observations of urban individuals.

    Pink Stripes by Scott Duce
    Pink Stripes, oil on panel, 12×12
    Woman With Flowers by Scott Duce
    Woman With Flowers, oil on panel, 12×12

    Walking in a big city, you definitely get a sense of being on display, but then there is also a strange contradictory feeling of the ability to melt into the crowd. Duce’s choice to isolate each figure against a monochromatic background serves to call attention to the specialness of each individual and the uniqueness of each moment.

    Skinny Man by Scott Duce
    Skinny Man, oil on panel, 12×12
    Summer Stop by Scott Duce
    Summer Stop, oil on panel, 12×12

    As we each move through life, we do not do so in a bubble. We are one of many, each individual an important part of the the entire sum.

    Fashion Runner 4 by Scott Duce
    Fashion Runner 4, oil on panel, 12×12

    Want to see more of Scott Duce’s work? Please check out his website.

    All images via the artist’s website. Artist found via Hidell Brooks Gallery.