Tag: Artists

  • Vulnerable Abandon: Heather Chontos

    Vulnerable Abandon: Heather Chontos

    I’ve been reading up on the Abstract Expressionists lately and have found myself completely enraptured by the movement and the entire era.  Working intuitively, many abstract artists set out without a clue as to where their composition will ultimately end up.  The work is an extension of who they are in that moment in time– a big part of what fascinates me about abstract work and abstract expressionism.  In the work of Heather Chontos, I see much of that same intuitiveness and freedom.

    Heather Chontos Heather Chontos Heather Chontos Heather Chontos Heather Chontos

    Heather made a name for herself in the world of fashion publications, styling and set designing for the likes of Barneys & Anthropologie.  And in these abstract works, there carries over that sense of composition, you can almost see her rearranging her shapes and lines on each canvas, much in the same way she might stage & style for a shoot– moving things around until it feels just right.  She isn’t afraid to let us in on that process, too.  Smudges in charcoal and paint let us know where perhaps she switched out one shape or line for another.

    Of course, there is beauty in the slick and perfectly painted canvas– but often being able to let go of our need for perfection and allow ourselves to be vulnerable as artists is a deeper challenge.  It is an act of truly putting yourself out there, there is no hiding, you are laid out on canvas for all the world to see.  Completely scary, for sure, but amazingly liberating, too.

    One of my own resolutions  goals for 2014 is to get serious about painting again.  I’ll be starting a little daily exercise over on Instagram ( come follow along! ) and will share more on that later this week.  It’s a daunting prospect, especially as I hope to be busy with freelance work too, this year, but my heart is longing for it.  Artists like Heather are reminding me that the work isn’t always about the result but about learning from the process.

    To see more of Heather Chontos’ work, please visit her website, and follow her on Facebook & Instagram.  You can purchase her work through the Milk Farm Road shop.

    All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Affronting Our Fronts: Tristan Pigott

    Affronting Our Fronts: Tristan Pigott

    We all want to present ourselves in the best way possible.  But with the infiltration of social media into every aspect of our lives, its tempting to cross the line over from putting our best foot forward to presenting an inauthentic picture of who we are.  In his work, artist Tristan Pigott examines our habits of self-projection and the superficiality we often perpetuate.

    Tristan Pigott | artsy forager #art #painting What's Your Point by Tristan Pigott Tell Me by Tristan Pigott Tristan Pigott | artsy forager #art #paintings Waiting by Tristan Pigott | artsy forager #art #paintings

    His compositions employ fashion models in the place of “ordinary” people, to further enforce the notion of the fronts and facades we create for ourselves.  It’s so easy to fall into the trap of wanting every photo we post to be beautiful, to encite envy among our social media followers and to lead them to believe we live a life to which they should aspire.  And maybe we do in some ways.  But in other respects, each life is filled with the same sorts of gunk and uncomfortable human stuff that we are all too often so very careful to edit out.  How many photos have you seen this holiday season of burnt cookies?  Or a child in mid-meltdown because Santa didn’t bring exactly what he asked for?  Not many, I’m guessing. I certainly didn’t post the photos of the burnt Honey Rosemary Pecans I made or my non-made up face upon waking first thing Christmas morning.

    Why?  Because I’m chicken.  I don’t want the world to see the dark circles under my eyes or to know that I occasionally leave food in the oven just a bit too long. ( Oops guess now you know my secret! ).  Like everyone else, I want the world to see my life as beautiful.  But here’s the thing.  Every life IS beautiful.  Filled with beauty.  It may not be magazine spread perfect, but each and every one of our lives is full of moments that take our breath away, that make us laugh and yes, make us mad or embarrassed.  But what makes our lives the beautiful messes that they are is embracing the imperfectness, being able to laugh with and at ourselves.  Letting people into our beautiful mess.

    To see more of Tristan Pigott‘s work, please visit his website.

    All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Tender Highways: Grant Haffner

    Tender Highways: Grant Haffner

    Many of you may be on the road as I type this, on your way home after much holiday merriment.  Isn’t it interesting how much different the landscape looks from a car?  I remember being fascinated by the blur of grass and trees seen from my backseat window as a girl.  Even when half asleep after a long day, my young mind could still tell just by the timing and turning of corners when we were almost home.  Long Island artist Grant Haffner captures his love of his own hometown roads in his tender, colorful paintings.

    Grant Haffner

    Longbeach by Grant Haffner Entry 3 by Grant Haffner Gerard Drive by Grant Haffner Bay by Grant Haffner

    In these acrylic paintings, Haffner beautifully captures that feeling of being on the road, the whizzing blur of color, the towering power lines, the never-ending expanse of sky.  Sure, air travel may be faster, but a road trip offers so much more in the way of adventure and discovery.  There could always be some hidden potential just around the next corner, just over that hill.  Haffner’s paintings capture that sense of excitement and anticipation and their lack of cars and people give the viewer a through-the-windshield feeling of being that sole traveler indulging their wanderlust.

    To see more of Grant Haffner‘s work, please visit his website.  Our journey from Florida to Washington three years ago is among my best road trip memories.  Do you have a favorite?

    All images are via the artist’s website.  Artist found via The Jealous Curator.

  • Momentary Souvenirs: Stephanie Brody Lederman

    Momentary Souvenirs: Stephanie Brody Lederman

    Did you make some wonderful memories yesterday, Artsies?  What will you recall?  Will it be the main event, the big moments or will it be the small, seemingly insignificant minutes that you’ll look back on with fondness?  In her latest work, New York artist Stephanie Brody-Lederman in her own visual language, illustrates the moments that capture her emotions and imagination.

    Our Ancestors Lives by Stephanie Brody Lederman Being Human by Stephanie Brody Lederman Lantern & Lamp by Stephanie Brody Lederman At This Late Hour ( Still Swimming Forward ) by Stephanie Brody Lederman Dawn by Stephanie Brody Lederman

    Some people recall certain events in great detail.  That’s never been me.  I remember more the sensuality of memory– the smell of my paternal grandparents’ house, the soft skin of my maternal grandmothers’ hands, the thrill of the first kiss my husband gave me.  In these paintings, it is that untouchable sensation of memory, the emotion of certain moments that Brody-Lederman is capturing.

    In small symbols and still scenes, she evokes a sense of the remembrance of an instant.  After all, our memories don’t necessarily record full scenes like a movie, but more brief flashes and hints of feeling remind us of what has been.

    To see more of Stephanie Brody-Lederman‘s work, please visit her website.

    All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Sweet Decadence: Heather McCaw Kerley

    Sweet Decadence: Heather McCaw Kerley

    I don’t know about you, but one of my favorite things about this time of year is the food!  Putting diets aside, we allow ourselves to focus on the inherent feast for the senses that delicious food can bring.  Nothing beats the scent of freshly baked bread wafting through a home, am I right??  This season is about indulgence and much of it of the decadent sweet kind.  In her Bakery series, artist Heather McCaw Kerley focuses her attention on those baked objects of desire.

    Doughnut with Pink Sprinkles by Heather McCaw Kerley Chocolate Cupcake by Heather McCaw Kerley Doughnut Holes by Heather McCaw Kerley Pink Cupcake by Heather McCaw Kerley Doughnut with Chocolate White Striped Icing

    Isolating these treats, each a monument to delightful indulgence.  “I’ll have just one“, these seem to be saying.  And when we taste the sweetness of icing on our tongues, a wave of satisfaction washes over.  We know we can’t make a steady diet of doughnuts and cupcakes, but oh, if only we could!  How sweet life would be.  Maybe.  Or perhaps, if we were to indulge all the time, special treats would lose their luster.  We would no longer savor them slowly, but devour them without truly tasting their deliciousness.  I think the same can be said of events like holidays, if we were celebrating this way every day, the shine would soon grow weary.  But its the anticipation, the build up, the focus of intensity that makes these days so special.  Let’s savor them like the delectable cupcakes they are.

    To see more of Heather McCaw Kerley‘s work, please visit her website and be sure to follow her on Facebook and Pinterest

  • Stories Retold: Marybeth Rothman

    Stories Retold: Marybeth Rothman

    When I was young, one of my favorite grandmother’s house activities was to sit with her and go through the piles and piles of photo albums she meticulously collected and kept.  I was enchanted by seeing my grandparents when they were young, my mom and uncle as children and black & white pictures of countless relatives I never chanced to meet.  After my grandparents passed, my mom, brother and I sat around her dining table and tried to go through all the photos.  We discovered a good many whose faces we didn’t recognize and surprisingly, my grandmother didn’t label.  Who were these people?  What had them meant to our grandparents?  In her encaustic mixed media work, New Jersey artist Marybeth Rothman takes vintage photo booth pictures without identity and puts new stories to old faces.

    Clotho III by Marybeth Rothman Lachesis III by Marybeth Rothman Atropos III by Marybeth Rothman Fern by Marybeth Rothman T George Bell by Marybeth Rothman

    The artist gives new life to these abandoned portraits, seeing connections between strangers, reimagining them as icons of Greek mythology and fictional characters.  The tiny photographs are enlarged to a grand scale, giving even further importance to these forgotten faces.

    It does make me wonder, what will become of all our own memories?  Especially now that most personal photos are digitized, there will no longer be boxes and albums of photographs to be unearthed.  Will living our lives digitally allow for a better keeping of record or will all be lost when the technology we’ve used becomes obsolete?

    To see more work by Marybeth Rothman, please visit her website.

    All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Thriving Artist Summit Replays!

    Thriving Artist Summit Replays!

    I don’t usually post on Sundays, but I wanted to pop in and make sure all the artists who follow Artsy Forager knew about this!  I was so thrilled and excited to be a part of the Thriving Artist Summit earlier this month, a free online conference full of amazing advice, tips, and inspiration for artists.  But here’s the best news– all of the interviews are being replayed, now through December 31st!  So if you missed out on any or just want to listen again, head on over to the Thriving Artist website to gain access if you aren’t already registered.

    artmuse.com founder Bonnie Glendinning gathered together 20+ industry experts who, like me, are all on a mission to help artists not just survive, but THRIVE!

    TAS-Square-2014

    I shared my expertise in blogging and social media at this powerful summit and I hope to help you learn how to make these easy and accessible tools work for you!

    Find out more right here: http://thrivingartistsummit.com/lfrenz
    During this special community summit you will discover how to:

    • Make Your Creative Biz a Real Success
    • Build Your Brand for Your Ideal Buyers
    • Price for Real Profit and Growth
    • Increase Your Sales with Marketing, PR, and Social Media
    • Diversify into Licensing, Wholesale, and Direct-to-Consumer
    • Get Into Galleries, Shows, and Raise Project Funds

    I’d love for you to experience this yourself and JOIN US FOR THIS FREE summit.

    The Thriving Artist Summit
    With Lesley Frenz and Bonnie Glendinning December 18 through December 31, 2013 Approximately 1 hour, replay available to registrants

    SECURE YOUR SPOT NOW: http://thrivingartistsummit.com/lfrenz

  • Design Foraging: Urban Revisions

    Design Foraging: Urban Revisions

    Oh how I love some pretty jewelry candy!  I asked Mr. Forager Santa to put a pretty little artsy bauble in my Christmas stocking.  Think its too late to add one of these to my list?  These handmade glass and fiber pieces by Asheville artist Arlie Trowbridge aka Urban Revisions would be sure to add an artsy touch to every day.

    DF_UR_Indigo necklace DF_UR_Glass cluster ball earrings DF_UR_glass cluster ring opaque pastels DF_UR_Cluster ball necklace DF_UR_glass cluster ring amber purple

     

    Aren’t they lovely?  Like wearing beautiful little pieces of rock candy.  The top necklace and bottom rings are my fave.  Which do you love best?

    It’s too late to order from Urban Revisions in time for Christmas, but never too late for an anytime gift for yourself! 😉  See more pretty artsy baubles on the Urban Revisions website here.

    All images via the Urban Revisions website.

  • Lucid Stead: Phillip K Smith

    Lucid Stead: Phillip K Smith

    This time last year, Mr. Forager and I were in a very different place.  For six months, we traded our beloved Northwest for the California high desert.  Joshua Tree, California, to be exact.  And although we ultimately decided desert life wasn’t for us, we nonetheless felt the beauty and magic to be found there.  In his Lucid Stead installation project, Indio, CA artist Phillip K Smith transforms a 70 year old desert homestead into a miraculous mirage.

    Lucid Stead by Phillip K. Smith III Lucid Stead by Phillip K. Smith III Lucid Stead by Phillip K. Smith III Lucid Stead by Phillip K. Smith III Lucid Stead by Phillip K. Smith III

    The desert, with its vast expanses, can be a disorienting, isolating place, which always made me wonder– what was it that made first settlers decide to stop and try to make a life from such an unforgiving landscape?  Perhaps it was the intense light and the shadows it creates or the endless sky with its countless stars?

    In Lucid Stead ( sorry, now closed to the public ), Smith gilds this desert shack in mirrors, reflecting the sandy surrounds and creating an every changing spectral form on the landscape.  At night, the mirrors give way to darkness, colored LED lights lending an alien air.

    To see more of Phillip K Smith‘s work, please visit his website.  If you’re in Southern California, you can see an exhibition of Smith’s latest works at Royale Projects in Palm Desert.

    All images are via the Royale Projects website.

  • Artsy Holiday: Casey Matthews

    Artsy Holiday: Casey Matthews

    Mr. Forager & I have been going back and forth about what type of meals we’ll have on Christmas Day.  It’s just the two of us and while that’s never stopped us from making elaborate meals before, we’re thinking a sweet little brunch and then a bit of antipasto later.  But no matter how simple the holiday meal, it always feels more festive when the table is set in an artful way!  So if you’re like me and still figuring out your holiday tablescape, here’s a little inspiration from this month’s Featured Artist Casey Matthews

    Artsy holiday Casey Matthews

    found via art | ornaments | trees | float | votives | placemat | tableware | napkins | paperweight | glasses

    I mean, those greens are just calling out holiday cheer like nobody’s business!  Add in a judicious dollop of snowy white, rich jewel tones and glittery metallics and you’ll have a table scape perfect for celebrating the season.  Casey’s painting Sitting Pretty at The End of the World is full of delicious shape and color, a Casey inspired table can’t help but sit pretty, too!

    If you’d like to see more artsy holiday inspiration, please take a peek at my Artsy Holiday Pinterest board, where I’ve been gathering all sorts of inspiring holiday images, DIYs and just plain prettiness.  To see more of Casey Matthews‘ work, please visit her website.

    All image sources linked above.  Artwork is a cropped detail of the original.