Tag: Artists

  • Guest Foraging for Image South: How Versatile Artwork Transforms Any Space

    Hiya Artsies!  Oh boy, so many exciting things happening ’round these parts!  Feel like I’m all over the place in the best sort of way.  This week, I have a guest post up over on the Image South blog.  If you’re not familiar with Image South, they are a publisher of fine art prints offering beautiful work at affordable prices.  For my guest post, I took one IS print, Essential Line #4 by Mitra Ghaffari, carefully chose versatile Larson Juhl framing and then showcased it in three very different spaces.  Head over to the Image South blog to check it out!

    Essential Line #4 by Mitra Ghaffari

    Guest Foraging for Image South

  • Artsy on Escape Into Life: Carlito Dalceggio

    As much travelling as Mr. Forager and I do, we have yet to venture outside the US.  But we have big plans to do so and I can. not. wait.!!  Recently Artsy Forager fave artist, M.A. Tateishi, journeyed to a dream destination of mine, Turkey ( read all about it on her blog here ).  While she was there, M.A. experienced the most amazing looking installation, Revolution Revelation, created by artists Arkin (Mercan Dede) and Carlito Dalceggio.  I was especially struck by the style of Dalceggio– so modern Byzantine meets urban graffiti!  So I’m featuring his work on my Artist Watch over on Escape Into Life today.  His works feel like an escape into the intricacies of Moorish architecture in a delightfully twisted way.  Nothing but love from this Artsy.

    Portrait of Jean Michel Basquiat ( RWD ) by Carlito Dalceggio

    Carlito Dalceggio on Escape Into Life

  • Saturated Skies: Eric Cahan

    Saturated Skies: Eric Cahan

    While living on a lake in Northern Idaho this summer, I swear I have never seen skies soooo blue.  Every day around lunch time, I take a break from blogging work and walk outside to text my hubby ( danger of living in the boonies, spotty cell reception ) and almost every day as I look up above the canopy of trees and into the sky, it is the most impossible shade of blue.  A blue so deep and saturated and perfect that it would be impossible to capture, at least for this amateur photographer.  New York artist Eric Cahan seems to have a similar obsession with sky, but where my own limitations keep my from even trying, his skill and talent beautifully capture the simple magnificence of the expanse above us.

    Bridgehampton, NY Sunset 7:48pm

    His work focuses on the pure joy of color that the sky and landscape affords, breaking the vast space and complexity of the natural world into simple gradients of color.

    Tri-Color Diptych Gradient Window Wedge, cast polyester resin, 30x8x4
    Pink Gradient A-Frame, cast polyester resin, 20x80x20

    In his sculptures and photographs alike, we are left to revel in the pure liquidity of color and environs.  We forget the chaos on the earth below and are transported to the space above.

    Gardiners Bay NY Sunrise 6:28am

    To see more of Eric Cahan’s work, please visit his website.  Eric represents just one of the many talented artists and photographers I’ve found via Pinterest.  It’s not just shoes and recipes!  Check out the Artsy Forager Pinterest board, Artsy in Living Color, for more found photographic talent.

  • Artsy Reads: Tom and Jack by Henry Adams

    Artsy Reads: Tom and Jack by Henry Adams

    I have always been a voracious reader, nerd that I am.  Summers were often spent with my nose in a book and summer reading contests were usually won handedly.  These days, with so much time spent reading blogs and articles online, I don’t pick up a book nearly as often as I’d like.  When I do, sometimes it’s an artist biography or other art/art history related tome, with the occasional fun & easy fiction read thrown in.  Since some of my artsy reads might be of interest to you, I thought I’d begin posting my thoughts on my latest conquests.

    Best reading spot ever

    My most recent artsy read has been Tom and Jack: The Intertwined Lives of Thomas Hart Benton and Jackson Pollock by Henry Adams.  Many of us know that Pollock was a student of Benton, but this book really delves into both their lives and careers, their complicated relationship and the influence of each on the development of modern art.

    Tom and Jack: The Intertwined Lives of Thomas Hart Benton and Jackson Pollock by Henry Adams

    While I’ve always admired Thomas Hart Benton’s work for its sweeping nature and subtly satirical voice ( though it is still widely criticized by many as too provincial ), I’ll admit my main draw to the book was Pollock.

    Arts of the West ( 1932 ) by Thomas Hart Benton

    Remembering back to my earliest forays into art history, I wasn’t especially intrigued by Pollock.  At the time, I was drawn to the more feminine abstractions of Georgia O’Keeffe and Helen Frankenthaler.  It wasn’t until I came face to face with a Pollock canvas during an Abstract Expressionism show at The Cummer Museum of Art in Jacksonville.   I was completely blown away.

    Convergence by Jackson Pollock ( 1952 ), oil on canvas, 155×93.5

    The texture, the seemingly randomness that once you really stare at it, is not so random, the thick build-up of paint.. I was now officially hooked.  The book details the rise of Thomas Hart Benton, paying special attention to his influences, as these would trickle down to ultimately influence Pollock.  Benton’s theory of “the hollow and the bump” becomes especially important to Pollock’s artistic growth.  Once studied side by side, it’s interesting to map how Pollock went from devoted student of Benton’s to the development of his own unique, groundbreaking style while still utilizing theories taught to him by this mentor and father figure.

    I confess, this one took me several library renewals to get through..  The first half of the book, which focuses heavily on Benton and his contemporaries is a bit of a challenge, perhaps because I was more interested in Pollock.  But once you begin to see it all culminating in the explosion of Pollock’s career, the transition from the Modern movement to Abstract Expressionism and the shifting of the center of the art world from Paris to New York, the book is impossible to put down.  Yes, there’s plenty of speculation regarding Pollock’s alcoholism, mental and emotional battles, but the focus comes back to how he dealt with those demons through his work.  A fantastic read if you are at all interested in modern art, abstract expressionism, Benton or Pollock.  I just wish I’d bought it instead of checking it out of the library!

    Anyone else out there read this book?  What were your thoughts?

    PS– If you have any recommendations for artsy reads, please share!  Right now, I’m really enjoying Steve Martin’s An Object of Beauty.  Thoughts on that one to come soon!  You can see more of my reading list on my Artsy Book Club Pinterest board. 😉

  • Constructed Dreams: Laura Redburn

    Constructed Dreams: Laura Redburn

    I’ve been having some pretty weird and vivid dreams lately.  One night’s sleep involved a marriage proposal from The Office’s Michael Scott ( admittedly, I do have a bit of a Steve Carell crush ) AND an actual wedding to George Michael circa his Wham! days ( and yes, 80s girl that I am, I had a huge crush on GM back in the day ).  So it isn’t any surprise that as soon as Welsh artist Laura Redburn emailed her work to me, I was instantly drawn to it.

    Gannex, mixed media
    The Truest Thing We’d Ever Known, mixed media

    Her mixed media work, constructions of things and images that inspire her, reminded me of my own dreams.  The scenes are familiar and usually friendly, yet slightly so ever askew.

    In the Warm July Sun, mixed media
    Messenger in Disguise, mixed media

    Redburn’s collages unearth old memories, finding them perhaps not quite as we remembered them.  Which is sometimes a bit unsettling, but there is a bit of freedom in the renewal of memories in an unfamiliar fashion.

    Keen, mixed media

    To see more of Laura Redburn’s work, please visit her website.  You can buy her prints of her work ( and other cool goodies, too! ) at Society6.

    All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Exploratory Expressions: Amadea Bailey

    Exploratory Expressions: Amadea Bailey

    I love the way some artists are visual archaeologists.  California based artist Amadea Bailey takes a journey of exploration and excavation each time she works a canvas.

    In the Pink, mixed media on canvas, 53×89
    Out of the box, mixed media on canvas, 60×80

    Like other “excavation” artists whose work I love, such as M.A. Tateishi and Christina Foard, Bailey builds her work, layer upon layer, eventually unearthing treasures as they resurface.

    La Dolce Vita, oil on canvas, 38×54

    Her large canvases are worlds unto themselves, images appearing out of the chaos, like mirages in the desert.

    Free Fall, mixed media on canvas, 54×62
    The Little Prince, acrylic and oil on canvas, 62×78

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

    All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Guest Foraging: New Monthly Feature on UGallery’s Blog!

    Good afternoon, Artsies!  I’m happy to announce that beginning today, I’ll be writing a monthly feature for the UGallery blog!  UGallery is an online gallery featuring affordable & accessible original artwork.  I’ve been pinning to UGallery’s group Pinterest board, Artful Rooms, for a few months now and  you may remember Kurt Yalcin, Community Manager for UGallery, popped in to do a little Guest Foraging for me while I was on vacation earlier this month.  We’ve been enjoying our collaborations so much that Kurt offered me a regular feature on the UGallery blog!

    Curated Persona will run once a month and with each new post, I’ll introduce you to a new “personality” and curate a collection of work from UGallery’s fabulous stable of artists especially tailored to that persona.  Head over the the UGallery blog to check out the first installment of Curated Personas: The Romantic Sophisticate!

    At the Edge by Joy McKinney
  • No Ordinary Imaginary Magic: Alexandra Eldridge

    No Ordinary Imaginary Magic: Alexandra Eldridge

    I always loved listening to my nieces when they were playing alone in their rooms.  Their imaginations, so fertile and free, creating worlds all their own.  So many of us, as we grow older, lose our childlike imaginations.  But artist Alexandra Eldridge obviously still has hers firmly intact, as she crafts imagery full of whimsy and dream-like charm.

    The Garden House, venetian plaster, mixed media, collage on panel, 18×24
    Elephant, mixed media

    Eldridge’s mixed media work combines seemingly disparaged elements in such a enchanting way, they have the feeling of our childhood day dreams.  Reminders of the days when life was filled with possibilities and wonder.

    Miracle by Miracle, mixed media, 24×24
    This is Where I Live, mixed media, 24×24

    To see more of Alexandra Eldridge’s work, please visit her website.  I discovered her work at Diehl Gallery in Jackson Hole, WY ( more artists to come from Diehl! ).  You can see her work in person there and at other galleries around the country.  Check out her website for details!

    All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Artsy on Escape Into Life: Linus Lohoff

    I have a feeling there is a contingency out there who think Pinterest is filled with nothing but images of shoes, decadent cuisine, house porn and Ryan Gosling memes.  OK, perhaps they have a point.  But when you follow smart, intelligent, artsy folks like I do, Pinterest can be a treasure trove of artistic goodies, like the work of German photographer Linus Lohoff, whose work I’m featuring in my Artist Watch over on Escape Info Life today.  Hope you’ll head over to EIL to check it out and while you’re at it, take a peek at the Artsy Forager boards on Pinterest!

    Linus Lohoff on Escape Into Life

  • Flights of Fancy: Diana Beltran Herrera

    Flights of Fancy: Diana Beltran Herrera

    I’ve told you before about my visions of becoming a crazy bird watcher.  While Mr. Forager loves to lookout for ospreys, hawks and other large birds of prey, my own preference is for birds of smaller varieties.  Spotting a hummingbird is especially thrilling!  Their diminutive size and speed make their sudden appearance fascinating.  Colombian artist Diana Beltran Herrera recreates their flights of fancy in her paper sculptures.

    While we were recently camping in Glacier National Park, we awoke one morning to what sounded like tiny jets buzzing above the roof of our tent.  The hummingbirds were enjoying a frolic among the lupine surrounding our campsite.

    Herrera’s birds seem to come alive as they search for nectar among paper sculpted flowers.  You can practically hear the buzz of their wings as they keep themselves suspended mid-air.

    So what do you think?  Has my slight ornithological obsession completely taken hold?  I think the only cure is to just seek out more fowl, both of the living and artistic variety. 😉 To see more of Diana Beltran Herrera’s work, please visit her website.

    Artist found via My Modern Metropolis.  All images are via the artist’s website.