Tag: Florida Mining

  • Artsy on the Road: Tales from Florida

    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.

  • Friday Finds: Galleries to Love

    This whole economic mess has contributed to the loss of countless galleries around the US.  I know first hand what it is like to put blood, sweat and tears into one.  OK, maybe not blood, but plenty of sweat and tears, I assure you! 😉  I’ve heard some folks say that the old gallery model is a thing of the past, gasping for air, dead in the water.  But I believe in galleries!  And today, I’m featuring some brick & mortar galleries that are out there, doing it right.  These folks are hustling, marketing, selling and making magic happen for their artists and communities.  Put ’em on your list to check out, whether you can do so in person or online!

    Diehl Gallery, Jackson Hole, Wyoming
    Florida Mining Gallery, Jacksonville, Florida
    Foster/White Gallery, Seattle, WA
    Gallery Orange, New Orleans, Louisiana
    Taylor de Cordoba, Culver City, California

    **I’m so excited to finally get a chance to visit Taylor de Cordoba and all the other LA area galleries when Mr. Forager & I hit SoCal in October!  Can’t wait to drag him all over Los Angeles.

    Diehl Gallery | Florida Mining | Foster/White | Gallery Orange | Taylor de Cordoba

    I hope you’ll check out these galleries when you’re in their respective cities– well worth the trip!  You can see more of my favorite artsy spots on my Pinterest board, Artsy’s Guide to Galleries.  Do you have a favorite gallery?  Let me know in the comments below!

  • Action Figuration:  Betsy Cain

    Action Figuration: Betsy Cain

    When I took figure drawing in college, I recall my professor telling us that once we mastered drawing the figure realistically, that’s when the real fun begins.  For once you understand the hollows and bumps of the human figure, you can then abstract your representation to your heart’s content.  Savannah artist Betsy Cain’s work energetically fuses the figure with the abstract in gorgeous layers of color.

    Red Yellow Love Melt, oil on canvas, 60×80

    Like the work of other abstract expressionists, Cain’s work appears to be purely non-representational, but often you can detect a figure coming through the energetic fever of the canvas.

    Neural Nude, oil on canvas, 54×72
    Nature of Not Knowing, oil on canvas, 60×60

    Each work consists of layer upon layer of colorful, expressive strokes which may end in a purely abstract composition yet each gives us a glimpse into the artist’s connection between her mind, the paint and the canvas.

    Nerve Flower, oil on canvas, 60×60

    To see more of Betsy Cain’s work, please visit her website.  If you happen to be reading from North Florida, you can check out Betsy Cain’s solo exhibition, Selections at Florida Mining in Jacksonville, opening this Friday, September 7th!

  • April Facebook Featured Artist: Steve Williams

    April Facebook Featured Artist: Steve Williams

    When I launched the Artsy Forager Facebook Featured Artist program this month, I was thrilled when Steve Williams agreed to be my inaugural artist. Like me, Steve is a native of our hometown, Jacksonville, Florida and has long been a fixture on the art scene there.  Steve, along with his then gallery partner, Jim Draper, encouraged a young Artsy Forager  to continue painting just out of college.  Even though I allowed myself to get sidetracked, I never forgot their kindness.

    Marco Polo, mixed media

    As he splits his time between being president of his family’s successful sign business, Harbinger Sign, the gallery he has created at the business’s headquarters, Florida Mining, his own work as an artist AND being a devoted father of three, Steve is a busy soul.  Which makes it all the more amazing to see the quality of thoughtful work he creates.

    Jackson, mixed media

    His experience in the sign business is evident in the strong graphic quality and balance evident in his compositions.  His most recent Money series ( images above ) explores currency as symbolic of all that we strive for as a society yet ensnares and imprisons us.

    Into the Goodly Land, mixed media on panel, 60×72

    While I love this current direction, my personal favorite works of Steve’s are those that incorporate layers of texture and color in which graphic signs and images are enshrouded.  These works, as well as the Money series, invite us in, asking us to look more closely at not only the world around us, but the motives and desires within us.

    TV Exploration of Mars II, mixed media, 12×12
    Revolutionary Exploration: Shallow Discovery, mixed media, 11×19

    I hope you’ll check out more of Steve Williams‘ work on his website.  And do yourself a favor– don’t miss his blog, Making Cheddar, or his Twitter feed.    He’s as hilarious as he is insightful.

    Featured image is Grant, mixed media, 60×36.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Curious Amalgamations of the Unrelated: Geoff Mitchell

    Curious Amalgamations of the Unrelated: Geoff Mitchell

    It seems to be human nature to look for meaning in everything.  We agonize over the meaning of baby names before choosing monikers for our offspring, we overanalyze  other people’s words to find out what they really meant, we take silly quizzes that tell us what our favorite color says about who we are.  And of course, we look for meaning and subtext in artwork.  Guilty, as charged, officer.  What is the artist trying to say?  What message is being conveyed?  In the case of Geoff Mitchell, it is a case of what the artist is striving not to communicate.

    Mayonaisse by Geoff Mitchell
    Mayonaisse, mixed media on panel, 20×20

    The artist, whose show, Entries of a Diary Thief, opens at Florida Mining in Jacksonville, FL next Friday, creates work driven by the sense of “pareidolia, a psychological misperception involving a vague or obscure stimulus being perceived as something distinct and significant”. ( quote via Florida Mining )

    Trinket by Geoff Mitchell
    Trinket, mixed media on six panels, 24×36 overall

    In other words, our tendency to create meaning where there is none.  The artist describes his use of representational imagery as being done  “in a free associative and purely intuitive manner. I mix and layer images together in a way that is reminiscent of an abstract painter layering color.” ( via Florida Mining ) So any “meaning” inferred by the viewer is not intended by the artist himself, but instead by the viewers personal association with the imagery therein.

    Zipper by Geoff Mitchell
    Zipper, mixed media on panel, 20×20

    So, with that being said, I leave you to draw your own conclusions about Mitchell’s work.  His sense of color, composition and design are undeniable, which is what makes the unrelated imagery so compelling and visually arresting.

    Derby by Geoff Mitchell
    Derby, mixed media on panel, 12×18
    Drop by Geoff Mitchell
    Drop, mixed media on panel, 20×20

    Please visit Geoff Mitchell’s website to see more of his work online.  If you’re in North Florida, don’t miss his show opening December 9, 2011 at Florida Mining.

    Featured image is Topaz, mixed media on panel, 60×20.  All images are via the artist’s website.
  • Artsy on Escape Into Life: Laird

    Artsy on Escape Into Life: Laird

    Check out my Escape Into Life post today featuring Laird, a Northeast Florida photographer whose work can be seen at Florida Mining.  You may remember his work from my Gallery Spotlight post featuring FM.  This new work is stunning!

    Laird on Escape Into Life

  • Artsy Spot:  Florida Mining

    Artsy Spot: Florida Mining

    Ninety-nine percent of the time I completely love my life in the Pacific Northwest.  But occasionally, there is that nagging little 1% that longs to be back in my hometown of Jacksonville, Florida, just so that I can be in the thick of the exciting artistic resurgence happening there.  Though the arts in Jax were hit hard by the recession, artists and art supporters are determined to make Jacksonville a cultural destination.  Among them, artist Steve Williams is bringing home forward-thinking, atypical art with his new gallery, Florida Mining.

    CPHACE by Laird, inaugural exhibition at Florida Mining

    Williams is no stranger to playing gallerist.  He’s been at the heart of several successful galleries in Jacksonville over the years.  As an artist, he thrives on being involved with other artists and their creative processes.  And, being the generous soul that he is, wants to help them succeed and in the process, is bringing his unique vision for the arts to his hometown.

    Florida Mining

    Florida Mining’s mission?  To present emerging to mid career artists who are thought provoking and fresh with a mix of medium and perspective.  And they were off to a slammin’ start with their first show featuring a new series of work by Northeast Florida photographer Laird, a series infared photographs which begin with organic surroundings and are composited and mirrored so that the resulting image becomes almost hauntingly alien, yet familiar.

    CPHACE series by Laird

    Florida Mining’s sleek, contemporary space, designed by the brilliant team at Designmind, Larry Wilson and Rebecca Davisson ( both artists in their own right ) is the perfect showcase for making avant-garde work accessible to North Florida.

    Florida Mining

    Up next for Florida Mining is a new show, Tonya Lee: All Smiles, a new series from the Jacksonville-native, current Philadelphian featuring paintings and wallpaper ( yes, you read that right! ), embracing Lee’s fascination with alternative materials.

    Tonya Lee: All Smiles

    Tonya Lee: All Smiles opens at Florida Mining this coming Friday, 11/11/11.  If you are anywhere nearby, you will not want to miss it!  Big things are in store for this new venture.  Go and experience it for yourself.

    If you’re not in Florida, be sure to check out Florida Mining on their website, Facebook and Twitter.  Always interesting and cheeky fun to be had.