Tag: Jamie Baldridge

  • Friday Faves:  Spooktacular

    Friday Faves: Spooktacular

    You will never catch me watching a gory horror movie, so I’m not usually drawn to truly gruesome imagery.  But I do love a good spooky mystery, so just in time for Halloween, today’s round-up features some of my favorite frightful art!

    Edison's Parable by Jamie Baldridge
    Chair With Hand by Kim Kamens, thread, nails and wood, 48×72
    Dolly Madison Zebra Stripe Death by Dirk Westphal, limited edition print, 11×14, 16×20 or 24×30
    Phones by Melanie Pullen

    To see more of these artists awesomely creepy work, please visit their websites listed below.  Happy Halloween!

    1.  Jamie Baldridge

    2.  Kim Kamens

    3.  Dirk Westphal ( the print shown is available via ArtWeLove, but make sure to check out Dirk’s website, too! )

    4.  Melanie Pullen 

    Featured image is “Flock” by Kim Kamens, thread, nails & wood, 72×48.  All images are courtesy of the artist’s websites, unless otherwise noted.

  • Visual Tales of Allegory and Absurdity: Jamie Baldridge

    Visual Tales of Allegory and Absurdity: Jamie Baldridge

    The fantastical work of Jamie Baldridge weaves for the viewer visually complex stories that engage the mind and entrance the spirit.

    Phrases From A Broken Language

    Baldridge, a professor of photography at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, creates his fantastical works by utilizing not only photography, but also digital manipulation and collage.  The resulting images are full of depth, texture and an extraordinary sense of light.

    The Socrates Safe Co.

    His Vermeerish palette lends the eccentric images an old-worldly feel and their dark sensibilities recall the iconography and symbolism of the Victorians.  Yet there is something inherently modern about them– perhaps it is the subtly infused humor or the fashiony bent to some of the work.

    A Confluence of Extraordinary Ideas
    A Pair of Gnostics Burdened On A Platform

    There are stories at work here, some obvious, others more subversive, but all entirely up to the viewer to complete.  Baldridge has opened up the book to a random middle page and it is up to us to find the beginning and end.

    To see more of Jamie Baldridge’s fascinating work, please visit his website.  I first saw his work this weekend at the Thomas Lee Gallery in Ashland, OR, so if you’re anywhere near the area, you could do the same.  ( Note to the Thomas Lee gallerist:  Immediately going into the archival paper, framing and pricing of an intriguing work of art is NOT the way to sell it.  Just sayin’. )