Happy Independence Day to all the US Artsies! It’s always been the artist’s job to be the visual voice of each generation. Whether that means celebrating what we love most about our country or being a creative outlet for independent critical thought, each artist sees the world with their own unique vision.
As we celebrate freedom today, let’s each have our own Artsy Independence Day by throwing off the shackles of whatever is holding us back. Have a great one, Artsies! Mr. Forager & I are headed to the Seattle Art Museum today for a little Artsy Independence of our own. More on our visit soon!
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, 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
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!
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, from Re:Focus Art of the 1980s at MOCA JacksonvilleElizabeth 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 Connectionsarea.
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.
Steve Williams and I go way back, although he doesn’t remember. When I was a college senior, my painting professor encouraged me to meet with two artists/gallery owners, Jim Draper and Steve Williams. They liked my work and were very encouraging, wanting to see more and see it framed.. but I chickened out and didn’t follow through. Who knows where my life may have led had I followed their advice and diligently pursued it? Oh how stupid we are when we are young! 🙂
A gallery owner and artist, Steve is always a source for interesting work, his own and what he features in his gallery, Florida Mining. He is also a businessman running not only his gallery but his family’s sign business, Harbinger Sign. So it’s no surprise his questions related to the business of making art!
Jackson, mixed media, 60×30
Steve Williams | What have you found to be most important to an artist’s success? What do you see as the activities an artist does that puts them in an arena of “success”, whatever that means?
Artsy Forager | Hmm.. I suppose to answer this question, you would first have to define success, which differs with each artist. For some artists, financial success, i.e., selling lots of work, taking on commissions, making a living solely by art-making, may be their touchstone. While for others, critical achievement is utmost in their minds– being lauded and accepted in the highest of art circles. Or maybe they are looking for their Andy Warholish 15 minutes of fame.
For success in both arenas, first I would say an artist has to just WORK. Create all the time. Creating work is the most important activity an artist can do because after all, it’s impossible to achieve financial or critical success without having the work to sell or show. Second, use the tools at your disposal and use them smartly. An online presence is more important for an artist now than ever– keep your website updated and make sure it loads and allows browsing easily. Post regularly on Facebook and Twitter ( Hootsuite is a great tool for social media time management ). Write a blog if you’re so inclined– but if you don’t have something interesting to say or share, whether about your work, other artist’s work, your interests, etc., don’t feel like you need to write a blog. Do it well or don’t do it at all. Third, be open to everything. Opportunities come your way when you put yourself in their path. Don’t be afraid to propose a collaboration with a dream brand or approach a dream gallery for representation. You’ll never know if you don’t try.
TV Exploration of Mars, mixed media, 12×12
SW | Is there an area in America that seems to be enjoying greater success in art sales? Or an area that seems to have less?
AF | This is a really tough question for me to answer, as I’m so ingrained in the Southeast and Northwest and I’m not truly in the business of selling art ( yet..? ). There are exciting shows happening in Los Angeles and San Francisco, but is that translating into sales? I can’t say for certain. I see some Southern galleries and artists doing really well, but I can’t say if that is a product of their location or if the galleries are just working really hard to sell art and build up a following of collectors for their artists. Artistic epicenters like NYC, Santa Fe and Miami are always going to be ahead of the game, sales-wise, I think. But there are smaller cities like Austin, Asheville and Portland that are gaining in popularity as artistic tourist destinations, which could equal greater sales.
Haiku Metaphor, mixed media, 22×30
SW | Have you seen/done research to see if people are buying art more online now? If so, what type of work is being purchased?
AF | I can only speak for what I’m witnessing on my own and hearing about from artists. Collectors ARE buying more work online these days. I see online buyers as more apt to purchase limited editions or less expensive originals than to purchase originals with a higher price tag over the internet. There is inherently less to lose by purchasing work online with a lower price tag. Also, the intricacies and textures inherent in original work are almost impossible to truly see online, so that makes some originals a tougher online sell. Perhaps as technology continues to advance, we’ll see more truly fine art originals being sold online. For now, the online market seems to be made up more of prints, limited editions and lower priced originals. I hope to see that change, as galleries continue to fold, the internet is soaking up the slack– but the technology of viewing originals online still has a long way to go. Hmm.. maybe I need to team up with a venture capitalist and some uber-smart techie and make that happen!
Marco Polo, mixed media
Thank you, my dear Mr. Williams for what may have been my toughest set of questions all week! You never fail to make me think or smile.
To see more of Steve’s artwork, please visit his website. Don’t miss tomorrow’s final Takeover when artists reveal their favorite Artsy Forager finds!
Note: The title of this post is a reference to the original Dead or Alive song, not more recent versions featuring people who are possibly young enough to be my children. Children of the 80s unite!
I love art of all shapes and sizes. Large scale, small, square, rectangle, ROUND. Artists who take on the circular composition get extra kudos. Check out some examples I’m loving this week!
Andy Says by Jill Ricci, mixed media on wood, 24″ diameterNational Soil Destruction Leading to Self Implosion by Steve Williams, mixed media, 48″ diameterEmily by Ben Hughes, oil on canvas, 22″ diameterNo. 555 by Nicholas Bodde, oil and acrylic on aluminum, 80cm diameter
Any other orb-obsessed artists I should know about? Tell me about ’em in the comments!
Featured image is Andy Says by Jill Ricci. Be sure to head over to the Artsy Forager Facebook page where Jill Ricci is this month’s featured artist! All images are via the artists’ websites, linked above. Special thanks to The Jealous Curator for introducing me to Ben Hughes’ work!
I hope you guys have wandered over to the Artsy Forager Facebook page to check out this month’s Featured Artist, Steve Williams! It’s been so much fun sharing Steve’s work with you over the month of April. With the Month of Steve is coming to a close, I wanted to share with you a few new pieces from the irrepressible Mr. Williams.
Cap Tossing Over the Wall of Space
These latest works were created for the Sustainotopiaconference, which happened in Miami this week. Sustainotopia is “an impact conference that encourages people to really consider how social relationships between investing, finances, and environmental sustainability can become more collaborative, creating a global community that benefits economically from doing what is, essentially, the right thing.”
A Slender Acquaintance With the WorldNational Soil Destruction Leading to Self Implosion
You can read more about Sustainotopia on their website ( and make plans to attend next year! ) and read about Steve’s thoughts on living an impactful life on his blog, Making Cheddar. And if you’re new here or haven’t already done it, be sure to check out Steve’s website!
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, 12×12Revolutionary 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.
Sometime in my late 20s I went through a slight obsession with the Irish part of my heritage & Irish culture in general. I think it stemmed mainly from too many Maeve Binchy books and multiple PBS viewings of Riverdance. Add to that the fact that my husband thinks Guinness is the greatest thing since, well, Guinness, and it isn’t any surprise that we love St. Patrick’s Day. So to get you in the mood for a little Erin Go Bragh, how about some artwork to remind us of the Emerald Isle?
Runaway Trees by Christina Baker, acrylic on canvas, 48×48Ives Pond I by Susan Morosky, acrylic on canvas, 30×30Cold Feet by Casey Matthews, mixed media, 24×24Covenant Commitment by Steve Williams, mixed media on canvas, 84×84
‘Tis a new year and with that comes all sorts of lists documenting the good, the bad and the ugly from the past 12 months. While there’s certainly no bad or ugly here at Artsy Forager, I thought it would be a kick to award our featured art some high schoolish superlatives. Put your mittens on your kittens and away we go!
Today’s Artsy Forager post on Escape Into Life features one of my favorite artists, Steve Williams. Check out his feature and peruse around the EIL site, lots of fabulous goodies to be had!
Many artists see their wardrobe as an extension of their creative personalities. So for artsyF A S H I O NWeek, I thought it would be fun to feature a few of my favorite stylish artists side-by-side with their work. You’ll see that often their style carries over from canvas to clothes.
THE URBAN GENTLEMAN: STEVE WILLIAMS
Passion Of The World ( cropped ) with Pioneer Chaser with artist Steve Williams
THE HIP RUSTIC: DOLAN GEIMAN
Artist Dolan Geiman with Made In The Shade Guitar Collection ( Large )
THE ECLECTIC ECCENTRIC: SHARLA VALESKI
Liberated with artist, Sharla Valeski
There are hints about who we are in what we choose to wear. What are your clothes saying about you?
To see more of these artists’ work, please visit their websites, listed below.