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Tag: Featured Artist

FEATURED ARTIST: Madeleine Avirov

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!CONCEALED
TREASURE

The $2 Art Contest has been a journey for me as both an Editor and an artist. I have learned that I must recognize my taste and bias as an artist while tempering it with impartiality as an Editor.  

Choosing a Featured Artist is like cooking for a large family gathering.  You have to honor where your talents lie, but you have to remember that sometimes your family just wants a turkey with traditional stuffing  on Thanksgiving regardless of how good your Oysters Rockefeller may be.

I truly have a soft spot for portraiture, as it influences my personal work; however, I also love the intimacy and vulnerability it gently masks.  I find a treasure in every portrait…sort of like the pearl in an oyster as a matter of fact.  During the holidays, I thought we could all use a reminder of things to be treasured–people most of all.  So, Oysters Rockefeller it will be. 

Click to learn more about Madeleine Avirov!The Featured Artist chosen from November entries is Madeleine Avirov.  Avirov’s work has a sadness balanced by the love and care that only an insider could have into the inner reaches of each subject.  While I love her landscape and abstract work, I find Avirov’s portraiture touching and worthy of an individual audience.  

FEATURED ARTIST:
Madeleine Avirov

Avirov, studied figure painting at The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, portraiture at the Richard Halstead Studio in Evanston, IL, and Studio Art & Illustration at Kent State University in Kent, OH. 
 
 But after all this study, Avirov drew a simpler picture of her direction for me: “My subjects follow two tracks that are beginning to merge. One is darkly colored and moves backward into the past through urban terrain that Philip Roth called ‘a timeless Depression set in a placeless Lower East Side.’  Here I work with the figure as a kind of still-life element, placing my father, for example, into settings whose contents reflect and contain his particular misfortunes in order to tell a story.”
Old Jew with Bird (detail) by Madeleine Avirov 2009“The other track moves outward into landscape, not to replicate any particular place, but more to conjure a remembered dimension in which things are rearranged, local color is heightened, dimmed, ignored, and the surface in places remains broken and unfinished—all in keeping with a broken world.” 
 

I was struck by Avirov’s process.  While as artists so many of us are trying to forge our own paths and break new ground with materials and media, why would Avirov work so hard to conquer the techniques of the Old Masters? “I build up the surface of the canvas transparently—in dozens of layers in some places, in others abrading or letting the ground show through.  By laying down patches of color to build form architecturally (a method I constructed from studying the texture of tree bark and from looking at Cézanne, the Spanish realist Antonio Lopez Garcia, and the English figurative painter Euan Uglow).

“First, in the same way that all genuine knowledge includes recognition—a backward glance—however interpreted, any new media or technique worth anything is in some sense built on what came before it.”

Ma by Madeleine Avirov 2004“When he was 75, the literary critic Northrop Frye understood that at that point in his life ‘discovery [could] come only from reversing one’s direction, going upstream to one’s source.’   He added ‘that at a certain point searching for the unknown gives place to trying to remove the impediments to seeing what is already there.’

“I am 55, but a dozen or so years ago, I began to feel similarly compelled. There are centuries of craft, of painstaking trial and error, that have produced works I revere, and I could not reject what I had not tested for myself.” 
 
 Favorite Food?  It’s either bread or fruit, the first peach of summer, warm bread on a cold day.  In search of renewal and comfort, I say wearing my armchair pyschologist’s chef’s hat.

Racism: When Kids Learn by Madeleine Avirov 2003I find that portraiture can often be difficult to sell.  The buying public often feels compelled to personally know the person in the art with which they choose to share their lives.  When I asked how Avirov dealt with that obstacle, she answered with a straight forward pragmatism that, frankly, took me by surprise.

“I’ve sold far more of the work that I uneasily categorize as landscape. The short answer to how I deal with it is that, essentially, I don’t. More and more, I divide my time between writing and painting, and, lately, the months I’ve given to any one painting I’ve been giving to landscape. But even in the years when I was consumed with the figure, I did so because I could not do otherwise, and paid the bills with editing work and illustration.”

How do you classify your own work?  “I also say there that it’s an ever-shifting mix of realism, surrealism, expressionism that is grounded in and is moving more and more toward abstraction, even imageless-ness. Any given work is driven by its content, but all the decisions I make about it refer to formal conventions. The story told, the emotion conveyed, are secondary even as they hover at the edge of these decisions.”

The Hippocratic Face 3 by Madeleine Avirov, 2010In addition to her figurative and landscape work, Madeleine is also a writer.  her next big project is a book.  The book’ss working title, The Hippocratic Face, refers to Hippocrates’ description of the appearance of the dying.  See work of the same name pictured right. It was conceived as a consideration the 90-year-span of the artist’s mother’s life in the light of her final days and weeks, in the hospital and in hospice, as well as an examination of the cultural obsession with extending life against all reason.

Thank you Madeleine for sharing your work with us. 

I felt a little like an eavesdropper in the hallways of your life while reviewing your work.  It was a privilege to be granted such an intimate view.

Learn more about Madeleine Avirov online!

 

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$2 Art Contest

 

FEATURED ARTIST: James Melcher

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!DUCK of the MONTH!

The best thing about judging the $2 Art Contest is getting to play “I wonder.”  As in, I wonder what this artist is really like.  I generally look at an artist’s work first.  I don’t want anything else to interfere with my opinion of the work.  And although we are taught as children that you can’t judge a book by its cover, we are also taught “If it walks like a duck, sounds like a duck and looks like a duck, it is probably a duck.”  And, more often than not, I can figure out an artist’s philosophy from their work alone.  Sometimes I am surprised.  But what I always remember in the end…there are no two alike…all lovely little odd ducklings.  This month was no different.

Learn more about Featured Artist James Melcher!

And the winner is…

The entries I receive each month for the $2 Art Contest are incredibly varied. I see work from every imaginable media, from artists at every level of their careers–some polished and PR savvy, some more vulnerable, but honest.  This month, the winner is happy and optimistic, and since we are all headed into sometimes stressful and often melodramatic holidays… I thought we could all use some sunshine.

The Featured Artist chosen from October entries is James Melcher. Melcher’s work has a carefully chosen randomness to it that both makes me wonder and makes me smile.  I would own his work.  That is one of the many tests for any artist, wouldn’t you say? 

The beginning of the mosaic paintings at Tartooful!FEATURED ARTIST:
James Melcher

James Melcher was born in Cleveland, Ohio where he received his Bachelor of Fine Arts in ceramics from the Cleveland Institute of Art.  After graduating, James spent a decade first in Southeast Asia, then Italy, and finally New York City before moving to Canada in 1996. Vancouver, British Columbia is now his home,  and Melcher claims the spectacular mountainous landscape and glimmering glass towers as his daily inspiration.

While I am drawn to the Melcher’s line drawings.  I simply could not avoid the elephant in the room–the mosaic paintings.   I was not shocked to find out that the mosaic paintings began as an happy accident:

“This whole thing began when I unrolled old polka dot, acrylic on canvas paintings and started cutting them up. I was in a kind of creative block and really didn’t know what I was doing. I cut out circles and then cut them in half and like a kid started playing with fitting the pieces together. I ended up gluing these down to small canvases and called them cut-outs.” (pictured above left)

April Mosaic by James Melcher“The mosaic paintings began kind of by accident – A pile of strips, left over from all the trimming of the cut-out pieces, was collecting dust and I was going to throw it out. Instead I started playfully laying them together in rows – ‘April Mosaic’ (pictured right) is the culmination of that “Strips” series. This led to delving more into pattern and to more purposeful decisions about color combinations.”

“I continued to cut up old works on canvas to make new mosaic paintings until I ran out of old work! Now there is more of a conscious plan and design although I also let the work “speak” to me and go where it tells me to go! There is still the occasional coming together of pieces on the studio floor and that’s where new ideas are born.” –James Melcher

After studying the work & the process,
I went to the food for the real scoop…

Patterned Mosaic Painting by James Melcher

Favorite Food?
Premium cut steak and potatoes
with an occasionally guilty binge of Doritos.
No deep, dark happiness issues there.

And what of his favorite artists?
The inspirational mentors?

Matisse, Mondrian, Warhol, Gehry.
Not a particularly optimistic lot,
but I can see the stylistic/artistic inspiration.

I was certain he was hiding something.

How does he classify his own work?
Modernism, Color Field, Pattern painting.

What makes this artist tick? 
Where is the quirk? 
Where is the secret?

http://jamesmelcher.net/stu-exh/exh-9.htmlAnd then I got to the final quiz question…What is your next big project?  And then I found my answer within his:  “I have Four!  The Artist Project in Toronto – March 3-6, 2011 is a BIG Project that I am in the full swing of producing and getting prepared for…Getting my book “Memory Mosaic” published…Moving to Europe…And, I would love to complete a large-scale art installation somewhere!”

Eureka!  The king of random pattern is fueled by frenzy.  This artist does not suffer from the motivational anorexia of which I warn.  His life will not pass him by.  He is caught up in his own whirlwind of pattern and placement.  Lookout world James Melcher’s headed your way.

Learn more about James Melcher online!

Want to be a Featured Artist on www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com?
Check out the $2 Art Contest!

FEATURED ARTIST: T.S. McFadden

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CRUNCHY GOODNESS!

The $2 Art Contest is getting to be like pulling teeth.  And, I can’t afford to loose my teeth.  While I love silky bisques and hollandaise, a blogger cannot live by hollandaise alone.  What good is the hollandaise when you’re dreaming of corn nuts and have pulled all your teeth?  I think this month’s entries  for the $2 Art Contest were extraordinarily tasty.

The entries I receive each month for the $2 Art Contest are incredibly varied.  I see work from every imaginable media, from artists at every level of their careers–some polished and PR savvy, some more vulnerable, but honest.  Because it isn’t a level playing field, it isn’t really just about choosing the best art.  I love having the honor of reviewing all the work, but I am made anxious by the necessity of choosing.

Learn more about artist T.S. McFadden!The Featured Artist chosen from September entries is T.S. McFadden.  McFadden’s work hits so many of the right notes for me–multiple media, over-the-top devotion to the creative process, and a love for found objects and recycled materials. 

FEATURED ARTIST:
T.S. McFadden

T.S. McFadden is an intuitive artist whose prolific body of work explores process, internal dialoques and facilitation.  He was born in a small town in Ohio and raised in the country.   He is now based in New York.

McFadden has sculpted and painted since he was a child and is self-taught but for a handful of private lessons.  He studied in the fine arts, graduated from Kent State University and has spent time in Europe studying other artists.

Mother Grand 8x8 by T.S.McFaddenWhile I am in love with the Elephant Graveyard series on which McFadden is currently working, I chose to focus this feature on McFadden’s Mother Series of paintings.  As I have shouted from the mountain tops many times, my artistic skill does not lie in painting media.  But, I find my inadequacy in this area makes me appreciate the talent in others even more.

The Mother Series is what the artist calls an abstract expression of logic.  That will serve as a huge contradiction for some.  The next contradiction will come from the idea that these paintings are a sort of recycled assemblage.

“This series was created using remnants from my palattes, which were scraped and pulled and meant for the garbage.  Too haunting and too beautiful to be discarded, they were stacked and saved for years.  The kinetic energy found in the palatte is art in its purest form–it is the unintentional genesis of intention.” 

Mother Grand 24x24 by TS McFaddenThere’s that logic for you.

I always send a quiz to my Featured Artist picks to gain a little insight and help me feel inspired to write.  Some of the questions are food related, some are art related, some try to unveil the inspiration behind it all.  What have a learned from the quizzes as a whole? 

Artists don’t often like
to give direct answers, ha.
 

McFadden’s answers did not disappoint.  When asked about his favorite foods, he reinforced the notion of contradictions.  How do you claim corn nuts and sashimi among your favorites?  I suspect those choices just reinforce how the pull of opposites can produce a cohesive balance. 

Mother in Silver IX 10x10 by T.S. McFaddenWhat do you think?

When asked about his favorite media, McFadden decided upon Experimentation.  Perfect. 

And what school of art does feel
his work fits?  Intuition.

Even more perfect. 

 Energy, emotion and circumstance direct him.  He uses layers of color to examine, define and mask an inner world.  Organic and graphic elements invade the space, push the calm and subdue the conflict.

McFadden considers his creativity intrinsic and his pronouncement of it solely environmental. 

He is a painter and a sculptor, a published author, a writer of poetry and music, a furniture designer and whatever else the moment he is living in requires him to be. 

Thank you, T.S. McFadden, for the Mother Series…and for reminding us of the old school definition of “artistic.”  I, for one, can’t wait to see the Elephant Graveyard series!

Learn more about T.S. McFadden online!

Want to be a Featured Artist on www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com?
Check out the $2 Art Contest!

FEATURED ARTIST: Peg Grady

Click to subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!INDULGENT WHIMSY

I find the sacred in everyday objects and appreciate the indulgence of artists that do.  My house is filled with odd tidbits that have called out to me from here and there–things with which I cannot part for reasons unknown. 

Peg Grady is a kindred spirit.

July marks the first month of the $2 Art Contest.  The purpose of the contest was not to get rich, but to force myself to regularly review the work submitted to me by artists.  Now you will get monthly Featured Artists, not quarterly or whenever the mood strikes me. 

Circularity/Convolution by Peg GradyWhen choosing to force myself to be more diligent about posting Featured Artists, I neglected to account for how hard it would be for me to chose only one.  I contemplated giving 2nd and 3rd place, but felt it somehow took away from the true winner–Peg Grady.

PEG GRADY

When I started investigating Peg Grady’s work, I was immediately drawn to her paintings and drawings that often take on the appearance of oil pastels and often incorporate a whimsy of color and typography.   But once I found The Perfect Word Series, I was hooked.  The work was, well, reverential…from a distance.

I noticed a statement on Grady’s site apart from her Artist Statement specifically for The Perfect Word: “An old thesaurus’s yellowed pages containing outdated phrases such as ‘apple pie order,’ ‘pretty kettle of fish’ and ‘tittle-tattle’ evoke a sense of history that delights me, sending me back to my elementary school classroom where the teacher told us of the value of Roget’s (not the dictionary style) thesaurus and how it branched off with differing shades of meaning, leading you to the perfect word.”

Music/News (detail) by Peg GradyThis led me back to the work, where I used the built-in magnifier to examine the details that tied it all together. 

The simply whimsy in sacred found objects is all tied together in the simplicity of The Perfect Word.

Some of you may recall that I send out a questionnaire to all of my potential Featured Artists that asks a variety of questions from favorite foods to artistic influences, and I couldn’t wait to read Peg Grady’s answers to see if I really could have developed a picture of who she was based on this short series of work.

Artistic influences?  Betye Saar, famous for her assemblage work, seems fitting.  Robert Rauchenberg reinforced assemblage as Grady’s true love.  Romare Bearden rounds it out.

Relations/Order by Peg GradyFoods?  Dark Chocolate and Almonds–indulgent.  I would expect no less. 

When asked if she liked to collaborate with others, she matter-of-factly explained that she doesn’t “play well with others.  But I do run with scissors.”  A woman after my own heart.

I have fallen in love with The Perfect Word series, and my heart is singing to hear that The Perfect Game series featuring a vintage book of solitaire layouts is in the works.

How did Peg Grady develop into the artist she is?  Maybe it all ties back to her childhood…

“I was born in New York City where I appreciated the dinosaurs at the Museum of Natural History much more than the Monets at the Modern. Finally I got older and (hopefully) wiser, became a California girl and fell in love with art.”

Visit Peg Grady's website and discover her work on your own!

Thank you, Peg Grady for the reverence with which you treat the written word and for creating work that makes us think.  Thank you for artwork that both celebrates and believes in the ability of the child in all of us to remember the whimsy of our childhood with the sacredness it deserves.

Discover Peg Grady’s artwork on your own at:
www.PegGradyArt.com

Just a side note, Peg Grady embodies many of the tips that I preach in “The Art of Cooking (aka How to Get an Art Show)”  Investigate and learn.

LAST DAY for JULY $2 Art Contest

Best of Show...Each month I will feature an artist from submissions received the previous month.LAST CHANCE for July

I just wanted to post a short reminder that today is the last day of the $2 Art Contest for July.  We’ve had enough entries so far to make the July contest interesting, but I haven’t reviewed ANY of the work yet.  If you get to this post after the deadline, don’t worry…there’s always August.

If you want to read the reasoning behind the monthly $2 Art Contest, visit the page.  But remember…if you want to be considered for the July Featured Artist, the deadline is July 31st at midnight EST.  If you miss the deadline, don’t worry…you’ll be automatically entered in the August contest.

You can’t buy your way onto ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, but here are the tangible benefits to you for your $2 if you are chosen for a feature post.

Benefits of Entering the $2 Art Contest:

  • The distinct honor of being a FEATURED ARTIST of the MONTH on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com .   🙂
  • A permanent inbound link from the post to multiple pages on your website (if you have one) from this site which has a Google Page Rank of 4 (as of 07/01/2010) which helps your website’s visibility on the web.
  • Additional permanent inbound links from a new Featured Artist page to your website (if you have one) from this site which has a Google Page Rank of 4 (as of 07/01/2010) which helps your website’s visibility on the web.
  • A 300×300 pixel ad (created by me) for occasional use in other blog posts throughout the month in which you are featured (and beyond–at my discretion)

I hope you agree…It could be the best $2 you ever spend.

Why $2?  I’m not trying to get rich off the artwork of my readers by producing ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, but it would be nice to pay the hosting fees and software occasionally.  $2 is a ridiculously low fee FOR ANYTHING.  You see a benefit, and ArtAndArtDeadlines.com gets to promote great art and great artists.  Simple.

The $2 Art Contest Guidelines are easy:

Follow the Rules to win the Crown!FEE:  Send $2 to submitart@artandartdeadlines.com via PayPal.com and record the transaction # when you’re finished.  Don’t worry…it is part of the confirmation email they send you.

SUBMISSION:  Email me the PayPal transaction #, a handful of pics, a bio and whatever you think I need to form an accurate opinion of your work.  If all of the information I need is on your website, just send me the link to the site.  There are no restrictions…You can win EVERY month, so just keep entering.

DEADLINE:  The deadline is the last day of each month.  The artist chosen will be notified by the 7th of each month, and the FEATURED ARTIST of the MONTH blog will be posted by the 15th of each month.

DISCLAIMERS:  ArtAndArtDeadlines.com reserves the right to publish work of artists whose work we love–entry fee or not; however, a winner will be chosen each month from paid entries.  Additional posts are at my discretion. P.S.  Don’t expect to get a ribbon in the mail.

The permanent $2 Art Contest Page is accessible through the top and side navigation areas so that you can find it again and again.

Email me if you have any questions.

FEATURED: $2 Art Contest

First...I am not a big fan of online exhibits.What is the $2 Art Contest?

First…Please know that I am not a big fan of online exhibits.  I enter one occasionally, but usually they just seem like scams to get my entry fee.  Now, how is it that I am supposed to not be a “starving artist” when I am throwing $35 after $50 toward meaningless shows with no history, no academic recognition, and no shot of selling my work? 

Show me tangible benefits please.

Second...I made the decision to remove Google Ads from this site.Second…ArtAndArtDeadlines.com has always been intended to be a FREE resource, and that isn’t changing.  But, I made the decision to remove Google Ads from this site by our one-year anniversary (September 2010) and replace them with well-placed, aesthetically pleasing, non-flash ads for artists and art resources that my readers will find helpful and valuable to them. 

Yes…I’m coming to the point…

Third…I receive a good number of submissions to be a FEATURED ARTIST on ArtAndArtDeadlines.comThird…I receive a good number of submissions to be a FEATURED ARTIST on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, and I usually write a feature post every couple of months.  Take a look at our Recently Featured Artists Catherine Roach, Celine Eimann, Shane Watt, and Kris Wlodarski.  These posts do really well for MONTHS after they are posted because people want to see good art.

Best of Show...Each month I will feature an artist from submissions received the previous month.Finally…
Best of Show…

All of the meandering above was leading to this point… 

Each month I will feature an artist of the month from submissions received the previous month. 

There will be a fee of $2 to enter–payable by PayPal to submitart@artandartdeadlines.com

You can’t buy your way onto ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, but here are the tangible benefits to you for your $2 if you are chosen for a feature post.

Benefits of Entering the $2 Art Contest:

  • The distinct honor of being a FEATURED ARTIST of the MONTH on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com .   🙂
  • A permanent inbound link from the post to multiple pages on your website (if you have one) from this site which has a Google Page Rank of 4 (as of 07/01/2010) which helps your website’s visibility on the web.
  • Additional permanent inbound links from a new Featured Artist page to your website (if you have one) from this site which has a Google Page Rank of 4 (as of 07/01/2010) which helps your website’s visibility on the web.
  • A 300×300 pixel ad (created by me) for occasional use in other blog posts throughout the month in which you are featured (and beyond–at my discretion)

I hope you agree…It could be the best $2 you ever spend.

Why $2?  I’m not trying to get rich off the artwork of my readers by producing ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, but it would be nice to pay the hosting fees and software occasionally.  $2 is a ridiculously low fee FOR ANYTHING.  You see a benefit, and ArtAndArtDeadlines.com gets to promote great art and great artists.  Simple.

The $2 Art Contest Guidelines are easy:

Follow the Rules to win the Crown!FEE:  Send $2 to submitart@artandartdeadlines.com via PayPal.com and record the transaction # when you’re finished.  Don’t worry…it is part of the confirmation email they send you.

SUBMISSION:  Email me the PayPal transaction #, a handful of pics, a bio and whatever you think I need to form an accurate opinion of your work.  If all of the information I need is on your website, just send me the link to the site.  There are no restrictions…You can win EVERY month, so just keep entering.

DEADLINE:  The deadline is the last day of each month.  The artist chosen will be notified by the 7th of each month, and the FEATURED ARTIST of the MONTH blog will be posted by the 15th of each month.

DISCLAIMERS:  ArtAndArtDeadlines.com reserves the right to publish work of artists whose work we love–entry fee or not; however, a winner will be chosen each month from paid entries.  Additional posts are at my discretion. P.S.  Don’t expect to get a ribbon in the mail.

The permanent $2 Art Contest Page is accessible through the top and side navigation areas so that you can find it again and again.

Email me if you have any questions.

FEATURED ARTIST: Shane Watt

Click here to Subscribe to this Blog by Email!I am very rarely surprised by artists.
It is not meant as an insult…

I often feel like I have witnessed every take on every media imaginable.  Cracked every nut.  But, of course, I haven’t.  And, I delight every time I am taken by surprise.

Shane WattShane Watt
is a delightful surprise.

Watt considers himself a  semi-fictional mapmaker.  He is self-taught and based in Montreal Quebec Canada inspired most by the drawing of his father.

Watt has been exhibiting his cartographic work over the past 4 years and producing commissions for the past 7 years.

Watt uses objects, numbers, real places and photographs to create city maps, which convey stories and insights into his own personal experience of a particular time and place. 

Many loyal readers know that I send a quiz, of sorts, to artists I want to feature, and the questions vary depending on my gut reaction to their work. 

In fairness, I usually answer the questions first baring my own truths and embarassments. 

Waites Rounde by Shane WattWhen I asked Watt about his artistic influences, he claimed his father as his biggest inspiration.  Sweet. 

Then once again, he delightfully surprised me.  As a second influence, Watt claims Don Van Vliet (Captain Beefheart).  Wow, I didn’t see that one coming.  On a humorous note, when Don Van Vliet was asked the same question, he answered “I just paint like I paint and that’s enough influence.”  Funny.

Click to see a larger version of Bloodshotville by Shane Watt!I won’t reveal the art he finds creepy, and I’ll leave it to you to figure out his favorite snack foods…yes, I do ask. I’m a nosey foodie, and it IS a food-themed art blog.

In his upcoming exhibit at Galarie Rye in Montreal, Watt will showcase a recent collection of works including a multi-dimensional map, which can be viewed from various perspectives revealing clues of an overall narrative and an interactive puzzle map.

Illustration by Shane WattI think most of us can accept map making as an art form, and a few of us always think of maps as art.  But in an age of GPS systems, only an artist would think of whimsical, semi-fictional maps as a specialty media.  How perfect.  I love a niche market. 

Even more–I love the idea of something being representational, but not. 

I appreciate Watt’s refusal to dumb down work to mere aesthetics but make it beautiful nonetheless.  I revel in Watt’s assumption of the best in all people–curiousity, determination and the yearning to understand.

Visit ShaneWatt.com!When asked if he includes puzzles and secrets in all of his work–even the commissions, he simply states, “The maps always contain at least four elements, the primary narrative, the muse, references to me and, of course, the secrets of the city. Whenever I create a commission I’m always very clear about the fact that the cities all inter-connect into the larger context of my fictitious country Loyala and need to have the four elements present….so far no one has really minded.”

Thank you Shane Watt

I look forward to searching out the hidden gems in my own life’s map very soon.

ArtAndArtDeadlines.com is a free service–forever and always. But clicking on a sponsor’s ad can help you find additional Art Deadlines and help this service remain free. I’ve filtered the ads so they are mostly about art. I hope you find something intriguing! Thanks for your support!

FEATURED ARTIST: Kris Wlodarski

Click here to see more of Wlodarski's work.

BOTTOMS up!

The mission of AAAD is to inspire artists through resources, opportunities, and the work of your contemporaries.  Should you be our next Artist of the Day?  Be sure to let us knowAAAD is proud to feature the work of painter Kris Wlodarski.

 Krzysztof Wlodarski, aka Kali, born in 1977 in Poland. Graduated at University of Zielona Gora, Poland in philosophy. Wlodarski, influenced by the art of Gottried Helnwein, Saturno Butto, Joel Peter Witkin and modern Bodyart movements, is now showing a series “The Sleep of Reason.”  Wlodarski is also musician , film-maker, and tattoo artist, living and working in London.

Wlodarski says, “These works are reflecting a head-on collision between the primary sphere of instinct (sex & violence) and the secondary sphere of culture (taboo). This leads to a sort of synthesis, its necessary result being a transgressive form of art.

Sleep of Reason by Kris Wlodarski“I call it ‘The sleep of reason,’ a reference to Goya , because this is the manifestation of all that is pre-rational, anti-enlightenment, anti-creative. It is about the moments of insanity when the language and logic are suspended in favour of primal drives that are otherwise subject to suppression by cultural structures.”

Plagued by anxiety and bitterness from a devastating illness, Francisco Goya (1746 – 1828) created “The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters,” one of 80 etchings in his “Los Caprichos” series–scathing critiques of human errors and vices of contemporary religious and political figures.  “The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters” portrays Goya, often believed to be the Father of Modern Art, hounded by creatures that threaten the ignorant mind. Goya believed that imagination, combined with reason, would keep these monsters at bay.

Click here to see more of Kris Wlodarski's work!I am drawn to the passion with which Wlodarski’s interprets his vision of contemporary culture–shaped by sex and violence, destruction and morbidity.  The connection to Goya, and sometimes startling lack of connection, is a comment on Wlodarski’s view on where we are as a culture today.  His striking use of color gives us a momentary glimpse into the moments of insanity between the rational thoughts.  The moments without control or norms.

It is easy to feel transported to another place or time by these works, and maybe that’s the sugar that makes it easier to take the medicine–the knowledge that we are all there, on the cusp, all the time.  It is…the buttery taste of scotch with the charred character of bourbon.

Learn more about painter Kris Wlodarski!

Learn more about Featured Artist Kris Wlodarski!

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