Sunday, October 30, 2011

DIY Project: Crayon Pumpkins

Came across this DIY post this morning. I love Halloween!!! May be my favorite holiday and definitely my favorite time of the year. These pumpkins look great and what a way to use old crayons.

Carving pumpkins is my favorite thing to do for Halloween (besides dressing up of course).  Every year I try and do something different and unique but this time instead of carving, I thought I would just decorate the pumpkins so I could enjoy them a lot longer.  I decided to get a little extra crafty and ended up melting different colored crayons on the pumpkins.  It's a fun little DIY Halloween project that will surely impress your guests!

courtesy of The Swede Reords

Friday, October 28, 2011

Chris Martin at the Corcoran

Fantastic Exhibit. Wish I had posted earlier. Show ended a few days ago.

Chris Martin: Painting Big

June 18–October 23, 2011

Chris Martin’s paintings are tactile and stitched-together, incorporating found objects and collage into their abstract geometries and rhythmic patterns. His works relate to the physical world as much as to his own internal landscape of memories and experiences, which draw from music, literature, and the human relationship to the natural world. Martin’s project for the Corcoran,Painting Big, brings together large-scale works from the past nine years and a new body of work: a site-specific installation of monumental paintings in the museum’s central atrium. Three paintings, each 26 feet high, are suspended from the second floor of the museum to the ground, creating a vibrant “room” of color and pattern in the public space of the Gallery.

Although abstract, Martin’s paintings are a direct response to the physical world around him. Many of his works integrate objects from his immediate environment into their surfaces, including kitchen utensils, records, photographs, and Persian carpets. The works are as much about daily life—music, travel, and language—as they are about mythology, storytelling, the endurance of symbols, and the role of painting in art history.
Martin’s interest in bringing painting into the realm of lived experience and his own history of performance are essential elements of his work. In the 1970s and 1980s, he created collaborative paintings during Happenings with other artists and musicians. He has placed works in bus stops, on the sides of buildings, and in nightclubs, fabricating them with phosphorescent paint to respond to the lighting and conditions of the location. He has taken large-scale paintings for “walks” around the block, involving his neighbors and local shopkeepers in creating the meaning and experience of his work. In more traditional gallery spaces, Martin has blurred the distinction between the art object and the viewer, placing paintings on floors, ceilings, and displayed among household objects.

Originally from Washington, D.C., Martin grew up visiting the Corcoran. His memories of seeing ambitious sculptural installations in the Corcoran’s central atrium have inspired his ideas for this exhibition, and his paintings directly engage the architecture and history of the museum. This is Martin’s first one-artist museum exhibition.
Chris Martin was born in Washington D.C. in 1954. From 1972–75 he attended Yale University, and in 1992 attained a BFA, Certificate of Art Therapy from the School of Visual Arts, New York. Martin has lived and worked in New York City since 1976 and has been exhibiting actively in the United States since the early 1980s. Recent projects include Joe Bradley & Chris Martin at Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York, 2010, and a one-artist exhibition of large-scale paintings and drawings at KOW Berlin, Germany, 2009. Martin’s works have also been included in many group exhibitions includingAbstract America at the Saatchi Gallery, London, 2009; Shape Shifters at the University of North Carolina, Pembroke, NC, 2008; The Painted World at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, NY, 2005; andCurrent Undercurrents: Working in Brooklyn at the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY, 1997. Martin has been the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships including the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, 2002, and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Award, 1999.




CHRIS MARTIN VISITS WITH STUDENTS IN OCTOBER 2010.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

One of my all time faves - Wayne Thiebaud

Wayne Thiebaud, I have to say, has been one of my most influential artists. I love the white background, no visible vertical line but there is one there, and shadowing. 

A conscious decision to eliminate certain details and include selective bits of personal experiences or perceptual nuances, gives the painting more of a multi-dimension than when it is done directly as a visual recording. This results in a kind of abstraction... and thus avoids the pitfalls of mere decoration. (Wayne Thiebaud)

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Steve Jobs....... thanks.



Thanks for my favorite product, ever. My MacBook.

Lisa Yuskavage at David Zwirner Gallery, NY

Featured Yuskavage's art in February 2011 under in the 5 artist I admire. 

Painting of the Day - "I don't want to think" by Abbey McCulloch

I made a great discovery this morning. Australian artist Abbey McCulloch

Abbey McCulloch's works are expressive representations of the female.
They capture dualities and contradictions. Abbey's paintings may appear as cute doe-eyed damsels. There is an underlying strength of character that comes through after the first glance and it is this- whether the viewer knows it or not- that makes her works so appealing and ultimately so popular.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Big thanks to Danielle at Fresh Quince Blog

I'd like to thank Danielle at freshquince.blogspot.com for the lovely post this morning.  Awesome blogger.

Fresh Quince

Local Artist: Sabrina Cabada

I had the pleasure of meeting Sabrina awhile ago at a local art/gift store, unaware until recently she was an artist herself and an incredible one at that. I love to support artists in general, especially local ones, so I couldn't wait to share. She lives in Arlington, Virginia where she creates her masterpieces and recently became the art director of a new art gallery, Artspace 109. She also created a blog, An Artful Nature, where she catalogs her interests in art, decor, fashion, food and creative living. 

Below are just a few examples of her paintings...

"Bad Call'     12" x 18" Acrylic on Canvas

"Beach II"    18" x 24" Acrylic on Canvas

"Apples"     20" x 20" Acrylic on Canvas

She uses vintage wallpaper for the background below...

"Day Dream"     10" x 10" Acrylic on Canvas

"Doorway II"     12" x 18" Acrylic on Canvas SOLD

"Don't Get Caught"     18" x 24" Acrylic on Canvas

Another with vintage wallpaper in the background...

"Morning Tea"     10" x 10" Acrylic on Canvas

Beautiful aren't they? I love her use of color and can envision a nice grouping on a white wall above a comfy sofa. If you're interested in purchasing any of these and want to see her other creations please visit her website at SabrinaCabada.com


featured in freshquince.blogspot.com