Tuesday, 29 May 2012

Kevin Francis Gray Ballerina, 2011 carrara marble, 190 x 45 x 52 cm


Everything will be all right in the end... if it's not all right then it's not the end. 

Fantastic movie!

Evelyn: Nothing here has worked out quite as I expected. 
Muriel: Most things don't. But sometimes what happens instead is the good stuff. 

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1412386/quotes?qt=qt1689813

Friday, 25 May 2012

Craig Alan constructs portraits of pop-culture icons using people as pixels. [Via sweet-station]


Willi Dorner, Bodies in Urban Spaces.


MACRO Testaccio (ex Mattatoio) Piazza Orazio Giustiniani, 4 Roma




Ruah. 2012 oil , gold, on wood cm 32 x 27 

Benappi Gallery PAD.3 STAND 39 CON:L. ANDREOTTI - A. ARRIVABENE - G. BALLA - A. BARIN - E. BARONI - F. CASORATI - C. D’ORIA - L. FONTANA - J. GRIS - B. NICHOLSON - P. SCHMIDLIN www.agostinoarrivabene.it

Donna Summer by Ryan Shane Owen



RIP Donna Summer,  Queen of Disco

Art © Blisselicious/ The Egg Nog Factory


The death of painting


Greetings!

Yesterday, Renate M Reuter, Founder, President and Executive Director of the Portrait and Figure Painters Society of SW Florida, Inc. wrote, "What is the future of oil painting? Are they going out of style? Are they going to be done by computers? What about the classic type of oils versus all the modern forms? I'd like to have the right answers from you for the people who ask me these questions."

Thanks, Renate. I don't know if I can give you the "right" answers, but I'll give you mine.

Oil painters currently fill entire mountain passes, French barnyards and Las Vegas Casinos. Some California beaches are so burdened with oil painters a local kid who wants to build sandcastles has to bring his own sand. It's got so bad in our area that the other day when I went out to one of my favourite spots, other painters were already using up my view.

Fact is, there are more paintings being produced today than at any time in history. Basements and attics groan with them.

With the current democratization of art and lots of folks with time on their hands, painting has become a mainline avocation, second only to photography and tropical fish. Art instruction and workshops are big business--take a look at our Workshop Calendar.

The problem lies in the quality of the art. Let's face it, some genres, like portraiture, are time-consuming to learn and difficult to pull off. John Singer Sargent took eight years studying with Carolus Duran to achieve a degree of proficiency. Becoming a truly fine artist requires a lifetime of studenthood and dedication. Fine art is a "doing thing" and therein lies its main appeal. Painting, like fishing and hunting, is not going to be taken over any time soon by computers.

The art of painting will survive and thrive because it is easy to do and difficult to do well. Humankind loves challenges, and traditional painting has more challenges than a new Greek government. But just as you can be assured that the Parthenon will still be there, painting will go on. In my opinion, reports on the death of painting have been greatly exaggerated. I'd be interested in hearing what you think.

Best regards,

Robert

PS: "Within the act of painting there is a history, a continuum of alchemy through the ages that lives on in paint." (Lori Agostino)

Esoterica: Intellectuals and others have enthused about modern forms of art that seem more significant in today's problem-loaded world. These pundits are the ones most frequently announcing the death of painting. The forms of art they espouse have the advantage of not being so arduous to teach and have more shock, social, and entertainment value than old-fashioned representational forms. People will line up around the block to be shocked, socialized or entertained, whereas traditional forms tend to attract a quieter crowd. While the public entertainment artist serves a valuable purpose, the private traditional painter continues to labour in her modest studio or mountain pass. Winslow Homer said it well: "Look at nature, work independently, and solve your own problems."


Current Clickback: "Not your father's Oldsmobile" looks at fashion in the art world. Your comments will be appreciated.

Read this letter online and share your thoughts on the reported 'death of painting.' Live comments are welcome. Direct, illustratable comments can be made at rgenn@saraphina.com

The Art Show Calendar: If you or your group has a show coming up, put an illustrated announcement on The Painter's Keys site. The longer it's up, the more people will see it. Your announcement will be shown until the last day of your show.

The Workshop Calendar: Here is a selection of workshops and seminars laid out in chronological order that will stimulate, teach, mentor, take you to foreign lands or just down the street. Many of these workshops are recommended by Robert and friends. Incidentally, if you are planning a workshop and have photos of happy people working, feel free to send them to us and we'll include a selection in the workshops feature at no extra charge.

The Painter's Post: Every day new material is going into this feature. Links to art info, ideas, inspiration and all kinds of creative fun can be found in this online arts aggregator.

If a friend is trying to subscribe to the Twice-Weekly Letter via Constant Contact, please let her or him know that confirmation is required and to reply to Constant Contact's confirmation email.

You can also follow Robert's valuable insights and see further feedback on Facebook and Twitter

Featured Responses: Alternative to the instant Live Comments, Featured Responses are illustrated and edited for content. If you would like to submit your own for possible inclusion, please do so. Just click 'reply' on this letter or write to rgenn@saraphina.com

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

Art and current economics




Greetings!

After my last letter where I advocated the outsourcing of art sales to galleries, many readers legitimately asked how to do just that. Vast changes are currently taking place in both economics and demographics. When I first started painting 50 years ago, there were fewer accomplished artists and less expendable cash to buy art. Today there are far more artists and a peculiar disconnect in the buying of art.

Basketball star and former US Senator Bill Bradley in his recent book We Can All Do Better notes that our world now has both a surplus of labour and a surplus of capital. Jobs and money shift eastward in the name of power shopping, fossil fuel consumption, outsourcing, investment and debt. North American artists, particularly, are affected by this. It's safe to say that art thrives best in prosperity on home shores.

Currently, in my estimation, four percent of Western populations are making art while only two percent are collecting it. While many pockets of healthy collectorship remain, and some countries remain strong, many artists are experiencing tough times. In the meantime, we have exciting (or obscene) new highs in world auction prices.

Commenting on the 120 million bucks recently paid for a rendition of The Scream by Edvard Munch, the financial journalist and commentator Felix Salmon said that the phenomenon is all about speculation and "rich men comparing the size of their genitals."

So what's an artist to do in this environment? First, artists need to get better at what they do--on the creative front, the production front and the distribution front. Second, the oft-disregarded connection between art and investment is here to stay. Artists who want to be around for the long haul need to maintain creative integrity, dealer price and territory protection, and annual price increases. Third, artists need to realize that any group, any country, indeed, any brotherhood and sisterhood can reinvent itself. Vital are the oft-neglected arts of cooperation and consensus. When artists learn the skills of working together with complementary talents and a spirit of enterprise and mutual well-being, all things are possible. As Bill Bradley says, "We can all do better."

Best regards,

Robert

PS: "Respect your fellow human beings, treat them fairly, disagree with them honestly, enjoy their friendship, explore your thoughts about one another candidly, work together for a common goal and help one another achieve it." (Bill Bradley)

Esoterica: The days of submitting slides to galleries are history. Providing the work is of a suitable standard, artists need a simple, unpretentious and un-shopping-carted website with at least eight of their current works. Target dealers and galleries need to be made aware of your site and directed to it. It's fast and efficient for dealers to go there--they almost always do--and they can tell in 10 seconds whether they are the slightest bit interested. A stand-alone website is best, but a page in our own Premium Listings is sufficient. Your own personality and lots of apples in your applecart help when galleries ask you to come by and say hello.




Current Clickback: "Outsourcing" looks at passing some tasks on to others. Your comments will be appreciated.

Read this letter online and share your thoughts on the current economic climate. Live comments are welcome. Direct, illustratable comments can be made at rgenn@saraphina.com

The Art Show Calendar: If you or your group has a show coming up, put an illustrated announcement on The Painter's Keys site. The longer it's up, the more people will see it. Your announcement will be shown until the last day of your show.

The Workshop Calendar: Here is a selection of workshops and seminars laid out in chronological order that will stimulate, teach, mentor, take you to foreign lands or just down the street. Many of these workshops are recommended by Robert and friends. Incidentally, if you are planning a workshop and have photos of happy people working, feel free to send them to us and we'll include a selection in the workshops feature at no extra charge.

The Painter's Post: Every day new material is going into this feature. Links to art info, ideas, inspiration and all kinds of creative fun can be found in this online arts aggregator.

If a friend is trying to subscribe to the Twice-Weekly Letter via Constant Contact, please let her or him know that confirmation is required and to reply to Constant Contact's confirmation email.

You can also follow Robert's valuable insights and see further feedback on Facebook and Twitter

Featured Responses: Alternative to the instant Live Comments, Featured Responses are illustrated and edited for content. If you would like to submit your own for possible inclusion, please do so. Just click 'reply' on this letter or write to rgenn@saraphina.com


Yes, please go ahead and forward this letter to a friend. This does not mean that they will automatically be subscribed to the Twice-Weekly Letter. They have to do it voluntarily and can find out about it by going to The Painter's Keys website.
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(c) Copyright 2012 Robert Genn. If you wish to copy this material to other publications or mail lists, please ask for permission by writingrgenn@saraphina.com. Thanks for your friendship. 

Tuesday, 8 May 2012


Post-traumatic growth

May 8, 2012

Greetings!

Over the past while I've had an abundance of emails from artists who are fighting cancer, stroke, stress, macular degeneration, concussion, body-destroying motor accidents and other trauma. Some are just reporting in, others are announcing they are throwing in the towel, while a few others are asking for help. It is, of course, difficult to advise on a one-to-one basis through the clouds, and I don't always feel confident of my guruship but, as usual, I have a few thoughts:

Post-traumatic growth is a relatively new area of psychological study. It deals with the positive changes experienced by some people as a result of a struggle with challenging life circumstances. It's not simply a return to the way things were before the suffering, but the welcome experience of a profound improvement.

The idea that suffering can be channelled to make us stronger runs through the history of philosophies and religions. While most of us no longer believe that artists need to suffer to make good art, we do know that a lot of good art comes from people who have suffered.

Dr. Robin Rosenberg, a clinical psychologist based in Stanford, California, has introduced an interesting method whereby sufferers can grow their way out of trauma. Much like Joseph Campbell's "The Hero with a Thousand Faces" Rosenberg thinks folks can gain strength by following popular superheroes and their stories. We're talking about the sort of characters in the current blockbuster action/violence/heroism movie, "The Avengers"--Hawkeye, Captain America, Black Widow, Hulk and Nick Fury. She also thinks we should pay attention to Superman, Batman, Spiderman and Joker. This is good stuff--I've often thought there's more in comic books than meets the eye.

Dr. Rosenberg's superheroes teach us a variety of life lessons. Among them:

+ We all have alter egos

+ We need to wear the costumes of our heroes

+ Being different can give us power

+ Adversity can be overcome

+ No matter what our abilities, life is frustrating

+ To overcome our fears, we need to run toward danger

Regardless of whether you think Rosenberg's superheroes are beneath your dignity, they do exemplify a simple and direct purpose uncluttered by nuance. Good and evil are sharply defined, and evil is often merely in need of shooting, beheading or blowing up.

Best regards,

Robert

PS: "Every superhero has a mission." (Dr. Robin Rosenberg)

Esoterica: We all know of disabled persons who have overcome and excelled. By accidentally narrowing the range of capabilities, we often build strength in whatever talent or ability may be left. Further, some overcomers I've noticed have a strong sense of fantasy and self-delusion--even delusions of grandeur and superhuman abilities. I personally like the costume idea. As you may know, there are social clubs of dresser-uppers who claim to gain power by hanging out as Spiderwoman and Spiderman, etc. It's becoming apparent that these nut cases are not so nuts. But I wonder if any psychologists or others might comment on my going to the party as Minnie Mouse.


Current Clickback: "Your primal joys" looks at internal and external motivation. Your comments will be appreciated.

Read this letter online and share your thoughts on our strengths in adversity. Live comments are welcome. Direct, illustratable comments can be made at rgenn@saraphina.com

The Art Show Calendar: If you or your group has a show coming up, put an illustrated announcement on The Painter's Keys site. The longer it's up, the more people will see it. Your announcement will be shown until the last day of your show.

The Workshop Calendar: Here is a selection of workshops and seminars laid out in chronological order that will stimulate, teach, mentor, take you to foreign lands or just down the street. Many of these workshops are recommended by Robert and friends. Incidentally, if you are planning a workshop and have photos of happy people working, feel free to send them to us and we'll include a selection in the workshops feature at no extra charge.

The Painter's Post: Every day new material is going into this feature. Links to art info, ideas, inspiration and all kinds of creative fun can be found in this online arts aggregator.

If a friend is trying to subscribe to the Twice-Weekly Letter via Constant Contact, please let her or him know that confirmation is required and to reply to Constant Contact's confirmation email.

You can also follow Robert's valuable insights and see further feedback on Facebook and Twitter

Featured Responses: Alternative to the instant Live Comments, Featured Responses are illustrated and edited for content. If you would like to submit your own for possible inclusion, please do so. Just click 'reply' on this letter or write to rgenn@saraphina.com

Yes, please go ahead and forward this letter to a friend. This does not mean that they will automatically be subscribed to the Twice-Weekly Letter. They have to do it voluntarily and can find out about it by going to The Painter's Keys website.
Subscribe Free!
Your name and email
address will be kept safe.
To Unsubscribe or Change Your Email Address, please click Safe Unsubscribe or Update Profile/Email Address links found at the bottom of this email.

(c) Copyright 2012 Robert Genn. If you wish to copy this material to other publications or mail lists, please ask for permission by writingrgenn@saraphina.com. Thanks for your friendship. 

Friday, 4 May 2012


Your primal joys

May 4, 2012

Greetings!

As usual, some of my recent tips baffled a few folks. "Listen to the music that has been within you from your youth," confused Peter Brown of Oakland, CA. "Is this about marching to my inner drummer," he asked, "or the suggestion that I dust off my old Beatles albums?"

Inner drummer, Peter, sorry, not Sgt. Pepper, but it could be. The idea is to tune into and bring to life our earliest interests and passions.

"External" and "Internal" are the two main types of creative motivation. External motivation can be market forces or societal, peer or educational demands. As an example of the latter, some art school friends were recently asked by their instructor to dig around and find subject matter that "upsets or angers you." The result was a classroom full of poverty, privation, humiliation, defeat, famine, war, fanaticism, religious prejudice, gay bashing, familial discord and various other social ills. I'm not saying these are unsuitable subjects for paintings, but they just didn't fit in with the current thoughts of most of these students. "Life is good and I'm happy to be alive," said one. "If I was angry I'd spray-can the boxcars. Right now I want to learn how to paint, not how to protest."
  
Internal motivation, on the other hand, often originates in the purity of our pre-teen youth and is rich with unsullied integrity. An artesian well of surprise and diversity, different folks report the early highs of camping, playing sports, watching wildlife, listening to music, fishing, collecting or even quietly drawing and painting. Evolved artists, in my experience, are able to use these primal joys as guides and triggers for creative direction and satisfaction. In my observation, the results are generally superior to the proscribed demands of others.
  
Internal motivation can be sparked by a few minutes of quiet Zen-like reflection on earlier times and places. Work begins when you answer the question, "What do I want to do today?"
  
The other alternative is to do what other people want. It's also been my observation that most of us rugged individualists would prefer a root canal to doing other people's will.
  
Best regards,

Robert

PS: "Life is your art. An open, aware heart is your camera. A oneness with your world is your film." (Ansel Adams)

Esoterica: B.G. (Before Girls) I had an extensive collection of semi-rotten and weathered roots and gnarls from our nearby forests and beaches. Leaning against the side of our home, my museum pieces were wired to several sheets of dad-provided plywood, until mom happened to notice the carpenter ants. Visualizing the ants' destructive march to our school, hospital and parliament buildings, multiplying like the brooms in Walt Disney's "Fantasia," overwhelming civilization as we knew it, my parents contrived with a local farmer, Albert Eales, to load my museum onto his flat-bed, take it somewhere and burn it. This covert operation hurt my folks as much as it did me, and they apologized forever after. Bugs and all, the objects and their bone-like forms still hang out lovingly in the deep folds of my B.G. soul.


Current Clickback: "Tips for you" offers tips for painterly happiness and success. Your comments will be appreciated.

Read this letter online and share your thoughts on internal and external motivation. Live comments are welcome. Direct, illustratable comments can be made at rgenn@saraphina.com

The Art Show Calendar: If you or your group has a show coming up, put an illustrated announcement on The Painter's Keys site. The longer it's up, the more people will see it. Your announcement will be shown until the last day of your show.

The Workshop Calendar: Here is a selection of workshops and seminars laid out in chronological order that will stimulate, teach, mentor, take you to foreign lands or just down the street. Many of these workshops are recommended by Robert and friends. Incidentally, if you are planning a workshop and have photos of happy people working, feel free to send them to us and we'll include a selection in the workshops feature at no extra charge.

The Painter's Post: Every day new material is going into this feature. Links to art info, ideas, inspiration and all kinds of creative fun can be found in this online arts aggregator.

If a friend is trying to subscribe to the Twice-Weekly Letter via Constant Contact, please let her or him know that confirmation is required and to reply to Constant Contact's confirmation email.

You can also follow Robert's valuable insights and see further feedback on Facebook and Twitter

Peter Brown is at p.w.brown@sbcglobal.net 

Featured Responses: Alternative to the instant Live Comments, Featured Responses are illustrated and edited for content. If you would like to submit your own for possible inclusion, please do so. Just click 'reply' on this letter or write to rgenn@saraphina.com

Yes, please go ahead and forward this letter to a friend. This does not mean that they will automatically be subscribed to the Twice-Weekly Letter. They have to do it voluntarily and can find out about it by going to The Painter's Keys website.
Subscribe Free!
Your name and email
address will be kept safe.
To Unsubscribe or Change Your Email Address, please click Safe Unsubscribe or Update Profile/Email Address links found at the bottom of this email.

(c) Copyright 2012 Robert Genn. If you wish to copy this material to other publications or mail lists, please ask for permission by writingrgenn@saraphina.com. Thanks for your friendship. 

Tuesday, 1 May 2012


Tips for you

May 1, 2012

Greetings!

Whenever I offer tips to fellow artists I'm aware that a tip may be valuable to one person and a poison pill to another. Lately, on the speaking circuit, I've been giving a little talk I call, "Two dozen tips for painterly happiness and success." I start by suggesting that we all need to be our own tipsters and some of my so-called tips may not be for everyone. Nevertheless, I have a copy of my current batch printed out to hand around after the event. We've posted this tip-sheet at the top of the current clickback. If you go there, you're on your own.

Curiously, when following other tip-givers who also go from club to club, I often find the eager tip-takers have taken down some wonderfully contradictory tips. Typical is "Before starting, draw your composition carefully," and "Do not draw--go directly to composing with patches of colour and tone." Such are the hazards of tipstering.

That being said, here are three tips you may not have heard before:

1. Rather than go with your first choice in a composition, go with your second choice. Your first is likely to be in your comfort zone, but it is your second choice that will stretch your capabilities and expose new creativity. How to do this? Slowly rotate yourself in a full circle, taking every possibility into consideration. Sort out and at least anticipate the potentials of every angle before you start.

2. Pause frequently during the production of your work and reconsider your options. The simple business of strategizing and thinking ahead can save you a lot of downstream angst. If you find yourself too far into your end-game and not in good shape, courageously strike out an over-rendered passage. This audacious act often frees you up for further improvement.

3. Regularly refill your "Patience Bucket." While fresh, energetic, speedy brushing can be desirable, there is often a time to slow down and let things evolve with a more deliberate, tender and measured stroking. A work-in-progress can be your confederate friend. Let him gently speak to you and don't be socially embarrassed if you gently answer back. Your half-realized friend secretly wants to help you win big.

I should wind this up with one of my all time best tips: "You are your own best tipster."

Best regards,

Robert

PS: "Beware of geeks bearing formulas." (Warren Buffett)

Esoterica: In the "Zingers" section on page 947 of my book The Twice-Weekly Letters are two consecutive items. Ralph wrote, "I like it because you don't give pat little recipes like some other instructors." Then Phyllis wrote, "I really appreciate all the little tips from time to time." Then there's Henry's contribution on page 943: "Stick to tips, Robert, we are tired of your philosophizing all the time. There is no room for philosophy in this business." I love it when people give me tips.


Current Clickback: "The Parachute Principle"looks at how we refresh our 'seeing' eye. Also included is the tip-sheet. Your comments will be appreciated. appreciated.

Read this letter online and share your personal tips. Live comments are welcome. Direct, illustratable comments can be made at 

The Art Show Calendar: If you or your group has a show coming up, put an illustrated announcement on The Painter's Keys site. The longer it's up, the more people will see it. Your announcement will be shown until the last day of your show.

The Workshop Calendar: Here is a selection of workshops and seminars laid out in chronological order that will stimulate, teach, mentor, take you to foreign lands or just down the street. Many of these workshops are recommended by Robert and friends. Incidentally, if you are planning a workshop and have photos of happy people working, feel free to send them to us and we'll include a selection in the workshops feature at no extra charge.

The Painter's Post: Every day new material is going into this feature. Links to art info, ideas, inspiration and all kinds of creative fun can be found in this online arts aggregator.

If a friend is trying to subscribe to the Twice-Weekly Letter via Constant Contact, please let her or him know that confirmation is required and to reply to Constant Contact's confirmation email.

You can also follow Robert's valuable insights and see further feedback on Facebook and Twitter

Featured Responses: Alternative to the instant Live Comments, Featured Responses are illustrated and edited for content. If you would like to submit your own for possible inclusion, please do so. Just click 'reply' on this letter or write to rgenn@saraphina.com

Yes, please go ahead and forward this letter to a friend. This does not mean that they will automatically be subscribed to the Twice-Weekly Letter. They have to do it voluntarily and can find out about it by going to The Painter's Keys website.
Subscribe Free!
Your name and email
address will be kept safe.
To Unsubscribe or Change Your Email Address, please click Safe Unsubscribe or Update Profile/Email Address links found at the bottom of this email.

(c) Copyright 2012 Robert Genn. If you wish to copy this material to other publications or mail lists, please ask for permission by writingrgenn@saraphina.com. Thanks for your friendship.