Monday, August 22, 2011

Why

Why do I make art? What do I want to accomplish out of Senior Seminar? What do I want to accomplish as an artist?


When I was three years old my parents came to pick me up from preschool when my teacher came up to them and showed them something I’d drawn that day. She compared my drawing to other children’s and explained that I was drawing in enormous detail for a three-year-old; I drew with perspective and included fingers (apparently fingers are a huge deal). My teacher told my parents that I was going to be artist and so for the rest of my life I identified myself as an artist. In late elementary school and all throughout middle school I skipped recess to sit in the art room or just the classroom to draw and draw. I’ve been drawing as long as I can remember because I’m good at it, and it makes me feel good to see something come together and put my thoughts on paper. My friends never hesitated to express how lucky I was to be able to take something out of my head and make a picture out of it instead of having to use words. Although I loved writing as well, I learned quickly that a picture really is worth a thousand words, and I found myself constantly volunteering my artwork for school projects both in the classroom and out. In fact, St. Timothy’s still has a mural I painted in 8th grade. I’m the only student to ever have painted something on a wall at that school, almost ten years later. Studying art in college was a no-brainer for me, especially since science and math are literally my worst subjects, and no other subject really appealed to me. In retrospect I’ve grown as an artist at CNU because I have become not only an artist, but an art historian, and I find that art history inspires me to create, and creating inspires me to study. I don’t willingly draw or paint like I used to, it’s become more methodical for me, but I hope to change that in Senior Seminar. Unfortunately, as I’ve gone through college I’ve felt a stronger connection to art history than studio art, and my strongest focus for my senior year is in my Art History Senior Seminar and in applying to grad school to study art history. Studio Art Senior Seminar will be the close to my education in the studio, which is sad, but a little relieving at the same time. I don’t feel heavy pressure anymore because it’s the last requirement I need and I feel a load coming off my shoulders more and more as I plan my project. I feel like I am fine tuning myself as an artist while also really separating myself as an artist and myself as an art historian. And while I leave one field of study behind, I intend to use Senior Seminar as source of closure. The artist inside will not die, but through Senior Seminar I want to make studio art fun again so that should grad school overwhelm me, I can fall back on something comfortable and familiar to me. And I hope to ultimately use my education as an artist to support my opinion as an art historian and fortify me as a scholar.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

The feather that started it all....

Without further adieu, the feather that I discovered in Costa Rica from a street artist named Guillermo - my original inspiration. So simple, but so cool as an idea. This is going up in my kitchen as soon as I move back to NPN tomorrow! Just thought I'd post it for the whole wide world to see!


Polly Apfelbaum

Polly Apfelbaum’s work is proof that no matter how strange or uncommon or unconventional one’s inspiration for concept may be, the artwork speaks for itself. The translation of concept and theory into a solid piece of artwork is everything to an artist for the piece to be successful, and everything for the viewer to have the ability to make any sort of sense of the painting. While Apfelbaum’s inspiration may be obvious to him in terms of translation into her artwork, the viewer would have no idea what he or she was actually looking at without reading the artist statement. Her inspiration comes from the old Cartoon Network TV Show, the Powderpuff Girls. One would never realize this just by looking at her artwork, which is mandala-like installations, one of which is housed by the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, titled Blossom.

Deep. The pink one is Blossom.

Blossom is named after one of the three Powderpuff girls, the red-headed leader who is constantly wearing pink and is the “sugar” out of “sugar, spice and everything nice.” Like Apfelbaum’s other pieces, it resembles a mandala and is displayed on the floor. The piece is colorful and elaborate, comprised of hundreds of pieces of hand-dyed velvet that start out in a color-coded pattern and begin to randomize as the rings grow. The strategy of color keeps the viewer’s eye moving around the piece, constantly observing how the color placement affects the hues, tints and tones of each color from one to the next. Blossom is part of Apfelbaum’s “fallen pieces” series, which reflects superheroes and their personas, the name coming from the nature of the pieces in relation to the ground.

Blossom (the art piece. big difference!)

Apfelbaum draws me in as an artist for two strong reasons. First, the fact that her piece is comprised of color, and is completely dependent on color both visually and conceptually. Every group of three pieces of velvet provides a different combination of color and a different effect on the eye. Second, that she draws inspiration from something so bizarre, but commits to it as an artist and sells the concept through her artwork. Although she draws ideas from something that is literally childish and commercial, he translates it into something deeper and more moving, and she uses color to execute it.



Polly Apfelbaum. The Museum of Modern Art. 2010. Web. 16 August 2011. <http://www.moma.org/collection/browse_results.php?criteria=O%3ADE%3AI%3A5%7CG%3AHI%3AE%3A1&page_number=41&template_id=1&sort_order=2>. 

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Color in the Sky


Color, color, color, color, COLOR! This piece is quick, it's spontaneous, and it's not something you'd actually see in the sky. But it's not senseless. And the color in the sky and in the terrain in the foreground sort of halos the mountains in the background, making them the focus of the painting, despite the monotone blue and stylistic differences. It's like two different paintings put into one. It's almost heavenly. 
I love the clever framing that the artist experimented with in this painting. He/she essentially framed a painting within a painting.

Symbolism

I appreciate artwork with a little bit of symbolism. Especially in still life. Everything the artist selects to include is meticulous and carefully chosen - from the flowers, to musical instruments, to birds. Not to mention color. And while too much symbolism and iconography can lead to an allegory painting that absolutely no one understands, like, say, Boticelli's Primavera, or Allegory of Love.

what????

Yes that's a a green guy coming out of a tree and grabbing a terrified looking chick. It's supposed to be wind raping a nymph. Even with the explanation, it still doesn't make sense. Allegorical paintings are like symbolism on steroids. And they're so jacked up they only make sense to the people they're painted for. That's right, sometimes even the painters had no idea what they were painting.
So, clearly, even great artists can over symbolize their point. And suddenly they have something ridiculous. It's gotta be minimal, and effective. And most importantly, the viewer has to have some kind of idea of what is going on, and at least what is symbolically significant, if not aware of what the symbology represents. 

much better!

Simple, but effective. I was originally drawn to this piece because of its COLOR and TEXTURE. Two things that are really important not to mention striking to me as an artist and scholar of art (what up double major!) and then I started looking around at what's in the painting. You've got a clarinet, a stork, and a hippy woman. Could she be pregnant? Or is it a coincidence in the style of her dress? Well then we have the fact that her gaze is looking downward toward her stomach. Of course, I stumbled on the image alone, no artist name, no title, no nothing. So I can't really research what the significance of the clarinet is. But, hey, it's pretty tropical in setting and in color, and the symbology is successful in leading the viewer's eyes throughout the painting.




Silvia Pelissaro

I'm such a fan of Watercolour. It is, in my opinion, one of the most unique mediums. And it truly shows an artist's ability in how it's handled. I admire watercolourists, especially those who know what they're doing and know how to manipulate the paint.
Silvia Pelissaro is a pretty talented watercolourist. And forgive me for being short, brcause I am now blogging on my iPhone while I'm on my break at work... But her use of color is bright and bold and shows careful placement, as not to create ugly washes where contrasting hues blend.
Her pieces are smoothly blended, washy, and color blocked cleverly. Her brushstrokes are quick but meaningful, and she includes a lot of detail in specific parts of the painting, like the lips and in the pupils.


Monday, August 15, 2011

Charles L. Peterson

I HAD to blog about this. Literally could not help myself. Charles L. Peterson is a [talented] watercolour artist whose concept is pretty familiar to me... probably because it's my original concept that I was going to go with for my Senior Sem. WOAH what a coincidence right?!!?! That's what I thought. He paints scenes that discreetly have ghosts of memories sort of hidden in them. And once you see them you can't unsee them. IT'S THE EXACT SAME IDEA I HAD BACK IN APRIL! Talk about small world. Looking through his work is really cool for me because in an essence it allows me to see what my work would have looked similar to outside of my head.

...his images are copyrighted pretty tight.

But I can ramble! So blah blah blah, I had this idea sort of pop into my head in Computer Art with Sir Skees and I really enjoyed working on it and developing my concept. Not to mention the idea got me looking at Tom Chambers, and he's only one of my all time favorite artists ever ever ever. I decided... at the time... that I would base my Senior Sem off of a similar concept, and I was mainly inspired by how thoroughly creepy the Ferguson Center's abandoned shell of a high school STILL stands at CNU and how when I was studying for Northern Renaissance art with my study group in the Painting Studio we started to discuss the likelihood of the Ferg being haunted... and what can I say, I'm drawn to the creepy, no matter how happy and perky I try my very best to come off as. Seeing Peterson's work sort of makes me realize I really am still drawn to this idea/concept. And it's actually the idea I had started working on sketches and paintings for at the beginning of the summer BEFORE I traveled to the Caribbean on a Carnival Cruise and my life changed forever (I don't think that's even possible to find yourself on a Carnival Cruise Line but whatever, I did and I find it hilarious). I want to incorporate this in with my project. Someway SOMEHOW. And time is running out. So needless to say, I still may be pretty scattered when we come back to school. And my art could most likely use some fine tuning. And I'm a hot mess ALL THE TIME. But I feel like the ghosts of my past are ultimately playing a pivotal role in my artwork/concept and they deserve to peek-a-boo in my art. If I end up being really creepy, my apologies in advance.

BUT HEY, you can click on Peterson's name and take a look on how he gets his creep on. Great minds think alike my man.




Luis Hernandez Cruz




Luis Hernandez Cruz is a Puerto Rican graphic artist, painter, and sculptor. His work has an extremely wide range, not only in medium, but in subject matter as well. His graphic pieces appear very digital with a pixilated effect. They vary in color patterns, giving some the illusion of a distorted checkerboard covering an image in the background. His paintings contrast between resembling graphic art designs in texture, and showing his painterly strokes in minimalist pieces. His sculptures are reminiscent of primitive art in terms of the materials and medium with a contemporary touch in purpose. Unlike primitive Caribbean art, Cruz’s sculptures are not meant for actual use either ritualistic or for everyday use. His painterly styled paintings and 3D pieces are the most reminiscent of his Puerto Rican heritage, while his graphic design reflects American or European training. However, as a whole portfolio his work is reflective of a modern Caribbean artist with outside influences, specifically American. In fact, Cruz studied art at both the University of Puerto Rico and the American University in Washington, DC, making him a bit of a medley artist in both his training and his inspiration. No matter where he goes with his art, he stays true to color. He consistently uses a mixture of saturated hues in his pieces. If anything, he avoids tints, shades, and neutral tones, an aspect that is very common in Caribbean art.


Cruz was a pioneer in the 1960s of bringing abstract art to the Caribbean, specifically in implicating it as a legitimate form of art in Puerto Rico. He was so successful in this that he helped found and became the president of the Congress of Abstract Art in Puerto Rico.


I am inspired by Cruz’s passion to bring what he learned in America and believed in as art to Puerto Rico. His passion to change art in Puerto Rico shows passion for his country and for his heritage, an aspect that is admired among all Latin people. No matter where we go in life, we have our roots, and while some people choose to escape their roots and travel as far as possible to do so, others have their loyalties to where they come from no matter where they go in life. Luis Hernandez Cruz is not only an example of cultural pride, but a man who helped bring his culture to date in contemporary art, and who combined his beliefs and concepts as an artist with his heritage. Cruz’s work is inspiring for what it stands for to me. His portfolio is an example of the meshing of culture and applying it wherever he went.


Cruz, Luis Hernandez. Luis Hernandez Cruz: Painter, Printmaker, Sculptor. CCG. 2009. Web. 12 August 2011. <http://www.luishernandezcruz.com/>.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Francoise Nielly

Knife-painting. Forget a brush, who needs it?! Francoise Nielly doesn't, and her portraits are impulsive, emotional, and expressive because of it. She's a great example of the process truly creating the emphasis behind the final result, and her work is outstanding in the simplicity of quick strokes of broken color coming together to make some exquisite details. Her use of color is daring to say the least. It's really hard to paint a pink and green person without it looking like a cartoon. Her pieces are striking and eye-catching, not only for the color, but for the distinction that they are not created by any "normal" means. 

Unfortunately, her photos are copy-righted tight and I can't load an image on here. But click on her name or here and check out some of her work!


Brigitte Delthony

I found an artist, Brigitte Delthony, who is creating ancient/primitive pottery in today's art world. As a whole, I extremely appreciate her stand of being purely inspired by the old. My initial spark in Caribbean art and in defining myself as an artist came from primitive art in the Caribbean.


Although there's nothing modern or contemporary about essentially recreating primitive art with primitive themes, I find it refreshing to see artists revisiting the cultures where art began. And it's reassuring to know that I'm far from the only artist drawing inspiration from the roots of art.

Matthew Cusick

Talk about seriously blowing my mind. This guy does stuff in his art I didn't think was really possible. And I'm jealous I didn't think of it! Look long and hard at Matthew Cusick's piece:


See a map? See a wave? I'm sure you see both. BECAUSE IT IS. It's map art! He cuts up maps and strategically arranges pieces to create a piece of artwork. I think it's effing brilliant. I don't think I could rant and rave anymore. The texture, the color, it's hard to believe what it comes from, but so easy at the same time. And it looks strategic and difficult. The piece above is titled Kara's Wave, and it's my favorite of his many many map pieces. But I mean check this one out:

Three Horses
triple sick.

I'm baffled by how he has the patience to do this! I want to stare at it forever and ever and zoom in and see what parts of the world make all this up. And it's not just ocean pieces of waves. He'll turn a map into anything he wants. The ocean ones are just the most natural, given the color scheme an untouched map allows.

Sniper 1

Note the title. This is actually a portrait of one of the snipers that terrorized the DC metropolitan area in 2004. And yes, the maps that make him up are of the DC metropolitan area, including the specific locations of his victims. Intense enough? Shyeah. Awesome and outspoken? Hell yeah.

To say the least, Cusick is talented. He literally just shot up to my top 10 of coolest and most clever artists I've ever had the pleasure of looking at. I think to be truly creative today you have to be really original and a little witty and I think his work really says that about him.



Tadashi Ikai

Birds and color, oh my GOSH. Birds have fascinated humans for centuries now. Besides their ability to, you know, fly, they're gorgeous. And it all comes down to the feather. It doesn't really take Isaac Newton to figure out that everything that all birds have feathers. And without the feathers, they struggle to fly. Now see, Europeans weren't the only ones who were brainiacs: ancient cultures in both Asia and the Caribbean have been accreditted with being masters of the skies, and therefor, observations. They picked up on the birds pretty quick. And on top of having flight going for them, birds have the tendency of being colorful and whatnot. Birds are inspiring. They do things we can't, and they're given attributes by nature that most humans would kill for (we all kinda want to fly). So, if you can't get your hands on some real life feathers, paint them!


This is Tadashi Ikai's piece titled Blue Ocean is pretty straight up: it's a hummingbird flying over water. Ikai chose to be dramatic and representational of his take on water, making it ultimately obvious through his choice of color. The hummingbird is done in impeccable detail, with every feather visible. His choice of color really grabs me though, I'm a sucker for turquoise and teals. 

Takashi Hirata

FEATHERS! Gotta love art that involves the feather. And, cool thing, Native Americans and Caribbean people aren't the only folks who love feathers in art. So does African and Asian art. I've touched on Africans and feathers a little bit through carnival - in African culture the parading of cultural costume was big. But this isn't about feathers in African art, it's about feathers in Asian art. Like this piece by Takashi Hirata. Feather VII. 


This feather piece is less about where it came from and more about what it can do. Quills are big with Asian art, being that they are the indisputable masters of ink. Hirata's lithograph successfully translates the simple but distinct texture of the feather. His scratches and blots show the differences in what it can do.

Wayne Crothers

I found an exhibition in the Library of Congress (who knew it wasn't just books?!) on Contemporary Japanese Prints from the 50th College Women's Association of Japan Print Show. Japanese art isn't exactly my thing, but I found a lot of the prints sort of intoxicating, and decided to look through the entire online exhibition. A few select pieces not only caught my eye, but blew me away. Now I'm sly, so I'm giving each piece their own post. Because, volume is important. This post is all about Wayne Crothers and his piece Show Me the Way


COLOR COLOR COLOR COLOR COLOR!!!!!!! I cannot express how much I love Crothers' use of color and the way he layers it. Not to mention the subject matter of the working man along with the patterned background, mainly the sky. Is it a fence? Is that a wheel? Whatever it is, it flows.

Michael Shapcott

This guy, Michael Shapcott, does some interesting portraits. He focuses on women, and he works in the combination of ink, colored pencil, and paint (my guess is either acrylic or opaque watercolour). His pieces are interesting because of what he adds to the portrait: symbols, spontaneous streaks of paint, and his creative but minimal use of color. In one piece especially (the title is unknown), I think his use of line to create the illusion of scarification is unique. I also admire the organic shapes. God knows why they're there. But it works. It's well thought out but impulsive at the same time.


Video

I think I'm going a little art bat-shit, and I'm getting to the point where I'm like OH I LIKE THIS! OH THAT'S AWESOME! DUDE THAT'S SICK! But, for real, I've basically been working at my computer every spare minute I have. And I don't have a lot of spare time because I work 70 hours a week. All I have time for is sleeping and the occasional meal... so in retrospect I have turned into the starving insomniac artist. Because something has to give right? And I can sleep when I'm dead!
I think I may write StumbleUpon a giant thank you letter. Because this would be impossible without them. And I cannot figure out Pinterest to save my damn soul. So shout out to StumbleUpon, ya'll rock.

Check out these badasses.

Reasons I think what they do rocks.
  1. I don't know what their concept is, I'm assuming it's some kind of marriage-esque union thing going on. But I dig looking at it even though I don't get it. And I really appreciate the time and detail that went into it.
  2. THE DETAIL! Oh my gosh, it's like pattern like I've never seen. You could stare at that thing for about 4 hours and keep seeing new stuff.
  3. The color. The saturation. The mixed media of acrylic and watercolour and how they're applied. 
  4. The symbology that I don't get at all. It's not just people. It's like composite figures. 




Saturday, August 13, 2011

Julio Rosado del Valle

Julio Rosado del Valle's artwork is extremely reflective of Wifredo Lam, as I previously blogged, one of the Caribbean's most influential artists of all time. Like Lam, he uses strong strokes and focuses on similar subject matter. It's not uncommon for Santeria and voudoon to come up in Caribbean art due to the wide practice of the combination of ancient beliefs (both Caribbean and African) with Christianity influenced by the conquistadors and conquering cultures. The hybrid result is the Santeria and voudoo symbology and icons that we see in Caribbean art - they are essentially the locals' way of hiding their own sacred motifs and camouflaging them as otherwise. Julio Rosado del Valle's work is extremely reflective of these motifs, very much like Wifredo Lam.



But, Wifredo Lam got a full lengthy response from me, and Valle doesn't, purely because I don't think he developed his work as much as he could have. He does, however, show consistency as a Caribbean artist, and I respect his work.


Bernadette Persaud

Bernadette Persaud is a Guyanese painter who studied art at both the University of Guyana and the Burrows School of Art in Georgetown. Her work is reflective of political unease, with her most famous work coming out of her series Gentlemen in the Gardens which depicts camouflaged soldiers hiding in jungle-like scenes. 


Her paintings convey the beauty and color of the Caribbean while also exposing the dangers of the jungle - and its not spotted beasts or snakes, but men with guns. The Caribbean is full of hostile people, both in terms of government and mercenaries, and it taints the beauty of the land and the climate. This unfortunate combination makes many Caribbean artists from restless countries, such as Persaud, proud of their heritage but intent on alerting people of the unexpected and seemingly unlikely dangers in the jungle.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Raul Martinez

Talk about political art in the Caribbean. Raul Martinez's art is bright and colorful (which, naturally is what attracted me to him) but also serves a political purpose. In essence, a lot of his pieces look like bright, Cuban campaign posters.

Camilo Cienfueges

Martinez is a pop-art artist, sort of like a Cuban Andy Warhol.  His pieces revolve around the Cuban Revolution and have earned him a name among great Caribbean artists. His graphic designs and paintings have been featured in both Cuba and the US. 
I'm drawn to Martinez's bold use of color. I love pop-art, always have. When I was 13 I had an Andy Warhol poster in my room while everyone else had Eminem. Rough times. Pop-art is simple and ultimately helped unleash Cuban artists like Martinez. Do art. And do a lot of it.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Rene' Portocarrero

Rene Portocarrero was a 20th century Cuban artist who began his training at the young age of 14 and quickly became a bull in the industry of art, rebelling against the academies that educated him and going rogue as an artist. After becoming a professor in art himself, he began his travels to Haiti, Europe, and the US, and ultimately landed in New York where he defined himself as a ceramics and mural artist. His work is simple, colorful and strong in line and concept. Portocarrero’s work paid off in landing him several exhibits throughout the Western Hemisphere, including the Museums of Modern Arts of Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, New York, and San Francisco and the National Museum in Havana. He is arguably one of the most famous artists to come out the Caribbean, let alone Cuba.


Portocarrero’s work became well known because of his style: mentally develop the painting as the brush hits the canvas. His spontaneously style of painting created a very hybrid form of art – brushy, stylized art that captures the natural handling of the paint, with modern subject matter. He is a perfect example of Caribbean Modern Art.
Portocarrero’s color palette is especially inspiring. His work varies from using muddy tones with pops of saturation, to pure saturated color on a neutral canvas with strong use of line. Cerro, Interior, is an example of one of his muddier and brushier pieces. His heavy use of paint is evident in providing a blurry sense of atmosphere from fat brushstrokes. The details of the painting are vague and difficult to make out outside large organic shapes. His thick brushstrokes allows for thick strokes of broken color that make up the woman’s skin tone and dress. Her arms especially pop, with some unexpected color combinations.


Portocarrero’s portfolio is all over the place between geometric and organic shapes, saturated and dull color, hard lines and soft brushstrokes. I admire his array of talent, however, in terms of inspiration, I choose to focus on the pieces that include brushy techniques and saturated color. His pieces with a more simple use of line and strong color strike me in how effective they are in reflecting Caribbean motifs. They also, for the most part, include feather-like headdresses on profiles of women, which is intriguing to say the least to a student of Caribbean art. His work as a whole impresses me, especially in terms of his range, and his choice of Caribbean women as his subject matter.


Rene' Portocarrero. Cernuda Arte. 2002-2011. Web. 11 August 2011. <http://www.cernudaarte.com/cgi-local/artists.cgi?aid=44>.


Lee Krasner

Lee Krasner was a 20th century abstract expressionist who sought out her inspiration from Jackson Pollock and Barbara Rose. Her work is reflective of her inspiration, with passionate slashes of paint across the canvas. Abstract expressionists in particular work with passion and allow their emotions to drive their paintbrush, not their hand-eye-coordination. Her fame came from her talent in refining Pollock’s concepts. In fact, not only did she draw inspiration from Jackson Pollock, she was married to him.
Krasner was a ground breaking artist for her time, simply for being a woman and a successful artist. Her relationship with Jackson Pollock no doubt helped her debut as a serious artist, but her work stood for its own.


Krasner’s work has a specific color palette: greens, pinks, oranges and earth tones. And her work is highly conceptual in terms of outlining however she feels at the time of the painting. It’s very spur of the moment work. She constantly challenged herself as an artist and embraced her identity as a woman in art. Krasner sought out to help people understand abstract art and along the way, came up with her “Little Image” Series, that made her a renowned artist.  Her distinct repetitive lines resembled hieroglyphs and made her work stand out among other abstract artists. Pieces such as Night Creatures reflect Krasner’s signature stroke style that earned her a name in the art world. Night Creatures came out of Krasner’s night work which was driven by a combination of insomnia and depression. In her frustration, Krasner created art, and became living proof of the ties between emotional disturbances and creativity.



Krasner inspires me as a strong woman making history as an artist. I find it remarkable that she was married to such an influential artist and still managed to trek her own brilliant career instead of living in the shadows of her husband. On top of this, her emotional state inspires me. As someone who has struggled with depression, compulsiveness, and blood disorders that cause fluctuations in sleep habits, I truly appreciate Krasner’s ability to essentially vent through art. I struggled in defining myself as a human being, let alone an artist, at the worst of my depression, and her perseverance to not only create, but to create artwork that in turn was so moving, astounds and inspires me. I discovered her at just the right time: that when times are tough it’s important to push through as an artist and let it out through a paintbrush.

Such a cute artsy couple.

Shaffer, Jessica. Lee Krasner. The Art Story.org. 2011. Web. 11 August 2011. <http://www.theartstory.org/artist-krasner-lee.htm>.




Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Jose Bedia


Jose Bedia is a celebrated Cuban artist who studied in Spain and brought his knowledge of European art back to Cuba. He’s had exhibitions in Italy, Cuba, Mexico, Germany, and the United States, as well as receiving three awards for his work, first Prize in the "Salón Paisaje’82", of the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes de La Habana, Havana, Cuba, the Guggenheim Fellowship in New York City, and the Distinction for the National Culture, Cuban Council of State, Havana, Cuba. He’s an installation artist as well as a painter, and has been heavily feature in the United States all over the country. In fact, one of his pieces can be found at the National Sculpture Garden in Washington, DC.
A lot of Bedia’s work involves incorporating constellations, in both his paintings and his installations. This is no surprise in terms of Caribbean motif, as the Pre-Columbian people are renowned for their astronomy and calendars, and how they interpreted their study of the skies into their art. In fact, ancient calendars are individual pieces of art, themselves. The concept of constellations and art is simple but powerful, essentially using the sky as an inspiration and a mental canvas.

(image unavailable due to copyright)

Bedia’s work primarily focuses on the celestial, however he includes small details of the terrain around him – cities, islands, and water. In these details he shows the skills he learned in Europe and in art school, showing off his attention to detail and his ability to paint. In terms of incorporating multiple realms in his work, he is very reflective of the Taino, the people who inhabited Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic. They believed in three realms, the celestial realm, the earthly/terrain realm, and the underworld, and created artwork portraying the passing between these realms, both in the mythological sense, and what they saw as the literal sense (such as trees, which were rooted under the ground and reached into the skies). Bedia’s work strongly reflects his heritage in terms of ancient beliefs applied to modern art.



I admire Bedia’s artwork and find him inspiring because he takes ancient art and applies ancient beliefs in his artwork. His artwork is bold, and consistent, while also standing strong as individual pieces. He’s rooted not only in nature, but in his heritage and in the land where he came from. His piece in the National Sculpture Garden, To the Possible Limit, particularly stands out to me as a piece. It’s articulate and geometric while also having some organic qualities.

Mizota, Sharon. Art Review: Jose Bedia in Latin American Masters. The Los Angeles Times. 21 May 2010. Web. 10 August 2011.
<http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/culturemonster/2010/05/art-review-jose-bedia-at-latin-american-masters.html>.

Carved Eggshells

All I can say is, I can appreciate the patience and time that probably went in to creating this:


I mean, damn. I thought my concept was intricate and annoying.

Guillermo Collazo

Guillermo Collazo was a Caribbean painter in the late 19th century, and his style is very European. He himself had a heritage of both European Spanish and indigenous blood, and he made a career painting picturesque subject matters, like many other artists at the time. Paintings of the Caribbean were very popular in Europe at the time, as they allowed Europeans to essentially see what they wanted to see without having to make the trip (and probably see things they really didn't want to see in the process, such as enslaved locals and disease). However, Guillermo Collazo's pieces had a heavier influence than just recording landscape to send back to Europe - his stormy scenes not only captivate the extreme weather in the Caribbean, but speak about churning waters politically as well. For example, my personal favorite painting of his, The Siesta.



Guillermo Collazo’s 1886 oil on canvas, The Siesta, brings the viewer into the hazy scene of a woman taking a nap in a sunroom. Collazo paints a dream-like room, almost foggy and sleepy from the viewer’s standpoint. The painting is half portrait, half landscape, illustrating a finely dressed Spaniard woman dozing off in an open-air room, facing a wide entrance to the beach and ocean. She is positioned in her wicker chair to be directly in the sunlight coming through the open-way, giving the whole painting a warm comforting feeling. The inside and outside of the room are covered with various tropical plants, the architecture and openness of the room allows space, and the colors are vibrant and warm, all indicating hot weather. The atmosphere of painting is hot. While the artist paid careful attention to detail – for example the print on the Oriental rug below the sleeping woman – Collazo consistently uses soft lines and slightly whites out the image to create a sense of heat. The relaxed pose of the sleeping woman, and the sunshine reflecting off her face indicate that she sat down to enjoy the breeze coming off of the ocean, rested her eyes, and dozed away in the relaxation of the setting.
As calm and soothing as the painting first appears, it has many elements that make the viewer question just how relaxing this scene is. To start, the room is very large and the only furniture visible is the chair in which the woman sleeps. The large open doorway, and the staircase directly outside the room show that the room is on the first floor or the building, and that the area outside the room is more likely to be a terrace outside an entrance to the house than a balcony off of a bedroom. This woman has chosen a peculiar space to nap, unless it is simply the only large view of the ocean in the house. Her positioning to the left center of the painting strongly suggests that she chose her location simply for the gorgeous view outside. Still, even the woman alone appears to be relaxed but tense at the same time. While her upper body is slumped in the chair and clearly at rest, the lower half of her body keeps its posture; Her leg remains neatly crossed over the other. She is a woman of status; otherwise she would not bother to look so composed and feminine. However, this only adds to the odd location of the room. Why sit properly when one is alone in a sitting room to enjoy a view. Furthermore, he body is turned toward the water in the chair, while the chair faces the interior of the room. It could also be possible that she was posing for a portrait, and in the heat she fell asleep, so Collazo painted her as he pleased.
Secondly the room is hardly clean. Leaves are strewn about the entrance, both inside and outside, and the rug is ruffled and disturbed rather than laying flat on the ground. Since the ornate rug, the lavish architecture of the room and the woman’s attire all indicate wealth, it seems odd that the setting would be so messy, especially if it was the location of portraiture. Maybe the artist was aiming to paint the scene as it actually was. Maybe this portrait/landscape is symbolism for the calm that follows a tropical storm. Maybe the artist has a message in the mixture of rest and mess. This could be that the wealthy that were living in the Caribbean had a blind eye to the troubles of the area and the people around them. It could be a message of carelessness. It could symbolize the Spanish people’s struggle with the Spanish American War about to break out. At the point in which Collazo painted The Siesta, the Spanish Empire was declining, and Cuba, the location of the painting, would shortly declare independence from Spain. It is highly likely that a woman of wealth in Cuba would be a Spaniard. In yet another message, the painting could indicate that no home is safe from the dangerous storms of the Caribbean, no matter how lavish.
The more one learns about the time and location of the painting, the more possibilities open up for it to symbolize more than an elegant woman dozing in front of pretty scenery.


Lopez Nuñez, Olga. Guillermo Collazo in Cobas Amate, R. et al (Eds.) Guia Arte Cubano. Seville, Spain: Escandón Impresores, 2003.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Rob Gonzales

Found a cool graphic artist today named Rob Gonzales. He is ALL about eye trickery, almost sort of like the mathematical artist, Escher. I had a lot of fun looking at each of his pieces for a little bit of time and appreciating how half of the piece looks totally normal and then BOOM, optical illusion. Some of them actually took me a while to see, some are really obvious (and a lot of them are reminiscent of Peter Pan). His play of perspective is really very inspiring, his work shows that creativity goes a long way without necessarily being really ground breaking or edgy. 


Monday, August 8, 2011

Kate MccGwire

Well hiiiii! I just wanted to note that the posting time for this is 10:32, and I am squeezing in a blog post between my job from 5am-10am today, and my other job 11am-7pm. DEDICATION, right there. I should also note that I am already exhausted and have absolutely no idea how I will get through 8 more hours of working today... so I may not make a whole lot of sense.

I discovered Kate MccGwire today. She uses feathers. And the volume and detail of her work is literally like the most incredible thing I've ever seen done with a feather. In fact, I feel like a goofus next to her with my dinky little "oh I saw feather paintings on my trip to Panama and Costa Rica and now I'm inspired to paint some of my own shit on them!" thing I got going on over here. Just scroll and be amazed.







She knows what she's doing with a feather. Oh and she's been featured by the Museum of Art and Design in New York City, no big deal. She's quickly become one of my favorite artists and a huge inspiration to me sheerly by how talented she is at what she does.






Sunday, August 7, 2011

Abstract Bird of Paradise

I'm getting really frustrated with artists protecting their artwork with copyrights that prohibit me from being able to upload them to my blog. I mean really, it's for educational purposes people!

I found an abstracted painting of the tropical flower, Bird of Paradise, by Marcia Baldwin. I think the color and the simplicity of the piece are phenomenal. It drew me in in making me wonder what the subject matter was, and then it hit me... aka I saw the title... and I was like oh man! And then I couldn't unsee it. What's really special about it is that it's a batik, which means the artist dyed in the composition. Batiking takes a lot of skill and a lot of patience, and it really shows the artist's dedication to the end result. The subtle use of white to create thin lines of negative space are very cool. But then again, I'm just not a black person, so the less black in a piece the more intrigued I am.

David Reeves

Watercolour is where my heart is. It was the first medium I ever ever ever used, and is definitely the medium I identify with the most. David Reeves is a great watercolour artist. He lets the paint do its thing and soak into the paper. (Unfortunately, his pieces aren't compatible for me to upload on my blog, so you have to visit his page for images.) His piece titled Resurfacing is a great example of him working with the medium and allowing it to do what watercolour does to create the overall intense explosion of color in the painting. However, his piece titled End of the Cod shows his ability to manipulate the medium and to give his artwork a sense of control. His portfolio very much shows his various abilities in watercolour. As an artist, specifically a watercolourist, I find inspiration in his use of color and his simple ability to create intensity. 

umm..

I don't know what to call this because I was stumbling around and I came across this painting.


Now... I think the signature at the bottom says "Autumn Fitatopa" ... but I'm really not sure. And I have no idea what it's called. But there's color and feathers. And I'm sure it's highly conceptual, but as far as finding any information... I'm lost. I like the top part though! The bottom of the painting... not so much.


Water Painting

Now, I need to say right off the bat that I think in terms of composition, this artist could go without the whole seventies cliche. I'm personally not a fan of his final products. BUT he paints.. on water... and then transfers it to paper. And it's probably one of the coolest processes I've ever seen. Plus it's really organic and gets a lot done and it creates some baller effects. I recommend muting the video... the music is super lame.

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1hki7y/www.youtube.com/watch%253Fv%253DtCamx8vzyCw

Aztec Calendar

Aztec Calendars. Mayan Calendars. The original mandala of the Caribbean. They're intense, and it's hard to know what you're looking at. I'm really drawn to mandalas across cultures. They're like dumplings, they managed to pop up in all kinds of cultures without any of them influencing one another - China, Mexico, Europe, etc. So cool! And they all have different purposes, most of which go back to spiritual beliefs.

Intro Aztec Calendars! The Mayans did it first... but I think the Aztecs did it better. Considering most of the stone calendars that are still sold today are replications of Sun Stone Aztec Calendar. In fact, we own one. 


A little more of a breakdown: http://www.earthmatrix.com/serie02/cuad02-2.htm 

The Maya

The Pre-Columbian cultures thoroughly fascinate me. What I love about ancient art, or old world art, is that it's boggling how they did what they did. I mean, really, mind blowing. And the Maya, Axtec, Taino, Olmec, Zapotec, and Inca are the cultures that drew me into Caribbean art as an art historian, so I feel as if everything I do in both creating art and studying it goes back to those cultures. They are in multiple ways, an origin of me in art... especially the Mayan. The ballgame specifically captivates me. I think it's sort of hilarious that something they did for sport also had life or death connotations and was actually used in battle situations. And the importance of the ballgame is truly reflected in Mayan art by the thousands of effigy pieces that the people produced in honor of such a pinnacle aspect of their culture.
Caribbean art today is ALL about how Pre-Columbian art fused together with European art over time. Today we continue to see a lot of ancient spirit in Caribbean art, with the refined style that comes with European art. I think it's important to understand origins in a culture of art, especially for, say, an art student exploring her roots both known and unknown.
(90% of my family records have been lost, as my family came from Cuba as refugees, and the generations who could tell the stories all died by the time I was 8 years old. My last great aunt, Tia Isa, passed away this week after a long battle with Parkinson's disease. However, she married into my family via my Tio Raul, and helped me with what information she knew before she died. Everyone else in my family, from what my mother has told me, was very private about life before they came to the United States, as if they'd abandoned their heritage and started new as a family.)


To the Maya, as well as most other Meso-American cultures, the ballgame was held in sacred esteem. In fact, it was so sacred that it was even involved in their creation story, the Popol Vuh. The story begins with One Ahuapu, the first father, passing a cave where the gods of the underworld called out to him for a ball game. Upon descending into the underworld, he is attacked and beheaded, and his head is placed on a Calabash tree for show. A daughter of one of the underworld gods walked past the severed head and became pregnant with twins after he spat in her hand. She left the underworld and gave birth to twin boys, who later grow to challenge the gods of the underworld to a ball game in order to avenge their father. After they had won the game, the twins slay one of the gods and resurrected their father. On their journey back to the land, One Ahuapu discovered corn and takes an ear. Once home, the twins rose into the sky to become the sun and moon, but One Ahuapu remained at home as the maize god. From his ear of corn, the Mayan people were born. From this story arose three sacred Mayan motifs: twins, corn, and the ballgame.
Mayan art revolved around what they considered to be sacred motifs. An example of one of these pieces is The Ball Player Effigy, or a representation as a sculpture or monument, in the Chrysler Museum of Art in Norfolk. The Ball Player is Mayan, found in Jaina, now Campeche, in Mexico and dates to the Late Classic Period. The figure is small, six to eight inches tall, and is made of terra cotta. The effigy piece was once painted; small remnants of the famous Maya Blue, a unique pigment, still show on the equipment of the ball player. The figure is a classic Mayan: he has a prominent nose and square-like jaw. On his head is an elaborate headdress with several rectangular shapes out of which come what looks like representations of feathers flaring out at all angles. Among these feather-like headdress pieces is a long flair that looks like a bird’s tail. On the left and right bone-like pieces protrude perpendicular to the body and the rest of the headdress. The figure has large ear-spools or earrings on, and what appears to be a low relief of snakes on face, which were most likely at one point painted. He carries a yoke on his right shoulder and has what looks like an indented dish, probably some sort of breastplate, hanging around his neck with his left arm tucked beneath it. His attire is consistent with that of a ball player; he wears a long loincloth over a skirt-like garment. However, he has no ankle equipment commonly used to protect the feet and kick the ball; his feet are bare. Most of the focus of the piece is on the ball player’s headdress, which makes up a good third of the figure. Because the player is missing some equipment, and is not wearing his equipment, but carrying it, it is likely that the effigy portrays a ball player either before or after a match.



This effigy most likely served as a ritual piece. For the Maya, the origin of the ballgame laid in the Popol Vuh, and therefore, the ballgame was mostly about overcoming or facing death. To them, the ball court was a place where life and death met in the game. Although this concept seems violent, ballgames more or less celebrated the Mayan creation story. Along with this, the ballgame could also be used as a form of settling dispute, as twins played, or as a form of sacrifice or ritual to the gods. Although the act of playing the ballgame was considered sacred, ritual art still arose to display what they considered to be sacred. Although the game was casually played, there is nothing casual about this figure due to his headdress. A casual game would not have involved something so elaborate or ritualistic. Because the piece is small, it could have been mobile; its intention was to be taken from one place to another, and it probably accompanied other pieces. Its size also indicates that it was a private piece, because a public piece would have demanded a much larger size and probably would be statuary. This piece could have been viewed by anyone involved in the ritual, or by a person of importance. Its detail is too concise and the figure is too well preserved to have been of everyday use. Because it was painted, and especially because it incorporated the Maya Blue, the making of the figure was an honor, and so the figure was probably considered to be precious if not sacred.
The Ball Player Effigy, like other effigies found from Jaina, such as Woman and Old Man Deity Effigy, was painted with a unique blue pigment known as the Maya Blue. This pigment was used for sacred pieces, like as a ritual piece to a god. The careful craftsmanship of the sculpture is delicate, especially because the piece is so small. Both the pigment and the detail indicate a sense of importance to the piece that would not be put in the hands of any artist but a master. The medium, terra cotta, is a usual everyday material for Meso-American art, so the process of painting and perfecting the piece was the honorable job, not the initial workshop where the terra cotta came from. The artist chose the motif of the ball player because of its clear-cut significance to Mayan society.
The ballgame was a pinnacle part of not only Mayan culture, but also Meso-American culture as a whole. The Ball Player Effigy is just a small example of how important it was to the Maya. Its detail and precision allude to its importance as a sacred work of art, and its value at the time. Figures like this one provide art historians with a history of the culture and its values and rituals. They also speak measures of the little-known capabilities of Pre-Columbian culture, especially through the Maya Blue, the small details, and the references to elaborate ritual garb. This piece characterizes the Maya as an athletic, artistic, and cultured people with a deep regard for ritual and their roots. 



The Chrysler Museum. 2011. <http://www.chrysler.org/>.