Sunday, November 28, 2010

Chaos checks out the laundry

He gets into everything...
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Friday, August 20, 2010

Portrait of a happy cat

Shiva has it all.
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Friday, July 16, 2010

Roy Lichtenstein and Roy Rogers






"To draw outlines and color them in is about as dumb a way of painting as you can imagine, and you can look at my work and say that's how it's done."  - Roy Lichtenstein

"At the time (1961) Roy was 38 years old and his two sons were very young and he liked making drawings for them of Mickey Mouse & Donald Duck from their Bazooka Bubble Gum Wrappers. One day he realized how important these cartoon characters were to them and decided to make one of the gum wrappers into a large painting." Janet Boris 2001

The work was done a few years after U.S. Senate hearings into the role of comic books and juvenile delinquency (see footnote #1 below for source).  Clearly, politicians were keeping their collective eye on the important issues of the time.

Lichtenstein certainly recognized the power of the images and the importance of some of the comic book characters to his kids. But Lichtenstein claims he wasn't interested in reproducing or the original social context of the comics. He says that ""I think my work is different from comic strips- but I wouldn't call it transformation; I don't think that whatever is meant by it is important to art." What is inspiring to me, as an artist, is that Lichtenstein was free to paint in as "dumb" a manner as he wished.  Isn't it about time for a contemporary artist to rediscover the old 1950s era Roy Rogers comics in a similar mode?  (Hint: check back here in a month or two.)

For some great images showing the inspiration for Lichtenstein's comic book paintings, see David Barsalou's website at http://davidbarsalou.homestead.com/LICHTENSTEINPROJECT.html

Footnote #1: Comic Books and Juvenile Delinquency, Interim Report of the Committee on the judiciary pursuant to S. Res. 89 and S. Res. 190, US Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary. Juvenile Delinquency. 1955-6. Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number 77-90720


Thursday, June 24, 2010

Summerr arrives

Finally, after months of cold and winter jackets. Summer is here in Holland! Note champagne in the foreground, and happy ancient cat receiving pets from T.

Today, I am very much looking forward to working outdoors on a sculpture/cyanotype print, in the sun. As they say, Hot Dawg!
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Friday, June 11, 2010

Latte

We all fell in love with Latte, the wild cat with the cappuccino stripe down his back.  The Italian pool cleaner must have chased him away one day when we were gone.  At least, we hope that's what happened.  Attitudes towards animals in the Italian agricultural heartland are decidedly different than ours.  This is one of three cats in my lifetime that has chosen to be included in my inner circle.  There is Marvin, the albino pregnant cat from the Caribbean, and Boris, the grey long hair from Seattle days.  Ah Latte, where are you now?
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Todi, dawn

A

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Spring flowers from the garden

Truly it is now spring here in The Hague. These flowers are a gift from the dear owner of the house, Eduard, and come from the garden. We've had weeks of sunny, warm weather. April can be the nicest month in Holland and also the most deceptive. Our first year here, April was magnificent. It was just like this April, warm enough to sit outside at noon, and sunny day after day. It lulled us into a sense of false security, even comfort. What treachery! We were absolutely and completely betrayed in the months that followed. It was the summer that never came. It was a heat-on-in-August kind of summer; bone-chilling wind, rain and low-lying clouds. Then, winter came. To be honest it was hard to tell the difference. Well, except that it was darker. May this summer be different!
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Monday, April 19, 2010

Album cover

Pictured: Jos, Nanneke, T, at the remote Insel Hombroich museum in Germany near Dusseldorf. This museum would be a great place to stage an album cover, all the elements are here in the picture.

We loved this museum for how it is curated. There are no explanations given for any of the artwork. Stone-age sculptures are shown side by side with modern paintings. No information about any of the work is presented, not even a tag to show the year the work was created, the title, or the name of the artist. It changes how one experiences the artwork. Rather than reading, we looked. It felt right.

The museum is on an old military base. The site has been restored to a nature preserve, with a series of stand-alone buildings created specifically to hold art.  This was a great day.
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T at the Insel Hombroich

T models the latest North Face jacket in the chic setting of the Insel Hombroich museum near Dusseldorf. 
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Sunday, April 18, 2010

A couple of portraits in charcoal


We had a great model at the IAC the other week, and here are a couple of the images from that series.
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Portrait of a cat

This one goes out to T, who is stranded in Houston because of the volacno eruption.
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Thursday, April 1, 2010

Tina, charcoal sketches at the IAC


These are this week's portraits from life at the IAC here in The Hague. Each sketch is about 20 to 30 minutes.





Monday, March 29, 2010

Great Wallpaper for your desktop



Feel free to use this for a wallpaper image on your computer. This image makes me happy, it evokes a full day's painting in the studio. What could be better?
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View from my studio

These are my peeps, as seen from my studio window. These guys come knocking when it is time for a piece of lekker Dutch bread.

Finally we have nice weather. I have great light for painting, and in the warmest part of the day I can keep the studio door open to the outdoors. I wonder how long before my peeps start to walk right in?
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Friday, March 26, 2010

Update, 6 foot tall portrait.


I've been painting my 6-foot tall portrait, and itching to blog about it along with photos. But, the person in the portrait is unaware of the project. It will be a surprise. So, I can't show photos of the subject yet! For those who just have to see it now, drop me an email and I'll send images of the work in progress. Shown here is a detail of the painting, just the flowers in the corner.