Art Daily closes

One of my favourite sources of news about art events around the world Art Daily has just announced that they are closing after eight years and millions of visits. I’m quite sad and worried that my posts about interesting exhibitions attributed to Art Daily will have expired links. Maybe they will keep the old entries online for awhile?

Addendum June 12.04: While you are still able, have a look at the absolutely gorgeous series of photos of the newly cleaned Michelangelo’s David. (I saw him in 1993 on a trip to Italy and now he sure does look brilliantly clean, like having one’s teeth whitened!)

Rock Art in Saskatchewan

I’m learning more about rock art in other parts of Canada. Here are reproductions and photos of aboriginal rock paintings or pictographs along the Saskatchewan portion of the Churchill River. These are taken from the book The Aboriginal Rock Paintings of the Churchill River by Tim E. H. Jones.

He writes: “At least 70 aboriginal rock painting sites are known in Saskatchewan north of the 55th parallel and perhaps two dozen more occur in northern Manitoba. The Churchill River, a major historic waterway, spans this northern area and possesses an important series of rock art sites.[…] From the evidence of Cree and Ojibwa Indian oral traditions, and early European explorers’ writings, many of the paintings are known to be at least 200-300 years old, but archaeological cross-dating evidence from the Ural Mountains in the Soviet Union suggests that our paintings could be 3,500 years old or more. The Urals rock paintings occur in very similar geological and climatic circumstances to the northern Canadian ones.”

There are some interesting links to explore here, such as how the reproductions were made, and how to find the sites by canoe (click on the “canoe route” numbers next to the pictograph illustrations).
More about Saskatchewan

UPDATE Nov.5.2013 – all but the last link are dead. A second edition of the book is available here. Some general information can be found at the Saskatchewan Archaeology Society pages.

Mirror Image I & II

MirrorImageI.jpg

Mirror Image I
Etching
34 x 25 cm.

MirrorImageII.jpg

Mirror Image II
Etching
34 x 25 cm.

These are variations on Meta-morphosis I & Meta-morphosis II.

Sokolovski the sculptor

Just found this very interesting item on online:
CBC Radio 3 asks Valeri Sokolovski, a Socialist Realist sculptor from Odessa living in Surrey, BC, Canada to come out of retirement to portray some of today’s leaders. This is a full-screen Flash presentation called “Monumental Bust”. Click
here, then on “relaunch CBC Radio 3”, then click on “Monumental Bust”. There is some very interesting political commentary here to accompany some great classical portraiture!
Need to download Flash?

Photo-based print show

Here’s another printmaking exhibition I’ve just read about in Art Daily :

Photo Image in American Prints: 1960s-1990s at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco, until 18 July 2004.

The diverse range of styles and viewpoints of over 20 contemporary artists will be showcased in Photo Image in American Prints 1968-1998. This exhibition of 30 prints and books explores the use of photographic imagery in creative printmaking, from Andy Warhol’s screenprints of the 1960s, which utilized imagery borrowed from mass media, to Kiki Smith’s 1996 photogravure, My Blue Lake, in which the artist used a peripheral camera to create her self-portrait. The majority of works in the exhibition are selected from the Crown Point Press Archive and the Anderson Graphic Arts Collection.

American painters, sculptors, and conceptual artists, with a few exceptions such as Richard Hamilton and Jannis Kounellis, are the focus of the exhibition. Among the other artists whose work will be on view are Jasper Johns, Vito Acconci, John Baldessari, Christopher Brown, Tom Marioni, Gay Outlaw, and Ed Ruscha.

Also included in the exhibition are hand-drawn prints by Robert Bechtle, Vija Clemins, and Chuck Close. Although these images are inspired by photographic images and despite their distinctly photographic look, these works do not involve the actual use of photographs.

Saving the best for the last, look at this Virtual Exhibition of 35 Years at Crown Point Press, by the National Gallery of Art, Washington.

Crown Point Press, a community studio in San Francisco founded by Kathan Brown, was a gathering place for artists to share ideas and equipment. Many of the best-known American painters, sculptors, and other artists, collaborated with the master printers here to create printworks. You can see a number of these prints in this virtual exhibition along with some discussion of printmaking techniques and a history of contemporary printmaking.

Drawing, Hockney and Eyre

David Hockney has talked to BBC News Online about drawing:

Drawing should be regarded as a major art form, artist David Hockney said as he launched the Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition in London…Drawing has been neglected for the last 30 years in art education…. Despite long being seen as ‘almost irrelevant’, drawing is a vital part of every creative process…..drawings help us become critical of other images.
Read more on BBC.

My own firm belief is that drawing is a relevant and powerful medium in its own right. I also think that art education should include lots of drawing, especially from life, as it is also a strong foundation for all other art media. I feel sorry for young artists who are not taught much drawing in art schools today like it was when I went – too long ago – to the University of Manitoba School of Art. I drew as a child, grew up loving to draw and it was my favourite studio course, plus I had the pleasure and benefit of having a master draughtsman and a great Canadian artist for a teacher: Ivan Eyre. I later became attracted to printmaking because it was close to drawing; the greater part of my art work is in the printmaking media.

Here is what Ivan Eyre says about his drawings. View his paintings, drawings and prints at the National Gallery of Canada and the Mackenzie Art Gallery.

Thanks to MAeX Art Blog for the Hockney link.

Nexus: Red Venus de Willendorf

A recently completed piece:

Nexus-Red-VenusdeW.jpg

Nexus: Red Venus de Willendorf
Etching and inkjet on paper & film
51.8 x 40.5 cm.

Rembrandt at Retretti

I was very excited to learn that my favourite and a most unique art gallery has some exciting printmaking exhibitions this summer. “The Retretti Art Centre is one of the largest art centres in the Nordic region. Located in the heart of Finnish lakeland and in close proximity to the magnificent Punkaharju Ridge, Retretti is unique in that it has galleries both above and below ground. The subterranean galleries and concert hall, excavated during the 1980s to a depth of 30 metres, cover an area of 3 700 square metres.”

This summer’s exhibitions feature many printmakers. There are 65 printworks by the great master Rembrandt, paintings & printworks by Swedish artist Anders Zorn (1860-1920), who is said to have modelled himself after Rembrandt, and works by the best contemporary Estonian printmakers.

There’s an interesting review in the Helsingin Sanomat International online newspaper that I read regularly.

I am very disappointed to find only this small photo of part of the grotto gallery to show you what an exciting space this is. And, I’m disappointed not to be visiting that part of the world this summer!

Addendum 2012: So sad! The Retretti Art Centre closed in 2012. Above links to it are of course now dead.

The Unfinished Print

Art Daily reports:

For the first time in its history, The Frick Collection (in New York) will host a major special exhibition this summer that is devoted solely to prints and the process of printmaking. This special presentation poses questions that have preoccupied artists, critics, and collectors for centuries: When is a work of art complete? and When do further additions detract from the desired result? These issues have a particular history in the graphic arts, where images are developed in stages and often distributed at various points in their making.

Featured artists, European masters from the fifteenth to the early twentieth century, include Albrecht Dürer, Hendrik Goltzius, Parmigianino, Anthony van Dyck, Rembrandt van Rijn, Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Edouard Manet, Edgar Degas, August Rodin, Felix Bracquemond, Paul Gauguin, Edvard Munch, and Jacques Villon.

The Frick Collection has a very good website with The Unfinished Print exhibition featured right now.

What follows is a chronicle of the complex workings of the artistic imagination revealed through the unfinished print and the changing estimation of artistic process that it provoked. There are many different ways to define incompleteness in a print.

The online exhibition shows several beautiful examples of some of the artists’ works with descriptions of the techniques and process – very helpful to those wishing to learn more about printmaking.

One historical note I would like to add is that the practise of signing and numbering editions did not begin until near the end of the 19th century, I think it was.

Michelangelo

Found at that rabbit girl:

“The artist Michelangelo may have had the condition Asperger’s Syndrome, according to researchers. Two experts in Asperger’s, a milder form of autism, say the artist had many of the traits linked with the condition which causes social problems.” Read about it in BBC news.
Many other brilliant minds have been linked to Asperger’s including Socrates, Darwin, Einstein, Newton, Warhol, Yeats and others…read more, also in BBC.

This is a great site on Michelangelo Buonarotti.