Spring 2015 Presenting our curated selection of works and words from emerging and mid-career artists across the globe Lyubov Muravyeva Phyllis Gillie Jaffe Abstracts Inspired by Nature $6.95 Meet 50 Exciting US and International Artists! Looking for a few good artists. Join our continually growing arsenal of talented artisans to take advantage of our aggressive marketing program. We will develop a personalized plan of e-marketing, print marketing, art show representation, website design, gallery representation and national magazine advertising – to help your art stand out in the crowd. 82 Callingham Road, Pittsford, NY 14534 • 585.586.3535 • [email protected] www.artisandirectltd.net A d i l A k h tA r • l i s A A l l i s o n • G i A n c A r l o c A l i c c h i A ElizAbEth MyErs cAstonGuAy • hArry c. doolit tlE l A y l A FA n u c c i • E l i z A b E t h h A r i n G t o n • c h E r y l h r u d k A MAl lubEr • thoMAs lund-lAck • rEnEA MEnziEs A n n E n y E • PA t r i c i A P E t E r s • r A M o n s A n t i A G o lArry siMons • JoEl sPEctor • ciArAn tully 82 callingham road, Pittsford, ny 14534 | 585.586.3535 | [email protected] | www.jaysonsamuel.com There’s nothing like ARTISANworks! Not only an art exhibit area, but also the most unique events venue in the heart of Rochester, New York. Weddings, corporate events, seminars, proms, parties — any event worth making a lasting impression on your guest. ARTISANworks is a not-for-profit member of the community, giving back by sponsoring events for seniors, children and community organizations. ARTISANworks is an ART experience! With almost 40,000 square feet of creativity, featuring work from local artists hanging next to world famous artists — all available for purchase or rent. 565 Blossom Road, Suite L, Rochester, NY 14610 585.288.7170 • www.artisanworks.net 2015 SPRING Contents 6 Special Features 6 Cover Story: Lyubov Muravyeva Lyubov Muravyeva, painter and sculptor, focuses on the female body, though without directly enhancing the physical beauty – it lacks the delay on the perfection of features – to convey emotions and romantic entanglements. 17 Artist Pages Meet 50 of our favorite artists from across the US and around the world. 28Farano Sports Art Farano’s original oil paintings and hand embellished limited edition artist recreation canvas gicleés are signed and numbered by Farano, and then autographed by the athlete or entertainer. 17 28 hIddEn SPIrIt 2006 acrYLIc on canVaS 122X122 cM | 48X48 In 124 On the cover Lyubov Muravyeva, Mirage of a Gone City, Stoneware, 70 inch, St Louis, MO TOP LEFT: Lyubov Muravyeva, Pilgrims, 24 x 36, Oil on canvas MIDDLE LEFT: Paul Ygartua, Hidden Spirit, 2006, Acrylic on canvas, 122 x 122 cm | 48 x 48 in BOTTOM LEFT: Justyn Farano, Derek Jeter 03 Spring 2015 3 Letter from the Publisher Published by Art Market Publications, The Artist Showcase seeks out active and intriguing emerging and mid-career talent worldwide, bringing these artists to the attention of galleries and collectors in major art-buying locations. If you are a gallery, art fair producer, non-profit organization, or the like, seeking new talent, we invite you to visit our artists on these pages, explore their websites and reach out to them to learn more, and to contact us about distributing the publication as well. If you are a service or hospitality organization in a host city to the major art fairs where we distribute, advertising on our pages is a great way to access new business in a high-end market. Dear Readers, Welcome to the 12th issue of The Artist Showcase Magazine. We are excited to be returning to New York City after getting rave reviews on our Winter 2014 Issue which featured 34 of the most promising new artists in our Artisan Direct network. Once again we are proud to feature a number of exciting artists, photographers and sculptors. Each of these artists have labored long and hard to be recognized as artists worth your attention. On our pages you will find practitioners of abstraction, realism and figurative art, as well as a wide range of sizes, prices and pieces. Stories and images introduce the artists and their images when you see something interesting, direct contact, web site and gallery information is immediately available to you. Enjoy the new Issue and let us hear from you. Sincerely, Jayson Samuel, Publisher, The Artist Showcase Pittsford, New York | www.artmarketpublications.net Augusto C. Bordelois, I will find you, Oil on canvas, 80 x 84” Publisher Jayson Samuel Editor Jayson Samuel Art Director Nicole Scanlon The Artist Showcase provides a venue for artists and art professionals. Articles express the opinion, experience and knowledge of the authors and not necessarily that of the magazine’s management. Artist profiles are provided by the artists and edited by staff or the artists, unless otherwise noted. Copyright 2014. All material appearing in The Artist Showcase is copyrighted. Copyrights are reserved by the authors. The copyrights of all published artworks are retained by the artists. Reproduction in whole or part of any published material is prohibited without written permission from the magazine’s publisher. The views expressed are not necessarily those of the editor or the publisher. The publisher bears no liability for the claims made, nor for information provided by advertisers. Suggestions and submissions for future articles are welcome, however, management reserves the right to determine what may be published. Submissions may be made to the Publisher, Jayson Samuel, email: [email protected] The Artist Showcase is published 4 times a year by Art Market Publications www.artmarketpublications.net The Artist Showcase Advertising & Sales Inquiries: [email protected] 82 Callingham Road, Pittsford, New York 14534 Telephone: 585-330-2715; Fax: 585-586-8555 Subscriptions: Single copies, $6.95 each Past copies, $8.95 each Subscription Rate for 1 year is $36. To place order, change address or make a customer service query, email: [email protected] 4 New York City GISELA PFERDEKAEMPER ROMAINE KAUFMAN Poor Mans Orchid, Oil on Canvas, 30 x 40” www.artbygisela.com | [email protected] Spring 2015 Winter 2014 5 5 Lyubov Muravyeva Reminiscences, 40x28, Oil on canvas 6 New York City Featured Artist Profile Artist Lyubov Muravyeva Lyubov Muravyeva, painter and sculptor, focuses on the female body, though without directly enhancing the physical beauty – it lacks the delay on the perfection of features – to convey emotions and romantic entanglements. In her artwork, the woman figure is proposed, in its many facets, as a primal source of life, as a sensual and a fertile being, as a divine creature that becomes mother and companion, a sinuous body that is also a protective shelter or a nutrient source. The chosen icon, portrayed in different situations and meanings, leads the viewer to reflect deeply on the experience of life itself: the chosen subjects of the sculptor are the essence of life; the attention she gives to the different female shapes and functions makes us reflect on the miracle of creation and the inherent strength of the female. Experiencing the different medium of expression, the artist may sway among the different feelings that arise from the research of her own identity and function. The sensuality of the protagonists is treated as natural, spontaneous and always confidential, deep inside there is always a mischievous innocence that turns a regenerative power, in a way to be congenital and not in a studied, unnatural attitude. Courage and feelings are amplified in certain gestures and specific sculptural continued on next page Alone At Night, 22x28, Oil on canvas Spring 2015 7 Artist Profile Featured Artist continued representations, while a better communication is achieved when the artist dedicates to public installations. In large scale, the figure retains a certain passion and lightness thank to its thinness and to the delicate colors placed on the white clay, that covers the material, but despite these features, she appears as a point from which power propagates: in “Save the world from nuclear winter” is presented as saving power and support, in “Together through the flame” she faces a dangerous test, while in “Spring” she embodies all the regenerating energy of nature. In her small sculptures, as in her paintings and drawings, the artist focuses on the most intimate, less choral and universal aspects: the female body is often engaged in liberating actions, arms protected or open to the sky, intent to dance or stand out flight in a figurative or metaphorical action. Artworks such as “Exercise with ribbon” and “In the wind” or “Butterfly” exemplify both that freedom that women in the third millennium have achieved in current society and the female ability, to be reborn from the ashes and return to live. These modern semi goddesses aren’t surprised in front of danger, they calmly face risks. They do not smash down for the physical or psychological suffering but above all, they openly face suffering and danger. Let’s consider them natural female predispositions, but specially the new awareness of contemporary heroines. My Art Philosophy Spring, ceramic with enamel, 18’H, Vinogradar Living Area, Kiev, Ukraine Having my works widespread into different techniques and genres, I always had actually one main desire (goal) - to express the human emotions. Human emotions, once born, never disappear. They are adding a quality of Humanity to the Universe. This is an essence of my composition – “Spirit” Composition, improvised for the space becomes a tuning fork and may add some feeling through time of its existence. The ever changeable light (sun – clouds) add 4-th dimension – changes the expression – feeling in time. My public works for the Kiev “Vinogradar” area (in collaboration with architect E. A. Bilskiy) are aimed on the Synthesis of fine arts and the real architectural space. It seems that combining different means of fine arts is possible to create an impression as music does. It was done for those who are going through, living in this environment. The purpose was to add emotional sounding, a little bit of lyrics in an inhabitancy – to humanize the industrial city locality. Summer Day, Ceramic, enamel 17’H, Vinogradar Living Area, Kiev, Ukraine. 8 New York City Featured Artist continued Here are the examples of how I approached this task in my installations. “The Spring”: in this composition forms freely reaching upwards resembling the treetops of a forest. The eye follows the effortlessly moving shapes brining the joyful feeling of growth, springing up; Spring (media – stoneware, enamels). “The Summer Day”: Here the sense of a soft summer day is created by the color spots and how they relate to each other. This was done with the intent to invoke a peaceful, gracious state of mind (media – stoneware, enamels). “Together Through the Flame”: The young girl and a horse (human and nature) are running together towards the fire. This fire symbolizes the grave danger that awaits our world if people don’t start paying attention to their habitat. Moving clouds are bringing an effect of the flying composition, helping the viewer to believe that the obstacle (this flame threatening to engulf the Earth) can be overcome. (media – copper sheet with enamel) Soul of the Stone, Granite, 155 x 250 x 60 cm, Andres Institute of Art, Brookline, NH “Soul of the Stone”– the Petrifying Soul, the Hardened Soul. The viewer sees a granite figure as a cloud among clouds on a background of the faraway hills, as soul above the world – empathizing with the Earth, the People of the Earth. My credo in the sculpture – more time confined in by more tightened, more compressed form prolonging sound of the form, longer retains in attention of a spectator. Together through the Flame, Copper sheets and fired enamel, 21’H, outside Public Center, Kiev, Ukraine. The porcelain “Bird” (see Small Sculpture section at my website) is my signature work in sculpture. The same are the composition “Forever” (stoneware, enamels) and composition “Spring Motive” (iron wood) – see on my web site in section Sculpture. One of my signature painting is “Reminiscences” – we see a different time recollected by the main actor of the play in different spaces, places, and exactly were He sees it and so we are. Bird, porcelain, 3” x 5” x 3” The Abstractions: in my case it would be a line full of developing feelings, as in “South Night” (ink, pastels). Lyubov Muravyeva www.luba.addr.com Forever, stoneware, 12”x12”x12” Spring Motive, Ironwood, 72”x24”x12” Spirit, 47x12x12inch, Wood, oil paint Spring 2015 9 Featured Artist continued Pain, 22x28, Oil on canvas 10 New York City SOLO EXHIBITIONS • “ New Work by Luba ( Lyubov Muravyeva)”, Millstone Fine Arts Gallery, 2002, St. Louis, MO • “Lyubov Muravyeva: Sculpture (wood, ceramic, and bronze)”. Millstone Fine Arts Gallery, 2000, St. Louis, MO • “Dedication”, Martin Schweig Gallery, 1996, St. Louis, Missouri, USA • “From A Distance”, Saint Louis Design Center, 1995 , St. Louis, Missouri, USA SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS Space of Souls, 30x40 inch, Oil on canvas Humans, 9x12 inch, Pastel on paper • International Biennale Artists Show, Gallery Gora, June14th – July 2nd, 2011, Montreal, Canada • U.S. Arts Biennial, Broadway Gallery NYC, September 16-30,2010. New York, NY • Biennale Internazionale Dell’Arte Contemporanea of Florence, 7th edition, December 5-13, 2009, Florence, Italy • “Human Figure Exhibition”, Long Beach Arts, 2006, Long Beach, CA • “Connections and Bridges. Ukraine and Ukraine Connected American Artists” Killian Gallery, Sharon Arts Center, 1997, NH, U.S.A. • “Realist Approach”,1997, Agora Gallery, Soho, New Troubled dream of the Earth, 17x13.5, pastel on paper Woman Figure 1, 22x18, mixed media on paper CATALOGES & ARTICLES • “Lyubov Muravyeva - Contemporary Heroins” by Flora Rovigo, Art Historian and Art Critic, in Lyubov Muravyeva: Eroine Contemporanee / Contemporary Heroins, Biennale Artists Series Florence, Italy, 2010. • “European Flavor , Diversity Produces A Compelling Program”, by Robert W. Duffy, St. Louis PostDispatch, St. Louis, Oct.,1995 • “On monumental sculpture art: Theory and experience,” by M.Yablonskaya, magazine Soviet Sculpture, v10, Moscow, 1986 • “Space for relaxation” magazine Decorative Art of the USSR, Moscow, v9, 1985 After the Rain, 17x13, ink and pastel on paper Spring 2015 11 Featured Artist PHYLLIS GILLIE JAFFE 12 New York City Phyllis Gillie Jaffe Abstracts Inspired by Nature Artist Statement Biography Growing up in the flat, farmland of central Indiana, I saw horizontal bands of color, bright, subdued, in every imaginable range of yellow, red, green and blue. The abstract patterns that exist in nature where everything is reduced to mass, shape, color, pattern and texture become universal and symbolic. Those early experiences influence and reflect in my artwork today. The Maryland Eastern Shore produces its own seasonal color palette, but the effect is equally exciting. My first visit to the Assateague Seashore Dunes spawned aPhyllisn instant love affair; the unique characteristics of these dunes and marshes express a new reality. Shaped and reshaped every year by storms, sand, salt and wind, they have retained their natural sense of wilderness. The struggle to live is almost palpable. My paintings capture this raw beauty, so visitors can see this treasure through different eyes. A bit edgy, they express what I see and feel. The dunes are rugged, unkempt and slightly wild. The ocean breeze seems a bit nippier than that inland. I get few warm, fuzzy feelings from these drifting waves of sand. Painted with a palette knife, detail of the subject is sacrificed to mood; time and place every changing by the effect of light falling on the subject. If I ever tire of trying to capture the character of the dunes, the area is filled with graceful, meandering marshes to paint. An earlier phase of my work is expressed in the design elements of two other series. Viewing open-heart surgery, as well as my personal health issues inspired the Heart Felt series. The Mythological and Abstract series represents a transition of my work from two-dimensional abstract, surface designs to impressions and interpretations of landscapes that parallel my spirituality maturity. After a full career in education, teaching art at levels ranging from elementary school through university and then advancing in administration as a fine arts college presidency, Dr. Jaffe responded to a call to ordained ministry. The response took her in search of connecting factors between art and spirituality. After retirement from presidency of Kendall College of Art and Design, Jaffe worked for many years as an international management consultant to developing countries where she set up new women’s craft programs and regional art centers. Her work took her to the Eastern European countries, including two projects in Russia. Her longest assignment out of the country was spent in Nepal and India. Jaffe’s style developed through a series of transformations from textile wall hangings to decorative symbolic images to landscape, drawings and paintings. She has received recognition and awards in the mid-west and east coast. Art remains her primary interest, where she continues painting, concentrating on developing her Impressionist style, and writing. Her professional preparation is grounded in art and education degrees from Ball State University BA, Michigan State University MA, and Indiana University EdD and an Honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts from Kendall College of Art and Design. Jaffe served as Hospital Chaplaincy at the National Institute of Health, Bethesda, MD and Sibley Memorial Hospital and George Washington University Hospital, Washington, DC. Throughout her professional career, she produced and exhibited art at the local and national level. Friends, colleagues and a few art museums own her work. Retired, she paints and writes, while remaining active in regional arts organizations. She and her husband divide their time between Washington, DC and Salisbury, MD. n Access Denied We Will Work it Out Rooftops www.pgGallery.com | [email protected] | 410-742-2814 Spring 2015 13 Phyllis Gillie Jaffe Tribal Dance 14 New York City SOLO SHOWS Terryberry Gallery, Grand Rapids, MI All Soul’s Unitarian Church, Indianapolis, IN Eye Opener Community Center, Cincinnati, OH Art Institute & Gallery, Salisbury, MD Holly Gallery, Maryland Federtation of Art, Annapolis, MD The Buttery, Lewes, DE Jewish Community Center, Indianapolis, IN GROUP SHOWS Chasen Gallery, Sarasota, FL Grand Rapids Art Museum, MI Gallery Luisa, Grand Rapids, MI 1 Women in Art ‘76, West Bend, IA Stitchery ‘75, IA, Invitational Herron Art Gallery, Indianapolis, IN International Women’s Art Festival Mint Museum of Art, Charlotte, NC Purchase Award Niagra Swirl Sloane O’Slickery Gallery, OH Matrix Gallery, Bloomington, IN Stitchery ‘71, PA, Invitational Third Piedmont Show, NC Purchase Award Witherspoon Gallery, Greensboro, NC Lansing Community College, MI 1966 Art League of Ocean City, Ocean City, MD Watergate Gallery, Washington, DC Maryland Federation of Art, Annapolis, MD Race St. Gallery, Cambridge, MD Gallery 213, Salisbury, MD Rehoboth Art League, Rehoboth, DE PROFESSIONAL AWARDS Arts Administration Harvard University New Presidents Workshop, University of Wisconsin Art League of Ocean City, Honorable mention 2010 Art Institute and Gallery, Salisbury, Third Place 2010 Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts, Kendall College of Art & Design 1989 Leadership Michigan: State Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Woman of the Arts Award, Michigan Community Leader Award, Grand Rapids, Chamber of Commerce Stylemaker of the Year, Michigan Cosmetologist Award National Collection of Fine Arts Project HUD Faculty Summer Fellowship, Indiana University Down to the Shore Faculty Summer Research Fellowship, University of North Carolina Spring 2015 15 Artisan Direct, Ltd. Marketing Strategies for Creative People & Organizations Artisan Direct, Ltd. – www.artisandirectltd.net, an upstate New York Company was founded on the belief that there has to be a smarter and more effective way of introducing an artist’s work to an art buying public that would potentially purchase the artist’s work or effectuate the purchase of the work as an art gallery might do. Three years in development, Artisan Direct has built a proprietary database of over 350,000 legitimate art resources who are interested in purchasing art. That database contains twenty one categories of purchasers including galleries, private collectors of art, corporate buyers of art, designers, attendees of national art shows, art publishers, etc. Those categories assist the Company in appropriately matching an artist with its best resource. Employing the philosophy that a marketer of art has to aggressively introduce an artist’s work to potential purchasers as opposed to sitting back and letting a purchaser find an artist’s work on an artist’s online gallery has proven very successful for the Company and its artists. More than a third of the Company’s artists, now numbering more than 600 have connected with a resource worldwide. From that original premise, the Company has developed and is employing additional services and products that can help an artist market their work, including– e-commerce representation programs, the ability to exhibit and participate in national art shows and fairs, as well as advertise in a number of art publications including the highly acclaimed Artist Showcase Magazine. The Company also promotes its artists through national co-op advertising campaigns, a national, juried Art Competition, and the printing of artist catalogues, posters and postcards. The Company plans on introducing this year a free Artist Directory, print on demand services, a specific mechanism to sell historically significant art, development of artist videos and presentations as a marketing tool as well as other cutting edge programs. It is the Company’s mission to help place an artist in their best position to be successful and the Company believes that by working with Artisan Direct will dramatically help in that endeavor. Having spoken with << Artisan Direct at Red Dot NY >> A sampling of print collateral and catalogs produced through the Artisan Direct printing program 16 New York City hundreds of galleries and art buyers have confirmed that the Artisan Direct method of marketing and selling an artist’s work makes great business sense. n Patricia Peters Patricia Peters is a self taught artist who has mastered the disciplines of sculpture and painting through experimentation and innovation. She worked as a fine art instructor in New Jersey for many years. She enjoyed encouraging her students to explore, grow and develop their art. She moved to South Florida in 2001 where she immediately became an important member of the arts community in the Palm Beaches Patricia is the recipient of many awards and prizes and her work is in several important collections. Currently she devotes her time exclusively in three dimensional design using clay and bronze as her favorite mediums. Throughout her work, there is a recurring concern for the power inherent in all women. She believes that all women are beautiful and should be celebrated! Consequently, her sculptures honor the female form for all of its irregularities and perfections. In her latest bronze collection entitled Joyous Women, Patricia expresses energy and movement flawlessly. Transformation and fluidity engage the viewer from all angles. Another important theme in Ms. Peters work is the quest for family and friendship. In Family Circle, curvilinear lines embrace and entwine the figures and give rise to the feeling of warmth, intimacy and love of family. Patricia Peter’s clay and bronze sculptures are currently on view in several galleries across South Florida. She is the founding member of the Clay, Glass, Metal & Stone Gallery in historic downtown Lake Worth. She actively works with organizations that showcase area artists. She now introduces her work back to her northern roots in New York City. Aleta Pippin Just as music creates a physical response – so does color. My work is about the use of color and light as well as the translation of music. Sometimes there is a direct connection between the music I’m listening to and the painting. It can be an integration of the highs and lows of the music into various colors, it can be the speed of the marks, or just an overall image. I listen to a variety of musical styles from Native American flute music, to classical, to classic rock. I am relentless in using various media to create the finished piece. My process of layering color, clear medium and glazes, creates a feeling of depth. I enjoy vibrant color and believe it usually has a positive impact on viewers. Red is the longest wavelength that our eyes can translate and it seems to be a passionate color, very attractive to viewers. Blues are more calming, lavender – meditative, green has a feeling of nature, and so on. In addition to color and light, my work is influenced by nature and the beauty of the Southwest and in particular Santa Fe. PatriciaPetersStudio.com • [email protected] Studio 561-499-0967 Joyous Women Collection, Limited Edition Bronze ARTISAN DIRECT, LTD. Gisela Pferdekamper [ 50 ] [email protected] Latin Buzz, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 30 x 3 inches www.artisandirectltd.net [ 51 ] ARTISAN DIRECT, LTD. RED DOT NEW YORK MAY 3-6, 2012 G 30 2015 New York City Dennis Griffin D MURRAY WEINSTE and does workshops on foundry practice for younger sculptors. He is a self-taught welder starting at the age of ten on the family farm in Kansas. He taught forging and fabrication for all his teaching years. During his last years at Alfred, he developed an induction furnace and new stand- alone facility for the foundry practice of casting high temperature metals, including stainless steel. Glenn earned two Chancellor’s awards from SUNY for creative teaching and the development of glass casting into metal forms, which allows glass to be used in outdoor settings. Cast glass is used to this day in many of his sculpture. The philanthropists Philip and Muriel Berman of Allentown, PA gave Glenn’s SPRING Artist Profile MURRAY WEINSTEIN lenn Zweygardt was born in St. Francis, Kansas in 1943. His parents were high plains farmers. He earned a BFA from Wichita State University in 1967 and a MFA in 1969 from the Rinehart School of Sculpture at Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore, MD. He taught sculpture at the New York College of Ceramics at Alfred University, Alfred, NY for 38 years and became an Emeritus Professor in 2007. He has exhibited widely and has a regional, national and international reputation. Glenn has had more than 50 solo exhibitions. His sculptures are in many private, public, university and museum collections. At his Alfred Station studio, he and his partner, Christine Ehmann, operate their own bronze foundry. Glenn also lectures continued on next page Artist Profile Artist Statement Sea Horsey JAVIER FINELLI Guardian Trilogy The interplay of color and design and the magical effects of light and reflections have always fascinated me. I discovered photography 40 years ago Queen of Spades, Carnevale Venice 2009 and have been shooting ever since, simply because I enjoy the process, and the results are good often enough to keep me hooked. Over the years, I studied different photographic styles, took a couple of classes from Leland Rice and learned from studying the work of those I admired most, Alfred Stieglitz, Ansel Adams, Ernest Haas and Eliot Porter. My work evolved with time and Artist Profile the influence of my friend and long-time photography partner, Tom Howell, who unselfishly shared his knowledge as an accomplished artist and gifted photographer, and who constantly challenged me to improve. Many creative insights have come from our dueling slideshows sustained with Cabernet or Chianti after trips to Yosemite, Point Lobos, Bodie, Moro Bay, Death Valley, The Wine Country, Florence, Venice and Rome. To view a partial gallery of Mr. Griffin’s work, please visit his My favorite artists include Italian Renaissance Masters, website, www.studiogriffoto.com. French Impressionists, Classical and Modern Artists. A partial list includes Bernini, Caravaggio, Degas, Donatello, Michelangelo, O’Keefe, Rembrandt, Renoir, Rodin, Rothko, Titian, and Van Gogh. My passions other than photography include travel, music, history, movies and wine. I have been fortunate to travel to many countries over the years, and I have tried to capture interesting and varied images that reflect the unique characteristics of each one. I have photographed many different subjects during the past four decades with a single objective...a desire to depict the interplay of light, color, design and sometimes reflections to create unique images of beauty. From the early days working in darkrooms smelling of acetic acid to the present using the immaculate NINE, 44” x 44”, acrylic on canvas technology of inkjet printers, my goal of making unique, artful images has remained unchanged. While I learned to emphasize technical perfection, my goal is to create something beyond “straight photography.” I am pleased when people view my work and think it is something “more than photography.” n ennis Griffin, a photographer for 40 years, is a native of Southern California. Born and raised in Los Angeles, Mr. Griffin graduated from UCLA with a Masters Degree in Life Sciences, served as an Artillery Officer in Viet Nam, and had a distinguished 32-year career in the Healthcare Industry before founding Studio Griffoto in 2007 to market his fine art imagery. His award winning work spans four decades and encompasses nature and landscape photography, form photography, travel photography and digital imaging. Mr. Griffin’s unique style and eye for composition are clearly reflected throughout the broad scope of his images captured in California and other parts of the United States, as well as many countries in Europe. Dennis Griffin’s award winning work is widely exhibited in the Conejo Valley, California and is available as signed, archival inkjet prints. The artist prints all pieces individually, which are then matted using acid-free archival materials and framed under UV filtering acrylic. Mr. Griffin’s work may also be obtained as permanent prints on high gloss aluminum. Artist Statement I was born in Buenos Aires on August 5th in the 60s, since childhood my parents instilled in me a sense of duty but also fostered with games and rides creativity and love for beauty and harmony, they had at home a collection of works of art, both in Paris where we lived five years and then in Buenos Aires City. I began to appreciate artistic taste in my paternal grandfather Rafael’s art gallery. I graduated from UBA in mechanical engineering in 1988, I designed many industrial robots, founded Fabrimática where I projected and directed the construction of robotic packing end lines in major consumer firms. One day about 5 years ago I turned an old dream and went to learn to paint with master Jose Luis Gomez Catoira, then with masters Sergio Bazan and Juan Doffo. To myself plastic arts are a passion and really I enjoy creating art, with strength and harmony using vivid colors while I try to express the inner or outer movement of reality and imagination. Movement is the key to my work. In my own view of the real or imaginary imposes much to see, and to capture in my work movement. The movement that consciously or unconsciously I see in even inanimate objects. It is a movement that the external surrounding generates inside me, so I “see” the motion and try to display it on canvas. Sometimes the KAREN BANKER 6 Gillie 12 Phyllis Jaffe Lyubov Muravyeva 32 Dennis Griffin 20 Glenn Zweygardt C. 22 Augusto Bordelois Artist Profile HOLLAND Debbie Viola 34 Karen Banker 36SKYE 38 Helen Kagan thought provoking. Powerful, intense, Power, Acrylic & mixed media, 36 x 24” | www.murrayweinstein.com [email protected] Winter 2014 KAUFMAN: NY I Spectrum Miami Artist Statement Elements of Expression explode energy and life, celebrating life’s nuances while enticing the viewers eye. Thomas 48 Lund-Lack 50 Aysin Iseri 52 Skye Holland Books Flying Off The Shelf, 87 x 48 x 33”, installed at the Fon-du-lac District Library, E. Peoria, IL. 54 Metrov Soriya, Mixed media on 350gsm Saunders Waterford Paper, framed with black lacquer contemporary frame & red slip inset, 870mm x 1060mm Limited edition (500) giclee print on brushed aluminium panel, 841mm x 1189mm Miami www.murrayweinstein.com B WATSART™ 56 Rod Seeley Winter 2014 orn to paint, the Austrian artist Tanja Playner has been guided by her creative environment. In youth she was fascinated by the Pop art culture of Andy Warhol, the philosophical fantasy world of the surrealist Salvador Dali, the rich colors of Gustav Klimt and the shapes and abstract expressionism of Vassily Kandinsky. From those early influences Tanja has carved out her own quasi Pop style incorporating the life of the city, nature and people who are always in the center of what Tanja depicts. work. Tanja sends a message of love, joy and optimism through her work. Tanja Playner is considered to day one of the great Pop Artists of contemporary art. [email protected] This bold language of art displays an individuality and breadth of style that speaks directly to a need for art that truly connects with the viewer, forming both a lasting expression and a lasting impression. A carefully selected grouping of perspectives creates a visual conversation that is both contemplative, meditative, powerful and honest. n 58 Peter J. Sucy 60 Patricia Brintle omaine 72 RKaufman 74 Bea Last Untitled I 2013, Mat Emulsion/Graphite powder, 40 x 40’’ Her works are unique and unmistakable! Her collectors love her work, laugh along side her as they view her work. Happiness is her key. Tanja believes her art should bring happiness and glee to those who view her Her artworks are a combination of various designs, interesting and colorful, as a story is told. In her artworks, the artist is always having fun, enjoying the city, the people in it as well as the objects of the city Having exhibited in more than twenty countries, Tanja has brought joy through her paintings to hundreds of thousands of people. Called by the American author John Pirillo, the new Andy Warhol, Tanja continues to entertain through her work. A mixture of Warhol and Picasso can describe her work. – architecture, lifestyle, fashion, cars and nature in order to add a glamorous game of life as a message to her viewers. Tanja’s work was also displayed at the Museum of the Americas in Miami, FL, the Latino Art Museum in Pomona, CA, and in October at the Carrousel du Louvre in Paris. 48 b b kInG 2002 acrYLIc on canVaS 122X122 cM | 48X48 In Miami PrIVatE coLLEctIon Untitled IV 2013, Emulsion/Graphite powder on canvas, 40 x 40’’ 54 Miami The Dance, 72 x 60 x 58”, installed at the Sabre Centre for Health, Suwanee, GA. Cedarbrook Pond ” 68 Miami Playner 82 Tanja 84 M iguel Hine Night Dreams, 23 x 23” | [email protected] TRADITIONAL http://fineartamerica.com/profiles/lydia-watsart.html BRONZE WORKS ARE AT www.gregoryjohnson.biz MODERN SCULPTURES ARE AT www.moderngj.com 74 Miami C O M M IS S IO N S INVIT ED Notes Floating Off The Podium, 96 x 36 x 30”, currently in inventory. Winter 2014 94 Suki Maguire 43 100 Solco Bernard Unt www.re-title.com/artists/bea-last.asp | 62 80 Gregory Johnson Unt 59 livia Cisneros 64 James Wilner Luce O 62 Villanueva 66 Neerja Bhatt 68 Paul Ygartua 70 Marlene Tremblay hese sculptures, constructed of high quality brushed stainless steel are mounted on granite bases. The works offer exciting views from any angle, and are reflective of their Through environment - literally. Placetypes themofnext to a bed of flowers, the use of different medium, papers, objects, fabrics and other items, andI am those are reflected the metal. workstoare ableflowers to be imaginative andincreative in myThe approach artistic presentation. ideal for interior or exterior placement, and offer a lifetime of minimal maintenance . We Are Insid Tanja Playner Miami 76 Abe Ordover T 78 Watsart “ L Metropolitan Love, 23 x 23” Artist Profile www.skyeholland.com 34 Finelli 44 Javier BEA Ellos, 13 x 13” Oil, 2013 22 ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONIST ARTIST 15 www.murrayweinstein.com Miami Last Am Art Expo Art San Spectrum Art Expo NINE, 44” x 44”, acrylic on canvas Berry ROMAINE 39 Sandra 42 Margaret Drake [email protected] I have always been fascinated by the interplay of color, design, and the magical effects at:goal ArthasHamptons I Artexpo of light and reflections. From my early experience toExhibiting the present, my remained unchanged…to utilize these elements to create unique images that transcend photographs. –Dennis Griffin 26 Duygu Kivanc 30 Murray Weinstein 7 Winter 2014 Arancione 2, Carnevale Venice www.karenbanker.com 24 Larry Frank movement I end up watch lines, I just h seems to me To the amount of m appear. So p sense of mov hidden faces main part of 104 Cindy Avroch 86 Scarmato 88 Marko Stout MARIANA SCERBO Art is part of my life, it is something that emerges, it is a passion. Born in the province of Córdoba, Argentina. For many years I have drawn and painted. Being the last five years, exclusively to painting on canvas dedication, experimenting mainly acrylic and oil paint. Both brush, as with spatula. I have participated in numerous exhibitions. Some of my works were selected for Governmental Entities organized by the Province of Córdoba exhibitions. Also,participated in “2nd International Biennial of Contemporary art of Argentina” (October 2014) “Spectrum Miami” -Midtown Miami (Decembre 2014) In Uruguay, Punta del Este City, in”Arte en el Conrrad”, with the 50 Best Artist of Latin America (January 2015) And now , Art Expo New York and in “Le Carrousel du Louvre”, at Paris in June 2015.” n 18 New York City Spring 2015 19 Glenn Zweygardt G lenn Zweygardt was born in St. Francis, Kansas in 1943. His parents were high plains farmers. He earned a BFA from Wichita State University in 1967 and a MFA in 1969 from the Rinehart School of Sculpture at Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore, MD. He taught sculpture at the New York College of Ceramics at Alfred University, Alfred, NY for 38 years and became an Emeritus Professor in 2007. He has exhibited widely and has a regional, national and international reputation. Glenn has had more than 50 solo exhibitions. His sculptures are in many private, public, university and museum collections. At his Alfred Station studio, he and his partner, Christine Ehmann, operate their own bronze foundry. Glenn also lectures Sea Horsey 20 New York City Cover Story and does workshops on foundry practice for younger sculptors. He is a self-taught welder starting at the age of ten on the family farm in Kansas. He taught forging and fabrication for all his teaching years. During his last years at Alfred, he developed an induction furnace and new stand- alone facility for the foundry practice of casting high temperature metals, including stainless steel. Glenn earned two Chancellor’s awards from SUNY for creative teaching and the development of glass casting into metal forms, which allows glass to be used in outdoor settings. Cast glass is used to this day in many of his sculpture. The philanthropists Philip and Muriel Berman of Allentown, PA gave Glenn’s continued on next page Guardian Trilogy Winter 2014 7 Artist Profile Cover Story We Get Higher By Working Together, 2011, Acrylic on canvas 29.5 x 19.7” early and mid-life career great support. The Bermans commissioned and placed many of Zweygardt’s large metal and stone sculptures throughout the higher education campuses in IN (Notre Dame, South Bend, IN), PA and NY. Glenn has also been invited to several international sculpture symposiums, most notably the sculpture park in Guilin, China where he created “Guilin Council”. In Stanstead, Canada he worked in granite at one of the oldest quarries in North America. In 2012, in the heel of Italy, he worked in local limestone, completing “Sky Eater” for the local community. Glenn and Christine currently live and work in their NY state studio where they are very busy making and placing sculptures in many national outdoor public competitions throughout cities and parks in the United States. The successful joining of numerous materials is part of Zweygardt’s unique aesthetic development. Metals, stone and glass comprise his palette. The imagery is often simple yet actively engaging and bold. His knowledge of materials, his ability to work in these materials and successfully combine them in a meaningful composition enables him to engage an audience with a broad range of interests. n For More Information: ArtisanDirectLtd.net www.glennzweygardt.com Peace Passage Sisters Sky Eaters Spring Winter2015 2014 21 9 AUGUSTO FINE ART STUDIO AND ART CENTER Left: Another Love Story, Oil on canvas, 36 x 48” Right: Northern Daydreamers, Oil canvas, 38 x 52” Bottom: Beautiful girls and boys in a peacock cage, Oil canvas diptych, 48 x 72” www.AugustoFineArt.com | [email protected] 22 New York City Artist Profile Augusto C. Bordelois “… In strange way Augusto’s works operate in what I can only call a mythological level. They work like dream images, something that is significant. When you look at them you know that they have meaning but you can’t necessarily place it. It doesn’t have a one to one relationship. This does not mean that. But it somehow resonates. I don’t think that there is a person in the world that can look at these images and not find some connection with them. I think that this is the power of his work. It seems to be very universal. It is also very personal obviously. Augusto is the product of Cuban academic instruction. He is an academic painter in that sense. Now, when he takes the standard version of the body and he adjusts the proportions ever so subtly, he unloads some kind of effect on these characters that he creates. He makes them slightly expanded and they have more presence more heft, more meaning. In the tradition of Caribbean Magical Realism style, his work is full of visually obvious and also hidden symbols.” Robert Thurmer, Cleveland State University Art Gallery Director A ugusto C. Bordelois (Havana, Cuba, 1969) graduated from the University of Havana with a major in English Language and Literature. He has also studied sculpture, ceramics, costume design for theatre and cinema, classical drawing and painting. His visual artwork has been awarded much recognition in Cuba as well as competitions in the United States. He has participated in more than 120 national and international group shows and 27 solo exhibitions. Some of his works are in corporate and private collections in Cuba, the United States, Venezuela, Colombia, Mexico, Spain, Portugal, Brazil, Ecuador, Japan, Greece, Germany, Chile, Switzerland, England and Norway. Augusto’s literary works have been published in magazines such as Kastello, and Hojas Literarias (Spain). He has also written and illustrated short stories for children and created many public art pieces across Ohio. He has been featured as a guest lecturer at Cleveland State University and Baldwin Wallace University. Currently, he owns and directs Augusto Fine Art Studio and Art Center in Berea, Ohio. n For more information: www.AugustoFineArt.com • [email protected] Caribbean Dream by Lake Erie, Oil on canvas, 60 x 96” Spring 2015 23 LARRY FRANK Top: Monsters and Rodents, Left, 2013, Oil on canvas, 30 x 48” | Bottom: Penang Market, Malaysia, 2014, Oil on canvas, 30 x 40” www.LarryFrankPaintings.com | [email protected] | 212-518-1531 24 New York City Artist Profile Larry Frank F rom his childhood, Larry has been involved in the arts and is a Modern Expressionist painter. Larry works mostly in oil paint and sketches in acrylic or pencil when traveling. His Expressionist Interpretive Representational Style at times borders on the abstract with overtones of the allegorical. Inspired by images from daily life as well more exotic images experienced as he travels. He is particularly interested in people, portraits, food still life, landscape and historical fantasy. Color, form, light and space relationships whether real or are integral and defining in his work. He paints only what he is familiar with, loves or things and events he experiences and thinks about most often. As a former Graphics Arts Director turned black and white photographer and now painter, images collect and file in his head and intensify to emerge as he encounters situations or visual triggers. Triggers can be quite ordinary or run to the extraordinary. He tends to work on series over time which include self portrait, figurative images, some with sexual overtones, location or story panorama, food still life and most recently inspiration from travel in SE Asia and unexpected surprising historical fantasy. His favorite periods in western art are the Expressionists, Impressionists, Medieval Art and from the East... Japanese, Indian and Islamic art and calligraphy. His longest time favorites have been and continues to be the Expressionists and Impressionists. As his painting expands over time he struggled to find new directions and visual freedom. For a while, he felt trapped in an unsatisfying safe zone and subsequently enrolled in unique Art Residences to break down barriers and catapult out of a false comfort zone. This has proven to be a great decision as his work now emerges and expands with more freedom of expression, freshness, singularity and immediacy. Larry’s artwork is collected and in permanent collections by several individuals and has been shown in galleries and museums around the globe. He was born in and currently resides in New York City. He teaches Painting at The Educational Alliance. For a details, please visit his website: www.LarryFrankPaintings.com. n Larry painting in his studio; The Maine Polar Vortex, 2014, Oil on Canvas, 48 x 60” in two panels Mangrove Monkey, 2013, Oil on canvas, 16 x 20” Fantasmagorical, 2013, Oil on canvas, 30 x 36” Elephants with Handlers, Malaysia, 2013, Oil on canvas, 18 x 24” Spring 2015 25 Artist Profile Duygu Kivanc D oing art has always been my means of communication attribute my participation with the Art Students’ League in New York to have influenced the development of my individual style. metropolitan area in 1980. I have participated in several gallery exhibitions in my adoptive home of Fairfax, Virginia and nearby McLean, as well as several exhibitions in New York City, including a group shows at the United Nations Building. My paintings were well liked in Thimpu, Bhutan, during my stay there for three years I have received several Certificates of Excellence; placements in juried shows; and have also been included in the Encyclopedia of Living Artists - Fourth Edition. With numerous artistic workshops, I further continued my studies and when I later moved to the Washington D.C. My illustrative style...somewhat twodimensional, yet contouring enough to provide my portraits with a degree of solidity. My paintings are studies in composition, design and controlled color as exemplified by “The Question” and the oriental woman in “Daydreams”. Rich reds and browns contrast the pale, ashen faces. Although I have created many portraits, abstract landscapes have become another favorite subject to exhibit my use of analogous and complementary color. Many of my paintings have rich, striking and bold color, creating an exciting contrast, while my floral are produced by washes of pastel color applied in a delicate technique. I have done a great deal of traveling, often times influencing the subject matter of my prolific collection of oil or acrylic landscapes and portraits.and Canada. n Top: Daydreaming Series Bottom: Butterfly 2 26 New York City DUYGU KIVANC Istinye/Istanbul [email protected] Spring 2015 27 Artist Profile Farano Come experience Farano Fine Art located at booth number 241 under the Artisan Direct Exhibit. See first-hand how one of the elite sports and entertainment artist in the world today creates each unique masterpiece. Artist Justyn Farano will dazzle as he paints live. Farano’s entire portfolio consists of over 140 athletes & entertainers and can be viewed at www.sportsartillustrated.com. then autographed by the athlete or entertainer. Farano’s artwork can be seen in stadiums, athlete’s homes, and the collections of art enthusiasts worldwide. Michael Jordan, Tom Brady, Peyton Manning along with musicians Rihanna & Gene Simmons are just a few notable clients and proud collectors of Justyn Farano’s works of art. Come see what all the buzz is about and join the Farano Fine Art nation. n Farano’s original oil paintings and hand embellished limited edition artist recreation canvas gicleés are signed and numbered by Farano, and For more about Farano and his work visit www.sportsartillustrated.com Frank Sinatra Artist Justyn Farano AROC 28 New York City Brando As The God Father Artist Justyn Farano AROC FARANO New Eng Patriots Dynasty Artist Justyn Farano Auto Brady Derek Jeter 03 Artist Justyn Farano Auto AROC www.sportsartillustrated.com | [email protected] Spring 2015 29 Artist CULTURE THINK Profile By C H A R L I E C R E S P O VIVID GEOMETRICS Second Career Emerges from Printing Background MURRAY WEINSTEIN never thought that he’d become an artist. “My first love was carpentry,” he said. “Art was something I always admired. I did have an interest in art, but I couldn’t afford it.” The South Florida artist grew up in Brooklyn’s Brownville neighborhood and although his passion for carpentry always remained, he never would pursue a career in woodworking. On the advice of a teacher at New York School of Printing, Weinstein received an academic education and learned printing production at a shop in Manhattan, which subsequently led him to employment with Candid Litho Printing in 1974 and ultimately the purchase of the company in July 1990. After a long and successful career, Weinstein retired in 2000, turning over Candid to his two sons. During the early stages of his retirement, he dabbled in many of the conventional retirement activities: golfing, traveling, and gin rummy. Yet 102 30 T H I NKM AGAZI NES .CO M New York City Weinstein couldn’t couldn’t shake shake the the feeling feeling that that Weinstein something was something was missing, missing, and and he he eventually eventually realized that be able able to to fifill realized that painting painting might might be ll him with with the the same same satisfaction satisfaction that him that he he had had found working working in in the the printing printing industry. industry. found “I was just 73, and I was looking for “I was just and I was for and something to 73, do to keep mylooking mind busy something to do to keep my mind busy fill up my day,” he said. Painting “poppedand fill up day,” “popped into mymy head andheitsaid. tookPainting me a little while into my head and it took me a little while to figure out what I was going to do with to figure this idea.”out what I was going to do with thisInidea.” a stunningly short amount of time, Weinstein not onlyshort figured out how he was In a stunningly amount of time, going to begin butout he developed Weinstein not painting, only figured how he was the distinct abstract stylebut thathecharactergoing to begin painting, developed izes all of his work. Infl uenced by Piet the distinct abstract style that characterMondrian, Klee, and Gerhard Richter, izes all of hisPaul work. Influenced by Piet Weinstein style “compatible conMondrian,calls Paulhis Klee, and Gerhard Richter, trasting color hard-edge geometic Weinstein callswith his astyle “compatible conabstraction. ” with a hard-edge geometic trasting color “When I paint, I try to find colors that abstraction.” normally wouldn’t go together — that do go “When” he I paint, I try“All to find colors that together, explains. of my paintings normally wouldn’t go together — that do go are solid colors; I don’t do any shading. he explains. “All ofand myI’m paintings Itogether,” haven’t tried another style, not are solid colors; I don’t do any shading. interested in another style. I’m interested I haven’t tried another I’mno notone in thinking about what style, I can and do that interested in another style. I’m time interested else does with this style at this that I in thinking about have developed. ” what I can do that no one elseOriginally, does withWeinstein’s this style atpaintings this time weren’t that I have developed.” meant for public consumption. In fact, he only went into a gallery to discuss selling Originally, Weinstein’s paintings weren’t his work because he had so many pieces meant for public consumption. In fact, he that he simply began to wonder if someone only went into a gallery to discuss selling might be interested in them. his work because he had so many pieces that Just as quickly as he developed his own he simply began to wonder if someone might style, Weinstein’s paintings found an evbe interested in them. er-growing audience. His work has already been at as Artblend, a 6,200-squareJustexhibited as quickly he developed his own foot in Fort paintings Lauderdale, andan haseverstyle,gallery Weinstein’s found shown the Artexpo New in York, growingataudience in a in gallery Fort and at ArtHamptons Long Island, Lauderdale. His workonhas already N.Y. recently, Wein-at the beenMost exhibited and 13 hasofshown stein’s works haveYork, found way Artexpo in New thetheir Spectrum to the newand corporate offices of Blue in Miami at Art Hamptons on Ocean Worldwide Lasrecently, Vegas. In Long Island, N.Y. in Most addition, his work works is set to be shown 13 of Weinstein’s have found in December 2014 at corporate contemporary their way to the new offices artBlue fair SPECTRUM Miami.in Las Vegas. of Ocean Worldwide Even though he enjoys and values the Even though he enjoys and values the recognition his work is receiving, that’s recognition work he is receiving, that’s not the mainhis reason plans to continue not the main reason he plans to continue painting. painting.“ “I paint because I love what I’m doing,” heIsaid. e actual enjoyment is putting paint“Th because I love what I’m doing,” the paint on the canvas and getting the he said. “The actual enjoyment is putting fi nished product. I feel accomplished and the paint on the canvas and getting the successful, which Iisfeel more than just being finished product. accomplished and retired withwhich nothing to do.than ” successful, is more just being retired with nothing to do.” See Little Black Book on page 132 Artist Profile “He is led by his own intuition, which is channeled and controlled by an innate rhythm.” Murray Weinstein Delray Beach, FL Weinstein’s Weinstein’s seemingly seemingly simplified simplified paintings paintings are are brought brought down down to to the the most most basic basic elements elements in in order order to to reveal reveal the the essence essence of of balance, balance, symmetry, symmetry, and and harmony. harmony. He He constructs constructs lines lines and and color combinations combinations on on a color a flat flat plane plane in in order order to to express express general general beauty with with unfettered unfettered awareness, awareness, but but not not always beauty always with with calculation. He He is is led led by by his his own own intuition, intuition, which which is calculation. is channeled channeled and controlled controlled by by an an innate innate rhythm. rhythm. and W e are Weinstein pleased tois host Weinstein at the Murray one Murray of a growing number of Artblend talented artists who haveof made South Florida Weinstein has Gallery as one a growing numbertheir of home. talented artists who worked with South a clearFlorida vision to develop innovative talent and have made their home.his Weinstein has worked skill and become part of a creative movement has with a clear vision to develop his innovative talenthere and that skill and drawn international This is evident his has success in become part of a attention. creative movement hereby that drawn gaining acceptance andThis recognition prominent exhibitions at international attention. is evidentatby his success in gaining important artand shows throughout country. Such as Spectrum acceptance recognition atthe prominent exhibitions at our in Miami, Artexpo in NY as as the Hampton gallery and in important art well shows throughout th prestigious the Art country. in Long Island New York. Flowers of Color, 30” x 30”, acrylic on canvas Color and art have always been an intimate part of my life. As a retired printing company executive, my whole career has been observing the profound effect the artistic process has on an individual’s perspective on life. This has been strengthened by my numerous experiences with leading artists, graphic artists, and art directors working with New York City advertising agencies, the toughest critics in the world. I have seen the emergence, and embraced the importance, of the Pantone Weinstein’s most recent body of work is called the “Floral” Weinstein’s most are recent bodyinof work canvas is calledconfiguration, the “Floral” series. The works created a multiseries. works are created in a multicanvas configuration, using The a single color application connected by a grid using a single application a grid arrangement, thus color bringing all elementsconnected together in by a complete arrangement, thus bringing all elements together in a complete floral arrangement called “Nine.” The overall, pleasing design floral arrangement calledhave “Nine.” The overall, to pleasing design and chromatic elements led enthusiasts informally call andseries chromatic elements have led enthusiasts to informally call the the “Cupcakes.” the series the “Cupcakes.” At Artblend, we meet countless inspiring artists on an ongoing Murray WeinsteinWeinstein stands outstands as an enthusiastic for basis. Murray out as an advocate enthusiastic the arts - respectful and dedicated.and He should prove be an advocate for the arts - respectful dedicated. Hetoshould ideal for future influence, growth, and therefore an provecandidate to be an ideal candidate for future influence, growth, and outstanding art. therefore an investment outstandingininvestment in art. . Matching System and the creation of thousands of uses of color on the printed sheet and the subtle emotional reactions to incremental change. PHOTOGRAPHY BT AMY LEE At this point in my life, I am driven to personally explore the art of painting and creating. All the works that I have completed until now are based on what I call “compatible contrasting color,” informed by my long experience with Pantone matching. Murray Weinstein's vision of his art is clearly demonstrated in the mutation of his artistic style from traditional representation to total hard-edge geometric abstraction. The trained eye will note the obvious − that Weinstein is greatly influenced and inspired by Piet Mondrian, Gerhard Richter, and Peter Max. Pop of Red, 30” x 40”, acrylic on canvas Spring 2015 31 Artist Profi Profile le Dennis Griffin Griffin D Artist Statement ennis Griffin, a photographer for 40 years, is a native of Southern California. Born and raised in Los Angeles, Mr. Griffin graduated from UCLA with a Masters Degree in Life Sciences, served as an Artillery Officer in Viet Nam, and had a distinguished 32-year career in the Healthcare Industry before founding Studio Griffoto in 2007 to market his fine art imagery. His award winning work spans four decades and encompasses nature and landscape photography, form photography, travel photography and digital imaging. Mr. Griffin’s unique style and eye for composition are clearly reflected throughout the broad scope of his images captured in California and other parts of the United States, as well as many countries in Europe. Dennis Griffin’s award winning work is widely exhibited in the Conejo Valley, California and is available as signed, archival inkjet prints. The artist prints all pieces individually, which are then matted using acid-free archival materials and framed under UV filtering acrylic. Mr. Griffin’s work may also be obtained as permanent prints on high gloss aluminum. To view a partial gallery of Mr. Griffin’s work, please visit his website, www.studiogriffoto.com. Feathers and Lashes, Carnival Venice, 2010 The interplay of color and design and the magical effects of light and reflections have always fascinated me. I discovered photography 40 years ago Queen of Spades, Carnevale Venice 2009 and have been shooting ever since, simply because I enjoy the process, and the results are good often enough to keep me hooked. Over the years, I studied different photographic styles, took a couple of classes from Leland Rice and learned from studying the work of those I admired most, Alfred Stieglitz, Ansel Adams, Ernest Haas and Eliot Porter. My work evolved with time and the influence of my friend and long-time photography partner, Tom Howell, who unselfishly shared his knowledge as an accomplished artist and gifted photographer, and who constantly challenged me to improve. Many creative insights have come from our dueling slideshows sustained with Cabernet or Chianti after trips to Yosemite, Point Lobos, Bodie, Moro Bay, Death Valley, The Wine Country, Florence, Venice and Rome. My favorite artists include Italian Renaissance Masters, French Impressionists, Classical and Modern Artists. A partial list includes Bernini, Caravaggio, Degas, Donatello, Michelangelo, O’Keefe, Rembrandt, Renoir, Rodin, Rothko, Titian, and Van Gogh. My passions other than photography include travel, music, history, movies and wine. I have been fortunate to travel to many countries over the years, and I have tried to capture interesting and varied images that reflect the unique characteristics of each one. I have photographed many different subjects during the past four decades with a single objective...a desire to depict the interplay of light, color, design and sometimes reflections to create unique images of beauty. From the early days working in darkrooms smelling of acetic acid to the present using the immaculate technology of inkjet printers, my goal of making unique, artful images has remained unchanged. While I learned to emphasize technical perfection, my goal is to create something beyond “straight photography.” I am pleased when people view my work and think it is something “more than photography.” n Arancione 2, Carnevale Venice I have always been fascinated by the interplay of color, design, and the magical effects of light and reflections. From my early experience to the present, my goal has remained unchanged…to utilize these elements to create unique images that transcend photographs. –Dennis Griffin 30 32 New Miami York City STUDIO GRIFFOTO Fine Art Imagery Stairwell Venice, 2010 www.studiogriffoto.com | [email protected] | 805-262-2168 Spring 2015 33 Artist ArtistProfile Profile Karen Banker Inward Journeys Back to True Self I t’s all about the experience one has with art,” states Karen Banker, North Carolina based, international artist. “Some may look at art as a collection of materials, shapes, forms, color and textures, but if the combination of these variables fails to evoke emotion or a reaction, is it really art?” Banker has devoted her entire career to creating works that stimulate provocative thought, tug at one’s emotions either by drudging up memories or slapping one in the face with complex iterations of saturated color and scared textures. Beyond, Acrylic, 24 x 36” 3414 New York City Miami “So many people today are asleep at the wheel, often lost and unfulfilled. Nobody wants to live like that.” Banker’s work challenges the viewer to look inward, to explore unanswered questions about who they really are and why they are not living the life they innately know is meant for them. “My work marks a pivotal point in time where society is finally questioning the value of material possessions over the value of being true to themselves.” Her work ignites the power and freedom for viewers to express the light inside of them. Karen Banker’s paintings have been seen in five recent solo exhibitions including “Karen Banker USA,” 2012, Colorida Gallery, Lisbon, Portugal, as well as numerous group and juried exhibitions from Miami to New York to San Francisco including “Story of the Creative”, Angel Orensanz Foundation, New York, NY, “A Swine Evening” where her artwork was paired with Sheryl Crow, Grammy award winning artist, Charlotte, NC, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Miami, FL. n To see more, visit www.KarenBanker.com KAREN BANKER ArtistProfile Profile Artist Powerful, intense, thought provoking. Power, Acrylic & mixed media, 36 x 24” www.karenbanker.com | [email protected] Spring 2015 15 35 Winter 2014 Artist Profile Debbie Viola T here are times when Debbie Viola’s need to paint is as strong as her need to breathe. At the end of a long day, nothing can entice her more than going through tubes of paint and contemplate a new creation. Debbie loves the wonder of what will happen next at her own hand. Her intuitive paintings are a natural extension of being an award-winning fine finish painter and surface designer for the past 17 years. “Sophisticated elegance” is how one art consultant describes Debbie’s art, which is defined by fluid movement and a strong sense of color. Her refreshing use of color captivates and pulls you in, whether it’s soft and blended, or determined and bold. Debbie is passionate about all the beauty life has to offer, and finds herself delving into a number of styles and mediums. The inspiration behind her serene collection comes from Debbie’s love of nature and everything outdoors. The heavenly landscapes of Long Island, New York provide never-ending inspiration. After a walk on the beach, you will likely find her painting nothing but soft, serene seascape abstractions. When stormy winter days prevent a trip to the shore, Debbie can only find the same inner peace and calm at her easel. She can’t wait to get the colors onto her canvas. With each brushstroke, Debbie captures the tranquility that pours from within, and again she is transformed to a warm summer’s day. As one painting is being completed, another is being composed in her mind. As much as she is drawn to everything calm, Debbie is equally enamored by textures, bright colors, and shapes. She is fascinated how her manipulation of various plasters and dripping pigments Bluegreens Skyscape, 12 x 36 36 New York City meld and take on a different path than envisioned. When large palette knives replace her brushes, layers of textured depth and shimmery color emerge. If the final layer could be peeled away, a completely different painting might be revealed underneath. Debbie’s love for painting began as early as kindergarten; she cried when she had to miss fingerpainting because she was sick. It wasn’t until decades later that she finally picked up a paintbrush at the age of 40, and hasn’t put it down since. She is most grateful that she was able to make the transition from corporate life to becoming a successful artist, and is so proud of being voted “Best Artist of Long Island” the past five years. n Artist Profile Peaceful, 48 x 48, acrylics My Heart Bleeds, #11, 36 x 48 www.DebbieViola.com | [email protected] Twilight, 36 x 36, metallic textures Spring 2015 37 Artist Profile Helen Kagan Healing Arts ...I believe that art heals. As a therapist and artist I believe that tragedy, pain and trauma can be healed with beauty, love, positive energy, and selfexpression. My “Healing Arts” is my unique way to integrate fine art and the art of healing to enhance well-being in a viewer... H elen Kagan, PhD. was born in a cold Siberian winter in what then was the USSR. She grew up in a communist State where oppression and control were a daily reality. In 1991 her quest for freedom led Helen to the US, whereto she brought a Jewish heritage, and an unending thirst to explore the World and its meaning. Following her quest she studied many healing modalities, and has been integrating a mind-body-spirit philosophy into her professional and personal life. Mainly self-taught Helen’s been painting for as long as she remembers herself, since 2005 does it professionally. Helen works with oil and acrylic, lately is experimenting with mixed mediums. She paints with pure boldness and emotion, always looking for ways to communicate on levels often not yet understood. While reflecting her own colorful and deep perception of life, a desire to bridge the Realities and heal the Past, she believes her artwork can enhance healing process to those in need. n Artist Statement As a therapist and artist I believe that tragedy, pain and trauma can be healed with beauty, love, positive energy, and self-expression. My intention is to create a substantial body of ‘Healing Art’ to serve people and communities in need. I envision my artwork to be placed in Medical Centers, Hospitals, Rehabilitation and Multicultural Centers, Behavioral Health, Crisis Centers, and alike–to enhance healing and promote well-being. My canvases are varied, vibrant, some are raw, some refined, all are intuitive. The important themes always present in my art are - being on a spiritual Journey, moving towards the Light, awareness of ‘Here and Now’, and of course - j’oie de vivre! Communicating on subliminal levels, my art delivers these messages through positively charged intention, healing frequencies of color, and energetically balanced composition. I believe my ‘Healing Arts’ promotes well-being in a viewer, I believe in the interconnectedness of physical, mental and spiritual, and my vibrant art is a statement of my beliefs. n See more of Helen’s work at www.helenkagan.com Sun Shower, 2014 Acrylic, canvas 24”x30” 38 New York City Autumn Leaves, 2014 Acrylic, canvas 24”x36” HELEN KAGAN In Search Of Meaning, 2012-2013 Acrylic, canvas 48”x36” “... Helen Kagan’s “healing” art resonates anywhere due to its dramatic outburst of colors, powerful pictorial syntax and a uniquely unforgettable style, which gives it universal appeal. Beautiful as it is, her art is so much more than just a feast for the eyes. Imbued with a profound spiritual energy, it connects us with our inner self with its immense potential for self-healing, mind-opening and creative growth. As a painter, Helen was inspired by impressionism and expressionism. In her art, these two aesthetics are bridged with ground-breaking novelty, although historically the two excluded and somewhat diminished each other.... For Helen, both tonalities are harmonized - impressionist joie de vivre with its emphasis on the now is gracefully entwined with the inner, undying luminous essence valued by expressionists. …The light as the apex of Helen Kagan’s art is so strong that it reminds us of the sunshine that breaks through the closed window of our visions and compels us to finally open it... for self-healing and self-discovery.” by MayaEllenson, PhD., Art Critic from “Kagan provides us a healing symphony of color” Martin County Currents, Feb 2014 www.HelenKagan.com | [email protected] | 917-855-1153 Spring 2015 39 Artist Profile Sandra Berry S andra Berry Hover has expanded her language through painting with watercolors on fresco. She is rebellious and provocative with her whirling compositions. Her orchestrated settings channel simultaneous events with tension, creating a world vibrating with meaning. Her large paintings on paper reflect her need to dance across a stage, giving her room to navigate. Space recedes and comes forward, a fluctuation that excites the eye. She is in a league of her own. Accessible and free she has experienced and explored many facets of art in her life. A ringmaster of creativity, Sandra opened her own art gallery in 1982, “The Toy Theater”. Located on Spaulding Street in Lockport, New York, Berry sold mechanical art toys. The Albright Knox gift shop soon discovered Berry’s gallery, they consistently purchased her work for the next six years. Berry continued constructing wood assemblages, painting them as if they were canvas. Her high visual contrast was achieved by a distinctive palette of intensity changes. The unique combination of wood and paint was an iconographic play at work which won Berry a NYSFA Award in Crafts in 1989. Berry rebuilt her world in 1996 entering graduate school on a scholarship at University @ Buffalo’s Casting Institute. She proceeded to investigate the contradiction of disassembling a work of art to resurrect something new. Her wood carvings would be molded in wax then cut up or squeezed into a heterogeneous mix of gregarious figures. This world of collage would continue to inspire Berry’s future as a painter. Play Ball, 2015, watercolor on fresco, 20” x20” 40 New York City The Last Urban cowgirl, 2015, watercolor on fresco, 24” x 17” Sandra currently lives on a farm with her husband in Almond, NY. She teaches part time inspiring young digital media animation students at Alfred State College, Alfred, NY. In the world of computer technology learning to draw and sculpt is still an important part of the art world. n SANDRA BERRY Artist Profile Serpents and Steam, 2015, watercolor painting, 48”tall x 74.5”wide A Trip To an Unknown Point, 2014, watercolor painting 45.5”x55” Spring 2015 41 Artist Profile Margaret Drake M argaret lives on a ranch near Glen Rose, Texas. Originally hailing from a small ranching communityin northwestern Colorado, she lives with horses and the Western way of life. After retiring from clinical research in the pharmaceuticalindustry, she devoted herself to a year of studying threedimensional portraiture under Texas artist Art Blevins. After that, she focused on figurative art, taking workshops from such renowned sculptors as Lincoln Fox, Rod Zulo, Bruno Lucchesi, Mehl Lawson, David Lemmon and Scott Rogers. a work of art that will last for a long time. A piece of good bronze artwork on the mantle or a shelf adds class and sophistication to a room. The added pleasure you will have of looking at it daily will surely add to its benefit to you. Working with oil-based clay, she sculpts realistic figures of the athletic human form, horses, cowboys, Native Americans, and other creatures that capture her perception of the beauty that surrounds us. Her pieces are known and recognized for their realistic detail, partly due to the fact that she uses live models throughout the creation process. Margaret also works with water-based clays, creating ceramic bas reliefs and figures. She is currently in a “Ceramic Phase”, in which she is creating and experimenting with bas reliefs and ceramic impressions that will be wallmounted. Her bronze sculptures have been accepted into juried competitions such as the Cattlemen’s Western Art Show, Bosque Art Classic, the Art Center of Estes Park’s show, the Breckenridge Fine Art Show, Loveland’s ”Sculpture in the Park” and the Tucson Mountain Oyster Show. Margaret is an Associate member of The National Sculpture Society, and a member of the Texas Artists Coalition. n Mankind has created artistic images of the world around him ever since the beginning of recorded history. The great civilizations of Greece, Rome and China created bronze statues thousands of years ago. Many bronze statues remain to this day, having lasted the ravages of centuries. Obtaining a bronze sculpture of Margaret’s ensures that you will have Eye on the Gold 42 New York City Tradit Ponca Her pieces are featured at: The White Buffalo Gallery - Glen Rose, Texas wwwthewhitebuffalogallery.com Adobe Western Art Gallery - Fort Worth, Texas www.adobewesternart.com Visit www.margaretdrakestudio.com, and on Facebook at: www.facebook.com/MargaretDrakeStudio Small Colt Buckskin MARGARET DRAKE Murry Weinstein Top: First in the Fifth | Bottom: Tu Vienes [email protected] | 254-897-9113 Spring 2015 43 JAVIER FINELLI Ellos - They, Oil on canvas, 2013, 13X13” 44 New York City Artist JavierProfile Finelli Javier Finelli Javier Finelli who knows about engineering, managed to capture the movement of the painting, what remains and what follows. All throughout we can feel persistence, talent and mysterious art with a personal style as unique as his own portrait. His concerns take him to the quest of one fundamental intriguing idea: movement in all its dimensions. Easy search but not simple. The aim seemed an illusion, the further away the illusion the more distant the aim. So..... What is it that he forgot? What is missing? His own inner knowledge. As a little child who experiences with colors, textures, materials and deprived of all intellectual knowledge, he began to listen to his inner voice. The first outcomes began to blink as if reflected on a mirror, among a combination of colors, figures and objects. In this quest between the conceptual and the perceptive framework and appealing to the sight over the other senses, he managed to shape movement in his works. This movement is embedded not only in motionless objects but also in inanimate ones. It appears as an external agent that invades his inner self. But there is another movement. Tree on its Birthday, Oil on canvas, 38x45” The movement which comes out from his own brushstrokes charged with matter which spontaneously display the motif captured by the eyes and more importantly, his soul. He uses oil on canvas. His technique: strokes of pure colors applied with palette knife which results in an output full of force and vivid colors. Then he models his work so that the final outcome is harmonious and meaningful transmitting the movement and attitude of the objects : trees and branches, persons, ships, animals, water and sky. The spectator, without ignoring the other senses, is forced to see the movement, the playful approach. He is driven to feel the humor and experience the mystery behind the hinted characters. The color abstraction he combines, generates movement and characters and objects show up as silent but meaningful witnesses. n Agustina Mazzini Uriburu Art Critic Selfportrait, Oil on canvas, 2013, 39x39” www.javierfinelli.com | [email protected] | (+54 911) 52206032 Spring 2015 45 Artist Javier Profile Finelli Dancing Tree, Oil on canvas, 2015, 38x36” Details of Dancing Tree 46 New York City Javier Finelli ARTIST LIFE I was born in Buenos Aires on August 5th in the 60s, since childhood my parents instilled in me a sense of duty but also fostered with games and rides creativity and love for beauty and harmony, they had at home a collection of works of art, both in Paris where we lived five years and then in Buenos Aires City. I began to appreciate artistic taste in my paternal grandfather Rafael’s art gallery. I graduated from UBA in mechanical engineering in 1988, I designed many industrial robots, founded Fabrimática whereI projected and directed the Him, Oil on canvas, 2014, 25X13” Many Dogs , Oil on canvas, 2014, 41X37” construction of robotic packing end lines in major consumer firms. Niagra Swirl One day about 5 years ago I turned an old dream and went to learn to paint with master Jose Luis Gomez Catoira, then with masters Sergio Bazan and Juan Doffo. To myself plastic arts are a passion and really I enjoy creating art, with strength and harmony using vivid colors while I try to express the inner or outer movement of reality and imagination. Movement is the key to my work Many we Are II, Oil on canvas, 2015, 38x56” PROFESSIONAL AWARDS Cultural Center Embassy of Argentina, Asuncion Paraguay, September 2011 Borges Cultural Center of Buenos Aires, Argentina, April 2012 Itau Bank Foundation, Asuncion Paraguay, November 2012 Ministry of Culture of Paraguay, Asuncion, November 2012 Saint Cayetano, Buenos Aires Argentina, May 2013 Necochea’s Cultural Center, Argentina, December 2013 Art Expo New York, NY USA, April 2014 Art San Diego, CA USA, November 2014 Swiss Rowing Club, Tigre Argentina, November 2014 Spectrum Miami, FL USA, December 2014 Art Expo New York, NY USA, April 2015 Art San Diego, CA USA, November 2015 Brainstorming II, Oil on canvas, 2015, 12x23” Spring 2015 47 Artist Profile Thomas Lund-Lack “I love the colors, and the combination of realistic and contemporary style” –Lenore Schenk F igurative action paintings infused with powerful expressions of drama and movement form the hallmark of British artist Thomas Lund-Lack’s work. With every piece he paints, Lund-Lack hopes to arrest the motion of the subject and hold it fixed so that in even in a hundred years, when a stranger looks at it, it moves again. Not surprisingly, Lund-Lack gravitates to the racing thoroughbred as irresistible subject matter perfectly suited to his style of work. Less preoccupied with the details of which horse or which race, the artist aims instead to capture all of the elements of racing in one impression. By incorporating figurative subjects, broken lines, abstract highlights and loose flowing brush strokes along with a heavy application of paint, he readily accomplishes this goal. Equally attractive as a subject matter are large and fast yachting boats, which together against a backdrop of sea and sky create the foundation for his impressive marine paintings. To capture the movement of a wave or the light on the clouds is a challenge as it happens in a quick moment when all the elements are in harmony and fleeting. These elusive features are difficult to successfully bring together, yet they are the very elements Lund-Lack believes contribute to an attractive and exciting combination of colours and tones, reflective of many Last Furlong moods. It is his skill in doing just this that becomes another signature of his work. Many of Lund-Lack’s marine paintings also reflect his personal interest in history and a family background connected with the sea. It is not surprising to find naval subjects and early 20th Century warships in his work. However, it is not the war that appeals to the artist, but again, the ships. Tom is a self taught artist who started out in water colour. Through the influence of Hugo Grenville, Lund-Lack turned to oil paint, which he now uses exclusively. He has worked hard to perfect his skills as an artist over the last twenty years. In addition to creating art, Tom is the Chairman of Suffolk Open Studios and the founder of ARTactiv a group that offers art workshops bringing the joy of creativity to disabled children and young people across the English county of Suffolk. Born in Devon, England, LundLack has lived in Hong Kong, New Zealand, and London .He has made his home in Suffolk, England over the last 22 years with his wife, Amanda. Tom’s paintings have been seen, exhibited and collected in Galleries, Art Fairs, Marine and Equestrian Shows in the UK and the USA as well as being featured in Equestrian publications throughout England. n To make the work come alive is the challenge; colour, tone and technique all play their parts in creating the illusions I am seeking to portray. Thomas Lund-Lack is represented by Jayson Samuel. For more information, please contact Jayson Samuel: [email protected] 48 New York City THOMAS LUND-LACK Top: Regatta Bottom: South Coast Harbour www.absolutearts.com/lundlack | [email protected] Spring 2015 49 Artist Profile Aysin Iseri T (ISIS SCULPTURE AND DESIGN) he ‘’Great Stories’’ are part of the core human experience and never change except in the most superficial ways. They defy any attempts to rewrite them with drastic changes and always return to their original forms. The settings might be modified depending on who’s telling it, the characters might have different names, but fundamentally, it’s still the same story. Who is ISIS? ISIS is the feminine archetype for creation the goddess of fertility and motherhood. She has gone by many names and played many roles in history. She was considered as the Queen of Heaven, Mother of the Gods, The Brilliant One in the Sky, She Who Knows How to Make Right Use of the Heart, Moon Shining over the Sea, etc. It is manifestly impossible to limit the attributes of ISIS, therefore she had so many worshippers. The symbol of ISIS in the heavens was a star. Its appearance in other’s soul marked the beginning of a new year- a new era -. 50 New York City For some, ISIS was The One Who is All and will remain so until the end of the universe. ISIS is the essence of the feminine energy which is part of us all. This is evidenced by the movements of the body in the artworks and enriched by the artists with bronze who are eager to express their devotion to the ‘’GREAT STORIES’’. ISIS is actually a nickname given to Aysin Iseri by a very dear friend... ISIS SCULPTURE AND DESIGN ATELIER opened in the heart of beautiful Istanbul in 2006 by Aysin Iseri and raising too many artists...ISIS SCULPTURE AND DESIGN GALLERY is in Bodrum, right across the most important and best marina in Europe, Palmarina STUDIO ISIS Sculpture and Design Studio offers the finest motivation for creation available anywhere. The studio has been providing sculpting classes and workshops for the past 9 years. Studio ISIS is a full service sculpture and design facility with a wealth of talent to match the need of any project. Our classes are taught by the owner Aysin Iseri, herself, and offer students a first-hand look at the importance of observation first, then the pleasure of a thorough hands-on experience forming the clay, and the thrill of being able to pass one’s feelings to others with an artwork MESSAGE TO ISD MEMBERS ... Your state of putting one material into a shape shows; your intention to change the things you want to change, resistance to things you don’t want to change, your patience shows how much you are interested in reaching your targets in life, your attitude about the results shows your way of looking at life itself...I recommend you to use this material called ‘’clay’’, which is made of water and soil (two essences of life) for the purpose of your wellbeing....and I am grateful to the universe to have played such a synchrodestiny game by creating a coincidence and thus given the chance of having you lightbeings in my studio. n [email protected] Spring 2015 51 SKYE HOLLAND Soriya, Mixed media on 350gsm Saunders Waterford Paper, framed with black lacquer contemporary frame & red slip inset, 870mm x 1060mm Limited edition (500) giclee print on brushed aluminium panel, 841mm x 1189mm www.skyeholland.com 52 34 New York City Miami Artist Profile Skye Holland The Emmanuelle Collection, debut showing in the US with Artisan Direct at Miami Spectrum 2013 I Skye Holland drawing from the model am a London-based artist, with a studio in an old converted factory in Kingston-Upon-Thames, a suburb of London pretty close to Hampton Court Palace where Henry VIII resided! I trained in Fine Art Printmaking at Central St. Martin’s School of Art & Design in the mid 1980’s. This is a famous school of art and we had amazing tutors and visiting lecturers as a matter of course – people like Anthony Caro, Norman Ackroyd, Trisha Gillman, and Helen Chadwick. The main influences of the day were abstract expressionism and the beginnings of more conceptual approaches to contemporary art – installationary work, video, film etc. However, all the disciplines, and particularly printmaking were rooted in traditional drawing. We had a life model on hand every Friday which I always attended and loved and it was there where I learned and practiced my craft and flair with ‘life’ drawing from the model. I have made, exhibited and sold artwork all my life, alongside being a working wife, running a home and raising two children who are now amazing, independent young adults working in London. We moved to South Africa at the end of the 80’s to work in Johannesburg. It was a very vibrant and exciting, if sometimes hair-raising time spent there – the birth of Nelson Mandela’s “rainbow nation” with his release from 28 years incarceration and the first free election which saw him become SA’s first black president. As I am the only hearing person in a deaf family, I can use sign language – and interpreted live news of the election coverage to the world – an incredible experience I’ll never forget and am so grateful for! The Gift of the Weaver, 1997, Mixed media on paperwork, 4’x4’ (private collection) My artwork from this time reflects the very serious socio-political events which dominated the press and our everyday lives, but also the amazing colours, textures and most importantly the stories of ordinary people, their adventures and human endeavours and resilience which never ceased to impress me. It is the story-telling aspect of making my artwork which has become central to everything I do, and the latest body of work – The Emmanuelle Collection is no exception. The concept was born last summer, when my daughter Emmanuelle popped into my studio and asked me to draw her naked as a gift for her boyfriend. She sat in a chair and arranged her hair over one shoulder and I drew her fast, with sweeping lines, fingers smudging and marks made with a putty rubber. Two hours later, she ran off with it straight to the framer. Her boyfriend was so happy! It occurred to me that this was a powerful idea – that in spite of idealised “photoshopped” images of female and male sexuality pumped out through mass media, women (or men) would have their own very personal ideas about how they want to be seen, or see themselves. Capturing this projection of desire in an artwork as a contemporary take on the boudoir painting tradition is proving to be very evocative and much admired. Stripped down to mainly black and white graphics, with some use of mixed media/colour – I focus on the capturing of the “essence” of the models who come into my studio. Sometimes the drawings are fast, and I use expressive mark-making and experience with a line to capture form, curves, structure in an economic and almost fashion-illustrative way – elegant and stylish. Other times, it is a much more lengthy study, where I can add tone, texture, describe form, fabric, pattern and latterly, adding accoutrements, fashion and detailing which the models might bring with them or which I collect from my travels (and wardrobe) in my studio. The days are fun, relaxed and quite often the stories told are intimate, funny, sad, amazing and moving… but none are re-told…unless specifically requested.. secrets remain secrets! Recently, I’ve printed a selection of these drawings in limited editions on fine papers and on brushed aluminium panels – which are very glamorous and striking and look amazing in contemporary interiors. I am planning a launch event with an exhibition of The Emmanuelle Collection in a central London gallery in the spring. Please do register your interest on my website. Otherwise, I look forward to meeting you at my Artisan Direct booth at Miami Spectrum. n Fish Nets, Limited edition (500) giclee print on brushed aluminium panel, 841mm x 1189mm For more info and to see other work, please visit my website: www.skyeholland.com Winter Spring2014 2015 35 53 Artist Profile 5458 New York City Miami Spring 2015 Winter 2014 5559 Artist Profile Rod Seeley Rod Seeley’s artwork and has been exhibited local community galleries and many online juried exhibitions. In 2012 Mr. Seeley started entering juried international exhibitions and has won awards for his work. His artwork has also been included in the Museum of Computer Art and The International Art Guide. – Abstract Art Showcase R od Seeley is a mixed technique Digital Artist and Photographer. The computer; a mouse and imagination are his tools. Vibrant colors, use of shapes and digital art mixed with photography, abstract and fractal art are the base for his creative artwork style. He is self-taught but does have an art background, and uses a variety of graphic and paint programs combined with Photoshop to create unique and colorful art. Mr. Seeley is a 3rd generation native Californian born in 1946 and raised in Southern California. His innovative creative talents have always been apparent having been an award winning Creative Director (Advertising Agency) in the 70’s to establishing one the countries first “Cruise Only” Travel companies in the mid 80’s. He started in 2010 experimenting with graphic and paint programs and has now created a style that is colorful and unique. Creative Circles, Fractal Art-Mixed Technique, On High Gloss Metal, 24 x 19” Believe, Fractal Art-Mixed TechniquePaint On High Gloss Metal, 19 x 24” 56 New York City Artist Statement I am a self-taught digital artist, always pushing my creative boundaries through my unique stylized Fractal Art & Digital Art creations. My passion is utilizing creative shapes and bright colors combined with dozens of special techniques to create truly unique artwork. Many of my pieces are enhanced using a customized digital paint (oil) technique. My artwork is designed to be printed on high gloss metal in a metal shadow frame, which adds an additional visual dimension to the artwork. The artwork has won many International Awards & Special Recognitions. I’m honored to have my artwork included in Volume VII of the “International Contemporary Masters” and Art Buzz “The 2013 Collection.” n Floating Leaf Rainbow, Fractal Art-Mixed Technique-Paint On High Gloss Metal, 24 x 19” Rotating Color Trails, Fractal Art-Mixed Technique-Paint On High Gloss Metal, 24 x 19” Red Glass Expressive, Fractal ArtMixed Technique On High Gloss Metal, 19 x 24” Color Spectrums, Fractal Art-Mixed Technique-Paint On High Gloss Metal, 24 x 19” ROD SEELEY Red Smile, Fractal Art-Mixed Technique On High Gloss Metal, 24 x 19” Imagine It - #5, Fractal Art-Mixed Technique, On High Gloss Metal, 19 x 24” Yellow Sun Trails, Fractal Art-Mixed Technique-Paint On High Gloss Metal, 19 x 24” Artistic Layers 1, Fractal Art-Mixed Technique-Paint, On High Gloss Metal, 24 x 19” www.RodSeeleyArt.com | [email protected] | 818-292-1236 Spring 2015 57 PETER J. SUCY Top left: Kodak Product Development Top right: Smoke & Mirrors Bottom: Mendon Drain www.peterjsucy.com | [email protected] 58 New York City Artist Profile Peter J. Sucy P eter, a 1980 BFA graduate of RIT’s School of Photography, within just a few years would become a pioneer in fields of digital art and photography. Purchasing a Macintosh 128K computer for his part time, freelance photo business in 1984. He added a single element, ThunderScan “scanner” to his ImageWriter printer the following year, and began scanning his photos and editing them in MacPaint. The beginnings of digital photography. Employed by the Eastman Kodak Company for more than twentyseven years, Peter became one of the original members of Kodak’s Electronic Photography Division when it was founded, in 1986. Realizing the coming digitization of photography before many at Kodak, Peter utilized the new desktop drawing and publishing tools at his disposal, to create hundreds of documents and proposals. Most were designed to persuade Kodak management to abandon the analog image path they were on, in favor of digital image capture and storage devices. Eventually, he succeeded and was tapped to draft Kodak’s first digital product strategy in 1989. Peter would also conceive and design a number of the very first digital products Kodak shipped, holds a key patent on digital camera preview technology and suggested establishing the world’s first digital imaging training facility, the Center for Creative Imaging, in Camden, Maine. Peter was among the first Adobe Photoshop Digital Masters, named in 1993. His artwork was featured on the Adobe Photoshop 3.0 CDROM and in 1994, at a Digital Master’s group show at the Ansel Adams Gallery in San Francisco. Peter taught digital photography workshops for Kodak during much of the 1990’s. Before symptoms from fibromyalgia led to his early departure from Kodak in 2001, Peter had been consulting for Kodak’s Dynamic Imaging Division. There he learned the intricacies of lenticular imaging, and pioneered the use of digital photographic 3D capture and 3D modeling programs for the creation of lenticular images at Kodak. Peter created a number of 3D lenticular images for clients such as, Pepsi, R. J. Reynolds, Pfizer, Martell Liquor, FAO Schwartz, Purina, and Disney. While his recovery continues, Peter has persisted in his work at his art and craft, learning to print his own lenticular images, as well as designing an LED backlit frame system for displaying his 3D lenticular transparencies. At age 60, Peter has just begun to promote his work, and hopes to make a new career of his passion for creating images. A detailed history of Peter’s journey of digital discovery at Kodak is available on his web site: www.peterjsucy.com/DigHist.htm n Night Stalker Lenticular printing is a 2D on 3D print technology that uses complex multi-image processing techniques and a special lens sheet laminate, to play back a series of frames as the viewer moves relative to the piece. Or if the piece is small enough, they moves the piece in their hand. 3D is one possibility, animation is another, depending on lens orientation. The advent of digital image processing is the reason lenticular technology is making a resurgence, more than a hundred years after it’s introduction. Photo-Flo Spring 2015 59 Artist Profile Patricia Brintle PATRICIA BRINTLE 1446 Utopia Parkway Whitestone, NY 11257 www.patriciabrintle.com [email protected] T he art Patricia Brintle is vibrant and reminds the viewer of her native Haiti because she lets her rich culture guide her creative muse. Her paintings are infused with complex symbolism yet seem, at first glance, simple. Her style is as varied as her subjects but she favors bright and vivid colors as she explores the universality of human emotions in every one of her artworks. Many of Brintle’s works address strong issues such as nuclear disarmament, the Holocaust and the Haitian earthquake. Several of her works grace the covers and pages of books, magazines, and publications. Brintle belongs to several art organizations and exhibits internationally. Brintle is also the president of From Here to Haiti, Ltd. (FHTH), a non-profit all-volunteer charity doing repair work in Haiti. FHTH concentrates its efforts in the provinces where the need is greatest and provides a hands-on approach wherein board members personally travel to the site to work with the community to finish the work in about a week. FHTH completed over 18 projects of varying sizes within a four year period. Fundraising efforts are varied but Brintle donates most of the profits from the sale of her artworks to From Here to Haiti. n Put Out Into Deep Water, 36x24, Acrylic on canvas, 2013 60 New York City Home’s Awaiting, 48x16, Acrylic on masonite, 2015 Artist Profile The Visitation, 24x36, Acrylic on canvas, 2014 Maternal Reflection, 36x24, Acrylic on canvas, 2014 Patience, 36x24, Acrylic on canvas, 2014 Spring 2015 61 Artist Profile Olivia Cisneros Villanueva I discovered San Antonio artist Olivia Villanueva through one of the art eNewsletters I get on a regular basis. Not only did the work I saw speak to me, I was also impressed by her story. Shortly after finishing high school she married and raised a family. It was only later in life, when her kids were grown, that her art career blossomed and flourished. Her work has been featured extensively in shows and galleries throughout Texas. She has also been featured in numerous publications including USA Today, and this month will see her work featured in a major exhibition in New York. n 62 New York City O ur first interview took place in the spring of 2011 and from the start I found her paintings very exciting and dramatic. This is a follow up to that first interview. EN: What are you working on now that has you jazzed? OLIVIA VILLANUEVA: Right now I am very excited to be showing my new paintings at the Artexpo in New York. It has been a major showcase for 37 years and is the largest international gathering of qualified trade buyers, gallery owners, art dealers, interior designers as well as architects and corporate art buyers. Bernard Solo Fine Art in New York City will be representing me there this April 23‐26 2015 and Art Basel Miami Florida in December. The first day of the Expo NewYork exhibition will be closed to the public and open only to museum art collectors, art dealers, serious art collectors and the media as well as celebrity VIPs. Bernard Solo Fine Art will be in the prime location in the very center of the main pavilion at Pier 94, 711 12th Ave. New York, NY. 10019‐5399 EN: Tell us more about your New York exhibition. OLIVIA VILLANUEVA: The Artexpo New York will also be promoting a two-page article about my art in their magazine The Artist Showcase, I am very blessed and thankful for such an amazing opportunity to let thousands of art dealers, museum collectors and many others from all over the world to consider owning an Olivia original. EN: W e did this in 2011... what have you been working on the past three years? OLIVIA VILLANUEVA: The past three years have been a spiral. I was not able to really paint for over a year and a half, due to a bout with sepsis that turned into septic shock in a matter of hours. The doctors gave me little to no chance of survival and had to revive me when all my organs starting shutting down. I had no idea I was dying! Until I started seeing the tears of my children. My words to them and in my heart were, this is just a test from God, pass it and you will see a miracle. Well I’m the living proof of what faith and believing can do. Just ask my doctors. They still can not believe I survived. I am still dealing with the aftereffects, but that is not keeping me from creating. OliviaArtist.com EN: Do you have a favorite medium and why? EN: Where can people see more of your work? OLIVIA VILLANUEVA: If I were to say I have a favorite medium then I would limit myself to so many other outlets to painting. I use many things to create, from found objects to paper. My favorite is to create with what is near to my heart. If it’s not, then it is just a painting. EN: What kind of music do you listen to while you paint? OLIVIA VILLANUEVA: I listen to all types of music. When I paint figurative I like listening to Jazz, depending on the type of painting I’m working on a the time. I love working in high heels when I’m abstract painting. It gives me a sense of freedom. No rules, no boundaries. OLIVIA VILLANUEVA: My new insights this year are moving forward with my art, not allowing any distractions when it comes to creating. The past few years have been the hardest, but keep in mind that we are the captain of our own ship. I stay away from negativity and keep to myself. I prefer to stay away from the art scene to create from my own being with no other influences. Finding one’s self is most important when it comes to painting. I become one with the paint as it leaves my brush onto the canvas. This is the mystery to my creativity when it comes to art. There is no substitute to capturing the raw art in motion. n Spring 2015 63 Artist Profile James Wilner J ames Wilner is a third generation Washingtonian who has devoted the last ten years to painting. Educated at the University of Pennsylvania, where he received both a Bachelors’ and Masters’ degree in Architecture, James, an award-winning and published architect, has spent 40 years running a successful architecture practice in Bethesda, MD. James has been drawing his entire life. Largely self-taught, and using the training My Son The Doctor, 64 x 88” 64 New York City he received in his design background, he continues to explore new and subtle ways of artistic impression. Well–established as a figurative artist, James Wilner’s portraits border on the abstract, always pushing the envelope, seeking a way to portray the human expression in a new light. n For more on James, visit his website at: www.jameswilner.com JAMES WILNER Top left: The Connoisseur, 60 x 36” Top right: Mikey, 48 x 30” Botom left: Palm Beach, 72 x 48” Botom right: Thursdays Poet, 48 x 96” www.jameswilner.com Spring 2015 65 Artist Profile Enigmatic, 100x120 cms. Medium- Acrylic Neerja Bhatt P ainting is a passion for me – anything I see or feel, I feel like putting it down in colors! That’s the reason I experiment with different themes – landscape, figures, still form, abstract – the themes and the colors are the expression of my thoughts. Nature, of course, is a great inspiration for me, but so are the many other things in life – people, places, experiences. This wide interest and a certain restlessness within me also makes me dabble in different mediums – oil, acrylic, watercolor or sketches. It’s like something clicks when an idea comes in my mind – if I see a beautiful person, I feel like sketching, if I visit a place, 66 New York City I feel like putting it down in water colors, when the weather is changing, I feel like doing an abstract, if I am in a contemplative mood, I paint the Buddha. Variety is the spice of life and when I’m inspired to paint, sometimes I just don’t want to stop! To me, a canvas is the door, and a brush is the key - I open the door and I’m transported to a different world - a world of tranquility and creativity. If you like any of my creations, please feel free to contact me. Or maybe, you want your idea reflected in a painting. Whichever way, I am happy to share my contact details in case you would like to get in touch with me: Om, 80x100 cms. Medium- Acrylic on canvas For more on Neerja: email- [email protected] Website- www.neerjabhatt.com Facebook- www.facebook.com/pages/Neerjas Art/420701554652385 Neerja Bhatt The Warmth Of The Morning Sun, (2) 50x70 cms. Medium- Acrylic Reflection, 40x90 cms. Medium- Acrylic on canvas Spring 2015 67 Artist Profile Paul Ygartua Exceprts from Paul’s limited edition book Ygartua by Petru Rusu TheYgartua next painting will be the best. It has been an on-going struggle is a painter most often translating the bold strokes of his life into more subtle finer strokes of his work. His bold strokes and color show his for the perfection - being able to break through mental and physical extraordinary ability and confidence to work in any medium, any style. barriers, pushing the envelope to realizing and developing that vision until ultimately a style is born. Then taking that style and working it until it cannot be developed further and only then moving on to adapt this to new ideas, taking you on a journey of versatility and determination to the next painting. C omposition, color, perspective, form. Paul Ygartua told me those were the four things he looked for when creating or evaluating art. This came in response to a question of mine about a new painting by another artist in my collection. He then went on to give a detailed academic like analysis of the canvas. Paul is not a teacher: he has been a full time painter for the last forty years. He has never taken students, but he can talk academic art with ease and insight. He is a genius. These are a few of my perspectives of that genius. Paul paints 8 to 10 hours every day. If people are watching in a public place; like his gallery, that’s fine with him. He is supremely confident and goes about the business of creation. If someone interrupts to ask a question he is always poised, with a friendly insightful response; but he keeps painting. Ten-hour stretches are not uncommon. I remember reading about a famous Canadian artist who couldn’t take the pressure of having to produce 18 paintings a year for his gallery; Paul is prolific and creates new works daily. He says a good artist should be able to paint fast. The great ones do. Gainsborough, like Paul, rarely went over the same brush stroke twice. At an Ygartua show, about 2 years ago, I was approached by an architect who commented that the artist was a genius. I asked how so? He said, ‘look at all these paintings (there were dozens) there is not one mistake, everyone is perfectly balanced, colored and in perspective.’ He proceeded to go through the collection showing examples, adding ‘you can’t look at one picture and say ‘that color is wrong or that line is off.’ He was right. Ygartua is a genius. Paul is best known to the general public in our part of the world as a muralist. Paintings 20 feet by 50 feet on the sides of public buildings. He does them free hand! No projectors, no graph grids, just give him a high lifter, a brush and paint. The ability to freely compose on such a large scale is amazing. Those who wonder what it would have been like to watch Michelangelo at work have their chance; Paul should sell tickets. Artist Statement 7 The next painting will be the best. It has been an on-going struggle for perfection - being able to break through mental and physical barriers, pushing the envelope to realizing and developing that vision until ultimately a style is born. Then taking that style and working it until it cannot be developed further and only then moving on to adapt this to new ideas, taking you on a journey of versatility and determination to the next painting. n [email protected] | www.ygartua.com | www.thisisartlondon.com | www.thisisartparis.com 68 New York City Non-Toxic, 2011 Acrylic on canvas, 122 x 122 cm | 48 x 48 in non toXIc 2011 acrYLIc on canVaS 122X122 cM | 48X48 In My Father Taught Me, 2012, Acrylic on canvas, 122 x 122 cm | 48 x 48 in MY FathEr tauGht ME 2012 acrYLIc on canVaS 122X122 cM | 48X48 In PrIVatE coLLEctIon PrIVatE coLLEctIon 22 B B King, 2002, Acrylic on canvas, 122 x 122 cm | 48 x 48 in b b kInG 2002 acrYLIc on canVaS 122X122 cM | 48X48 In 51 Hidden Spirit, 2006, Acrylic on canvas, 122 x 122 cm | 48 x 48 in hIddEn SPIrIt 2006 acrYLIc on canVaS 122X122 cM | 48X48 In PrIVatE coLLEctIon 62 124 The Monarchy, 2012, Acrylic on canvas, 122 x 200 cm | 48 x 78 in Spring 2015 69 Artist Profile Marlene Luce Tremblay T remblay is a photographer-artist who, as a result of extensive travels throughout the Middle East, was able to offer an artistic “archaeology” of the Arab world. She began this journey with explorations of Egypt and exhibited works both in Montreal and in Cairo, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Canada and Egypt. Throughout her career, Tremblay exhibited in Montreal, New York, Paris, London, Tunis and Algiers. Today, while her passion for photography is being focused on the city where she now lives, Tremblay brings to light the beauty of the natural world in conversation with the cityscape. After working only in film photography for many years, she now uses digital photography to tint her images highlighting the painterly aspect of her imagery. Tremblay’s quest is to create art that questions the meaning of existence in time and place and the meaning of being in this world. The sense of belonging is a difficult concept to grasp for she claims that her identity is not defined by where she comes from but rather by the places where she has been and, most importantly, the people she met. While uncovering the many facets of her own existence, Tremblay strives to return to the source and to uncover the multi-layered meanings of life. While traveling throughout Europe and the Middle East, she was able to capture the multi-layered aspects of different cultures and the history of great civilizations. n 70 New York City Iconic Egypt Series marleneluce-tremblay.squarespace.com | www.facebook.com/marlene.l.tremblay | marlenelucetremblayblogspot.com Spring 2015 71 Artist Profile ROMAINE KAUFMAN: ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONIST ARTIST Artist Statement Elements of Expression explode energy and life, celebrating life’s nuances while enticing the viewers eye. Miami 7248 New York City This bold language of art displays an individuality and breadth of style that speaks directly to a need for art that truly connects with the viewer, forming both a lasting expression and a lasting impression. A carefully selected grouping of perspectives creates a visual conversation that is both contemplative, meditative, powerful and honest. n Spring2014 2015 Winter 73 49 BEA L AST Untitled I 2013, Mat Emulsion/Graphite powder, 40 x 40’’ Untitled II 2013, Emulsion/Graphite powder on canvas, 40 x 40’’ Untitled IV 2013, Emulsion/Graphite powder on canvas, 40 x 40’’ Untiled V 2013, Emulsion/Graphite Powder on canvas, 40 x 40’’ www.re-title.com/artists/bea-last.asp | [email protected] 74 54 New York City Miami Artist Profile Bea Last B ea lives and works in southwest Scotland and has exhibited her work widely across the U.K and abroad. Her most recent solo show was at The Linenhall Art Centre, County Mayo, Ireland. Her work is held in both the private and corporate sector with clients such as The Corinthia Hotel London, The Dokkae project, Jeddah, Club quarters Hotel, Central Loop, Chicago,Illanois and Ballymore properties, Canary Wharf, London. She says of her practice: “I am essentially concerned with the exploration of paint onto canvas and my relationship to it, its application and the dynamics thereof. Working with the process of addition and subtraction, movement/stillness and energy, while evolving a series of paintings concurrently.” “They are inspired by my landscape, by which I mean the space I inhabit and the landscape that I journey through. About connection, placement and relationship. How we relate to our world and in turn, how it relates to us. My paintings are to be spent time with. To converse with. To build a relationship to and to perceive their changing nature throughout time.” “My sketchbooks are a vital part of my creative process allowing freedom of mark making without self consciousness. The fluid energy created through these drawings are crucial to my practice and help me stay connected to the paintings that i am working on, helping to move them forward in their development.’’ Bea’s sketchbooks have also been exhibited in ‘SKETCH 2011’. A national selected drawing exhibition, at Rabley Drawing centre, Wiltshire, U.K and ‘The moment of privacy has passed’: sketchbooks by contemporary artists, designers and architects, at the Usher Gallery,Lincoln,U.K. n Further examples of her work and an update on her profile can be seen at: www.re-title.com/artists/bea-last.asp “My paintings are to be spent time with. To converse with. To build a relationship to and to perceive their changing nature throughout time.” Spring 2014 2015 Winter 75 55 Artist Profile ABE ORDOVER A lawyer, professor and mediator by trade, Mr. Ordover became a professional photographer fifteen years ago. Since entering the field, he has had major solo exhibitions in New York City, at Georgia Tech and the Fernbank Museum of Natural History in Atlanta, and the Parthenon Museum in Nashville. Other solo shows were in Raleigh, Dallas, and Tallahassee. He has appeared in a great many group shows in San Diego, Atlanta, Palo Alto, Minneapolis, Philadelphia and elsewhere. In San Diego, he curates the Ordover Gallery in the San Diego Natural History Museum where he has fashioned more than twenty shows featuring some of the great photographers in the world. His own “Color of Water”, “Autumn”, and “Abstraction” shows have appeared there. He began as a landscape photographer, a genre that he still loves. In addition he is widely known for his reflection pieces, abstractions and a wide array of animal impressions. His work has been the subject of a major profile in Shutterbug. Critic Karen Chambers said of his work, “the abstract qualities of his photographs…make him more of an impressionist than a realist.” William Zimmer, contributing critic of the New York Times noted that Ordover captures peak, emotional experiences. His most recent solo show was at the University of San Diego. He also recently exhibited in a joint show at L Street Gallery with renowned glass maker Michelle Kurtis Cole. 66 76 Miami New York City The abstract qualities of his “photographs… make him more of ” an impressionist than a realist. This page. Left: Into the Abyss Right: Namibia Morning Moon Opposite page. Top left: Dune Top right: Moraine Lake Bottom: Dawn Rainbow Spring 2015 6777 Winter 2014 Artist Profile WATSART™ “ Through the use of different types of medium, papers, objects, fabrics and other items, I am able to be imaginative and creative in my approach to artistic presentation. ” Cedarbrook Pond http://fineartamerica.com/profiles/lydia-watsart.html 78 74 New York City Miami | [email protected] Watsart W atsart enjoys working with different types of medium in her approach to artistic presentation. “With temperaments varying from placidly involving to fiercely kinetic, Watsart explores myriad avenues of visual expression, actualizing effects as diverse as her intentions and procedures. An underlying zeal for the arrangement of impact and mood distinguishes her quest for significant and pleasurable creation.” –Book Art Press Just as Picasso had his blue period, so, too, Watsart had her black & white period; 2005 EN REALTE` ARTE exhibitions showcased artwork in which Watsart combined a limited palette along with recycled materials to create her paintings. Watsart studied with Nevad Art Studio and has also attended Ducret School of Art. She has received numerous awards for her artistic contributions. A resident of New Jersey, Watsart has been creating art and exhibiting her Dayworker work since 1990. Her art has been shown in venues throughout the Metropolitan NY area and has taken her as far afield as Beijing, China. n For more information, visit her website at: www.watsart.com Eastside Playground Spring2014 2015 Winter 79 75 Artist Profile Profile Artist GREGORYJOHNSON I am an artist whose work, for the past 40 years, has focused on figurative themes which have been cast in bronze and stainless steel. The current contemporary set of works is built upon the concepts of traditional works. With regard to the modern works, instead of sculpting things that we see and are familiar with, such as a person, I often chose to depict elements we people feel, but cannot necessarily touch or quantify. The warmth of the sun, the secure and loving feeling of a Family, the strength of nature; these are just a few of the elements I’m touching on. Wildflowers, 21 x 13 x 5”, features 3 moveable panels of flowers, in a limited edition of 15. His ‘n’ Hers, 30 x 26 x 2.5”, in a limited edition of 15. Birds Of Paradise, 21 x 13 x 5”, features 3 moveable panels of flowers, in a limited edition of 15. M y sculpture is a metaphor that exceeds the physical presence of the work. It is more literal than much of the abstract work out there, and is somewhat reductive in its presentation. In these works, industrial created components are placed in a formal, yet irregular and lyrical juxtaposition, thus suggesting a transformation from utility to non-utility material. I chose the circle as a thematic symbol because of its cleanliness of shape, presence in our every day life, and the fact that it has no corners - just one beautiful line with no beginning, middle or end. An incredible spiritual shape, that invites interpretation, and is so very common in our landscape. The Dance is a work that references mother nature in motion - whether the warmth of the sun or figurative movement, it suggests circular movement. M y lyrical, caressing rings form beautiful contemporary sculptures that suggest the pathways of life, the forces of nature or emotions of our humanity. I use the entire circle, whole and complete, contrast it with segments of the circle, and yet other times will use other geometric shapes to make circles... quite a mix of contradictions. 42 80 Miami New York City Books Flying Off The Shelf, 87 x 48 x 33”, installed at the Fon-du-lac District Library, E. Peoria, IL. The Dance, 72 x 60 x 58”, installed at the Sabre Centre for Health, Suwanee, GA. T hese sculptures, constructed of high quality brushed stainless steel are mounted on granite bases. The works offer exciting views from any angle, and are reflective of their environment - literally. Place them next to a bed of flowers, and those flowers are reflected in the metal. The works are ideal for interior or exterior placement, and offer a lifetime of minimal maintenance . TRADITIONAL BRONZE WORKS ARE AT www.gregoryjohnson.biz MODERN SCULPTURES ARE AT www.moderngj.com COMMISSIONS INVITED Notes Floating Off The Podium, 96 x 36 x 30”, currently in inventory. Winter 2014 43 Spring 2015 81 Artist Profile Metropolitan Love, 23 x 23” Tanja Playner B orn to paint, the Austrian artist Tanja Playner has been guided by her creative environment. In youth she was fascinated by the Pop art culture of Andy Warhol, the philosophical fantasy world of the surrealist Salvador Dali, the rich colors of Gustav Klimt and the shapes and abstract expressionism of Vassily Kandinsky. From those early influences Tanja has carved out her own quasi Pop style incorporating the life of the city, nature and people who are always in the center of what Tanja depicts. work. Tanja sends a message of love, joy and optimism through her work. Tanja Playner is considered to day one of the great Pop Artists of contemporary art. Her works are unique and unmistakable! Her collectors love her work, laugh along side her as they view her work. Happiness is her key. Tanja believes her art should bring happiness and glee to those who view her Her artworks are a combination of various designs, interesting and colorful, as a story is told. In her artworks, the artist is always having fun, enjoying the city, the people in it as well as the objects of the city Having exhibited in more than twenty countries, Tanja has brought joy through her paintings to hundreds of thousands of people. Called by the American author John Pirillo, the new Andy Warhol, Tanja continues to entertain through her work. A mixture of Warhol and Picasso can describe her work. – architecture, lifestyle, fashion, cars and nature in order to add a glamorous game of life as a message to her viewers. Tanja’s work was also displayed at the Museum of the Americas in Miami, FL, the Latino Art Museum in Pomona, CA, and in October at the Carrousel du Louvre in Paris. Night Dreams, 23 x 23” 68 82 Miami New York City Mona Lisa, 39.8 x 47.3” Gloria on the Balcony, 23 x 23” Marilyn, 23 x 31.5” Winter Spring 2014 2015 69 83 Artist Profile Miguel Hine M iami artist Miguel Hine, 37, is soft-spoken, intelligent, articulate and highly introspective. Those personality traits transfer well to his work. His most recent creations being readied for this years’ NYC Art Expo are vivid and powerful, as if his introspection gets nurtured and explodes onto the canvas. At age 16, Hine was accepted into the highly competitive New World School of the Arts in Miami. In his junior year, he returned to Costa Rica where he spent two years exploring the ecology of his homeland, a visit that imprinted his artistic sensibilities. “Costa Rica is a biologically intense country, so incredibly inspiring. It echoes in my work, in my colors and strokes, and the way I approach the canvas.” The artist often uses his hands instead of brushes. “I like to get physically involved with my painting. I like that adventure.” Later, he completed formal training at Maryland Institute College of Art. Playing on the fundamentals he learned in art school – composition, structure, color theory, line – his work takes on a new level of abstract expressionism. “When people look at my work, they all see different things, but I’ve got them thinking. I am a Renaissance artist – a classical artist. I needed to learn to draw and paint from life before I became an abstract expressionist.” Art speaks its own language. “I look at a piece, I can hear the artist’s story,” says Hine. “And art has always spoken to me very deeply. Art is a gift, something I am blessed with. Art chose me.” Hine honors the gift by giving into the spontaneity of the process. “I enjoy it that way. I let the work be what it wants to be.” Painting abstract is often more difficult than realism for Hine. “When painting realistically, I have a point of reference. I can see where I’m going, right or wrong. Painting abstract deals a lot with stepping back and imagining where it can go.” Lately, his painting has been more of a therapeutic meditation. “I’m not thinking about what the piece is going to be. I’m not thinking of the piece at all. I’m just flowing. I love to paint freely.” Hine recently won an art battle hosted by the World Wide Arts Federation in Atlanta. The American Idol of the art world type contest challenged artists to a costumed and themed production where contestants drew live models on stage. Most of the contestants had planned in advance, came with friends and crews, and had well thought out costumes. Hine entered at the spur of the moment, showed up with three friends, very few art supplies and a makeshift costume. That performance earned him bragging rights, a $1,000 check and first place in the Last Man Standing Artist’s Battle. “Walking in not knowing a single soul and then having the whole crowd cheering for me; it was one of the coolest things I’ve ever done. n Charlotte Miller Local Color – Miami For more on Artist Miguel Hine: www.miguelhine.com Mixed Media, from varoius darwing material’s such as charcol , Inda ink’s to Acylic paint on a custom craddled maple wooden canvas, Triptych painting of 3 24”x 30”x 3” deep, 2015 Property of the Ortega Family Art collection. Key Biscayne FL 84 New York City Artist Profile Mixed media on on a custom craddled maple wooden canvas., 9”x12”, 2015 Property of the Paola Bernat permenat Art Collection Mixed media, sand , gel’s and texture’s. Oil paint on a custom craddled maple wooden canvas, 36”x48” Propertity of the Michael Oliva Art Collection. Miami FL. Abstract Drawing Seris, India Ink on Arches paper, 18”x26”, 2015 For Sale Spring 2015 85 Artist Profile 86 New York City Featured Artist Spring 2015 87 Artist Profile Marko Stout B ased in Manhattan, the popular mixed-media and installation artist Marko Stout is best known for his fierce juxtaposition of the contemporary female and a madly debauched New York City. His current series are a reinvention of the femme fatale motif, exposing the modern woman’s powerful role within today’s uberpaced world. In his latest series, the woman reveal a strong sensuality in contrast with the roughness of their industrial urban backgrounds. Through these depictions, Marko plunges the viewer deeply into a hauntingly seductive and an often confrontational relationship with the subject, creating an edgy examination of creative powers of the individual to strive beyond social, cultural, and moral contexts. Born 1962 in a turbulent South Africa, Marko Stout’s journey was not the path of a conventional artist. As a young child the Stout family relocated to America, eventually settling in a small summertime resort town along the New Jersey seashore. Upon completing his primary education and influences by the writings of Kerouac, Marko took a year traveling throughout the United States and Europe. Ultimately, returning to the States for his university education, earning degrees in biology and medicine. His early vocation was that of a practicing orthopedic doctor and medical illustrator in New York City, this career was to be short lived, as karma was pushing him toward more creative pursuits. Marko moved to Chelsea Girl In Hat, 2015 88 New York City California and developed a passion for painting and the arts while living on San Francisco Bay aboard a houseboat in the bohemian community of Sausalito. But, like the proverbial moth to a flame, Marko returned to New York City, where he deeply immersed himself as a part of the city’s emerging downtown art scene. Drawing inspiration from the aesthetics of pop legends Andy Warhol, Richard Hamilton and Jeff Koons, as well as non-narrative French and Italian cinema and the metaphor rich works of Nietzsche, Marko Stout established a fashionable approach to art-making that truly speaks to the cultural nuances of our time. Through these influences, Marko developed his trademark urban-eqsue imagery and bold use of color, which capture the force and dynamism of city life. As viewers are plunged into his obscure scenes, they become lost in the electric colors and dynamic imagery, which often ignite against organic sensuality. The resulting impact is a stunning contemporary spectacle! n Marko Stout Studio & Gallery New York City and Berlin (212) 390-1165 • [email protected] www.MarkoStout.com Innocense Out of Style, 2015 Art Is A Lie, 2015 Spring 2015 89 JAS O GAL LER The Jas Y, D o 585 n Ty l .58 EAL 6.3 er Gall 535 er ER • fa y • 12 25 x 58 & Ge 5 ww w.ja s onty NT YLE ART CON SUL TAN T .58 6.8 orge B us 555 • ja h Blvd ., Su son @ja son ite #2 •D tyle r.ne elra t y Be ach , Flo rida ler.n et R Visit us at booth #267 BRANDON SINES Marilyn, 18”x24”, screen print on coventry rag Simpsons, 18”x24”, screen print on coventry rag Janet, 18”x24”, screen print on coventry rag Nicholas Parish: photography Lennon, 18”x24”, screen print on coventry rag Brandon sines, born in los angeles in 1986, is a painter and street artist. Sines grew up in toronto, canada, and moved to nyc in 2010, creating his iconic character, frank ape, that same year. Frank apes can be found painted, wheat pasted and stickered in nyc. Sines first solo presentation was in 2013 at the living gallery in new york. Frank ape art has been purchased by people all over the world, including japan, germany, bangkok. Notable collectors include solange, who owns 4 original franks pieces and photographer richard misrach who has several non-frank pieces. Sines has no formal art education. Sines lives and works in new york city. w w w.sinesar t.co m Deborah J. Mikell D eborah Mikell came out of the womb with a crayon in her hand. Her career in art began in 1972 following graduation from Pascack Valley high school in Hillsdale, New Jersey. She then worked out of West New York as a freelance designer for an embroideries company. Her first commissioned mural occupied the walls of Dweet’s North, a popular pub located in Emerson, New Jersey. Within a year, these diverse talents earned a solid reputation, which followed her to the Jersey Shore in 1975. Although Deborah’s career was placed on hold while she raised two sons, she kept her hand in various school and community projects. In the early 90’s she returned to her education, honing her skills both as an artist and a business woman, enabling her to create her own company, DJM Design. In conjunction with her canvas pieces, she specializes in murals, faux finishes, hand painted furniture and custom finishes for cabinetry. Her work has been featured in various design publications throughout the metropolitan area, widening the scope of her commissions to include the entire East coast from New York to Florida. n e: deborahmikell.com p: 732.674.0712 w: paintingsilove.com/artist/djmikell Spring 2015 93 Artist Profile Suki Maguire O nce again, Suki McGuire treats us to a series of works that Santa Claus the imagination with bold strokes of dark and light, hinting at shapes both human and ethereal and pulling us through the two dimensional surface of the canvas into the mysterious depths of a multidimensional world. There is a great potential for discovery in McGuire’s world of symbols, but a passing glance will not do: you have to allow your gaze to linger on this part and that of each painting so that your subconscious will have the opportunity to retrieve the elusive forms that seem to be hiding within the more of these shapes. This holds true even in those works that incorporate letters of the Korean or Latin alphabet, which serves as glyphs barring some symbolic meaning that goes beyond the mere representation of sound. spend some time letting your mind play with in each painting and you’ll come away with a much richer understanding of what Suki Maguire’s art has to show us. n 94 New York City S u k i M a g u i r e S u k i M ag u i re i s rep res en ted in Ne w Yor k Cit y by Ber nard S olco G aller y. w w w. solcogaller y. com Spring 2015 95 Barbara Baker-Bury [email protected] | 802-257-1029(h) | 413-522-9166 (c) | barbarabakerbury.com ANN BEAM (705) 377 6088 [email protected] www.annbeam.com Artist Profile Bernard Solco The World’s First Talking Paintings I “Bernard Solco is years ahead of his time” Ivan Karp, OK Harris Gallery n the current age of accelerated technological advancement, one seldom has the opportunity to reflect upon the nature of the changes this advancement brings until well after they have been effected. The impact that this condition has had in the last fifty years on the fine arts, which are historically resistant to interface, has yet to be calculated. One artist’s focus on this issue, and more specifically the technology of the bar code, has drawn the attention of both the art community and the bar code industry. The works comment on the power of marketing to transform products into entrenched institutions, to ingrain them into the very fabric of a culture. The paintings would seem to suggest that the consumer is as much shaped by the innumerable products and marketing strategies offered to it, as it is a player in shaping them. The bar code is the symbol of this socioeconomic union. It is the ubiquitous postscript to every human transaction. The images allow for a new awareness of the bar code, compelling one to consider the origins and ramifications of a technology which is so widespread that it has almost come to be taken for granted. Solco’s work is able to exist due to the advent of digital technology. This highlights the manner in which art and technology evolve in conjunction. Solco’s latest works are a series of matrix barcodes that are encrypted with messages and are actually able to communicate with the viewer through an app that is downloaded to any smartphone. These are the world’s first talking paintings. New York artist Bernard Solco’s depictions of popular American product bar codes illustrates the extent to which art and technology have become intertwined. These impressive oversize paintings have been precisely scaled and rendered so as to remain scannable. Yet, Solco’s works are not simple depictions of bar codes; in their altered format and context, they manifest new meaning. His “American Product Series” recently exhibited in Soho NYC, explores the ramifications of the influence which technology exerts over American society. 100 New York City Bernard Solco has united the two distinct roles of consumer and artist. Representing a range of popular products from Welch’s Grape Jelly and Kellogg’s Corn Flakes to Elmer’s Glue and Kodak Film. Solco’s series delineates the buying habits of a specific sector of the American public. Bernard Solco’s barcode paintings and prints have been acquired by private collectors and prominent corporations worldwide. His bar code art is currently on display in the executive boardroom of America Online on Madison Avenue in NYC, Sony Music Headquarters in NYC, Eastman Kodak Company, and many other corporate collections worldwide. B ernard Solco is also an accomplished portrait artist and has been commissioned to paint original portraits for some of the world’s most famous celebrities and dignitaries including Brook Shields, Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani, George Steinbrenner, Count Alexis de Limburg Stirum, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, and many others. His portraits have an incredible likeness of each subject he paints and a unique Pop Minimalist style which makes him one of the most sought after portrait painters in the world. Contact the studio for available works, commissions & more information on the artist. Bernard Solco Fine Art web: www.bernardsolco.com tel: + 1. 212.308.4981 email: [email protected] Spring 2015 101 CATHERINE MAYELL Fine Art and Prints | Catherinemayell.com/art | 781.820.8063 PAULA HAAPALAHTI FINLAND [email protected] +35840-8441293 www.paulahaapalahti.fi Booth #267 Elegance-series Spring 2015 103 Artist Profile Cindy Avroch C indy Avroch is a multi-talented, internationally known artist, who began her career by following in her mother’s artistic footsteps. Among her earlier accomplishments, she received a degree in textile design from the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City, and a scholarship to study at Winchester School of Art in England. Cindy worked as a studio artist and then for many years an art director in New York City’s fashion industry. Her designs could be found in major department stores and specialty shops across the country. Working directly with the Walt Disney Co., Warner Bros., United Media and Nickelodeon, she created licensed print collections for the men’s, women’s and children’s clothing markets. Her unique approach and vision, refusing to be locked into a singular form of expression, enabled her to create and direct the artists on her team to develop collections that tripled sales for the companies that employed her. She left the fashion industry to care for her special needs second son and found herself a stay at home mom for the first time. She began designing fine art lighting and coordinated decoupage tabletop accessories, utilizing her original artwork. Commissioned to create collections for major 104 New York City cultural institutions, the Chicago and Longwood Botanical Gardens, The Newseum in Washington, DC, multiple aquariums in the United States and a holiday program for Saks 5th Avenue, it wasn’t long before her artwork sold in high-end gift and home décor stores nationwide. But Cindy’s first love was always drawing, painting and sculpting. In Cindy’s work, you can see a celebration both of the real and the imaginative. Her eye for detail, precision, composition and color explain why her drawings and paintings have been described as “spot on.” She is from the school of thought that in order to be a great abstract painter, you must be a traditional one first. And she thrives in challenging and pushing the limits every day. This is why you can catch Cindy in her studio working on an innovative sculpture or mixed media piece, while waiting for the layers of one of her captivating oil paintings to dry. Cindy’s award-winning artwork is widely exhibited and collected. She was born in and currently resides in New York City. n Spring 2015 105 ARTISTS WANTED Park n Front Representation • Artist Profiles Art Show Participation Visual • ArtistNational Watsart Show Catalogues & Directories • Co-Op Advertising • Printed Materials http://fineartamerica.com/featured/park-n-front-watsart.html 106 New York City Contact Jayson Samuel [email protected] Stretched Canvases Fine Art Prints Greeting Cards Stretcher Bars: 1.50" x 1.50" or 0.625" x 0.625" Wrap Style: Black, White, or Mirrored Image Choose From Thousands of Available Frames, Mats, and Fine Art Papers All Cards are 5" x 7" and Include White Envelopes for Mailing and Gift Giving 8.00" x 4.88" $92.04 8.00" x 4.88" $63.50 10.00" x 6.13" $92.04 10.00" x 6.13" $63.50 12.00" x 7.38" $109.96 12.00" x 7.38" $67.00 14.00" x 8.63" $151.37 14.00" x 8.63" $94.50 16.00" x 9.75" $162.37 16.00" x 9.75" $109.00 20.00" x 12.25" $204.98 20.00" x 12.25" $129.00 24.00" x 14.75" $229.48 24.00" x 14.75" $132.50 www.artisandirectltd.net Single Card $5.00 / Card Pack of 10 $3.70 / Card Pack of 25 $3.00 / Card
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