Showing posts with label Art Collecting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art Collecting. Show all posts

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Gifted Art

New Jersey based artist, Bob Matarangelo is this week's guest blogger for our Artist as Collector Series.


Over the years I have accumulated more than a fair share of artwork from students, friends and collaborators. Some were gifts, others purchased, and still others part of an exchange. Each holds a personal back story, in addition to its aesthetic qualities, so choosing one is never easy.

I have decided to post about an untitled diptych given to me by Ric Haynes from Quincy, Massachusetts. Ric was my best friend in graduate school as we matriculated towards our MFAs at Vermont College, both of us in middle age.

Ric's process incorporateds a thickly brushed application of oil paint leaving an impasto trail, like the frosting on a Wayne Thiebaud cake.  His characters are benign monsters lumbering through a barren pastel world, while captured in an iconic Robert Crumb gesture. Their draw lies in that tenuous space between comic and horror, like Grimm Brothers Fair Tales. They are loaded with personal references but their secrets are not easily accessed.  These images are the unique product of Ric's most inner creative being.  In fact, it is Ric we see hanging on the wall, but in a Shamanistic, shape shifting form.

Ric is also a poet, printmaker, watercolorist, and a very accomplished artbook maker, with his work in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C.

Bob Matarangelo is an artist working in digital video, animation, painting and sculpture. He is also a teaching artist and has created and collaborated on many public murals in New Jersey.


Sunday, November 11, 2012

A Year of Art in our Collections

It's a year this month since I began the Artist as Collector Series on this blog.  It is a great way to learn about new artists and see what inspires everyone. Personally, I am passionate about art. I love making it, being around it, and connecting with other artists and art lovers (if you are reading this, then count yourself among them.)  My home is filled with art- my own, friends', and work I have picked up in my travels, near and far.

Frida and milagros in Pegge Hopper's kitchen

This series is one way to share this passion, introduce people (myself included) to new art and new artists and see why and what makes someone want to have a piece of someone's work in their home or collection.

Many of the artists I knew and several I met through Alyson Stanfield's blog and workshops. Some were introduced by a guest blogger who wrote about a piece in their collection and then that artist became a guest blogger.  It's a great way to Pay it Forward, and a lot of fun along the way- kind of like Art Tag- and the best part, everyone wins!

Many of the selected pieces have been the work of teachers or mentors. Other's a student of theirs, or the work of a family member. A few have never met the artist whose work they wrote about but nonethless, felt a kinship.

The work has been purchased, traded, gifted or found. All are treasures.

I guess that's the point of all this... living with art inspires us, makes us feel happy, connected, joyful, and can reminds us of what it possible.
©2012StanSmokler 
So if you have not contributed yet, please join in... and if you have, thank you for being a part of this.









Sunday, September 2, 2012

Empty and Full with a Fresh Eye

Virginia based artist, blogger and teaching artist Donna Iona Drozda is this week's guest blogger for the
Untitled, 2010
Mixed media collage
8" x 8"
©2012SharmonDavidson
Collection of Donna Iona Drozda


My artist pick is Sharmon Davidson…the piece in my collection is 'untitled' but I find myself calling it  'Empty and Full' since those words are prominent in this mixed media collage.

I find myself drawn to all of Sharmon's work.  I see this piece in my collection with a fresh eye each time I take in the layers of color, the calm, the juxtaposition of geometric/meditative imagery. 

The words that Sharmon has included are smart and provocative. I'm a fan and so happy to be able to share her worldview with your readers.

In addition to her studio work Donna Iona Drozda, Donna is busy with a public art project she designed, Life in Transit for "women who have liberated themselves from domestic violence, abuse and poverty," her rich and inspirational blog: Following the Moon, and all her workshops

Donna says this about her life/work:
My vision is to live a natural life, in harmony with the rhythms of nature, creating and sharing a balanced physical, emotional and spiritual environment where true creative wonder resides.
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My vision is to turn scared into sacred inspiring the expression of joyful creative gifts and talents thereby 'Making Life the Master Peace'.




Thanks Donna for this... and so much more.

Whose work fills you up with a fresh eye?

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Belonging Together- Artist as Collector from Israel

Israeli artist Hagit Shahal is this week's guest blogger for the Artist as Collector series.
Woman in Studio
Oil on masonite
46 x 33 cm, 18" x 13"
©2012ManeKatz
In April 2010 I had an exhibition at Stern Gallery in Tel Aviv in which I was forming a dialogue with chosen classic paintings form the gallery collection.
One of the paintings was a beautiful small piece of Mane Katz, a known Jewish artist. This painting inspired me to create a work of my own as a dialogue. The two works hung together in the gallery- they looked so belonging to each other.

At the end of the exhibition, Monday noon time, after taking my work back to my studio, I came home, and my husband came towards me and handed me Mane Katz's painting…
"these paintings had to stay together, so I had to buy it"


Hagit Shahal is a painter and printmaker living and working in Tel Aviv.





Sunday, November 27, 2011

Look and Look Again

"Only buy what you like. Go to museums, read about the artist, learn, travel. But mainly just look and look again."

Sage advice from Rosamond Bernier in her memoir, Some of My Lives.


Mona Lisa at the Louvre
Here's to looking, learning and traveling!