tagged w/ Oil Painting
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For those who are fans of 'Thundercats' (which the reboot is currently showing on Cartoon Network), some art. Robert Burden is well known for painting large scale drawings of action figures, and in this timelapse video spanning several months, the oil painting titled "Soldiers of Thundera" goes into the detail...
Video from YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ah07ibl6W3k
Worth checking out his other work here: http://robertburden.comFor those who are fans of 'Thundercats' (which the reboot is currently... more
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Jason Alper Opening September 25
Sep 20th, 2010
Guy Hepner presents Jason Alper's "Proletarian Drift and the Enfranchisement of the Bourgeoisie in the 21st Century."
The opening reception will be held this Saturday, September 25th, from 7p.m. to 10p.m. at 300 N Robertson.
Please contact the gallery for further information and availability. Appointments are available 7 days a week for private viewing and discussing your collecting needs.
Guy Hepner
300 N Robertson Blvd.
West Hollywood CA, 90048
info@guyhepner.com
Tel: +1 310.979.0011
www.guyhepner.com
www.twitter.com/guyhepnerJason Alper Opening September 25
Sep 20th, 2010
Guy Hepner presents Jason... more
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Soothe And Cure Yourself By Learning Mixed Media
Mixed Media art is truly calming. There is a wide range of media available for you to discover your own creative side. You can start with pastels, change to water colors as you progress, and, if you nurture your art practice, you may even see yourself graduate to oil paintings some day. Encouraging art also includes enabling yourself to have a go at at modeling with clay, pot painting, and other activities. Think out of the box. Make something out of odds and ends, such as a paper bag puppet, for instance. Dabbling in art is a great stress buster. Actually, psychologists encourage a young child to draw so that they can draw inferences coming from the child's art and psychoanalyze these.
Drawing as well as painting can also be a good way for you to vent your pent-up feelings. If you are struggling with grief, persistent pains, or major life changes, think about art therapy. There is something great about creating a picture, photo, or clay sculpture from raw materials, particularly if can dip straight into your soul and let your personality look out. Words may not be sufficient to convey the real and mental distress of people struggling with chronic pain. People often feel safer containing these kinds of unspeakable feelings inside artwork.
Creating art fortifies your sense of self and also plays a role in feelings of normalcy. Additionally it is relaxing. Creativity raises serotonin levels as well as reduces stress; it also helps blood pressure as well as heart rate. If you are dealing with a recent illness, art therapy might help create a new post-illness identity. You could investigate how irritated, discouraged, and unhappy you are -- and look at the ways your life has improved.
A recent study shows that the right kind of art in the hospital could accelerate a patient’s recuperation. It could enhance a facility's identity. In the past several years, hospital leaders, doctors and patients have found that art inside the hospital environment can help patients cope with their health problems more effectively and perhaps return to full functioning previously. Healing art can be as simple as looking at pictures on the wall to help calm the worries of waiting for a procedure. Therefore, care providers, volunteers as well as artists from around the nation are interested in bringing art to the bedside and to the entire medical environment.
Mixed Media Art could make you feel gorgeous inside and out. Learning to paint and see as a painter does is definitely a unique experience. It's a different view from ones previous photographic perspective. Learning exactly how to oil paint or acrylic and watercolor helps give you a better understanding as to how great works in museums as well as galleries were made and all the time and effort involved. Perhaps you could have painted that artwork, but now you know all the care and creativity that was put into making it. A lot of people who seek art therapy usually have hidden feelings which they do not normally feel comfortable talking about or may not even be aware of. Art therapy is known as one of the finest approaches to help someone understand something regarding themselves.
http://www.bertaart.comSoothe And Cure Yourself By Learning Mixed Media
Mixed Media art is truly calming.... more
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While painting a commissioned portrait of a toy poodle, I made this video. The goal is to demonstrate my personal process to others and myself.While painting a commissioned portrait of a toy poodle, I made this video. The goal is... more
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This is an examination of the painting "Sandstorm" by the Abstract Imaginist oil painter Fippypopulosa.This is an examination of the painting "Sandstorm" by the Abstract Imaginist... more
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This is an exploration of a painting by the Abstract Imaginist oil painter Fippypopulosa. The art is by Fippypopulosa and the video was produced and directed by acclaimed Photographer Arleeno. The painting is in the permanent collection of The Buckland House museum in New York.This is an exploration of a painting by the Abstract Imaginist oil painter... more
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Buying and collecting abstract painting can be a labor of love. I love abstract paintings. I think that my favorite medium is gouache. I recently purchased a work from Oscar Bluemner. The person I bought the abstract painting from had it in storage for over twenty years. I am going to hang this piece in my office.
I found an oil abstract painting that was dated 1947 that was painted by Louis Bassi Siegriest. I liked the composition, it felt oddly soothing. The artist signed the back of the painting. It was a little out of my price range, but I bought it anyway.
Trade Winds is the name of an abstract painting I bought from the artist Joanne Riddle while I was in Connecticut. The piece was huge and I had to have it sent by freight to my home. The blue in the painting was so vivid. The whole composition was absolutely inspired.Buying and collecting abstract painting can be a labor of love. I love abstract... more
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Portland artist Amy Bennett creates striking oil paintings, many of which depict beautiful vistas, landscapes, cityscapes and slices of daily life. Only there’s one catch – these oil paintings are stylized to look like miniature models. View more of Bennett's work on her website: http://www.amybennett.com/home.htmlPortland artist Amy Bennett creates striking oil paintings, many of which depict... more
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Featuring Oakland - Alameda County Artists
May 6 - June 15
Many studio visitors plan their EBOS tour by viewing the over 400 artworks and presentations displayed salon-style in our 2500 square foot gallery. Works are in a variety of media – visitors will see art and fine crafts including painting, sculpture, ceramics, jewelry, printing and letterpress, photography, textiles, and glass. Much of the work is for sale – a percentage of which benefits Pro Arts' exhibitions and programs.
East Bay Open Studios Preview Exhibition
http://www.proartsgallery.org/ebos/gallery.htmlFeaturing Oakland - Alameda County Artists
May 6 - June 15
Many studio visitors... more
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Ed The Oil Painter is a look at a self-taught artist that works at a steel mill by day. He began painting as a hobby at age 45, started taking it seriously at age 53, and is now an established artist with displays in galleries throughout the Ohio Valley and West Virginia. Ed paints on an almost daily basis and has a true passion for oil painting. His message to others is that it's never too late to learn or to be a kid at heart. Watch as he completes a painting during the interview.
Check out more samples in Ed's web gallery at screamingreens.com.
Music sampled from a song by Battle Cat. Look for Battle Cat at MySpace.com.
Ed The Oil Painter is a look at a self-taught artist that works at a steel mill by... more
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Washingtonians - and others with big egos - have a portrait fetish that is obscene especially when it involves taxpayers money.
Even half that nealry 50 grand could have been significant funding for the non-profit Native American and environment projects I volunteer for in northern Michigan.
More comment after a few sentences of the article and a look at this portrait:
Portrait Cost Indian Museum $48,500: Senators, Trustees Question Spending By Former Director
By James V. Grimaldi
Washington Post Staff Writer
W. Richard West Jr., the founding director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian, spent $48,500 in museum funds to commission a portrait of himself.
The portrait of West by New York artist Burton Silverman hangs in the patrons' lounge on the fourth floor of the flagship museum, which is dedicated to the arts and culture of American Indians.
Silverman said West picked him after he saw a portrait Silverman had done of former Smithsonian secretary Robert McCormick Adams.
The Adams portrait, completed about a decade earlier, was smaller and cost about half as much.
Rest of the Washington Post story:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/01/03/AR2008010304163.html
Portrait:
http://media3.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2008/01/04/PH2008010400031.jpg
[IMG]http://i235.photobucket.com/albums/ee225/YOOPERNEWSMAN/RichardWestcrookedSmithsonian.jpg[/IMG]
Native American on Native American crime - much like black on black crime - is especially insidious because so much good could have been done for First Nations peoples heritage with this wasted and misappropriated money.
It's also a crime against taxpayers and common decency.
Spending $48,500 on a self portrait is among the disgraceful financial crimes of W. Richard West Jr., the founding director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian.
For this crime to occur in the hallowed halls of the Smithsonian shows again thievery knows no class boundaries - and should be treated just as severely as the poor man who sticks a gun into the face of a 7-11 clerk.
The Smithsonian needs to be thoroughly audited from top to bottom as this is at least the second huge scandal to tarnish its once respected reputation.
No doubt it's only the tip of the fiduciary iceberg that's tearing through the Smithsonian's highbrow richly-protected hull.
I do volunteer work for several Native American related non-profits whose budgets are much smaller than even the cost of that disgraceful portrait.
And the suggestion that it could not have been painted by an American Indian artist is as laughable as it is sickening with a hint of racism against one's own culture.
Even the portrait stance is borrowed and unoriginal, as a buttoned-down Mr. West gazes thoughtfully off to the east, his coat hanging on a crooked forefinger and tossed over suspenders with his soft thumb and the remaining fingers forming the "OK" sign.
The Washington ego commands that a portrait much be painted to prove one's importance.
No doubt many law offices, banking institutions and the halls of officialdom are plastered with the self-aggrandizing crafty art.
Prior to the Polaroid, a self-portrait may have been necessary to preserve one's historic legacy but in today's world it's merely a measure of one's self-importance that is more often scoffed at than admired by those it's meant to impress. Perhaps, a modern definition of irony.
Maybe the next exhibit at the Smithsonian will be portraits of former executives doing the proverbial "perp walk" - cuffed and stuffed for perp-etuity. Washingtonians - and others with big egos - have a portrait fetish that is obscene... more
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Hip-hop and art history collide on Kehinde Wiley's canvases, where contemporary urban black men pose as angels, prophets, and saints set against richly colored swirls of ornate and rococo ornamentation.Hip-hop and art history collide on Kehinde Wiley's canvases, where contemporary... more
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