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Category: Abstract Art

FEATURED ARTIST: Ross Ford

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!OINK, OINK, OINK!
my little piggies

The $2 Art Contest and the artists I meet teach me lessons. Every portfolio I review opens my eyes to new perspectives, new techniques and a new understanding that there is a different path for everyone.  While one little piggy may take his art to market, another little piggy will stay home.  As a consequence of the decisions made, one little piggy will eat roast beef (with au jus, no doubt) and another little piggy (suffering from motivational anorexia) will have none.  But this little piggy is happily singing wee wee wee to have been able to give them all a home.

This month’s artist has taken his art to market and appears to be stuffed with pork (not roast beef) due to a sort of dedication to his art that is almost incomprehensible to me.   I preach about the value of dedication to your statement over aesthetic; however, I don’t often get to enjoy the work of an an artist that expresses emotion through technique–seemingly at random.

Learn more about Featured Artist Ross Ford!I am proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the March entries is Ross Ford. His artwork captures emotion through the constant evolution of color, form and stroke in his paintings.  I find myself contemplating which came first–the message or the form.   Does form follow function or function follow form in your work?

FEATURED ARTIST:
Ross Ford

Ross Ford was born in New Hampshire halfway through the Jimmy Carter presidency.  He first started painting in 8th grade when he met the artist Duane Penske while living in southwest Minnesota.  Duane introduced Ross to sketch journaling and how to stretch a canvas.  Duane’s work guided Ford to focus on work that came from an internal place instead of trying to recreate a real thing.

While in college Ford experimented with video as a medium but returned to painting in 2005 while living in Miami, FL.  For about a year he created and sold his work on the street in Miami Beach until he graduated to shows in restaurants and nightclubs.  In 2009, Ford moved his studio into the Bakehouse Art Complex in the Wynwood neighborhood.

423 by Featured Artist Ross FordIn 2010, Ford moved to Carrboro, North Carolina with his wife so she could pursue a PhD at UNC.  Since moving to North Carolina, Ford has been featured in 2 group exhibitions as well as a solo show at the Durham Art Guild and more.

I usually talk about technique later in the interview, but based on your images, I have to ask you to start with technique.  Talk to me. “I draw a lot.  Not doodling, but a directed expressive shape that has evolved over many years.  Since middle school, with a few exceptions, most of my sketch books were filled with just faces.  I would just start drawing and try to figure out what expression the face was making, finish it and move on to the next one.  Over time, these faces have evolved into the very abstract figures I paint today.

“It is a very intuitive/automatic process, I do not have some idea of what it is before I draw it.  I just start drawing and it’s done when it’s looking back at me.  I consider the process exploratory.  It is a directed exploration; I do not know what I have got until I start sorting through it afterwards.  They are reactive evolutions of the last painting.

Number 418 by Featured Artist Ross Ford“Since I do literally thousands of individual drawings for each painting they can’t be strictly consecutive evolutions.  As the series grows, I have become attracted to different elements in the paintings, specific shapes that, for whatever reason, appeal to me, so during my editing and selection process I am looking for specific elements in the drawings that excite me but also fit the pattern that has been established.

“There are other considerations too.  I consider myself a colorist, I love color and sometimes I have ideas about what colors I want to use.  Sometimes I will look at a drawing and say to myself “that would look fantastic in a really dark purple.”  Or I know I want to paint something bright orange, so I find a drawing that wants to be orange. The colors vary along a different arc than the lines.  I go through phases where specific colors are the ones I want to use, the ones that I surround myself with and this influences the drawings I select.”

Do you consider yourself a painter? Something else? “I consider myself a painter, although as my process has evolved to include printmaking I have focused my thinking more about the concepts in the art instead of the means of production.  Each of the mediums that I work in examines the patterns that emerge from this process in different ways.  The paintings focus on the intricacies of individual expressive shapes.  The prints investigate the different shapes created by overlaying multiple expressions in a chaotic manner.  The grid drawings explore the evolution of shape over many consecutive expressions.”

Number 402 by Featured Artist Ross FordI was surprised to find that your pieces start out as sort of abstract portraits. Why faces? “I am not sure why.  I was just always drawn to portraits.  Maybe it comes from visits to museums were filled with oil portraits of important figures? When you look at portraits you see elements of yourself and of people you know.

“Faces are the look of the human condition, we express love, hurt, loneliness, comfort,  joy, everything through our faces.”

“It is a universal communicator that exists outside of language and can be understood and interpreted by people from every background and culture.”

Do you have special terminology for how you work?  “I call it Iterative Expression – because it is a directed expressionism.  The term iterative expression comes from computer science, it relates to code that performs a set of operations while certain conditions exist.

Number 412 by Featured Artist Ross Ford“The operation is the drawing process… and the data that is fed into it is subconscious thoughts and emotions.”

 

You know we have to talk about food. What are your favorites? “I love pork.  In Miami for 6 years, I ate Cuban food all the time.   I am proud to say that I have stumbled 2 blocks past midnight (more than once, I suspect) to the local Cuban cafe 24 hour window to get a medianoche and some croquettas.

“Now that we live in NC,I am in hog heaven.  From barbecue to the locally made garlic bratwurst, this state has me covered.  I have a few tricks of my own though, like my famous, at least to me, spicy mango pork empanadas.  Cayenne + Cumin + Mango + Pork + Pie = WIN.

“I find the extra effort required to bake things
into a pie is always worth it.”

  Amen, brother, amen.

Number 401 by Featured Artist Ross FordWhat about snack foods? “I have been a hopeless popcorn addict since I was a child.  I do not recognize microwave popcorn as a substitute for stove top made.  When I was a child my parents used to make popcorn for my sister and me on Friday nights (movie night) and the flavor of orange juice is forever paired with salty corn in my mind.” We share this addiction, Ross, but I prefer mine with Romano and freshly-cracked black pepper.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “My studio at Golden Belt will be open for the Durham Art Walk the last weekend of April.  I am talking with someone about doing a show in June but nothing is final yet.  I have a few proposals in progress, so we’ll see.  I have a book that I started last year that I want to finish.  I did 65 pages of sketches in one day.”

Thank you, Ross Ford for reminding me that I some days it pays to get off my soapbox and just create from the depth of my feeling–without a pre-determined outcome.  More calm, more patience, less control.

Learn more about Ross Ford online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Ross Ford!

Want to be a Featured Artist on www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com?
Check out the
$2 Art Contest!

CALL for ENTRIES: Print Exchange

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!RELISH IT!

I collect condiments, and it is contagious.  My husband now collects condiments too.  I like relishes and mustards; he likes hot sauces and meat marinades.  The collection never gets out of hand because we consume them.  It’s a good system.  This next Call can help you start a collection of your own.  Consider it carefully…

Check out this Call for Entries for the 2nd Annual Print Exchange for a Cure to be hosted by the University of Dallas. The entry fee is low. You get 10 prints in return, AND your work ends up in a permanent University collection. Oh, did I mention the funds raised go to a reputable charity? You couldn’t ask for more.

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Print Exchange, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about the 2nd Annual Print Exchange!CALL for ENTRIES:
Second Annual
Print Exchange

 

All printmakers are invited to participate in Print Exchange For A Cure. The purpose of this exchange is to raise funds in order to find a cure for blood cancers and offer financial support to those already battling these diseases.  “the Cure” pictured right (and cropped at the bottom of the page) is a screenprint by Jonathan Stewart featured in the 2011 Print Exchange.

ELIGIBILITY: These works do not have to fall under any particular theme. The Paper size must be 7″x10″. The print/image size is open. 12 identical hand-pulled, original prints, with glassine or other archival leafing between each print, cut to match paper size must be submitted. Each print must be signed and numbered somewhere on the print. In addition, clearly print artist’s name, title, and media on the back of each print.

Learn more about the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society!MEDIA: Printmaking including relief, intaglio, lithography, silkscreen, solar, woodblock, or any process other than digital.

DEADLINE: Prints must be received by May 9, 2012. But, participants must RSVP by April 25, 2012 by email to: sarahfrancisart@gmail.com.

ENTRY FEE: Minimum cost to participate is $20 US or $30 International paid via PayPal to sarahfrancisart@gmail.com or a check made out to Sarah Francis, other donations for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society are always appreciated. Please let me know if you would like a receipt for tax purposes.

PROCESS: A portfolio of 10 randomly selected prints will be mailed to each participant by June 1st. You will also be able to find digital images of all prints involved at the following website: www.sarahfrancisart.com.

Learn more about the University of Dallas online!The 11th print in each edition will be auctioned off through ebay. The proceeds from the sale of each piece will go to support the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, and the 12th print in the edition will remain in the University of Dallas’s Private Collection of Prints.  The works will also be exhibited in the Upper Gallery at the University of Dallas*.

* Editor’s Note: In the interest of full disclosure, I wanted to make sure that readers are aware that this is a Catholic University. Their Vision and Mission statements: “The University of Dallas aspires to be recognized regionally and nationally as a premier Catholic, liberal arts school and a first-choice institution for practice-oriented, professional business education…to educate its students, to develop intellectual and moral virtues, to prepare themselves for life and work, and to become leaders in the community.”

For complete details, Read the Full Prospectus!

Learn more about the 2nd Annual Print Exchange!

ART PUBLICATION: Vallum Magazine

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!QUEEN OF THE WORLD

I want to do everything.  I don’t sleep much because I cannot turn my brain off.  I am constantly thinking of the souflee I’ve never made, the exotic vacation I haven’t taken and the art I haven’t produced.  It isn’t a sad sort of sleepless anxiety.  It is an I-Want-to-Take-on-the-World-and-I-am-Running-Out-of-Time anxiety.  This next Call is a chance for you to mark a few “to do” items off your artistic bucket list.

Check out this Call for Art (among other things) from Vallum Magazine!  Here’s a chance for you to shine on the pages of a great poetry magazine.  And, if you’re a wordsmith, well, there’s that too…

ART PUBLICATION: Vallum Magazine

Founded in 2000, Vallum: contemporary poetry is one of Canada’s top, critically-acclaimed, all-poetry magazines.

Check out Vallum Magazine!Vallum has positioned itself as an avant-garde exposition of the best in poetry, providing a literary platform for established and emerging writers from Canada, the US and abroad.

Notable past contributors include P.K. Page, George Bowering, Paul Muldoon, Franz Wright, Jan Zwicky, Stephen Dunn, Les Murray, Charles Bernstein, John Kinsella, Fanny Howe, George Elliott Clarke, Andrew Motion, Erin Mouré, Peter Redgrove, Nicole Brossard and others.

Vallum publishes poetry that is sharp, engaging and exciting. It pushes boundaries and invites the exploration of different worlds and perspectives. In addition to the poetic contributions are essays, interviews, book reviews and stimulating visual art.

Vallum MagazineTHEME:  Mountains/Heights

How high can you go? Stars, mountains, ledges, high diction, big dreams, high wired… We walk straight ahead, but how do we climb? Slow or fast, where do we go when we look up?

DEADLINE:  March 1, 2011

SUBMISSIONS:  Essays, reviews, interviews, letters to the editor and art work can be sent by regular mail or through their Online Submission page.

For complete details, visit Vallum’s Submissions Page!

FEATURED ARTIST: Madeleine Avirov

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!CONCEALED
TREASURE

The $2 Art Contest has been a journey for me as both an Editor and an artist. I have learned that I must recognize my taste and bias as an artist while tempering it with impartiality as an Editor.  

Choosing a Featured Artist is like cooking for a large family gathering.  You have to honor where your talents lie, but you have to remember that sometimes your family just wants a turkey with traditional stuffing  on Thanksgiving regardless of how good your Oysters Rockefeller may be.

I truly have a soft spot for portraiture, as it influences my personal work; however, I also love the intimacy and vulnerability it gently masks.  I find a treasure in every portrait…sort of like the pearl in an oyster as a matter of fact.  During the holidays, I thought we could all use a reminder of things to be treasured–people most of all.  So, Oysters Rockefeller it will be. 

Click to learn more about Madeleine Avirov!The Featured Artist chosen from November entries is Madeleine Avirov.  Avirov’s work has a sadness balanced by the love and care that only an insider could have into the inner reaches of each subject.  While I love her landscape and abstract work, I find Avirov’s portraiture touching and worthy of an individual audience.  

FEATURED ARTIST:
Madeleine Avirov

Avirov, studied figure painting at The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, portraiture at the Richard Halstead Studio in Evanston, IL, and Studio Art & Illustration at Kent State University in Kent, OH. 
 
 But after all this study, Avirov drew a simpler picture of her direction for me: “My subjects follow two tracks that are beginning to merge. One is darkly colored and moves backward into the past through urban terrain that Philip Roth called ‘a timeless Depression set in a placeless Lower East Side.’  Here I work with the figure as a kind of still-life element, placing my father, for example, into settings whose contents reflect and contain his particular misfortunes in order to tell a story.”
Old Jew with Bird (detail) by Madeleine Avirov 2009“The other track moves outward into landscape, not to replicate any particular place, but more to conjure a remembered dimension in which things are rearranged, local color is heightened, dimmed, ignored, and the surface in places remains broken and unfinished—all in keeping with a broken world.” 
 

I was struck by Avirov’s process.  While as artists so many of us are trying to forge our own paths and break new ground with materials and media, why would Avirov work so hard to conquer the techniques of the Old Masters? “I build up the surface of the canvas transparently—in dozens of layers in some places, in others abrading or letting the ground show through.  By laying down patches of color to build form architecturally (a method I constructed from studying the texture of tree bark and from looking at Cézanne, the Spanish realist Antonio Lopez Garcia, and the English figurative painter Euan Uglow).

“First, in the same way that all genuine knowledge includes recognition—a backward glance—however interpreted, any new media or technique worth anything is in some sense built on what came before it.”

Ma by Madeleine Avirov 2004“When he was 75, the literary critic Northrop Frye understood that at that point in his life ‘discovery [could] come only from reversing one’s direction, going upstream to one’s source.’   He added ‘that at a certain point searching for the unknown gives place to trying to remove the impediments to seeing what is already there.’

“I am 55, but a dozen or so years ago, I began to feel similarly compelled. There are centuries of craft, of painstaking trial and error, that have produced works I revere, and I could not reject what I had not tested for myself.” 
 
 Favorite Food?  It’s either bread or fruit, the first peach of summer, warm bread on a cold day.  In search of renewal and comfort, I say wearing my armchair pyschologist’s chef’s hat.

Racism: When Kids Learn by Madeleine Avirov 2003I find that portraiture can often be difficult to sell.  The buying public often feels compelled to personally know the person in the art with which they choose to share their lives.  When I asked how Avirov dealt with that obstacle, she answered with a straight forward pragmatism that, frankly, took me by surprise.

“I’ve sold far more of the work that I uneasily categorize as landscape. The short answer to how I deal with it is that, essentially, I don’t. More and more, I divide my time between writing and painting, and, lately, the months I’ve given to any one painting I’ve been giving to landscape. But even in the years when I was consumed with the figure, I did so because I could not do otherwise, and paid the bills with editing work and illustration.”

How do you classify your own work?  “I also say there that it’s an ever-shifting mix of realism, surrealism, expressionism that is grounded in and is moving more and more toward abstraction, even imageless-ness. Any given work is driven by its content, but all the decisions I make about it refer to formal conventions. The story told, the emotion conveyed, are secondary even as they hover at the edge of these decisions.”

The Hippocratic Face 3 by Madeleine Avirov, 2010In addition to her figurative and landscape work, Madeleine is also a writer.  her next big project is a book.  The book’ss working title, The Hippocratic Face, refers to Hippocrates’ description of the appearance of the dying.  See work of the same name pictured right. It was conceived as a consideration the 90-year-span of the artist’s mother’s life in the light of her final days and weeks, in the hospital and in hospice, as well as an examination of the cultural obsession with extending life against all reason.

Thank you Madeleine for sharing your work with us. 

I felt a little like an eavesdropper in the hallways of your life while reviewing your work.  It was a privilege to be granted such an intimate view.

Learn more about Madeleine Avirov online!

 

Want to be a Featured Artist on www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com?
Check out the
$2 Art Contest

 

FEATURED ARTIST: James Melcher

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!DUCK of the MONTH!

The best thing about judging the $2 Art Contest is getting to play “I wonder.”  As in, I wonder what this artist is really like.  I generally look at an artist’s work first.  I don’t want anything else to interfere with my opinion of the work.  And although we are taught as children that you can’t judge a book by its cover, we are also taught “If it walks like a duck, sounds like a duck and looks like a duck, it is probably a duck.”  And, more often than not, I can figure out an artist’s philosophy from their work alone.  Sometimes I am surprised.  But what I always remember in the end…there are no two alike…all lovely little odd ducklings.  This month was no different.

Learn more about Featured Artist James Melcher!

And the winner is…

The entries I receive each month for the $2 Art Contest are incredibly varied. I see work from every imaginable media, from artists at every level of their careers–some polished and PR savvy, some more vulnerable, but honest.  This month, the winner is happy and optimistic, and since we are all headed into sometimes stressful and often melodramatic holidays… I thought we could all use some sunshine.

The Featured Artist chosen from October entries is James Melcher. Melcher’s work has a carefully chosen randomness to it that both makes me wonder and makes me smile.  I would own his work.  That is one of the many tests for any artist, wouldn’t you say? 

The beginning of the mosaic paintings at Tartooful!FEATURED ARTIST:
James Melcher

James Melcher was born in Cleveland, Ohio where he received his Bachelor of Fine Arts in ceramics from the Cleveland Institute of Art.  After graduating, James spent a decade first in Southeast Asia, then Italy, and finally New York City before moving to Canada in 1996. Vancouver, British Columbia is now his home,  and Melcher claims the spectacular mountainous landscape and glimmering glass towers as his daily inspiration.

While I am drawn to the Melcher’s line drawings.  I simply could not avoid the elephant in the room–the mosaic paintings.   I was not shocked to find out that the mosaic paintings began as an happy accident:

“This whole thing began when I unrolled old polka dot, acrylic on canvas paintings and started cutting them up. I was in a kind of creative block and really didn’t know what I was doing. I cut out circles and then cut them in half and like a kid started playing with fitting the pieces together. I ended up gluing these down to small canvases and called them cut-outs.” (pictured above left)

April Mosaic by James Melcher“The mosaic paintings began kind of by accident – A pile of strips, left over from all the trimming of the cut-out pieces, was collecting dust and I was going to throw it out. Instead I started playfully laying them together in rows – ‘April Mosaic’ (pictured right) is the culmination of that “Strips” series. This led to delving more into pattern and to more purposeful decisions about color combinations.”

“I continued to cut up old works on canvas to make new mosaic paintings until I ran out of old work! Now there is more of a conscious plan and design although I also let the work “speak” to me and go where it tells me to go! There is still the occasional coming together of pieces on the studio floor and that’s where new ideas are born.” –James Melcher

After studying the work & the process,
I went to the food for the real scoop…

Patterned Mosaic Painting by James Melcher

Favorite Food?
Premium cut steak and potatoes
with an occasionally guilty binge of Doritos.
No deep, dark happiness issues there.

And what of his favorite artists?
The inspirational mentors?

Matisse, Mondrian, Warhol, Gehry.
Not a particularly optimistic lot,
but I can see the stylistic/artistic inspiration.

I was certain he was hiding something.

How does he classify his own work?
Modernism, Color Field, Pattern painting.

What makes this artist tick? 
Where is the quirk? 
Where is the secret?

http://jamesmelcher.net/stu-exh/exh-9.htmlAnd then I got to the final quiz question…What is your next big project?  And then I found my answer within his:  “I have Four!  The Artist Project in Toronto – March 3-6, 2011 is a BIG Project that I am in the full swing of producing and getting prepared for…Getting my book “Memory Mosaic” published…Moving to Europe…And, I would love to complete a large-scale art installation somewhere!”

Eureka!  The king of random pattern is fueled by frenzy.  This artist does not suffer from the motivational anorexia of which I warn.  His life will not pass him by.  He is caught up in his own whirlwind of pattern and placement.  Lookout world James Melcher’s headed your way.

Learn more about James Melcher online!

Want to be a Featured Artist on www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com?
Check out the $2 Art Contest!

CALL for ENTRIES: Abstractions

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!POETIC PIZZA

Abstraction is defined as the process or result of generalization.  In my house, the dinner discussion goes a little like this: “What do you want for dinner?” Which is often followed by “I don’t know.  What do you want for dinner?”  Which is then further followed by: ” Well, I know I don’t want pizza.”  By the way, this abstract dinner notion of I-don’t-know-but-I-don’t-want-that, usually ends in pizza for dinner.  Poetic, eh?  Here’s a way to have a more productive abstract notion…

Check out this Call for Entries called True Poetry: Abstractions from the Woman Made Gallery in Chicago. I’ve shown at Woman Made before, and I always admire the curatorial eye of their jurors. The fee is reasonable, and you know I love a theme. Take a closer look…

Wave After Wave by Juror Sandra PerlowCALL for ENTRIES:
True Poetry: Abstractions

Abstract art uses a visual language of form, color and line to create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world. 

Western art was, from the Renaissance up to the middle of the nineteenth century, underpinned by the logic of perspective and an attempt to reproduce an illusion of visible reality.

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!The arts of cultures other than the European had become accessible and showed alternative ways of describing visual experience to the artist. By the end of the 19th century many artists felt a need to create a new kind of art which would encompass the changes taking place in technology, science and philosophy.

The sources from which individual artists drew their arguments were diverse, and reflected the social and intellectual preoccupations in all areas of Western culture at that time.

Visit the Woman Made Gallery!Abstraction indicates a departure from reality in depiction of imagery in art. This departure from accurate representation can be only slight, or it can be partial, or it can be complete.

Abstraction exists along a continuum.

Even art that aims for verisimilitude of the highest degree can be said to be abstract, at least theoretically, since perfect representation is likely to be exceedingly elusive.

Time Turned by Juror Sandra PerlowArtwork which takes liberties, altering for instance color and form in ways that are conspicuous, can be said to be partially abstract. Total abstraction bears no trace of any reference to anything recognizable. In geometric abstraction, for instance, one is unlikely to find references to naturalistic entities.

Figurative art and total abstraction are almost mutually exclusive. But figurative and representational (or realistic) art often contains partial abstraction.  Both Geometric abstraction and Lyrical Abstraction are often totally abstract.  Among the very numerous art movements that embody partial abstraction would be for instance fauvism in which color is conspicuously and deliberately altered vis-a-vis reality, and cubism, which blatantly alters the forms of the real life entities depicted.

MEDIA: Open to two- and three-dimensional semi-abstract, non-objective to pure abstract works in all media by women artists from the international community.

SUBMISSION ONLINE:Submit jpgs of up to three of your works on their website. Please include an artist statement and a $30 entry fee.

While Walking by Juror Sandra PerlowJUROR: Sandra Perlow is a prolific artist interested in abstraction and pictorial space. She earned her BA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and an MA from the Illinois Institute of Design.

Perlow has shown her work internationally, including at Linda Warren Gallery, Harper College, Jean Albano Gallery, and the Rockford Art Museum. She is an active contributor to WMG and serves on its Advisory Board.

DEADLINE: February 9, 2011

NOTIFICATION: March 12, 2011

For full details, Download the Prospectus!