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Tag: Featured Artist

CALL for ENTRIES: Trick ART Treat

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!the trick is
I MISS THE TREATS

I haven’t had a trick-or-treater at my door in years.  I miss seeing cute kids in even cuter costumes.  I miss giving out chocolate, knowing it may be the only candy that doesn’t get thrown away later. But alas, I live in the mountains.  Not many people live in neighborhoods, and those that do have an “organized community,” don’t have walkable streets.  We buy 4-wheel drive vehicles because we actually need them.  Our kids go downtown and trick or treat on Main Street.  No joke. So, I have to get in the spirit other ways.  I think this next Call is a great start.  Take a look…

Check out this Call for Entries from RaiseART (online) for Trick Art Treat, a fun online competition with no fee that might just get you out of your rut and into the Halloween spirit.  The award is pretty sweet…

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

Learn more about the Trick Art Treat from RaiseART!CALL for ENTRIES:
Trick ART Treat

 

RaiseART wants to see, hear and/or read how you envision & create the word “Scary” for their ‘Trick ART Treat’ Halloween Contest!

ELIGIBILITY:  Open to all artists

MEDIA:  Open to all media They can use a picture, video or soundcloud, so, if you’re not a visual artist, don’t be discouraged!

DEADLINE:  Technically, I can’t find a deadline anywhere.  But, since they are specifically calling it a “Halloween” contest, let’s call the deadline October 30, 2013, assuming they will publish the winner ON Halloween. *Editor’s Note:  Raise ART confirmed my deadline intuition. 🙂

ENTRY FEE:  None

AWARD:  One artist will be selected to win a feature on RaiseART’s blog, making them eligible to win December’s Artist of the Month!

For complete details, Read the Full Call!

Learn more from RaiseART!

ARTIST TO LOVE: Amantha Tsaros

Peek-a-Boo, I See You

Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love, Amantha Tsaros!

Amantha Tsaros
Monotype & Acrylic Painting
Acrylic Painting by Amantha Tsaros
Tarre
Monotype
We carry unseen struggles. TSAROS gives form to the internal life in paint. Bringing emotional and spiritual states to light are more important to me than depicting any physical likeness.

Her current series, Bigger Spirits/Square Souls, features organic forms that dance, float or slowly ebb with life. Through paint and monotype, the shapes and marks in the images recall spirits; forces that carry us through our days or challenge us mightily.

FAVORITE FOOD: Pumpkin Bread

Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!

FEATURED ARTIST: David Phillips Hodge

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!a beer
& SUSHI
summer

Yes, it is the first day of August, and I am judging the JUNE entries to the $5 Art Contest. I will spare you the excuses.   As the hot, rainy days of Summer start winding down, we all need a little peace without boredom.  Beautiful sushi with a wasabi surprise.  Here it is…

This month’s artist works is a painter–now.   I appreciate the contemplative nature of landscape without having to endure another wagon wheel in a wheat field or lone seagull in the sand.  This work is like the intersection of reality and perception.  The message is subtle, but appreciated.

Learn more about Featured Artist David Phillips Hodge!

On behalf of ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, I am proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the June entries to the $5 Art Contest is David Phillip Hodge. I find this work to be…a visual respite but also thought-provoking.

FEATURED
ARTIST:

David
Phillip
Hodge

 

A Missouri native, Hodge began his art career at age 18 at Missouri State University.  After graduating with a BFA, he immediately headed to New York to pursue his other passion, filmmaking, at NYU.  For 30 years, he then ran his own film and television production company, producing and directing everything from political campaign spots, to music videos, to documentaries and commercials.

Painting by Featured Artist David Phillips Hodge!Hodge won numerous awards, including 2 Emmys, 3 Cine Golden Eagles, and a Monitor Award. While in NYC, he also directed Off Broadway theatre.  He is thrilled to have now returned to painting.  His current focus is exploring the emotion evoked through line, shape and color.  The work lies at the intersection between color field painting and representational art—examining the ways in which they co-exist within the same canvas.

Are you self taught or formally instructed?

“Well I graduated with a BFA in sculpture & ceramics. One of my teachers once told me that after graduation you spend the next few years trying to unlearn what you learned in school.” 

Painting by Featured Artist David Phillips Hodge! I’ve had
quite a while
to unlearn
what I learned
in art school.

 

Your work is very quiet. Is the process as peaceful as the work comes across?  

“I believe the process of picture making IS somewhat peaceful, at least for me.  There is a fair amount of taping, spraying, brushwork, sanding and stencil cutting though.  Also, there is always music playing.”

The connecting aesthetic in your work seems to be landscape.  How landscape and color field work together for you?

Painting by Featured Artist David Phillips Hodge!“Landscape?  I keep coming back to the landscape. It gives me a certain amount of freedom to explore color because the landscape is so recognizable to the viewer.”

Tell me about the painting process for you.  Do you paint from photographs, plein aire  or from memory?  Is your work strictly paint or is their silk screening involved as well? 

Sometimes I work from photographs that I’ve taken or that my wife has taken. And other times I work from memory.  I don’t currently use silk screen  but, that not a bad idea.  Maybe in the future.

Painting by Featured Artist David Phillips Hodge!What style or school of art do you think your work fits into and why?

“I believe my work fits most closely as color field painting. I  coined the word Colorscape to describe my current work.”

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite?

“My favorite food changes from time to time or day to day for that matter, but at the present time I would say sushi is my favorite food. Last week I was in the Midwest so it was steak.”   I suspect you are easily bored and just haven’t found your true favorite.  Let me know if that ever changes, David.

Painting by Featured Artist David Phillips Hodge!What about snack foods?

“My favorite snack food is definitely beer.” Best answer ever.  No, really.

So, what’s coming up
next for you?

“I wish I knew.” 

Honesty, not bravado.  Refreshing.

David, thank you for making me take a second look at landscape.  I’ll try to be less dismissive in the future.  Lesson learned…maybe.

Learn more about David Phillips Hodge online!

Learn more about Featured Artist David Phillips Hodge!

 

ARTIST TO LOVE: Shane Watt!

Peek-a-Boo, I See You

Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love, Shane Watt!

Shane Watt
Cartography & Illustration
SeahorseCshellcity Detail, Cartography by Shane Watt
SeahorseCshellcity (detail)
Cartography
WATT makes street maps of fictional cities, encrypted with stories & secrets. They are often based on all the wonderful places he has been and the wonderful places he hopes to go. He wants to explore both the real and imaginary and the links between them. Watt's city maps take on organic forms, much like a bloodstream, clotted with city blocks.

Watt has exhibited internationally, and his work has been featured in online and print publications.

FAVORITE FOOD:Marshmallows

Are you an Artist to Love? Be sure to let us know!

FEATURED ARTISTS: Thayer & Van Patten

Learn more about Cara Thayer & Louie Van Patten!

PEARLS of plurality

The artist features had to evolve. Some days I feel like I’ve seen everything there is to be seen.  When that I happens, I go back to the basics in an effort to remember what I personally love about art.  I think about what the art that makes me want to BUY work. 

This month’s featured artist is a departure, among other reasons, because they are this month’s artists, plural.   Collaboration.   Complicated.  They are also portraitist, of sorts.  Simplicity.  Collaboration requires a perfect combination of  both ego-maniacal fanaticism and selflessness.  There isn’t a middle ground; it is a combination of extremes.  Raw perfection.  Two pearls in an oyster–distinctly different, but the same.  I am proud to announce Cara Thayer & Louie Van Patten as this months Featured Artists…

Blue Canvas Magazine Cover by Thayer and Van Patten

FEATURED ARTISTS:
Cara Thayer & Louie Van Patten

Cara Thayer was born in Panorama City, CA but grew up in Bend, OR.  She studied painting at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (not to be confused with the Art Institute of Chicago) and received her BFA in 2007.  Louie Van Patten was born in West Des Moines, IA.

They met in Chicago in events surrounding the attendance of a Pixies reunion show.

(If food wasn’t what brought them together, at least it was music.)  They both studied art at Central Oregon Community College under Bill Hoppe, who has been hugely influential on them. They have been collaborating since 2005, maintaining a day job together and painting on the side in Bend, until they went full-time with their art in 2008.

Chromatic Maladies V - part of a diptych by Cara Thayer and Louie Van PattenThey regularly show their art in Bend, Oregon and have participated in a handful of shows along the West Coast.  In 2011, they were selected to create the art for Deschutes Brewery’s annual , as well as being featured on the cover of BLUECANVAS magazine.

Talk to me about inspiration. “We are inspired by the little sweet spots of masterworks of art – – things in the margins, single frames from a film, faces and musculature in motion and in stasis. We are fascinated with flesh and the relationship between frame and canvas and skin and bone, the apertures of the face and the way intense light traces the contours of the skeleton under the skin. We are inspired by paint as paint and paint being an analogue of skin and viscera.

Saccadic II by Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten“Our paintings could be considered to be at least quasi-biographical about paint itself, so paint and pigment are also very much a source of inspiration – – we are very medium-oriented at the moment, hopefully not to the point of the tail wagging the dog. It also just occurred to us that we’re probably a self-fueling fire as we inspire and invigorate each other. ”

What do you consider your media? Are these pieces strictly paint? “We are primarily infatuated with oil paint. We’re not sure that we’re strictly painters, though. A certain theatricality informs the work, being transduced into paint via photography. Our collaborative process first began with fiber art and work with resin and spray paint. It is likely we’ll return to more semi-sculptural fiber art at some point, especially as more opportunities for installations and public art surface. We very much enjoy working together and that is truly the only constant.”

Apertural - a triptych by Cara Thayer and Louie Van PattenClearly, portraiture has a strong influence in your work.  While I love the hands, I have to admit that I am drawn to the faces. “Portraiture does have an influence on the work, as does the general physicality of human forms, both formal and informal.  We tend to paint hands often, as they work as a portrait for people, rather than a specific person and they are also great armatures for paint.  We’re interested in faces for the apertures, as well as the effect of filling a canvas with the architecture of facial flesh.

Saccadic I by Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten“We also enjoy the ambiguity that emerges from the truncation of the human face.  Some of the imagery emerges from the fact that we use ourselves as source material, the portraiture happens naturally, but not without intention. Creating an exaggerated representation of our process, the final image looks like two people struggling to fill the picture frame with only their face by brute force, but becoming one form instead.”  I find this an oddly poetic description of their own painting process.  Watch the video.

Do you have special terminology for how you collaborate?  “We do not have special terminology, although perhaps we should consider that. Conjunctive-painting? Bilateral art-making?

Tangled-arm painting? Shiva the Destroyer?

 

“As far as we know, the actual act of painting is painfully conventional in nearly every other way, aside from the fact there are two of us.

Chromatic Maladies IV by Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten“Years ago, when we first starting making art, we created a website called thegryllus.com, as a way to loosely reference this four-armed method of painting.  Essentially, a gryllus is a creature comprised of other creatures with nameable parts, such as a griffin.  Our use of the word may be a little off, but the basic idea is that we work as one painter, made of the parts of two significantly different people.”

You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “We’re very partial to scallops with a little sriracha, as well as pan-fried Brussels sprouts with Parmesan. For Louie, it might just be NY-style pepperoni pizza dipped in pukka sauce (hot sauce made with Jamaican scotch bonnet peppers).

Saccadic III by Cara Thayer and Louie Van PattenGenerally speaking, we’re big fans of cured meats, aged cheeses, raw vegetables, and craft beer, preferably all at once. Since we seem to drink more than we eat (nothing terribly excessive, we assure you), we’ll also mention that Cara is a gin girl and Louie is a bourbon/rye/scotch kind of guy.” I’ve never been to Oregon.  I’m thinking the Thayer-Van Patten household needs to make room for a visitor. Yum.

What about snack foods? “We love smoked oysters with crackers. We also both love popcorn. Being a normal person, Louie shoves handfuls in his face like a savage, but Cara meticulously picks apart each kernel like a total weirdo. Point being, we have a very hard time sharing a bag of popcorn. It is a good thing painting doesn’t resemble popcorn-eating, at least not in any way we’re aware of.”  For the record, I avoided asking which two hands of this four-armed monster wrote the interview responses.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “Ideally, a lifetime of painting. This is something one does not have to retire from, nor should they desire to.”

Thank you, Cara and Louie for bringing me back to what I love about art–raw perfection.  The connection between you translates to canvas as a visceral tie to all that is human in art.  Lovely.

Learn more about Thayer & Van Patten online!

Learn more about Thayer and Van Patten!

CALL for ENTRIES: Changes Abound!

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!LET US
eat cake

Can you believe we have arrived at our three year anniversary here at AAAD?  This is post 812.  What has changed in three years?  I receive A LOT of email.  I love the foodie email, updates on careers, and recipes, recipes, recipes.

Most of the galleries and artists that contact me are looking for exposure. They aren’t asking for reviews, recommendations or glowing critiques.  Most are confident in their abilities to prove themselves and simply need a little help getting their gallery opportunities or their personal artwork out there.  I applaud your motivation.

As usual, every year I glance back at the sites older pages and make a few updates to the visual style and ridiculous wordiness of my writing style.  I made a few changes today, and most of them are in response to your requests for additional opportunities for exposure.  There are lots of opportunities for Exposure on AAAD.  Take a look…

  • Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!Submit your Call – With 1000+ daily readers, you’ll receive a wide diversity of entries. Guidelines for submissions have been updated.
  • Featured Artist Submissions – Enter the $5 Art Contest for a post featuring your work, an interview and links back to your website. Yes, this went from $2 to $5. Still cheap.
  • Sponsors – You can now advertise your art-related business on AAAD.  This isn’t Google Ads, folks.  Art-related business only. I reserve the right to say “no” if it isn’t the right fit for the site.  Visit the new Be a Sponsor page for more information.
  • Food Sponsors – Want me to try a new food?  Click here.
  • Individual Artists – I am still figuring out the best way to offer an unjuried and inexpensive way for artists to share a page that links back to each website without just making it a long alphabetical list.  Boring.  Give me a little while, and I’ll get back to you.

So thank you for three great years.  I have got the 3-year itch…so hang on folks.  AAAD will be undergoing a few experimental changes over the next few weeks.  As always, I welcome your feedback.

Have a Wonderful September!

CALL for ENTRIES: Art Every Day 2 U

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GROWN

There are two or three new restaurants in my neighborhood.  I’m headed out to eat at each of them this weekend.  Support local everything.  Put yourself and your appetite in the hands of others occasionally.  Support a dream–even if it isn’t your own.  This next Call involves a brand new art blog that could use a little love from you and wants to give a little love back.  Support a dream…

Check out this Call for Entries for a Featured Artist post from Paula Shaughnessy, editor of the new blog Art Every Day 2 U!  There is no cost to submit, and this could be a great opportunity for a little art publication

*Editor’s Note: If you have read the personal portion of this post, CALL for ENTRIES: Art Every Day 2 U, anywhere other than by email subscription or on ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, it has been published without permission and is considered theft.

Learn more about Art Every Day 2 U!CALL for ENTRIES:
Art Every Day 2 U

 

The intent is to showcase one work from a different featured artist every day, with the feature piece somehow tied in to something about the day – a holiday, a famous person’s birthday, an event in history, etc.

Although I can’t promise to feature everyone who submits, there will be absolutely no charge – ever – to the artist for the feature, so it’s a good opportunity for a no cost resume builder – my only request is that artists follow the blog so I can start to build up some audience.  Anyone featured in the first 6 months will get priority for re-feature later once we’ve got an audience built up.” –Paula Shaughnessy, Editor

ELIGIBILITY: Open to all artists

Learn more about Art Every Day 2 U! MEDIA:  All mediums are eligible, although she is partial to non-digital work:  paint, sculpture, photography & mixed media.  No religion, election stuff, nudity or language that would make her “mama blush” Everything else is fair game.  Editor’s Note:  I GET that many of you are not well behaved enough work inside these guidelines.

DEADLINE:  On going

NOTIFICATION:  No time frame

ENTRY FEE:  None

AWARDS:  Your work featured on Art Every Day 2 U.

TO ENTER:  Send 1 image of your work, your name & links to your webpage to paula.shaughnessy@yahoo.com.  One entry per artist.

For an idea of what work is being featured, Visit the Website!

Learn more about Art Every Day 2 U!

FEATURED ARTIST: Grant Penny

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!ROUNDS
of goodness

The $2 Art Contest is has evolved over the past few years. I went from sorting good work from bad to sorting good work from great work.  Lately, I am sorting great work from great work that would be more appropriate at a different time of the year. It is getting harder and harder, but I am appreciating both the work and the honor of getting to review the work more and more as time goes by.   I always appreciate simplicity when I don’t have to actually live it.  Sometimes it is the absence of something (or the absence of many, many of things) that makes you notice the details.

This month’s artist has stripped down scenes and objects to focus on the line, continuity and impact of the parts. Like a perfect roundness of a glazed donut, Grant Penny wallows in the fatty decadence of simplicity. His artwork has a sort of simplified retro elegance without a true retro reference–but rather a nod to modernity. Perfection.

Learn more about Featured Artist Grant Penny!FEATURED ARTIST:
Grant Penny

 

Grant Penny grew up in central N.C. (Sanford).   His mother, an artist, art teacher and graphic designer,  gave Penny the solid foundation in the arts that fuel a lifelong passion. He and his wife, Carly, (then girlfriend) would regularly visit Asheville, NC for the occasional long weekend and…

“We knew that if we didn’t live here we would look back in 20 years and regret it.”

 

They have called Asheville home since 2003 and haven’t regretted it for a moment. Penny reports the city is full of genuinely good, happy people. Great food. Great art.  Since moving to Asheville, he got married now has daughter Emaline.   The recent addition to the family is actually the inspiration for my his new paper airplane series. Originally a theme of “anticipation” evolved into something different as time went by.  A small paper airplane piece now hangs in his daughter’s room, the message being:

as if on a wire by Featured Artist Grant Penny!“I wish for you to soar in life… but don’t take it too seriously.”

 

Talk to me about inspiration.  Most of us can see the beauty in a fern frond, branch, a flower.  But you have found beautiful inspiration in traffic lights and power lines. Talk to me about that.“I find my inspiration in “simplicity.” It’s often a curve or a line that gets my attention. For example the powerline pieces you’ve mentioned – It’s that never ending line that draws me in visually. It just keeps going and going and going. I follow it with my eyes as I travel down the road.

“Often there is flip side to the visual. Something that amuses me. I look at  powerline/telephone cables and think about what those silly looking, seemingly hap-hazard wires hoisted up on big sticks are doing there? They’re doing simple things – warming the water for a bath, connecting a phone call between a grandmother and a child, keeping my beer cold.”

broadway st by Featured Artist Grant Penny!What do you consider your media? Are these pieces strictly collage or do I note a touch of photographic work?  There even seems to be the appearance of silk screen.  Explain.“My media is strictly paper – specifically ‘Lokta”’paper which is hand made and dyed in Nepal.  I do shoot photos to create the composition. But what you see in the finished pieces is cut paper. I coat the pieces with layers of acrylic medium which gives some texture to the surface (and really brings out the rich saturation in the papers).”

Clearly, graphic design has a strong influence in your work.  Can you appreciate what it brings to your sensibility despite your efforts to produce hand-made work to specifically separate yourself from  your graphic design? “My graphic design background plays into my work especially when it comes to composition. I tend to leave large expanses of blank space which certainly comes from years of doing layouts where I needed to balance images with content. I really enjoy those empty spaces. I tend to crop the subjects in my work so that you can’t see it entirely. I find it makes it more interesting. More intimate maybe.”

where we make our inside jokes by Featured Artist Grant Penny!You know we have to talk about food. What is your favorite? “All things PORK. What a magical animal. Bacon, Ham, Pork Belly, Ribs, BBQ … On a radio show, maybe 10-12 years ago, I heard of a specific Spanish ham that wasn’t even available in the U.S. at the time–called ‘Jamón ibérico.’  It’s made from free-range Black Iberian Pigs raised on a diet of acorns.  I never forgot about this amazing sounding ham for all these years.  Just a few weeks ago I finally had the pleasure and experience of tasting this most wonderful pork delicacy. Oh. My. God. Drop your fork delicious.”  For those of you that are regular readers, you’ll note that this seems to be a trend–the love of pork–amongst Featured Artists.  Interesting

ruby on the right by Featured Artist Grant Penny!What about snack foods? “My current favorite snack is freshly made Guacamole on a salty chip with a nice cold beer.”

So, what’s coming up next for you? “I’ve been going after (and getting in) a few shows lately. Tip of the hat to your blog for wonderful advice and encouragement. I will continue to pursue more opportunities to show my work.  The main and constant focus is Work Work Work! If I don’t get ample time in the studio the quality of everything else around me suffers.” Happy to have nudged you along the way.

Thank you, Grant for reminding us of the beauty in simplicity–from a cold beer to paper airplanes. You have reminded to not let life wash over me in a clutter of the wholeness of it all but to celebrate the simple details.

Learn more about Grant Penny online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Grant Penny!

FEATURED ARTIST: Jacques Vesery

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!My little,
CHICKADEE

The $2 Art Contest and the time I spend reviewing work reveals a new surprise each month.  When I made the choice this month, it occurred to me that I have chosen very few men as Featured Artists over the years. In fact, I chose only four in 2010, and only one in 2011.  Hmm.   I find that once I send out my questionnaire / interview questions, the artists I choose seem to have an elusive connecting thread (other than food) with the other artists I have chosen as well as with me.  I suppose we are birds of a feather, as the cliche goes.

This month’s artist is a beautiful example of a connection to process and materials often found in craft artisans, but a passion for the message, the voice of the work that is generally only found in the fine arts.  Maybe my little chicks and I are connected by a thread of passion, not just to create…but to speak.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jacques Vesery! I am so proud to announce the Featured Artist chosen from the December entries is Jacques Vesery.  His artwork, his sculpture,  speaks to what each of chooses to honor, to cherish both physically and within ourselves.  They are…

Vessels for the soul,
if you will.

 

These sculptures are a beautiful, layered, decadent aesthetic combined with threads of the mystical, wondrous history of someplace not quite known.  They make me daydream.  But is the overwhelming desire to hold and touch them that makes me feel ever so slightly out of control.  Wonderful.

The Enigma From Within by Jacques Vesery!FEATURED ARTIST:
Jacques Vesery

Jacques Vesery is a sculptor from Damariscotta, ME and has lived in Maine for 20 years.  His work is in numerous public and private collections including the Detroit Institute of Art, the Contemporary Art Museum of Honolulu, Yale University Art Gallery and The Carnegie Museum. He is a Maine Arts Commission Fellow for 2000 and winner of Sculptural Pursuit Third Annual Sculpture Competition in 2006.

Jacques has lectured on design and concepts within his work in France, Italy, England, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and 28 US states at such locations as Journees Mondiales du Tournage D’art Sur Bois Congres, Loughborough University, Anderson Ranch, `Aha Hana Lima- Hawaii and Haystack Mt. School.

Une Triade de Mon Moi Intérieur by Jacques Vesery!What do you consider your media? Do you primarily consider yourself a sculptor? Something else? “This one always seems harder than it should be. I guess I fall through the cracks. To make life easier, I say that I am an Artist/Sculptor and for the most part, my work three dimensional, but not always.”

Clearly, there seems to be a repeated circular and/or egg-shaped aesthetic in your work.  What is the significance to working round?  “I started from creating art/craft objects solely based on utility… very conservative vessels with textures that seemed to grow with the surface area vs. being applied.  I quickly realized sculptural forms would be much more appropriate and started making what I call “Seaforms”.  They are not like any real shells and actually I base the forms on classic utilitarian forms. Everything else has evolved from this.”

Second Sister From the Skyforest by Jacques Vesery!Talk to me about your choice of natural materials versus using a process to replicate the look of natural materials?  “I love the confusion that many of the pieces cause. Some think it’s stone, some ceramic… in most cases, people don’t think wood. Even when it is supposed to look like wood. I have heard people say ‘so you sculpted wood to look like wood or you shaped a stone to look like a shell, or wood to look like stone.’  I use wood because I know it well. I know what it is capable of and I enjoy it.  If I knew another material that would work better for what I want to convey, I would use it. I am not hooked on any one material or tools. For me it is all about the outcome.  The surprise factor is also a plus.  When you are thinking stone or ceramic then hold a piece in your hands, it’s warm and very light in weight.”
What style or school of art do you think your work fits into and why? “That has always been a tough question… What do you think? It’s not craft. It is mostly sculptural…partially surreal, but not quite.”  Well, Jacques, take solace that no one ever gives me a straight answer to this one.  Your work is the sculptural equivalent of photo-realism, but of objects that don’t really exist.  Let’s call it sculptural photo surrealism, maybe?  You asked.

A Fascination with Cherry Trees by Jacques Vesery!You know we have to talk about food. What are your favorites? “Anything French! Cooking is one of my passions and most of the time it’s something French… Italian runs a very close second though.  If I had pick one dish, I guess it would be Coq Au Vin, with a great Cotes du Rhone of course.”  You owe me dinner, Mister.

“And, I have always been a lover of fruit. I’ll pick up an apple or a mango before chocolate any day.  I only go for my wife’s chocolate when there is nothing else sweet around. Lately I have been making gallons of fruit smoothies with loads of green leafy stuff added.  Hey kale is the new beef.  *Editor’s Note: Just when I think I’m in love, some fruity artist always comes up with a “Kale is the new Beef” statement.  No, Jacques, kale IS NOT the new beef.  You fruitcake, you.

So, what’s coming up next for you? “Well… There has been a big change in my life in the last 15 months, and it has effected my work greatly. Long story short, I have an illness that that prevents my working  in my normal ways.  The silver lining has been exploring new directions… Even sneaker art of all things.  For now, that is what is next… as I get better, I hope to get back to the small scale sculptures, but still want to  pursue this new found  passions as well.”

Thank you, Jacques Vesery  for giving me back my daydreams.  And the gift of being out-of-control is a treasured rarity for me.   Future Relics are what I see. You’re are an inspiration!

Learn more about Jacques Vesery online!

Learn more about Featured Artist Jacques Vesery!

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

2011 FEATURED ARTIST: Last Day to Vote!

Click to Subscribe to www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com by Email!PEACHES

Sometimes the best is clearly the best— the cream of the crop, the ripest peach, the perfect raspberry, the ooey-gooeyest of chocolate sauce.  This year I have had the privelege of choosing Featured artists that are definitely the sweetest peaches on the tree.  Here is your chance to pick the best of the bushel, so to speak.

Check out these 2011 Featured Artists brought to you by AAAD.  Each artist has a chance to be named the 2011 Featured Artist of the Year.  To cast your vote, leave a comment on their original post (links below).  The rules are simple: one comment per person per artist by midnight EST on December 31, 2011.  You have to actually say something; don’t just leave a smiley face.  Editor’s Note:  Don’t worry if your comment doesn’t show up immediately because I moderate every comment.  The contest has a clearly front runner at the moment, but it is still wide open.  So make your vote count…

2011 Featured Artists

Learn more about Featured Artist Denee Black!

Click to learn more about Featured Artist Deanna Bowdish!

Click to learn more about Daniel Embree!

Click to Learn More about Book Carver Julia Feld!

Click to learn more about Featured Artist Gracelee Lawrence!

Click to learn more about Artist Terri Lloyd!

Click to learn more about Featured Artist Meredith Martens!

Learn More about Featured Artist Penny Perkins!

Learn More about Featured Artist Pamela Zimmerman!