Art and Art Deadlines.com

A food-themed FREE resource site for ARTISTS.

×
Art and Art Deadlines.com

Tag: www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com

ARTIST to LOVE: June Yokell

Peek-a-Boo, We See You!

Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love

June Yokell
Painting
The End is Now, Painting by June Yokell
The End is Now
Painting
June YOKELL is currently working on paintings of California landscapes creating particular moments in paint of beauty & loss.

"I feel a rootedness to everything about nature;-rushing rivers, tangled bushes and trees, blooming plants & flowers, songs of birds, snow falling in a silent and dark night, the warmth of a summer evening. Early experiences along with my response to nature, to personal relationships and to the world are the ingredients. The presence of memory is the ongoing spice."

FAVORITE FOOD: Salad

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

FEATURED ARTIST: Jillian Platt

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!i choose
CHOCOLATE

not dishes

I’m up to my eyeballs in my own sink of dishes, as it were.  But, I appreciated the break from deadlines and mayhem afforded by reviewing the work of those that contributed to the Featured Artist Contest.

And admittedly, what I choose to feature is often colored by whatever is piled in my proverbial sink of dishes at the moment.  With my own solo show opening in July, I am deep in historical anatomies being used in my pieces.  And what comes across my desk?  The work of a phenomenal abstract painter that also does medical illustration.

I am proud to welcome Jillian Platt as AAAD’s latest Featured Artist.  The historical anatomies I use are deliberately labored, graphic and anything but beautiful.  But this work is soft and delicate and draws me in–regardless of the subject matter.  Then there is the abstract work; I’m just lost in the sort of emotional chaos & cacophony of sound emitted by the color & texture of this work.  Enjoy.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!FEATURED ARTIST:
Jillian Platt

 

Early chalk drawings were the first indications of Jillian’s need for artistic expression.  Exposed to fine art at an early age & encouraged by surroundings & teachers her talents were solidified at Boston University School of Fine Art.

Jillian wove art & science together in the field of medical art. Her work garnered awards both in & out of the courtroom & operating theatres.  She has explained to college students, attorneys & surgeons the cellular work of the body, the mechanisms of destruction & the steps of repair.

Expressions in abstract gently pull the viewer in allowing them private entrance into the artist world. Underlying perceptions & profound realizations of softness, emotionality and solitude reach out for the viewer’ s participation.

Abstract Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Are you self-taught or formally instructed? 

“I am formally trained.  A B.F.A. in painting from Boston University & a M.S. in Medical Illustration from Georgia Regents University.  I have loved to paint and draw for as long as I can remember so…

“It was only natural
for me to study art.”

 

“The science part came in after college.  I had a bookkeeping job and wanted to find a way to make a living using my art.  I had heard about medical illustration and decided to take some science classes. One teacher, a physiology teacher, got me hooked on science.”

Illustration Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Talk to me about your process. 

“It depends on the job, but for the most part medical illustration is like writing a book report. You use references, such as anatomy books, medical reports, patient records, sometimes observing surgery.  Graduate school in medical illustration includes medical school courses in anatomy, neuroanatomy, cell biology, surgery (and many others).

“When you graduate you are well prepared in how to read and incorporate all the information in those references. The hardest part is simplifying the information without losing something important and still making it visually appealing.”  Editor:  I’m sure that the amount of education & preparation required should have been obvious to me, but I simply never considered it. Wow.

Featured Artist Jillian Platt!I find myself loving both your abstract paintings AND the medical illustrations.  What brought about such a stark contrast in subject matter? 

“I fell in love with art because it is an outlet for me emotionally. With abstract painting there are no references, it can be purely emotional. Muddling your way through feelings, getting dirty, and really being in your art. It’s a huge release for me.

“Medical illustration is pretty straight forward. I’m generally creating it to serve a specific purpose so there’s not much room for expression.”

Illustration Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Talk to me about your inspiration. “Human physiology is fascinating to me. How it all works together. It’s so complex and beautiful. Any time I have been hired to create medical art is a chance for me to learn.  To go into an operating room and watch, or to talk with scientists about a process they are experimenting with, is fascinating.  There’s so much creativity in science.

“Abstract art is all about emotion for me. I am a pretty private person and generally keep my feelings to myself except for a few friends. So art becomes, for me, the release.

Abstract Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!“Sounds corny, but I really need to be making something all the time, using my hands. Painting, upholstering, making jewelry, gardening. Something is always going on in my head that needs to get out.”

Talk to me about the two artists (one living, one dead) that have most influenced your work, and tell us why.

“My 1st art teacher, a great friend & artist named John Dyer, from NY.  He taught me how to use oil paint & the importance of light.  Also, how to really try to feel the subject matter that I was painting, the texture, color, temperature.  His style is similar to Andrew Wyeth.  Anselm Kiefer’s work is gripping.  Just to be in its presence is so powerful. It was his work that really moved me and showed me what abstract is all about.

“Dead. That would be Frances Spalding Whistler.  The way he used oil paint like watercolor and the ethereal feeling of his paintings.”

Illustration Work by Featured Artist Jillian Platt!Is there one artist whose work you simply cannot abide?  Editor: I always ask this question of artists, mostly to gauge their feelings about the public image of art.  I almost never reveal the answers, but I’ll say this… I’ve only had about 4 or 5 different answers in the past few years.  Apparently we all dislike the same people, ha.

What’s coming up next for you?  “I’m doing a mural in my friend Rachel’s dining room. I’m really exited about it. I have been working on a medical animation project for a long time now and am eager to get dirty again.”

You know we have to know about your favorite food.  You know you want to tell us…  “Sadly, at 44 years old, it’s still pizza with a lot of sauce and a coke.”  Pizza is never sad, Jillian.  Never ever.

And what about your favorite snack foods?  “Anything chocolate. I love chocolate.”  Amen.  Me too.  Did you know that there are people that dislike chocolate?  Dumbfounding, eh?

Thank you, Jillian, for being an oddly beautiful connection in what I suspect is a very small world.  Your work moves me.

Learn more about Featured Artist Jillian Platt!

If you’re interested in becoming a Featured Artist,
Click to Learn How!

ARTIST to LOVE: Ione Citrin

Peek-a-Boo, I See You

Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love

Ione Citrin
Painting, Sculpture, Mixed Media
Shahrzad, Acrylic Painting by Ione Citrin
Shahrzad
Mixed Media
CITRIN is an avant garde artist whose artistic expression takes fantastic shape through her diverse oil and watercolor paintings, bronze sculptures, found object collages and mixed media assemblages. Her contemporary paintings and sculptures range from abstract to realistic to impressionistic - all visionary interpretations from her imaginative soul. Citrin maintains an extensive exhibition schedule in juried, non-juried, and invitational arts venues.

FAVORITE FOOD: Mediterranean

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

FEATURED ARTIST: Charmagne Coe

Learn more about how to become a Featured Artist!chicka
chicka
CHEESE

Spring is just around the corner.  It is a sure sign when farm-animal-shaped chocolates and marshmallows start popping up everywhere.  But this year, instead of a chocolate bunny, can I formally request a chick made of Romano or maybe a simple sheep’s milk cheese shaped like the ubiquitous egg?  You know it is Spring when I am asking for cheese instead of blindly accepting  chocolate in any form.  Yum… cheeeeese.

The upcoming season of green has also brought to mind work with a lighter feel.  For the most part, artists submitted work to the Featured Artist Contest  this past month that felt hopeful although still contemplative.  And, color abounded.  This work was chosen because it had both a sense of wild abandon AND familial ties.  I found the dichotomy intriguing.  On behalf of www.ArtAndArtDeadlines.com, I am proud to congratulate Charmagne Coe as our latest Featured Artist!

Learn more about Featured Artist Charmagne Coe! FEATURED ARTIST:
Charmagne Coe

 

Charmagne Coe is an American artist who creates expressive surreal paintings and drawings. Her work has been featured in international publications, group and solo exhibitions.

Her fantastical, surreal paintings are made with watercolor, ink and pastel. Inherent is a deep respect for the nature of automatism and contour line.

When she is not painting, she is inking wild expanses and heart-achy characters.

 

The Gift by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!Are you self-taught or formally instructed in your current media?   “Both, but mostly self-taught.  I was raised in a family of artists and musicians, so I witnessed first-hand, the importance of authenticity and perseverance.  I have a minor in art from Northern Arizona University.   My schooling imparted crucial foundational skills and philosophical awareness.  From there, I developed my own auto-didactic processes. Drawing was my first artistic love, but I greatly desired to be a painter as well.  I wanted to somehow fuse the two.  Experimenting led me to the three media I conjointly employ/implore now: watercolor, ink and pastel.”

Talk to me about your process and how you feel about teaching and/or sharing your process. My process of obtaining ideas and painting itself is extremely organic and open-ended. My time management is structured. I am not inclined to teach the inspirational methods I use because painting is kind of like a personal meditation and a wild place. I like to preserve vulnerability for the canvas. However, I am always willing to discuss brush technique, marketing ideas, website construction and the like.”  (Interview continues below.)

Kinder Storm by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!

I find myself loving both saturation of color in your paintings and the stark contrast of your line drawings.  Are the drawings studies for the paintings or just a separate passion?  “I consider my drawings to be stand-alone works of art, but sometimes they naturally become studies for paintings.  My painting and drawings are blood brothers.”

Drawings by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!I see that figurative images weigh in heavily, and the evidence of Romanticism is rampant and extraordinary.   Talk to me about your inspiration.Yes,  my work is partly figurative. The characters are enmeshed in surreal landscapes — which, to me, are actually like emotional atmospheres. I am truly a tactile person, a romantic, if you will… so that obviously comes across! Some of the latest are very sensual. Artwork from the Renaissance and Belle Époque eras have always enticed me, but so has modernity and futuristic panoramas. My work jumps freely between time periods.”

Gossamer by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!What style or school of art do you think work fits into? And why do you think so?  “I prefer to use the term ‘expressive surrealism’, but I find ‘abstract’ or just ‘surreal’ perfectly acceptable.

“My process and artwork is highly automatistic as was the first surrealists; I do not plan out my art in advance, so I freely express what I am feeling and sensing along the way. It’s sometimes like playing a solitary form of the game, Exquisite Corpse.” 

My goal is not to paint exact representations of the world, but rather the feelings evoked by people, places and situations.

 

Hinder Be Go by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!Talk to me about the two artists (one living, one dead) that have most influenced your work and why.  “I am most influenced by life at large, and the loves of my life.  So those artists who go after love and life hard, are who I am most taking with.  I adore the ineffable works of Chris Berens.  Miro’s vast legacy of artwork lifts my head off my shoulders.”

What is your favorite food?  It IS a food-themed blog after all.   “That’s easy–Mexican food. I come from a larger Hispanic family that really knows how to cook traditional, hearty food. It’s always made with fresh, simple ingredients. Sentimental as it sounds, my grandmother told me to always cook with the ingredient, love. She was right.”

Prelude by Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!What is your favorite snack food?  “I am actually more of a snacker than an eater, so I have many, many faves.  But for right now it’s Manchego cheese. I was actually in Spain at a street cafe when I discovered this traditional mild, nutty sheep’s cheeseI still like to eat it just as I did then–paired with young red wine and plain almonds.”  Good choice.  I have such a soft spot for cheese from both sheep and goat’s milk. Yum.

Thanks for spending a little time with us, Charmagne. What’s coming up next for you?  “I am thrilled to have many recent paintings featured in the upcoming, Viriditas.  It is an anthology of contemporary female artists created and curated by the extraordinary Michaela Meadow of Magpie Magazine.”

Learn more about Featured Artist Charmagne Coe!
If you’re interested in
becoming a
Featured Artist, Click to Learn How!

ARTIST to LOVE: Emily Thiroux Threatt

Peek-a-Boo, I See You

Say “Hello” to our newest Artist to Love

Emily Thiroux Threatt
Ceramic Sculpture & Fiber
Ceramic by Emily Thiroux Threatt
Sculpted Head
Ceramic
THREATT's vision is to inspire people to notice how art enhances their lives. "My vision is to inspire people to value both art appreciation & creation and to create beautiful art which reflects peace, beauty & my gratitude for that ability. I am a ceramist & fiber artist. I delight in the beauty of nature, architecture & people. I am grateful for my vision and strive to make it happen. My goal is to stimulate more people to appreciate art & artists. This beauty is important for society to thrive."

FAVORITE FOOD: Tamale Pie

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

FEATURED ARTIST: Amy Kollar Anderson

Enter the Featured Artist Contest!I’M MELTING
melting

I love Surrealism in art. I just do. Fried eggs permanently remind me of Dali’s melting clocks.  It is embedded now.

But I digress.  Surrealism has had a significant influence on my own work, and I believe it is that same slant of Surrealism that I love in the work of Amy Kollar Anderson.  And I am pleased and proud to have painter Amy Kollar Anderson as AAAD’s latest Featured Artist!

Anderson grew up in the suburbs of Chicago. Her inspirations are gathered from the work of the Surrealists, Symbolists, Art Nouveau, and the decorative arts.

Nite Mare by Amy Kollar AndersonIntrigued by the forms, textures and colors found in nature, she collects bits of plants, rocks, bones, and feathers, then sorts them in jars in her studio. Her current series explores divergent environments inside and outside the containers, and addresses issues of environmental concern and child welfare.

She received her B.F.A. from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and her Master of Humanity with a focus in Fine Arts, from Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio.

She currently lives with her husband and their four cats in Dayton, Ohio, and works as the Gallery Coordinator for the Rosewood Gallery in Kettering, Ohio.

See “Nite Mare” pictured right.  To watch a time-lapsed video of Anderson painting “Nite Mare,” click Here.

Of her process Anderson says, “I enjoy the process of creating a completely new environment in each painting, complete with new rules about interactions and colors.

Detail of "The Messenger" from Featured Artist Amy Kollar Anderson!I enhance this juxtaposition of imagery by creating what I call the ‘gypsy aesthetic’ of patterns and colors, which is inspired by my frequent trips to local thrift stores.

“The aesthetic involves a contrast of overlapping vintage and modern design elements and untraditional paint choices, such as metallic, fluorescent and interference colors.

This subtle psychedelic presentation misdirects the viewer from immediately focusing on the issues presented, therefore creating harmony and tension in the narrative.”

“The Messenger” (pictured left) is one of the images I watched in progress on Anderson’s facebook fan page.  I encourage you to reach out and get connected with Anderson on facebook, MySpace, and her website KollarAnderson.com .

Sign up for Anderson’s announcement list, find connections to her Etsy shop and more via the Contact Page on her website.

Click to Learn more about Featured Artist Amy Kollar Anderson!

If you would like to be considered as a Featured Artist,
submit your work to the Featured Artist Contest.