2018-06-01 The Artists Magazine
2018-06-01 The Artists Magazine
2018-06-01 The Artists Magazine
ARTISTSNETWORK.COM
Magazine
10 Best Cities to
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Contents
Volume 35 | Issue 05
JUNE 2018 94
58
70
Compositions
58 76 86
ART CITY, USA STREET ART JOURNEY OF A LIFETIME
Artists Network followers select Outdoor murals spif up cities and homas Cole drew attention to the
the 10 best cities for artists. bring communities together. glory of America’s wilderness.
70 82 94
MARFA, TEXAS SURREAL SUBURBIA LESS IS MORE
A small desert city is an unlikely Peter Drake creates a visual Anne Packard merges image and
magnet for artists and art lovers. narrative of a suburban dream that imagination in her seascapes.
never existed.
104
36
Prime Build Outfit
10 BIO 36 TUTORIAL 104 DO NOW
Jane Jacobs Painting With Greens
106 INDEPENDENT
12 COLOR STORY 38 ART HACKS STUDY
Ultraviolet The Big Drink
107 COMPETITION
15 SPACE 40 WORKSHOP SPOTLIGHT
We’re All Pink Inside There’s No Place
Like Home 108 SHORT STORIES
18 VOYAGE
Santa Barbara, California 46 BUSINESS OF ART 112 LASTING
Who Are You? IMPRESSION
22 CROSSROADS
Drawn to the City 48 WORKSHOP
Architecture in ON THE COVER
27 ALCHEMY Painting
Plein Air Eden Anthony Arias’ mural Art City
54 PROMPTS PHOTO: CHIP AUCHINCLOSS
Artists Magazine (ISSN 0741-3351) is published 10 times per year (January, March, April, May, June, July, September, October, November and December) by F+W Media Inc., 10151 Carver Road, Suite 300, Cincinnati OH 45242; tel: 386/246-3370.
Subscription rates: one year $25. Canadian subscriptions add $15 per year postal surcharge and remit in U.S. funds. Foreign subscriptions add $20 per year postal surcharge and remit in U.S. funds. Artists Magazine will not be responsible for
unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or artwork. Only submissions with a self-addressed, stamped envelope will be returned. Volume 35, No. 5. Periodicals postage paid at Cincinnati OH and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send all address
changes to Artists Magazine, P.O. Box 421751, Palm Coast FL 32142-1751. F+W Media Inc. Back issues are available. For pricing information or to order, call 855/842-5267, visit our online shop at ArtistsNetwork.com/store, or send a check or money order
to Artists Magazine/F+W Media Products, 700 E. State St., Iola WI 54990. Please specify Artists Magazine and the issue month and year. Canada Publications Mail Agreement No. 40025316. Canadian return address: 2835 Kew Drive, Windsor, ON N8T 3B7.
ArtistsNetwork.com 3
From The Editor Art sts Magazine
CONTENT STRATEGIST + EDITOR IN CHIEF
Michael Gormley
MANAGING EDITOR Austin R. Williams
ART DIRECTOR Amy Petriello
SENIOR EDITOR Holly Davis
ASSOCIATE EDITOR Michael Woodson
ASSOCIATE EDITOR Mike Allen
ADVERTISING
ADVERTISING CONSULTANT Mary McLane
Western U.S. & International
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ADVERTISING CONSULTANT D’NA Company
(for Artists Network) Northeastern U.S.
MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON; GIFT OF MARTHA C. KAROLIK FOR THE M. AND M. KAROLIK COLLECTION OF AMERICAN PAINTINGS, 1815–1865 (47.1200); PHOTOGRAPH © MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON
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CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Greg Osberg
CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Jennifer Graham
In addition to the “how” and “why” questions on
SVP, GENERAL MANAGER, F+W FINE ART,
art making that Artists Magazine focuses on, in WRITING AND DESIGN GROUPS David Pyle
this issue we explore questions about “where.” At MANAGING DIRECTOR, F+W INTERNATIONAL James Woollam
the risk of stating the obvious, where an artist VP, GENERAL COUNSEL Robert Sporn
makes art has a significant impact on what that VP, HUMAN RESOURCES Gigi Healy
art will be and how it’s made. For example, would VP, MANUFACTURING & LOGISTICS Phil Graham
Robert Henri and his fellow Ashcan School paint- VP, CONSUMER MARKETING John Phelan
ers have taken up social realism had they not been NEWSSTAND SALES, CONTACT:
Scott T. Hill, scott.hill@procirc.com
young artists struggling in New York City?
Conversely, Monet began with a vision and ARTISTS MAGAZINE EDITORIAL OFFICES
shaped the environment accordingly—creating a breathtaking water 1140 Broadway 14th Floor, New York, New York 10001
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you’ve found your idyll, practice expressing its charms with help from Website: ArtistsNetwork.com
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can always visit. We recommend two cities—Marfa, Texas (page 70) and Tel: 201-634-7400 Fax: 201-634-7499
Santa Barbara, California (page 18). Special places like these exist because ATTENTION RETAILERS
people like Jane Jacobs dedicated themselves to preservation (page 10). To carry Artists Magazine in your stores,
contact us at sales@fwmedia.com
Up-and-coming artists pioneer up-and-coming neighborhoods. Their art, PRIVACY PROMISE
glowing with a flourishing beauty, may be found in remote studios (page Occasionally we make portions of our customer list available to
other companies so they may contact you about products and
15) or on the sides of buildings (page 76). services that may be of interest to you. If you prefer we withhold
Art transports us to places both real and imagined. Anne Packard’s your name, simply send a note with the magazine name to List
Manager, F+W, 10151 Carver Road, Suite 300, Cincinnati OH 45242.
distilled views of Cape Cod capture the essence of shore, sea and sky (page
Printed in the USA
94). Thomas Cole’s more picturesque views are encounters with the divine Copyright © 2018 by F+W Media, Inc. All rights reserved.
(page 86), and Peter Drake paints haunting suburban scenes (page 82). Artists Magazine is a registered trademark of F+W.
We’re all nomads on a life journey that’s alternatingly breathtaking
and bewildering. Capture the view any way you can—and enjoy the ride.
Send us your feedback!
Cheers, Write to us at:
View of the Round-Top in the info@artistsmagazine.com
Catskill Mountains (Sunny
Morning on the Hudson)
MICHAEL GORMLEY by Thomas Cole
1827; oil on panel, 18⅝x25⅜ ArtistsNetwork
Content Strategist + Editor in Chief
©2018 Golden Artist Colors, Inc., 188 Bell Rd., New Berlin, NY 13411 ʄ #goldenpaints
ArtistsNetwork.com 5
Behind the Cover
A street artist creates a mural to celebrate America’s most artful cities.
NEAR LEFT
Arias primed four
separate pieces of
plywood with gray
paint.
BELOW LEFT
Plastic sheeting
provided a contained
area for spray painting.
BELOW
Arias worked on two
of the four sections at
a time.
LEFT
Arias blocked in
TOP LEFT
At b[x], Arias
attributes: affordable housing, artists’ enclaves, added hand-
museums and galleries, bookstores and cafes, and drawn lettering.
inspiring environment. Wanting to incorporate
BELOW
the survey results in a magazine cover, the Murals at b[x]
editorial team first landed on the idea of creating
an illustrated map. That idea morphed into
creating a mural—adding the association of street
art to a sense of place.
We contracted former graphic designer turned
hip street artist Anthony Arias, who also operates
the custom mural company Masterpiece NYC, to
design and paint our Art City mural project.
Working in tandem with Artists Magazine art
director Amy Petriello, he arrived at a visual
concept that stuck to the map idea but highlighted
the survey’s “artful living” ranking attributes.
The Art City mural will remain until August on
ArtistsNetwork.com 7
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ArtistsNetwork.com 9
Prime BIO
JANE JACOBS
Prescient Urbanist
Standing up to political and corporate
“big boys,” Jane Jacobs championed city
dwellers and their communities.
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LEFT (CLOCKWISE)
We're All Pink Inside
by Stuart Sheldon
inkjet print, acrylic and
latex paint and graphite
on canvas; 70x206
Remnants of a Deeper
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by JohnBob Carlos
acrylic metallic print,
44x275
We're All
Pink Inside
f rom November through April, Miami is hopping—
a tropical paradise replete with coral beaches,
boutique hotels and de rigueur bars. But none of these
attractions compares to the sizzle of Art Basel, Miami
Beach—a best-in-class art fair that draws thousands of
ABOVE
I'd Prefer Not To
by Matthias Droste
oil on canvas, 43⅓x31½
visitors from around the globe.
The fair has grown exponentially since its 2002 launch, LEFT
spawning a half dozen independent breakout fairs spilling Hidden Refuge
into various Miami neighborhoods—most notably North by JohnBob Carlos
acrylic metallic print, 96x104
Beach and Wynwood. The latter, reimagined
from a gritty neighborhood to Miami’s Design
District, has become synonymous with chic gal-
leries, design studios and fashion boutiques.
Near Wynwood lies Little River, an “in-between”
neighborhood that attracts emerging artists
looking for inexpensive and accessible work-
spaces while waiting to be discovered. Stuart
Sheldon moved his studio to Little River two
years ago—and christened it Fancy Nasty.
In 2017, undeterred that Fancy Nasty Studios
nestles between a tumbledown warehouse and
dubious car-repair shop on a somewhat paved
road, Sheldon painted the floor, walls and ceil-
ing pink and installed a group show titled
“LUSH” to coincide with Art Basel week. “This ABOVE (LEFT TO RIGHT)
show aimed at utopia,” says Sheldon. "For me, Really Good Food Energy Fields Drifting Away
by Stuart Sheldon by Daren Joy by Nadja Frank
pink represents the vulnerability within each 1950s Betty Crocker acrylic on linen, 90x60 silkscreen on fabric, resin
of us that is so critical to compassion and Cookbook pages, latex paint and light bulbs, installation
civility." and vinyl on wood, 48x38 dimensions variable
ArtistsNetwork.com 15
Prime SPACE
LEFT (LEFT TO RIGHT)
Paradise Lost by Marte Kiessling
silkscreen print, 16½x23⅔
BELOW
"Nicht So Scharf "
by Marte Kiessling and Zefrey Throwell
video, 4:24 minutes; edition of 3 with 2 AP
From meditations in the studio to trending colors, urban sketchers and Renaissance
masters, Artists Network connects you with the artists, ideas, inspiration, and skills
that encourage art making and living an artful life.
Artistsnetwork.com
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Beginners embraced!
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REGISTER TO DAY
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Drawn
to the City
Revitalizing existing cities and planning
new ones is Urban Design Associates’
mission, and fine art is a foundational
tool in their process.
by Allison Malafronte
STYLE SETTER
WATERCOLOR: © 2015 URBAN DESIGN ASSOCIATES AND MWVA; GRAPHITE: © 2011 URBAN DESIGN ASSOCIATES
This plein air watercolor sketch of
an existing house, in Summerville,
South Carolina, represents the
Lowcountry-style house that was to
be built in a new community.
ArtistsNetwork.com 23
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SUPPLIES
I arrange my Michael Harding paints in a
light-to-dark and warm-to-cool arrangement.
I’ve had this particular Open Box M
pochade box for more than 20 years, and
I’ve found there’s nothing better than a
honed-wood surface for mixing. I clip my
paint thinner cups on the Open Box M
extension, where I also set my palette knife
and cotton rags.
THE SETUP
My surface is a RayMar C13DP panel. Its double oil-primed
linen surface, as well as RayMar’s new quadruple-primed
linen surface, receives the paint beautifully, letting me
build up layers or grab that perfect alla prima stroke.
STEP 1 STEP 2
In this particular situation, I’m after the tonal quality of the The toned surface becomes relatively dry. Since the paint
moment and time of day. Using blues, reds, crimsons and thinner has evaporated, leaving the pigment behind, I use
magentas with a touch of brown and black to avoid a too the same thinned-out colors already on my palette to brush
richly colored underpainting, I begin at the top and wash in the big shapes. I’m careful not to make things too
the colors with paint thinner to create an organic and symmetrical. I also place my focal point.
abstract look. I take my cues from nature and allow gravity With a rag and a dab of thinner, I pull out lighter areas
to wash the colors in from top to bottom. This creates along the horizon line to help stage the composition. I keep
harmony with the atmosphere of the landscape. things simple—not drawing too much and allowing abstract
and graphic qualities to set the stage. The details will come
later. By keeping things loose, I allow the painting to hold a
dialogue with nature. My creative sensibilities begin to
expand and develop.
STEP 3 STEP 4
I start staging my tonal and color variations with a big I block in the blue areas of the sky, leaving previously toned
brush. This enables me to use value (dark to light) and areas open for the clouds. I also mass in the large areas of the
color (warm or cool) to create the illusion of depth and mountains and the water. To create the reflective quality in the
atmosphere. I keep everything similar in relationship to water, I use the same and slightly darker blues as I used in the
color harmony, but I also make sure I capture the clear sky. Notice the slight indication in the water of warm, colored
distinction of what’s in the light and what’s in the shadows, reflections of clouds I have yet to add. On the mountain to the
as seen in the cool, gray shades of the mountains to the right I add a shaft of warm color in the lower section, indicating
right versus the warmer colors of the mountains to the left. the light filtering in from right to left, with the strongest and
I also begin to establish the color and value of the sky in brightest areas to the left. The mountains on the left of the
relationship to the distant mountains. This area of water composition receive much brighter reds, oranges and yellows
reflects the sky and helps establish an illusionary depth. to indicate the strong, setting sunlight they’re facing.
ArtistsNetwork.com 29
Prime ALCHEMY
STEP 5 STEP 6
The sunlight is low in the sky. Warm pinks and The clouds and sky have taken shape, and I add some
light yellows are clearly visible. I add the brightly stronger contrasts and reflections to the water. The
lit areas of the clouds and reflective suggestions sunlit mountains to the left now have that richly
in the water below them. The benefit of painting colored impact I was hoping for, contrasted by some
the same spot many times is that you can added shadows from the mountain in the shade on
anticipate the light and colors to come. the right.
no obstacle,
what museum or “I’ve heard amazing
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“The Louvre,
“ THE LOUVRE AND THE of course.”
H E R M I TA G E M U S E U M .”
CHERYL K. SNAY
ELIZABETH OSBORNE CURATOR OF EUROPEAN ART,
ARTIST SNITE MUSEUM OF ART,
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME
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ArtistsNetwork.com 33
SPANNOCCHIA | SEPTEMBER 16-22, 2018
INSTRUCTORS
Immersive. Transportive.
Restorative.
Join Artists Network for Retreat to Tuscany, a
weeklong art pilgrimage to the Italian countryside.
Two celebrated painter-instructors, Melanie Vote
and Thomas Schaller will mentor you toward the
creation of your best work during intimate oil and
watercolor workshops that will take full advantage
of the gorgeous surroundings and rustic setting.
Thomas Schaller
RE GIS T E R
ArtistsNetwork.com/Retreat-Tuscany-2018
Melanie Vote
Bu ld
PA B LO P I C A S S O
ArtistsNetwork.com 35
Build TUTORIAL
PAINTING
WITH GREENS
DIY fields of greens
with HELEN OH
You can make a wide range of greens with just a few pigments. In fact, the
fewer colors mixed, the better, since the more colors that are mixed
together, the muddier the result. Here we’ll look at a few different color
combinations that will get you that perfect green.
1
2 2
Mixing complementary hues
neutralizes a color. For subtler greens,
3 3 try the following:
1. Permanent green and alizarin
1. Cadmium yellow light and Mars crimson: This green loses intensity
4 black: Iron oxide black has a high as alizarin crimson is added,
tinting strength and dries quickly. It producing a dark gray.
Green, a secondary hue, is a mixture of produces a neutral, opaque green.
yellow and blue. The choice of blue 2. Cadmium yellow light and ivory
affects the resulting green hue. These
charts show gradients of greens
black: Ivory, a brownish black,
produces a dull yellowish green.
TRANSPARENT
produced by mixing the same yellow
with a small amount of different blues.
3. Cadmium yellow light and GREEN
peach black: In The Craftsman’s
1. Cadmium yellow light and Handbook, Cennino Cennini wrote,
cobalt blue: The resulting green 1
“Burnt peach stone is a perfect
resembles permanent green. black.” Paul Cézanne was known to
2. Cadmium yellow light and favor peach black. This transparent
ultramarine blue: Ultramarine 2
black produces a bluish green.
blue’s reddish bias produces a Clear and vibrant Indian yellow is
brownish green. excellent for glazing. Originally derived
3. Cadmium yellow light and from the urine of cows fed mango
Prussian blue: This deep, inky blue leaves in India, it is now synthetically
produces a bluish green. produced. J.M.W. Turner and Winslow
4. Cadmium yellow light and Homer used this exotic color.
cerulean blue: This bright blue 1. Indian yellow and cobalt blue:
produces a light yellowish green, They produce a soft green.
a substitute for emerald green or 2. Indian yellow and Prussian blue:
Winsor green. The mixture is dark, yet luminous.
A B C
1. Artichoke
A. cadmium yellow light and Mars black
1
B. cadmium orange and ivory black
C. permanent yellow green and white
2. Lime
A. permanent yellow green and cobalt
2 B. raw umber
C. cadmium yellow light
3. Cut Artichoke
A. cadmium yellow light and white
3 B. cadmium yellow light and raw umber, magenta and white
C. magenta, cadmium yellow light and white
4. Avocado
A. permanent yellow green and white
4 B. cadmium orange and ivory black
C. cadmium orange and white
5. Watermelon
5 A. cadmium yellow light and cobalt blue
B. Indian yellow and Prussian blue
6. Bottle
A. permanent yellow green and cobalt
6
B. Indian yellow and peach black
C. white and Mars black
ArtistsNetwork.com 37
Build ART HACKS
Tropics in a Glass
Nothing says “coastal art” like a nice
cold beverage. Artists tote plenty of
gear when trekking out to paint Stay hydrated
crashing waves in person, so keep it
Water Ways
light by putting all the ingredients in a
with a BYO
Painting all the essentials of a
watercolor seascape, from skyline to
ziplock storage bag. Cheers! slushy.
horizon to shore, is as easy as 1-2-3. COMBINE IN BLENDER
1. Heavily load your biggest brush 3 cups of watermelon chunks
with the color mix of your choice. 1 lime, juiced mercilessly
2. Starting at the upper corner of your 2 tablespoons of liquid sweetener—
paper, place a nonstop horizontal agave juice, simple syrup or honey
Painting a stroke with light pressure. Sprinkle of kosher salt
seascape is as 3. Repeat this horizontal stroke,
slightly overlapping your previous
1 (optional) shot of your favorite
grown-up beverage
easy as 1-2-3! stroke. Increase the pressure with
ENJOY
each stroke until you reach the
Puree until smooth. Freeze the drink
shore, which is your heavily colored
contents in a ziplock pouch the night
foreground.
before your painting expedition. Pop
the pouch into your snack sack as you
Get Going leave. By the time you’re ready to sip it
Once you’ve set out for your local up, the drink will be slushy perfection.
watering hole, don’t get stopped in Just don’t forget a straw!
your tracks when you forget the way
Go Gray
WATERCOLOR: NIK MACMILLAN/UNSPLASH; OTHER PHOTOS:
SKETCHBOOK
There’s No Place
Like Home
JAMES GURNEY explores ordinary subjects
within 15 miles of where he lives.
“The great lessons from the true mystics, from the Zen
monks, is that the sacred is in the ordinary, that it is
to be found in one’s daily life, in one’s neighbors,
friends, and family, in one’s backyard, and that travel
may be a flight from confronting the sacred. To be
looking everywhere for miracles is a sure sign of
ignorance that everything is miraculous.”
—ABRAHAM MASLOW
ArtistsNetwork.com 41
Demo 1: Grisaille Over Colored Underpainting
STEP 1 STEP 2
My wife was shopping for groceries, so I had 45 minutes to I had two tubes of gouache, white and black. I laid down the
paint. I walked to the edge of the supermarket parking lot. big tonal masses with a ½-inch flat brush, making no
There was a white van parked behind a car dealership. My attempt at detail. I interpreted the scene in two tonal
sketchbook page was already primed with a bright yellow families: 1) very-dark-plus-black, for what was in shadow,
acrylic gouache underpainting. Over that dry priming, I drew and 2) very-light-plus-white, for what was in direct sun.
some perspective guidelines with a watercolor pencil. I mainly wanted to avoid middle tones.
STEP 3 STEP 4
I liked the way the van was half in the light and half in shadow. Time was running out, so I had to finish. I painted the chain
I moved to smaller brushes for details. A guy came out on his link fence in the foreground and the utility pole in the
break and sat to the left of the van to check his cell phone. distance. I used black water-soluble colored pencil for the
The sun went behind clouds for the rest of the session, so I had distant wires. The gouache surface is matte enough to be
to remember the lighting. I tried to cover all the remaining receptive to the pencil. To add a little more glare to the sky,
areas of yellow acrylic-gouache underpainting. Acrylic gouche I added a bit of white artist’s chalk in the area adjoining the
doesn’t pick up when it’s re-wet. sky, rubbing in the chalk with a soft cotton cloth.
I’m fascinated by the blatant blandness of the franchise landscape, with its fast-food
restaurants and big-box stores. Because so few artists paint them, these landscapes feel to me
like unexplored frontiers, full of exciting possibilities. This view looks down on the rooftop of a
burger place from a raised vacant lot, with a strip mall in the distance.
Loading Dock
watercolor on
paper, 4½x7
While I sat behind a supermarket, two people in uniforms approached me. They’d spotted me
from the outdoor break table. One of them identified herself as the store manager. I was
nervous, trying to muster an explanation. She said, “I’m just being nosy. Can I see what you’re
doing?” It turned out she was interested in painting. We remarked on the beauty of the spring
day, and then she and her associate went back inside.
ArtistsNetwork.com 43
Build WORKSHOP
STEP 1 STEP 2
I selected a random section of a farm pond and At this stage I wanted to focus on one key area and
decided to paint it in gouache over several bring it to a finish. I chose the wild bush roses on the
consecutive days. The underpainting was a rather left side because, in the warm June weather during
bright yellow-green, the color of backlit leaves. I knew which I was working, they were likely to drop their
I’d need to cover up most of that underpainting with petals within the next couple of days. This was how far
opaque paint as I went forward. I got by the end of the first day.
STEP 3
During a subsequent session, I concentrated on the
rippling reflections in the middle distance. A dark
mass of trees was reflected on the right, and a light
sky was reflected on the left. There was also a cast
shadow on the duckweed on the surface of the water.
STEP 4
Small as this painting is, it’s a universe of textures and details, and interpreting it in
paint required several consecutive two-hour sessions. Whether I focus on the human
world or the natural world, I never lack for challenges when I’m painting close to
home. The sacred is, indeed, in the ordinary. The only way to lose yourself in it is to
stop and open the sketchbook.
I take Ruskin’s advice to mean that I should willfully discard the idea of improving on
nature and translate what I see into paint as faithfully as possible. This is easier said
than done. Painting every detail is impossible, so I find ways to summarize textures in
paint. Exercising this true-to-nature philosophy works best for me close to home,
because I can return to the same location enough times to accomplish the goal.
ArtistsNetwork.com 45
Build BUSINESS OF ART
CHOOSE YOUR
APPROACH
An artist’s statement has no defini-
tive format. Some statements seem to
be manifestos; others are personal
musings; yet others delve into art his-
tory and theory with endless
references. Every artist finds the style
that suits his or her work, but this
takes time and regular writing.
LET IT GO!
Who Are You? When you first sit down to write,
don’t try to craft your final artist’s
statement. When you started making
Follow these tips to write an artist’s statement that art, you didn’t immediately tackle a
gets the word out about you and your work. large block of Carrara marble but
sketched and dabbled, exercising your
by C.J. Kent hand. Here, too, you want to practice
different ideas. You should plan to
write a lot more than 200 words in
presence. It cannot reasonably be avoided. With that in mind, here self as an artist. Write about your
are some basic considerations for developing this vital document. elementary-school art teacher, the
trip to Peru in high school and any-
LIMIT THE BIO thing else that has had a part in your
becoming an artist. Later, you’ll
An artist’s statement is not a life story. Mention only those extract the major moments relevant
biographical elements relevant to understanding your art. to your current body of work.
and in person.
ArtistsNetwork.com 47
Build WORKSHOP
TEXTURES
Architecture
in Painting
ANDREW S. CONKLIN shows a building’s texture and art-deco style
through a painterly step-by-step.
ArtistsNetwork.com 49
Build WORKSHOP
STEP 1 STEP 2
I decided to focus on the contrasting textures of wood, I chose a square surface (illustration board) to connect the
bas-relief and brick. To show the concrete-cast relief figure, design with the Modernist influences in this 1938 building.
which is about 16 inches high, I decided to enlarge it I toned the surface with raw umber and let it dry. Then, with
considerably. I wanted a bit of color, so I swapped the a soft pencil, T-square and draftsman’s triangle, I placed the
iron-gate entrance on the left for Miller’s red wooden door, main contours of the structure and freehanded the curving
on the right. wall. I counted the courses of bricks to ensure accuracy.
STEP 3
With a synthetic watercolor brush dipped in Gamsol,
I mixed a transparent warm color of Venetian red and burnt
sienna for the red door in partial shadow and the doorway
brickwork. I then mixed a slightly cooler transparent
shadow color for the brick courses, this time using raw
umber and transparent yellow oxide.
STEP 6
Once the layer described in step five dried,
I used a soft pencil to draw horizontal lines
representing each brick course and the
gaps for mortar.
ArtistsNetwork.com 51
Build WORKSHOP
STEP 7 STEP 8
I rendered the relief figure a bit further, bringing out the I drew the first cat’s profile on tracing paper, adjusting its
features of the face and body. The relief’s scythe-like form proportions slightly. Then I transferred the contour to the
suggested a cat’s tail and prompted me to include two of my panel by rubbing the reverse with graphite and redrawing
brother Peter’s cats—both to repeat this form and add live the outline. I painted this cat with a mix of Cremnitz
elements to the composition. white, Mars black, raw umber and neutral tint. To
mimic the softness of the fur, I blended the tones with
a small squirrel-hair watercolor brush.
STEP 9
I added another layer of white to the brick courses. For the
shadows of each row, I used white and raw umber to emphasize
the strong horizontal lines of the deco wall. These lines are
echoed in the tabby stripes of the cat, which I began at this
stage. I added thin, dark shading to the door with Venetian red,
alizarin crimson and Spanish earth—then added a red collar to
the cat to match the door. I also blocked in a second cat in the
doorway to break up the large shadow shape.
STEP 12
I painted the door details with a mix of white, Venetian red
and Spanish earth. I added the brick entryway with the
same colors plus raw umber. I also added sidewalk lines in
perspective to finish the painting. After a week, I used the
“oil out” technique to revive the darks that had dried matte.
ArtistsNetwork.com 53
Build PROMPTS
1 2
Try a different type of
Make an illustrated
map of your home, illustrated “map”—one of
neighborhood or city. a nongeographic space,
such as your dreams or
fears. You could also chart
a nongeographic route, like
your thought process
when planning dinner.
3
If you typically lean The places and structures that your locality is most known for may
toward representational
art, try going abstract to
4 not be those that have most meaning to you. Draw or paint a place
or landmark in your community that conveys your more personal,
everyday experience.
convey what’s significant
to you about a particular
place. For inspiration,
think of scents, sounds,
colors and textures you
associate with that place.
GLOBE: GETTY IMAGES; MAP AND CAROUSEL: UNSPLASH
5
Cities and landscapes change
over time. Create an artwork
that suggests the passage of
time for a specific location.
9
8
Have you been meaning to try
Rudolf Stussi paints representationally, but his cityscapes
seem to sway with the rhythms of life. What techniques can
you use to give a cityscape a sense of vitality?
a plein air outing, but never
seem to carry out the plan? Pick a
date and place, mark your
calendar and start assembling
your supplies and gear. When
the chosen day arrives,
get out there!
SPACE: NASA/JPL-CALTECH/SWRI/MSSS/GERALD EICHSTÄDT; EASEL: GETTY IMAGES
10
What mood are you in today?
If that mood were a place, what would it
look like? Draw or paint that place—or
build a model of it.
Centuries
Collide
(Berlin)
by Rudolf
Put us in your place! Stussi
Show your artwork on Instagram. watercolor,
@artistsnetwork 20x15
#artistsnetwork_prompts
ArtistsNetwork.com 55
The picture of authenticity
ory and romance all come together to create a truly special sense of place.
-a-kind experience for yourself. Discover The City Different at santafe.org
7 W O R L D ’ S B E S T AWA
#2 Top 15 Cities
in the U.S. #11 World’s Top
15 Cities
I N M A R FA , T H I N G S A R E N ’ T A L W AY S
T H E W AY Y O U E X P E C T T H E M T O B E , A N D
T H AT ’ S I N L A R G E P A R T W H AT H A S M A D E
THIS PLACE DEEP IN THE CHIHUAHUAN
H I G H D E S E R T O N E O F T H E M O S T TA L K E D -
A B O U T, I F U N L I K E LY, A R T D E S T I N AT I O N S
IN DECADES.
PHOTO: CAROL M. HIGHSMITH/BUYENLARGE/GETTY IMAGES; ARCHIVE PHOTOS
Untitled (detail)
by Donald Judd
on the grounds of the Chinati
Foundation; concrete,
98½x98½x194 (each cube)
ArtistsNetwork.com 57
Art
City,
USA
U city illustrations by
Jag Nagra
58
8 Artists Magazine
A a i JJune 2018
0
hen one thinks of Monet, what
Key
comes to mind is his garden in
Giverny. Georgia O’Keeffe conjures
wildflowers of Taos, and Thomas Affordable
Housing
Cole's landscapes apotheosize the sublime Hudson
River Valley. It’s as if the artist and the place are one.
Recognizing the symbiotic relationship of maker
Artists’
with place, we explored with our readers the leading Enclaves
cities conducive to an artful life. Aiming to winnow a
large list of contenders to 10 destinations, we asked
community members to rank locations based on Museums &
affordability, community engagement, cultural Galleries
attractions and inspirational environment—
attributes we feel best support an artist’s lifestyle.
The results offer a welcome diversity in terms of Bookstores
& Cafes
size, location and other attributes, proving there’s a
promised land waiting for all who seek it. Whether
you’re about to embark on an art career or are look-
Inspiring
ing to better support your current practice, we trust Environment
that “Art City, USA” will be your North Star, pointing
you to your true home. —michael gormley
Art
r i sts N etwork
tw k .com
om 59
5
Santa Fe New Mexico
Affordable
Housing
Artists’
Enclaves
Museums &
Galleries
Bookstores
& Cafes
Inspiring
Environment
T H E C I T Y ’S M I X T U R E
O F N AT I V E , S P A N I S H
f our hundred years of practice make perfect. In Santa Fe, art,
history and culture harmonize in ways seldom experienced
anywhere else. A longtime mecca for creatives and dreamers
of all sorts, Santa Fe’s roots run deep. Indigenous peoples have lived
there for thousands of years, and the Spanish arrived in 1610—that’s
10 years before the Mayflower set sail. The city’s mixture of Native,
A N D A N G L O C U LT U R E S Spanish and Anglo cultures makes it a hotbed of cultural and artistic
happenings, and its vibrant gallery scene and packed calendar of
MAKES IT A HOTBED events mean nobody there need be at a loss for something to do. Pair
O F C U LT U R A L that with Santa Fe’s jaw-dropping collection of museums (don’t
miss the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum) in a relatively compact, walkable
AND ARTISTIC and historic downtown, and you quickly see why so many people visit
and decide never to leave. Of course, 300 days of sunshine a year
HAPPENINGS. doesn’t hurt. Yes, Santa Fe is steeped in history, but the future—
particularly for artists, makers and creatives—looks awfully bright.
—SAMANTHA SANDERS
Museums &
Galleries
Artists’
Enclaves
Inspiring
Environment
Bookstores
& Cafes
ArtistsNetwork.com 61
Asheville North Carolina
Affordable
Housing
Artists’
Enclaves
Inspiring
Environment
Bookstores
& Cafes
B O T H D AY S A N D
NIGHTS ARE SPENT
t ake in the mountainous landscape and explore all the vibrant
art and historic architecture that Asheville, North Carolina,
has to offer. Nestled among the Blue Ridge Mountains, the city
of Asheville has everything a visiting tourist, artist or wayfarer may
want—not to mention a reasonable cost of living for those looking for
a big life change. For the grand experience, there’s the dome-topped
IN (AFFORDABLE) Basilica of Saint Lawrence, and you can’t go through the city without a
L U X U R Y. trip to the 19th-century Biltmore Estate, which displays artworks by
such masters as Renoir. For an artsy afternoon, there are the 310 ART
gallery, the Asheville Gallery of Art, the Folk Art Center and other gal-
leries. Just outside of the downtown area is the River Arts District,
where more than 100 local artists have chosen to set up shop. With
copious food options in downtown Asheville, both days and nights are
spent in (affordable) luxury. —MICHAEL WOODSON
Affordable
Housing
Artists’
Enclaves
Inspiring
Environment
Bookstores
& Cafes
ArtistsNetwork.com 63
Austin Texas
Affordable
Housing
Artists’
Enclaves
Inspiring
Environment
Museums &
Galleries
Bookstores
& Cafes
ArtistsNetwork.com 65
Los Angeles California
Museums &
Galleries
Artists’
Enclaves
"LOS ANGELES
M AY B E T H E M O S T
i t may be most closely associated with the entertainment indus-
try, but Los Angeles, and the sprawling metropolitan area
surrounding it, offer serious rewards for fine artists. It’s not the
most picturesque destination in this list—as the filmmaker and his-
torian Thom Andersen has observed, “Los Angeles may be the most
photographed city in the world, but it’s one of the least photoge-
PHOTOGRAPHED CITY nic”—but the surrounding landscape offers abundant natural
beauty, from the coastal views of the Palos Verdes peninsula to the
IN THE WORLD, BUT San Gabriel Mountains, which rise to the north of the city’s skyline.
I T ’S O N E O F T H E On the museum front, big names include the Getty and the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art. Midsize institutions include the
LEAST PHOTOGENIC." Norton Simon Museum, the Long Beach Museum of Art and the
Japanese American National Museum, to name just a few.
THOM ANDERSEN Complementing these is an extensive network of galleries and alter-
native art spaces serving contemporary artists of all stripes.
—AUSTIN R. WILLIAMS
Affordable
Housing
Inspiring
Environment
ArtistsNetwork.com 67
Denver Colorado
Inspiring
Environment
DENVER IS A PLACE
WHERE MOTHER
v isitors to Denver are never hard-pressed to find gasp-worthy
vistas. Take in the vast blue skies of the High Plains to the
east. Stop and stare as the sun gilds the Rocky Mountains to
the west. As the capital of Colorado and also the highest city in the
United States (at an altitude of exactly one mile above sea level),
Denver is a place where Mother Nature puts on her best. The city
N AT U R E P U T S O N delivers more than 4,000 acres of urban and traditional parkland and
another 14,000 acres of skyline mountain parks. Day-trippers can
H E R B E S T. explore hundreds of miles of forest—studded with lakes, waterfalls
and wildlife—at Rocky Mountain National Park, or merge onto the
Mount Evans Scenic Byway—the highest paved road in North
America—which twists and turns as it rises 9,000 feet through five
climate zones to the summit of Mount Evans. For artists who appreci-
ate that inexplicable connection between the outdoors and creativity,
Denver offers one of the most inspiring environments of all.
—COURTNEY JORDAN
Museums &
Galleries
ArtistsNetwork.com 69
MARFA
Untitled
by Donald Judd
on the grounds of the Chinati Foundation; concrete, 98½x98½x194 (each cube)
PHOTO: CAROL M. HIGHSMITH/BUYENLARGE/GETTY IMAGES; ARCHIVE PHOTOS
TEXAS
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP
A panorama of the desert in Marfa, Texas, with the Davis Mountains in the background; headquarters
of the Chinati Foundation, a contemporary art museum in Marfa; the Judd Foundation building on
Highland Avenue; “Welcome to Marfa” sign
he artist Donald Judd collected more buildings that he transformed into a permanent space to
T
than 13,000 books, many of which showcase art in a nonmuseum setting.
birth. Like much of what Judd everyday life exists alongside the myth in Marfa.
touched, this system seems idiosyncratic but reveals, on In fact, the everyday realities of Marfa were what
closer inspection, a certain logic. The same can be said of appealed to Judd. It was a place that offered both free-
the town. In Marfa, things aren’t always the way you dom and space. In a mission statement for the Chinati
expect them to be, and that’s in large part what has made Foundation, a contemporary art museum in Marfa that
this place deep in the Chihuahuan high desert one of the Judd founded and that still continues his legacy, he
most talked-about, if unlikely, art destinations in wrote, “The art and architecture of the past that we know
decades. is that which remains. The best is that which remains
Marfa’s reputation as an overnight sensation doesn’t where it was painted, placed or built. Most of the art of
give the town its full due; it’s now deep into its fifth the past that could be moved was taken by conquerors.”
decade as a draw for artists. Judd first visited Marfa in To Judd, Marfa was his fortress against would-be
1971, although he didn’t buy property there until 1979, conquerors. Its art would not be moved, and its remote-
after first considering California. He acquired Fort D.A. ness set the stage for the town to essentially become a
Russell, a compound of decommissioned military modern pilgrimage site for artists.
L
egacy alone isn’t enough to make most people pack actually had kind of a hard time living in it for quite a
WRONG STORE AND GET GO: SCOTT HALLERAN/GETTY IMAGES; OTHER PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES
up their lives and move, of course, particularly to a while. Once I figured it out, I think I was able to appreci-
place that’s a three-hour drive from the nearest air- ate it. Now it feels like home.”
port. Marfa boasts a Dollar General, a few grocery I pressed Green further about this adjustment process,
stores, an outsize number of restaurants for a town its size, and she described the unique interplay between place and
and the country’s smallest National Public Radio station, culture that makes Marfa so distinct from other towns.
Marfa Public Radio (93.5 on the dial). It also has a long and “Most of us have been to remote places, but maybe [that
varied history prior to Judd’s arrival. Among other things, feeling] is even more distinct in Marfa because it’s a desert
it’s been a railroad water stop, a base for the cavalry to pro- landscape,” she says. “And the sky is so large because the
tect West Texas from Pancho Villa (that would be Fort D.A. horizon line is so low. Then you see the mountains around
Russell) and a filming site for Hollywood movies—from you and anything that sticks up—the town, the people in
Giant, in 1956, to There Will Be Blood and No Country for Old it—is distinct from the landscape. The remoteness stands
Men, both filmed in 2006. out. And it’s very quiet in Marfa. There’s little noise
With a population smaller than many suburban high beyond nature. So that feeling of being so far from the rest
schools, there’s a very real intimacy to daily life there of what you know feels dominant.”
that’s not for everyone. Kate Green, a former curator at
J
Marfa Contemporary, admitted to me in a phone call that udd famously hated the term “minimalism,” but if
moving there was a difficult adjustment. She describes I were to ask you to picture some of Judd’s work—
the landscape as “so different, with its horizontality. the sort of thing you’d see on a postcard from
Having grown up in the Northeast and Northwest, I was Marfa—you might call to mind his concrete boxes
used to the landscape being dominated by these tall trees. in the desert. It’s the austerity of the work that fixes it
I had to figure out what was different, and that’s why I in the mind of its viewer. Although Judd would never
ArtistsNetwork.com 73
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP
Judd Art Studio in Marfa; Judd’s Spring Street studio in New York City; man in a Judd cube;
Judd cubes in Marfa
ART STUDIO: ELIZABETH FELICELLA/ESTO; © JUDD FOUNDATION/ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK;
SPRING STREET: CHARLIE RUBIN © JUDD FOUNDATION/ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK; MAN:
describe it as minimalist, Marfa has become known for There’s an intangible, romantic quality to Marfa
just this kind of work: large-scale, permanent, fixed and the surrounding desert. Painter Ann Marie
and sometimes inscrutable. But understanding what Nafziger—who has lived in Marfa since 2002 and
I
We’re a really diverse community, and I’m always f you go there, Marfa will welcome you, but it takes a
looking for our shared values. What are the things that person suited to the landscape, isolation and quiet to
bring us together?” make a serious go of it. So if you’re an artist searching
Green says something similar. “It sometimes feels as for your own space, how do you find your Marfa?
WOMA AND TRUCK: SCOTT HALLERAN/GETTY IMAGES; LANDSCAPE: GETTY IMAGES
if there are two groups: the art community and the “The most important thing, I’d say, is to simply make sure
community at large,” she says. “But there are certainly that you’re really being true to yourself and what it is that
plenty of us that exist in both of those realms. You’ll you want,” says Nafziger, when I ask her this question.
see people at a Zumba class and also at an exhibition “Years ago I lived in Portland, Oregon, which isn’t a major
opening.” For Green, the divide isn’t something dis- art center, and I lived and worked there for about 10 years.
tinct about Marfa but, instead, a larger phenomenon of I had a great group of artist friends there and it was a really
which Marfa is often cited as an example. “The 100 or rich time for me, but being in Marfa is similar—the experi-
so people [in the art community] are a very visible ences I have here are very rich. My goal as an artist is to still
element of Marfa, so it creates this kind of stark dis- be painting or making work when I’m 90 years old, so it’s
tinction that you might not otherwise have,” she says. about what’s going to continue to be with me as an artist so
“But we’ve had the same conversations in every place: that I want to keep practicing. And frankly, right now, being
Austin, Brooklyn, Portland. There are always the ques- mayor is a big part of that. You never know where things are
tions of gentrification and what it means when a going to take you. One road leads to another, and the next
creative community comes in and raises house prices. thing you know, you’re mayor of Marfa.”
The really important questions—the topics that are on
people’s minds and that come up in city council meet- Samantha Sanders is the event content director for Artists
ings or conversations with friends—are also questions Network and a writer whose work has appeared in Catapult
that most places are grappling with.” and he Awl. She lives in New York City.
ArtistsNetwork.com 75
Painting
in the
Streets
Erasing the Street Art Stigma
77
ArtWorks since 2003, became a project manager on
one of these murals in 2008. “I’m particularly keen
on supporting young and emerging artists as they
gain experience and take on ambitious projects,” she
says. “Working with apprentices is one of the most
incredible facets of these projects. There’s nothing
like completing a large mural and then standing
back to look at your work, knowing that it will be in
your community for decades to come.”
The murals are initiated in a variety of ways, and
a popular one is for the public to submit ideas on
the ArtWorks website. “On average, we receive two
to five submissions per week,” says Wolff.
The ArtWorks team reviews submissions and con-
ducts preliminary conversations about scope,
employment impact, budget, timeline, artistic
vision and location. ArtWorks also invests in strate-
gic initiatives and year-over-year partnerships that
celebrate and reflect Cincinnati’s vibrant communi-
ties. Their aim is to address social issues and
provide innovative opportunities for bold, contem-
porary, artist-driven work.
Once a decision is made based on a submission,
the mural’s style, theme and color palette are deter-
mined through discussions and hands-on sessions
with partners, neighborhood representatives and
artists. “ArtWorks recruits youth apprentices
(including more than 51 percent from low-income
homes) from diverse communities to partake in
enrichment from and implementation of the art
under the guidance and mentorship of professional
teaching artists,” says Wolff. “Once the project is
complete, the general public is invited to a celebra-
tory dedication event.”
Josie Masset has been an apprentice for ArtWorks
for four years. Her experience working with the organi-
zation has given her an even greater artistic purpose
than she’d expected. “I knew I wanted to work in the
arts, but I felt like what I was producing lacked sub-
stance or meaning,” she says. “I never really expressed Cincinnati’s rich history of artisans, makers and entrepreneurs
traditional emotions through my art. Working for often plays into ArtWorks murals. In partnership with the Brewery
District Community Urban Redevelopment Corporation, ArtWorks
ArtWorks, meeting professional artists both local and
employed artist Jim Effler and a team of apprentices to create the
visiting, I’ve learned that art can be used to convey brewing-inspired art installation, Prost to Cincinnati. Seen above
valuable messages, such as the value of human rights.” is Zinsy Ist Bier.
“ArtWorks murals have helped cultivate civic © 2017 ARTWORKS / BLDG / 1700 VINE ST. / PHOTO BY J. MILES WOLF
ArtistsNetwork.com 79
According to the
organization,
“PSAA advocates
for artists by
working with the
City and
stakeholders to
develop more
equitable and
inclusive policies
and programs.
Our mission is to
cultivate a more
democratic
culture of artistic
expression, by
activating public
spaces and
broadening
perspectives to
build a more
engaged and
diverse city.”
SUBURBIA
Using unexpected bits of cultural imagery,
Peter Drake creates a visual narrative of
a suburban dream that never existed.
by Michael Gormley
ABOVE
Light My Pill
acrylic on board,
11¾x11
LEFT
Carol Is Shocked
acrylic on canvas,
40x50
OPPOSITE
Harriet Walks Away
acrylic on canvas,
24x33
ArtistsNetwork.com 83
Although his work is representational, the artist’s use of
scumbling over high-keyed grounds, numerous glaze layers and
subtractive wipe-out technique imbues his paintings with a
mannered artifice. The resulting distortions and painterly sur-
faces create a tension that distances the work from the
photorealism and academic approaches employed by many figu-
rative artists. “I have been naturally gravitating toward acrylic
because I love to be able to glaze all day,” says Drake. “I almost
never stop painting when I’m working in acrylic. This process
also appeals to my understanding of the visual world. Most
visual experiences (in particular the human form) are built up
from layers and layers of visual information. To accurately
reproduce this experience, you have to have layers and layers of
paint.”
This heightened expressiveness and aesthetic assertion is
refreshing; we think painting first, then concept, then repre-
CLOCKWISE sentation. Similitude, as a defining and ascendant attribute, is suppressed in service to an
FROM TOP idea or intention. The objective here is to signify the half-asleep haze of late-night TV
Not Sanitary
viewing and the blurring of boundaries between the experience of real life and life experi-
acrylic on canvas,
8x8 enced through the filter of media. Drake notes, “I’m always thinking cinematically in my
own work and find myself constantly compelled to think of movies one frame at a time.”
People Stroking With his painted images derived from other media images (in this instance, mass media’s
Their House I representation of suburban life), rather than from a life observed, Drake is offering a
acrylic on canvas,
32x40 commentary on perceptual strategies and the assumed primacy that manufactured imag-
ery exerts over observed reality. We are, ultimately, what we scroll to.
Spool Although the presence of the lens and its impact on the development of visual cul-
acrylic on paper, ture certainly inform Drake’s perceptions of reality, this influence is paradoxically
sanded, on canvas,
tempered by Drake’s insistence on historicizing cinquecento. Inspired pictorial strategies
24x19
such as object outlines, forms flattened into compositional patterns and shallow pictorial
space evince a full-on flight from reality.
Drake’s black-and-white paintings are a further foray into a dreamlike world and offer a
strong counterpoint to his color-rich inventions. Distilled to tone and gesture, one won-
ders whether Drake is challenging himself to arrive at an expression as compelling as his
ArtistsNetwork.com 85
86
JOURNEY OF
A LIFETIME
ArtistsNetwork.com 87
he most distinctive, and perhaps the most impressive,
characteristic of American scenery is its wildness,”
wrote the painter Thomas Cole (1801–48) in an 1836
essay. “It is the most distinctive because in civilized
Europe the primitive features of scenery have long
since been destroyed or modified.”
With his powerful understanding of the primeval
nature of the land itself, Cole can rightly be called the
founding father of American landscape painting, an
artist whose work communicated the vast magnifi-
cence of the New World wilderness with a directness
and vitality that set it apart from European painting.
Yet, as his ambitions grew, Cole’s work formed a pas-
sionate critique of the new American values, with
their embrace of raw commercialism, sprawling indus-
trialization and the destruction of natural settings in
pursuit of gain.
More than a mere preservationist, he took an
encompassing view of the nature of human interac-
tion with the landscape. He saw human history as a
broad arc in which wilderness gives way to the plough
and cities rise from villages to form great civilizations
only to be undermined by their own venality and
corruption to fall into eventual ruin.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, in New York
City, is showing a major exhibition of Cole’s paint-
ings, concentrating on his early work and the
subsequent influence of his first European trip,
giving viewers the opportunity to enjoy his abundant
gifts and to contemplate his sobering outlook.
Formative Years
Cole’s view of how human activity affects landscape apprenticed to an engraver in Chorley, Lancashire, at
must surely have formed at an early age. He was born in the age of 13. The family religion was Calvinism, a dis-
England in Bolton, Lancashire, a hotbed of the senting Protestant sect that prized, among other
Industrial Revolution where factories and grim terraces things, the virtue of hard work. This apparently did not
of workers’ housing lay in a long river valley. The sur- prove sufficient for the success of Cole’s father, who
rounding landscape was more or less open moorland, a undertook a long series of failed business ventures.
juxtaposition that could not have been lost on the boy. After Chorley, the family moved to Liverpool, where
Cole’s family was only modestly middle-class, and he young Thomas worked for an engraver and probably
received a brief and unhappy education before being first saw engravings of the paintings of his day.
ArtistsNetwork.com 89
companion day and night … my ambition grew, and landscape that would become his inspiration. Staying
in my imagination I pictured the glory of being a in the environs of Catskill, the town where he would
great painter.” eventually settle, he made a number of sketches that
he later developed into a group of paintings that
would set him on a path to success. Exhibited in a
Right Time shop window in New York that fall, they caught the
and Place eye of John Trumbull, the president of the American
Academy of the Fine Arts. He recognized immediately
Cole threw himself into the pursuit of “being a great the presence of a new and original voice and pur-
painter,” adopting the habit of drawing directly from chased one of the pictures.
nature, an approach that allowed him to capture fea-
tures of the American landscape, unencumbered by
European stereotypes. He was also fortunate at this Vast, Wild View
time to receive a commission that took him to the To understand what was so innovative about Cole’s pic-
Caribbean, where he experienced firsthand a tropical tures, consider his early work View of the Round-Top in
environment with all its wealth of exotic vegetation. the Catskill Mountains (Sunny Morning on the Hudson)
In 1825, Cole moved to New York, hoping to estab- (pages 86–87). To the casual viewer, it might appear
lish a career as a painter. From an economic point of very much in line with early 19th-century European
view, he couldn’t have chosen a better moment; New landscape painting, with its warm ground, carefully
York was humming with trade, and the Erie Canal was graded tonal values and deep aerial perspective. What is
about to open, establishing the city as the focal point unusual is a kind of abrupt starkness in the composi-
of trade to the Midwest via the Hudson River. tion, an almost naive directness, as well as a forthright
Moreover, a tourist trade was just starting, fueled by approach to the idea of a panorama.
interest in the wild landscape of the Hudson Valley. The sense of starkness comes from the bold shape
The Catskill Mountain House had opened in 1824, of the mountain on the left, whose dark, shadowy
offering incomparable vistas and civilized accommo- presence dominates the painting. Silhouetted against
dations. So it was in the summer of 1825 that Cole this, in brilliant light, a group of blasted trees and a
took a steamer up the Hudson and discovered the squat, overgrown tree stump dramatically suggest the
Variations on a Theme
Trumbull’s recognition gained Cole introductions to Italian Influences
the inner circles of American painting as well as its From England, Cole traveled to Florence in May of
supporters and patrons. It was through this connec- 1831 where, in the convivial company of a group of
tion that Cole met Daniel Wadsworth, heir to a great expatriate American painters, he made sketching trips
mercantile fortune, who invited Cole to paint the into the countryside and attended life-drawing classes
financial mogul’s country estate, Monte Video, in at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze, filling a hole
Connecticut. Painting another panoramic landscape, in his piecemeal art education. In February 1832, he
Cole pursued the theme of the confrontation of wil- moved on to Rome, where he delighted in drawing the
derness and civilization. Here, the carefully cultivated ruins, particularly the Coliseum, which was then over-
grounds melt into the surrounding wilderness in a grown and provided a powerful image of the demise of
reasonably harmonious relationship. a civilization. He also relished the opportunity to draw
Not so in his next project, a pair of paintings and paint the landscape that Lorrain had worked in,
executed in what he called “a higher style of land- the Roman Campagna. By now, Cole had adopted the
scape than I have yet tried.” They show, respectively, European art of painting oil sketches out in the land-
a view of the Garden of Eden and the expulsion from scape, carrying paints in pig bladders and working
the Garden of Eden. In the first, Cole used his earlier with a small easel and an umbrella. The practice would
experience of tropical vegetation to create a rich ver- greatly enrich his work.
sion of earthly paradise. In the second, he conjured a
melodramatic scenario in which Adam is cast out
into the wild and rocky darkness of a primeval world. The Course
For this he was greatly influenced by a composition
by John Martin (1759–1854), an English visionary of Empire
artist whose work Cole knew through prints. This Returning to New York in late 1832, Cole was taken
time, however, Cole had misjudged his market, and with the idea of a cycle of paintings that would trace the
there were no immediate takers for the works. With entire process of man’s interaction with the landscape.
his early success and now this hiccup, the artist It was to be titled The Course of Empire. He conceived it
began to think that it might be a good idea to go back first in London, writing notes in his sketchbook. The
to Europe for a while to improve his skills and learn scheme was simple but grand; five paintings would be
about European painting firsthand. set in the same location showing the five stages of civi-
ArtistsNetwork.com 91
The Course of Empire: Destruction
by Thomas Cole
1836; oil on canvas, 39¼x63½
NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY; GIFT OF THE NEW YORK GALLERY OF THE FINE ARTS
(1858.4); DIGITAL IMAGE CREATED BY OPPENHEIMER EDITIONS
ArtistsNetwork.com 93
LESS IS MORE
94 Artists Magazine June 2018
Over the course of six decades, Anne Packard has honed her creative voice
into an inspired convergence of image and imagination.
by Robert Carsten
rchitect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886– 1923) was awarded the gold medal. “She wanted to
OPPOSITE ABOVE
Serenity (oil on canvas, 72x48) Beach House (oil on canvas, 24x36)
ArtistsNetwork.com 95
which hangs in my home, enchants the household. After 17 years of mar- OF FENCES AND
me even now.” riage, her husband left, abandoning NEIGHBORS
Packard and the children. “I was living
A CIRCUITOUS ROUTE in Princeton, New Jersey,” she says, Renting a seaside cottage, Packard
“and I had no money and no child sup- began hanging her paintings on a
Because she was interested in art, port. I found odd jobs and began board attached to her fence to attract
Packard’s parents enrolled her in a painting ocean scenes on scraps of the eyes of passersby. “I sold the paint-
figure-painting class when she was wood. I went to street fairs, church ings for a song, but it supported us,”
18 years old. Despite showing prom- sales—anywhere I could—and sold says Packard. She also began studying
ise, the instructor met with her them for $10 or $20 each.” with painter Philip Malicoat (1908–
parents and advised them to dissuade In 1974, Packard tragically lost her 1981), who had been a student of
their daughter from a life in art, citing oldest son, Stephen. Devastated, she Henry Hensche (1899–1992) and
the difficulties in making a living. found solace through her art and her Edwin Dickinson (1891–1978).
Packard would attend Bard College for children. Three years after his death, “I learned a great deal from Phil,” she
a year, followed by secretarial school. she made the decision to move to says, “especially about the
Soon after, she met a writer, they mar- Provincetown, and its landscape importance and use of value. He
ried and had five children. Her life was became the subject of her ethereal encouraged and influenced me
devoted to caring for her family and paintings. tremendously, but he didn’t like that
ArtistsNetwork.com 97
abstract expressionist Robert artist says. “It started as a craft, change and refinement. I’ll work on
Motherwell. He lived just three doors something fun to do for which I four or five paintings at a time, so I
down, and we became friends. He’d could earn money. Never in my wild- can let some rest as I contemplate
visit often, at times buying more est dreams did I think I’d accomplish what they need.”
paintings, over 20 in all. That really what I have.” In her upstairs studio overlooking
built my confidence. He’d favorably the bay, working by natural light,
compare my paintings with those by THE MIND’S EYE Packard creates her artwork using
great landscape painters. My daugh- innumerable layers of paint. Old
ter, Cynthia, who was in art school at Extremely prolific, Packard Holland oil paint is her brand of
the time, would listen from behind describes her overwhelming urge to choice, because she loves its consis-
the door so afterward she could create. “It’s about the search and tency and vibrancy of color. She
explain to me what and who he was having something to say, discover- uses an array of primary colors,
talking about. Once, he told me that ing your own individual voice,” she along with yellow ochre, orange, sap
he could take me to New York and says. “It comes from deep within. green and titanium white. An addi-
make me ‘very big.’ Here I was, a For me, it’s about the tranquility of tional color Packard admittedly can’t
woman in her mid-40s with all these solitude, not loneliness, but the live without is Winsor & Newton’s
kids, poor, selling paintings dirt contentment that comes from really Payne’s gray.
cheap. Then he added that he didn’t being alone with yourself and your Even when working large, whether
think it would make me happy and thoughts, memories and daydreams. on canvas, linen, Masonite or paper,
that he wouldn’t do it, and that I go for walks in the morning, she relies on a small 10x12-inch pal-
was that.” always with a sketchbook, and then ette. She uses turpentine to thin the
Over the following decades, I’ll return to work in the studio paint mixtures and occasionally pours
Packard’s innate talent and hard from the sketches, but mostly from turp over freshly painted areas, rotat-
work at daily painting proved fruit- my mind’s eye. I alter things con- ing and maneuvering the canvas to
ful. “The more I painted, the more stantly in my paintings. Like nature, achieve gossamer effects. Because her
serious I got about painting,” the they’re in a continual state of paintings often evolve over extended
ArtistsNetwork.com 99
periods, she applies retouch varnish color—as John Constable did,” she Like opposing forces, they enact a
toward the end to reinvigorate any says. “It helps to give me that lovely dynamic push/pull effect across the
colors that have dulled. atmosphere. Although you may not entire canvas. It’s a piece that
Her philosophy on brushes is to always see it, there’s always some discloses Packard’s prowess as a
use the largest one possible to do memory of that orange.” The large painter of enigma. At first glance, it’s
the job at hand. In addition, Packard painting Serenity (page 94) reveals the a simple, lovely picture, firmly
has found that her fingers and optical effects she achieves by using grounded in reality. But the more one
palms are invaluable implements for the imprimatura with semitranspar- looks, the more mirage-like that real-
moving paint around and softening ent layers, each applied skillfully by ity becomes. The signature of
edges during the creative process. hand and highly responsive brush- Packard’s imagery takes effect,
work. The painting achieves luminous inducing the viewer’s imagination,
PAINTING THE qualities of atmosphere and a bound- memories and dreams. Subject matter
less sense of depth. in a Packard painting shifts as surely
ESSENCE InWhite Dory (page 97), a low- as sand dunes.
Packard often begins a painting by lying fog obscures the horizon, gener- Fleeting, atmospheric effects are
applying an imprimatura of orange. ating a profound depth that plays captured in Evening Mist (pages
“I love to paint against a warm against the proximity of the boat. 96–97) and Foggy Wharf (below).
ABOVE OPPOSITE
Foggy Wharf (oil on canvas, 30x40) View From Bradford (oil on canvas, 36x24)
BETWEEN REALITY
AND THE IMAGINED
To view Packard’s paintings is to
experience natural elements as forces
artfully teased and coerced into equi-
librium. There’s an ever-delicate
balance between reality and the
imagined. Intangible qualities such
as time, memory and dreams float
freely yet are tethered to a specific
place and moment. Her stunning and
mysterious Blue Evening (page 98) is
a befitting nod to her grandfather’s
“ I G O F O R WA L K S I N T H E The Blue Painting. Here, she uses a
figure/ground relationship to
M O R N I N G , A LWAYS W I T H A advance her expressive illumination
further. She says, “I like to paint
SKETCHBOOK, AND THEN I’LL things that are alone, solitary and
peaceful. Boats are like people to
R E T U R N TO W O R K I N T H E S T U D I O me—friends who have their own per-
sonalities—and that blue isn’t just a
wall of blue. I applied layer after
F R O M T H E S K E TC H E S , B U T layer of cobalt, cerulean and yellow
ochre until I achieved that depth.
M O S T LY F R O M M Y M I N D ’S E Y E .” “I always want the viewer to be able
to go into my paint surface as though
it’s the air itself, a patina of time that
sparks memories or transports
“I hold all of these moments and coming to rest on the red-roofed dreams,” the artist says. “I’m always
images in my mind’s eye," says houses, above which the sea recedes trying to express that breadth of
Packard. "I can change things around as the sky advances forward. space between breaths. I’m still on the
at will. I don’t want to paint exactly “I started with the main red-roofed search, and I want to do so much
what I see. I want to paint the house and worked the composition more with so much less.”
essence of what’s there.” out from there," says Packard.
Good composition is a guiding "Composition becomes instinctual, When not teaching workshops
principle in Packard’s process. In View but only when you have a lot of nationally and internationally,
From Bradford (above), we enter the experience. I’ve painted this area Robert K. Carsten spends his time
composition at bottom right. Packard many times.” painting the landscape near his home
then takes our attention left, weaving Packard’s painterly and visually in Vermont. Learn more at
us through labyrinthine space before concise Beach House (page 95) robertcarsten.com.
ArtistsNetwork.com 101
strokes
of genius 11
FINDING BEAUTY
Shine a spotlight
on your art
Every artist strives to display their masterpiece for the
world to see—here’s your chance to bring this fantasy to
life with Strokes of Genius 11: Finding Beauty.
“A B O V E T H E F O L D ”
I S T H E F I R S T T R AV E L I N G
ORIGAMI EXHIBITION TO BRING
I N T E R N AT I O N A L I N S TA L L AT I O N S T O
NORTH AMERICAN AUDIENCES.
ArtistsNetwork.com 103
Nancy Exhibitions, events and other items of interest
1.
TANKERSLEY 2.
1. PROCESSION BY CAROLINE KENT; 2015; ACRYLIC ON UNSTRETCHED CANVAS; COURTESY OF THE ARTIST; PHOTOGRAPH BY RENEÉ YAMADA 2. A YEARLING BY WALTER UFER; 1929; OIL ON CANVAS; COLLECTION OF PALM SPRINGS ART MUSEUM 3. GREENE RECYCLING/
DO
NEW
NOW 3.
1. Abstraction and
Marginalized
Voices
2. Western Stories
3. Origami
4. Berthe Morisot
California
Michele common American assumptions about
WESTERN STORIES
BYRNE
Palette Knife Painting™
PALM SPRINGS ART MUSEUM
race from a woman’s point of view. The
exhibition features prints, oil paint-
PALM SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA ings, drawings, masks, soft sculptures,
760-322-4800 • PSMUSEUM.ORG tankas (works inspired by Tibetan tex-
! THROUGH JUNE 18 tiles called thangkas) and original
NEW “Western Stories” examines the com- illustrations—as well as Ringgold’s
plex relationship between people and story quilts, which combine textiles and
the landscape in the American West paint to tell the story of black women.
and Mexico, as well as the interplay
between myth and reality. The exhibi- Illinois
tion pulls inspiration from Hollywood
movies (with their Western icons),
spirituality and the experiences of
ABSTRACTION AND
those who populate the landscape, as MARGINALIZED
well as those who cross its borders. The
VOICES
DESTRUCTORS VIII BY ERIK DEMAINE AND MARTIN DEMAINE; 2013; ELEPHANT HIDE PAPER; PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ARTISTS
works on display are contextualized
historically, through the juxtaposition DEPAUL ART MUSEUM • CHICAGO
John of contemporary and traditional art, 773-325-7506 • MUSEUMS.DEPAUL.EDU
APRIL 26 THROUGH AUGUST 5
with the aim of challenging our roman-
MACDONALD ticized notions of the West. “Out of Easy Reach” examines the use
Creating Dynamic of abstraction by female-identifying
Landscapes™ California artists whose work deals with the
Black and Latina Diasporas. The
FAITH RINGGOLD exhibition aims to counter the conven-
tional views of art history that often
CROCKER ART MUSEUM exclude the voices and contributions of
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA
women of color. It explores the rela-
916-808-7000 • CROCKERART.ORG
THROUGH MAY 13 tionships between body, spatial
politics, time and material culture.
“Faith Ringgold: An American Artist”
examines the work of an artist and North Carolina
activist who has documented and con-
tributed to some of America’s greatest
social upheavals. Growing up in
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Harlem, New York, at the tail end of OF MEXICO
the Harlem Renaissance and the begin- THE MINT MUSEUM • CHARLOTTE,
ning of the Great Depression, Ringgold NORTH CAROLINA • 704-337-2000
quickly found a place among the revo- MINTMUSEUM.ORG • THROUGH JUNE 17
lutionary voices of the 1960s with her
1-877-867-0324
first series of political paintings, “Develar y Detonar (Reveal and
LiliArtVideo.com/Artist The American People, which challenged Detonate): Contemporary Mexican
Pale by choice,
not by comparison.
Anyone who has painted for very long knows that you use more white
than any other color. For this reason, GOLDEN introduces seven
new Light Value colors for 2018. They’re mostly white, but with a hint of
color that gives you a quick chromatic highlight or a shorter path to more
subtle blends. All seven are tints of very strong, lightfast colors. See the
new Light Value Colors along with the new Benzimidazolone Yellows and
Cobalt Teal at your nearest art supply store or goldenpaints.com.
©2018 Golden Artist Colors, Inc., 188 Bell Rd., New Berlin, NY 13411 ʄ #goldenpaints
ArtistsNetwork.com 105
Independent
Study
Travel Guide
Planning a trip? Be sure to consult
Street Art (Lonely Planet) to find
the exact locations of the best urban
art in 42 cities across the globe—
plus a list of 15 awesome street-art
festivals. Plentiful photos will keep
even the armchair traveler happy.
MAP IT!
MAP OF LA PAZ, BOLIVIA: FROM HOW TO MAKE HAND-DRAWN MAPS BY HELEN CANN, PUBLISHED BY CHRONICLE BOOKS 2018; MAP BY TILLY
How to Make Hand-Drawn Maps
(Chronicle Books, 2018) by Helen Cann
covers the expansive territory of illustrated
maps with 30 projects for mapping
MURAL: REPRODUCED WITH PERMISSION FROM LONELY PLANET’S STREET ART, © 2017 LONELY PLANET; PHOTO BY C215;
188 Rue Pelleport, everything from neighborhoods and cities
Paris, France to story plot lines to genealogies.
by C215
Additional features include overviews of
cartographic elements, lettering and
folding styles; interviews with notable map
artists; and grid and template pages.
Mountain View
Join watercolorist Stephen Quiller in the Colorado mountains—via
streaming video. In Painting en Plein Air: Bird’s Eye View (Artists
Network), Quiller shares tips and techniques while giving an on-site
painting demonstration featuring a rocky, evergreen-spiked mountain
scene overlooking an abandoned mine.
Competition Spotlight
Finalist artwork from Artists Magazine’s 2017 Annual Art Competition
Kathleen
E. Dunn
MILTON, WASHINGTON
t he Explorer is based on an
encounter I had during the
first weeks after moving into
my current house. I was enjoying the
upper deck when I noticed this clus-
ter of juvenile Bewick’s wrens
napping on our fence.
The drawing for this piece actually
sat uncompleted for three years
because I couldn’t resolve the place-
ment of the fifth bird. I finally
realized that putting it in the space
where the missing slat had been cre-
ated a balanced composition. I didn’t
have a reference, so I made a clay
model of the head. I placed a piece of
the fencing in front to figure out the
shadow and posture of the bird.
The Explorer
oil on panel, 12½x9
ArtistsNetwork.com 107
short stories Brief reflections on notable
exhibitions BY HOLLY DAVIS
William Morris:
Triumph of Beauty
and Craft
CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART • CLEVELAND
CLEVELANDART.ORG • THROUGH NOVEMBER 11
showcase
Your painting could win $2,500
and worldwide recognition!
Catapult your best Best of Show: $2,500
painting into the
spotlight. Winners and 2nd Place: $1,250
honorable mentions
will see their painting
3rd Place: $750
in the April 2019 issue 4th Place: $500
of Watercolor Artist. Blick gift card
ArtistsNetwork.com 109
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Watercolor West ..................110 artworkshops.com
ArtistsNetwork.com 111
Lasting impression
Angel
by Jean Barbet
1475; bronze,
44½ inches high
THE FRICK COLLECTION,
NEW YORK; PURCHASED BY
THE FRICK COLLECTION, 1943
TM
Systems Cradle Part 1 by Andrea Pramuk. Alcohol Ink on Ampersand Claybord
Conservators agree that paintings on rigid and well-prepared surfaces will outlast those
on stretched canvas. But not all wood panels or surfaces are the same. Artists around the
world, like Andrea Pramuk, trust Ampersand panels for their work. Ampersand’s surfaces
are the only truly archivally prepared wood panels on the market, and their signature
painting grounds invite artists to explore, imagine, and create without boundaries.
AmpersandArt.com