When I started trying to promote my own artwork online I kept coming across other people's art that amazed or compelled me in one way or another. This blog has been a way for me to practice thinking and writing about art, as well as learning more about my peers and all the incredible art that is being made out there.

Search for an Artist on this blog (or cut and paste from the list at the bottom of this page)

Monday, September 17, 2012

Carolyn Swisczc

"Food Court, Santa Fe NM"  acrylic, relief ink and rubber stamp on canvas  48" x 73"  2011

"Whitney Lobby #1"   acrylic and relief ink on canvas  36" x 48"  2011

"Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library and Museum, Austin TX"  acrylic and rubber stamp on canvas  48" x 73"  2011

"Karate Extreme"  acrylic, ink, relief ink and rubber stamp  18" x 22"  2005

"Showcase Cinemas, Revere MA"  acrylic, relief ink and rubber stamp on canvas  48" x 72"

Carolyn Swiszcz (pronounced Swiz for those like me who have to be hear every word or name in their heads) is an artist currently in St. Paul Minnesota, whose work is like a series of encounters with modern American architecture, both ordinary and extraordinary, banal and peculiar, and often all of these at once. She has a vivid graphic style using acrylic paints, printmaking techniques and even rubber stamps, that somehow captures a surreal atmosphere to scenes we might otherwise pay little or no attention to; a strip mall, a lobby, an old motel, the marquis for a suburban cinema. Through composition and careful attention to patterns and shapes, she draws out details of the innocuous and makes them interesting with the simple trick of forcing us to look at them. She seems to see through the ordinary and find within it, not banality, but a delicate mood of acute nostalgia and haunting melancholy. The addition of figures in some of her more recent work, often an adult with a child, brings a degree of warmth to the images, but suggests to me that the haunting quality is in part the haunting of our own childhood, that often too dimly remembered time when nothing was ordinary, simply because everything was new. Recapturing that perception and communicating it with an adult's knowledge and skill, is essentially the very heart of the artistic endeavor.
You can see more at her website: www.carolynswiszcz.com
There are a lot of images available and slightly larger at here gallery's site: stevenzevitasgallery.com

thanks to the folks at http://www.booooooom.com for posting her work.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Robert Sato - new show

"Siege" from the new show "Haunts"

untitled from the new show "Haunts"

"Island"  watercolor on arches paper  16" x 17"  2011

"Asleep at the Wheel"  watercolor on molachi paper  9" x 9"  2011

"Ghost Ride"  watercolor on molachi paper  35" x 84"  2011

I posted some of Robert Sato's watercolors just one year ago (Sept. 1, 2011), and had almost nothing intelligent to say about the work except that I liked it. Well, I still do. And if I happened to be in L.A., which I'm largely grateful not to be, but if I was, I would most definitely go see his new show "Haunts" (along with artist John Pham) which is currently up at Giant Robot through Sept 26). Robert's work often depicts conglomerations of objects, flying apart or coming together to form new objects. Individual items are often morphing into other things or are in fact two things at once, or perhaps unrecognizable pieces of a something else altogether. There is no doubt that surrealism is the most useful label here, but there is sometimes a more conscious meaning. The chaos that seems ever present here reflects the chaos of our post-industrial world which has turned out to be just the opposite of industrial age dreams. Hopes for technological solutions to all the world's woes and an orderly arrangement by human reason have given rise instead to confusion, unpredictability and possibly, in the end, collapse and disintegration. Robert Sato's vision is not a grim commentary on all this, but rather one of a lively participation in the ensuing anarchy.
Please check out his website: www.robsato.com

Monday, September 10, 2012

Shane Guffogg

"Ginevra de' Benci #6"  Oil on canvas  30" x 24"  2011





What I like about these paintings is how they take an important and early early impetus for abstraction and turn it on its head. From it's very beginning and running through such diverse movements as abstract expressionism and color field paintings, abstraction was all about abandoning the illusion of depth, flattening the canvas as it were acknowledging that painting is a 2-dimensinal art form. Shane Guffog's work embraces the illusion of depth, but does so without resorting to outright representation. The paintings are built up slowly in varnished layers through rhythmic repetitive brush strokes. The varnished layers give the work a luminous depth (like the sky of a Maxfield Parrish painting (about as polar opposite from twentieth century abstraction as it is possible to get). This also heightens the three dimensional illusion, while the rhythmic brushwork seems to suggest mathematical ideas of stochasticity and chaos theory.
You can see more at the artist's website: www.shaneguffogg.com
or at: Leslie Sacks Fine Arts

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Sam Dargan

"The Celestial Abduction of Henri de Rochefort at the Behest of the Third Republic, 20th March 1874"  Oil on canvas  130x110cm  2012

"The Sea Won't Save You, Vidkun Quisling (Wrong Place, Wrong Time #2)"  oil on canvas  50x30cm  2012
 
"Christ’s Entry Into Paris, 18th March 1871: A Diversionary Tactic"  Oil on Canvas  2011-12

"Rue Charles Peguy, Road to Mulhouse: 18th October 1977"  Oil on Canvas   130x150cm  2012

"Cold War Bolt Hole (at Home with Dean Read)"  oil on canvas  30x24cm  2011

from "A Bad Year for People"  2007
Sam Dargan is another "successful" artist but new to me and so I'm posting his work here, because.. well damn it... I like it. I have to admit that looking back over his earlier work I was slightly put off by the overwhelming  jaded cynicism of it all. That's not really on display here and you'll have to do the googling for yourself to see what I mean. But there are remnants of it in his long obtuse historical referential titles. Those too put me off at first but actually they're rather fascinating, once you dig into them a little bit. For example "Rue Charles Peguy, Road to Mulhouse: 18th October 1977" is a reference to the assassination of Hanns-Martin Schleyer, a former SS officer by the Red Army Faction, aka the Baader-Meinhof gang. His body was left in the trunk of a car by the side of the titular road. That strip of pavement in the foreground becomes so much more significant. But the images themselves are only loosely tied to the narrative titles. The actual images have their own historical reference points, most especially the romantic landscapes of artists like Caspar David Friedrich (it seems that lately I'm finding a lot of artists harking back to the great Friedrich, whom I recall my art history teacher poo-pooing a bit as mere sentimentalism significant only in its historical context. I love how that stuff turns around).

Here's a link to a better review than mine from the Guardian. And here's a couple links where you can look through some more of the artist's work:
art.sy/artist/sam-dargan
www.rokebygallery.com/artists/sam-dargan