Tuesday, December 4, 2012

GAETANNELAVOIE

Gaetanne Lavoie is a Canadian born artist who has studied fine art at York University, San Francisco Academy of Art University, and  New York Academy of Art. She currently resides in New York. Her work focuses primarily on figures and their environment. Many of her works depict daily habits that people do with out thinking of what it is that they are doing, like walking across a street in a busy city or staring off into space while sitting on your bed.


"Girl on Bed" 26"x 26", Oil.


"Place St. Henri" 24"x48", Oil.

A common thread that holds of her works together is the fact that they seen to be painted as if they are just still frames from a film. This is clearly evident in the painting above titled "Place to St. Henri," the face of the man sitting in the middle is blurry as if this 'snpashot' was taken just as he was turning his head. Her works also have a tense atmosphere around them, as if somthing will happen if you just wait and see. This could also be tyed to the concept that the paintings are just still frames from an ongoing movie that you, the viewer have yet to watch.


"Thai Train" 20"x40", Oil.

Another concept that Lavoie likes to portray in her works are those little fleeting personal moments that happen everyday within the hussel and bussel of a busy city. One way that he captures this is by painting a subject alone and isolated, not only are these figures physically isolated from the crowds on the streets but the are also mentally alone; lost in their own thoughts. This idea of visually showing this precious moments that have happened to everyone is what makes her work so easily understandable and relatable.


"Polk Street" 18"x28", Oil.


"Happy Pills" 40"x60", Oil.



http://www.gaetannelavoie.com/index.html
http://www.bluecanvas.com/gaetannelavoie
  

Monday, December 3, 2012

Hidden Meanings

Meghan Howland

Meghan Howland is an American artist who is based in Portland, Maine. She specializes in figure paintings that carry a weight of something that is slightly more distant. In many of her works the subjects faces are obscured by something often by birds. There also happens to be a question looming around the subjects of whether something is safe or dangerous. With this question the image tends to be snapshot like of a person going through interpersonal turmoil, this turmoil is usually expressed by the obscuring of the face. All of the these aptitudes happen while conveying a situation or mood that is slightly ambiguous. This ambiguous nature makes the issues to be up to the viewer to resolve what is happening, creating an unending range of emotions and possibilities.












    














"Vapors" 20 x 24, Oil on Canvas





































"Ennui" 30 x 34, Oil On Canvas











































"Wake Up" 40 x 302, Oil on Canvas
























"Tony" 30 x 40, Oil On Canvas


http://bowersockgallery.com/Meghan-Howland
http://www.meghanhowland.com/

Macobe in the Ordinary

The Art of Julia Randall

Julia Randall attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in 1999 and received her M.F.A. from Rutgers University, and her B.F.A. from Washington University in St. Louis. She lives and works in New York City and in Connecticut. Her main media that she works with was pastel but is now colored pencil, which she found she was able to make sharper images with. Her work is a mixture of beauty and repulsion that are simultaneously erotic and humorous. Randall uses observation-based drawing and hyper realistic technique to create images that are surreal and suggestive. In her collection called "Blown," exhibited at the Garvey Simon Art Access, the subject matter is chewing gum.
 

Cherry
2011
colored pencil on paper
24” x 18”

At first glace her works are slightly erotic but grotesque do to the fact that they resemble internal organs. But this confusion is the premise of why the works are so powerful. She uses the chewing gum as an allegory to ageing and the change from care free youth to adulthood and eventually old age. Randall says, "Bubblegum initially connotes innocent, cheeky pleasure, yet the fragile skin of gum also points to the susceptibility of the body, and the dreaded passage of time." Her use of chewing gum also plays with her oral infatuation. In many of her pieces, she attempts to relate them to the realistic act of sex. This is typically done by the use of lush hues of pinks and flesh tones and the depiction of fluids covering and dripping off of the subject matter. She mentions this in a interview with Hi-Fructose magazine in this year. Her other works have also attempted to show the realities of sex through the depiction of mouths on various thinks like birds, flowers, and just mouths themselves. In Randall's interview she states, " these images are not glossy or idealized, but is visceral and vulnerable, sex is similar; real erotic experience can be squishy, humorous, gross; and makes one feel quite vulnerable...and this is what I have showed through 'Blown.' The physicality of erotic experience, and what it feels living in a sexual body."
 

Wild Berry
2012
colored pencil on paper
26” x 33”

These works from Randall's collection called "Decoys" shows another elegantly done mix of humor and eroticism by combining flowers with meats. Her she creates a dynamic of the two by incorporating other senses like smell and taste by showing food and flowers. Yet these flowers are met with a strangeness around them that makes them both morbid and desired.


Decoy # 4
2006
colored pencil on paper
41” x 29”


Decoy # 7
2007
colored pencil on paper
29” x 41”

What draws me towards these works is their brilliant precision and craft, but also the morbid grotesqueness that intertwines them. It is the mixture of marvel and repulsion that draws the audience to look closer and truly think about what it is that they are really looking at. And maybe even attempt to relate to the emotions and experiences that Julia Randall is trying to get her audiences to feel.


http://www.julia-randall.com/images.html
http://hifructose.com/2012/11/14/preview-julia-randalls-blown-at-garvey-simons-art-access/

A Gilded Painter

Brad Kunkle, is an American born painter who grew up in rural Pennsylvania, and now resides in New York. He has recently been dubbed as one of the greatest American artist of all time by American Artist magazine this year. The media that he works in is oil on panel or canvas and he also incorporates gold and silver leaf into his works. The use of gold and other precious metals in in painting or as a paint like media is called grisaille. The artist learn of this technique while in school working on his degree. He also uses a limited colour palette which he learned from his professor George Sorrels. This limited palette is similar to how great artist in the past worked like Jan van Eyck and Robert Campin.

The Gilded Wilderness Oil, gold, and silver leaf on linen.  42 x 80 inches
The Gilded Wilderness Oil, gold, and silver leaf on linen. 42 x 80 inches

His worlds like one above are mostly focused on figures but he incorporates nature into just about everything. Majority of the figures tend to be female and he does this on purpose because he wants to explore the strong "Feminine energy" that all women possess. In his work he tries to show the mystique of both women and nature. In "The Gilded Wilderness" above he mixes the urban industrialized world in with the peaceful natural world. This is done by the use of the gears in the back ground and the men in suits signing papers next to them. That is in great contrast to the youthful men and women who are bathing in the golden leaves on the floor beneath the suited men. Also he paints himself into this work, he is the figure looking up at the suited men form the upper right hand corner.

Kunkle like the use of the precious metals because it add to the atmosphere of the work and helps make the audience feel like they are part of it. This happens because the viewer sees the work that the artist wants them to to see and then the Gold or silver leafing create another layer of detail that changes as the viewer moves around the work. Kunkle calls this a dance between the two that is choreographed by the viewer. He also states that the metals help reflect his relation to the cities. By having them as large swathes in the background it is reminiscent of the glass covered building.


Bird of Paradise Oil and silver leaf on wood.  30 x 40 inches
Bird of Paradise Oil and silver leaf on wood. 30 x 40 inches

In these two works it illustrates the use of the large metallic backgrounds but gives two different feels. In the painting above titled "Bird of Paradise" the silver background is more like a wall in a room, which would more likely be found in a city. While the second work titled " The Bee Healer" the silver background is more like a dreary autumnal day, emphasizing the country.


 The Bee Healer Oil, gold and silver leaf on wood.  25 x 44 inches

 The Bee Healer Oil, gold and silver leaf on wood. 25 x 44 inches

http://bradkunkle.com/home.html
http://hifructose.com/?s=brad+kunkle&submit=Go