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Sunday, March 29, 2015

Animation Treat


Dan Deacon "When I Was Done Dying" (DDWIWDD) for Off The Air on Adult Swim from dave hughes on Vimeo.

Created this music video as a special episode of Off The Air. Tapping nine unique and talented animators (whose work had all appeared previously on the show) to create a beautiful and seamless journey through the afterlife to the great song "When I Was Done Dying" by Dan Deacon. Seen it a thousand times and it still makes me happy.
Short interviews with Dan and the animators can be found here: offtheairas.tumblr.com/DDWIWDD
And please check out other episodes of Off The Air here:  adultswim.com/videos/off-the-air/
Or stream it here:  adultswim.com/videos/astv/off-the-air/
Animators in order of appearance:
Jake Fried, Chad Vangaalen, Dimitri Stankowicz, Colin White, Taras Hrabowsky, Anthony Schepperd, Masanobu Hiraoka, Caleb Wood, KOKOFreakbean

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Charles Bukowski Poem


All The Way - a Charles Bukowski poem from Willem Martinot on Vimeo.

Correcting Misinformation..

Eight superstitions about crows 

If you're an animal lover and a lover of superstitions, then read on about some superstitions about crows. An animal that has been associated with death to just plain bad luck.
The crow is seen as an animal that is portrayed with the sign of death. Modern tale of the crow, comes from none other than a comic series and a movie, "The Crow."
This article after researching I found eight superstitions about this animal:
  • Seeing one crow means bad luck.
  • Seeing two crows means good luck.
  • If you see six, then that means death!
  • If you hear cawing in the distance, that means that death is very near.
  • If a crow is in your house, that means that you're going to get bad news.
  • Finding a dead crow on the road means good luck (how grotesque!)
  • Crows in a churchyard is a sign of bad luck.
  • Chinese folklore tells of a three legged crow that symbolizes the sun.
Obviously you can notice that the crow is a sign of bad luck according to superstitions. Just like the black cat, this black bird is a sign of uncertainly. Of course that is all superstition and the crow is actually quite a smart bird.

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Thank You Wayne Thiebaud

       


I took an Art Appreciation class from Wayne Thiebaud at UC Davis in the early 1970's.  I was a pre-med student at the time.  He didn't cause me to change my major (though physics and calculus influenced my final choice of history) but did make an indelible impression with his insistence that art was for everyone and whatever each individual happened to see in a work of art was completely valid and to be respected.  Below a biography from the Academy of Achievment.


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Wayne Thiebaud
Wayne Thiebaud
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Wayne Thiebaud Biography

Painter and Teacher

Wayne Thiebaud Date of birth: November 15, 1920

  Wayne Thiebaud

Wayne Thiebaud was born in Mesa, Arizona, but his parents moved to Long Beach, California when he was only six years old. He would spend most of his youth in Southern California, but his large Mormon family had deep roots in the desert Southwest, and the young Wayne Thiebaud also spent a number of years living on an uncle's ranch in Utah. His early enthusiasm for comic strips and illustration led to an interest in serious art. Although he showed a precocious talent for drawing, fine art training -- or even a college education -- seemed like remote possibilities in the depressed economy of the 1930s. One summer between terms in high school, a teenage Thiebaud found work at Walt Disney Studios as an "in-betweener," laboriously drawing the thousands of individual frames that gave the illusion of movement to animated characters. The following summer, he enrolled in the Frank Wiggins Trade School in Los Angeles with the intention of learning sign painting. Experienced commercial artists in the school encouraged him to study illustration, and he set himself to learning the skills of a commercial artist.
Wayne Thiebaud Biography Photo
His budding career as a cartoonist and graphic designer was interrupted by World War II. From 1942 to 1945, Thiebaud served in the U.S. Army Air Force, where his skills as an artist kept him out of combat. During the war, he met and married Patricia Patterson. Their first child, Twinka, was born in 1945. A second daughter, Mallary Ann, was born in 1951.
After the war, Wayne Thiebaud resumed his career as a commercial artist, working for the Rexall drugstore chain, among others. At Rexall he met a fellow commercial artist, Robert Mallary, who was also an aspiring fine artist. Mallary encouraged Thiebaud to study fine art, and to broaden his education generally. Nearing 30 years of age, Thiebaud enrolled in the California State University system, first at San Jose and then at Sacramento, where he earned bachelor's and master's degrees. Thiebaud had set himself a new goal, to support his family by teaching while pursuing a career as a fine artist. He found work at Sacramento City College, where he worked throughout the 1950s.
Thiebaud spent a sabbatical year in New York City, where he made the acquaintance of the leading American painters of the day. Among these were the abstract expressionists Willem De Kooning and Franz Kline, as well as Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns, two painters whose work would later be identified as cornerstones of the pop art movement.
Wayne Thiebaud Biography Photo
At this time, Thiebaud found a way to apply the formidable technical skills he had acquired during his years as a commercial artist to a new and unique subject matter. He began to paint small canvasses depicting brightly colored food products -- pies, cakes, candy and ice cream cones -- displayed as in shop windows, meticulously rendered with multi-hued outlines and the hyper-realistic shadows characteristic of commercial art. While conventional still lifes are painted with the artist observing real objects as he paints, Thiebaud drew his pictures of food entirely from memory and imagination, a practice that contributed to the dreamlike intensity of his vision.
There were no galleries to speak of in Sacramento in the 1950s, so Thiebaud exhibited wherever he could, in shops and restaurants, even in the concession booth of a drive-in theater. Impressed with the artists' cooperatives he had observed in New York, he founded a cooperative gallery in Sacramento, now known as Artists Contemporary Gallery, and an artists' retreat known as the Pond Farm. In 1958, Thiebaud and his wife Patricia divorced. Their daughter Twinka became a celebrated artist's model, author and painter in her own right. Wayne Thiebaud later married filmmaker Betty Jean Carr, and adopted her son Matthew, who also became an artist. The couple had a second son, Paul, who became a noted art dealer and gallerist.
Wayne Thiebaud Biography Photo
Thiebaud's work was making an impression on his colleagues but had not yet found a general audience. This began to change in 1961, when he met the New York art dealer Allan Stone. Stone was initially indifferent to the slides he saw of Thiebaud's food paintings, but when the artist contacted him again a year later, Stone remembered them vividly and agreed to represent him. Stone became his exclusive dealer and a close personal friend. His first showings at Allan Stone Gallery resulted in major sales. In addition to showings at Stone's gallery, Thiebaud's work was featured in two historic group shows in 1962. The Pasadena Art Museum's "New Painting of Common Objects" is regarded as the first exhibition of pop art in America. Thiebaud's paintings were included alongside the work of Roy Lichtenstein, Jim Dine and Andy Warhol -- an artist with whom Thiebaud felt little affinity -- but the exhibition attracted national attention and made Wayne Thiebaud a major name in the art world. Later that same year, the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York presented an "International Exhibition of the New Realists," which again grouped Thiebaud with Warhol and Lichtenstein, as well as James Rosenquist. Coming on the heels of the Pasadena exhibit, the show at Sidney Janis made pop art the dominant visual style of the '60s.
Thiebaud never embraced the concept of pop art, often characterized as a parody or critique of commercialism and consumer society. Thiebaud preferred to describe himself as a traditional painter of illusionistic form, and regarded the craftsmanship of advertising, cartoons and commercial illustration with respect and affection. He also distinguished himself among his contemporaries through his exacting craftsmanship and his uncompromising dedication to his own vision, without regard for changing fashions or trends in the art world.
Wayne Thiebaud Biography Photo
As other artists adopted the now accepted pop art motifs, Thiebaud turned increasingly to the representation of the human figure, rendered in meticulous detail, but with a dispassionate sense of weight and solidity that freed the painted figure from any implication of sentimentality or superficial appeal. In the mid-'60s, Thiebaud also took up printmaking, a practice he has pursued alongside his painting ever since. In the 1970s he carried on with his examination of everyday objects, including shoes and cosmetics, while painting his first major landscapes, dizzying street scenes inspired by the vertiginous topography of San Francisco. He continued his landscape series for the next 20 years, finding haunting beauty in apparently commonplace scenes, rendered with hyper-realistic detail.
He has received numerous honors for his work, most notably the National Medal of Arts, presented to him by President William J. Clinton in a 1994 ceremony at the White House. A 2001 retrospective of his work at the Whitney Museum in New York won enthusiastic acclaim. After the death of Allan Stone in 2006, Thiebaud was represented by his son, art dealer Paul Thiebaud, until Paul's death in 2009. Although Wayne Thiebaud is now retired from teaching, his decades of mentoring younger artists has had a major influence on American art. Many of his students have enjoyed distinguished artistic careers, not the least of whom was the late Fritz Scholder (1937-2005). In his 90th year, Wayne Thiebaud was still painting. His vast body of work continues to inspire and delight viewers with its unique vision of the charm and beauty of everyday things. 

(See a video montage of the paintings of Wayne Thiebaud.)

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

From Loriann Signori's Painting-A-Day Blog

loriann signori's painting-a-day


Posted: 16 Mar 2015 03:58 AM PDT
oil on linen 36x36
I am finishing my paintings for the upcoming show at Gallery B in Bethesda. It will be up April 1-25th.  I will have my easel set up at the gallery and working there Wednesday through Saturday 12-6. There will a couple of free classes as well. Sign up for my newsletter and I will be sending out the specifics soon. (ZZZLink for my website.) Or, of course, you can email me and I will snail mail the show postcard.
The inspiration for this painting was a plein air painting I did this autumn. Patience and glazed layers was the way this one was created. I want to do the same layered opalescence. It's funny, my wonderful framer Bosco said to me that I was continually changing in this body of work. The only thing I could think was I kept seeking the best way to "feel." I'll still keep looking.