I really want to see this.
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Joan Mitchell
Joan Michell is probably the most wellknown female abstract expressionist. Though born in Chicago, Illinois much of her carrear took place in France. She painted on unprimed canvases with violent brush strokes inspired mostly by landscapes. She has said she wanted her paintings "to convey the feeling of the dying sunflower" and "some of them come out like young girls, very coy ... they're very human." I admire the freedom she has with the paint and all the raw emotion you feel in her movements.
Xochi Solis
Xochi Solis is a painter living and working in Austin, Texas. I love her color combinations and texture play.
Friday, September 27, 2013
Herbert Baglione
I had seen Herbert Baglione a while back but today as I was going through other street artists I realized Baglione looked familiar. And after some research I realized I am in love with his billowing patterned textile floral heads and wispy spirits that dance around chairs and and floating nudes.
Hell'o Monsters
Escif
"Although sometimes is not easy to separate, I try to focus my work around concepts, not just shapes. I try to [find] my style like the consequences of my own ideas.
I understand the painting as an exercise of reflection that can be shared with people.
I´m not looking for decorative paintings, I try to wake up viewers' minds." Unurth
Julia Alverez
The wise words of Julia Alverez, Latina Author of How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accent. She speaks about her experience coming to the states and how it inspires her writing in the new PBS special Latin American.
Saturday, September 21, 2013
PBS Latin American Series
There is a new PBS series titled Latin American, it's six hours in three installments. It's claimed to be "TV’s most ambitious attempt ever to document the
Latino experience in North America." And so far from what I've seen I would have to agree. It runs at 7 p.m. Tuesday on your PBS station. Catch up on the episodes you've missed here.
YARISAL & KUBLITZ
The Anger Release Machine by Yarisal and Kublitz is an interactive sculpture.
Experience the most satisfying feeling when a piece of China breaks
into million pieces. All you have to do is insert a coin, and a piece
of China will slowly move forwards and fall into the bottom of the
machine, breaking, and leaving you happy and relieved of anger.
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Pedro Reyes
Amazing Art/Social Project by Pedro Reyes titled 'Disarm'. Reyes turns weapons into Musical Instruments. I love his quote at the end of the video he states,"I'm taking this piece of metal that represents our instinct of killing each other, and I'm turning it into a musical instrument which is the most sophisticated form of communication on the planet." poetic.
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