Archive for October, 2009

Online Art Gallery: Click on the Mouse to Catch Creativity…

October 21st, 2009

It is said that art is the bearer of human imagination and creativity. From primitive days to modern arena, arts have been molded through various stages. From ancient cave paintings to the unique mingle of color in modern times cite a drastic change in the world of art and creativity. No matter what kind of arts you are fond of, various websites, presenting online art galleries, will definitely meet your demands with their alluring arrays.

Web revolution and the advancement of information technology have an intense impact on these online art galleries. Here, creative endeavors are showcased not only for displaying, these sites also have a commercial purpose and that is the availability of paintings for sale. So, staying far away from India, if you want to buy the painting of an eminent artist of India, it would be absolutely easier for you through an online art gallery.

Theme based arts are quite popular when it comes to the subject of online art gallery. Various themes including Africa, Women and Children, Nature, etc. are widely exhibited on these online art gallery portals. In addition, online abstract art, many a times, is the dominant ingredient of these paintings for sale. The contributors of online abstract art are definitely not confined to renowned artists, as many of these online art galleries portray the creations of budding talented artists too. Some galleries are the home to various artists’ creations, while some only concentrate on one or two particular artists.

Many a times, the topic of a painting remains to blur to its viewers. In such cases, all these online galleries undoubtedly play a trick. Whatever the painting is, its subject is mostly clearly mentioned beside its thumbnail picture.

Getting information about any online art gallery is simpler. Just log on to Google and type online art gallery + region of your interest and within a few seconds, you will be showed various gallery sites. Most of these sites are very user friendly and just by reading their instructions; one can get to know everything related to the artists and their paintings.

Besides, the price of each and every painting is mentioned beside the paintings for sale. And as far as payment mode and shipping arrangements are concerned, the site itself takes care of all the necessary details. Visit various online galleries anytime and quench your thirst for the world of art and creativity!




By: Smit Mathur

Alan Michael at the Saatchi-gallery

October 20th, 2009

Michael seems to foreclose the possibility of us adequately defining his relationship to the artists whose styles and subjects he borrows (recreates, adapts, reworks). Nor does it seem possible to properly characterise his non-art range of sources without being left in contradictions. The artist pre-empts any logical connection between his constellation of competing, rather than connected references. Each painting creates such an impossibly circuitous ‘narrative drive’ that we are only left circling around ideas rather than gaining any point of entry or closure.

The artist, recognising that all artistic endeavour is a question of interdependence rather than sovereign autonomy, also recognises that we inescapably search for fixity of meaning for and for tidy solutions to the issue of causation. What, he asks, if we were to remember that the Latin word ‘textum’ simply means ‘web’? Rather than establishing a mere ‘dialogue’ with his material or insisting on the past as irretrievably lost, Michael takes a different tack. His personal investment in the (ostensible) subject matter becomes impossible to discern. In fact, it becomes impossible to tell if he even has any. (In the past he has written, “Someone once said to me ‘Why would you put something you’re interested in into your work?’, and I kind of agree.”) As Tom Morton has recently written about the artist, “his real concern is the moment when the source material he references fades into a new fiction… If referencing is a social contract, it often seems like Michael has torn it up to create a near impermeable private language.” This hermetic language throws us back onto our own resources, independent of the artist’s direction. Whilst frequently referencing cinematic imagery, Michael expresses an ambivalent relation to the idea of the artist-as-auteur. Our only points of certainty are that the artist keeps us engaged with a delightfully light touch and splinters of humour.

Unlike painters from previous generations, Michael doesn’t work in series; each painting is a unique combination of ideas and images packed into a single frame, never to be repeated. Moreover, Michael’s technique never resolves itself comfortably into a recognisable signature style, but rather is perpetually a means to an end, deferring and complicating the relationship between the artist’s own position, those of the protagonists represented in his pictures, and the ideas of the original image-maker(s). Flipping between one style and the next without a single programme or sequence, Michael appears to emphasise the plasticity of time, as though our memory banks were best thought of as random-access libraries, which we were at liberty to reorder and recategorise at will.

Morton has also remarked, “quotation depends on a ‘cordon sanitaire’ of inverted commas. Do away with them and something quoted might be mistaken for something meant.” Indeed the artist’s descriptions of his practice and methods of working emphasise how the character of an image is dependent on its ‘user group’, or ownership: “I’m interested in representing the quotation as commodity; its relation to new bourgeois capital; and its relation to struggles for supremacy in general.” Michael’s ultra-elliptical cultural connections invite us to speculate about the relationship of images to the social constituencies that mobilise them. His strategy endlessly complicates that the relationship between image and ideology, so that it is never simply a form of one-way traffic. On the contrary, his practice echoes Baudelaire’s conclusion that the most definitive experience of visual modernity lies in “the sudden leaps of consciousness” which giant cities generate.

Read entire article about Alan Michael or looking for his paintings please visit us on http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/alan_michael.htm




By: Saatchi-gallery

Online Art Galleries: Bringing Creativity Within Easy Reach

October 19th, 2009
Online Art Galleries: Bringing Creativity Within Easy Reach

Art needs exposure and survives on appreciation. Art has always appealed to a niche category and remained confined to the interests of a particular segment of society. For years, art galleries have been the only platform of exposure for artworks. Thanks to the global technological development, art has found a new platform to gain more exposure and popularity. The World Wide Web has given way to multiple internet art galleries that offer all ki » Read more: Online Art Galleries: Bringing Creativity Within Easy Reach

Ode to Art

October 16th, 2009

Why would anybody buy art from my art gallery? Out of charity reasons? Charity is not a very popular word in the current realm of crisis. Who needs art anyway? The snobs? Maybe the snobs. I think that that there is a common tendency to lose the faith in the rapidly depreciating high tech toys like plasma tv, iPhones, youPhones and other half hazarldy built toys.

 Art and Art Galleries is what can provide a status symbol these days. Imagine having guests at your newly renovated most modern apartment. There is no TV. You don’t even have a stereo system. All you have is an old gramophone and a collection of records. This is double WOW. Guests are nervously swallowing their saliva in powerless envy. How brave. How original. You stand there in the spot light of fame.

 The walls of your rebellious home are decorated with modern art. I do not mean those painting bought at tourists squares in Paris and other pop cities. I am talking authentic, natural art works collected by the means of internet research.

 Your walls are decorated by brilliant artworks of artists from badly suffered Eastern Europe. Well, if you want a good painting you need to find an artist with a  bleeding heart. I think that the true artist is the one who suffers the most. Hey. Try to find the suffering ones in North America. They would sing a poem of a cold burger or better yet, they would paint in oil the sadness of a cold burger. This is not going to make you stand out. Your home must become an art gallery. A gallery of deep revelations and the pain the must go with them. Knowledge, love and pain are all related. They are all from the same family. They are Siamese triplets.

 You collect art. The old record is playing the forgotten tune. The fireplace emanates the deep odor of burnt wood. The semi dark apartment with most original paintings highlighted in the fashionably selected lights make you proud and victorious.

 ‘I ran my own art gallery’ you say casually and look in the mirror. This is a very pleasant thing to say. You repeat louder: ‘I ran my own art gallery’. I like to buy art and sell art. It makes me feel important.

 Let’s put all the sarcasm aside. These are the days when we start doubting the value of overpriced techno toys the return to art is not the answer but a clue. We need clues as the old world model is shattering. Art galleries will prevail. Those who buy art and sell art will too.




By: Muneca

National Gallery, Victoria

October 16th, 2009

 

Founded in 1861, The National Gallery of Victoria is the largest and oldest public art gallery in Australia. Located in Melbourne, the gallery currently houses over 63,000 works of art by various local and international masters of the field. As part of the gallery, the National Gallery of Victoria Art School performs a necessary service by providing academic art training facilities for Australian residents. The gallery has permanent exhibitions, as well as seasonal and temporary displays.

 

The National Gallery of Victoria is well-known for its International Collection, holding great works by Rembrandt, Marco Palmezzano, Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Peter Paul Rubens, Paolo Veronese, Tintoretto and Paolo Uccello. Aboriginal art, photography, fashion and textiles are the more modern art collections available at the National Gallery of Victoria. The overall collection’s diversity includes masterpieces from ancient Greece, Egyptian artifacts, historical European ceramics and a comprehensive range of Australian artworks over several centuries. The largest amount ever paid for an art work displayed at the gallery was for the Paris Bordone “The Rest on the Flight Into Egypt with Saint Catherine and Angels.” The purchase price for this was $3.8 million, partly funded by the NGV Council of Trustees.

 

The Ian Potter Center, also known as the NGV International, which is part of the National Gallery of Victoria, displays an impressive collection of over 20,000 Australian works, from both old masters and modern artists. The gallery’s building itself is a work of art, with a Leonard French ceiling consisting

one of the world’s largest suspended stained glass pieces. The Australian collection housed in the Ian Potter Center includes the Joseph Brown Collection, donated by its namesake.

 

The National Gallery of Victoria became a notorious part of Australian history when the Pablo Picasso painting “The Weeping Woman” was stolen in 1986. The painting was returned a week later, after been used as pawn in a cultural protest against ill-treating artists during the time. The gallery holds exhibitions periodically and known as Blockbusters, these exhibitions have included the Impressionists, Dutch Masters (including a Vermeer), Picasso, Caravaggio and selections from the Guggenheim Museums.

 

Besides offering a peaceful atmosphere for contemplating art and leisurely strolls, the National Gallery of Victoria also arranges lectures, workshops, tours, children’s activities, films and performances related to art work. Visitors can easily take a day or more to view the exhibits and take in the artistic splendor and if you are an art lover, you should consider staying at one of the hotels in Melbourne.TheLangham Hotel Melbourne is ideal if you want luxurious accommodations. There are plenty of hotels in Melbourne for you to choose from.




By: Naveen Marasinghe

Is India perfect destination for Contemporary art gallery?

October 16th, 2009

It isn’t just India’s politicians but its artists as well who refuse to let age come in the way of their constituency. At different points, different artists have been important not just from the point of view of art aesthetics, or value, but because of the pivotal role they have played in providing the stepping stones with which to monitor the key turns in Indian art styles. These must necessarily include famous master artists such as Raja Ravi Varma less for his kitschy calendar pop-art and more for the fusion of Indian and European idioms that continues to dictate popular taste; the Tagore family for opening up the way art was viewed in India; Nandalal Bose, India’s first truly renaissance artist; and Amrita Sher-Gil for the passion she brought to the form in her very short life.

India’s tryst with modern art traces its origins to roughly the turn of the last century up to India’s independence, and it is the “moderns” — as both the artists and their art is referred to — who define the popular perception of how we view art in this country. Among these, the most radical by far was F N Souza whose provocative contemporary art gallery includes drawings and paintings earned him a fair share of ire and more brickbats than bouquets, though it might be said in the same breath that his sensibility lent more towards European extremism than any obvious Indian sensibility.

Souza was a victim of his own excesses, but among those who once shared the platform with him are three painters who without doubt can be regarded as the greatest living artists of this country. Of them, S H Raza, has been referred to also as the greatest living artist of France, and while that might be arguable — his work is collected mostly by Indians — Raza, 87 years, has said that by the end of this year he would like to wind up his atelier in Paris and return to the country of his birth, to probably New Delhi, where he is in the process, with friend Ashok Vajpeyi, of searching for land to create an institution for the arts.

Raza’s record at a Saffronart auction is Rs 4.2 crore, which must seem formidable given that critics have savaged him for repeatedly painting variations of the Bindu and the Mandala, forms that set him apart from his peers, creating a visual language that is both abstract as well as rooted in the tradition of tantra. Raza’s prices have skittered and gained since 2000, and have consolidated after 2003, casting him as a blue-chip, even though critics — and collectors — say Raza’s paintings don’t compel you to want all of his important works since they seem to replicate each other.

India’s most maverick, most loved and equally hated artist is M F Husain, 94 years this August, who single-handedly broke the cordons of exclusivity and took his famous art works mainstream to the masses. From travelling around the world in bare feet to creating a show of crumpled newspapers, he has mocked critics, courted moneyed buyers yet reached out to people, a bond he built as a hoarding artist painting posters for Bollywood marquees. Some of the most iconic images in Indian art gallery have been created from his palette — Mother Teresa, Indira Gandhi, the Lady with the Lamp, vignettes from the Ramayana and the Mahabharata, and of course, his horses. In recent times it seems to be trendy to dismiss Husain’s prodigious talent, but make no mistake: Husain is India’s tour de force of art. Currently at home in Dubai, where he is creating a series on the Arabic civilization and in London, where he has a home, Husain has shied away from returning to India fearing for his life from Hindu fundamentalists who have objected to some of his paintings. His prices, always the bellwether index of the art world, have fallen recently, though he has struck the biggest deals for the largest sums of money that any Indian artist has commanded: a gimmicky Rs 100 crore for one such series in India, and an undisclosed sum for his work on the Arab civilization, making him without a doubt India’s richest living artist.

One reason for the fall in Husain’s price is his proclivity to paint too much, too fast, the exact opposite of Mumbai-based Tyeb Mehta, 84 years, who refuses to let his debilitating health keep him from his canvas. If it appears that Mehta has painted very little, it is because of his tendency to ruthlessly destroy those works that don’t measure up to his critical gaze. In many ways, Mehta could be called minimalist: Since the seventies, his subjects have been mythological. He seems to enjoy scale, but what is most compelling is the energy on his canvases that is at once awesome and fearful. His price point has held steady for many years now, and even though Souza exceeded his auction high of Rs 8.2 crore in a surprise upset last year, there can be no doubt that Tyeb Mehta is not only India’s greatest living artist, his works are most likely to continue to escalate in value over the years.

There is a large scope for Indian art styles world wide.  Artflute kinds of platforms are an endeavor to build India’s first Indian Contemporary Art gallery and artist community.  The philosophy of the Artflute is to create a platform for new talent and at the same time allow young collectors to buy at early artist prices. It is for every kind of collector and artist… from young collectors to veterans, from young artists to Masters.




By: Margarita

Why I hate modern art (part 2) – Tillie the Dog Artist

October 14th, 2009

Some while ago I wrote an article that attempted to explain why I hate modern art.

The thrust of my article was that modern art appreciation has shifted the emphasis from the finished artwork to the act of creation itself. Consequentially, a splattered mess of paint can be considered great art if it has a provenance to explain its purpose and meaning.  

To take an example, the first and possibly most famous piece of conceptual art was Marcel Duchamp’s “Fountain”. Fountain was a signed urinal, purchased, not made by the artist. Duchamp claimed it to be a work of art because; he chose the item, he gave it a name, placed it in a different context, and so created a new thought for that object.

The Times newspaper recently ran a story on “Tillie”, the ten-year-old Jack Russell terrier who paints (it also ran an item on a tree that draws, but let’s not go there). Tillie was reported to have notched up her 20th solo exhibition, earned more than $100,000 from sales of her work, visited five countries and drawn comparisons with the abstract expressionist Jackson Pollock. Her “artworks” sell for between $100 and $2,000.

The Hollywood Art and Culture Centre in Hollywood, Florida, is the latest gallery to put the dog’s output on show, with an exhibition entitled “The Tillamook Cheddar Mid-Career Retrospective, 1999-2009”.

Tillie “works” by scratching and biting at overturned painted vellum; the pressure of her claws, paws and teeth transferring the coloured pigment on to paper below.

Her “art” has been featured by CBS News, Good Morning America, Inside Edition, Fox News, The National Geographic Network, Animal Planet, The New York Post, The Washington Times, Esquire Magazine, and many others worldwide. Time Out New York described it as “a masterpiece of conceptualism.”

Jane Hart, curator of the Hollywood Art and Culture Centre is quoted as saying, “if you put her work before someone without telling them that a dog did it, they wouldn’t be able to tell it apart from a human artist’s”. The remark appears to be an indication of how “good” Tillie’s painting is!

So I know its all a bit of a joke, but there is a serious side to the story.

In 2006, media mogul David Geffen sold Jackson Pollock’s “No. 5 1948”, for $140 million. This made Pollock’s work the most expensive painting in modern history.

Given the comparisons between Tillie’s and Jackson Pollock’s outputs, it’s no surprise that society can willingly accept the scratchings of a dog as meritorious art!

We have been taught not to question the merit of art: if someone tells us something is art (e.g. puts it in a gallery), we believe that to be true. We are afraid to express an opinion for fear of ridicule. And yet, it would be perfectly reasonable to look at “No. 5”, and remark that it looked like a dog had made it.

Tillie is doing what dogs do. She is scratching and biting. She is not composing, conceptualising, or expressing herself. It is utter madness to portray the outcome of her clawing at paint and paper as art. Placing value on a similar painting produced by a human is insanity. The only genius at work here is the seller’s – not the artist’s.

Portraits by John Burton




By: John Burton

Clubs, Cocktail Bars and Art Galleries: Stuff to Do in London

October 14th, 2009

the capital of the uk & a truly popular tourist location. in fact, it is home to exhilarating uk landmarks love Big Ben, the Tower of London & the Globe Theatre.

We hope you enjoy our guide to london & that it gives you many documentation about stuff to do in the city, in addition to some history & some interesting facts.

London boasts a rich history that goes back over 2,000 years. amid this time, the city has expanded to become one of the financial and cultural capitals of the world. it has also suffered from the plague, devastating fire, civil war, & terrorist attacks.

London suffered especially along world war ii. It suffered bad damage from bombs along this time & plenty of 1000s of kids in the city were evacuated out to the countryside to avoid the bombs. The worst bombing took place between 7 September 1940 & 10 May 1941.

The museums & art galleries in London are the perfect in the country. One of the favourite art galleries is the Tate Modern, which is placed on the site of the former Bankside Power Station. The art gallery opened in 2000 & it boasts a vast range of permanent exhibits by artists for instance Warhol, Peter Blake & Picasso, in addition to touring exhibitions. access to various exhibitions is free.

London is famous for its shopping, which means that you will find everything from unusual independent stores and markets, to designer stores.

One of the city’s most famous stores is Selfridges, which is situated on Oxford street. It was initially opened in 1909 by Harry Selfridge, who wanted to make shopping lively rather than a chore. He succeeded & the store now has four other branches in various cities throughout great britain.

London has rich & varied fashion, which offers something for everyone. From elite celebrity cocktail bars & clubs, to quiet public houses, you can not fail to have a fabulous night out here.

London’s West End is famous for its many theatres, which show a wide variety of musicals & other shows. The longest running production in the west end was Agatha Christie’s Mousetrap, which ran for a massive 26 years from 1952 – 2004. other popular shows are Les Miserables, Miss Saigon, Cats & Mary Poppins.

As it’s such a major place, London is truly simple to get to. in actual fact, it’s well-connected by rail & boasts some large train stations, including London Bridge, London Victoria, London Euston & Liverpool street. as well as this, the city also boasts three big airports, Heathrow; Stanstead & Luton.

Driving in London can be tricky because of the congestion charge, but the city boasts a great underground & bus network to help people get about.

Thank you for reading!


By: Tania Machowska

Famous Different Kinds of Art Galleries

October 14th, 2009
Famous Different Kinds of Art Galleries

When it comes to art galleries you will find lots varieties as there are different kinds of art existing. Commonly, an art gallery comprises of precise focus and further managed by a custodian who expertise in such kind of art. General concerns of art galleries comes from particular area, art in a particular medium or singular style, or also art from specific focus such as political art. Characteristically, any art in an art gallery is for sal » Read more: Famous Different Kinds of Art Galleries

Rudolf Stingel’s Biography and Exhibitions at Saatchi-gallery

October 13th, 2009

Rudolf Stingel was born on 1956 in Merano, Italy, currently lives and Works in New York. Stingel says it in his usual no-nonsense, dazzlingly beautiful way. For his sixth show with Cooper since 1994, Stingel — who would be among my first picks for the next Whitney Biennial — has left this temple-like space empty except for a gallery-wide floor made of white painted particleboard.

If you know Stingel’s work, you know this isn’t some clever, leave-the-gallery-empty ruse, or a matter of him toadying up to his dealer (although all artists are capable of this). In fact, this exhibition finds Stingel being as subversive and striking as he always is. In 2002, he covered the walls of this gallery in silver insulation panels and allowed people to mark them up willy-nilly. In 1997, he swathed the floor with a plush carpet and placed a large, perforated, blue foam-core screen near the entry. Before this, he published an “instruction” book that explained how to make his abstract paintings. His unforgettable 1991 New York debut consisted of a vivid orange rug in an otherwise empty gallery. It was one of the best shows of the 1990s.The painting, as proficient as any photo-realist canvas, is by Stingel. The woman is Paula Cooper. The overall effect is celebratory, revelatory, sly and adds up to one of the best shows of the season.

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2007

• Curated by Francesco Bonami, MCA, Chicago

2006

• Inverleigh House, Edinburgh

2005

• EURAC tower, Bolzano, Italy

• Paula Cooper Gallery, New York

2004

• Sadie Coles HQ, London

• Plan B, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Grand Central Terminal, New York

• Galleria Massimo de Carlo, Milan

• Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt

2003

• Galerie Schmela, Dusseldorf

2002

• Georg Kargl Galerie, Vienna

• Paula Cooper Gallery New York

2001

• Museo di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Palazzo delle Arbere, Trento

• Stephen Friedman Gallery, London

2000

• Paula Cooper Gallery, New York

• Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles

Conclusions:

Rudolf Stingel said. “Artists have always been accused of being decorative. I just went to the extreme.” Basically, Stingel has always gone to extremes, making good-looking, self-referential paintings.

What to Do Next…

If you want any information about Rudolf Stingel or looking for his paintings please visit us on http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/rudolf_stingel.htm




By: Saatchi-gallery