Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Foot Medication


Artist´s Studio "Foot Medication", 1974
Oil and Magna on Canvas

Roy Lichtenstein

The Lichtenstein "Still Life" Exhibit at the Gagosian Gallery is just about to close if you still want to go and brighten your day a little.

When we think of still lifes, we think of paintings that have a certain atmosphere or ambience. My still life paintings have none of those qualities, they just have pictures of certain things that are in a still life, like lemons and grapefruits and so forth. It's not meant to have the usual still life meaning.
--Roy Lichtenstein (From Gagosian web site)


I am just about to prepare for my Bachelorette party weekend on an Island in Norway called "Hankø" with 27 wild wonderful Women. Wishing now that I had pampered my nails... In my head I am already dancing all night long.

See you all next week!!
With Love
Kristin


Monday, July 26, 2010

From Worry Beads to Prayer Mat

Worry Beads, 2009

Mona Hatoum
On my recent Chelsea Gallery trip last Friday, I came upon this cannonball size bronze prayer beads at the Alexander and Bonin Gallery. I had heard of Mona Hatoum before, but I am surprised at actually never having seen any of her work in person. Especially when I notice the intense amount of incredible work that she has presented so far.
.
Measures of Entanglement/Undercurrent (red) 2008-
Ph. Oak Taylor Smith_UCCA

Mona Hatoum was born in Beirut, Lebanon in 1952 but ended up staying in London after Civil War broke out in 1975. She began as a performance artist but gradually moved through fields of installations, video and sculptures.
Mona Hatoum / - zoom out
Homebound, (installation) 2002

"Your first experience of a work of art is physical," says Hatoum. "I like the work to operate on both the sensual and intellectual levels. Meanings, connotations and associations come after the initial physical experience as your imagination and intellect are fired by what you have seen."  - From Egodesign.ca

Traffic 2002

When you look at Hatoum´s work you gradually will notice what she is most known for. She brings otherwise normal objects out to the public and then overexposes it to make them almost unfamiliar and at times frightening. She demands the viewer to rethink the "normal".

Hot Spot III, 2009
Interior Landscapes, Pallazo Querini Stampalia
Stainless steel and neon tube

I began with the worry beads and will end with the Prayer Mat, I guess "praying" for more. I definitely have "blood on my teeth" the more I see and read about Mona Hatoum the more I want. 
When will she have a Solo Show in New York that I can attend, I wonder?

Prayer Mat, 1995
British Council, London

With Love
Kristin

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Event Horizon 2010







Event Horizon March 26 - August 15, 2010

ANTONY GORMLEY

My English friends keep asking me why I am not writing about Antony Gormley? Finally he is having an exhibit in New York. But even the distances in Manhattan sometimes feels far.... Tuesday though I finally ventured to Madison Square Park to view the Iron casted Men (casted out of the artist´s own body). 
Unfortunately my pictures did not come up as exciting as the one above...







I hope you can find the men up there, this would be the perspective from you standing at the ground, looking up without a zoom.
I have a feeling this exhibit actually worked a lot better in London where they held it in 2007, especially since the buildings in New York are too tall for us to view the sculptures close up, it is a bit hard to get an intimate feeling from it.

I am impressed though at the incentive to do these public exhibits, it brings art out to the people in a completely different, more open minded and interactive way. People actually thought there was guys on the roof trying to jump, which then again ended up reminding them of 9/11. It also opens up an interest for Antony Gormley as an Artist for us in New York, in London he is a celebrity.

Here are some of his other projects:

Standing out from the crowd ... British artist Antony Gormley sits
among the 180,000 figurines that make up Asian Field, part
of the Sydney Biennale.
Anthony Gormley in front of his 180,000 terracotta Figurines "Asian Field" at the Sydney Biennale in 2006
Photo: Ben Rushton ©

"Between You and Me" 2009

Quantum Cloud.1999 

Firmament, 2008

Anthony Gormley´s web site is pretty impressive if you would like to see more:)

Have a lovely day:) Kristin


Monday, July 19, 2010

Lucian and the girl in bed

Lucian Freud © Cecil Beaton Archive, 1956
Sothebys London / Collection National Portrait Gallery, London

LUCIAN FREUD
1922-

A fellow Art lover reminded me yesterday about Lucian Freud.
It made me think of the fantastic retrospective that I had a chance to see at the Tate Britain in 2002.
I had then just finished reading the Biography about Caroline Blackwood (1931-1996) who was married to Lucian Freud between 1953 - 1958 and who inspired some of his greatest work.                                                                                                                                                                                                             

Caroline (from the Guinness family) met Lucian at a debutante ball where Princess Margaret and the Queen Mother attended as well.

"Princesse Margaret was seized by a desire to add to the festivities by singing a medley of Cole Porter tunes, which she sang "Hopelessly off-key." Her audience was nonetheless cheering and asking for more, when, suddenly, a hiss emanated from the back of the ballroom. Someone was boing the Princess!
........the fellow who had booed Princess Margaret was the iconoclastic Anglo - Irish painter Francis Bacon. And Bacon had arrived with his young friend and fellow artist, the wolfishly handsome Lucian Freud." 
          ( Dangerous Muse Page 64-65)

Caroline Blackwood was a successful writer, especially later in life. She was short-listed for a Booker Prize for her novel "Great Granny Webster" in 1977. After she left Lucian Freud she married the composer Israel Chitkowitz and then followed with a third marriage to the poet Robert Lowell.

"a mermaid who dines upon the bones of her winded lovers"
          - Lowell's words on Caroline.

Girl in bed (1952)

My favorite painting of Lucian Freud´s might actually be this one "Hotel Bedroom". The questions it rises is why he painted such a young woman so old, so worn? (Maybe a prediction of her Alcohol problems?) And why does he looks so harsh so tortured?

Hotel Bedroom (1954)

Lucian Freud was actually born in Berlin (Sigmund Freud´s grandson) but is being seen as one of the greatest modern British painters. He and his family left Germany and the Nazi uprising to become British Citizens in 1933. The other great post-war British painter was his older friend Francis Bacon. 

Francis Bacon, painted by Lucian Freud (1952)
(Stolen in 1988, never to be seen again)

Lucian Freud, painted by Francis Bacon (1965)


I feel like I could keep going on about Lucian Freud for a long time, but to round it up I would like to add one of his nudes, some of what he is probably most known for.

Naked girl asleep II (1968)

Lucian Freud painted raw, realistic and one could say a bit cold paintings. But the truth they are portraying has a penetrating longevity. The more you look, the more they show you his intense talent.
I will definitely never forget the moment I first found myself in front of one of his naked portraits and how mesmerized I was by it´s crude nearly deadly silence it hit me with. But where and when that was, I cannot remember......

"He had a reputation in Soho - people thought he was going to be a great artist. But he wasn´t much liked by the galleries. Everyone thought his work was too ugly, even the work we now think as really pretty. They thought the portraits were hideous. Everyone said, "Oh, the nightmare would be to be painted by Lucian, because he makes everyone so ravaged."
          - Caroline´s words (Dangerous Muse page 80)

Lucian Freud is still alive and supposedly still working in his studio in Holland Park, London. 

With Love!
Kristin


Friday, July 16, 2010

Activities for Saturday Nights

Activities for Saturday Nights, Part 1 (Paris 2008)
Painting by Pia MYrvoLD, photo by Petter Hegre ©

PIA MYrvoLD


Pia MYrvoLD is probably one of the most beloved Norwegian artists at the moment. You can say she is quite untouchable when it comes to the wide spectrum of directions that her art takes you in. She began as a painter in the 1980´s with a debut in Paris. From there she has broaden out to include video, dance, architecture, fashion and performance Art as crafts she proves to master.
Her immense production is also breathtaking. Bellow I will show you pieces from what she has done so far this year.... and we still have many months left, for new wonders to be made:)

Mixed media painting exhibit at Gallery Nielsen in Skagen, Denmark:

"Forest VI" 
mixed media painting on canvas 90x90 cm, 2010 ©

Digital art, video and editions solo exhibit at Gallery A. in Oslo:

Yellow series IX (2010) ©
Digigrafikk

Exploration in landscape - Blue Diver (2010) ©
Digigrafikk

A whole series of these radiant colorful hanging sculptures in Paris:


PensiveMovementReflex - Signed Edition (Paris 2010) ©


"I love in-between
phenomena; things that fall
between two stools, or
connect gaps. They allow
borders to meet, in a space
where communication is
possible. It is in the realm of
the interfaces that our lives
take place and evolve"

Pia MYrvoLD - Interfaces statement

Pia MYrvoLD ©

To see more of her large varieties of intriguing and beautiful pieces (even modular carpets, and music ) click here.

Isn´t she incredibly exciting? Have a lovely weekend all!
Kristin



Tuesday, July 13, 2010

O Morro


Jeroen Koolhaas & Dre Urhahn

Rio de Janeiro

This summer, the art duo Jeroen Koolhaas & Dre Urhahn has painted a striking rainbow out of 33 buildings in the deepest slum of Rio de Janeiro (O Morro means "The Hill", synonymous with "Slum" according to N.Y. Times).
A wonderful grassroots movement about remaking an unknown place into a monumental space, helped out by the youngsters that live there and by grants and donations.
The Dutch duo Dre Urhahn and Jeroen Koolhaas

These sort of communal projects, might be of the most uplifting and positive aspects of what we can create out of our surroundings and for the people that needs it the most.

Please, if you know of similar projects that I might not have heard of, hit the send key:)

Love Kristin

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Essentials of a Woman


GEORGIA O´KEEFFE
1887-1986

I just finished watching the 2009 biopic "Georgia O´Keeffe" about her life with Art and the relationship between her and the photographer Alfred Stieglitz. 
Alfred Stieglitz
(Georgia O´Keefe) 
Torso
1919

(When they first met he obsessively took pictures of her, like he wanted to capture every piece of her body).

The film is also telling us the story of how Mr. Stieglitz brought her to recognition, and also through his demonic side and unfaithfulness made her choose to live a lonely life in Taos, New Mexico.
Joan Allen portrays Georgia O´Keeffe beautifully, and Jeremy Irons seldom disappoints, here as Alfred Stieglitz. 

I would like to remind you of her paintings together with O´Keeffe´s words that are said at the beginning of the movie.
Red Canna, 1925
Museum of Art University of Arizona

"I don´t trust words. Words and I are not good friends at all.
A painter using words, is like a baby trying to walk.
Better to let the picture speak on it´s own than try to help it
along with a word."

Calla Lillies on Pink, 1928
Philadelphia Museum of art

"What has happened to me in the past and how it has happened. 
I don´t think that´s anyone´s business, except my own.
You just look at the paintings, see what you can see in the paintings.
That´s all you have a right to see. 
That´s all I will allow you to see."

Jack-in-the pulpit No.IV 1930
From the National Gallery of Art collection

"Someone else´s vision will never be as good as
your own vision of yourself.
Live and die with it. 
Because in the end, that´s all you have.
Lose it and you lose yourself and everything else.

I should have listened to myself."

Pelvis with distance, 1943

Nobody will ever be able to paint flowers like her again, her unique interpretation and daring work makes her one of the most influential female artists of the 20th Century. She was also the first Woman to have a solo exhibit at MoMA.

With that I would like to wish you a fresh start on a new week, must it be good:)

With Love! Kristin