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Archive for April 17th, 2009|Daily archive page

international sketchbook project – en route to stop #2

In Uncategorized on April 17, 2009 at 9:28 pm

We’re so thrilled to be the first artist to have completed our initial portion for the International Sketchbook Project as conceived and designed by Kenya Bevans.  You can learn more about the ISP by visiting Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, Flickr, or the ISP website, or Kenya’s blog.  Kenya did a fabulous job collecting sketchbook artists from around the world to participate.  Representatives from Israel, Turkey, Croatia, Germany, France, Portugal, the UK, Scotland and many others have signed up!

Each artist has four pages with which to communciate about their world.  The first is a page about themselves and the remainder can be about anything the artist chooses as long as it remains true to the theme of location.  Our collage pages (made from re-used and re-cycled luxury magazines) concentrate on the USA and President Obama’s recent win, the green spring of the Commonwealth of Virginia, and the inspiring art community of Old Town Alexandria.  We’ve posted them here.  Look for more information about The International Sketchbook Project in the days to come.  

For paper and book arts enthusiasts everywhere, not to mention collage artists, we want to give a very special endorsement to Winsor & Newton’s All Purpose Varnish For General Purpose Arts & Crafts.  A beautiful clear gloss varnish which provides permanent non-removable protection of craftwork is ideal for a variety of surfaces including wood, metal, paper and modelling materials.  What I first thought was going to be a DISASTER when initially sprayed, turned out more beautifully then I could have ever imagined when dried.  I am completely SOLD on this product.  (Thank you for the recommendation, Alex!)

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featured artist: lynne friedman's cosmic garden series

In Uncategorized on April 17, 2009 at 8:38 pm

Kingston New York’s Lynne Friedman sent us over a brochure of examples of new work available as limited edition prints or originals on Arches. Lynne’s work was inspired by two art residencies at the Julia and David White Art Residency near the Montevideo Rain Forest in Costa Rica, followed by a month of working in the conservatory and greenhouses at the Tyrone Guthrie Centre in Ireland along with the flora of New York’s Hudson Valley.  You can learn more on Lynne’s blog.  The series is pen & ink in pure botanical art illustration form with tell-tale left-side light source and has been shown in numerous solo shows in New York City as well as through the U.S. Department of State Art-In-Embassies Program.  Here we’ve included Cosmic Garden #9 and Cosmic Garden #4.  Lynne’s limited edition giclees, signed and numbered with certificates of authenticity are extremely well priced for today’s art market.  

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the power of the Internet: Twitter, Pakistan, Sean Penn and the birth of a revolution

In Uncategorized on April 17, 2009 at 9:53 am

Recently, we’ve been experimenting with Twitter to increase our visibility and our communication within the art world as an art advisory, art consultancy, design studio, and artist rep.  Amazingly, since starting Twitter, our site hits have more than doubled in less than five days. Frustratingly though, we’ve also hit Twitter follow limits and recently launched a revolutionary petition campaign called LIFT FOLLOW LIMITS NOW.  

Follow limits infringe upon one’s free speech, free market and free trade possibilities. Additionally, despite the added insult of the misleading advertisement of Twitter as a freely accessible communication exchange device, there’s the added insult that the limits are arbitrarily imposed — which in our mind (after watching Oscar winner Sean Penn’s Harvey Milk performance last night on DVD) equates to a very scary new kind of discrimination among account holders. LIFT FOLLOW LIMITS NOW needs all Twitterers to join us today. 

While Twitter has enabled us to reach groups and members we might not have previously and regularly dealt with (Tate Gallery in London or Art Basel in Switzerland) we never imagined it would bring via Air Mail and the U.S. Postal Office  a letter from Sailkot Pakistan from the Hand Work Company advertising embroidered badges, military braids and shoulder boards among other uniform accessories.  Well, Mohd Ramzan Skeikh, it’s great to meet you by paper.  If Twitter LIFTs FOLLOW LIMITS NOW maybe I and all the rest of the Twitter community can twit you every now and then.  

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