Urban Legends and Country Tales

The Digital Art Guild brings an international print exhibit to the San Diego area. Fifty outstanding prints demonstrate the multiple directions art has taken in the contemporary art world – both in pluralism of styles and the hybridism of technique and media.

The opening and public reception for Urban Legends and Country Tales will be 6 to 8:30 pm on Saturday, Oct. 4th.  Admission is free to the Bonita Museum, 4355 Bonita Road, Bonita CA 91902.  Hours are 10:00am - 4:00pm - Wednesday through Saturday. For museum information, contact Vicky DeLong, Museum Director, 619-267-5141.

For more information visit the Digital Art Guild website

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SPEAK UP: Getting to Know Others By Giving a Gallery Talk

SPEAK UP: Getting to Know Others By Giving a Gallery Talk
by Robert Bean with permission for 1stAngel

It’s finally up on the walls. Months of work, years even. You’re standing there, spinning slowly in the middle of the gallery, basking in the self-loving glow of your artwork on the walls. The mailer has been mailed, email notices delivered, and a press release sent out. You might have even put up a few posters here and there, and posted to a few forums. You’re ready for the opening reception, with those thousands of people (you hope) rushing through the front door to see what new genius you’ve adorned the empty white walls with.

And then you spend the next several hours answering questions, many of them the same questions, to many different people, with a big grin on your face the whole time.  You explain how you use your materials, you explain why you picked your subject matter, why you like this color over that one, and why you only work on canvas or paper, or why sculpture is your medium of choice. You tell many people, time and again, what made you decide to be an artist in the first place.

By the end of the night, you can’t remember who you’ve talked to and what you’ve said. You know yourself and your work inside and out, and you’ve proved that as the hours marched on during the reception.

But do you know anything about the people that asked the questions? The ones who are interested in your work? What’s their take on the images you’ve created? If you spend all your time answering the same questions over and over, this information is hard to come by.

As an artist, creating images and objects comes naturally to you. Speaking may not, but speaking is how you will connect with those that enjoy your work and those that will collect it. By working with the gallery owner and employing a gallery talk at your opening, you can answer a lot of those questions early on that may get asked over and over otherwise. And that gives you time to get to know those interested in your work a little better.

A gallery talk does not have to be a scary thing – even if you’re apprehensive about speaking in front of a crowd of people. Unless you’re speaking in an academic setting, your talk doesn’t have to be long (and even in the academic setting it’s wise to not put your audience to sleep with every little story from your past explaining your growth as an artist). Think of the basic questions someone who doesn’t know you might want to know about you and your work:

?    Who are you? What’s your professional background?
?    What led you to creating art? Why do you do it?
?    What inspires you? What informs your work and leads to your ideas?
?    How do you create it? What mediums do you use and how do you use them?
?    What kind of experience do you hope a viewer gets out of seeing your work?

These are fairly simple and straightforward questions, and should be questions that you can answer easily. Use them as the foundation for your talk, answering them as you move along through your talking points.

But, you want to add a personal touch as well. Find a few anecdotes and stories that you can slip in between those questions that may help illuminate what you’re talking about, or put your answers to those questions into real life situations everyone can relate to.

For example, one of the stories I sometimes slip into talks about my work comes from years ago when I painted a very abstract painting of a mouse’s head. Without telling a friend of mine what the subject matter was, I had him look at the painting and asked him what he could see. His response?

“Jesus.”

I painted a mouse, and he sees Jesus Christ. Once I got over my bewilderment at his response, the situation became a turning point in how I approached art, because I came to realize that no matter what I create, no matter my intent, it will always be colored by the individual perceptions of those who view it. When I use that story, I like to work it into my talk about the time I’m explaining what inspires me and how I go about creating the work I create.

By taking the time to give a talk about your work, you give the attendees of your opening a chance to get to know you, and your work, all at once. Make sure you work in time for a question and answer session after you get through the talk as well. People love to ask questions, and it will allow them to feel closer to your work. And, as the reception continues on into the evening (or afternoon, or morning), you’ll be presented with a better chance to get to know those that have taken the time to come see what you’ve been creating. You’ll find out more about who they are, and why they like, or don’t like, what you’ve been doing.

You already know who you are, and you know your work – give a gallery talk, and give yourself a chance to find out who the people looking at your work are, and what they like and don’t like. You’ve already had a chance to express yourself, give them the chance to do the same.


Robert Bean is a practicing artist that resides in Little Rock, Arkansas. His work is collected throughout the United States and has been included in several competitives and exhibitions. Examples of his work can be found at his website, www.rbfineart.com. You can read more of his thoughts on art and being an artist on his online journal, Scribbles & Smudges, at http://rbfineart.livejournal.com.

This article ©2008 Robert Bean.

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Opportunity to view rare works by Degas, Hepworth, Sickert at Browse & Darby’s Annual Exhibition.

Venerable London gallery Browse & Darby opens its doors on 8th May 2008 with its 32nd Annual Exhibition of British and French paintings, drawings and sculptures. The exhibition runs from 8th May until 13th June 2008.

Visitors to the exhibition have a rare chance to view pieces by renowned and celebrated artists from the late 19th and 20th Centuries. A highlight of the show is Edgar Degas’ (1834-1917) Deux Danseuses circa 1895, executed in charcoal and pastel, which is a study for the pastel Danseuses dans les coulisses, and aptly illustrates the artist’s abiding fascination with movement and dance. Read more

TONYP at The Zeitgeist Gallery

One of our great interviewees, tonyp, will be showing selective work Saturday May 10, 2008 -June 7, 2008 at The Zeitgeist Gallery 2661 Michigan Ave. Detroit, MI 313.965.9192

If in the Detroit Metropolitan Area please stop by and say hello to him, It would mean so much :D Say you saw it here!!

Media will be there and some other great work by more artists.

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National Portrait Gallery - WANT TO SEE MORE OF ME?’ BLACK FILM ACTORS BY DONALD MACLELLAN

WANT TO SEE MORE OF ME?’ BLACK FILM ACTORS BY DONALD MACLELLAN
25 April - 7 September 2008
Room 38a. Free admission.

Sophie Okonedo by Donald MacLellan, 2007
Copyright: © Donald MacLellan

Want to see more of me?’ is a striking new series of portraits of talented and successful black British film actors by photographer Donald MacLellan, funded by the UK Film Council.


Robbie Gee by Donald MacLellan, 2007
Copyright: © Donald MacLellan

A dynamic group of images, opulent and rich in colour, ‘Want to see more of me?’ celebrates both individual and collective achievement and contributes to debates around diversity, on-screen representation, content and portrayal. Sitters include Colin Salmon, Adrian Lester, Ashley Walters, Mona Hammond, Sophie Okonedo and Chiwetel Ejiofor.

MacLellan is an established portrait photographer, whose images have appeared regularly in national and international magazines over the past fifteen years. His portfolio includes leading figures across the arts and entertainment industries such as John Hurt, Tilda Swinton, Benjamin Zephaniah and Ewan McGregor. He has had many commissions for book jackets and record covers along with numerous advertising and design commissions.


Marianne Jean-Baptiste by Donald MacLellan, 2007
Copyright: © Donald MacLellan

‘Want to see more of me?’ is the third project by Donald MacLellan to be exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery, having previously shown Black Power in 1998 and Tartan Army in 2000. In addition, a number of his works are held in the Gallery’s Photographic Collection.

On this new series of portraits MacLellan comments: ‘I did a number of test shots which helped me determine the look of the series and I knew I wanted a good cross section of well established actors, new comers and those who are in the later stages of their career’.


Kwame Kwei-Armah by Donald MacLellan, 2007
Copyright: © Donald MacLellan

The UK Film Council is the Government-backed lead agency for film in the UK. The Council aims to stimulate a successful, vibrant film industry and to promote the widest possible enjoyment and understanding of British and World cinema throughout the UK. Through the Leadership on Diversity Forum, the Council has formed a strategic partnership of 21 lead industry bodies, who in turn have adopted its Equalities Charter for Film. ‘Want to see more of me?’ is funded by the UK Film Council as part of its drive to ensure people from all backgrounds can thrive and achieve their potential in the film industry.

John Woodward, Chief Executive Officer of the UK Film Council said: ‘The UK Film Council is delighted to be partnering with the National Portrait Gallery on the Want to see more of me?’ project. We want to stimulate debate about on-screen diversity and we think that celebrating some of the UK’s most successful black actors is a brilliant reminder of what is possible.’

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Kew opens botanical art gallery


London’s Kew Gardens has opened the world’s first gallery dedicated to botanical art works - some of which have never been seen by the public.

The £3m attraction is exhibiting art from the collections of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and from collector Dr Shirley Sherwood.

Kew has a vast collection of more than 200,000 art works.

Some of the illustrations of extinct species are thought to be the only surviving record.

The Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art at Kew Gardens will be open to the public all year round. Read more

Take your time: Olafur Eliasson

Take your time: Olafur Eliasson
April 20–June 30
On view at MoMA & P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center

This comprehensive survey of Olafur Eliasson’s highly experimental, immersive work transforms MoMA and P.S.1’s galleries into hybrid spaces of nature and culture that offer a fresh perspective on everyday life.

The artist’s large-scale environments, sculptures, photographs, and geometric constructions use multicolored washes, projections of light, mirrors, and elements such as water and moss to elegantly recreate the extremes of landscape and atmosphere in his native Iceland.

P.S.1 is a 5-minute subway ride from MoMA.

Directions to P.S.1

Join today or tomorrow to see it first in Members Previews

Purchase the exhibition catalogue

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