Drewes was German and studied under Klee, Muche and other Bauhaus notables. It isn't a leap to see his origins in his work. He moved to the USA in the 30s. In addition to painting he was a printmaker and teacher.
Werner Drewes Small pieces of art were on display at the Richard Norton Gallery booth at Art Chicago/Next. Again, I am working on something on collecting small art...something that is taking way, way too long considering how unprofound it is. But these works were inspirational.
Drewes was German and studied under Klee, Muche and other Bauhaus notables. It isn't a leap to see his origins in his work. He moved to the USA in the 30s. In addition to painting he was a printmaker and teacher.
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Ashley Collins, Conrad Kern & Jenny Abel At Art Chicago/Next 2011, Via Turner Carroll Gallery5/10/2011 Ashley Collins' Moon was one of several pieces that stood out at the Turner Carroll Gallery booth at Art Chicago/Next 2011. There are many other examples of her work, which is oil, aged paper, panel and hand fired resin. You can see the reflective nature of the piece in my rotten photograph above. Paintings by Conrad Kern Conrad Kern was another artist who caught my eye at the Turner Carroll Gallery, in part because of my new obsession with "small art." His paintings, naturally, do not come across at ALL in the photo above. Smaller pieces inevitably come off worse in such photos; if you make them large you make them seem bigger. You can get a better idea by looking at the Turner Carroll website. Jenny Abel 's unique and meticulous "book cover" series also simply do no come across in these photos--nor even the much better photos on the gallery website. These are truly masterful works...quirky. The sort of work that, if you pause to consider them you wonder; what the HELL was this woman thinking (and I mean that in a good way).
I didn't think this at the time but I was a tad ovewhelmed. Big Dipper (not at Art Chicago) But From Frederick's WebsiteSo while wandering at Art Chicago I found paintings by Linden Frederick at the Forum Gallery booth. The folks working there were otherwise occupied (i.e. talking to people who looked like they might be reaching for a check book). I never try to chat with folks in that position!
I am often entranced by a certain style of night scape painting. I am glad I didn’t take photos here as there is just no way those would even sort of work. These are realistic paintings of the evening. But, for lack of a better way of putting it, so many night scapes seem just an excuse to slop some black paint on a canvas with a beam of light aimed at a guy in a fedora smoking a cigarette. There is often an obviousness and self-conscious love of blackness in such paintings (to my dubious eyes in any case). Frederick’s paintings are nuanced and have depth. They are of the night but they are not really dark because of that alone. I am starting to sound like an art critic…brrrr. See his paintings. Not ALL of them are of the night. Jeremy Hu is director and curator of Asymmetrik Inc., an art brokerage that specializes in photography. The company was at Art Chicago/Next displaying some truly breathtaking work. Hu took time to talk about some of the work and about being a broker versus having a gallery. He would like to someday have a gallery but, right now, he prefers being a broker—one with an impressive online gallery. And he thinks purchasing art online sales is becoming more accepted. “Yes definitely we have gone so far along into the cyber world now. I could really see how people slowly are becoming more comfortable buying art online,” says Hu. “It is still pretty much at the beginning but there is a huge demand. Of course, when you reach out online you are talking about global. So that gives you another spectrum of business and audience…” When asked if people come to events such as Art Chicago/Next and then buy the art later online, Hu answers in the affirmative.
“I would think so, there is so much to see and I do not how big this is exactly. One could get lost. Hard to see something and at that point make the purchase--unless it is something you ‘see your name on.’” he says. Among the artists whose work he sells are Ken Shung, Christophe von Hohenberg and many others. Antonio Capelao (I apolgize for the missing accents...they are not working for some reason) of Bicha Gallery showed the large and small works of Dr. Lisa Anderson. The small photos, 30 photos in a series of three, are titled China Red and were completed when Anderson was artist-in residence at Redgate Studios in Beijing in 2010.
I was attracted to these, first of all, because they were small and I am writing something about "small art" (more on that some day). Capelao told me the smaller pieces of China Red make up a single piece. He also showed some of Anderson's other works, for which she designed a new lens. He noted the artist has accommodated collectors who wanted different size prints--so long as those prints do not compromise the clarity of the image (or something like that). Walasse Ting was Chinese by birth but left his homeland as a teen. He went to Paris at the age of 19 and also lived and worked in New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles, according to The Catto Gallery’s Iain Barratt (Barratt did not bring up his own art, which is remarkable in its own right).
Ting got to know a number of notable artists, Andy Warhol and various abstract expressionists. He produced art of the variety of the latter in the sixties. But Barratt noted he mixed traditional Chinese elements with his expressions. One of the traditional aspects of his work is how he painted it. He painted it on the floor standing up. One of his pieces is in the Guggenheim. Regretably ,Ting had a stroke 8 years ago and was in a coma until he passed away in May, 2010. “What is happening now—in past six months—is that Chinese are buying him back, claiming him as their own.” says Barratt. Auction prices often exceed gallery prices and Barratt says his work is something collectors should keep an eye on. The Catto Gallery is located in London. Dan Dailey, Startlingly Beautiful And Artistic Glassworks, From A Master Artist & Craftsman5/4/2011 by Patrick Ogle Dan Dailey is a glass artist who began working in the medium over 45 years. His list of accomplishments and his resume are far too extensive to list here. He was the recipient of a Fulbright Hayes Fellowship. He founded the glass program at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston. But when he first went into art school glass was not on his mind. “I went to art school in Philadelphia in the 60s started in 64, Philadelphia College of Art. I got interested in glass when the college was given a grant to build a glass studio. They asked me to make it so I made the studio without really knowing what I was going to do,” he says. “That s what got me interested in the material. I was making films at the time. And I was also doing illustration and making things from clay and metal so I had classes in various media.” Even though he found glass very intriguing he had no real instruction in the glass. Even his instructor was no expert. “The ceramics instructor who told me how to build the furnace and rest of the shop, he didn’t know either. It was all experimental for him,” says Dailey. “He had one class and then he became the person who administered this grant the college was given. So it was an interesting time and very exciting to try this new material and be able to do something with it.” This first studio was not exactly state of the art. “It was a terrible studio. It was out in the parking lot in an old incinerator room. You had to pull the bench out into the parking lot and sit there in the parking lot,” he says. “Open up to doors and prop a piece of metal on top of there so the snow wouldn’t fall on your head. Everyone got sick in February.” When asked if there were any “spectacular failures” because of the lack of knowledge he pauses and says, “I wouldn’t have called them spectacular. They were kind of miserable” Yet even with the conditions it was valuable experience. He did not, however, immediately continue his work in glass. He says while it was cool to work with and intriguing he wasn’t fully into it. This was when he moved to Haight Ashbury (hey…it was the SIXTIES and he was an artist!). He lived in San Francisco for awhile but eventually burned out on the West Coast and went to Rhode Island for graduate school. This was fortuitous as he became the first grad student of famed glass artist Dale Chihuly. “He became a friend-is still a good friend. I just saw him at his opening in Boston. It was a great thing.” says Dailey. This is the point where Dailey became more focused. He stopped working in any medium aside from glass--excepting some illustration classes. And for Dailey illustrations lead to and inform his glass work. “I am kind of an imagist. Everything I make is subjective, even the pieces that are more like decorative art, like these bird sconces, which are functional objects and they have strong links to Art Deco or Ancient Egypt if you kind of boil down the imagery,” he says. “But my heroes are people like René Lalique, somebody from that era where design and function were merged in a way that is deliberately beautiful and with a really strong respect for materials and materials combination to make things elegant. So that quality of making things and the use of materials and even the geometric stylization of forms is all coming from a strong design tradition in Art Deco, Art Noveau.” One of the pieces, the one next to him in the top photo, had to be made five times. The white collar on the figure just wouldn’t come out right. After so many years working in glass he says he can mostly get it to do what he wants. But ultimately, the glass still wins. It is the boss. Tom Hawk from Hawk Galleries in Columbus, OH should be proud of the work he represents and also the artistic presentation at Art Chicago. It stood out from the others. There is an exhibition of Dailey's work at the gallery from May 7 through June 26, 2011.
These pieces are from Museum Works Galleries. They did not need to travel far for Art Chicago/Next 2011. Their gallery is in Chicago's Merchandise Mart.
The flowers above and horse below are by artist Danielle Procaccio. Procaccio uses different medium in her work. She has been featured in exhibitions since the mid 1990s. She is originally from New York. I walked past this painting, by Peter Keizer, on Friday several times saying "I need to go in and ask them about this artist."
But I didn't. Then I went back Sunday and walked past it three times thinking; "boy I need to ask someone about this one." But I didn't. Wish I had because he has a wonderful website and is a painter, sculptor, filmmaker and more. This painting, in English, is titled At the Apple Dyke. It is very impressionistic and you think his work will be a wonderful backward look at Impressionism. It isn't. He does many different things in his art which I hesitate to approach after seeing one painting and a website. His work, or at least this painting, was part of Envie D'Art's booth at Art Chicago. Ok, so I made a mistake here. There are two Susan Halls who are artists. THIS Susan Hall wrote to say thanks and that, "I live in Chicago, another Susan Hall (who is an artist, a bit older and more successful than me) lives in Point Reyes, CA." If I can find a third artist named Susan Hall I am going to raise money for a Susan Halls exhibition. My apologies to both Susans. Susan Hall has had numerous solo exhibitions going back into the early 1990s. Recently , in 2009, she had one at Thomas Masters Gallery in Chicago. Thomas Masters is the gallery that had two of her pieces on display (conveniently across from where you could get coffee…so I sat and considered them as my coffee cooled). They have very different “looks” up close and far away with a texture up close that gives an almost ethereal feel from a distance.
Hall lives in Chicago...as I noted. |
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