Monday, October 8, 2012

ART IN SAN DIEGO

ART IN SAN DIEGO


Red, Green, Blue 2012 65 x 48 Acrylic on Canvas
New Work by Heidi Thompson Available

Call Gallery or email for prices
AS@alexandersalazarfineart.com

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AlexanderSalazarFineArt.com
WHITEBOXCONTEMPORARY.COM
Call 1-619-531-8966 For Appointment


WE HAVE -
"BIG WHITE BALLS"
October 10th - Opening Reception
7 PM

Conceptual Art Installation:
WHITE BOX CONTEMPORARY
1040 7th Avenue
San Diego, CA 92101

Artist - BENSON TRENT


.


POLO KLEIN UBER 
 Arrived


www.palokleinuber.com


 "3:12 am. - Florist - Shop Display Window"
melted acrylic/plastic on Board and French Crayon
2008- London Studio
50 x 40
Original


Price Upon Request


KEVIN BARRETT 
Available One of A Kind
Sculptures - Welded Aluminum



Queen of Hearts
- 54" x 24.5" x 15"
$24,000


Cristos 
 48" x 18" x 16"
$ 19,500
Original


Navigator -2005
41.5 x 24 x 21
$18,000



Site Specific 
commission artist  
MICHAEL NEILSON 
Represented in San Diego by
 Alexander Salazar Fine Art
1- 619-531-8996 



















The Whitney and High Line Art Present an Installation of Richard Artschwager's Blps

Whitney Museum of American Art High Line Art

Whitney Museum of American Art
945 Madison Avenue at 75th Street
General Information: (212) 570-3600
whitney.org
High Line Art
529 West 20th Street
Ashley Tickle, Communications Manager
(212) 206-9922
ashley.tickle@thehighline.org
thehighline.org

RICHARD ARTSCHWAGER BLPS High Line Art and the Whitney Present Series of
Artist's Iconic Blps On and Around the High Line In Conjunction with the Retrospective Richard Artschwager! at the Whitney


October 25, 2012–February 3, 2013
 
Richard Artschwager

NEW YORK, October 5, 2012—In partnership with High Line Art, presented by Friends of the High Line, the Whitney Museum of American Art is mounting a series of blps by Richard Artschwager, in conjunction with the artist’s Whitney retrospective Richard Artschwager!. A group of blps will be installed in various locations on and around the High Line and will be on view in tandem with the Whitney retrospective from Thursday, October 25, 2012, to Sunday, February 3, 2013. Artschwager introduced his blps—a word coined by the artist and pronounced “blips”—in the late 1960s. The blps were first installed at the University of California–Davis, then in Europe, and then throughout New York City, including on subways and building facades, and in galleries. These public interventions consist of black or white lozenge-shaped marks that inspire focused looking, and draw attention to architecture, structures, and surfaces that usually go unnoticed. Artschwager’s blps have transformed art spaces and city streets for decades, creating an opportunity for the “useless looking” the artist has aspired to throughout his career.

As part of the upcoming retrospective at the Whitney, exhibition curator Jennifer Gross, in collaboration with High Line Art, has organized a project working with the artist that will revisit this aspect of his practice. Artschwager will install blps on and around the High Line, near the future downtown home of the Whitney Museum at the southern terminus of the High Line, at Gansevoort and Washington Streets, and the Whitney’s building uptown on Madison Avenue at East 75th Street. There, part of the exhibition reviews the history of the blp, including Artschwager’s 100 Locations, an installation of 100 blps that were placed around the Whitney Museum at the time of Artschwager’s appearance in the 1968 Whitney Annual Exhibition, as well as other blp projects.

Jennifer Gross, the Seymour H. Knox, Jr. Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at Yale University Art Gallery says, “The partnership between High Line Art and the Whitney has enabled Richard Artschwager to blp the neighborhood surrounding the High Line and has provided an essential component of his retrospective. Artschwager’s blps are a natural extension of the High Line’s embrace of its community and will only make even more visible the aesthetic richness of New York.” “I look forward to seeing the High Line dotted by blps,” says Cecilia Alemani, the Donald R. Mullen, Jr. Curator & Director of High Line Art. “The High Line is a natural theater for art, with its lush landscape, innovative design, and breathtaking views of New York City. Like in a connect-the-dots game, Artschwager’s blps will link the High Line’s unique characteristics, creating a three-dimensional painting in the landscape surrounding the park."
This project is made possible by the Whitney Museum of American Art and High Line Art, presented by Friends of the High Line. Richard Artschwager! is organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art in association with the Yale University Art Gallery. Support for the blp project is provided by 32BNY.

About the Artist

New York-based artist Richard Artschwager (b. 1923, Washington, D.C.) had his first solo show in 1965 at Leo Castelli and appeared in the Primary Structures exhibition at the Jewish Museum in 1966. Select solo exhibitions include Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis (2010); Sprüth Magers, Berlin (2009); Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami, Miami (2003); Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin (2003); Arts Club of Chicago, Chicago (2002); MAK, Vienna (2002); Serpentine Gallery, London (2001); Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, Paris (1994); Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (1992); Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia (1979); Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston (1979); and Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (1973). He began appearing in Whitney Annuals in 1966 and was shown in the 1968, 1970, and 1972 Annuals as well as the 1983 and 1987 Biennials. In 1988, the Whitney organized a mid-career retrospective of his work, which toured to numerous national and international venues including Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Palacio de Velasquez, Madrid; Centre Pompidou, Paris; and Städtische Kunsthalle, Dusseldorf.


Current and Upcoming Exhibitions at the Whitney Oskar Fischinger: Space Light Art—A Film Environment
Through October 28, 2012

Signs & Symbols
Through October 28, 2012

Fireflies on the Water
Through October 28, 2012

Wade Guyton
October 4, 2012–January 13, 2013

Richard Artschwager!
October 25, 2012–February 3, 2013

Trisha Baga: Plymouth Rock 2
November 7, 2012–January 27, 2013
Sinister Pop
Opens November 15, 2012

Dark and Deadpan: Pop in TV and the Movies
Opens November 15, 2012

Blues for Smoke
February 7–April 28, 2013
Jay DeFeo: A Retrospective
February 28–June 2, 2013

. . . as apple pie
On continuous view

The Whitney Museum is located at 945 Madison Avenue at 75th Street, New York City. Museum hours are: Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday from 11 am to 6 pm, Friday from 1 pm to 9 pm, closed Monday and Tuesday. General admission: $18. Full-time students and visitors ages 19–25 and 65 & over: $14. Visitors 18 & under and Whitney members: FREE. Admission to the Kaufman Astoria Studios Film & Video Gallery only: $6. Admission is pay-what-you-wish on Fridays, 6–9 pm. For general information, please call (212) 570-3600 or visit whitney.org.

IMAGE CREDIT

Blp at the Turtle Bay Steam Plant, New York, c. 1968. Photograph by Richard Artschwage

Whitney Museum of American Art        whitney.org



Piano Duo at New York's Weill Recital Hall 11/8/12







Piano Duo at New York's Weill Recital Hall 11/8/12

11-8-12 NG Concert 



Natasha Marin performs in Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall with internationally acclaimed pianist Gerald Robbins on Thursday, November 8, 2012 @ 8:00 PM. The hour-long classical music program includes works by Rachmaninoff, Saint-Saëns, Brahms and Arensky. 



VIP TICKETS: buy here 
ALL OTHER TICKETS: buy here 
to purchase from Carnegie Hall.

PIANO DUO IN CONCERT - Thursday, November 8 @ 8:00 PM
Natasha Marin & Gerald Robbins
Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall
Carnegie Charge (212) 247-7800
Box Office at 57th and Seventh, New York City
Doors open at 7:30 PM * Box office opens at 7:00 PM
TICKETS 
$100 VIP (includes post-concert reception) * $75 Orchestra Rear * $50 Balcony 

Pianists Natasha Marin and Gerald Robbins announce an exciting collaboration, which launched this summer with a concert at UCLA Schoenberg Hall on June 16 (video) and includes a performance this fall at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall in New York City.
The East Coast premiere showcases works by 19th-century quintessential romantic composers. The hour-long program opens with Johannes Brahms (Variations on a Theme by Haydn, op. 56b) and Camille Saint-Saëns (Variations on a Theme by Beethoven op. 35). After intermission, the performance continues with Anton Arensky (Suite Silhouette op. 23) and Sergei Rachmaninoff (Suite No. 2 op. 17).
The concert is produced by CauseConnect & EVFA Music 
.
ABOUT THE PIANISTS
"A pianist of authority and imagination. Versatile, secure in every respect, a spectacular technique."
~ Los Angeles Times
Gerald Robbins has distinguished himself internationally as a soloist, recitalist, and chamber musician of poetic sensitivity and virtuosic technique. Since capturing a major prize at the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition in 1969, he has performed regularly in the world's major music centers throughout Europe, Japan, and the United States. As a soloist accompanied by an orchestra, he has performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Royal Philharmonic, BBC Symphony and its affiliates, and Royal Liverpool Symphony under such conductors as Zubin Mehta, Neville Marriner, Edouard van Remoortel, Okku Kamu, Jorge Mester, and Lawrence Foster. In addition, Robbins' chamber music activities include collaborations with noted violinists Nathan Milstein, Pinchas Zukerman, Kyung-Wha Chung, Glenn Dicterow, and Ruggiero Ricci. Featured on numerous radio and television broadcasts, Robbins performed Rhapsody in Blue on the Emmy-award winning Gershwin TV special starring Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme, and was the featured pianist on the soundtrack for the Academy Award-winning British film, A Shocking Accident. A champion of neglected romantic repertoire, Robbins' artistry on the London-Decca, Orion and Genesis labels include world-premiere recordings of concerti by Litolff and Reinecke. He is co-founder of the Lyric Piano Quartet and is a member of the chamber music faculty of the Manhattan School of Music in New York City.

"... balancing pianistic flair with musical intellingence, Marin's playing of the cadenza was a dazzling showstopper"
~ Crescenta Valley Weekly
"Natasha Marin was impressive ... Under her hands, she nearly pinned the audience to their seats with a fiery rendition of Chopin's scherzo" ~ Boulevard Sentinel
Russian-born Natasha Marin began studying piano at age 6 and was later accepted into the Special Music School for Gifted Children at the St. Petersburg State Conservatory. She earned her B.A. in piano performance from the conservatory's Rimsky-Korsakov Music College, graduating with honors, and later studied with Leonid Sintsev and Igor Lebedev. After moving to California, she attended UCLA where she studied piano with Vitaly Margulis and Professor Antoinette Perry, contemporary music with Grammy Award-winning pianist Gloria Cheng, and worked with acclaimed scholar/media author Robert Winter.
Currently, she performs classical genres (and non-classical repertoire) as a soloist and with piano duos, vocalists, and chamber ensembles. In addition to radio and television appearances, she has recorded and performed live at St. Petersburg Philharmonic Hall in Russia, Comerica Theater in Phoenix, Gable Theater Stage in Coral Gables, Florida, Leo Bing Theater, Colburn School's Zipper Hall, and Thorne Hall in Los Angeles, and other U.S. and international venues.
Premiering June 2008 in Los Angeles, her piano duo "Double Sharp" with Maria Demina won the Grand Prize at a regional competition and appeared live and the radio nationwide. The program features music of Russian romantic and 20th-century composers, incorporating an innovative presentation with custom costumes by designer Vera DeFehr. "Double Sharp" has performed also at charity events like Robert Shapiro's Foundation and Alice Cooper's Solid Rock Foundation.
Together with French soprano Nicol Mecerova, Marin created "Voyage a Paris," program spanning 200 years of the French Art Song, which was presented in the US and Russia. She also performs with her husband actor/comedian Cheech Marin. The couple has appeared at the Hollywood Bowl, Valley Performing Arts Center of the California State University, Northridge, and Bonnaroo Festival in Manchester, Tennessee. She has also worked with Grammy Award-winning producer Peter Asher, playing piano on "Street Spirit (Fade Out)" for the album "Siren" by vocal duo Sasha and Shawna (Manhattan Records, 2007).

Posner Fine Art - Beverly Fishman

PFA News October 2012

OCTOBER 2012
Chroma Dose 

Shown Above:


Pill Spill (detail)
Installation at the Detroit Institute of Art

Beverly Fishman

Read more about Beverly Fishman's installation in the Huffington Post


Also Available:

Beverly Fishman  
Acid Kandyland #2
Acrylic and Enamel on Stainless Steel
84" x 26"

Shown to the Right:   
Dividose: E.X.P.
Acrylic and Enamel on Stainless Steel
58" x 84"
(three panels)
Beverly Fishman

In a new series of visually provocative abstractions, Beverly Fishman explores the fast evolving relationship between our bodies and contemporary technology. Her vibrantly colored paintings and sculptures have their genesis in diverse patterns and iconography drawn from scientific imaging systems and pharmaceutical packaging. By manipulating and layering these representational traces of the body into dense, psychedelic compositions, Fishman raises questions about the vulnerability of human identity in an in an increasingly digitized and electronically-mediated world.

Beverly Fishman's paintings are configurations of horizontal panels of polished stainless steel, each containing dense visual fields woven from neural imagery, sound waves, EEG graphs and other technological data. These accumulate into optically dazzling moiré patterns that are interrupted by images of drug capsules and molecular symbols. Painted in enamel on mirrored metal, the dynamic surfaces mingle with the reflections of spectators in the surrounding environment, allowing us to view our own fractured image in the multiple panels. The "Dividose" paintings, so named for multi-tab pills designed for user-controlled dosages, evoke what art historians and imaging theorist Barbara Maria Stafford has called "a frenzied inscape...that captures both the effect and the seduction of such mood-altering substances. These works are what they represent: stimulants."

Fishman's Pill Spill, currently on display at the Detroit Institute of Art is an installation of unique glass capsule forms that take their cue from mood-altering drugs. Like her paintings, each of the hand blown elements juxtapose multiple patterns, surfaces, and hues into an arresting spectacle. In 2011, Pill Spill first took form as an installation of 120 capsules in the Toledo Museum of Art, installed in dialogue with the architecture of the museum's Glass Pavilion. The capsules are configured to underscore the viewer's personal relationship to pharmaceuticals. These tantalizing yet paradoxical medications -- glass capsules that won't dissolve -- remind us that medicine can be both a cure and a poison.

Beverly Fishman  
Beverly Fishman has exhibited internationally and has garnered numerous honors including fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Last year she received the Hassam, Speicher, Betts, and Symons Purchase Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Her work is in many public collections including the Columbus Museum of Art, Detroit Art Institute of Arts, Miami Art Museum, Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, and Toledo Museum of Art. 

Posner Fine Art is always available to assist you with your fine art and accessory needs.

Sincerely,

Wendy Posner  info@posnerfineart.com

PFA New Address 2012  

Women's Studio Workshop - October News



October Happenings  

Don't Be Shy, Apply!
Art Opportunity Deadlines are Almost Here!

   
Opportunity deadlines are coming up that you won't want to miss them!

WSW provides fantastic residencies, internships and workspace residencies to women artists around the globe.With studios in etching, silkscreen, letterpress, and ceramics, there are plenty of opportunities available.



Check out our Opportunity Calendar for the full schedule!


Internships: October 15th postmark deadline
Studio, Art Administration, and Ceramic Internships

Workspace Residencies: October 15th postmark deadline  

Residency Grants: October 15th postmark deadline   

Residency Grants: November 15th postmark deadline 

Get Ready for the Gala!

Women's Studio Workshop is proud to present two brilliant women this year: Gillian Jagger, a prodigious artist and Hudson Valley resident, and Patricia Gould-Peck, an esteemed educator and longtime Kingston resident.     

Guests enjoying WSW's 2010 Gala.


Please join us at Mohonk Mountain House on November 4, 2012 to celebrate the accomplishments of these two fine women! There will be wining and dining, an exclusive VIP reception, as well as tantalizing items in both our silent and live auctions.

Funds raised help to support WSW programs including artist residencies, internships, art-in-education programs, specialized summer art classes, and the production of hand printed artist's books.


Call (845) 658-9133 or click here for more information.

Tickets: $125
VIP Tickets: $250  

WSW is looking for some fabulous donors to help us purchase 10 new Moulds & Deckles.  

Art students from Kingston High School will be working for four weeks with WSW's artistic director, Tana Kellner.


These new moulds will improve the quality of the paper students can make, enhancing their artistic experience and giving them a leg up for future art careers.
$140 buys 1 new Mould & Deckle.

Follow us on Twitter  
Tweet Tweet
Dig the buzz. 





 WSW's programs are made possible in part by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. 
 






Calendar

October


Oct 15th

and
Residency Grant Deadlines

November

Nov 15th
Residency Grant Deadline
In The Gallery
  
Work by  
Artist in Residence
10/2-10/27/2012

Gallery hours
M-F 9am-5pm   
 
   


Cold Spring/Garrison Open Studios Oct.12th, 13th, 14th.



2012 Cold Spring Arts Annual Open Studio tour  

Cold Spring, 
Nelsonville & Garrison Area Artists invite art lovers into  
Their Working Environment

The success of Cold Spring Arts first open studios held in 2011 has inspired 39 artists to join in CSA's 2nd annual Open Studio event. This free weekend event has been created by artists for art lovers and collectors to expand awareness of the vibrant artistic community thriving in the inspiring Hudson Valley towns of Cold Spring and Garrison. A preview reception and group show on Friday, October 12th, from 5 to 8 p.m. will kick off the event. Artists will open their spaces to the public from 12 pm to 6 pm on Saturday, October 13th and Sunday, October 14th, 2012. 
___________________________________________________ 
The group show, featuring one work from each artist, will open at Philipstown.info at 69 Main St., Cold Spring.  Representing a diverse range of styles and media, this collection will give visitors the opportunity to choreograph their weekend tour so that they can identify and then visit with the artists that interest them, in the studios where their work is created. 
Maps posted on www.coldspringarts.com will highlight the location of all open studios and will be available at various locations in the village of Cold Spring, including Houlihan Lawrence at 60 Main Street, the Cold Spring Visitor's Center at the end of Main Street and Garrison Art Center in Garrison. Visitors commuting by Metro-North can choose a walking tour within the village of Cold Spring, where over a dozen artists' studios will be opened to the public; if traveling by car, visitors can map out a drive to seek out the artists who live in the Hudson Valley towns of Garrison and Cold Spring.  
Visitors will have access to local artists in relaxed and informal settings, witnessing the creative process first-hand. Fused Glass artist and founder of Cold Spring Arts and ArtFull Living, Barbara Galazzo understands this: "By going into a studio, viewers get to see what goes on behind closed doors...how the artist's creativity stirs them into action...and the processes involved in getting to the finished product".   The open studio format invites meaningful dialogue between artist and viewer. Whether a collector or an art lover, this is a unique opportunity to discover new talent at the source and purchase works directly from the artist's inventory. Distinct from the often impersonal and intimidating gallery setting, this personal relationship with the artists brings another layer of meaning to any artwork that you choose to live with. 


This year's Open Studio tour features professional artists of national and international renown, working in ceramics, glass, painting, video, installation, printmaking, and sculpture. Highlights include: a rarely seen 18-foot wood-fired Anagama-Norborigama Japanese-style kiln built by Tony Moore; Susan English's luminous poured paintings; Thomas Huber's juxtaposition of images, built up to create a rich, intriguing surface; Carla Goldberg's I Remember series, in which she casts items from her childhood in a 3-dimensional translucent resin, fixing the memory in time; Jaanika Peerna's stunning nature-inspired abstract drawings and installations; Julie Tooth's paintings which reference the myriad influences affecting us at all times and which she describes as "an attempt to realize the influences we see and feel, be they natural or man-made"; Alex Uribe's profound sculptures, made from recycled and revitalized materials long before "Green" was in vogue; and Lesli Uribe's paintings which encompass a global language introducing, perhaps subliminally, the idea that we are all creators. 
The Cold Spring and Garrison 2nd Annual Open Studio event occurs at the beginning of fall foliage season - an opportune moment for visitors to experience the natural beauty that has long attracted artists to the Hudson Valley region. The area will also be host to other exciting art events on the same weekend, including "CURRENT 2012", a sculpture exhibition presented by Garrison Art Center on the grounds of Boscobel House and Gardens; Collaborative Concepts @ Saunders Farm, a sculpture exhibition of over 70 sculptures; both located in Garrison, NY; the Van Brunt Projects @ The Living Room among works being shown includes the Starn Brothers; and The ArtFull Living Designer Show House showcasing 37 Hudson Valley artists works and collaboration with 7 interior designers. 

Events Schedule
        
*Cold Spring Arts Open Studio Tour:

*Oct. 12th  
Kick Off Party Cold Spring Arts 5-8 pm
 Location Philipstown.Info  69 Main St., Cold Spring, NY

*Oct 13th Open Studios 12-6pm
*Oct 14th Open Studios 12-6pm

Art Events Scheduled:

*Oct. 12th Opening Receptions and Exhibits 6-9pm 
 Marina Gallery 153 Main St., Cold Spring 
Gallery 66 NY 66 Main St., Cold Spring  
Van Brunt Projects @the Living Room, 103 Main St.,Cold Spring  
Houlihan Lawrence 70 Main St., Cold Spring

*Oct. 13th  
Collaborative Concepts @ Saunders Farm Mid Run Reception, 853 Old Albany Post Rd, Garrison 2-6 pm
  
*Oct. 13th & 14th
Garrison Art Center Artist on Location Silent Auction, Garrison
Current Sculpture at Boscobel  Cold Spring
ArtFull Living Designer Show House at Glassbury
3370 Albany Post Road, (Route 9) Court Cold Spring
Collaborative Concepts @ Saunders Farm Garrison

*Oct. 14
ArtFull Living Designer Show House at Glassbury Court, Closing Reception & Silent Auction 6-7:30
3370 Albany Post Road, (Route 9) www.coldspringarts.com  
    

Links to All Area Events Weekend of Oct. 13th and 14th
Cold Spring Garrison Open Studios www.coldspringarts.com  
Artfull Living Designer Show House www.coldspringarts.com 
Saunders Farm www.collaborativeconcepts.org

 
This event was made possible by a grant from Putnam Arts. This grant program is managed and monitored by the Putnam Arts Council.


   
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