Pages

Showing posts with label ARTIST. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ARTIST. Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2014

WEEK IN REVIEW

Swoon's Submerged Motherlands at the Brooklyn Museum

A fresh pair from Nicholas Kirkwood

Ai Wei Wei's he xie at the Brooklyn Museum

More Ai Wei Wei; exhibition opens to the public today

The Big Egg Hunt on view at Rockefeller Center (Egg by Cope2)

Another egg, from Olivia Phillips-Falk

Studio visit with Case Jernigan for the Twitter Art Project

More paintings at Case's studio

Just a quick post looking back at what I saw this week.  For more, follow me on Twitter or Instagram.

Friday, February 14, 2014

OH LA LA

Olek, Oh La La, 2013
Happy Valentine's Day from Artfully Awear!  
Wouldn't you love to receive a hand-crocheted Valentine like this crocheted Olek piece?  I hope your day is filled with love.

Olek image via Artsy.net.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

NOW WEARING: Bubbles.


The best way for me to deal with a gray day has always been to pull out my brightest brights.  When I came across this umbrella on Fab.com, I knew it would be the perfect way to offset the blahs of a rainy day.  I paired it with this bubble print wrap dress to evoke the work of Karen Tompkins.


I discovered these gouache paintings on Artsy, and was immediately intrigued by the way color and light is reflected within the works.


According to the artist, bubbles are a way for her to express energy and the ephemeral experience of nature.



Capturing in paintings the quixotic bubble forms that usually escape the eye of the viewer in the fraction of second that they exist, is a magical experience...Not unlike the way Da Vinci is said to have exalted in seeking out “the invisible key of Nature” through his art. Nature, in this case, hands us one of it’s most beautiful keys...the most energy-efficient configuration in nature is a bubble. In this way, the Circle Series brings to light a mysterious world of creation and transformation.  --Karen Tompkins 



Wrap Dress: Diane von Furstenberg
Heels: United Nude
Handbag: Michael Kors East to West Tote in Mandarin
Umbrella: via Fab.com


[Tompkins images from artsy.net; photos by Brett McKenzie.]


Friday, August 2, 2013

INSPIRATION: Steven Vasquez Lopez.




If you know me, then you know of my obsession with Staedtler Triplus Fineliners--the perfect marker/pen hybrids that come in a rainbow of colors in an award-winning easel case.  When I came across these mind-blowing works on paper by San Francisco-based Steven Vasquez Lopez, I assumed they were created with thread.  Wrong!  These works are ink on paper, using the dear-to-my-heart Fineliners!  How beautiful are these drawings, and how miraculously does the artist capture the warp and weft of fabric?
Images from cover-magazine.com, design-milk.com, and cescontemporary.com.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

BRONZE SHOE

Esteban Blanco, Paris
I came across an image of this bronze sculpture, Paris, by Esteban Blanco, and was fascinated by the detail the artist was able to achieve in bronze.  This series of works was inspired by the book Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino, and continue with the (surprising) shoe sculpture theme delineated here.   Born in Cuba and educated in New York City, Blanco now lives and works in Miami.
Image from estebanblanco.com

Monday, February 11, 2013

THE RECONSTRUCTIONISTS





I recently came across The Reconstructionists, a collaboration between illustrator Lisa Congdon and writer Maria Popova.  Each Monday welcomes a new illustration and mini essay about an inspirational woman, posted to their shared Tumblr page.  Not only are the illustrations beautiful, but the prose is stimulating; I've found myself actually looking forward to Mondays just to read the latest chapter.

The Reconstructionists is "a yearlong celebration of remarkable women...who have changed the way we define ourselves as a culture and live our lives as individuals of any gender."

All images from http://thereconstructionists.org/

Thursday, July 12, 2012

GEORGIA O'KEEFFE


When I came across this dress, the layered, petal-like hem and rosy hue called to mind the flower paintings of Georgia O'Keeffe.


O'Keeffe (1887-1986) is widely regarded as one of the most important American artists of the 20th century, notable not only for her paintings of stark landscapes and larger-than-life blooms, but also as a woman who rose to renown in a male-dominated field.


Throughout her life, she lived and worked all over the country, depicting her natural surroundings from Illinois to New York, South Carolina, Virginia, Hawaii, Texas, and, finally, New Mexico.


Married to famed photographer and gallerist Alfred Stieglitz, O'Keeffe was also closely associated with other American modernists such as Charles Demuth, Arthur Dove, and Marsden Hartley.  See my Dove post here and Hartley post here.



O'Keeffe's most well-known works are her close-up views of nature, such as the flower paintings depicted here.



There have been many varied readings of O'Keeffe's flower paintings, particularly related to the feminist art movement of the 1970s, and the flowers' innate sensuality.  O'Keeffe maintained that her work simply existed to confront the viewer with the enchantment of nature.


"I decided that if I could paint that flower in a huge scale, you could not ignore its beauty." --Georgia O'Keeffe


I'm wearing a dress courtesy of sway chic, necklace from H&M, and Boutique 9 shoes.
Photos by @kay_elle_pea on the High Line.


Monday, December 27, 2010

WHITE OUT



One of the best things about snow is that it makes a busy landscape (or backyard, in this case) look stark and uniform. Figures are like swift brushstrokes on a white ground--exactly like the abstract paintings of Franz Kline.
Kline was an Abstract Expressionist active in the New York school during the 1940s and '50s. Alongside artists such as Jackson Pollock, Willem deKooning, and Mark Rothko, Kline was a proponent of the action painting movement.


His mature works are bold graphic compositions in black and white, which have been compared to Japanese calligraphy (an influence Kline denied).


Although his works appear to be visceral and quickly realized, he usually created numerous compositional studies leading up to a large canvas.


To him, the positive and negative space were equally important, and some of his works are actually white paint on a black ground.



Kline was famously impetuous (like many of the AbEx artists), and his life, in many ways, mirrored the ferocity of his large canvases.


I took advantage of the all-white background and struck some Kline-esque poses in the snow, which my Aunt captured from the (relative) warmth of the back doorway.


I wore a Tibi coat, Uniqlo jeans, NY & Co. sweater, vintage fur hat, and Sorel "Joan of Arctic" snow boots. Thank goodness for the boots, as the snow nearly reached the top of them!


[Kline images from beatmuseum.org, artic.edu, oceansbridge.com, and beatmuseum.org, respectively.]

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

RADIANT BABY



As I've shared before, I spend a lot of time thrifting. The thrill of the hunt is something I inherited from my mother and my grandmother, and sometimes it really pays off. One of my favorite things that I've uncovered while scouring the racks at Goodwill is my worn-in Keith Haring t-shirt.



Haring was a street artist based in New York City in the '80s. He is most known for his public murals and artwork in the subways, and was just as much a social activist as he was an artist. As a contemporary with Jean-Michel Basquiat, Haring's work became a symbol of inner city Manhattan life.


His graffiti can still be seen on the Lower East Side and elsewhere, where it represents the alternative art community that exploded during the '80s. Haring is most known for his "radiant baby" image, which became his trademark.


In 1989, Haring opened the Pop Shop in Soho, where he sold clothing and paraphernalia emblazoned with his radiant baby and other graffiti imagery. Criticized by the high art community, the Pop Shop was championed by Warhol and others who promoted the commercialization of art. For Haring, it was another way to bring his work to the masses.



Haring died tragically of AIDS in 1990, but the Pop Shop remained in SoHo until 2005, when the Keith Haring Foundation shut it down for good. Finding this original Pop Shop t-shirt at a Goodwill in the City was like uncovering a piece of New York art world history.



I throw it on all the time with boyfriend jeans, but for this look, I decided to dress it up a bit.




I'm wearing the Haring tee with vintage wool slacks, Juicy Couture boots, a vintage blazer, vintage leather purse, and old tie-dyed silk scarf.


[Haring images from thekasen.files.wordpress.com, thematbickley.wordpress.com, and coalregion.com, respectively.]

Friday, November 5, 2010

CASUAL FRIDAY



Happy Friday, all!
After this morning's session of Art Lovers' Yoga, I was motivated to post another Matisse-inspired outfit. As one of my favorite artists of all time, Matisse is bound to appear on this blog with some frequency.


The print of this sweater reminds me of Matisse's late work, the cutouts. As I mentioned before, when the artist was bedridden, he relied on cutting shapes out of colored paper and pasting them down to express his artistic vision.


I've always found the cutouts to be extremely powerful for their simplicity and visual dynamics.


Here is an installation shot I captured on a recent visit to the National Gallery:



Isn't it hard to believe that Matisse created masterpieces like this on his death bed?



I decided to pair my Matisse sweater with this necklace which was a recent acquisition. I have a weakness for neon in my wardrobe (case in point), and I think it complements the sweater quite well! To complete the look, I added my favorite jeans and leather mules.


I'm wearing a Twinkle by Wenlan sweater, PRPS jeans, necklace from H&M, and Marni shoes.

Have a great weekend!

[Matisse images from henri-matisse.net, habit-of-art.blogspot.com, and picasaweb.com, respectively.]