Tapedude in the news
The talented and ubiquitous Mark Jenkins is interviewed in the current issue of Juxtapoz Magazine.
Check out some of Mark's amazing videos of his street art and what they do to people... here.
Sunday, December 16, 2007
Frank Warren's Favorite Work of Art
They don't get much bigger on this planet than Frank Warren's PostSecret and in response to my call for favorite artwork, Frank writes:
I have been captivated by James Hampton's "The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations' Millenium General Assembly" at the Smithsonian American Art Museum for about a decade. I think partly because it was closed-off for so long and I began to miss seeing it.
It was the first piece of Folk or Visionary Art that I fell in love with. I like art that expands how we define it, and challenges who can create it. I like how the piece is so unselfconscious and at the same time ambitious. I like how it uses what some might see as trash to express a high spiritual calling. And I like how seeing it in a museum makes me think, "hey, maybe my stuff it good enough to be here too."
The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations' Millenium General Assembly by James Hampton
Saturday, December 15, 2007
Sidney Lawrence's Fave Artwork
Art critic and artist Sidney Lawrence responds to my request for readers' favorite artworks. Sidney's favorite work of art:
Bellini's St Francis of Assisi in the Desert at The Frick Collection.
Cindy Ann Coldiron's Fave Artwork
Attorney and glass artist Cindy Ann Coldiron responds to my request for readers' favorite artworks. Cindy writes:
My favorite works of art in general are anything by Gustav Klimpt. But my favorite is below. It reminds me of little bits of glittering falling glass. I guess I am biased there.

The Kiss by Gustav Klimpt
Shauna Lee Lange's Fave Artwork
Arts writer, critic, coach, and consultant Shauna Lee Lange responds to my request for readers' favorite artworks. Shauna writes:
Without a doubt, hands down, and also in the NGA, is Picasso's "The Tragedy."
If I ever show up on the news as "missing" - you can claim the big "finder's reward" as now you know I'll really be sitting in front of this one!
Do you agree that sincerity is not to be found outside the realm of grief?
Ha - Saddish thought for such a festive season, no?
I'm always surprised at the oddity of the hands and feet, and at different times have waivered between aligning my perspective with each character. Hard to believe 1901 - 1903 - over 100 years ago, and still so completely timeless.

"The Tragedy" by Pablo Picasso
Zoe Strauss' Fave Artwork(s)
Philly's brilliant photographer Zoe Strauss responds to my request for readers' favorite artworks.

Nude Descending a Staircase (No.2)/Nu descendant un Escalier. No.2. 1912, Marcel Duchamp

Nigredo by Anselm Kiefer, c.1984
Friday, December 14, 2007
No one asked me...
Nobody asked me, but Michael O'Sullivan's "Conversation Pieces" in today's WaPo lists some A-list folks' favorite art in the Greater DC area.
My favorite?
Watson and the Shark by John Singleton Copley at the National Gallery of Art. It seeks to depict an event that took place in Havana, Cuba, in 1749.
The naked guy in the water is fourteen-year-old Brook Watson, who was attacked by a shark while swimming alone in Havana harbor. Lucky for Watson, some of his mates were already at sea waiting to escort their captain ashore, and were able to fight the shark and rescue Watson, although the shark bit one of his legs off. On his return to England, he got his fifteen minutes of fame and Copley painted this work.
If you study the painting carefully, you will realize that Copley probably had never seen a shark in his life, and his depiction of the great white in Havana harbour yields one of the most ungainly and ugliest non-sharks fish things ever painted.
I love to sit in front of this painting and watch people as they walk by and get mesmerized by the brutal event taking place and kids making fun of the shark.
What is your favorite work of art? Not just DC, but from wherever you [reader] hail from? Email me your favorite and I'll post it!