Monday, October 26, 2015

Opportunity for Artists

What is your paradise? Brooklyn's Ugly Art Room has moved to Oregon and for its first show is seeking postcard size ("4x6") artworks for an exhibition on 11/19/15 in Corvallis, Oregon titled "Paradise." ENTRY IS FREE & ALL WORKS ARE ACCEPTED See link for all participation details.

Details: http://tinyurl.com/pyxp4yh

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Sunday School

Me: What did you learn in Sunday School today?

Anderson: All about David and Goliath.

Me: Tell me about it.

Anderson: Well... you see.. the Hebrews and the Philippines were at war...

Here comes ABMB

Over the 12 years that this blog has been active, I've discussed many times the experiences of doing an art fair - starting with my first one with the former Fraser Gallery about a decade ago, when "artfairing" was all fresh and new.

Soon we'll be heading to SOFA Chicago, as that formerly 3-D only art fair opens its walls to 2-D work. Right after that we'll head South to Miami for Context Art Miami for our yearly dance at ABMB.

Art Basel Miami Beach takes place December 3-6, 2015, although ABMB itself has become such a magnet for art symbiots of all kinds that the primus inter pares fair now encompasses more than 200 leading art galleries from North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia and Africa which will exhibit artworks by over 2,000 artists at the "real" ABMB.

And as I've noted a million times before here are now well over two dozen satellite art fairs all revolving around ABMB, and quite a few DC area art galleries and private dealers will be represented in several of these fairs.

It's been a long time since the now defused Fusebox Gallery became the first DC area art gallery to venture to the Miami area in 2003; as I recall to show Fusebox artists at The Art Positions section -- those air-conditioned shipping containers right on the beach that sometimes had disastrous encounters with the beach and the ocean.

The more I talk art fairs to gallerists and art dealers the more that it makes sense why a good gallery should do at least 3-4 art fairs a year. Many Mid Atlantic area gallerists note that they could not exist if it wasn't for the art fairs.

"About 75% of my yearly sales now come from the three art fairs that I do each year," related to me an Old City Philly gallerist. "Next year I am going to apply to double that number."

I hear a similar story from DC area gallerists, some of which are now even exploring art fairs in Europe and Latin America, as the sales continue to climb more and more at the fairs, and the appetite for the European Euro is discovered.

Galleries such as Connersmith, Morton Fine Art, Adah Rose and others all work very hard and do fairs all over -  the fact that they keep coming back to fairs is indicative of the success of their attendance to the fair; it costs a truckload of money to do an art fair... in other words, since most art galleries are run on a very tight budget, if you blow a couple of fairs in a row, you may be out of business, or worse, forever disinclined to do another fair (instead of re-examining the gallery's approach to the art fair, as art fairs are not "art shows" in the sense that a gallery puts a show in their spaces).

This is a bitter lesson that many DC galleries have also learned... the ones which used to do art fairs, but no longer do them.

Moral of the story: If you are a gallerist, you owe it to your gallery and to your artists to start thinking of a smart exhibition program approach to the art fair and applying to the high quality art fairs - not the bad ones.... therein lays the key.

This doesn't mean that the "new" art model is just art fairs; far from it. There are such models, and several private art dealers do great in getting into art fairs and selling loads of work.

But they do not contribute to their city's cultural life. And that's OK... a city's cultural tapestry has many members and parts, including private art dealers.

However, an art gallery, a good art gallery anyway, is not just an art store, but an integral and key part of the cultural tapestry of a city. As my good friend John Pancake (former Arts Editor of the WaPo when the WaPo had Arts Editors) once told me, "a heroic venture."

And so the true and valid model for a good and reputable art gallery seems to be a mixture of a brick and mortar establishment (or in the new paradigm: a former brick and mortar gallery which has closed shop and is now just an online venture that does art fairs), a substantial and organized and updated web and digital presence, and a healthy assortment of art fairs.

Gallerists: Start applying now for 2016 - Alas many 2016 deadlines have already passed! Or stop complaining about being unable to sell artwork in your local market.

Friday, October 23, 2015

New Arrivals 2015 at the University of Maryland Stamp Gallery

Eric Hope has an excellent review of UMD's long-running and most excellent student-curated acquisition program; read it here.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

For TBT: Masters and Pretenders at the Nation's Capital (from 1990s)

For Throw Back Thursday - Below review was originally published in the early 1990s in Dimensions magazine and the El Eco newspaper chain - it still lives online here.
The summer art season is well underway in Washington - Ranging from American master James McNeil Whistler to Dutch artist Piet Mondrian, a wide variety of exhibits will be on display through most of the summer in and around the Mall, and are sure to satisfy, bore and entertain art lovers and visitors alike.
Artists who dabble in many media and subjects (with the notable exception of Picasso) are often viciously dubbed as "jack of all trades and masters of none." Piet Mondrian (1872-1944) can justifiably be called a "jack of one trade and master of that one trade." Simply put, Mondrian was little more than a graphic designer who simply re-arranged black lines and color rectangles over and over. 
In the end, he contributed hugely to modern design, and probably made the biggest impact of any 20th century artist upon daily common items. His images have become familiar in dresses, book covers, refrigerator doors, wallpapers, tiles and even bed sheets to name a few. 
Per two of the guards at the National Gallery, the show has so far been received mildly by the public (it was generally ignored by Dutch crowds in its debut showing in The Hague). 
The Hirshhorn Museum is showing the work of Irish-American artist Sean Scully; this exhibit is a good follow on to the Mondrian exhibit; try to see them both in the same day. Scully is one of the most successful painters of his generation (he maintains studios in New York, London and Barcelona) and is a direct product of the award machinations of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). 
Spanish master Salvador Dali once said that if "you can't paint well, then paint big," and this appears to be a maxim to Scully's works at the Hirshhorn, a series of 62 gargantuan paintings on display as a 20-year retrospective. Strangely reminiscent of giant quilts and jigsaw puzzles, the paintings sometimes baffle the honest viewer. The 15 by 19 foot "Angelo" (1994), which is representative of Scully's recent works, was compared to a giant Rubik's cube by an visitor while I was looking at the painting; I agreed. 
Alfred Stieglitz, one of the great masters of photography is on exhibit at the Corcoran Gallery. Perhaps the first superstar photographer of the 20th century, Stieglitz introduced unique portraits of Georgia O'Keefe and Pablo Picasso which have become art history icons. He is credited with being the catalyst which brought photography into the realm of fine art. 87 of his pieces on exhibit at the Corcoran are ample evidence of the well-deserved title of "fine art" when dealing with his works. This is a magnificent show from a remarkable man and tremendously important artist; it should not be missed! 
In a jump from the sublime to the mundane, the National Gallery's "Arshile Gorky: The Breakthrough Years," delivers four rooms full of work by the man anointed by Andre Breton, the high priest of surrealism, as the "last of the surrealists." 
Armenian born Gorky was fond of saying that the "origin of his work was in Armenia." A stroll through the exhibit quickly brings to mind the question that perhaps the origin of his works may be in the art of Spaniards Picasso and Miro, and even the work of the father of abstraction, the Russian Wassily Kandinsky. 
A tormented artist, Gorky struggled to find a place while being overly influenced by the true giants of his generation; he died at the early age of 44 in 1948. Had he been living today, I suspect he would be painting in the style of Scully or some such other modern "master" who happens to be "in." 
Finally, the work of (and portraits of) one of the better known masters, American James Abbott McNeill Whistler will be on exhibit both at the National Gallery of Art and the National Portrait Gallery. Critics once denigrated his works as "decorative" and "formalized;" they were wrong. No review is needed of the great work of this true master, a modern 19th century Velazquez - Don't miss this show!