Thursday, July 30, 2009

30 July, 2009 Abstract by JMJ Studios

30 July, 2009
Artist: JMJ Studios, NY
Title: Joy
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Available: Etsy.com
Appeal:

Painting is such a visual medium but art is one step removed from what we percieve it to be. What do I mean? Art should be interactive but visual art, particularly painting, has only one means of interaction. We may look but we may never touch. I believe the touchability of art decreases in direct proportion to it's price or percieved value. No one would walk up and touch the Mona Lisa but we would tear the same picture from a magazine without a second thought if we needed to. We probably wouldn't mind touching the same image on a TV screen but are less likely to touch it on a laptop, as the screens are so sensitive and expensive to replace. Have you ever touched a painting in a museum? Not likely, and if you did you are probably still praying to the art Saints for forgiveness.

Artist JMJ surely recognizes that but has an unusual dillema. One of her three children is blind. How does a painter share their passion with someone who is completely removed from visual arts? JMJ takes a daring approach and tosses off convention by creating a painting that not only can be touched, can be understood if one can read braille. Her impasto technique creates noticably raised dots that spell out the word 'joy'. Her abstract composition is a pleasing, colorful balance that brings joy to my eyes as well.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

29 July, 2009 Abstract Landscape by Mandy Budan


Spring Light
Originally uploaded by Cherry Spectrum
29 July, 2009
Artist: Mandy Budan; Canada
Title: Spring Light
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Available: http://www.budanart.com/ also from Etsy.com
Appeal:

Budan does landscapes primarily in acrylic and I just love them. Simplified, almost cubist but with enough elements to recognize their underlying inspiration, the shapes fit together like a child's puzzle cut from wood, with bright, energetic, organic colors. I think this particular landscape, or folliage, piggybacks well on the prior portrait "Michelle" by Alice Linda, as though this is what should have been the background just above the portrait's head. Shape is the main character here, where shadows, corners, edges and curves are all given a life of their own.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

28 July, 2009 Portrait by Alice Linda

28 July, 2009
Artist: Alice Linda; Bemidji, MN
Title: Michelle
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Available: Etsy.com (see seller alicelinda)
Appeal:

Who hasn't finger painted? But tell me this, how many paintings done exclusively with fingers turn out like this acrylic portrait? This restricted brush stroke reminds me of Georges Seurat's pointilism technique in which he would paint complex landscapes using only colored dots, or a television set, which uses three colors to make up everything imaginable. Alice's ability to do this suggests to me that she is obviously a master of color and her work her certainly seems to agree. The subjects' face is a mix of peaches and pinks that verge on blurry impressionism but somehow work together to form a very distinct image and beautiful portrait. What's more impressive is the expression Alice captures here: friendly, kind and sweet. The subjects' light smile and soft eyes have a warmth more inviting than Mona Lisa's. I'd sit down for a quiet sip of tea in the garden with this portrait anytime.

Friday, July 24, 2009

24 July 2009, Abstract Landscape by Sylvia Grantins

24 July, 2009
Artist: Sylvia Grantins, Ontario Canada
Title: The Red School
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Available: etsy.com, sylviagrantins.blogspot
Appeal:

Red, black and white are always a commanding color combination. Don't believe me? Have a look at the Nazi flag or White Stripes album covers. Perhaps it's because the contrasting shades allow red the spotlight and we can all identify with red. Red is a stop sign, the blood that pumps through our heart, our face when we're embarassed or excited. Some may have gone to schools whose exteriors were painted red. Why red? Perhaps it made it hard for kids to say "I couldn't find the building" as an excuse for their tardiness.

We have a red schoolhouse of that sort here. It stands out from the snow like a sore thumb, so to speak. We're looking at it at an unsual time, however, as most schools operate during the day. Notice the wild night sky, fully of starry activity. Stars dance overhead like dreamy sugar plums for the school kids asleep in their beds at the same time this setting takes place. Is this to say school, early school at least, may incite childrens' imaginations? I know my early childhood educational experiences still influence me today.

What I really love about Grantins' works is how fluid everything is. The snow melts but the building seems to want to melt also- as if everything were one big candle that we've lit many times but never seem to fully finish. Dreamy.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

23 July, 2009 Abstract Landscape by Kyra Wilson


23 July, 2009
Artist: Kyra Wilson; Vermont
Title: Purple Trees (Enchanted Forest Series)
Medium: Oil and metal (copper) on canvas
Available: http://kyraart.blogspot.com/
Appeal:

Real trees are not like this. They are rigid, dark and only move when the wind is blowing but here the trees are wild, flowing and seem to have a mind all their own. The swirls seem so chaotic while simultaneously fitting together as if part of a larger puzzle. Life can be like that sometimes- a jumble of chaos, compartmentalized. If this picture symbolizes that on some level then where does our moon fit and what might the moon represent? It's significant presence is like a lighthouse in an unnatural storm made by nature. A forest like this would be an enchanting thing to walk through on a moonlit night- provided the trees didn't eat me when I passed by. :-)

22 July, 2009 Portrait by Bees (of Bees and Trees)

22 July, 2009
Artist: Bees (of Bees and Trees); Asheville, NC
Title: 1980 High School Portrait Science Lab
Medium: Gauche on paper
Available: Etsy.com
Appeal:

Were you or did you know a dork growing up? Did they look anything like this girl? I love this painting because it captures that same vulnerability I felt in High School. This girl looks like, pardon the cliche', a deer caught in headlights; uncertain what to expect next. We're thrown into this Lord of the Flies chasm facing what seems like life and death which forces us to sink or swim. Those who survive can look back and laugh at how unfashionable we looked doing it and maybe wince wondering what it might be like on a second go-round.

Bee's unsure vulnerable teen summarizes the American High School experience in true early 80's fashion; her subject obviously surviving but wonderous of what lies ahead. Can you imagine how much her life changed when contacts became widely available and affordable? Ah, the future we have yet to see- now DO YOUR HOMEWORK!!!!

Sunday, July 19, 2009

20 July 2009, Still Life by Veronika Nagy

Artist: Veronika Nagy; Rocklin, CA
Title: Pick a Number Between 1 and 8
Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Available: Etsy.com
Appeal:

Nagy paints a subject that never had a Superbowl commercial yet most people know about and have participated in. It's a simple chilldren's game but how simple is it to find a subject matter so many share in common? Nagy's execution of this, her focus on the hands and toy alone, give no identity to the party holding the game allowing viewers to imagine they are back on a school playground playing with their best friend. Brilliant.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

17 July 2009, Abstract Tree by Tom R. Mack

Artist: Tom R. Mack; Lakewood, FL
Title: Il Bell' Albero di Mango
Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Available: ArtFire.com, Etsy.com
Appeal:

The orange tree draws my eye but doesn't seem unusual at all. When I focus on it I imagine it a ripe peach, candy-like, inviting, abundant. And have you noticed the green sky? Is it green or are we upside down next to a tree hanging from a tan cloud? The circles remind me of Gustav Klimpt's "Der Kuss" (the Kiss) but with a much lighter mood. Perhaps it's raining gumdrops, perhaps these circles are leaves, stars, magic or spirits. I can't help feel a little lighter in looking at this- as if I've entered a happy place where all good things happen. Heavenly.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

16 July 2009, Portrait by Caitlin Kuhwald

Artist: Caitlin Kuhwald- Berkley, CA
Title: Brielle
Medium: Giclee print from original acrylic on canvas
Available: ArtFire.com
Appeal:

I'm bringing in a ringer here. If you've ever been to a fine arts museum no doubt you'll see portraits inpsired by Diego Valazquez, court painter to the Spanish King Philip IV, or perhaps Jacques-Louis David who did some outstanding portraits of Napoleon. These, other court painters and hordes of portraitists strive to get the details as clear as possible in their linear, photocopy-like style. That kind of work, while technically impressive, has been done so much that it's lost much of the impact it once had.

Here Kuhwald mixes the linear with a slight touch of abstraction in her portrait of her friend, Brielle Duyum, which gives me the feeling this person is real but is somehow out of reach and much more interesting than I. Her outfit is coloful, fashionable and slightly exotic, her pose is relaxed and confident. As monarchies have mostly disappeared I can only wonder if she is a celebrity but celebrity requires no reconsideration. If I haven't heard of the subject how famous can she be? And there is the masterful quality of this painting. Kuhwald has taken an ordinary person and given her an undeniable air of mystery and celebrity. Don't we all need portraits like this?

15 July 2009, Abstract Landscape by Carly Landry


Not Always the Same
Originally uploaded by Cherry Spectrum
Artist: Carly Landry- Yuma, AZ
Title: Not Always the Same
Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Available: ArtFire.com
Appeal:

I love monochromatic paintings. This one obviously explores blue in a way that tickles my brain. The tree tops balance so delicately on their trunks as if they were dandilions or cotton balls on pins. Notice that only the trees dot the landscape while the rest is bare, reminiscent of a Dali. Why? I don't know but I love it.

Tickets Please...

Welcome to the Cherry Spectrum Museum of Fine Art. This comes as an offshoot from my original blog, the Cherry Spectrum. It seemed the spectrum was too wide in terms of topic so I decided to split it into managable colors. This color, or blogspot if you will, is where I showcase works by modern artists drowning in a sea of internet static. At present I will showcase one work, per artist, per day. Many of these featured works are available for purchase directly through the artist. Each artist has been selected because I believe they exhibit a strong body of work. I will NEVER make or accept any money for adding them to this gallery and will not showcase any work as a personal favor. My main goal is to create a small space on the internet that showcases artists I like; artists you've likely never heard of and may never because their reach is limited by distribution and the lack of art awareness in our country. I also have no intention of displaying works by well-known artists. If you've heard of them they probably aren't here. Those artists already have all the momentum they need. I'm here to spread the spotlight to those who need it most and, hopefully, create a peaceful, beautiful place for the eyes. So here goes. On with the tour!!!!!