Tag: abstraction
Art This Week-At The Amon Carter-Archibald Motley: Jazz Age Modernist-Maggie Adler Interview
sped up painting – obstinate impasse
Artist of the month April: Guy Maestri
Daily posts of the work of the artist Guy Maestri on my artist page on Facebook. Like my page in the link below. Also follow me on Twitter and Instagram @nikuzo87
Guy Maestri, “Luke’s Lane No.9”, 2014, Oil on linen, 87 x 77 cm.
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Nik-Uzunovski-Artist/225201424159742
New work 24/11/2013
New works 22/11/2013
Place and Memory: An exhibition of recent work by Nik Uzunovski
So it is just around the corner, my first ever solo exhibition. I am excited, nervous, anxious, happy, sad, relieved and all the rest. I hope that everyone is able to make it. I of course understand that there are people who follow my blog who are from other countries and I am sure that you will be with me in spirit, for those who are in the state of NSW and more specifically the Sydney, South Coast and Illawarra areas I encourage you to come along to my exhibition and show your support for an emerging, local, young creative. Thank you.
New work
Abstract Art Painting Ideas, Techniques, Tips, Tricks and Tools at AbstractArtLesson.com
Artist of the week: A.R. Penck
A.R. Penck (German, b.1939) is a painter and sculptor active in East Berlin during the partition of the city after WWII. Penck’s work is unique for its primitivist stick-figures and signs, and his paintings employ a schematic idiom to convey universal ideas that are not tied down to a particular ideology of national agenda. Born Ralf Winker, Penck started painting at the age of 10 and continued his artistic career even after repeatedly denied acceptance into the art academies in East Berlin and Dresden.
Facing constant repercussions from East Berlin officials, in the early 1970s he started to work under the pseudonym of A.R. Penck, after studying the works of the former geologist, Albrecht Penck. Although he was not allowed to display his work in West Berlin, Penck was able to smuggle his work across the wall for exhibitions, and worked closely with the West German artist Jörg Immendorff (German, 1945–2007), whose work also addressed social and political concerns of the time. Penck used discarded objects as the inspiration behind many of his sculptures in the 1960s, and additionally incorporated wood and bronze into his work in the 1980s. Penck was also a jazz musician, theorist, and innovative writer, constantly returning to the social themes addressed in his artistic works. Penck acquired an exit visa from East Germany in 1980, and since then has worked in Dublin, London, Düsseldorf, and Cologne.
Systembild—Last, 2007, acrylic on canvas, 160 x 180 cm.
Standart, 2011, acrylic on paper, 80 x 60 cm.
Images and text: http://www.artnet.com/artists/a.r.-penck/