Category / Art

Philadelphia art galleries add bands to their exhibits 2012/04/20 at 6:39 am

WHAT WOULD Mona Lisa rock out to? Would she be a Beatles or a Stones girl? Or would she hide a love of punk rock behind the devilish smile?

Mona Lisa may not have many musical options at the Louvre. But if she were to leave her home in Paris and head to Philly, she might be able to explore her musical side, as a crop of smaller galleries in the city are blurring the lines between art spaces and music clubs.

Its almost like a one-night exhibition, said Daniel Dalseth, director of Queen Villages Pageant Soloveev. Its a sound experience.

Art Scene: April art walk part of busy week 2012/04/18 at 5:36 am

This week is another busy one in the Charleston arts community with the First Friday of April art walk.

Pop art icon or con artist? Damien Hirst exhibit opens at Tate Modern 2012/04/16 at 10:58 am

Pop art icon or con artist? Damien Hirst exhibit opens at Tate Modern

Stokely Baksh
0 Comment

Entertainment, Nation/World
art, Damien Hirst, London

20 photos

Well-known contemporary artist Damien Hirst has been ruffling the feathers of art critics since he received public attention back in the 80s. Some have called him a genius and even a modern-day Andy Warhol. Others, like critic Julian Spalding whose book Con Art – Why You Ought To Sell Your Damien Hirsts While You Can, remain unimpressed, and even adamant in their disdain for the artist.

Love him or hate him, Hirsts artwork is fascinating. His latest exhibition at the Tate Modern art gallery in London highlights some of his best work spanning three decades and features over 70 works of art. They include works from his Natural History series such as The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living which features a suspended shark in formaldehyde and Mother and Child Divided which presents a bisected cow and calf also in formaldehyde. Other works include a spin painting, a spot painting, pharmaceuticals, cigarette butts, live butterflies theres even a cows head being devoured by flies entitled A Thousand Years.

If youre planning on taking a trip to England, the exhibition opens to the general public on April 4, 2012 and runs until September 9, 2012.

Pop art icon or con artist? Decide for yourself.

Announcing the National Winners of The Art Institutes Passion for Fashion … 2012/04/14 at 7:06 pm

NEW YORK, April 3, 2012 — /PRNewswire/ — The Art Institutes schools are pleased to announce Mary Lum of Cornelius, Oregon and Jessica Lazarus of Boca Raton, Florida as the grand prize winners of The 2012 Passion for Fashion Scholarship Competition. The competition, sponsored by The Art Institutes, provides the opportunity for fashion-savvy teens throughout the US, Canada and Puerto Rico to submit an entry to compete for the chance to earn up to a half-tuition scholarship to study Fashion Design or Fashion Marketing Merchandising and Fashion Retail Management.

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120403/NE81744-a )

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120403/NE81744-b )

Lums Vintage to Runway evening gown entry takes the Victorian Era to the edge. Her dress has 19th century underpinnings that convert into an innovative urban eveningwear garment made out of an exceptionally lightweight microfiber taffeta. As grand prize winner in the Fashion Design category, Lum earns a half-tuition scholarship to study at The Art Institute of Portland.

Lazarus entry, entitled, TimeLine, is a business concept for vintage fashion merchandising. TimeLine offers a visionary way to shop for vintage and vintage-inspired looks. In Lazarus concept, items are chosen from thrift shops all around the world to satisfy her customers unique styles. As grand prize winner in the Fashion Marketing Merchandising and Fashion Retail Management category, Lazarus earns a half-tuition scholarship to study at The Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale.

In addition to the half-tuition scholarship, the grand prize winner in each category receive a VIP trip to New York City including a meet and greet at the Seventeen magazine offices, lunch with a Seventeen Style Pro, a $500 shopping spree at DKNY with a Seventeen Style Pro, and a $500 gift card to shop in New York City.

The national panel of judges for The Art Institutes Passion for Fashion Competition 2012 included: Claude Brown, Fashion Design/Fashion Marketing Management Academic Director at The Art Institute of California #x2014; Los Angeles; Suede, Project Runway Season 5 contestant and designer; Leanne Marshall, winner of Project Runway Season 5 and fashion designer; Warren Satchel, Director of Accessories at Indigo Canada; Elise Goldberg Santiago, Fashion Accessories Design Consultant; Erica Levine Ryan, owner of ELR Media Group, which specializes in public relations for the fashion industry; and Patty Hughes, a fashion show producer who has appeared as a fashion expert on The Rachael Ray Show.

We are privileged to provide fashion-minded students with an opportunity that combines creative expression with an educational scholarship. Entries have become more and more artistic every year. Students put their hearts into these creations and that kind of passion will carry them into very rewarding careers in their futures, said Brown, who served as head judge for The Art Institutes Passion for Fashion Competition 2012.

Second place winners in the Fashion Design and Fashion Marketing Merchandising and Fashion Retail Management categories each earn a $5,000 tuition scholarship. In the Fashion Design category, the second place winner is Elysia Wadley, representing The Art Institute of Colorado. In the Fashion Marketing Merchandising and Fashion Retail Management category, second place is Acalia Jones, representing The Art Institute of Virginia Beach, a branch of The Art Institute of Atlanta.

Third place winners in the Fashion Design and Fashion Marketing Merchandising and Fashion Retail Management categories each earn a $4,000 tuition scholarship. In the Fashion Design category, the third place winner is Mollie Trudeau, representing The Art Institute of Tucson. In the Fashion Marketing Merchandising and Fashion Retail Management category, the third place winner is Cassie Hankins, representing The Art Institute of California #x2014; Orange County.

For more information on The Art Institutes Passion for Fashion Competition, visit www.artinstitutes.edu/passion4fashion or http://www.multivu.com/players/English/51392-art-institutes-passion-for-fashion.

The Art Institutes (www.artinstitutes.edu) is a system of more than 45 educational institutions located throughout North America. The Art Institutes schools provide an important source for design, media arts, fashion and culinary arts professionals. Several institutions included in The Art Institutes system are campuses of South University. OH Registration # 04-01-1698B; AC0165, AC0080; Licensed by the Florida Commission for Independent Education, License No. 1287, 3427, 3110, 2581. See aiprograms.info for program duration, tuition, fees, and other costs, median debt, federal salary data, alumni success, and other important information.

SOURCE The Art Institutes

Elizabeth Catlett: a source of inspiration and distinctive art at 10:48 am

Posted at 02:11 PM ET, 04/04/2012



Elizabeth Catlett: a source of inspiration and distinctive art
By Jacqueline Trescott

Elizabeth Catlett, the inspirational sculptor who died Monday at age 96 in Mexico, was as warm and dignified in person as her sculptures. In her most famous work she depicted African American women with love and a peerless
eye for physique, attitude and significance.

The only joy her admirers feel today at her loss was that she was revered in life. Yet she was down to earth, and before a tribute to her in 1993, Catlett discussed her life’s work and why she had given black women a stately mirror of ourselves. “That is what I know the most about,” she said.

Here is the full interview: “Going with the Grain; The Warm, Deep Dignity of Elizabeth Catlett’s Art.”

And links to Catlett’s art in Washington, where she was born and finished Howard University in 1935, and Wednesday’s obituary, follows.

View Photo Gallery: The D.C.-born sculptor and printmaker, who created figurative portrayals of African American life, became what poet Maya Angelou called a “queen of the arts.”

The Smithsonian American Art Museum has two Catletts, and “Singing Head” is on display.

The National Gallery of Art has seven prints, which are in storage.

The National Museum of Women in the Arts has seven works by Catlett in its collection but none are currently on display.

The collections of Howard University.

Matt Schudel, wrote “Elizabeth Catlett, pioneering D.C.-born artist, dies at 96” in Wednesday’s newspaper.

By Jacqueline Trescott
 | 
02:11 PM ET, 04/04/2012

Tags: 
Elizabeth Catlett,
African American artist,
Washington, D.C. artist,
Smithsonian American Art Museum,
National Gallery of Art,
National museum of Women in the Arts


Personal Post

Next:
More art + more artists + more space = More Artomatic

Art is "world’s greatest currency", says Hirst 2012/04/13 at 5:45 am

LONDON (Reuters) – Some artists prefer not to talk about the value of their work. Damien Hirst clearly revels in it, going so far as to call art the greatest currency in the world.

On the eve of Hirsts first major retrospective in his native Britain, he hit back at a leading critic who dismissed him as a conman and advised anyone owning his work to sell it fast.

Google Art Project expands to include the Getty Museum, LACMA 2012/04/11 at 7:57 pm

Have you tried to get close enough to paintings at the Getty Museum to investigate individual brush strokes? If you did, a stern security officer probably asked you to step away from the painting. Now, you can get up close and personal with works from the Getty and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art without tripping alarms or being admonished.

The two Los Angeles museums are among the 134 museums that recently joined the Google Art Project, bringing their collections to visitors through virtual tours. The site includes narrated videos, audio guides, viewing notes and maps, among other offerings.

The project launched last year with virtual tours and digitized artworks from 17 museums. This expansion includes museums such as the Art Institute of Chicago, the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass., the Musee dOrsay in France, the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico, Islamic Museum of Qatar, Israel Museum and the White House. Forty countries are now represented.

A specially-designed Street View trolley shot 360-degree images of the galleries at the Getty, enabling smooth navigation between rooms, akin to actually strolling through the museum.

Our friends on the Culture Monster blog reported that the site started with about 1,000 objects and now has over 150 collections with 30,000 artworks. Diana Skaar of the Google project told Culture Monster that 20 million users have visited the site and have set up 200,000 user collections of favorite images.

Virtual gallery visitors can browse collections by artist, artwork, type of art, museum, country, city or collection and create personalized galleries of favorites from the participating museums around the world. There is a share function, but thats for desktop use only.

And, 44 museums in the project each chose a work to be photographed in extreme detail with super high-resolution, or gigapixel, photo-capturing technology. These images comprise nearly 7 billion pixels, so you can get closer on these pieces than you ever could in person and see details, such as brushwork and patina, you wouldnt otherwise be able to see unassisted.

There are plans to continue expanding participation, with the possibility of an experimental section to showcase how artists are using emerging technology in showcasing their work, according to the site.

RELATED:

LACMA, Getty among 134 museums joining Googles art site

Google bestows new technology mainly on old-world museums

Googles Android has 50.1% share of smartphone market, study says

Original source: Google expands its art site to 151 museums

Follow Michelle Maltais onGoogle+,FacebookorTwitter

Is Your Client’s Portfolio an Unfinished Work of Art? at 6:31 am

ALISO VIEJO, CA, Apr 04, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) –
Today’s families face many financial challenges. The most pressing
questions are: What happens if I outlive my retirement savings? How
can I potentially reduce my tax burden for a better financial
picture? Who will pay the bills if the primary income earner dies?
Addressing financial challenges is more of an art than a science.

To help life insurance producers address these clients’ concerns,
Pacific Life offers the Art of Retirement kit, a guide on using cash
value life insurance to help provide financial protection from the
death of an income earner in the early years and supplemental
retirement income in the later years. The Art of Retirement kit
features:

— Portraits to help identify the right clients
— Benefits of adding life insurance as an asset to client portfolios
— Step-by-step guide to the Life Insurance Retirement Plan

Life insurance producers can help clients picture more secure financial
futures with cash value life insurance. Visit

www.paintingretirement.com today to order a free kit.

About Pacific Life
Offering insurance since 1868, Pacific Life
provides a wide range of life insurance products, annuities, and
mutual funds, and offers a variety of investment products and
services to individuals, businesses, and pension plans. Pacific Life
counts more than half of the 100 largest U.S. companies as its
clients.(1) For additional company information, including current
financial strength ratings, visit Pacific Life online at

www.PacificLife.com .

1. Client count as of May 2011 is compiled by Pacific Life using the
2011 FORTUNE 500(R) list.

Pacific Life refers to Pacific Life Insurance Company and its
affiliates, including Pacific Life & Annuity Company. Insurance
products are issued by Pacific Life Insurance Company in all states
except New York and in New York by Pacific Life & Annuity Company.
Product availability and features may vary by state. Each insurance
company is solely responsible for the financial obligations accruing
under the products it issues. Insurance products and their
guarantees, including optional benefits and any fixed subaccount
crediting rates, are backed by the financial strength and
claims-paying ability of the issuing insurance company. Look to the
strength of the life insurance company with regard to such guarantees
as these guarantees are not backed by the broker-dealer, insurance
agency or their affiliates from which this product is purchased.
Neither these entities nor their representatives make any
representation or assurance regarding the claims-paying ability of
the life insurance company.

Pacific Life's individual life insurance products are marketed
exclusively through independent third-party life insurance producers,
which may include bank affiliated entities. Some of these selling
entities may limit availability of some optional riders based on
their client's age and other factors. Your life insurance producer
can help you determine which optional riders are available and
appropriate for you.

This material is not intended to be used, nor can it be used by any
taxpayer, for the purpose of avoiding U.S. federal, state or local
tax penalties. This material is written to support the promotion or
marketing of the transaction(s) or matter(s) addressed by this
material. Pacific Life, its distributors and their respective
representatives do not provide tax, accounting or legal advice. Any
taxpayer should seek advice based on the taxpayer's particular
circumstances from an independent tax advisor.

Contact:
Stacy Santmyer Klein
Pacific Life
Phone: (949) 420-7314
E-Mail: stacy.klein@pacificlife.com

SOURCE: Pacific Life

mailto:stacy.klein@pacificlife.com

Copyright 2012 Marketwire, Inc., All rights reserved.

Sports, art, streetlights: A new life in Mogadishu at 1:47 am

Apr 3, 2012 

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — The crowd — both men and women — cheered wildly as two Mogadishu basketball teams entered an old stadium that once bore the bloodstains of war.

During the recent reign of Islamist militants, playing basketball in Somalia’s seaside capital was punishable by torture or death. Today, Somalia’s blue flag has reclaimed its place over the battered Lujino Stadium, replacing the black banner of al-Shabab, the militant Islamist group that until a few months ago held sway over much of Mogadishu.

This seaside capital is full of life for the first time in 20 years. Since African Union and Somali troops pushed Islamist militants out of the city last year, schools, shops and markets have reopened. The city government has repaired potholed streets and installed streetlights. Turkish Airlines last month began weekly flights, advertised on billboards, marking the first time in decades that a reputable international carrier has regular flights to Mogadishu.

Western-style restaurants are opening, including near Mogadishu’s beach front, where men and women swim together without fear of punishment from militants. People dance at weddings.

It’s too early to say that the chaos, violence and hunger that have often gripped Mogadishu since 1991, when dictator Siad Barre was overthrown by warlords who then turned on each other, are gone for good. But a tectonic shift has occurred in the life of this city since al-Shabab’s withdrawal last August. The group at one point had controlled all but a few blocks of the capital.

“I see so much difference as a longtime resident in Mogadishu,” Abdiaziz Nur, a 31-year-old Mogadishu resident, said at a cafe where he was smoking a hookah. “I had never dreamed that I would either walk through Mogadishu’s streets or drive my car at night, but now we feel glorified and proud.”

The war is still sometimes felt in the capital, with a mortar round or car bomb exploding every few days. Unexploded munitions are also a danger — an old bomb embedded in ground being used as a soccer field exploded last month as a team jumped up and down in celebration of a goal, killing two players and wounding three.

But the violence is nowhere near the scale previously seen, and al-Shabab’s strict social rules are no longer enforced in a capital whose population is believed to be between 1.5 million and 3 million. No one knows how many people live in Mogadishu, because until now it has been too dangerous to conduct a census.

Changes are coming with stunning speed.

A Somali-American entrepreneur is investing millions of dollars to open the first international bank here in more than two decades. The First Somali Bank, protected by 10 guards, plans to offer mortgage loans and international banking services.

“The city is returning to normal now. Thanks to Allah we can do business here again,” said Liban Abdi Igal, the bank’s chairman, who was recently living in Maryland. “I have returned here with optimism after seeing progress and revival.”

After getting a facelift, the national theater reopened for the first time in 20 years. The opening concert on March 19 featured musicians playing guitars and drums. The performance was broadcast live on TV. Beauty salons and gyms are again flourishing in Mogadishu. Women have started driving cars, and Somalis play music on radios without fear.

Despite the advances, poverty is still prevalent in much of the city. Thousands of refugees displaced by famine last year sleep on dusty lots. Unemployment is widespread. Women with children on their laps sit on street corners, hoping for a handout.

Nowhere is Mogadishu’s transformation more clearly observed than on its many sports fields.

Just a year ago, al-Shabab used Mogadishu’s stadium as a launching pad for attacks against the nearby presidential palace. Mortars fired by pro-government forces sometimes landed inside the stadium. Blood stained the walls and the stone bleacher seats, even the goal posts. After al-Shabab left, residents washed the blood away.

The coach of Somalia’s national basketball team, Daud Diriye, never thought he’d see the day when sports came back to the city. His team is even traveling to Uganda to play in a tournament.

“Having endured the strict rule of the Islamists for so much time, I thought my training days were over,” the 53-year-old potbellied coach said.

On a recent day, Shukri Saeed was next to a male basketball fan at a game and excitedly spoke of the city’s changes.

“Sports are witnessing a revival nowadays, and everyone is in charge of his own destiny,” she said.

Hundreds of men and women were joking, chewing gum and enjoying simple pleasures together at the game. Al-Shabab had banned males and females from sitting together in public as a violation of Sharia law. Violators faced public whipping or imprisonment.

Across the war-scarred capital, dozens of soccer fields are filled with players. The revival of sports has not only brought ordinary Somalis outside, it has also pulled young militants away from the hold of insurgent groups.

“I have three al-Shabab defectors who want a new, entertaining life,” Daud said, glancing at two men struggling to catch a bouncing ball.

Mogadishu residents are even going out at night to watch sports competitions — a normal activity most anywhere else in the world but a forgotten pleasure here.

Mohamed Hashi, a 64-year-old former basketball player, watched a crowd arriving at the stadium with tears in his eyes.

“The grim days are over,” he said.

Copyright © 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Dark Horse To Publish ‘The Art of Portal 2′ In October 2012/04/07 at 4:36 am

Valve and the comic publisher team up to release an art book about the award-winning game this fall.

Over a year later, and were still talking about Portal 2. Not that Im complaining, mind–Im thrilled that Valves FPS-puzzler has caught on and captured the gaming communitys imagination the way it has. And now they want you to see what was going on with their imaginations with The Art of Portal 2.

The book, getting an October 31st release, will be an 184-page hardcover, featuring concept and actual art from the game. You can view a couple of images from the book here, and Kotaku is running some exclusive pages on their site to accompany the announcement. Click and visit if you must. We wont be offended. Too much.

No word on pricing, but Dark Horses The Art of Mass Effect Universe hardcover ran about the same length and retailed for around $30 on Amazon.

Related posts:

Escape Plan Getting Free DLC With Its 1.01 Update
[Rumor] Arkham City To Get Harley Quinn DLC, Playable Robin


Discuss this story in our Gaming forums! Follow @MTVGeek on Twitter and be sure to like us on Facebook for the best geek news about comics, toys, gaming and more!

Tags Dark Horse Comics, PC, portal 2, PS3, valve, Xbox 360