Saturday, November 14, 2009

November 14, 2009, David Pellish



SAA member David Pellish discussed his unique kinetic art., 2:00 at the Davis Library.  

 
 He got our attention!
  
Introducing a New Direction in Contemporary Art - David Pellish
 
Sixty years ago when I was in graduate school, I experimented with various materials and techniques to produce a sense of motion in art. Since my retirement in 1994, I have returned to focus on technology and tools in order to update my original concept. The results have been artwork that incorporates dynamic designs creating visions in motion.

Traditional wall art is static and the artist uses color and designs to develop an imaginative work.  For example, in landscape images the artist leads the viewer's eyes down a path or brook within lines merging towards the horizon. Sculpture is three dimensional and the viewer moves around the piece to gain different perspectives on the work of art. My goal was to add the element of motion to engage the observer into interacting with my wall art. I achieved this goal without the use of mechanical devices.  The motion is created when an observer moves his or her head slightly from side to side.

Dave emphasized several times during his presentation that his goal is to inspire people to think of motion as another aspect of contemporary art.  After his degrees in art and architecture, although he loved art, he practiced architecture with several government agencies emphasizing Bauhaus architecture, which eliminated any unnecessary pediments and fripperies, that is, free of unnecessary embellishment.  He also explained the process he used to create this more intimate connection between the observer and the art.   
 
His joy comes from watching individuals interact with his art.
    
 

Saturday, October 10, 2009

October 10, 2009, Bruce Blum


 
 

  
SAA member Bruce Blum, "Photographs on Canvas - Amplifying Quality Snapshots".

Bruce Blum is in his seventh decade of photography -- always an amateur.  He started to exhibit again in 1990, and has done well.  Always a black and white photographer, he expanded to color in the mid 90s and used Photoshop to print his color images.  He started shooting in digital around 2000, moved from small point-and-shoot to an SLR, and turned exclusively digital several years ago.  He will give a short and a long answer, the latter including more than you may want to know about digital printing.

Click for Bruce Blum's web site.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

September 12, 2009, Nannette Blinchikoff


 
The Business of Art with Nannette Clapman Blinchikoff

Attention Artists: If you want to learn how-to promote yourself and how-to market your art in today’s arena, this is the lecture for you! Nannette is a sculptor and author of Promoting Art with Integrity. She uses her Five Steps of Promotion to offer perspectives from both the artist and gallery point of view; and provide countless ideas, practical exercises, and ways to adapt mainstream sales techniques to help the artist become more professional. Books will be available for purchase at the event ($20).


Nannette Clapman Blinchikoff finds her self-worth through her art. She has created it, taught it, critiqued it, lectured on it, and wrote books about promoting it. This part of her identity is both invigorating and fulfilling.


Her sculpture can be found in public and private art collections and has been seen in numerous local, national, and international exhibitions, since 1972. She began researching promotional options for artists in 1983. Her business-of-artbooks, lectures, workshops, and private-tutoring sessions are useful tools for artists interested in marketing their art. After earning her Bachelor of Science (1975) and Master of Education (1984) degreesfrom Towson University, she used her master thesis as the basis of her Promoting FineArt books.




Promoting Art with Integrity, Nannette's most recent book, offers perspectives from

both the artist and gallery point of view, while providing countless ideas, practical

exercises, and unique methods to adapt mainstream sales techniques to help artists
become more professional.



Visit Nannette's web site at www.ncbenterprises.com  to see excerpts from Promoting Art with Integrity.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

July 22, 2009, Murray Stein


 

MURRAY STEIN WAS BACK IN TOWN FOR THE SUMMER AND DEMONSTRATED HIS TECHNIQUES FOR PRODUCING HIS AWARD-WINNING SEGMENTED WOOD BOWL TURNINGS.

As an artist, Murray says multi-colored wood is his palette, his chisels are his brushes and his lathe is his easel.   During his talk, he passed around partially assembled pieces of segmentation, so the class could see the steps taken in building up these unusual vessels. 

The  technique lends itself to replicating Native American pottery, which are his favorites, but he also has a collection of hi-tech UFOs equipped with electronics, as well as an ‘International Collection’ consisting of replicas of vessels from all over the world.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

June 20, 2009, Bonita Tabakin


    
 
    
 Since 1982 Bonita Tabakin-Latterner has exclusively studied color, shape, and contour figures. In 1965 she interned with Picasso who caused this path.  Later she exclusively focused on where Color lives and how it moves in the universe under L. Colbert Dubois and has intuitively worked with pure color to advance healing. Her extensive research reflected famous scientists, medical doctors, and surgeons proved her intuition and experiences accurate.  Through an interactive presentation, she's inviting us into the whirling swirling irresdescent jeweled luminous soft 4rth world creations which have sparked her recovery and turbocharged others.  All adults are welcomed.  She's invited a scientist who is also a journalist in this field and a medical doctor involved with building a $39 + million facility for advancing supplemental healings under one roof to assist in the question and answer phase of this knowledge.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

May 2, 2009 Sam Noto

At his home in his sculpture garden  
417 Hillmoor Drive, Silver Spring, MD 20901
 (301) 593-8546, FAX (301) 593-0426, Cell (240) 893-7827
 
"The struggle with limits is actually the source of creative productions" -

The approach to making sculpture that serves me best is one of sensing and evolving an idea. My intuitive approach to sculptural form, design, and content usually results in a more direct expression of my vision.  

I am a maker of objects. The materials I choose that respond to any space my be metal, stone, water, or light. I strive to establish a stable intimate garden presence, a point of interested, intended to act as a visual settling point from nature’s chaos. My desire is to design and develop objects that establish a visual relationship with the surrounding environment. In the making, the practical aspects are taken into consideration that is low maintenance and reasonable rates.
        

Saturday, April 18, 2009

April, 18, 2009, George Sakkal


APRIL 18, 2009, GEORGE J. E. SAKKAL
Click the picture for his website ... look at his bio, resume, collages, and his "My Opinion" tab
MAXIMISM
NOUVEAU COLLAGE

In 1912 the French artist, George Braque, created the first fine art paper collage. Braque's accomplishment was revolutionary. His innovation ushered in a new era in art. The monopoly technique of painting with a brush was now permanently altered. 



The paper collage changed forever the regard for the use of the traditional paint/brush stroke process as the means to produce art. Fifty years later in 1962, with the creation of my first collage, I discovered a process to apply paper so that the finished work appears to be painted… equivalent to the paint/brush stroke process, this furthering the use of paper as a fine art medium.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

March 28, 2009 Professor Farrell



MARCH 28, 2009, PROFESSOR MICHAEL FARRELL

A painter, his subject was "From Realism to Abstraction (and back again)".

25+ members attended - this was an exceptional afternoon!!

 
And you can click for the writeup that has been posted in preparation for this presentation.  

 Edgar Degas once related about his relationship to art, "I have spent my life in trying-out. Fortunately, I never found my manner."  Montgomery College Professor Michael Farrell exhibits Degas perception but argues, "I'm still seeking." And seeking is what he demonstrated at SAA's March 28th meeting and discussion.  Michael, brought up in NYC with two loving parents, became infatuated with art in high school, later in college. Although he majored in economics, he enrolled in art courses, especially 19th and 20th century modern art, to satisfy his need for expression and the knowledge which comes from related art history books.  By way of his father, an accountant who was financial manager at the American Museum of Modern Art, he had unique access to our modern art and some of the living artists of our time. 

Michael demonstrated to us that he is infatuated with landscapes, which he drew with outstanding graphic exactitude, true colors, and of "photographic" quality. (See example below).  While studying for his M.S.A., Michael's instructors and critics were not excited about his art, in fact they discounted it as being too simplistic, exacting, non-abstract, having no "inner meaning."  Still trying to "find his manner" Michael painted still life images, though these still did not provide his critics with satisfaction. 

Michael likes to quote artist Fairfield Porter, "As the wholeness of life eludes control, so the wholeness of art eludes the control of the artist.  The realist thinks he knows ahead of time what reality is, and the abstract  
artist what art is, but it is in the formality that realist art excels, and the best abstract art communicates an overwhelming sense of reality."  Hence, Michael was caught between the two; he knew that it was time for his process of discovery to begin anew.  Michael continued to be influenced by landscapes but painted in an abstract surreal way, offering simplicity and subdued texture to communicate beauty and meaning to the viewer.
He is an advocate of Diebenkorn Thiebaud in that one must, "explore the duality of perceptual and conceptual information" in his art.
 
Today Michael continues experimenting, learning about the unique qualities of painting, for example, on plastic Mylar. In addition, he's experimenting with cardboard rubbings.  These offer him a new approach, dimension, depth to the manner of his art.  He quotes John Berger from Ways of Seeing, "The world is full of information, but paintings are silent and still.  They exist in a different kind of time."  Hence, Michael pointed out that not only the artist but the viewer must put his or her own voice into the painting.

Michael loves light, its colors, its' tones.  He loves to look at and consider the beauty of landscapes, yet has learned to understand the abstraction hidden within. He loves the exactitude of photographs, but has learned to train his visual memory to look deeper into reality.  He loves to concentrate on the excitement of one form or technique of painting. However, he realizes that to maintain his yearning for growth, the new and different, that change is necessary.  Michael keeps learning techniques; his artistic perception does change and mature as he matures.  Michael is excited about what he does.  His outlook is fresh, airy and truthful to his inner desire of searching for his manner.  Professor Farrell is truly a positive example of a work in progress.

            Contributors, Arlene Polangin and August Spector

Saturday, February 21, 2009

February 21, 2009, Professor Okim


 

February 21, 2009, Professor Komelia Hongja Okim - Artist Extraordinaire
On Saturday, February 21, the Senior Artists Alliance had the pleasure of listening to Ms. Okim tell us about her art.  Ms. Okim attended Ewha woman’s University in Seoul, Korea and Indiana University in Bloomington.  First she was a textile major and then she moved into metallurgy. When Ms. Okim came to Montgomery College she taught weaving before teaching jewelry making which she does currently.

 The Alliance was treated to many pictures of Ms. Okim’s sculptures, table pieces, and jewelry. Many of her pieces are abstract landscapes which include figures. Several of her works show wheat fields and mountains. Other pieces were wedding sets and coffee pot sets. Her sculpture includes many with figures in motion. Hair is blowing in the breeze....

Her work is usually done in silver. Some work has gold fused into the silver. She has experimented with various ways of creating patina.  Her works can be large. Often she then reproduces the large work as smaller brooches. She has some bronze work. Most of her work shows the Asian influence. She described framing methods that she said were Korean. She has printed digital images on silk, mounted the silk and then attached silver figures to the mounted silk. Extraordinaire!

Ms. Okim’s work is in private, corporate, and museum collections both here and in Korea.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

January 10, 2009, Pat Zannie


 

Tips on Creativity and Shortcuts to Composition  

This was the title of Patricia Zannie’s presentation at the January 10th meeting of the Senior Artists Alliance. This was a hands-on presentation where everyone made one or two collages with bits of paper and string. The presentation began with Ms. Zannie’s statement: “ I believe creativity is a universal, innate ‘human‘ process, and that individuals are unique and precious, having the capacity to develop themselves and express their own experiences of and in this life.” She uses bits of papers from all over the world. She uses glazes, wax, varnish, and found objects to create her collages. She says, “For me, Collage is the Jazz of the visual art forms”.  She shared her passion with us.

Patricia Zannie is a firm believer that creativity is a part of all of us and should be allowed to blossom.
Some of her suggestions for freeing ourselves to be creative are:
  •  Don’t force your work. Go for a walk and let the creativity “bubble up”.
  • Do something different.
  • There is no such thing as perfection, so don’t seek it.
  • Be open minded
 

Patricia Zannie’s suggestions for composition were many that we have heard before:
  • Use contrast - light and dark - warm and cool - complements
  • Think about boundaries by integrating them shape-to-shape, color-to-color. She showed us a collage where every boundary had been outlined in zigzag dark ink.
  • Triangle shapes can become the lines of perspective

Ms. Zannie is an enthusiastic artist who thoroughly enjoys her art. Her collages of thousands of bits and pieces are amazing. The forty or so members present enjoyed her excitement and their own projects.
 

"Creativity and the philosophy and techniques of Cezanne, Matisse, Gauguin, and other rebel Master Artists who developed the concepts of Modern Art are the cornerstone of my intuitive approach to Art. The Japanese understanding of “Satori” or enlightenment permeates my personal and professional commitment toward Life as the “Greatest Art.” It is within this context that I have chosen to be a collage artist and to share this satisfying experience with my students."

Click for her web site