ART SOUP

A recipe for excuses that you can serve anytime of year

Ingredients

  • one large project
  • a number of small projects
  • a squeeze of time
  • reduced desire to succeed
  • a dash of taking the easy way out
  • a disorganized studio
  • a large jar of lack of focus
  • a minimum sense of commitment

Directions

In your mind, combine your lack of focus and your disorganization and place them in the center of your studio. Using another part of your brain mix a reduced desire to succeed with a squeeze of time and spread this across your large and small projects until completely coated.
Pour the mixture over your lack of commitment  adding a dash of taking the easy way out on top of the whole mess for decoration.

Procrastinate until you are ready to STOP MAKING EXCUSES AND REALLY DO SOMETHING WITH YOUR ART

LEARN more about how to make your ART successful in the  ARTCORE NEWSLETTER

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Art Core Newsletter Aug/Sept Online Now

The Art Core Aug/Sept newsletter edition is now online  And it’s still FREE

The feature Interview is with Louise P Sloane whose work focuses on geometric forms, grids, repetitive motifs and lushly layered color with a fascination with mark making as a fundamental principal

A article by  Jeremy Fitz  on Robert Raushenberg an American Collage Artist


‘What is Art’ by Liam Huston of www.theopening.us   The answer may surprise you!

‘Woven Art as an Art Form’ by Judith Schwartz  Although associated primarily with fabric and two-dimensional swaths of cloth, weaving as a medium provides a large range of possibilities for sculpture.

“An Incredible American Collage Artist Named Robert Raushenberg ” by Jeremy Fitz

And a Quick Look at the amazing work of  Astrid Fitzgerald 

 

 

 

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Where Art Begins

How Not to Define Art

This is the first in a series of dialogues explaining how to look at art.

Normally you would expect that a dialogue on how to look at art would begin with a definition of art. It would probably go on from there to explain how you should think so you could rationally accept that definition.

But you already know what art is and what you believe it is not! In fact contained in that statement alone are all the elements anyone needs to have an understanding of the visual arts. All of our feelings, ideas, insights and experiences are brought into focus in the first few seconds of looking at a piece of art. So, this instant visual experience encompasses our entire range of thought, feeling and observation. We sense the power behind the object. Whether it is ritual, physical or spiritual, we have a sense of the creative energy that transcends its physical presence. So that in an instant the object is replaced with what is behind its creation. Simply, good or bad, representative or abstract, it moves us in a special way.

The arts provide a communication that is basic to the human spirit. As of late some have a tendency to believe only a class of people with an inherent talent can produce these objects. Some even have gone so far as to say they shouldn’t bother trying to create art or even experience the art that already exists.  They see art as being isolated from the day to day experiences of modern people, stagnating in galleries and museums. But I think the truth of this is that people are confusing the name of the artist and the art’s location location with the basic truth of the art.

Art can inspire, anger, humiliate and delight separately and all at once. It can be used to communicate the knowledge of a society or record the legacy of a society. So truly no matter how you begin to look at art you are looking into the core of our being as humans.

In future installments I will continue this exploration into “Where Art Begins”

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2011 ARTCORE NEWSLETTER

ARTCORE Summer Issue online now
In this issue…
Artists and Art History.
Juan Gris – The Intellectual Cubist Painter & Sculptor From Spain
By Annette Labedzki
Art Appreciation 101
By Marianne Navarro
Artists Ask Questions About Art Marketing
By Aletta De Wal
Free Art Books, downloads, art contests, answers to your questions,
and a whole lot more.
Read ARTCORE for FREE at http://donaldkolberg.com/art_core.htm

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Call to Artists and Gallery Owners for articles and interviews

I have a growing international online art  newsletter, http://donaldkolberg.com/art_core.htm and an art blog, http://artblog.donaldkolberg.com I am placing this call out to artists and gallery owners in an effort to supply something more than another site to display their work. Your individual project will be published under the  Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License   so you will be able to use it on your own site free of charge. All I ask is that you forward the newsletter link of your published piece to your friends and fans.

This can be an information article about your work or an interview you have done or one created from the questions below. In either case I will display some of your works and include links to your website and other social media. If you are interested please send the response to dskolberg@gmail.com.

Please remember to include 4-8 jpegs of your work and your contact and social media sites.

When did you first start to realize you were on the path to becoming an artist?
What is the primary medium you work with and why?
Tell us about your style of art and how you have developed this visual voice.
What subject matter inspires you to create art and how do you keep motivated when things get tough in the studio?
What projects or pieces are you working on now?
What artists (famous or not) or art movements have influenced you and why?
How have you handled the business side of being an artist?
Tell us about another artist’s site you think our audience might like to see.
Is there anything else you would like to add about yourself?
And we have to ask, what advice would you give other artists about being an artist?

If you have any questions feel free to contact me
Donald

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