Category Archives: Book Arts

Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Stephen Heigh, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Stephen Heigh, Sunday Morning Robots, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club ends on June 16th 2012, so if you want to see a collection of 77 amazing works of art, illustrations for books, magazine covers, advertising, self promotion, then you have to visit the Avenue of the Artists now.  To see illustrations in person is so different than what you see in print.  Often a book cover is from a large painting, the art for a magazine cover may be quadruple the actual size, many are masterful works of painting virtuosity not illustrations made on a computer with Illustrator.

And you get to visit amazing alternate realities, space adventures, scary crimes and romantic trysts through the eyes and imagination of professional artists.  Some of the art is by recent graduates from design school, especially from Moore College of Art & Design where Rich Harrington, the master-mind behind Phillustration V for the past five years, is a professor of illustration.  The artistic talent he gathers together each year is impressive creating the opportunity to view artwork not normally available to the public except as a commercial product like a book or magazine cover.

Glenn Zimmer, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Glenn Zimmer, Lost in the Tower of LondonPhillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Glenn Zimmer helped get members of the Bucks County Illustrators Society to submit work and deliver it to Philly.

Robert Byrd, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Robert Byrd, The Grand Plans and Vision, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club – click the thumbnail for a larger image but Robert Byrd‘s website is amazing!

Stephanie Struse, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Stephanie Struse, OwlPhillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Mike Manly, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Mike Manley, Judge Parker 5.2.2012Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Jennifer Villareale, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Jennifer Villareale, Finist the FalconPhillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

DoN featured this piece about the Moore 2012 graduate in a recent DoNArTNeWs blog post, it was especially satisfying to see the art in the historic gallery of  The Philadelphia Sketch Club. Again, for a good look at this image visit the artist’s website or the gallery while the show is on.

Stacy Hornung, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Stacy Hornung, Belly Up IPhillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

David Palumbo, Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

David Palumbo, Terrible WeaknessPhillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

The oil painting by David PalumboTerrible Weakness, is enormous, almost life sized, and evokes passion and emotion so skillfully that it’s scary.  The Phillustration V at The Philadelphia Sketch Club will blow your mind with the creativity, masterful skill and myriad styles of modern illustration and proves you don’t need a computer to be an illustrator.

Read about Phillustration IV on SideArts.com Philadelphia Art Blog

Written and photographed by DoN Brewer

Affiliate Marketing [disclosure page] Shop on-line at Amazon.com and help support DoNArTNeWs.

Certain Circuits 2.1 Bookazine and Blog

Certain Circuits 2.1 Bookazine and Blog

Certain Circuits 2.1 Book Launch

For the second time, DoN‘s photography has been included on the Certain Circuits Magazine Tumblr blog.  Curator Bonnie MacAllister gleans a collection of art and writing from her circle of friends, designs a bubble of information for each artist and then programs the blog to launch on a certain date, the current issue launched May 1, 2012. Bonnie chose DoN‘s image, Decameron, a digital photograph, inkjet print, 20 x 16″ to be featured on the blog; the photograph is currently on display at Flying Carpet Cafe, 1841 Poplar Street, Philadelphia, PA.  The image is one of DoN‘s “light beings“, a series of photographic images of reflected light on urban surfaces that has become a hallmark of DoN‘s style.

Decameron, DoN Brewer, Certain Circuits 2.1 Bookazine and Blog

DecameronDoN Brewer, digital photograph, Certain Circuits Magazine blog

Certain Circuits Volume 2.1 is a book-a-zine, a hybrid of art and writing in a limited edition soft cover book showcasing work that previously had been featured on the Certain Circuits Magazine Tumblr blog.  The launch party is May 5th at the Flying Carpet Cafe in Philly’s Fairmount district.  DoN has five photographs in the show including light beings (Lorraine & Charles), the image that was featured on Certain Circuits last Winter and one of his favorite photographs, light being (Rick Selvin) a beautiful 20 x 30″ print.  It was so much fun hanging the show on Monday; Bonnie MacAllister made a first come, first serve FaceBook call and DoN was able to choose prime spots for his photographs.  The rooms are colorful and quirky, the art show looks beautiful and diverse – the Certain Circuits Volume 2.1 book launch party should prove to be memorable.

Certain Circuits 2.1 Bookazine and Blog

Read DoN‘s review at Side Arts Philadelphia Art Blog

DoN Brewer, Three Group Art Shows 

LoVe

DoN

Thread of Thought, Tara O’Brien Artist’s Talk at CFEVA

Thread of Thought, Tara O’Brien Artist’s Talk at CFEVA

Thread of ThoughtTara O’Brien at CFEVA

“I came to book arts as a librarian’s daughter and my poor father practically had a heart attack when he found out I was applying to grad school to do book arts.  ‘Those are those nut jobs that take books and nail them to canvasses and call them art.'” said Tara O’Brien during her artist talk at The Center for Emerging Visual Artists.  “A lot of what I was dealing with in Graduate School was making sure that that’s not what I’m doing, I’m not desecrating the Book. In fact, I spent a lot of time trying to figure out what is the future of the book, where is it going?  In 2003 we were just getting into a huge tipping point with the Internet and you went there instead of to a book, unless you were my father.  A lot of that time was spent thinking, ‘What is a book?  What can it be? What’s the conceptual quality of the book?’ And so for the early pieces in the show, these two Thread of Thought and Plenum in the back is what could it be?”

Thread of Thought, Tara O’Brien Artist’s Talk at CFEVA

Thread of ThoughtTara O’Brien at CFEVA

Plenum, for example, is a term physicists use to describe all of the matter in the universe.  So, what is a book, what can it be?  It can be anything in the Universe.  As I was talking earlier about Plenum the other thing I wanted you to do is approach the book when it was closed and when you open it it reveals a completely different structure inside, a surprise in finding a book. Which is what you get when you approach a novel and find that that stellar writing you kind of think, ‘Oh, they wrote that so beautifully.’  So, how can you combine the two in art and literature?  How does a book work physically? How do you read a book page by page and how do you follow the threads of what the author is trying to get through to you?  And then you can break it down to how are the symbols on the page giving you this linking.  And that’s why I chose crocheting instead of knitting because each chain in a crochet is a link from one to the next one but you can build so much from a crochet chain.  Both of these books are a single thread all the way through the entire book, the whole narrative, if you will, from the thread references as a you read a book.  Like when you’ve gone fifty pages and and you don’t remember turning a single page because you’ve gotten so caught up in this single thread.”

Thread of Thought, Tara O’Brien Artist’s Talk at CFEVA

Thread of ThoughtTara O’Brien at CFEVA, Hyperbolic Space

“Or you get to the point in a book here where you do realize your turning pages faster than you think.”  Tara demonstrated how many of the pages pull the others with the thread and pages fly by like a magicians deck of cards.  “And finally you almost turn in junior English denouement.  So those books lead to thinking metaphysically, ‘What is the future of the book?’  I have no idea.  Do I think books are going out of style?  No.  Not a chance, they just have a chance to evolve now.  We’ve got eReaders, they’re here to stay, have fun with them but come back to these.  The next group is the little tiny ones they all fall under the title Entelechy, Aristotle’s philosophy that every entity has a force that drives it to self-fulfillment and I just really like that idea.  I’d like to know what this force is?  What is it made up of?  How does it break down?  And in making these books I found that opening a page spread in a book is also kind of a metaphor for life.”

Thread of Thought, Tara O’Brien Artist’s Talk at CFEVA

Thread of ThoughtTara O’Brien at CFEVA

“If you do these stitches you can see the full spread of a chapter or a moment to a link in your life.  For example, as of now, all of February is one page spread for me, I don’t know what’s happening right now in this page spread but I can turn the page back in time and look at what happened in February in my life, and it’s clear now.  Whereas in February I had no idea.  A little crazy, right?  I was really excited about this show because it offered me a chance to do new work.  I do a lot of knitting, a lot of crocheting and I’m interested in a lot of things, I’m a library conservator so I get to look at a lot of old stuff, at ancient patterns and I get to look at old cookbooks and all these things that people have been doing forever.  How are we going to interpret it?”

“My Winter project this year was to knit a pair of Latvian mittens, in Latvian culture for years and years and years the girls know they will marry at age sixteen and they make these incredibly complex mittens, one pair for every member of the family of her future husband.  So, she’s been knitting five hundred pairs of mittens by the time she’s sixteen.  They’re complex and double stranded and they start knitting when they’re five years old, it’s part of the culture.”

“Fast forward to 1995, and we have a mathematician from Latvia who finally solves the problem of making a model for hyperbolic space.  So, what’s hyperbolic space?  Well I’m going to do my best, but, it’s a mathematical thing – continuously negative space.  It’s the ruffles on your lettuce, and what she was able to do was disprove Euclid’s theorum, given one straight line and a point off of the line there is only one other parallel line only.  But this theorum doesn’t work on a globe but nobody could prove how it didn’t work and why not?  In the 50’s they started experimenting with paper models but paper if you cut it, it falls apart.”

“So this person from a knitting culture sat down and said, ‘I know how to do this.’  And so she took these specifically exponentially increased, this one is six to one, you can see these two lines, when you take this continuously negative space and fold it you can bring two lines together and you get a set of parallel lines.  As you go on with these, it takes forever to make a row, and then you take another fold and lay it next to that and now you have three parallel lines.

So, this is important for me because it references back to my idea of linking and connecting everything, here’s a woman who just knitted all the time because she was so practiced at it, all of a sudden these higher level ideas were coming out her just regular handwork and solving really massive problems.  This book talks about the connection of this handwork from just the regular linking these little moments, these tiny little pearls of brilliant thoughts and made some coherence out of these higher thoughts.  I hope that that makes sense.”

Fiber Philadelphia 2012 

Thread of Thought at Center for Emerging Visual Artists  through March 23rd.

Written and photographed by DoN BrewerDoNArTNeWs Philadelphia Art News Blog Google and Wikipedia was used extensively to write this article.

Read more about FiberPhiladelphia2012 at Side Arts with Cassandra Hoo‘s excellent article.

[disclosure page] All ad links in this blog post go to Amazon.com

Her Philadelphia Tales, Book Party

Lilliana Didovic, Of South 2, Smile, Her Philadelphia Tales Book Signng Party, 2/25/2012

Lilliana Didovic, Of South 2, Smile Restaurant, Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic Book Signing Party, 2/25/2011, Instagram.

A brisk north wind bit into DoN‘s face as he walked up 22th Street to Smile Restaurant on a Saturday night for his book signing party.  Lilliana and Joseph reserved the dining room upstairs and invited all of our friends to celebrate the publication of Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic.  The creation of the book was an adventure in itself, DoN is a blogger, publication in print is not a goal for DoNArTNeWs.  DoN is into page impressions, rankings and search engine optimization results and the effects of reporting on Philadelphia art in Google.  But Lilliana said DoN‘s writing uses “nice words”.

Lilliana proposed collecting reviews from DoN‘s blog posts with her art in book form, an art book to sell and use to further her career as a painter.  Writing a book and writing a blog are not the same thing, page layout in a column is very different from designing a book.  A blog you can always go back and fix, a book is a one shot deal.  No pressure.  The book is published by CreateSpace on Amazon.com.  The 98 page book is full color, 9.5 x 11″ glossy soft cover with beautiful prints, even now when DoN thumbs through it feels surreal that an actual, tangible product has emerged from his writing.

Beyond Lilliana and DoN‘s wildest expectations, right at 6:00pm people emerged from the freezing Winter evening to crowd into the dining room made ready with a table full of beautiful Thai appetizers by chef Ken and Lilliana‘s own famous Bosnian chicken salad.  The wine flowed and people actually lined up to buy books and sit with the Lilliana and DoN to have their copy autographed.  C. Todd Hestand the mastermind behind the Side Arts blog platform which enabled the bulk of the material used in the book was there chatting with artists, gallery owners and educators…Lola Z, Spike, Ted and Ona (the Ona-bomber), Carl and Liz, Regina, Steve, Chris Z, Rachel, Kathryn, Dr. & Mrs. Dunn, Gordan’s liver transplant doctor…OMG – it was so crowded and the roar of conversation was so loud that Chris Z yelled in DoN‘s ear, “I think there are a lot of Bosnians here!”  The evening was wonderfully cosmopolitan, so many languages, so many people from all diverse backgrounds, artists and entrepreneurs, all together in the middle of down town Philadelphia for something as East Coast elite and snobbishly intellectual as a book signing party.  DoN LoVeD IT!!!  The night will always be one of DoN‘s most memorable moments.

Thank you so much to Lilliana and Joseph for hosting a beautiful evening.  This fantastic team of husband and wife, who have been through so much, have shown hospitality towards DoN that has always been exceptional.  Telling  Lilliana‘s amazing story with DoN‘s writing and information design is an accomplishment DoN has only dreamed about until now.

Lilliana Didovic, The City, Smile, Her Philadelphia Tales Book Signing Party, 2/25/2012

Lilliana Didovic, The City, Smile Restaurant, Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic
Book Signing Party, 2/25/2012.

Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic by DoN Brewer, Lilliana S. Ddovic book signing

Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic, Lilliana S. Didovic book signing party, February 25th, 2012.

Other stories about Lilliana S. Didovic: Lilliana Didovic @ TRUST, Lilliana’s Tales, Her Philadelphia Tales, Structure and Gesture

[disclosure page]

Leap Year!  DoNArTNeWs Philadelphia Art News Blog achieved a new milestone for page views topping 2000 unique visitors on one day, February has seen a consistent climb in page views achieving the highest rankings for the blog so far.  DoN is also a Contributing Writer to Side Arts Philadelphia art blog and is participating in a demonstration on how to write a blog post on the Side Arts platform at the Corzo Center for the Creative Economy at the University of the Arts, March 24th, 2012, 1 -3:00pm.

Get tickets http://corzocenter.ticketleap.com/side-arts-demo/

Her Philadelphia Tales

Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic by DoN Brewer

DoN Brewer is proud to announce the publication of his first book, Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic (Volume 1) available now on Amazon.  Paintings by Lilliana S. Didovic and a collection of blog posts by DoN Brewer on the Philadelphia art blog Philly Side Arts, a tech start-up web site for artists and DoNArTNeWs DoN Brewer Reviews the Philadelphia Art Scene art blog with an introduction by Professor Dexiang Qian, Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic (Volume 1) is more than an art book, it is an affirmation of love, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.  Her biography, written by Lilliana S. Didovic and DoN Brewer, based on interviews, e-mails and conversations, is an unimaginable and fascinating adventure of one artist’s journey toward creative self-actualization.

Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic by DoN Brewer

Red, 48″ x 60″. mixed media on canvas, page 17 of Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic (Volume 1)

Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic by DoN Brewer

Philadelphia Loves Lilliana!

Cover of Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic (Volume 1)

Blogging for DoNArTNeWs and Side Arts is one of those opportunities people talk about when they say, “Do what you love,”  DoN loves writing about Philadelphia art, artists, photographers, designers, sculptors and cultural leaders of all stripes.  Helping the creative community get publicity is self serving and generative simultaneously resulting in the opportunity to publish this book.  Thank you to the Philadelphia art community for accepting DoNArTNeWs and DoN Brewer on Side Arts as a reliable art review resource .  Thank you to Philly Side Arts for helping DoN think bigger.  Thank you to Lilliana S. Didovic for trusting me with Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic (Volume 1).

www.lillianadidovic.us

www.DoNBrewerMultimedia.com

sidearts.com

Read more about Her Philadelphia Tales at Side Arts Philadelphia art blog.

 

LoVe

DoNArTNeWs Philadelphia Art News Blog

[disclosure page]