Category Archives: Fine Art Philadelphia

Fine art created by Philadelphia area artists.

light being (Frank), Absolutely Abstract 2012 at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Absolutely Abstract 2012 at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Absolutely Abstract 2012 at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Absolutely Abstract 2012 at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

light being (Frank), Absolutely Abstract 2012 at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

light being (Frank)DoN Brewer, digital photograph, Absolutely Abstract 2012 at The Philadelphia Sketch Club

On the way to deliver my entries for the annual Absolutely Abstract show at The Philadelphia Sketch Club I had the usual reservations entering a landscape photograph in the abstract show. But once again another of my abstract landscape images from the light being series is included along with the painters, I am humbled and honored to have my work recognized as an abstract image drawn directly from the real world.

Absolutely Abstract 2012 at The Philadelphia Sketch Club 8/31 – 9/22/2012, Reception 9/9/2012 2-4:00pm

Written and Photographed by DoN Brewer

Follow DoN on Twitter @DoNNieBeat58

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Gesshel at Jed Williams Studio, Printmaking Demonstration

Gesshel at Jed Williams Studio, Printmaking Demonstration

Gesshel at Jed Williams Studio, Printmaking Demonstration 8/22/2012

Philadelphia artist Barbara Gesshel is a printmaker who combines excellent drawing skills with multiple printmaking processes. Old planks of wood become reliefs carved with images of nature in reverse, an old headboard is repurposed and carved away to reveal a family portrait, mono-prints become statement pieces…at Jed Williams Studio, 615 Bainbridge Street, Gesshel will demonstrate several printmaking techniques tonight, August 22nd, followed by refreshments and question and answer session. You may get a chance to even make your own print plus you will get a preview of Gesshel‘s upcoming solo show at Jed Williams Studio in October. Tickets are $7.00

Read more at SideArts.com 

http://gesshelprintmakingdemo.eventbrite.com

Through SideArts.comDoN is offering online and in-person one-on-one consulting services to visual and craft artists and art businesses.  Read all about it here.

Written and Photographed by DoN Brewer

Follow DoN on Twitter @DoNNieBeat58

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Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel, photo by Bonnie Schorske

Corrina Mehiel is half way through the Masters Degree Program in Studio Arts at the University of the Arts, a program lasting almost three years and is independently driven with 45 artists from all over the world.  Corrina explained her public art project, Bike (PH)ix this way, “I am interested in the unspoken social conversation that’s going on. In each city there’s a different kind of conversation happening. I moved here last June and I had been to Philly a couple times but not really that much. I was really struck by the amount of stuff existing on the street and the street life here. People that are existing with objects that are either this kind of free-cycle thing that happens in Philly where people just take stuff but in other cities it’s taken to a donation center.”

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel

“Here it’s just outside your door. It’s like this unwritten code about that ‘it’s fine to just take things’ and then beyond that it seems that almost theft is acceptable here. Just this culture that the bikes get stripped and people don’t come back to get the parts and students coming out of the university just leave their bicycles when they go back home, so, to me the city is talking about a kind of detachment or something. In other places I’ve lived humans have such a strong object attachment and our identities are so wrapped up in our objects. Things that we are about, you know?”

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel, photo by Bonnie Schorske

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel, photo by Bonnie Schorske

“So, I’ve been thinking about these street objects – non-functional street objects like bikes, pay phones that don’t have phones, newspaper boxes with no newspapers, all these things that sort of exist here, that are permanent, I felt like,’Well? I guess they just exist.’, so, I never would have imagined the City would remove these bike frames. I was looking at them, thinking about it, thinking about it and then I did some work related to this, a sticker book collection, I did ink paintings of these objects as stickers sort of questioning where do these things belong. We know the function but they don’t have a function. I made a book, a typical book, referencing a coloring book or a book from childhood that would be blank outlines recognizable as Philly and pages of these stickers in color of these non-useable objects to give the viewer the opportunity to at least think about where these things go in the city.”

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel, photo courtesy of the artist

Bike (PH)ix by Corrina Mehiel, photo courtesy of the artist

Corrina Mehiel continued, “Thinking about the bikes, though, I have this love of transportation and movement. I traveled a lot, it’s like a compulsion, not like crazy, somewhere between doing my work and being a tourist. And just going to places and existing there with no money, it’s weird, I’ve gone to India many, many times and just to be…I like doing that kind of travel and then being in cities in the U.S. is a little more hyper-aware of objects.”

“I’m interested in this conversation but I’m also thinking about the idea of responsibility in the context of a utopian society and who’s to say what responsibilities we should be taking on. How much should we want to clean up our space? I don’t know if it matters. But, these ideas point out the need to change the feeling of a neighborhood and that it leads to people taking care of their homes and they all layer on top of each other.”

Corrina Mehiel‘s story and adventures in guerilla art-bike repairs is on her blog “a year of making things“.

Written and photographed by DoN except where noted. Thank you to Bonnie Schorske for sharing her photographs and Joe Girandola, Director of MFA Program in Studio Art at University of the Arts for his enthusiastic introduction to Corrina Mehiel.

Most of the bikes are gone already but this is where they were if you think you saw one:

Broad and Lombard (SW corner)

Pine between 15th and Broad (North side)

Pine between 9th and 8th (South side)

Walnut and 18th Street

Spruce and 13th Street

Lombard and 16th Street

15th between Pine and Lombard (West side)

12th and Vine (West side)

11th and Appletree

11th and Cherry

Painting Buenos Aires, Charles Cushing’s Kickstarter.com Campaign

Painting Buenos Aires, Charles Cushing’s Kickstarter.com Campaign

Tango Dancing in Rittenhouse Square, oil on canvas, Charles Cushing

Charles Cushing imagined a compelling idea for a Kickstarter.com campaign, the popular website to help crowd fund artists projects, he is traveling to Buenos Aires, Argentina to paint the tango culture. Charles is a well-known Philadelphia painter and has traveled to paint plein air many times in many places but an extended stay in South America to absorb and paint the vibrant culture has expenses. That’s where Kickstarter.com helps artists raise money to realize their ambition but a short video is required, a confounding but good idea because the campaigner has to focus the idea and then sell the concept to the public. Charles Cushings project is titled Painting Buenos Aires and is now an approved project on Kickstarter.com.

Charles Cushing approached DoN about his idea and we agreed to produce the video together using his concepts and DoN’s direction including an art studio interview, plein air painting in the Italian Market and tango dancing on Passyunk Avenue to be edited with stills of his paintings over a soundtrack. Making movies can be a lot of fun with creative hard work, problem solving, lots of detail and of course a deadline. Painting Buenos Aires was conceived, videoed and edited in less than three weeks; the narrative was extracted from the interview movie using GarageBand, exported to iTunes as a song, imported into iMovie as a soundtrack and an hour of HD video footage was edited down to four minutes and fourteen seconds. Getting lost in video editing using all the elements and information design is like weaving or drawing, trying to get the story to emerge coherently can be a challenge. Especially with artists who can be self conscious of their image. But, Charles gave DoN freedom and trust.

Editing decisions were left up to DoN, Charles made very few requests to edit and all interactions and iterations were communicated through YouTube updates.  The original cut had a full two minute street tango dance scene with narration, it’s beautiful.  But the final cut of Painting Buenos Aires breaks that up with vignettes of art and painting. Shooting the dance scene at the fountain plaza on Passyunk Avenue will always be a favorite memory. The Philly folks on the plaza were so cool, even though it was about ninety degrees in the afternoon sun, as we shot video of Charles and his Tango partner, Grace Lee, dancing for about twenty minutes. Only one street person thought he was Len Goodman and offered advise on their dance moves.

Please support Charles Cushing‘s Painting Buenos Aires Kickstarter.com campaign and visit the site to view our movie.

Written by DoN Brewer

Follow DoN on Twitter @DoNNieBeat58

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Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered SeasonsAmie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Turn Here: ARTISTS PROMOTING ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS is an installation of photography at The Borowsky Gallery in the Gershman Y at the corner of Pine Street and Avenue of the Arts focussing attention on the world’s disintegration of the familiar. Amie Potsic installed more than fifty yards of draped multi-colored silk printed with her signature tree photographs. Using trees as a metaphor of our connection to the earth, Amie expands the dialog from landscape photography to multimedia installation, the translucent silk, rich with color and detail, creating memes of a global scale. 

Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered SeasonsAmie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Even though Amie Potsic shoots most of her photographs in Philadelphia, the sense of orientalism pervades the images with Asian references co-opted for the effect of a global view. The silk was printed in Pennsylvania. The layers of fabric play off each other like splashes of paint in bursts of expressionism yet there is a conservatism to the presentation which triggers ideas.  Like: that would make a great shirt, that would look fabulous in my dining room, scarves, of course, and furniture.  The trees symbolize community, work, aspirations, beauty and the fabric represents production, utilitarianism and use of resources.

Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered SeasonsAmie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered Seasons was previously exhibited in Greece, imagine the lustrous silk in the Mediterranean light, offering an even broader global provenance to the piece. Like branches of thought the artwork spirals like a fractal, the closer you look the more it changes, patterns of connection and disconnection guiding the viewer gently into a deeper state of understanding. Rooted in the concern for a planetary phenomenon that is sure to affect her family, Amie Potsic creates photographs that resonate on multiple levels of consciousness and awareness, subtly traditional yet leaving the viewer with questions of sustainability, containment and collaboration on a massively global scale.

Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered SeasonsAmie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Read more about Turn Here: ARTISTS PROMOTING ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS at SideArts.com Philadelphia Art Blog, Cassandra Alyse Hoo‘s post Turn Here” Is A Moving Environmental Exhibit at The Gershman Y’s Borowsky Gallery comprehensively approaches the theme of environmental change devastatingly portrayed in this important art show.

Amie Potsic is now Executive Director of Main Line Arts Center. Congratulations on this deserved opportunity. Thank you for your guidance and encouragement for my art career and writing. Let’s make some art news.

Main Line Media News coverage.

Written and Photographed by DoN Brewer

Through SideArts.comDoN is offering online and in-person one-on-one consulting services to visual and craft artists and art businesses.  Read all about it here.

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