Category Archives: Fine Art Philadelphia

Fine art created by Philadelphia area artists.

Women of Vision: 2012 Barbara Gesshel at Hidden River Gallery

Women of Vision: 2012 Barbara Gesshel at Hidden River Gallery

Women of Vision: 2012 Barbara Gesshel at Hidden River Gallery 

Barbara Gesshel, “I’m a painter and printmaker and a muralist.  My paintings have mostly been skies and clouds, water recently.  But, the prints are mono-prints, I also do woodcuts.  I was a printmaking major at UArts and then traveled to Norway where I was was studying the work of Edvard Munch and then I matriculated at the Norwegian National Academy of Craft and Art and then I went to the University of Oslo to learn Norwegian. Which, I’m still fluent in.”DoN asked how Barbara Gesshel ended up in Philadelphia?  “Well, I came back,”  “Everyone comes back!”, DoN interrupted, “Not really.  My father had given me money for a Eurail pass and return passage.  And then I found out I had to pay him back.”  DoN, noted, “That’s a Women’s History moment.”

“When I came back, the school I was teaching in, I worked so I could get back to Norway.  I literally just fell in love with the country.  I became a painter and a printmaker when I came back, very much influenced by Munch’s color in his later work…Munch was very funny.  He would continue to repeat a theme, the kiss, the scream, the bridge, vampire, these were his early ones and he would paint them in many different ways.  His later work, he did murals at the University in a series of huge murals and he did these paintings of the people, the peasants, the workers.  He did these larger than life paintings that literally have coming out in a multitude of colors that you wouldn’t think to use for skin color.”

“Now, I’m working at a University City High School mentoring program doing murals and they’ve never really painted.  The other artist is having them work on parachute cloth and they’re making little words that represent things.  And we find we’re working on masonite panels, this is all their work, I show them and they do it so that they’re actually using color as much as possible.  Each kid has a brush and a pan of all the colors, one on top of the other, the concept is it starts at the top and then moves down organically. Nothing is set in stone.  And therefore there is no such thing as a mistake, the greatest thing you can teach a kid.”

Women of Vision: 2012 Barbara Gesshel at Hidden River Gallery

Barbara Gesshel Richter Hell, monoprint on paper, DoN lifted from Barbara Gesshel‘s HeavyBubble bubble

Women of Vision: 2012 at the Hidden River Art Gallery and Salon, 525 South 4th Street, Philadelphia hosted by Debra Leigh Scott through April 30, 2012.

DoN will be posting stories about the other featured artists Pamela Peitzman, Madeline Bates, Lauren ActonLilliana Didovic and Maria Lourdes Soloman on upcoming DoNArTNeWs Philadelphia Art News Blog posts.

Read more about Women of Vision 2012 at Side Arts Philadelphia Art Blog

Read more about Gesshel at SideArts.com

Photographs by DoN Brewer

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Women of Vision: 2012 Lilliana S. Didovic at Hidden River Gallery

Women of Vision: 2012 Lilliana S. Didovic at Hidden River Gallery

Women of Vision: 2012 Lilliana S. Didovic, Philly Abstract, at Hidden River Gallery

Women of Vision: 2012 Lilliana S. Didovic at Hidden River Gallery

Women of Vision: 2012 Lilliana S. Didovic, Night, at Hidden River Gallery

“I knew Debra Leigh Scott years ago since she was running Enclave Gallery and she picked me as one of the Da Vinci Art Alliance artists to show in an exhibit.  Since then we keep seeing each other at different events and she sent me an e-mail and invited me to be part of this show.  I submitted some of my pieces, there is nine pieces all together here, which is good.”  Lilliana S. Didovic is prolific, working multiple canvasses with paint and mixed media, DoN wondered what she’s working on now? “Just last night we had a fabulous book party at Smile Gallery for Her Philadelphia Tales, The Art of Lilliana S. Didovic!  It was a really great success.  My new pieces are related to South Street, some sparkling with mirrors and rhinestone.  Now I’m having a related exhibit at the Lantern Theater related to love and loss, Romeo and Juliet.  Recently, in Millville NJ, I’m part of HERSTORY 2012: Ladies of Leonardo.”

Women of Vision: 2012 Lilliana S. Didovic at Hidden River Gallery

Women of Vision: 2012 Lilliana S. Didovic, Day, at Hidden River Gallery

DoN commented that Lilliana has two Women’s History shows running simultaneously.  “I think all month’s should be dedicated to women!”, said Lilliana laughing.  “They have such an important part of history of the world.  Taking care of everybody in the world. Ha, ha, ha!”  DoN persisted, “As someone who’s seen a lot more of the world than most Philadelphian’s, our people are famous for never leaving their own neighborhoods, you have lived in many, many places what do you see from women artists today?” Lilliana said, “Women are just as productive as a man, there is no difference, to be motivated in different ways.  I’m not just separating women from men because a lot of men’s art is not different than the women.  Women in their mind are being men and men in their mind are being women and then men do with men in their mind and women do with women in their mind.  Everything is all around, whatever way you’re motivated, you’re making your art.”

Women of Vision: 2012 at the Hidden River Art Gallery and Salon, 525 South 4th Street, Philadelphia hosted by Debra Leigh Scott through April 30, 2012.

DoN will be posting stories about the other featured artists Pamela Peitzman, Barbara Gesshel, Madeline Bates, Lauren Acton and Maria Lourdes Soloman on upcoming DoNArTNeWs Philadelphia Art News Blog posts.

Read more about Women of Vision 2012 at Side Arts Philadelphia Art Blog

Photographs by DoN Brewer

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Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Soldenise Ramos-Gonzalez, Pink Self Portrait, acrylic, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Soldenise Ramos-Gonzalez, Pink Self Portrait, acrylic, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

The Philadelphia Sketch Club is America’s oldest artist club established in 1865, for the past twenty-eight years the historic club has honored Philadelphia High School art students with an exhibition of work selected from all of the High Schools in the city.  On February 19th, 2012 the awards ceremony and closing reception took place in the historic gallery and more than twenty awards were presented to Philadelphia High School art students or their teachers.  The generous awards included monetary awards for the top winners and the many memorial awards, wonderful gift packages of art supplies for honorable mentions made the presentation go on for almost thirty minutes, and a wonderful reception with tons of food for hungry teens.  Congratulations to all the artists from DoNArTNeWs.

Emanuel Rodriguez, Living Room, Best in Show, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Emanuel Rodriguez, Living Room, Best in Show, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

The High School Art Show at Philadelphia Sketch Club included 149 works of art for the jurors to select from.  Mina Smith-Segal, Lois Schlachter and Joseph Winter spent hours winnowing down their faves but with 22 awards almost of the schools took home prizes.  DoN was impressed by the high level of craft and presentation, even without frames many pieces were appropriately matted to best effect.

Ada Anderson, Digital Photo Award, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Ada Anderson, Self Portrait/Woman, Digital Photo Award, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Ada Anderson told DoN her teacher pushed her to take her Photoshop skills to the max, sending her back to the computer to refine the photo over and over; Ada took her original self portrait then used the star paintbrush tool to decorate her scarf, layers of rainbow gradient are subtle mimics lens flare.  Digital Photo Award well deserved.

Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Linda Lvea, Travis Balker, acrylic, Kimberly Neubauer, John Frusciante, acrylic, Catherine Cordoza, Steve Jobs, acrylic, Tara Downey, Steve Buscemi, acrylic, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012.  The Arts Academy at Benjamin Rush, Graphic Arts Teacher Jeff Evans

Maisum Shami, Cast Drawng, conte, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Maisum Shami, Cast Drawing, conte, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012, Dick Blick Award

Miranda Gibson, Chair/Space Study, mixed media, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Miranda Gibson, Chair/Space Study, mixed media, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Dorothy Roschen, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Dorothy Roschen, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 28th Annual High School Art 2012

Special thanks to all the donors of awards, volunteers for hanging the show, food donations, committee co-chairs Debra Cooperstein and Dorothy Roschen, Jaqueline Barnette, Jaqueline and Richard Kunin, Mina Smith Segal, Norka Shedlock, Catherine Bath, Joanne Bosack, William C. Patterson PSC President and Executive Director Richard W. Fink, III.

Dorothy and the team begins work of this project in September to present a wonderful example of the state of the arts in High School.  Expressing creativity and ideas through the arts is essential for young people to learn in order to communicate more effectively in the adult world.  The skill of being able to draw is underestimated in society.  Support the arts by helping the Philadelphia Sketch Club 29th Annual High School Art Show even bigger and better, in only takes volunteer time to make a big difference in a young artists life.

Photographs by DoN Brewer
Students, get the best service, selection and price: shop at BLICK!

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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

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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/

Prince Twins Seven-Seven

Twins Seven-Seven, Indigo Arts, Crane Arts Center

Prince Twins Seven-Seven, Igarra, Nigeria, 1944 – 2011, Acrobatic Dancers, 2007, oil, acrylic, ink and pastel on plywood, Indigo Arts, Crane Arts Center

Prince Twins Seven-Seven is an artist from Nigeria who actually passed away last June.”  Indigo Arts Gallery owner Tony Fisher explained to DoN, “He was probably the most prominent living Nigerian artist at the time and he spent quite a lot of time in Philadelphia.  The last fifteen years he spent a lot of his time in Philadelphia because he was in some degree in exile from Nigeria both political problems and personal financial problems.  He was in Philadelphia for quite a while, the last five years or so he was back in Nigeria before he passed away.  But, he was told since he has a Green Card he could come back and forth every six months.  He would stop in every six months, and in a lot of the cases, bring me new work.”

Twins Seven-Seven, Monkey with Fish, Indigo Arts, Crane Arts Center

Prince Twins Seven-Seven, Monkey with Fish, 2007, oil, acrylic, ink and pastel on plywood, Indigo Arts, Crane Arts Center

“He was not born with the name Prince Twins Seven-Seven, he took that name on to commemorate the fact that according to his mother, according to him, he was the sole survivor of seven successive sets of twins.  Obviously the child death rate in a country like that is high, seven sets of twins in a row and they all died in childbirth or whatever, even his own twin died.  It’s not totally unbelievable in that Nigeria, the Yoruba people of Nigeria gave the highest rate of twins on Earth.  As a result of that, in their religion there is a special place for twins.  There’s a cult called the Ibedgi cult that honors twins with these little figures that are carved that represent when one or both twins die the figures represent them.  Either the surviving twin or the mother of the deceased twins will keep that figure and honor it, feed it, dance with it in ceremonies, things like that for the rest of her life.  There’s really a special place for twins in that culture.”

Twins Seven-Seven, Indigo Arts, Crane Arts Center

Prince Twins Seven-Seven, Indigo Arts, Crane Arts Center

“In his case I think he had a real flair for names, in general he had a flare for drama and I think he had the second Seven because it sounded better than Twin Seven.  This was in 1964, which was in kind of the era of 77 Sunset Strip so he didn’t credit it to that but Seven-Seven had a good sound to it.  So he emerged as in artist in 1964 when he first started painting and he was immediately very successful in Nigeria.  He appeared in shows all over the world, several museum shows in Europe, he was really a very big name.  In the period that he was in Philadelphia he was kind of in decline, I think he had kind of been forgotten and he was really, well it was in the last five years that he was really beginning to revive again.  There were several shows of his work, the Philadelphia Art Museum bought a major piece that they have there now, the Smithsonian has one of his pieces, so, he was picking up but he didn’t get to enjoy it for long.  Unfortunately, it’s like so many artists’ tale, I’m sure it won’t happen instantly but his reputation will rise again since we’re now looking back on him as a key figure of post independence African art.”

DoNArTNeWs Philadelphia Art News Blog

Photographs by DoN Brewer

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