Category Archives: Mixed Media Art

Mixed media art by Philadelphia artists.

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

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.

Affiliate Marketing [disclosure page]

Blick Art Materials’ Current Promo Code

Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Jose Rios, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Jose Rios, Clown Posse, pen and gouache, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

By the time Clown Posse was presented to the panel of jurors assembled at Off the Wall Gallery curator Jody Sweitzer‘s place on her sweet flat screen TV, they were ready for a jolt of color. In the first round, the jury looked at over 200 images by about 50 artists while artist statements were read explaining how the artwork relates to the theme Ties That Bind. It was a lot to take in, DoN knew many of the artists but lots of others were new to him and as each image was connected to a statement, the idea of what the best representation of theme could really be emerged. For the second round of viewing, renowned photographer Rick Wright joined Elizabeth J. McTearMarlise M. TkaczukMelissa Ezelle and DoN as we looked at them all once more, each scoring our favorites in different ways. And then we looked at them all again and began the process of elimination.

There was some disagreement with Jose Rios’Clown Posse because the color looks so bold standing on it’s own on a monitor and what do clowns have to do with Ties That Bind anyway?  Jose Rios is an art student at Oasis Arts and Education, he wants’s to “inspire hope in others and myself.” The jury agreed that clowns connect deeply with people on an emotional level, a common childhood thread of fun and fear, the naive primitivism and cartoon pop color of the painting is right on trend and when you see the artwork with the rest of the show, the piece speaks in a quieter voice. During the opening reception the artist sat in the booth under his painting and worked on drawings of super-heros.

The team sifted through images for several more hours, with breaks for strawberry rhubarb pie, and argued the merits of each piece, we had to narrow the selection down to a manageable number of artworks that would fit the limited wall space and DoN learned a good lesson. Presentation is key; art shows are juried looking at digital photos which make the images all the same size on the screen, make sure your photo is the best possible.

Alice Gonglewski, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Alice Gonglewski, Apartment, popsicle sticks, fabric and  acrylic paint, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery, photo courtesy of OTW@DF

Alice Gonglewsk‘s artist statement accompanying the popsicle stick constructions that look like a drawing/sculpture hybrids is a poem which begins, “Organize the dreams and moments, find connections, find a true tribe…” A good tip if you’re stuck writing an artist statement is to remember you’re an artist and can say it with words in a poem. If you can bring a tear to the juries eye, go for it. The graphic pieces present themselves as drawings in space, floor plan-like, with simple forms and materials representing the complex setting of a life lived.

Carla Liguori, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Carla Liguori, Bound, terra cotta and glaze, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Galleryphoto courtesy of OTW@DF

Bound took the “top” prize, there were different levels of adherence to the theme instead of 1st, 2nd, 3rd, but the small ceramic sculpture exemplified the concept on so many levels, mixing metaphors, exquisite detail and finish, and a strange dada-ist narrative that is hard to put in words, as if we’re aware of being yoked and thinking we’re one thing instead of another; each creature believes it resembles the other because it can’t see itself. The artist describes the relationship between the figures as, “tortuous”.

Russell Brodie, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Russell Brodie, Berkley House, oil on pine, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Galleryphoto courtesy of OTW@DF

The image of Berkley House, oil on pine, by Russell Brodie, is about life sized, the paintings are small and very realistic. In the jurying process the paintings looked as big as the other works, the images all presented relatively the same aspect ratio to one another, and presented on the screen large it was hard to imagine them small. The artist says he “wants to draw the audience in.”

Nicole Giusti, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Nicole Giusti, The Soap Dish, photograph, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Galleryphoto courtesy of OTW@DF

DoN loves the fact that The Soap Dish was awarded most abstract interpretation of the theme. How can a photo be abstract?  But in this case many of the artworks were impressionistic, not abstract per se, and Nicole Giusti‘s still life photo combined with the tense narrative of her strained relationship with her grandmother transformed ordinary soap into doppelgangers, simulacra and ghosts of unpleasant memories. The repeating patterns, pristine color fields and limited palette resonated the theme of uncomfortable ties to family that reads differently for each viewer.

Gene Renzi, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Gene Renzi, American Flags for Sale, photograph, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Galleryphoto courtesy of OTW@DF

Stephen Millner, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Stephen Millner, Air Support, mixed media collage, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Galleryphoto courtesy of OTW@DF

Stephen Millner‘s Air Support collage is poignant and direct to the point, ties to military people is special, enduring and hopeful. The cancelled air mail stamps speak of countless expressions of hope and love, military families send care packages of stuff soldiers can’t get in Afghanistan or even on military bases, DoN has two nephews who have been deployed to the wars, Kurt is in Iraq right now working as a contractor, Buddy is back on active duty and could deploy anywhere, anytime. Art that reflects military life touches DoN‘s heart, the ties of love and hope bound with anxiety and fear is potent.

Eli VandenBerg, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Eli VandenBerg, Egg Beater, ink on paper, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Galleryphoto courtesy of OTW@DF

All of the jurors thought of their grandmothers when presented with Egg Beater, an exquisite ink drawing that is simple, descriptive and active.  The image represents a tool that ties us to fond memories, the old fashioned kitchen utensil able to mentally transport us to a place in the past with cake batter and whipped cream. Even the angle of the egg beater hints at activity, actions and achieving goals.

Jena Serbu, Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Jena Serbu, detail from Crickets, diorama with marionette- style low-fire clay figures found wood construction by Dawn Smith,  Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Galleryphoto courtesy of OTW@DF

Crickets is especially interesting because the piece was made on spec. The artists submitted a proposal with drawings and samples of some completed elements of the sculpture, the artist statement dealt with marital discord, problems from the past and angst of modern life. So the artists took a chance the jury would give them the go ahead to complete the piece, the presentation of the idea was fulfilled exactly as proposed and is a powerful presence in the show.

Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery

Awarding the prizes was a surprisingly simple and satisfying exercise. Each juror picked their top three favorites in each category ranked in descending order, if two or more pieces were selected by the jurors the scores were added and the highest scores received an award – a cool tie-dye kit.

DoN was honored when Togo Travalia asked him to help jury the show, Off the Wall Gallery at Dirty Franks has a long history of exceptional art shows. The Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show is beautiful, sometimes challenging with a wide interpretation of a theme based on three simple words and what they mean to different artists.  The ties that Off the Wall Gallery has to the Philadelphia arts community binds artists in a welcoming place, not afraid to take risks with art, challenge norms and raise the conversation to new levels when it comes to art interpretation and exhibition. Ties That Bind, Seventh Annual Community Juried Art Show at Off the Wall Gallery is on exhibit through August 3rd.

Written by DoN

Photographs courtesy of Off the Wall Gallery at Dirty Frank’s Bar except where noted.

LiQin Tan, Primitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin Tan, Primitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin Tan, Primitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin Tan explained to DoN the concept behind Primitive Level Signals, the spectacular multi-media exhibit at Dalet Gallery in Old City, “It’s an animation installation, it all uses 3D animation software to create the animations and we also have animation stills. Printed directly on the wood the prints use technology that is new, a new way to print on different materials, ridged materials, normally it must be much softer.  Now you can use hard wood or metal, aluminum…”

LiQin Tan, Primitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin TanPrimitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin Tan explained, “Now I can print on all kinds of materials, not just paper. Also, the concept behind this is Chinese Taoism, what this means is that the Chinese have always dealt with five elements: fire, water, metal, earth and wood. All of the elements consistent with Nature is where the idea came from. Also my idea combines the ideas of the North American Indian people with ideas like the dream-catcher.”

LiQin Tan, Primitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin Tan, Primitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin TanPrimitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

The gallery is filled with fascinating creations from the mind of LiQin Tan, there are prints on animal skin stretched in frames with industrial clamps paired with an abstract video on a glossy monitor mounted on the wall above the dream-catcher. “Using spirit levels as a signal to describe a natural phenomenon in humans, where human brain development is an equalized procedure.  The competing concepts of the brain, whether the battle of the brain’s size versus it’s intellectual capacity , or of it’s technological versus spiritual side, are always kept in equalibrium” –  Dalet Gallery art card.

LiQin Tan, Primitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin TanPrimitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

The gallery displays five pairings of prints on wood with accompanying video like these three above to represent the five Taoist elements: fire, water, metal, earth and wood. The animation stills printed on the panels of wood are ethereal, with Max Ernst-like abstract images that evoking dreams, mind storms, underwater mysteries and the being lost in the deep forest.  The animations are mind-blowing in complexity and creativity.  In the front gallery is a series of monitors, tangles all in wires and cables, with an animated lava flow ebbing back and forth using video game technology realness to the point that the piece looks hot from melted stone.

LiQin Tan, Primitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin TanPrimitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

“In this dream-catcher you see here, the animal skins, I made them by myself, is from the North American Indian people as well, they’re used in a way to represent their culture. I stole it from them. In the animation is the biggest stone, the spiritual stone.” said LiQin TanIn the picture above is a shot, a still if you will, of a large dream-catcher, the animal hide stretched taut in the primitive circular frame using the same cruel clamps, the installation has two of them. From both sides of the darkened gallery four video projectors shined animations onto the stretched skins, the light shining through like when you hold a flashlight to the web on your hand.  The animation includes dancing figures, “The Miao people, a small group of people in China, are represented by the dressed dancers…I mixed the cultures, I call it digital primitivism, using digital technology to make it primitive.”  The effect is deeply spiritual, connecting with memories, archetypes, cultural resonance and internally rooted thoughts and ideals.

“You can see that in the animation, but I also used the American Indian skills because I made the animal skins by myself. Using primitive skills, using calf skin, this kind of skin the procedure is called primitive, so I used the primitive skills to make them digital.  And I used digital skills to make primitive art.”

LiQin Tan, Primitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

LiQin TanPrimitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery

“It’s a two-way work, digital art with old society and modern society, it’s multi-faceted.  I like the North American Indian culture a lot. I did a lot of research in Canada and I made a lot of multimedia pieces about North American Indian culture, so it’s about how during the day I teach digital animation but I have North American Indian culture in my brain. So the idea came very easy, very natural especially when it connected with Chinese Taoism, I did a lot of research, I’m not a religious person but I read a lot of philosophy and a lot of the research is organized in this idea.”

LiQin TanPrimitive Level Signals at Dalet Gallery through June 23rd.

Written and photographed by DoN

Affiliate Marketing [disclosure page] Shop with confidence on Amazon.com and help support DoNArTNeWs.

Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Simone Spicer, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Simone SpicerArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Katy the ArT DoG photo-bombs this pic of the site specific installation created by Simone Spicer for the Art in the Open weekend at Schuylkill Banks Park.  The artist gathered plastic or plasticized trash, decorated each piece with paint or collage, then strung them like beads along the bike path.  The effect was like a waterline where all this wacky trash had washed up on the banks of the nearby river commenting on the ecological effects of plastic trash.  But Simone Spicer also lavished time and effort on each element accentuating the careful design of these daily-use objects and the efforts of designers and corporations to make them attractive enough to buy.  And throw away.

Simone Spicer, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Simone SpicerArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Art in the Open 2012 was a big commitment by the participating artists – three days set up as a working artist along the bike trail from Lombard Street towards the Philadelphia Art Museum.  The point wasn’t to sell work but to demonstrate how art is made, engage with the public, raise questions and answer questions.  The artists are rewarded with a show at The Philadelphia Seaport Museum for the rest of the Summer opening June 15th. The experience of strolling along the trail with the dog is one of DoN‘s favorite activities, the addition of art was like an alternate reality for an afternoon, it would be cool to see more artists along the scenic path all the time.

Barbara Gesshel, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Barbara GesshelArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Photographer, Jeff StroudDoN and Katy the ArT DoG walked along the bike path in the hot Spring sun and stopped at a shady tree where artist Barbara Gesshel had set up her studio out of the sun.  Using the tree as a work surface Barbara Gesshel rubbed charcoal into large sheets of paper, using the ridges of the bark to create a naturalistic atmosphere to her drawing.  Working with nature instead of against it, Gesshel’s use of charcoal, the charred remnants of dead trees, onto the living surface of a tree to make her drawings is poetic and inspiring.

Barbara Gesshel, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Barbara GesshelArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park, photo by Jeff Stroud

Barbara Gesshel, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Barbara GesshelArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park, photo by Jeff Stroud

Barbara Gesshel has an expansive one-person show of prints and paintings at Red Hook Cafe on Fabric Row.  Read DoN‘s blog post about the show on SideArts.com.

Erika Bergere, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Erika BergereArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Cyanotype is one of the oldest types of photography there is, artist Erika Bergere set up on the lawn with her baby and made the beautiful Prussian blue photographs using only the light of the sun and a solution of potassium ferricyonide and ferric ammonium.  The wet paper hung out on a line to dry while the family lolled in the shade on the grass.

Justin Tyner, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Justin TynerArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Stained glass artist Justin Tyner was one of the only artists who needed to connect to the grid, he made this beautiful rose window outside with his soldering iron.  Shortly after this photo was taken the window was mounted in a round wooden frame on the lawn on a hill near the art museum.

Jeannie Moberly, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Jeannie MoberlyArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Jeannie Moberly, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Jeannie MoberlyArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Artist Jeannie Moberly used a variety of media from her art box to create the drawings on long expanses of paper that she planted in the ground with wood dowels.  The maze-like effect was bold and beautiful at the bend in the river.  Sitting in the bright sun with a big hat and long sleeves to guard her arms, the artist contentedly worked out the ambitious drawing while bikers, walkers and gawkers stopped by to check out the colorful display of art.

Abdelkrim Djennas, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Abdelkrim DjennasArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Flowers made from battle caps – gorgeous! Abdelkrim Djennas flattens out bottle caps with cuts along the edge transforming refuse into delightful dumpster diver art.  Like tramp artists of old, he takes what society discards and makes something desirable and pretty.  The metal flowers sprouting in the woods near the art museum were whimsical yet prescient with a question of whether Nature will be overtaken by man made objects.

Nicole Donnelly, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Nicole DonnellyArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

Using found materials, Nicole Donnelly wove a structure of twigs and branches around one of the boulders along the river.  Obviously temporary but the piece touched a childhood nerve of playing in the woods.  The rocks along the river make convenient resting spots, Donnelly’s hut-like structure evokes Clan of the Cave Bear-like racial memories and the satisfaction of creating shelter.

George Apotsos, Art in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

George ApotsosArt in the Open at Schuylkill Banks Park

George Apotsos used simple chicken wire to create his ethereal Occupy People. The wire torsos planted in the Earth at oblique angles, each faceless head looking in a different direction evoking the mixed message mantra of the Occupy movement. We can see right through them. Using a mannequin as a form, George Apotsos molds and trims the common material, using heavy gloves and strong shears, into a metaphor for modern life.

Written and photographed by DoN Brewer except where noted.

Contributing photographer, Jeff Stroud

Affiliate Marketing [disclosure page] Shop with confidence on Amazon.com and help DoNArTNeWs.