Category Archives: Philadelphia Artists

Artists DoN has met in and around Philadelphia.

Valerie Carroll & Reta Sweeney @ TwentyTwo Gallery

Reta Sweeney

 

Reta Sweeney @ Gallery TwentyTwo.  Part of what DoN refers to as the School of Philadelphia (Peltzman, Barns, Monaghan…), Sweeney sees light with a delightful optimism and has the ability to create welcoming atmosphere in paint.  Reta’s paintings are joyous, reveling in the liquid medium, working quickly and efficiently, applying color with skill, so as to sign the work by scratching into the wet paint with satisfaction.

 

Reta Sweeney

 

A Rose Bouquet, oil on canvas, Reta Sweeney @ TwentyTwo Gallery.

 

Reta Sweeney @ Valerie Carroll

 

Cherry Blossoms and Tulips, Reta Sweeney, oil on canvas and Valerie Carroll @ Gallery TwentyTwoDoN was impressed and inspired by the pairing of these two paintings, it’s not just the color palette, soothing pinks enhanced with warm atmosphere,  but the balance of symbolism and visual cues that creates a broader real world narrative.  This is a lesson in how to decorate with art confidently placing expressionism with impressionism in close proximity increasing the visual energy of the art.

 

Valerie Carroll

 

Valerie Carroll @ TwentyTwo Gallery.  Paintings like this make’s DoN want to paint, reaching deep into the soul creating an image to explain the human condition, paint strokes representing the passage of time, entropy and generativity vs. despair visualized with mysterious smudges and emotional color.

Rich Harrington – Parked Cars @ The Philadelphia Sketch Club

Rich Harrington

Rich Harrington, Parked Cars @ The Philadelphia Sketch Club.

Harrington’s paintings are totally cool – each painting features old cars, trucks or tractors with their rusting hulks rendered realistically but painterly in watercolors and acrylics.  Rich is a Philadelphia artist whose work is recognizable as a Harrington; brushwork, coloration, depth of field, composition, subject matter, information design, atmospheric naturalism and pop sensibilities are all thoroughly modern with a fond backward glance at the remnants of mid-century modernism.

Rich Harrington

The collection of Rich Harrington paintings in the historic pool room of the Philadelphia Sketch Club is extemely accessible and enjoyable, his painting style is specific and strong with powerful images that tell stories yet are extremely decorative.  Harrington is the new Vice President of the Philadelphia Sketch Club and is also the chair of the upcoming Phillustration ’09 – download the prospectus.

Rich Harrington

Detail of painting by Rich Harrington @ The Philadelphia Sketch Club.

Karen McDonnell – Studio Visit

After Dr. Deb’s lecture about Andy Warhol @ Fleisher, DoN visited the studio of Karen McDonnell & Anthony Cortosi – the art team behind award-winning, evocative stencil, spray paint and mixed media paintings appropriately iconic images of Elvis, Betty Grable, Janet Leigh, and much like Andy Warhol, even Factory Superstars like Joe Dallesandro.  The difference is the McDonnell/Cortosi hive mind extracts the images from media, then cuts the stencils, sprays the paint, makes marks, composes word structures  –  making each piece different even if in series, instead of slavishly copying with silk screen; it’s not so much appropriation as it is appreciation of popular culture, visual iconography, memes, idols, graffiti tagging, sticker art, words, naive primitivism and cave painting.

The team currenty has a show @ Roger Lapelle Galleries in Old City.

Karen McDonnell

 Karen McDonnell & Anthony Cortosi.

Karen McDonnell

Dr. Deb Miller compared Andy Warhol’s Cow wallpaper to Flemish cow paintings; McDonnell/Cortosi continues the theme of farm animals as subject for decorative paintings now created with spray-paint, stencils and markers, once to fill the homes of wealthy landowners, now it’s downtown lofts and street art.

Karen McDonnell

The studio of Karen McDonnell & Anthony Cortosi.

Dr. Debra Miller on Andy Warhol & His Critics @ Fleisher Art Memorial

Dr Deb Miller on Andy Warhol @ His Critics @ Fleisher Art Memorial.

Dr. Debra Miller presented an informative, witty, insider view to Andy Warhol and his critics as compared to past masters like Caravaggio who was also harshly and publicly criticized by his contemporaries.  Dr. Deb writes arts reviews for the Inferno and like DoN prefers not to write bad reviews, but, some reviewers get more exposure for being nasty and saying dismissive statements in the press.  Andy Warhol would have now have been 80 years old, Dr. Deb’s slideshow included lots of clues and tips to the content of his work, it was great seeing the Andy Warhol Superstars being compared to Birth of Venus and Vermeer’s use of the camera obscura compared to Andy’s appropriation of newspaper images for his Death & Disaster series.

The Sunday afternoon lecture was fun and interactive, Dr. Deb Miller’s fact filled, myth busting monolog followed with a great Q&A is a terrific way to pick up quips and quotes:

  • image hunger of the masses
  • the cheaper more despicable the better – Lucy Lippard
  • the reason Andy painted soup is because he ate it everyday

Philadelphia Sketch Club Workshops Show

members

The Workshops Show @ The Philadelphia Sketch Club.  The reception is Sunday, May 17th, 2-4:00 PM.

members

The standing male nude is Mina Smith-Segal, the cat is Vince Doktor.  Both of these artists host workshops at the Sketch Club; their dedication to leading a professional, creative, disciplined workshop provides the atmosphere for making art.  The Sketch Club only charges $9 for three hour workshops with a live model; Mina leads Tuesdays 12 – 3:00 PM, Vince leads Saturdays 9:30 – 12:30.

members

Benton Spruance, “Miss Kim Sutko – and Art“, lithograph.  In conjunction with the Workshops show is a preview of works to be shown for the 150th Anniversary of The Philadelphia Sketch Club.  The pool room now has a fabulous installation of paintings of “Parked Cars” by the talented Rich Harrington.

members

Fred Wagner,”By the River“, oil.  The Workshops Show runs through May 24th, 2009, take this unique opportunity to see a wide range of Philadelphia artists all in one place.