I've interviewed a fascinating range of fine artists over the years in many publications such as Art and Antiques, Time-Mirror Newspapers and Art Scene for the Hour. My mission here is to bring the work of gifted artists to the public eye and do it with accuracy, writing excellence, a bit of humor and artistic insight.
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
Carolee Ross' Art Scene: Carolee Ross' Art Scene
Carolee Ross' Art Scene: Carolee Ross' Art Scene: An Important Artistic Update by Carolee Ross. Arts Writer Time and Tide by Francine Funke Although I haven't posted to this blog...
Carolee Ross' Art Scene
An Important Artistic Update by Carolee Ross. Arts Writer |
Time and Tide by Francine Funke
Although I haven't posted to this blog for a while, I recently came across a painting, "Time and Tide," that renowned artist Francine Funke of Shelton, Connecticut had done for a solo exhibition in New York City at the Barbara Braathen Gallery. It is a powerful work and bespeaks of the maelstrom of turbulence that Hurricane Sandy wrought upon the NorthEastern coastal cities last week.
It might inspire you to reflect upon the force and power that has come with climate change -- or just feel the work visually, as the masterpiece that it is, measuring approximately seven feet by seven feet. The work belongs in a revered arts institution or in the spacious home of a knowledgeable collector. If it inspires you to donate to helping victims of Hurricane Sandy recover, then the work has served its purporse; to inspire.
For further information on Francine Funke's extensive body of work, contact: http://www.franartstudio.com/Welcome.html
|
Monday, June 11, 2012
Troubled Waters: An Exhibition and Gallery Talk
Artist Anne Seelbach at Stamford’s PMW
Gallery
By Carolee Ross
Troubled Waters by Anne Seelbach oil on canvas, 26x26" framed |
Anne
Seelbach’s new series of works, “Troubled Waters,” on exhibit at PMW Gallery,
Stamford, Connecticut, are a protest against the despoiling of the environment.
It’s not the typical protest art,
brewed tough and bitter and aggressively obvious in the execution. Instead,
Seelbach’s work whispers her message in subtle colors and textures and at
first, the viewer is enchanted by the multiplicity of the venues within the
works.
What is, and
always has been, the function of art and artist? Perhaps art’s deepest impulses
are rooted in a desire to clarify and reflect the historical space in which we
exist. These artists are mirrors of their society and their times; they express
the anxieties of their age in a world beset by more ills than Job could have
envisioned.
The artist
writes in a clarifying statement: “My work addresses the pollution that is in
many of our water systems. Toxic chemicals and industrial waste contaminate
streams, lakes, bays and oceans. The “Troubled Waters” paintings reflect this
conflict between the laws of nature and artificial attempts to control the environment.
Gaskets and other mechanical shapes are incorporated into the paintings, representing
human presence and industrial waste. Debris crowds the waters. Fish mutate into
imaginary forms. A change is taking place as nature reacts to this disruption.”
Troubled Waters #13 by Anne Seelbach oil on canvas 26 x26 Framed |
Inherent in
the rhythmic beauty of Anne Seelbach’s piece are some interesting
contradictions. Wresting textural effects from the ringed loops that not only
hold six-packs of beer and soda together but choke sea creatures to death, she
assigns them new life as sculptural forms, dissociating them from their
original context and consecrating them
as art.
Troubled Waters #8 by Anne Seelbach oil on canvas, 36x40" framed |
Seelbach
continues: “I am interested in the tension between representation and
abstraction; perspective drawing versus free-form washes and geometric shapes
versus atmospheric color fields. I use these oppositions to create a tension
between three-dimensional illusion and a flattening of space.
Gestural brushwork and rich colors are dominant. Layered paint creates subtle
colors and
textures.”
The Artist’s Background
Anne Seelbach received a BA from New York University and an MFA
from Hunter College, City
University of New York. She was a Painting Fellow at the Radcliffe (Bunting)
Institute, Harvard
University. She has developed her work at the MacDowell Colony, Triangle
Artists’ Workshop,
the Griffis Art Center, New London, Connecticut and I-Park, East Haddam, Connecticut.
International art residencies include the Centrum Frans Masereel, Kasterlee,
Belgium, Frauenmuseum, Bonn,
Germany, and the Griffis-Orpheus Foundations’ artist exchange program in Sofia,
Bulgaria.
Her work is included in the permanent collections of The Newark Museum NJ, Lyman Allyn Museum CT and the Frauenmuseum, Bonn, Germany. She is also represented in many corporate collections including: Pfizer Inc., Prudential Insurance and XTO Energy as well as private collections in the United States and Europe.
Artist’s Walk and Talk
Anne
Seelbach will give an artist’s Walk and Talk Sunday, June 17 at noon at PMW
Gallery, 530 Roxbury Road, Stamford, Connecticut, 06902. Call 203 322 5427.
There is no fee, but it is suggested that you call ahead to confirm your
attendance.
Trouble Waters series: Cut-out #7 26.75 x 16.25 unframed, tempera on paper |
To
learn more about Anne Seelbach’s artworks, visit her website at www.anneseelbach.com.
Friday, May 18, 2012
My Night with Buster Poindexter
alias ``But Ricky, I want to be in Show Business"
by Carolee Ross
Originally written in 1993 and published in Times-Mirror Newspaper Syndicate
My elegant, aristocratic, Russian-born father wanted me to be a university art professor. My mother, born into a poor, conservative family, thought that either a good secretarial or an accounting course would be more practical.
Me -- well, being a child of the Hollywood musical fifties, my head was full of other dreams. I wanted to float like a feather with Fred Astaire as my partner, heat up the stage alongside Rita Moreno in ``West Side Story,'' play the timbales with salsa bandleader Tito Puente, rock along with Grace Slick and Jefferson Airplane, belt out a tune with Bette Midler. I became, in due course, an adjunct art professor at Hofstra University, a manager of several art galleries, and an office temp during some particularly hard times. Ultimately, I found myself in the most interesting, exasperating, frustrating and gratifying of all professions. I became a freelance arts writer and did corporate newsletters to support my arts addiction.
There's an old expression which goes something like, ``If you wish for something hard enough, you just might get it. My dreams were fulfilled, out in ski country, last weekend, (back in February, 1993) in Snowbird, Utah, while on assignment, writing a daily newsletter for one of Fairfield County's largest corporations.
Contrary to common belief, corporate trips are non-stop grueling assignments. They do have their up side; lots of food and drink, combined with some pretty wild nighttime entertainment which is always kept a secret, up to the last minute.
Last Thursday evening, the lights dimmed in the resort's theatre and there was our evening's surprise. Straight from the bayou country of Louisiana and the streets of New York, was Buster Poindexter and his band. Buster proceeded to rock us, titillate us with his raunchy, bar room style humor, and amuse us with the mobile contortions of his marvelously silly face; somewhat of a cross between the Stone's bad boy, Mick Jagger and comedian Joe E. Lewis of ``Some Like it Hot'' fame. But wait, folks there's more.
In the improvisational, anything-goes spirit of the evening, the band's drummer, Tony, jumped off the stage, bringing his drumsticks into the audience and cajoling a beat out of anything he could get his hands on -- bottles, glasses, tabletops, even a spare pate or two.
Along with the rest of the audience, I was caught up in the rhythm, rockin' and clappin' along with the beat, temporarily forgetting that I was in the presence of about 500 of my client's employees, including the CEO, Chairman of the Board, and several vice presidents. That's what watching Poindexter and group can do to you.
Suddenly, the spotlight was on me. Tony the drummer was grabbing my hand, leading me in a sensuous tango, whispering that I was an exceptionally good sport.
That's when I lost it. Buster and crew started playing a burlesque bump and grind and with Tony egging me on, there I was, performing to the music. Almost immediately, Buster came downstage and claimed me as his partner, leading a conga line to the tune of `Hot! Hot! Hot!' that went round the house. The last thing I remember was grabbing several upper management people and leading them in the line.
Well, Buster is coming to Stamford, Connecticut, folks. And I've been invited to be his guest at the Terrace Club this weekend. I've also had a request to do a command, repeat performance. I guess I'd better take him up on his offer. After last week's display, my writing days may soon be at an end.
Thank goodness for those secretarial courses.
by Carolee Ross
Carolee Ross Dancing onstage at 18 years of age |
My elegant, aristocratic, Russian-born father wanted me to be a university art professor. My mother, born into a poor, conservative family, thought that either a good secretarial or an accounting course would be more practical.
Me -- well, being a child of the Hollywood musical fifties, my head was full of other dreams. I wanted to float like a feather with Fred Astaire as my partner, heat up the stage alongside Rita Moreno in ``West Side Story,'' play the timbales with salsa bandleader Tito Puente, rock along with Grace Slick and Jefferson Airplane, belt out a tune with Bette Midler. I became, in due course, an adjunct art professor at Hofstra University, a manager of several art galleries, and an office temp during some particularly hard times. Ultimately, I found myself in the most interesting, exasperating, frustrating and gratifying of all professions. I became a freelance arts writer and did corporate newsletters to support my arts addiction.
There's an old expression which goes something like, ``If you wish for something hard enough, you just might get it. My dreams were fulfilled, out in ski country, last weekend, (back in February, 1993) in Snowbird, Utah, while on assignment, writing a daily newsletter for one of Fairfield County's largest corporations.
Contrary to common belief, corporate trips are non-stop grueling assignments. They do have their up side; lots of food and drink, combined with some pretty wild nighttime entertainment which is always kept a secret, up to the last minute.
Last Thursday evening, the lights dimmed in the resort's theatre and there was our evening's surprise. Straight from the bayou country of Louisiana and the streets of New York, was Buster Poindexter and his band. Buster proceeded to rock us, titillate us with his raunchy, bar room style humor, and amuse us with the mobile contortions of his marvelously silly face; somewhat of a cross between the Stone's bad boy, Mick Jagger and comedian Joe E. Lewis of ``Some Like it Hot'' fame. But wait, folks there's more.
Buster Poindexter aka David Johannsen courtesy, Google Photos |
Along with the rest of the audience, I was caught up in the rhythm, rockin' and clappin' along with the beat, temporarily forgetting that I was in the presence of about 500 of my client's employees, including the CEO, Chairman of the Board, and several vice presidents. That's what watching Poindexter and group can do to you.
Suddenly, the spotlight was on me. Tony the drummer was grabbing my hand, leading me in a sensuous tango, whispering that I was an exceptionally good sport.
That's when I lost it. Buster and crew started playing a burlesque bump and grind and with Tony egging me on, there I was, performing to the music. Almost immediately, Buster came downstage and claimed me as his partner, leading a conga line to the tune of `Hot! Hot! Hot!' that went round the house. The last thing I remember was grabbing several upper management people and leading them in the line.
Well, Buster is coming to Stamford, Connecticut, folks. And I've been invited to be his guest at the Terrace Club this weekend. I've also had a request to do a command, repeat performance. I guess I'd better take him up on his offer. After last week's display, my writing days may soon be at an end.
Thank goodness for those secretarial courses.
Francine Funke, An American National Treasure
by Carolee Ross
This feature article is copyrighted and may not be used without express permission of the author.
With all this success, why did Francine Funke start creating fireworks? The space at the Barbara Braathen Gallery
where she was having a show was “humongous, making everything look tiny,” said
Funke. “Most of the pieces were in black and white. They needed some color.”
So, striations of red and orange were added in a spontaneous gesture. Combining
with the vortex created by the swirling moment of the special Oriental paper
she used, the color had an incendiary effect and fire was born.
These paintings are symbols of the persistence of life in its most elemental form
The Mechanical Botanical Series
I
was on a wild visual, kaleidoscopic ride in which the combinations and
manipulations
Francine Funke's Mechanical Botanical #3 will appear at The Creative Arts Workshop, 80 Audubon Street, New Haven, CT 06510, (203) 562-4927 creativeartsworkshop.org - opening tonight, May 18, 2012 and runs through June 22: Boundless: New Works in Contemporary Printmaking, A National Exhibition with Juror Anne Coffin ,
Opening Reception: Friday, May 18, 5:30 - 7:30 pm
Free and open to the public
This feature article is copyrighted and may not be used without express permission of the author.
Francine Funke in her former Stamford Studio photo by Carolee Ross |
In reviewing the work of artist Francine Funke, I am reminded of
the words of Dr. Meyer Shapiro at Columbia University, my art history mentor,
who explained the difference between a competent technical artist and an artist
who is a gifted genius.
He said, "In addition to the artistic skills and creative
imagination that are the foundation of the work of art, the superbly gifted
artist possesses an innate intelligence combined with an endless curiosity to
try to make sense of the world he or she inhabits."
Throughout the more than twenty years we’ve known one another --Francine
Funke's work has never disappointed me or fallen short of that definition.
Hopefully, one day soon I’ll be writing about her retrospective exhibition and
inclusion in the permanent collections at NYC’s Three Greats, The Museum of
Modern Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art and the Guggenheim.
For Francine Funke has a multitude of skills, whether it be the
creation of fine art, her expressive writing (Her book, “ON FIRE,
poem and paintings”, is in the library collections of the Museum of Modern
Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The
Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA, Museum of Contemporary Art,
Chicago, the National Museum of Women in the Arts Library, McNay Art Museum,
San Antonio, Texas, and the Cleveland Museum of Art). Add to that her innate problem-solving skills and ever-present
curiosity and you’ve got an artist who will be celebrated in the annals of art
history.
The Beginnings
I first met Francine Funke at a Loft Artists party in downtown
Stamford, Connecticut. Petite in stature, she was dressed as a ninja, ready for
battle against any nemesis. She invited me to her studio to see her newest
works and because I was always on the lookout for new artists to profile, I
accepted. There, large sculptural wall pieces, sketches, appointment books and
plans for new work filled almost every room, including an attic
workshop/studio.
Then, I was also told an intriguing
secret. Rock music was playing everywhere and the petite artist started to
dance. She looked at my expression of surprise and told me, “The connection between my art and dancing is simple. When I work,
I play music, usually high energy rock. When I hear rock music, I must dance to
it. So, I dance while I am working. Hopefully, the energy is transferred to the
canvas or whatever else I am working on. I like to do art because I like to
dance.”
As we explored her wide range of
work, she recalled a childhood filled with paints and pencils, and knew
instinctively that she was an artist. Her work developed in a step-by-step
evolution that began with her studies at Cornell University, where she studied
with famed painters, Jim Dine and Robert Rauschenberg, received a bachelor’s
degree in fine arts. She later completed her M.F.A. at Hunter College, working
under the auspices of another group of New York greats – Tony Smith, Ray Parker
and Robert Morris.
Lockwood Mansion by Francine Funke |
On view were her former series of chair paintings in all sizes,
shapes and varieties, a theme she had explored for ten years. When she looked
at a chair, she realized it was perfect because of her predilection for folding
or “pop-up” pieces. “The distance between the fold, the length of the legs and
the geometric planes lent themselves to the pop-up format,” she explained.
Eventually the chairs
metamorphosed into an entry piece for Rutgers National Sculpture Competition, a
Christmas exhibit at the Vanderwoude Tananbaum Gallery in New York and group
exhibitions including the Aldrich Museum in Ridgefield and the Bruce Museum in
Greenwich. There was also the excitement of having her work displayed in
Tiffany’s window, although Ms. Funke insists that doing the work is always more
of a thrill than showing it. Awards were plentiful for the artist and her
cacophony of chairs, including the award for sculpture at the Hudson River
Museum’s 68th Annual Competition and inclusion in the Connecticut
Commission on the Arts “Artists’ Showcase,” by Alan Chastick, then director of
the Yale University Art Gallery.
Fireworks Explode
The Kuwaiti "Plume" Series Part of the Fireworks Series by Francine Funke Photo by Carolee Ross |
“At the same time I started to add
flames to my work, things started happening,” Funke added. “The war in Kuwait,
the explosions, the fun fire, inspired me to do the “Plume” series, a reaction
to Hussein’s destruction of the Kuwaiti oil fields.” In the Plume works, the
backgrounds became ominous, dark maroon-red as fire mushrooms against the sky.
“I learned about the fingers of fire, explosions and the renewal that fire
gives, the purging which creates new life and new growth,” explained Funke.
In creating the sculptured paintings
from strips of Oriental rice paper, the artist fractures and reshapes the forms
into richly textured planes that overlap and intertwine against a background of
velvety blacks and grays. Treating the works as abstract explorations, they
become the quintessence of fire.
Her installation, “Plumes,” traveled to the Museum of
Art, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the Scottsdale Center for the Arts in
Scottsdale, Arizona, the Discovery Museum in Bridgeport and the Russell Senate
Rotunda on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, where her exhibition was sponsored
by Senator Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut. “The colors in these works jump off
the canvas,” said the Senator. “I feel as though I am there, in the midst of
destruction.”
The Lost and Found Series - Acrylic
and Analine Dye on Canvas
Midnight Bouquet #2 by Francine Funke |
Francine Funke writes:
“These works deal with the emptiness
left by fire and destruction
and the process of rebirth that
inevitably follows.
Emerging from the ashes, the loss, and
the despair,
the human spirit must find nature and
beauty in order to survive
In the Lost and Found Series, as in
nature,
botanical forms are the first to
emerge from obscurity. These paintings are symbols of the persistence of life in its most elemental form
in a world sometimes filled with
tragedy and darkness.”
The
name Lost and Found came from the process involved in the creation of the
artwork.
Writes
Funke in her Lost and Found artist’s statement: “I laid down many colors on the
canvas, and then covered the entire canvas with an overlay of deep sepia color.
Then I used a solvent to remove that wash and reveal the color underneath. I
removed the color, thinking of a botanical motif. It was a rather child-like
process, as, when we were kids, we put down scribbles of colored crayons, then
covered the whole thing with black crayon--and then used a pencil to draw. The
multi-colored lines underneath were always a surprise. I wanted a very old
world deep feeling--like a Rembrandt painting.
Solar Bouquet by Francine Funke |
The Mechanical Botanical Series
Fran
says, “After the Epiphany--the flood gates opened wide! I started taking
photographs and scans of every flower, weed, branch, leaf that I could find.
These botanical ingredients were the "raw materials" for composing my
mutated bouquets. Because I was manipulating everything on the computer
(flipping, turning elongating, duplicating) -- whatever I envisioned in my
mind, I could create immediately on the computer screen, at record speed. It
was instant gratification!
Sometimes,
I did not even know the exact progression of the work, or remember what I
actually did-- because it was going so fast.
And,
with every click of my mouse, I was amazed at the intricacies and other
worldliness of the fruits of my labor.
of
my new creations were limited only by the limits of my imagination
Artist’s Statement about the
Mechanical Botanical Series
By Francine Funke
The Flower of Notre Dame by Francine Funke |
The
“Mechanical Botanical” Series, deals with the effects of Technology on Nature.
This new work combines photography, traditional subject matter, digital
technology, and my personal artistic vision.
The
Mechanical Botanical Series builds upon my recent interest in the persistence
and rejuvenation of plant life. All aspects of existence on earth are
inter-dependent, and continually developing, changing, and mutating. Based on
that premise, how will advances in modern science alter organic forms? And how
will that phenomenon ultimately be manifested?
As an artist,
all my skills and experiences ultimately influence my artwork—and in this case,
it was my knowledge of photography and the computer that led me on an exciting
journey of transforming beautiful botanical forms into a “weird science”
composed of strangely exquisite “techno-mutations”.
The discovery
of the “Mechanical Botanical” Series was an epiphany, and the process of
creating this work is intensely cerebral. In my mind, I can manipulate and
alter form and shape—and the computer will magically render it visually. My
collaboration with the camera and the computer never fails to surprise and
amaze me in some way—and I am perpetually learning from the results of our efforts.
In the end,
the “Mechanical Botanical” Series hopefully provides the viewer with a new and
startling way of looking at the world we now inhabit—and perhaps even a glimpse
into the hybrid universe of tomorrow.
Opening Reception: Friday, May 18, 5:30 - 7:30 pm
Free and open to the public
Saturday, April 21, 2012
EarthWorks, An Exhibition at the Darien Nature Center
Featuring
Artists Heidi Lewis Coleman, Lucy Krupenye and Nancy Woodward
“EarthWorks” Opens on
Sunday, April 22 at the Darien Nature Center
The Darien Nature Center, a small, Fairfield County oasis that
houses live animals including rabbits, turtles, screech owls, reptiles and
prairie dogs also features the work of select area artists. For Earth Day,
Curator Ann Hart of Stamford-based “annart” has partnered with three local
artists to present “EarthWorks,” a serene exhibit that borders on visual poetry
in an era when society needs the calm and contemplative peacefulness of
artworks that are meditative in nature.
She is a Norwalk native who works out of her Silvermine, New Canaan studio, where the digital darkroom, she says, "affords me the resources to coax out even the faintest of shadows and ethereal landscapes". Woodward is a regular exhibitor at Southport's "Rooms with a View." For the last six years, she has been an Artist in Residence at Silver Lake Conference Center in Sharon, Connecticut and is a member of the Ridgefield Guild of Artists.
EarthWorks, featuring artists Heidi Lewis Coleman, Lucy Krupenye and Nancy Woodward continues through June 8th.
By
Carolee Ross
“EarthWorks” Opens on
Sunday, April 22 at the Darien Nature Center
The opening reception
will be held on Earth Day, Sunday, April 22 from 3:00 – 5:00 p.m. in the Nature
Center’s Wetherstone Gallery at 120
Brookside Road, Darien, Connecticut.
Hart explains in her curatorial
statement, “EarthWorks is a celebration of nature’s simplicities and
complexities through the eyes of three remarkably insightful artists; Heidi
Lewis Coleman, Lucy Krupenye and Nancy Woodward. Each pays homage to the beauty
of the current, the remnants of the past and the wonder of the unknown future.”
Heidi Lewis Coleman
Explores Language in Art
"DOGWOOD"
2011
Cut Stainless Steel
|
In
her artist’s statement Coleman writes, “My work reflects an ongoing exploration
into the aesthetics of using language in art. While most conceptual artists
incorporate text into their work as a means of analyzing popular culture or for
making political and social commentary, I am more intrigued with developing
text as a visual design element. I am particularly inspired by Asian art and
have studied the intricate calligraphy used to decorate ancient scrolls and
screens. The columns of simple, yet elegant characters may express specific
meanings, but a viewer is not required to understand that meaning in order to
appreciate the grace and integrity of the artwork.”
Coleman’s
work focuses on developing text as a visual design element. Her mixed media
assemblage pieces and steel sculptures incorporate her own abstract writing
which is an invented, rhythmic language that she develops intuitively. Most of
the artist’s assemblages are created using Thai papers which incorporate
embedded bits of wood, leaves, petals and stems.
“For
me, the languages have an ancient, almost mystical quality. I believe that
because my artwork communicates in the abstract, individual viewers are not
forced to translate it specifically, allowing them to “feel” the energy of each
piece and to take away their own unique messages on a subconscious level,
Coleman explains.
Heidi Lewis Coleman studied at Parsons
and the New York School of Design in New York City. She is a juried member of
the National Association of Women Artists and the Silvermine Guild of Artists
and is represented by Reynolds Fine Art in New Haven, Connecticut.
Lucy Krupenye Creates Wall Hanging
Assemblages of Found Objects
Lucy at a former show at The Carriage Barn Arts Center with (from left) "Ceremonial Totem", "Sea Creature", "Balance" and "Zen Shelter" |
Krupenye
believes that her sculptures are a reflection of her soul and she strives to
create works of beauty, peace and tranquility in a world that is often
surrounded by violence and hatred. Her work can be described as organic and Zen
in feeling and are inspired by nature, music and the bits and pieces of the
world around her, including stone, wood, metal and bone. She looks for
treasures in the discarded pieces she finds in her Connecticut environment and
searches for harmony in their creation.
Lucy
Krupenye, who has her studio in Wilton, Connecticut, has been the featured
artist in many magazines and newspapers, on the cable television program, Miggs
B and her work was included in the book “The Art of the Birdhouse: Portraits of
Artists and Their Creations. She has exhibited in galleries and museums in the
Northeast including The Hammond Museum, The Stamford Museum, and The Silvermine
Guild Arts Center and has won awards for her sculptures in juried exhibitions.
Nancy Woodward, A Photographic Artist
Who Transforms Views of the Natural World
Woodward's images result from her “hearing the calling to go further into
the woods, to patiently wait for the sun and the clouds to illuminate the trees,”
that she photographs, and then transforms into what she calls a “spiritual
thank you.”
Nature Center Hours:
Weekdays 9-4
Saturday 9-12
120 Brookside Road, Darien Ct 06820
203-655-7459
www.dariennaturecenter.org
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Tito Puente, El Rey del Mambo by Carolee Ross
Recently I received a pleasant surprise. I saw that the United States Post Office had issued a commemorative set of stamps titled "Latin Music Legends," honoring Tito Puente, Carmen Miranda, Selena, Carlos Gardel and Celia Cruz. I went home and searched for the memorial I had written about my friend, Tito Puente, the year that he passed, June of 2000. This is from the archives of The Advocate/Greenwich Time, of the Times-Mirror newspapers and was originally printed on June 11, 2000. Following is the original article:
Tito Puente, el Rey del Mambo, The King of Latin Music, the consummate showman, the man who never forgot his Spanish Harlem beginnings is gone.
He was The Man, way before Carlos Santana, Ricky Martin and Marc Anthony appeared on the music scene. He played for presidents and with jazz greats such as Duke Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie, George Shearing, Cubana songstress Celia Cruz and pop singers such as Tony Bennett.
Tito Puente playing his beloved timbales |
He was The Man, way before Carlos Santana, Ricky Martin and Marc Anthony appeared on the music scene. He played for presidents and with jazz greats such as Duke Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie, George Shearing, Cubana songstress Celia Cruz and pop singers such as Tony Bennett.
Friday, February 3, 2012
In Praise of Norman Rockwell by Carolee Ross
Artist’s Americana is now considered high art
"The problem we all live with" — by Norman Rockwell , depicting an incident in the American Civil Rights struggle of the early 1960s, when Ruby Bridges entered first grade on the first day of court-ordered desegregation of New Orleans, Louisiana public schools (November 14, 1960). Originally published in Look Magazine. The painting is currently displayed in the West Wing of the White House, just outside President Obama's Oval Office.
When I was a young art history student, Norman Rockwell’s visions of an idyllic America were dismissed at “kitsch,” the ultimate in sentimentality and bad taste. The intelligentsia of the academic world met my queries about Rockwell’s status in American art with silent disdain.
It seemed that the prolific Rockwell, whose illustrations appeared in the Saturday Evening Post from 1916 to 1963, was one of those artists whose destiny was to be cherished by the public and detested by the connoisseur.
There are probably a lot of red-faced professors now, for Rockwell’s status has changed dramatically over the past 30 years.
An Astonishing About-Face
Art critics and scholars are now doing an astonishing about-face and the frigid dividing line between art for the masses and art for the elite is experiencing a quick meltdown and critics such as Robert Rosenblum, art critic for Artforum and professor of fine arts at New York University, and Paul Johnson, critic for the Spectator, are jumping on the Rockwell bandwagon.
Writes Rosenblum, “We have a newborn Rockwell, who can no longer be looked at with sneering condescension and might well become an indispensable part of art history. In order to enjoy his unique genius, all you have to do is relax.”
“Who was the most popular painter of the 20th century?” asks Johnson. “I suspect the true answer is Norman Rockwell. . .Rockwell will slowly come to be ranked among the Old Masters, as he is already firmly wedged in humble hearts and minds. People do not like Picasso, they just feel they ought to, but they genuinely love Rockwell’s painting.”
“Pictures for the American People,” a show that traveled throughout America a few years back, making its debut at Atlanta’s High Museum, featured all 322 of Rockwell’s Saturday Evening Post magazine covers and more than 70 of his paintings.
Says Ann Morgan of the High Museum of Art and a former Rockwell model (she posed for his Crest Toothpaste ad in 1957) notes: “Rockwell scholarship has been very superficial. People see him a sentimental, but a number of his works are quite complex and profound.”
High Museum’s director, Ned Rifkin, points out that Rockwell was one of America’s most successful mass media artists and makes connections to the posters and illustrations of 19th century French artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and to the pop artists of the 1960s. “It’s amazing how Rockwell created and distilled images into icons of popular culture.”
Saturday Evening Post Cover, 1949 |
A Master of Genre Painting
Rockwell gave the American public exactly what it wanted, a 20th century version of genre painting, or art of the common person. In a way, he is the descendant of 19th century American masters William Sidney Mount, Caleb Bingham and Winslow Homer, who gave their vast audiences scenes from everyday life – children, farm life, people at work.
What does Rockwell have in common with these artists? Adherence to facts, directness of vision, clarity and solidity. He was intrigued and captivated by the human condition and helped shape the iconography of the mass media of his time.
But although he filled his pictures with bushels of visual facts, Rockwell was a fabulist, not a realist. He was, at heart, a propagandist for The American Dream, exaggerating the admirable and pleasant qualities of American life – the corners and outposts of our culture.
Why is Rockwell’s popularity soaring? Because since the days of the disappearance of open plains and horse and buggy, Americans have sought a return to what they believe are simpler times.
Saying Grace, 1951, by Norman Rockwell in the collection of Steven Spielberg |
Director Steven Spielberg a proud Rockwell collector
Movie director Steven Spielberg owes a debt to the art of Norman Rockwell, He owns “Saying Grace,” a Thanksgiving 1951 Saturday Evening Post cover, depicting a little boy and his grandmother, saying grace before their meal in a big-city restaurant filled with truck drivers and businessmen. This is quintessential Rockwell.
Spielberg a trustee of The Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, also owns 13 other Rockwell original paintings.
My Adventures as an Illustrator
In his 1960 autobiography, “My Adventures as an Illustrator,” (Harry N. Abrams) Rockwell wrote: “The commonplaces of America are to me the richest subjects in art; boys batting flies on vacant lots, little girls playing jacks on the front steps, old men plodding home at twilight, umbrella in hand – all of these things arouse feeling in me. Commonplaces never become tiresome. It is we who become tired when we cease to be curious and appreciative.”
The Problem We All Live With |
Rockwell also loved the movies and illustrated several movie posters between 1942 and 1966, including “The Magnificent Ambersons,” “The Song of Bernadette,” “Along Came Jones,” “The Razor’s Edge,” “Cinderfella,” and the 1966 remake of the classic, “Stagecoach.” In his portraits of well-known actors, Rockwell infused his canvases with subtle nuances of the personality each actor sought to portray.
Workaholic Rockwell
Norman Rockwell was a workaholic, who painted from dawn to dusk, seven days a week. Born in New York City on February 3, 1894, Rockwell’s greatest desire was to be an illustrator. He found success early, painting his first commission for Christmas cards before his 16th birthday. While still in his teens, he was hired as art director for Boys Life Magazine.
Scout at Ship's Wheel, 1913 Illustration for Boy's Life Magazine |
Rockwell produced work for leading magazines such as Life, Literary Digest and Country Gentleman, and did his first cover for the Saturday Evening Post in 1916. Over the next 47 years, Rockwell created 321 more covers for the Post, including “The Four Freedoms,” which had been rejected by dozens of bureaucrats at the War Department in Washington, D. C. He presented the idea to editor Ben Hibbs, who urged him to create them for the Post.
Freedom of Speech from The Four Freedoms by Norman Rockwell |
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt wrote a letter to Rockwell, stating: “I think you have done a superb job in bringing home to the plain, everyday citizen, the plain everyday truths behind the Four Freedoms – I congratulate you.” The paintings were made into war bond posters and went on a 16-city tour that brought in more than $132 million for the war bond effort.
The Golden Rule by Norman Rockwell |
In 1973, Rockwell established a trust to preserve his artistic legacy and placed it under the custodianship of The Normal Rockwell Museum at the Old Corner House in Stockbridge. Rockwell was presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1977, the highest civilian honor for his vivid and affectionate portraits of America. He died at his Stockbridge home on November 8, 1978.
The Connoisseur by Norman Rockwell In 1961, Rockwell's studio was temporarily transformed into an abstract expressionist's workplace while he painted The Connoisseur. The purpose of this work was to show the relationship between conventional and modern art. Always fascinated by modern and abstract art, Rockwell designed a cover in which he could acknowledge his appreciation of the genre by emulating Jackson Pollock's style. By placing his back to us, he leaves the interpretation of the museum visitor’s reaction to the viewer. |
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