Posts Tagged ‘art’

The Pin-Up Queen

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009
Charlene Lanza

Charlene Lanza

…..No stranger to the studio, pin-up artist Charlene Lanza and TW met through a mutual friend, fellow painter and guest blogger Mikel Elam back in the nineties while they we’re hanging out regularly in Soho. Recently, the artist and the photographer met again for a portrait sitting and to introduce her latest works to our growing audience. Ms. Lanzel is an American artist, originally from LaCrosse, Wisconsin. Born in 1967, she started to paint with passion at the age of five. Self taught and determined to exhibit her works beyond the confines of a small town, she moved to New York City at the age of 20 and has been enjoying the creative process in the Big Apple ever since.

We are delighted to introduce a sampling of her work to you. To learn more about Charlene’s painting’s, log on to www.charlenelanzel.com…….

Erotica

Painting Of The Day

Friday, October 23rd, 2009
Nirvana By Mikel Elam

Nirvana By Mikel Elam

…..Guest Blogger, Patrick Breslin a professor of Speech Communication at Santa Fe College in Gainesville, Florida; writes a commentary about Mikel Elam’s state of “Nirvana”, the studio’s Painting of the Day…….

Mikel Elam’s painting titled “Nirvana” depicts a male figure seated in meditation. The painting is a partial patchwork: the figure’s head encased in an orange square, the torso in a dark gray one. The background contains light colored disks, gold leaf squares, and dark purple 5-spoked behandled circles reminiscent of Buddhist icons, all ensconced in rectangular shapes. The dominant shade at the bottom of the painting is also purple, suggesting a base or ground, and philosophically linked to the icons; the top is adorned with swaths of blue, suggesting sky.

The meditator in the painting is a multiracial collage. The head appears African; the torso a shade of bronze; the lower abdomen and legs partake of a dark Caucasian complexion; the arms lighter—the left hinting at orange, the right bordering on pink—, and both terminating in an empty space of unpainted hands.

The title of the piece suggests several interpretations. Nirvana by definition refers to the ultimate peaceful state, and the multiracial makeup of the subject of the painting seems to propose that the blending of races, or at least their acceptance of one another, might lead to a peaceful existence. In the context of meditation as understood in popular culture, the lower abdomen whimsically lacks a navel, the historically clichéd object of meditation, causing the viewer to wonder whether the meditator in the painting is a holy incarnation not born of a woman. The viewer observes that the head of the subject does not fully connect to the body; the two are separated by a strip of the orange color from the box that surrounds the head. One could read into this that the nirvanic state of the meditator is all within the mind, disembodied, the concept of which does align with classic Buddhist perspectives.

The goal of meditation is enlightenment, whose common metaphor is light. Meditation is practiced in the mind—in the head—, yet the color scheme of the meditator’s body in the painting casts the darkest shades on the head and the lightest ones on the nonexistent hands, reversing the typical expectation and intimating that perhaps through the hands one expresses one’s degree of spiritual development, as Elam may be attempting to do in this work.

Pat Breslin Vulcan Days

Pat Breslin Vulcan Days

Art Of The Kiss

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009
Lovers Kiss

Lovers Kiss

…..Guest blogger, Atomic Bombshell weigh’s in on the Art of the Kiss……….

Movie Kiss

Movie Kiss

If Helen of Troy’s face could launch a thousand ships, kissing can definitely inspire timeless, artistic creations. You will always remember your best and worst kisses. I think this is because a kiss can leave an imprint on your soul. So much passion and longing can be felt with a single kiss. An ultimate chemistry of connection and sensory, that you share with another person. While there are some people who are not natural born kissers, if you feel strongly about the person you are with and you are open to experience, take your tie and discover kissing together. After all, we all hate those kisses that leave our faces chaffed! Some of the best stories and paintings were inspired by the beauty of the kiss. I wish everyone would take their time and explore the sensual Art of the Kiss!

Painting Of The Day

Friday, October 9th, 2009
www.MikelElam.com

www.MikelElam.com

Guest Blogger Mikel Elam, “I think this self portrait says a lot about me and my work. My paintings have been mostly about signs and symbols. It started early in my life when I began to notice patterns of numbers shadowing my everyday existence.

First I thought it was just chance and then as time passed, I realize there are very few coincidences. In portraiture and figure studies there are a great deal of measurements used to create an accurate representation. As an expressionistic painter, I use my emotions and my imagination to create images which are symbolic to my thoughts. In essence, they become these dreamscapes and very surreal in nature. I am interested in that place which is somewhere between reality and the ethereal.

Lou-Pop Postscript

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009
A Personal Remembrance

A Personal Remembrance

….Comments have been coming in to the studio about the recent blog about the passing of Lou-Pop. When you’ve lived for 93 years a lot of people are left with memories. Lou-Pop was an artist and a landscaper. One of the employee’s of Louie’s suburban landscaping business learned about his recent passing. In his own word’s Don Brunetti, now a singer songwriter from Nashville, Tennessee share’s intimate stories about the times he spent with Pop.

Lou-Pop

Lou-Pop

On September 19, twenty years ago, my mother died. The next day, on September 20, Irving Berlin, the great songwriter passed. Now Louie has left us on September 21. I’m guessing, if there really is a place called Heaven, the three of them are maybe listening to Trotter and Utah Phillips picking and singing.

Some people pass and are easily forgotten, while other people leave a “hole in the world” when they pass. Louie filled a lot of holes in my life at a time when I needed it most. He had the wisdom of the street, a kind of “bottom up” view of the world. In 1973, when the gas prices went up to the he horrendous price of 50 cents a gallon, I told Louie we were about to have a depression. “Youse hippies don’t know anything,” was his reply, “In a depression, the money doesn’t go away, it just goes someplace else.”

He sure knew how to follow the money. The following summer, we had our best year yet. Another time, he came back from lunch at the “Fox and Hounds” and started yelling at me from a crack in the window of his air conditioned car. No particular reason, he was not what you might call, “a hippie whisperer”. Finally he said, “Why didn’t you do that?”. I yelled back, “Louie, I was going to do that last”. “Don’t do anything last!”

You couldn’t “one up” him either. Louie would always have the last word. I think my favorite story was the time when Trotter and I were walking up the alley one morning. We were both hung over, at least a half hour late and holding each other up. When we got there, Louie was yelling at Louis and Mark for being late. Marko should have kept his mouth shut, and Louie would have turned his wrath on us, but Mark said, “What about those guys, they’re later than us”. Louie turned around with his big shit-eating grin and said, “Youse guys are Hippies, youse can be late!”

As long as I’m around Louie Pop will live on in these stories. And nobody will believe them. About 30 years ago, I moved down to Corpus Christi because I needed a job and Trotter put me on his landscaping crew. I was working with a guy named William, who had his PHD in chemistry, but who preferred to work outside. William and I were riding around one day and I said, “I wonder what Lou-Pop would think about all this?” William pulled the truck over and said, “There’s no such person as Lou-Pop. That’s a story Trotter made up. Nobody could be like that.” “Sorry William, there is such a person and Trotter’s stories are only scratching the surface.”

When my son turned 30, he was starting to get upset about getting old. I used a “Louie-ism” when I told my son, “Don’t worry, the older you get, the more unique you become.” Lou-Pop was, if nothing else, was the most unique person I ever met, and I’ve met a lot of people. I’m sad for losing probably the best friend I ever had.

Drawings By Lou-Pop

Drawings By Lou-Pop

Mikel And Miles

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009
Guest Blogger Mikel Elam On Miles

Guest Blogger Mikel Elam On Miles

….Mikel Elam spent several years globetrotting with the legend, Miles Davis, as his personal assistant. Very few people have had the opportunity to spend time with the jazz master both in and out of the spot light. In his own word’s Mikel blogs about his personal relationship with Miles, and yes the paintings they worked on together……

Mikel Elam Painted With Miles

Mikel Elam Painted With Miles

…..”I met Miles in October of 1987. I was moving from one freelance job to another disenchanted with my adult life as an artist. A friend of mine who knew Miles introduced me to him and we clicked immediately. Miles asked if I would travel with him as his on the road assistant. Our day to day activities included traveling the world to perform shows, attend press conferences, photo shoots for magazines and advertising campaigns for various companies. During the initial days of working for him, Miles was finishing his soon to be released memoirs and then a little later his first starring role in a film entitled, “Dingo”.

A lesser known activity for Miles was creating paintings and drawings wherever we traveled and whenever there was a free moment he explored this passion with great enthusiasm. One of my special asset’s was a good knowledge of artist materials as I have a BFA degree in painting.

I often observed Miles while he was drawing and painting and as time passed, he began to ask me to contribute some of my ideas to his canvases. For about one year I said no, out of pure fear. I had placed my own artistic career in a bubble thinking one day I would burst that bubble and work on my painting’s again. I had lost my drive mostly because the day-to-day survival of working for Miles had become a grueling process. Working for him and being on the road constantly was both exciting and all consuming.

Miles told me at his Malibu home one day, “Mikel you have to learn to do many thing’s at one time.” He had a big canvas laid out on a large worktable. He stated in a very serious way, “Put some paint on this canvas”. I decided to try and paint again, as it was late at night and I did not have him around to look over my shoulder. The next morning he got up before me and when I went downstairs he looked at the canvas and said, “Mikel it’s a motherfucker”. That was his way of expressing that he enjoyed what I had done.” Several more collaborations with Miles were soon to follow.”……

Art By Mikel And Miles

Art By Mikel And Miles

…to learn more about Mikel Elams Artwork, log on to http://www.mikelelam.com