2012年4月25日星期三

Whiteley painting to take flight

THE veteran art dealer Denis Savill has thrown down the gauntlet to his auction house rivals by going to market with a giant Brett Whiteley not seen in public for decades, which could attract one of the highest prices for Australian art this year.

Savill is selling Seagull , 1988, originally owned by the ad man John Singleton, for $1.6 million, along with several other major Australian works that have never been seen at auction.

Australia's art market is a long way from the halcyon days of 2010 when Sidney Nolan's First-Class Marksman sold for $5.4 million. But the Whiteley may pip Deutscher & Hackett's May 2 auction of Arthur Streeton's 1888 Settler's Camp, estimated to sell for as much as $1.5 million.

A week later, Sotheby's Australia hopes to get as much as $1.2 million for Frederick McCubbin's 1886 Whisperings in Wattle Boughs.

One of the highlights of last year's auction market was Whiteley's Washing the Salt Off 1 with its curvaceous, big-bottomed Bondi bathers, which went under the hammer at Menzies Art Brands for $1.55 million.

This year, Whiteley's name has attracted a different kind of publicity with a Sydney banker taking a Melbourne art dealer to court over a $2.5 million sale of an alleged fake Whiteley, one of three alleged fake Whiteleys circulating in the market.

Will the fakes make it harder to sell Seagull?

''I unconditionally think it has helped because if someone will pay $2.5 million for a bit of junk, this is a real painting twice the size, for $1.6 million,'' Savill said.

''I am not telling you it is the greatest Whiteley; I am telling you it is a real Whiteley.''

Seagull, with its brilliant blue sky, aquamarine sea and Whiteley's signature curves, stands nearly two metres high. Owned by Singleton, it was next bought for about $280,000 by a wealthy West Australian family who are selling after enjoying it in their Perth home for 24 years.

''It is slightly mad and slightly spiritual and very evocative of Whiteley's sense of space,'' Savill said.

2012年4月24日星期二

Stake in Georgia O'Keeffe's art poised for sale by Fisk University

Fisk University may soon be able to generate cash from its 101-piece art collection donated by the late painter Georgia O'Keeffe.

On Monday, the Tennessee Supreme Court announced that it would let stand a ruling allowing the historically black university to complete a $30 million deal US to sell a 50 per cent stake in the collection to the Crystal Bridges Museum in Bentonville, Ark.

The decision may mean the legal battle that's lasted more than a decade is all but over.

Officials at the cash-strapped Nashville school have said Fisk might be forced to close if it didn't sell the stake in the Stieglitz Collection to the museum built by Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton.

"We're feeling pretty happy here," Fisk President Hazel O'Leary said. "We felt we had the clarity that the law was in our favour."

She said only a few administrative details need to be worked out before the case is closed.

The state of Tennessee has fought to keep the collection in Nashville. State lawyers argued that allowing the deal would have a chilling effect on future donations here because Fisk is going against the stipulations O'Keeffe made when she donated the collection to the school in 1949.

A spokeswoman for the state attorney's office said lawyers for the state were disappointed by the decision. It lets stand last year's Court of Appeals ruling that gave Fisk the green light to go ahead with the deal.

State attorneys had also argued that the art collection is a part of Nashville's cultural history and it needs to be protected because of the risk that it could be lost to Fisk's creditors. They said there is a risk that the entire collection could ultimately wind up in the Arkansas museum because of some of the wording in the contract between it and Fisk.

Under the proposed deal, the Arkansas museum would house the art two out of every four years. But the contract says the museum also has the right of first refusal for the remaining 50 per cent of the collection.

O'Keeffe donated 97 pieces of art to Fisk from the estate of her late husband, photographer Alfred Stiegltiz. The collection includes works by Picasso, Renoir, Cezanne, Marsden Hartley, and Charles Demuth, among others. O'Keeffe also donated four of her paintings to the school because Fisk educated blacks in the segregated south.

But she stipulated that the collection must never be sold or broken up. Fisk had argued that the $131,000 US annual cost to display the art was more than the school could afford.

O'Leary said one of the questions that now must be resolved is whether $1 million US that Walton pledged to Fisk is adequate to upgrade the display place.

2012年4月23日星期一

Record prices for Grosvenor artists at print auction

Records tumbled at Bonhams sale of linocut prints by Grosvenor School artists, featured in this column last week.

For Claude Flight, the central figure and teacher at the school, the previous 26,000 auction record was broken three times, led by Speed, an image of red London buses hurtling down Regent Street in the 1920s, which sold to an American private collector for 49,250.

A British private collector paid 82,850 for Sybil Andrews’s classic of motorbike racers, Speedway. This briefly held the record for any Grosvenor School print until, with the final lot of the sale, The Gust of Wind (pictured), by the Australian artist Ethel Spowers, blew away its 15,000 to 20,000 estimate to sell for 114,500 to another American collector.

Even the lesser-known Grosvenor artists were in demand, such as Ursula Fookes, whose view of a mining town soared over its 1,000 estimate to sell for 9,000. Such prices sent dealers scurrying back to their stock books to revalue their holdings in time for the opening of the London Original Print Fair.

From this week, Leighton House Museum in Holland Park hosts the first display of works from the collection of John Schaeffer, one of the most important collectors of Victorian art in the last 40 years.

The history of how Schaeffer, a highly successful businessman in Australia, fell in love with Victorian art, amassed a huge collection, then sold much of it following a painful divorce, only to continue buying and rebuild the collection, will make fascinating reading one day.

At Leighton House half of the works on show were bought at a Christie’s sale of the Forbes collection in 2003, just when many professionals thought he was out of the market.

The sale was rated a huge success and Schaeffer, unknown to most, was part of that. While he did pay record prices for some of the artists - Richard Redgrave, Thomas Faed, James Archer and John Linnell, he also snapped up bargains by Waterhouse and Holman Hunt at half their estimated prices. Schaeffer’s relationship with Leighton House has been a fruitful one.

The museum now owns three key paintings by GF Watts and Frederic Leighton that were previously owned by Schaeffer.

This time last year a drawing of a fishing boat on a beach by Lucian Freud sold at Sotheby’s for a record 2.6 million. Even more astonishing was the fact that it sold not to a wealthy private collector, but to the dealer Jean-Luc Baroni, who has a gallery in London run by his daughter, Novella.

Probably better known for handling Old Masters, the Baronis were giving notice that modern art was their field, too, so long as the quality was right. But could they re-sell a Freud drawing at that price level?

The answer is yes, because at the Salon du Dessin, the drawings fair in Paris this month, Baroni offered the drawing at 3.3 million, and sold it.

2012年4月22日星期日

Agape Center's art exhibit makes a statement

In this art exhibit are oil paintings, pastel prints, pencil drawings and engraving art. They are paintings with titles like “Portrait of a Lady,” “Lovely Day at the Park,” “Seascape,” “The Garden” and “Ocean Fish.”

They have been painted by those with schizophrenia, depression and bipolar disorder. They are the ones who many think would be the last ones to patiently express themselves with serene, detailed, three-
dimensional perspective paintings.

“A lot of people think those with major mental illness are just violent, capricious, impulsive,” Tony Foster said. “We get accused of being lazy because of a debilitating condition.

“There seems to be a caricature of somebody out of their tree instead of someone suffering pretty bad and trying to make it through this life.”

The Agape Center Art Exhibit 2012 is a first for the peer support group center for those with a mental illness. Almost 90 drawings are on display and for sale through Saturday at the Panhandle Art Center, adjacent to The Galleries at Sunset Center, 3701 Plains Blvd.

The purpose is twofold: to raise money for a center that operates on a shoestring budget and to counter the stereotypes of those who fight the unpredictable demons of mental illness.

“There’s so many stigmas out there,” said Bonnie Taylor, interim executive director of Agape Center. “We get painted in a lot of ways.”

No irony intended. Taylor has eight pieces of art on display that she completed over two months.

The Agape Center, governed by Amarillo Area Mental Health Consumers, has quietly operated in the basement of Buchanan Street Chapel, 1515 S. Buchanan St. for 15 years. It offers support groups, peer counseling, employee assistance, social outings, crafts and other outlets.

“It’s about getting people back into the community and being productive citizens,” said Foster, who is in the process of taking a break as executive director. “We have people going to college, trying to get their degree. It’s about working with the whole person, and turning that person into something useful in society.”

Foster was referred to the Agape Center in 2003. He was battling clinical depression and panic disorder. It was, he said, “excruciating.” The therapy he found helped ease his inner pain.

“There’s people there who understood how I was feeling and weren’t going to judge me,” Foster said. “There’s a collective group of people who have a common experience that make you feel accepted and comfortable.”

Those who show improvement over time often become staff members, facilitators in group discussion, or in Foster’s case, executive director. Agape Center receives a yearly grant from the state, but beyond that, fundraises to remain viable.

“By the end of the fiscal year, I always wonder how we can provide transportation and keep the lights on,” he said. “Even though what we do is important, it doesn’t have that big of a fanfare, and it should. It really should.”

The art exhibit came along almost by happenstance. Marcia Morgan, who has a background in art, began teaching a class at Agape Center last September. About a dozen decided to give it a try.

“They were eager to learn, were engaging, wanted to please,” Morgan said. “They were proud of their work, and it gave them a sense of value.”

Foster said the class came at the right time, a pick-them-up when things were running a little stagnant.

“I don’t want to sound melodramatic, but it was kind of flat, and this got people moving,” he said. “It was an impetus that got people excited about life again.”

Over several months, the artwork began to add up, and, for novices, the work was surprisingly good. Very few pieces, if any, reflect dark moods. In January, Agape and the Panhandle Art Center agreed to partner for the exhibit that opened April 6.

It is a way to showcase their art, and a way to raise a bit of money. Maybe there’s a statement too, that these handful, among an estimated 25.5 million in the U.S. who have schizophrenia, clinical depression or are bipolar, are just looking to better their lives and feel good about themselves.

2012年4月19日星期四

Fine art among many highlights at Gray's sale May 3

Composed of paintings, sculptures and works on paper, as well as fine furniture, jewelry, rugs and decorative collectibles, the May auction promises exceptional treasure for every taste, said Serena Harragin of Gray's Auctioneers.

Auction highlights include a number of artworks by modern masters. Lot 22, Snake in a Landscape, is a fantastic, late-career Surrealist drawing by Salvador Dali done on stationary from Hotel Meurice, Paris.

Lots 20 and 21 are two engravings by Pablo Picasso from the Vollard Suite, a collection of superb prints made by the artist between 1930 and 1937 for the acclaimed art critic and dealer Ambroise Vollard. Both pieces depict scenes from an artist’s studio, a subject addressed frequently by Picasso in his body of work, and also highlight his love of sensual allusion and sly wit. Note, for instance, the intriguingly androgynous figure featured in the second picture, Seated Nude with Painted Sculpted Head.

The auction also features a dynamic, offset colored lithograph by renowned American painter and printmaker Frank Stella. This 1982 abstract artwork, Yellow Journal, is signed and dated by the artist and numbered print 14 of a 50 run series.

Another fine art piece featured in the sale is a striking allegorical figure pairing titled Vanity and Modesty, painted in oil by Giuseppe Mazzolani after Bernardino Luini. Working in the high Renaissance circle of Leonard da Vinci, Luini is known for his depictions of lovely, large-eyed women. Here, the personification of Vanity on the right demands the viewer’s attention with her gaze, while the humbly dressed embodiment of Modesty seated beside her points to the heavens in a gesture of reverence.

Another extremely elegant object included in the sale is Amedeo Gennarelli’s Tireur d’Arc, a fine work of sculpture in bronze featuring a superbly rendered archer poised to shoot. It has a legible foundry mark and artist signature on the base.

Gray’s is also delighted to offer a number of decorative arts, furniture, and jewelry pieces in the May sale. Notably, a stunning Art Deco ring and brooch in white gold with diamonds and onyx comprise lots 132 and 133.

A uniquely grand piece for the home is lot 180, a fire screen with delicate scrolling branches and wildlife in wrought iron attributed to Samuel Yellin. Yellin is considered one of America’s most masterful blacksmiths and preeminent designer of decorative architectural pieces.

Some of the most fascinating items in the sale are lots 147 through 149, a collection of medals awarded to Dr. George William Lewis, former director of aeronautical research at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, better known today by its precedent organization, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Lewis managed the committee’s political and research technological endeavors during his tenure as director, and under his guidance, engineers at NACA’s Langley Research Center made outstanding advancements in the field of aerodynamics. The NASA John H. Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field in Cleveland is partly named after him.

Finally, Gray’s will be auctioning as lot 1 a gorgeous pair of Oscar de la Renta mahogany armchairs for the benefit of Girls with Sole, a Northeast Ohio charitable organization that helps to empower young women who have been victims of abuse through the physically and emotionally healing practice of fitness and athletics. There is no buyer’s premium for this purchase and 100 percent of the proceeds earned from the sale of the Oscar de la Renta armchairs will go to this worthy organization that Gray’s is proud to support.

2012年4月18日星期三

Artistic license set loose at the All About Art exhibit

Art lovers will have a heyday this weekend when the All About Art Club hosts its annual art show and sale in the Yemassee Craft Center Art Room. Original oils, acrylics, ceramics, watercolors, pastels, photography and more will be on display, all from the eyes and hands of Sun City’s vast corps of talented artists.

Among the many artists preparing to hang their work are three who depict their vision in different media.

Pat Everson, who has worked in different formats, from oil to acrylic paints, now focuses on PanPastels, a palette-style method of creating paintings with chalk.

Denis Reshetar works on a very large scale, building wooden frames in various shapes around which he stretches canvas he then paints.

Mary Ann Putzier works in watercolor and porcelain, learning each time she prepares to teach a new class.

“Teaching always gets me going because if I am going to teach floral painting, then I have to paint fresh ones. I can’t bring up old paintings as examples,” Putzier said in her well-lighted studio. Among the classes she has taught at the community’s art room are “Saving your Whites” and making a watercolor canvas. Next year, she expects to teach how to paint reflections and possibly portraits, her favorite subject.

“Portraits are the most satisfying. Not only to capture the likeness but the personality,” she said.

Her mother and grandmother were quite artistic, Putzier said, and she and her eight siblings were raised on drawing.

“All of us have some kind of artistic skills, especially the girls,” she said. It taught her to see, to observe. “If you can’t see it, you can’t draw it and you can’t paint it. Of course, once you see it, you can take liberties like Picasso and others. They weren’t copyists. They took the truth and bent it.”

Reshetar thinks in the summer and then creates in the fall and winter.

“I usually have thoughts on paper — the shapes I want to do and the designs I want to paint on them,” he said. He builds his own wooden frames, sometimes taking one completely apart after the design fails to come together.

“It usually takes me a week of 10-12 hours when I get going,” he said. “I like big stuff, different shapes. Big or narrow, horizontal or vertical. And usually difficult to put into a house.”

He said he repainted one square vision four or five times until he finally started all over from scratch, scrapping the canvas and rebuilding the canvas frame into a different shape.

“I usually spend as much time making the frame as doing the painting,” he said. Originally a ceramicist and sculptor in college, Reshetar has taken some of those skills and reapplied them to both his frames and his painting technique.

One painting has a 3D effect as one side seems to pull away from the wall. A few paintings Reshetar has hanging in his home were created by what he calls the “lost wax” technique, a process used in making molds. Across the surface of the painting — a blending of colors that graduate to more intense hues from the center out — he adds the finishing touch, a deliberate splash or dripline of black paint.

“When it has dried enough that the edges are hard, I take it outside and hose it off,” he said. What remains behind is an outline of the splash, the painting’s colors popping back out.

Everson began attending the Silvermine Guild of Art in Connecticut when she was 12 and studied art through high school. An argument she no longer recalls with an art instructor turned her against her training and she earned a degree in psychology in college.

“Art was always with me. I couldn’t get away from it,” Everson said. “Even in the two 10-year stretches I abandoned it, it was always behind me, nagging me.”

Now concentrating on the use of pastels, she finds that keeping up with the ever-evolving techniques and resources is just a small part of being an artist.

“You have to keep current,” she said. Originally an oil painter, Everson acquired adult asthma and found that being in the presence of the chemicals used was unhealthy. She had to change her medium and moved to acrylic and has taught the subject to Sun City students.

That, too, became a problem with her asthma and now she has moved to pastels, a medium that uses no chemicals with which to create. In the process of researching these tools, Everson discovered a whole new concept in the use of PanPastels, a set of colored chalk discs that have low dust issues, one of the challenges of using chalk.

Rather than create the painting with pastel sticks, Everson is able to apply the chalk with sponge-tipped applicators. The different shaped heads allow for various results on the paper and stick pastels may still be used to provide an opaque sharp line, if desired.

It’s all part of Everson’s pursuit of perfection through practice.

“Once you learn to paint well, you learn to create well. I’ve become progressively more intent on pursuing art and you can’t just stick with the old ways,” she said. “You have to keep up with new products. You can have thoughts in your head but you technically have to be able to put those thoughts down on paper or canvas.”

2012年4月17日星期二

Earth Celebration Day planned by Renfrew Institute

A full day of discovery, education, music, art and shopping is planned during Renfrew Institute’s Earth Celebration Day and Festival of Art fun from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, April 28, at Renfrew Park in Waynesboro.

Now in its 22nd year, the celebration also features a clothesline art exhibit and dozens of exhibitor displays featuring everything from beekeeping to archaeology to gardening. Held in conjunction with the event, the seventh annual Recycle/Reuse Yard Sale is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the park.

Twenty area artists will display, demonstrate and sell their works during the Festival of Art. These include a variety of fine art, jewelry, photography, basketry, garden art and pottery. Earth themes will be in the spotlight.

“The goal is to offer to the public the concept that art, in its many forms, reflects our effort to celebrate the earth and its life through artistic expression,” said Melodie Anderson-Smith, institute executive director.

The seventh annual “Renfrew Institute Environmental Artistry Award” will be presented to a local artist, in honor of outstanding lifetime achievement.

Art activities for children will be offered.

Slim Harrison will returns this year with his “good time mountain music.” Kids can use his handmade instruments or bring their own to play along as part of the Sunnyland Band.

Local artist and musician, Patric Schlee will lead an “improv music session” beginning at 3 p.m.

“Bring drums, flutes, guitars or a didgeridoo — any instrument — and jam with Earth Day Concert No. 3,” Anderson-Smith said. The improv session is open to everyone.

Several hands-on, earth-friendly activities are planned. A creek cleanup is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m., hosted by Franklin County Conservation District. Anyone interested in helping should bring gloves.

The Franklin County Commissioners and Washington Township supervisors are sponsoring free personal document shredding from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Washington Township office parking lot off Welty Road. There is a limit of 10 bags or boxes per person, and the following items cannot be processed: newspapers, three-ring binders, carbon paper, film, metal, cardboard, trash or heavy plastics.

In the spirit of recycling, several area groups are collecting items for reuse or proper disposal. The Lions Club will collect used eyeglasses and cell phones, and Summitview Elementary School will collect used printer cartridges (no copy toner cartridges). A disposal bin for used batteries will be available. All types of household and electronic device batteries are accepted, except large acid batteries that exceed 11 pounds.

CFAR/Waynesboro Running organizers are collecting “gently used running shoes” to support the Waynesboro Area Middle School running team.

Again this year, the Franklin County Commissioners will present an official proclamation declaring April as Earth Awareness Month. A ceremonial tree planting is also planned.

2012年4月16日星期一

Garage sale junkie finds Tom Thomson and Fred Varley

It’s a garage sale junkie’s dream: to find hidden art treasures at bargain basement prices.

And that’s what happened to one Vancouver bargain hunter and amateur art connoisseur who bought what he believed to be paintings by two iconic members of the Group of Seven — Tom Thomson and Frederick Varley.

The bargain hunter, who doesn’t want to be identified, bought the paintings at a garage sale for $100, convinced they were legitimate. He then took the two paintings — one a watercolour, the other an oil on panel — to Maynards fine art and antiques auction house earlier this year for authentication.

When Kate Bellringer, director of Canadian and contemporary art, took a look at them she was initially skeptical. “We get a lot of people at Maynards who come in with things they’ve found,” she explained in an interview with the Toronto Star. Nevertheless, each piece has to be looked at and examined and researched.

Bellringer began by taking the paintings to local experts for reaction. They came back with the same opinion: the paintings seemed to be authentic.

Then she consulted experts across Canada and flew to Toronto to have the paintings examined by an expert here. The conclusion was the same: the paintings appeared to be legitimate.

“It took two months to make sure they were real,” she said. “But it’s very exciting for us.”

Now, the paintings are to be auctioned off on May 16th.

The Thomson is valued at $150,000 to $250,000 while the Varley is valued at a more conservative $4,000 to $6,000.

The prices are on the conservative side because the auction house doesn’t know the provenance (the history of ownership) of the paintings.

That doesn’t take away from their artistic value. The Varley is a watercolour done in 1901 and depicts a cityscape of his hometown of Sheffield in England. It was likely painted when Varley was on vacation from studying art in Antwerp, Belgium, Bellringer said.

“It’s an early example of his work before he became the Varley we know. It’s him as a young painter.”

The Thomson oil painting of a sunrise over a lake in Algonquin Park was likely done in the spring or summer of 1915, said Bellringer.

“Thomson only painted for a brief period from about 1912 or 1913 to his untimely demise.”

The period of 1915 to 1917 is believed to be Thomson’s prime years for painting.

This painting is clearly from a “turning point in his style,” said Bellringer. It is vibrant with peachy colours, pale purples and blues in the sky, Bellringer said.

“The sky looks like it is coming awake. Because there is no foreground in the painting, I believe he painted this in his canoe.”

The Thomson was quite dirty when it was bought and has been cleaned by a conservator since then. Initially you didn’t see any of the colours, Bellringer said.

And the signature was difficult to make out. Part of it was missing — partially because of the dirt, and also because Bellringer believes a previous attempt at cleaning it had removed some of the signature.

“I’ve spent a lot of time with these paintings and looking at these paintings and I personally do think they’re beautiful,” she said.

The news that Maynard has two Group of Sevens on the auction block has prompted many inquiries, Bellringer said.

“We’ve had a lot of people call and come in to see the paintings.”

How that interest will translate when the painting is auctioned off is anyone’s guess.

But Bellringer points out the most expensive Tom Thomson went for over $2 million. “This one, if it had come in and had the proper provenance, I would have priced it at around $600,000.”

The find and the news of the auction has also triggered hundreds of phone calls from people who have found things at garage sales — all of them convinced they’re sitting on a fortune in undiscovered art and antiques.

So Bellringer will be busy over the next few months taking a look at these hopeful finds and evaluating them.

2012年4月15日星期日

College football recruiting is a season that never ends

As the popularity of college football has soared over the last dozen years, feeding the legions of loyal fans new and innovative information about their teams has spawned a beast today whose thirst almost seems unquenchable.

What started in the 1990s with magazines and 1-900 call-in numbers has become a powerful, expansive, fast-paced and still-growing outlet to follow the molding and shaping of the more than 100 NCAA Division I programs nationwide.

Major college football recruiting is riding a popularity wave the likes of which has never been seen.

Served up a perfect medium when the Internet became a thread of daily life, the demand for major college football recruiting information has steadily increased on almost a yearly basis for the last decade.

"Recruiting databases built in the late 1990s on the Internet created a product that was easily accessible and cheap, bringing an interesting product to a much broader base."

Cheap, accessible and providing new information ... what more could a modern-day passionate college football fan want?

The vehicle was the Internet. And like the famous line from the movie "Field of Dreams" asserted, "If you build it, they will come."

After the collision between the recruiting of Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) players and the web, the aftershocks of the initial explosion are still being felt today.

The consumer is driving the market. And serious college football fans are purchasing Smartphone apps, clicking for online subscriptions and trolling a variety of websites for inside information at a rate some might find alarming.

"In my opinion, the key is to give fans what they want," said JC Shurburtt, the national recruiting director for 247Sports, the new kid on the block. "I think we make a mistake industrywide. We are too ego-driven by breaking news or scooping the other guy.

"While it’s always important to compete, and if you aren’t competitive you will fail quickly doing this stuff, it’s paramount in today’s climate to focus on your readers and fans."

And whether it’s alarming or not, the demand for unique and fresh information clearly exists.

"I think the key is the same as any market: Deliver a consistent, well-respected, timely and interesting product," Kennedy said. "And keep getting better. More features, more interaction, etc." 

It all started in the early stages of the 2000s with Scout and Rivals — a pair of outlets already dabbling in the business of major college football recruiting before the Internet boom.

Once this duo went virtual, the sky has been the limit. More outlets have emerged, more content is available, more writers have jobs, more information is available on a daily basis from recruits courtesy of social media ... more, more, more.

"I think there is a ceiling to it, but I’m just not sure where it is. I compare recruiting to two of my other early hobbies," Kennedy said. "When I was in high school watching the NFL draft in 1988, I was one of the crazy ones who taped it and watched it over and over. Now it’s a four-day event.

"In the early ‘90s, a few of us would comb boxscores from newspapers to calculate our fantasy football teams. Now everyone and his grandmother has a team. When I first started covering recruiting, I had to explain to my close friends what I did for a living because they didn’t understand. Now their wives ask me where a kid might be leaning."

2012年4月12日星期四

Good Art Show to sell art for Tuscaloosa’s One Place

The members of the University’s honor course, The Art of Giving Back, will host The Good Art Show on Tuesday from 4 to 6 p.m., in Nott Hall. Proceeds from the show will support Tuscaloosa’s One Place, a local family resource center.

The Good Art Show will feature art from a variety of sources, said Tonya Nelson, professor of The Art of Giving Back, but most pieces will be those created by the course’s students.

“You wouldn’t believe the stuff,” Nelson said. “The show will feature bowls made out of old records, paper mache elephants, hand painted frames, handmade jewelry and textiles, paper crafts, paintings.”

Along with the art exhibits, the event will have live music and free refreshments. Admission is free for those wishing to browse, while the prices of the art are very student-friendly.

“Our lowest item is literally $1,” Nelson said. “Then they go up to $40-50 for painted canvases, and framed photography and paintings.”

The class has spent most of the semester creating the works that are going to be for sale.   Theresa Mince, a senior majoring in apparel design, will display the clocks she made from old vinyl records and gift boxes created from record sleeves, along with bowls and coasters.

“My classmates and I have been working really hard all semester to make things that will appeal to a lot of different people,” Mince said. “It’s going to be really cool to see the personalities of each student show through their art.”

Nelson said although the course title is The Art of Giving Back, the class isn’t really about art.

“The class is about constructing a life beautifully — artfully even — so that you’re able to incorporate your values into how you live,” Nelson said. “This class asks students to explore what they have to offer, what they have to contribute, what they can create in an event that’s bigger than any single person’s effort.”

Last semester, the Good Art Show raised $1,100 for Tuscaloosa’s One Place.

“The proceeds from the show are really a very small part of the money required to operate a family resource center like TOP,” Nelson said. “But it’s a crucial step in developing and acting on the instinct to make a difference.”

Mince said she was impressed when she learned about the work Tuscaloosa’s One Place does for families in Tuscaloosa and is excited that her work will be able to help the organization.

“They have programs set up for every family member, and I genuinely believe they are making a difference in the community,” Mince said. “It’s exciting to think that 100 percent of the profits from the things I made will go to helping them further their goals.”

2012年4月11日星期三

Kaminski sells Chinese art collection

The outstanding art collection of Wen Tsan Yu with works by many famous Chinese artists, the most notable Qi Baishi sold for over $2.6 million dollars at Kaminski Auctions on March 30-31.

Other artists in the collection, included Puru and Pu Jin. Most paintings included a dedication by the artist to “Yu San,” Wen Tsan Yu and the collector’s personal seal. Also in this sale, was his collection of exquisitely painted fans, the most important being a 20th century fan of paper leaf and featuring painting by Wang Yun on reverse with calligraphy by Zhu Nuzhen.

“Yu's collection is one of the rare collections by a Chinese scholar to come to auction. This collection of art and antiques is among the best I've ever seen,” said Ben Wang, Asian specialist.

Five 20th century Chinese paintings by Qi Bashi sold at Kaminski’s March Fine Asian Art and Antique Sale for a record $2.3 million dollars to break all records for the artist. All five paintings were 20th century scroll paintings of ink and color on paper, signed and sealed Qi Bashi and dedicated by the artist to "Yu San," Wen Tsan Yu with the collector's personal seal.

Wen Tsan Yu was raised in China and later became a professor at Peking University. He graduated from the University of Chicago in 1916 with a Ph.B, and from Harvard University in 1919 with a LL.B. The family's maternal great grandfather was Moy Toy Ni, who came to the United States in the late 1800s and settled in Milwaukee. He was widely known as “Chinese Rockefeller” in the early 20th century. Paintings in this collection had been in the family for over 50 years.

Chinese porcelain from the family's collection also brought top prices. A pair of Famille Verte bowls decorated with floral roundels, marked on the base in a double ring, sold for $300,000. From the Republic Period, a Famille Rose baluster form vase having a painted continuous landscape scene and a calligraphy mark on the base sold for $220,000.

The booming Chinese art market fueled bidding from all over the United States, Hong Kong and China for this rare Chinese scholar's collection.

2012年4月10日星期二

Bradford Painting, Burl Bowl & Silver Lead At Cottone Auction

A wide range of quality materials ranging from Tiffany, Steuben and contemporary glass to paintings to folk art and rare Native American items attracted a large crowd for an action-packed sale at Cottone Auction on March 24.

Comprising more than 500 lots, the auction featured items from the estate of Thomas Buechner, a former director of the Brooklyn Museum and the founding director of the Corning Museum of Glass, as well as items deaccessioned from the Strong Museum, the Rochester Historical Society and items from the former collection of the Campbell-Whittlesey House Museum. Naturally, a complement of freshly picked quality merchandise from local homes was also presented.

Preview for the auction was packed in the days leading up to the sale, with a great deal of interest expressed in the paintings, many of which had come directly from local families. The list of works was impressive, including artists such as William Bradford, Thomas Buttersworth, Frederick Judd Waugh, William Aiken Walker, Ogden Pleissner, John James Audubon, Charles Sprague Pierce and Jules Joseph Lefebvre.

Other categories within the auction included an assortment of Asian materials consigned from a private collection, silver, bronzes, Native American items and advertising items.

Come sale time on Saturday morning, every one of the 250-plus seats in the spacious gallery was filled, and a good-sized crowd lined the walls of the room. Auctioneer Sam Cottone got things rolling right off the bat, and maintained a brisk and steady pace throughout the day. The sale kicked off with close to 30 lots of sterling, beginning with a Tiffany bowl with foliate decorated edge that sold above estimate at $1,150. Sterling flatware sets included a Tiffany Audubon pattern service, 54 pieces total, that opened for bidding at $3,000 and sold moments later for $6,095, a Gorham set in the Old Medici pattern at $5,060, and a Towle service that for 12 sold at $2,875.

The action heated up when a small silver spout cup by colonial Boston maker John Coney (1655/56–1722) was offered. The rare piece listed a single family provenance descending from Martin Brimmer (1697–1760), a politician and prominent businessman, member of the House of Representatives, the mayor of Boston and the first president of the Boston Museum of Art. Lineage continued through the family, with ties to Harriet Wadsworth by marriage in the early Nineteenth Century, and on down through the family to the present day.

Coney was considered one of the most important Boston silversmiths of his day, an engraver of the plates used for paper money in 1702. Coney's apprentice at the time of his death was Paul Revere's father. The classic spouted cup, fitted with an elegant handle and lid, carried an estimate of $30/50,000; it opened in the room at $30,000. A bid of $35,000 came from one of several telephone bidders, and then another at $40,000. A moment later, a phone bidder claimed the rare and important piece of colonial silver at $74,750. A similar example of the cup is in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

The top lot of the auction came as an untouched, original condition painting by William Bradford was offered. Consigned from a Buffalo, N.Y., family, the painting depicted several sailing vessels amid icebergs towering above a land mass. "It's untouched," said Cottone of the painting during preview. "It has the original stretcher and there has been no in-painting or restoration at all."

Measuring 18 by 30 inches, the painting attracted the interest of all of the major dealers, with at least six ready for action on the telephones. Bidding came primarily from two of the phones, with the painting opening below the $60/80,000 estimate at $50,000. Moving in $5,000 advances the whole way, the rare Bradford more than doubled expectations when it sold moments later to a telephone bidder for $166,750.

Another painting in the auction that attracted a great deal of attention had come from the Buechner estate, an oil depicting Diana, the goddess of hunt, perched on a rock with a bow in her hand and a crescent moon on her head. Cataloged as an "original condition" work, the painting by Jules Joseph Lefebvre listed a provenance of Schweitzer Gallery in New York City and was estimated at $20/40,000.

2012年4月9日星期一

Artists for Humanity teens get ready to 'Bee' party hosts

The music is pumping in the background of a 5,000-square-foot art studio on a Thursday afternoon. Easels are lined across the floor. Small tables are covered in dried-up, splattered paint. Beams of sunlight capture the colors of canvas paintings and penetrate the room with warm air.

Unaffected by the clutter, young artists are scattered in their workspaces. They are drawn together by the vision of Susan Rodgerson, founder and director of Artists for Humanity, who has designated the theme of the 7th annual 'Greatest Party on Earth' event, which celebrates the earth and the creativity of young artists, as “Vanishing Bees.”

“We use this day to highlight environmental issues, and bees are a critical part of human life. There has been a problem with them dying in massive amounts,” said Rodgerson, adding that the theme was inspired by the documentary film, "Vanishing of the Bees."

The teen artists are expressing their interpretations of the bee theme through work that will be showcased and sold April 28 at the Artists For Humanity (AFH) EpiCenter, in the Fort Point art district. AFH’s central program, the Youth Arts Enterprise, is a paid apprenticeship and leadership program employing urban teens. Youths are partnered in small groups with professional artists, designers and young mentors to create, market and sell fine art and design services.

For the upcoming event, AFH "looks for diverse and abstract artwork, rather than literal pictures of bees and flowers,” said Maggi Brown, an AFH painting studio mentor.

Kelvin Nova (pictured above), a sophomore at Madison Park High School in Boston, conveys messages with meaning in a skilled graffiti-style form.

Traditional methods for graffiti have involved the use of spray paint, but Nova has infused his piece with a hip-hop flavor and lots of details, including eye-popping 3-D lettering that spells out the word “SAVE” in paint. A bee is strategically placed in the middle of the word.

The letter “V” is carved out as a red ribbon, representing the need to raise awareness. He has accented the piece with honeycombs and flowers that are bursting at the bottom of the canvas.

Nova is one of dozens of teens who have become paid apprentices for the organization by demonstrating a commitment to their craft. “I practice a lot. That’s how I’ve continued to improve and get better and better,” Nova said.

Rodgerson assesses the market value of each piece, which will carry price tags ranging from $100 for a small painting, to $4,000 for a large canvas piece. More than 100 pieces of artwork will be offered for sale.

“The kids volunteer to have their work sold," said Debbie First, AFH's communications consultant. If their work is purchased, 50 percent of the profit goes to the teen artist, and the other half goes into the AFH program.

Jameel Radcliffe, an AFH apprentice and a senior at West Roxbury High School, is working on an abstract piece that has bees disappearing into a blue sky, with elements of surrealism.

“Music motivates me," he explained. "I want people to realize that bees are disappearing and that we should have respect for them and have a deep appreciation for their existence."

For 'The Greatest Party On Earth' event, caterers from some top Boston restaurants donate food. This year, the food will match the theme: “The caterers are using everything from honeycombs to bee pollen to honey drizzles,” said Alexis Naylor, events manager for AFH. Live entertainment will include aerial performances and two bands. All money raised through ticket sales goes into the program.

2012年4月8日星期日

Lewy’s will give part of art profits to children’s charity

The scene grabbed hold of him, and he had to paint it.

It’s as simple as that.

And it’s really the foundation of Bryan Federico’s artistic career. Well, technically, it’s a part-time career. His profession and full-time job is as a physical therapist.

This is how Danny Lewy learned of Federico’s artwork. Lewy is owner and operator of Lewy Physical Therapy in both Baton Rouge and Denham Springs. Twice a year, he pushes all equipment aside to transform his Baton Rouge facility into an art gallery.

“We do this once in the fall, and once in the spring,” he said. “We started it two years ago.”

It’s simply called the Lewy Physical Therapy Art Show, and the next one will be Thursday, April 12. Work by 15 artists will be featured, most of which will be for sale.

A portion of the sale proceeds benefits a chosen charity. Previous shows have benefited the Never Quit Never Forget foundation for military veterans. This show will benefit the Dreams Come True foundation for children with life threatening diseases.

The event also will include live and silent auctions.

The story behind the show’s beginning is simple enough. Lewy’s wife Shannon was buying art from an artist who told her he was looking for a place to show his work.

“We thought, ‘Let’s try a show here,’” Lewy said.

The idea proved a success as some $10,000 worth of artwork was sold in the first show. So, Lewy scheduled another.

“And it grew,” he said.

Artists in this show include Carol Arabie, Ted Mayeux, Danni Shobe, Adrianna Speer, Maria Boudreaux, Laurie Williamson, Cindy Rome, Keith “The Cartoonman” Douglas, Daniel Strickland and Jack Joubert, among others.

Federico also will be there, as he has been in every Lewy show. He’ll have 10 paintings in the show, including the New Orleans jazz-themed “Papa John Joseph’s Preservation Hall” he had with him on this particular day.

The painting is large, the character of Papa John Joseph is mesmerizing. This makes it that much more difficult to believe that Federico has never had any type of formal art training.

It’s his passion. He sees a scene, and he has to paint it. It was that way when he was living in Asheville, N.C., and it’s the same now that he’s back home in New Orleans, where he lives with his wife and children and works as a physical therapist.

And it was a friend who alerted Lewy about the artwork by this fellow physical therapist. Lewy liked the artwork and invited Federico to be in the show.

Federico had dabbled in art as a kid, but he realized in high school that girls liked athletes better than artists, so he gave up art for baseball. He decided to again try his hand at art after finishing physical therapy school.

“That’s when I was living in Asheville,” he said. “It was an artist’s community, and I wanted to do it. I painted my passion, and I didn’t worry about what other people thought.”

And he’s still not worried.

This could be the same story for Jack Jaubert. He never worried what other people thought about his painting while playing LSU football. It’s something he loved, a passion within him. Jaubert played center for LSU from 1968 to 1971. Bert Jones was one of the quarterbacks for whom he snapped the ball.

And Jaubert is still affiliated with the LSU Athletic Department in his own way, painting the portraits of every LSU football player who has received All America honors. The portraits hang in the athletic department.

The athletic department also has commissioned other paintings, and Jaubert has been hired to paint murals for the New Orleans Police Department and the U.S. Naval Medical Center in Pensacola, Fla. He also was commissioned to create a painting for the Louisiana National Guard which now hangs at Camp Beauregard in Pineville.

Jaubert has been involved in so many projects, too many to mention in one sitting. He works primarily on commission mostly as a portraitist.

He’ll be showing some original works at the Lewy show, but none will be for sale.

“It’ll just be things for people to see,” he said. “People in Baton Rouge are interested in LSU and LSU art. This will be something they like.”

Viewers are sure to like Carol Arabie’s work, too. She brought her painting of New Orleans’ St. Louis Cathedral with her on this day. The painting looks at the cathedral from Chartres Street, gazing back toward the city. It’s an unusual angle; many artists either paint the cathedral from the front or from an angle looking into the French Quarter.

“I was sitting on the balcony at Muriel’s restaurant, and I saw the steeples in the sky,” Arabie said. “I knew I had to paint them.”

Arabie calls herself a “forever student.” She is an artist and instructor who has degrees in English and art education. She earned her art degree after teaching English on the high school level.

“Now I teach art on my own,” Arabie said.

As for her own painting, Arabie likes to explore different genres and techniques.

“I convey my impressions from my various impressions of life,” she said. “For me, it’s more about exploring the different elements of art than it is the subject matter. And I want the viewer to enjoy it.”

This show will mark Arabie’s fourth with Lewy Physical Therapy.

“Each show helps a cause, and I’m excited about this cause,” Arabie said. “This one is special because it helps children.”

And that’s what it’s all about isn’t it? Helping others while experiencing a passion for art.

2012年4月5日星期四

Record-breaking bowl shines at Sotheby's Asia sales

The five days of sales of wine, jewellery, Asian and Chinese art, ceramics and watches raised nearly HK$2.5 billion ($316 million) overall, above estimates but paling against previous sales on tempered demand for certain lots as collectors became more selective.

The sales are a closely watched biannual barometer of emerging market demand in China and Asia for some of the world's most expensive artwork and luxury goods, with voracious Chinese buying turning Hong Kong into a global auction hub.

While the total take outstripped pre-sale forecasts of some HK$1.9 billion, and with 87.9 percent of more than 3,000 lots sold, it fell short of tallies for biannual sales last year as auctioneers increasingly lean toward the top-tier lots at the cost of lesser works amid challenging economic conditions.

One of the highlights came on Wednesday with the sale of the flower-shaped Northern Song ceramic, a pale colored bowl that went for HK$207.86 million ($26.65 million) after a 15 minute bidding war, triple its pre-sale estimate and setting the auction record for Song ceramics.

The previous record holder was a vase that went for HK$67.5 million ($8.6 million) four years ago.

Auctioneers said the shallow bowl, also known as a washer, was made exclusively for a Chinese emperor who could have used it to wash his calligraphy brushes.

"This kiln was in production for only 20, 30 years and made the most refined wares ever produced," said Nicholas Chow, Sotheby's Asia Deputy Chairman and International Head of Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art.

"It's very understated, it's very simple aesthetic ... reflects ideas of humility, modesty that were prevalent at the time with neo-Confucianism."

But results were harsher for broader Chinese ceramics and works of art, which sold only 52.5 percent of its lots.

Even noted collections suffered. The third sale of the Meiyintang Collection, a respected assemblage of Chinese porcelain collected over nearly half a century by Swiss tycoons, saw a quarter of its lots unsold.

Increasingly selective collectors of contemporary artworks vied for the feted masterpieces while a string of recent works by younger artists struggled for the spotlight.

This yielded lukewarm results for 20th Century and Contemporary Asian art sales, which saw 9.3 percent and 25 percent of lots unsold.

Demand for Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asian Paintings was also muted with 20 percent of the lots remaining at a half-full auction room.

Prominent artists fared relatively well.

Zhang Xiaogang's 43.25 inch tall oil on canvas, "Bloodline - Big Family: Family No 2", featuring his signature tinted faces and portraiture reminiscent of family photos from the Cultural Revolution, scooped the record price of HK$52.18 million for the various-owner Contemporary Asian Art sale.

But a later work in his Bloodline series auctioned at below estimates.

"Buyers are becoming more rational, and the market is becoming more selective, with a focus on top quality work," said Evelyn Lin, Sotheby's Head of Contemporary Asian Art.

Appetite for classical artworks remained relatively firm as fine Chinese paintings scooped more than double the pre-sales estimate at some HK$468 million, selling 92.7 percent of lots.

Sotheby's said that, at its jewellery sale, an 8.01 carat emerald-cut blue diamond and diamond ring fetching HK$99.22 million was the second highest price per carat for a blue diamond at auction.

2012年4月4日星期三

Francis Bacon painting, Figure Writing Reflected in Mirror, in Sotheby's sale

A powerful and important Francis Bacon painting showing a contemplative figure writing, which has remained in the same private collection since it was bought in 1977, is to be sold at auction in May.

"It is a very, very serious painting that we've chased for years," Tobias Meyer, Sotheby's worldwide head of contemporary art, told the Guardian ahead of the sale announcement.

The auction house believes Figure Writing Reflected in Mirror is as important as two works by Bacon which set auction records for post-war art in 2007 and 2008. First Study from Innocent X briefly held the record when it sold for $52.6m but was later pipped by a Mark Rothko. Triptych 1976 now holds the record after Roman Abramovich bought it for $86.3m, an astonishing sum that had jaws dropping – not least because it was a time when many were predicting an end to crazy auction prices.

Both the triptych and the new-to-market Bacon were part of a small and now famous 1977 show of his work at the Galerie Claude Bernard in Paris.

Meyer recalled seeing the Bacon up close. "It was quite something," he said. "But great Bacons do that you, hit you over the head a little bit and the body of work that was shown in 1977 does that with great vigour and energy.

"Apart from being important paintings and very convincing, they are also incredibly beautiful because it is probably Bacon at the height of his skills as a painter."

Another painting in the show included Three Figures and Portrait, now owned by Tate and on display in Liverpool.

Figure Writing Reflected in a Mirror shows a male figure in white underwear who bears a distinct resemblance to the artist's lover George Dyer, who, with breathtaking timing, killed himself on the eve of Bacon's important retrospective at the Grand Palais, Paris, in October 1971. The black sweep of hair resembles Bacon, so it can be interpreted as representing both artist and lover.

Dublin-born Bacon was hugely inspired by literature, whether the Oresteia or TS Eliot, and the figure writing, with crumpled paper on the floor, would seem to be a direct manifestation of the artist's obsession with the written word. No other Bacon canvas has someone writing.

The painting remains something of a mystery, as it is difficult to fathom exactly what was going on in Bacon's mind. Unlike other works there are no classical references. "There are no birds swooping down to eat the liver of Prometheus," said Meyer.

Sotheby's has estimated the painting at $30m-$40m (up to 25m) and Meyer said it might be easier to sell because it is a single panel and not as violent as the Triptych.

Figure Writing Reflected in Mirror was clearly considered a star at the 1977 exhibition because it was used as the catalogue cover and the anonymous collector who bought it had been given first choice of the works by Claude Bernard.

Bacon who died in 1992, aged 82, was one of the greatest and most influential 20th century artists. The critic Robert Hughes, writing in the Guardian in 2008, described him as "England's most celebrated recently dead painter. He is probably the best-known one, and possibly the most popular, since JMW Turner." His distorted paintings of tormented figures were not to everyone's tastes. Margaret Thatcher once called him "that awful artist who paints those horrible pictures."