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ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | ART EXPLOITED AS PROPAGANDA AFTER OUTBREAK OF Art exploited as propaganda after outbreak of bubonic plague in Jaffa in 1799. By Andrea Kirsh May 3, 2020. In the second post in a new series, "Art Following Epidemics," Andrea Kirsh uses her knowledge of Art History to explore a propaganda painting commissioned by Napoleon during the bubonic plague. sponsored. ARTBLOG | NATALIE SANDSTROM Natalie Sandstrom is a writer and educator based in West Philly. As the Program Coordinator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, UPenn, she provides planning and support on public programs, community outreach, and audience development. Natalie has also championed ASL interpretation and captioning, website updates, and other accessibility-focused initiatives at the ICA. ARTBLOG | DAVID HUGGINS David Huggins is a 68 year old painter who lives in Hoboken, NJ. He studied at the Art Students League in New York City, and he’s been divorced for a little under ten years, with a 27 year old son who lives in Thailand. David concentrates most of his talent on the creation of a series of testimonial paintings about his life-longexperience as
ARTBLOG | PICASSO, MUSIC AND NEGATIVE SPACE; THE GUITARS Pablo Picasso “Guitar” (1912) paperboard, paper, string, wire 25 3/4 x 13 x 7 1/2" MoMA * Negative space is an oxymoronic term, but the one commonly employed in all art foundation courses and much criticism.It refers to the space around and between forms — the intervals, rather than the space occupied by matter — when that space is activated as a compositional element. ARTBLOG | DVD REVIEW \'Fold, Crumple, Crush\' is a quiet, charming documentary directed by Susan Vogel examining the life and work of Ghanaian-Nigerian artist El Anatsui. The film begins at the 2007 Venice Biennial where Anatsui is overseeing the construction of an exhibit of his work. Vogel then follows Anatsui to his home in Nigeria, gaining insights into the artist and his art from his colleagues at the ARTBLOG | TRENTON AVENUE ARTS FESTIVAL Fine Art made its way into the Kensington community last Saturday at the Trenton Avenue Arts Fest. The weather was indecisive, the hand-crafted goods and local music were abundant, and two Kensington-area Artist Communities were on the scene: Little Berlin and FLUXspace. Both groups put together installations for the festival, and found their own unique way to engage the community ARTBLOG | AN ONGOING CONVERSATION ABOUT ART AND COMMUNITYFEATURESREVIEWSNEWSCOMMUNITYREADER ADVISORVIDEO Features Pandemic conversation, Imani Roach and Janyce Denise Glasper talk about art, life, flowers By Janyce Denise Glasper and Imani Roach May 28, 2021. Navigate the Scene. Artblog Radio. Artblog previews Philadelphia Latino Film Fest’s 10th year festival, a conversation. ‘A Phonebook’ centers place and people in award-winning oral ARTBLOG | PAUL STRAND, “BLIND WOMAN” (1916) Paul Strand, “Blind Woman” (1916). From a semiotic point of view, the sign reads like a label that reduces her identity to the visual perception of those who have the power to observe her. In this sense, the sign is as much an accusation as a proclamation, suggesting that the voyeur who “sees” her is blind to her humanity. ARTBLOG | BLACK ABSTRACT ART TAKES CENTER STAGE IN Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs reports back from ‘Generations: A History of Black Abstract Art’ at the Baltimore Museum of Art. The exhibition is sourced largely from the collection of Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida, who have been collecting the work for thepast 20 years.
ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | ART EXPLOITED AS PROPAGANDA AFTER OUTBREAK OF Art exploited as propaganda after outbreak of bubonic plague in Jaffa in 1799. By Andrea Kirsh May 3, 2020. In the second post in a new series, "Art Following Epidemics," Andrea Kirsh uses her knowledge of Art History to explore a propaganda painting commissioned by Napoleon during the bubonic plague. sponsored. ARTBLOG | NATALIE SANDSTROM Natalie Sandstrom is a writer and educator based in West Philly. As the Program Coordinator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, UPenn, she provides planning and support on public programs, community outreach, and audience development. Natalie has also championed ASL interpretation and captioning, website updates, and other accessibility-focused initiatives at the ICA. ARTBLOG | DAVID HUGGINS David Huggins is a 68 year old painter who lives in Hoboken, NJ. He studied at the Art Students League in New York City, and he’s been divorced for a little under ten years, with a 27 year old son who lives in Thailand. David concentrates most of his talent on the creation of a series of testimonial paintings about his life-longexperience as
ARTBLOG | PICASSO, MUSIC AND NEGATIVE SPACE; THE GUITARS Pablo Picasso “Guitar” (1912) paperboard, paper, string, wire 25 3/4 x 13 x 7 1/2" MoMA * Negative space is an oxymoronic term, but the one commonly employed in all art foundation courses and much criticism.It refers to the space around and between forms — the intervals, rather than the space occupied by matter — when that space is activated as a compositional element. ARTBLOG | DVD REVIEW \'Fold, Crumple, Crush\' is a quiet, charming documentary directed by Susan Vogel examining the life and work of Ghanaian-Nigerian artist El Anatsui. The film begins at the 2007 Venice Biennial where Anatsui is overseeing the construction of an exhibit of his work. Vogel then follows Anatsui to his home in Nigeria, gaining insights into the artist and his art from his colleagues at the ARTBLOG | TRENTON AVENUE ARTS FESTIVAL Fine Art made its way into the Kensington community last Saturday at the Trenton Avenue Arts Fest. The weather was indecisive, the hand-crafted goods and local music were abundant, and two Kensington-area Artist Communities were on the scene: Little Berlin and FLUXspace. Both groups put together installations for the festival, and found their own unique way to engage the community ARTBLOG | SONYA CLARK DISENTANGLES AMERICA’S RACIST Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs visits \'Sonya Clark: Tatter, Bristle, and Mend,\' the first survey of Sonya\'a 25-year career. The exhibition (which Susan calls \'life changing\') examines America\'s history of racial violence and oppression. It is currently on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. throughJune 27, 2021.
ARTBLOG | SENGA NENGUDI’S ‘TOPOLOGIES’ AT THE PHILADELPHIA Andrea Kirsh follows up with Part 2 of her review of \'Senga Nengudi: Topologies,\' which is currently on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through July 25, 2021. Andrea believes the show is a rare museum exhibition that appeals to people of all ages and interests. If you missed Part 1, you can find it in the Artblog post! ARTBLOG | GRAND BALLROOM OF DOOM 1 day ago · Grand Ballroom of Doom Restore funding to the Philadelphia Cultural Fund and help the City recover, Write your Council Members Today Incarcerated creatives voice urgent truths in ‘128-G: Art and Writing from a California State Prison’ The 3:00 Book Sonya Clark disentangles America’s racist history at the National Museum of Women in the Arts ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | WOMEN FIGURATIVE PAINTERS IN ‘RISING VOICES’ AT 1 day ago · Aneka Ingold, “Postpartum” Mixed media on paper, 72 x 48 inches, 2018. Image courtesy of RJD Gallery, Bridgehampton, NY. The gallery at Studio Incamminati recently hosted an exhibition Rising Voices, the work of the ten finalists for the inaugural 2019 Bennett Prize.The Prize, $50,000 to be awarded biennially to one woman painter, was established in 2018 by San Antonio, TX realist art ARTBLOG | PHILADELPHIA ARTISTS RESPOND TO RACISM IN Four Philadelphia artists appear in a new book \'We Are the Story: A Visual Response to Racism\' by Carolyn L. Mazloomi. The book documents the 100 quilts included in group and solo exhibitions curated by the author, currently on view in Minneapolis, MN. ARTBLOG | “TEARS OF HONOR” RECOUNTS INTERNMENT AND HEROISM Artblog contributor Michael Lieberman reviews newly published book "Tears of Honor" by James A. Ardaiz, former prosecutor and judge in California. Michael says the book-- a historical fiction about an entirely Japanese American division of the U.S. army during World War II-- is artfully authored, but detailed to a fault. sponsored. ARTBLOG | THE FORGOTTEN WOMEN ARTISTS OF VIENNA 1900 Julie M. Johnson. The Memory Factory; The Forgotten Women Artists of Vienna 1900 (West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2012) ISBN 978-1-55753-613-6 It\'s remarkable that recent scholarship can force significant reconsideration of an artistic culture as well-studied as that of Vienna around 1900, but that\'s what Julie M. Johnson\'s workhas done.
ARTBLOG | VISITING KENTUCK KNOB, THE OTHER FRANK LLOYD Mandy Palasik visits Kentuck Knob, the lesser known residential work by Frank Lloyd Wright, designed for the Hagans family (yes, as in the ice cream!) Read this review to learn by Mandy thinks the surrounding nature is just as enthralling as the architecture itself. sponsored. Deep in the wooded hills of southwestern Pennsylvania resides ARTBLOG | ALEJANDRO RAMIREZ Artblog contributor Janyce Denise Glasper reviews the book “128-G” — a collection of photos, paintings, letters, writings and more, from incarcerated men in ARTBLOG | AN ONGOING CONVERSATION ABOUT ART AND COMMUNITYFEATURESREVIEWSNEWSCOMMUNITYREADER ADVISORVIDEO Features Pandemic conversation, Imani Roach and Janyce Denise Glasper talk about art, life, flowers By Janyce Denise Glasper and Imani Roach May 28, 2021. Navigate the Scene. Artblog Radio. Artblog previews Philadelphia Latino Film Fest’s 10th year festival, a conversation. ‘A Phonebook’ centers place and people in award-winning oral ARTBLOG | PAUL STRAND, “BLIND WOMAN” (1916)PAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY IMAGESPAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY STYLEPAUL STRAND PHOTOSPAUL STRANDWEBSITE
Paul Strand, “Blind Woman” (1916). From a semiotic point of view, the sign reads like a label that reduces her identity to the visual perception of those who have the power to observe her. In this sense, the sign is as much an accusation as a proclamation, suggesting that the voyeur who “sees” her is blind to her humanity. ARTBLOG | BLACK ABSTRACT ART TAKES CENTER STAGE IN Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs reports back from ‘Generations: A History of Black Abstract Art’ at the Baltimore Museum of Art. The exhibition is sourced largely from the collection of Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida, who have been collecting the work for thepast 20 years.
ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | ART EXPLOITED AS PROPAGANDA AFTER OUTBREAK OFANIMAL FARM NAPOLEON PROPAGANDANAPOLEON BONAPARTE PROPAGANDA Art exploited as propaganda after outbreak of bubonic plague in Jaffa in 1799. By Andrea Kirsh May 3, 2020. In the second post in a new series, "Art Following Epidemics," Andrea Kirsh uses her knowledge of Art History to explore a propaganda painting commissioned by Napoleon during the bubonic plague. sponsored. ARTBLOG | NATALIE SANDSTROM Natalie Sandstrom is a writer and educator based in West Philly. As the Program Coordinator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, UPenn, she provides planning and support on public programs, community outreach, and audience development. Natalie has also championed ASL interpretation and captioning, website updates, and other accessibility-focused initiatives at the ICA. ARTBLOG | DAVID HUGGINS David Huggins is a 68 year old painter who lives in Hoboken, NJ. He studied at the Art Students League in New York City, and he’s been divorced for a little under ten years, with a 27 year old son who lives in Thailand. David concentrates most of his talent on the creation of a series of testimonial paintings about his life-longexperience as
ARTBLOG | PICASSO, MUSIC AND NEGATIVE SPACE; THE GUITARS Pablo Picasso “Guitar” (1912) paperboard, paper, string, wire 25 3/4 x 13 x 7 1/2" MoMA * Negative space is an oxymoronic term, but the one commonly employed in all art foundation courses and much criticism.It refers to the space around and between forms — the intervals, rather than the space occupied by matter — when that space is activated as a compositional element. ARTBLOG | DVD REVIEW \'Fold, Crumple, Crush\' is a quiet, charming documentary directed by Susan Vogel examining the life and work of Ghanaian-Nigerian artist El Anatsui. The film begins at the 2007 Venice Biennial where Anatsui is overseeing the construction of an exhibit of his work. Vogel then follows Anatsui to his home in Nigeria, gaining insights into the artist and his art from his colleagues at the ARTBLOG | TRENTON AVENUE ARTS FESTIVAL Fine Art made its way into the Kensington community last Saturday at the Trenton Avenue Arts Fest. The weather was indecisive, the hand-crafted goods and local music were abundant, and two Kensington-area Artist Communities were on the scene: Little Berlin and FLUXspace. Both groups put together installations for the festival, and found their own unique way to engage the community ARTBLOG | AN ONGOING CONVERSATION ABOUT ART AND COMMUNITYFEATURESREVIEWSNEWSCOMMUNITYREADER ADVISORVIDEO Features Pandemic conversation, Imani Roach and Janyce Denise Glasper talk about art, life, flowers By Janyce Denise Glasper and Imani Roach May 28, 2021. Navigate the Scene. Artblog Radio. Artblog previews Philadelphia Latino Film Fest’s 10th year festival, a conversation. ‘A Phonebook’ centers place and people in award-winning oral ARTBLOG | PAUL STRAND, “BLIND WOMAN” (1916)PAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY IMAGESPAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY STYLEPAUL STRAND PHOTOSPAUL STRANDWEBSITE
Paul Strand, “Blind Woman” (1916). From a semiotic point of view, the sign reads like a label that reduces her identity to the visual perception of those who have the power to observe her. In this sense, the sign is as much an accusation as a proclamation, suggesting that the voyeur who “sees” her is blind to her humanity. ARTBLOG | BLACK ABSTRACT ART TAKES CENTER STAGE IN Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs reports back from ‘Generations: A History of Black Abstract Art’ at the Baltimore Museum of Art. The exhibition is sourced largely from the collection of Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida, who have been collecting the work for thepast 20 years.
ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | ART EXPLOITED AS PROPAGANDA AFTER OUTBREAK OFANIMAL FARM NAPOLEON PROPAGANDANAPOLEON BONAPARTE PROPAGANDA Art exploited as propaganda after outbreak of bubonic plague in Jaffa in 1799. By Andrea Kirsh May 3, 2020. In the second post in a new series, "Art Following Epidemics," Andrea Kirsh uses her knowledge of Art History to explore a propaganda painting commissioned by Napoleon during the bubonic plague. sponsored. ARTBLOG | NATALIE SANDSTROM Natalie Sandstrom is a writer and educator based in West Philly. As the Program Coordinator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, UPenn, she provides planning and support on public programs, community outreach, and audience development. Natalie has also championed ASL interpretation and captioning, website updates, and other accessibility-focused initiatives at the ICA. ARTBLOG | DAVID HUGGINS David Huggins is a 68 year old painter who lives in Hoboken, NJ. He studied at the Art Students League in New York City, and he’s been divorced for a little under ten years, with a 27 year old son who lives in Thailand. David concentrates most of his talent on the creation of a series of testimonial paintings about his life-longexperience as
ARTBLOG | PICASSO, MUSIC AND NEGATIVE SPACE; THE GUITARS Pablo Picasso “Guitar” (1912) paperboard, paper, string, wire 25 3/4 x 13 x 7 1/2" MoMA * Negative space is an oxymoronic term, but the one commonly employed in all art foundation courses and much criticism.It refers to the space around and between forms — the intervals, rather than the space occupied by matter — when that space is activated as a compositional element. ARTBLOG | DVD REVIEW \'Fold, Crumple, Crush\' is a quiet, charming documentary directed by Susan Vogel examining the life and work of Ghanaian-Nigerian artist El Anatsui. The film begins at the 2007 Venice Biennial where Anatsui is overseeing the construction of an exhibit of his work. Vogel then follows Anatsui to his home in Nigeria, gaining insights into the artist and his art from his colleagues at the ARTBLOG | TRENTON AVENUE ARTS FESTIVAL Fine Art made its way into the Kensington community last Saturday at the Trenton Avenue Arts Fest. The weather was indecisive, the hand-crafted goods and local music were abundant, and two Kensington-area Artist Communities were on the scene: Little Berlin and FLUXspace. Both groups put together installations for the festival, and found their own unique way to engage the community ARTBLOG | SONYA CLARK DISENTANGLES AMERICA’S RACIST Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs visits \'Sonya Clark: Tatter, Bristle, and Mend,\' the first survey of Sonya\'a 25-year career. The exhibition (which Susan calls \'life changing\') examines America\'s history of racial violence and oppression. It is currently on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. throughJune 27, 2021.
ARTBLOG | SENGA NENGUDI’S ‘TOPOLOGIES’ AT THE PHILADELPHIA Andrea Kirsh follows up with Part 2 of her review of \'Senga Nengudi: Topologies,\' which is currently on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through July 25, 2021. Andrea believes the show is a rare museum exhibition that appeals to people of all ages and interests. If you missed Part 1, you can find it in the Artblog post! ARTBLOG | RESTORE FUNDING TO THE PHILADELPHIA CULTURAL City Hall, Philadelphia, pictured from North Broad Street. Photo courtesy M. Edlow, Visit Philadelphia. Why is The Philadelphia Cultural Fund crucial to Philadelphia’s reopening and recovery from the pandemic? The PCF is an independent non-profit fund created 30 years ago to combat rampant Philadelphia cronyism in arts funding. ARTBLOG | GRAND BALLROOM OF DOOM 1 day ago · Grand Ballroom of Doom Restore funding to the Philadelphia Cultural Fund and help the City recover, Write your Council Members Today Incarcerated creatives voice urgent truths in ‘128-G: Art and Writing from a California State Prison’ The 3:00 Book Sonya Clark disentangles America’s racist history at the National Museum of Women in the Arts ARTBLOG | WOMEN FIGURATIVE PAINTERS IN ‘RISING VOICES’ AT 1 day ago · Aneka Ingold, “Postpartum” Mixed media on paper, 72 x 48 inches, 2018. Image courtesy of RJD Gallery, Bridgehampton, NY. The gallery at Studio Incamminati recently hosted an exhibition Rising Voices, the work of the ten finalists for the inaugural 2019 Bennett Prize.The Prize, $50,000 to be awarded biennially to one woman painter, was established in 2018 by San Antonio, TX realist art ARTBLOG | “TEARS OF HONOR” RECOUNTS INTERNMENT AND HEROISM Artblog contributor Michael Lieberman reviews newly published book "Tears of Honor" by James A. Ardaiz, former prosecutor and judge in California. Michael says the book-- a historical fiction about an entirely Japanese American division of the U.S. army during World War II-- is artfully authored, but detailed to a fault. sponsored. ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | PHILADELPHIA ARTISTS RESPOND TO RACISM IN Four Philadelphia artists appear in a new book \'We Are the Story: A Visual Response to Racism\' by Carolyn L. Mazloomi. The book documents the 100 quilts included in group and solo exhibitions curated by the author, currently on view in Minneapolis, MN. GROUPS TRY TO REBOUND FROM THE PANDEMIC OTHER CITIES ARE 6/4/2021 Philadelphia arts groups need more public-sector funding to rebound, advocates say https://www.inquirer.com/arts/philadelphia-arts-budget-covid-19-recovery ARTBLOG | JACQUES LOUIS DAVID Artblog contributor Janyce Denise Glasper reviews the book “128-G” — a collection of photos, paintings, letters, writings and more, from incarcerated men in ARTBLOG | AN ONGOING CONVERSATION ABOUT ART AND COMMUNITYFEATURESREVIEWSNEWSCOMMUNITYREADER ADVISORVIDEO Features Pandemic conversation, Imani Roach and Janyce Denise Glasper talk about art, life, flowers By Janyce Denise Glasper and Imani Roach May 28, 2021. Navigate the Scene. Artblog Radio. Artblog previews Philadelphia Latino Film Fest’s 10th year festival, a conversation. ‘A Phonebook’ centers place and people in award-winning oral ARTBLOG | PAUL STRAND, “BLIND WOMAN” (1916)PAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY IMAGESPAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY STYLEPAUL STRAND PHOTOSPAUL STRANDWEBSITE
Paul Strand, “Blind Woman” (1916). From a semiotic point of view, the sign reads like a label that reduces her identity to the visual perception of those who have the power to observe her. In this sense, the sign is as much an accusation as a proclamation, suggesting that the voyeur who “sees” her is blind to her humanity. ARTBLOG | BLACK ABSTRACT ART TAKES CENTER STAGE IN Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs reports back from ‘Generations: A History of Black Abstract Art’ at the Baltimore Museum of Art. The exhibition is sourced largely from the collection of Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida, who have been collecting the work for thepast 20 years.
ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | ART EXPLOITED AS PROPAGANDA AFTER OUTBREAK OFANIMAL FARM NAPOLEON PROPAGANDANAPOLEON BONAPARTE PROPAGANDA Art exploited as propaganda after outbreak of bubonic plague in Jaffa in 1799. By Andrea Kirsh May 3, 2020. In the second post in a new series, "Art Following Epidemics," Andrea Kirsh uses her knowledge of Art History to explore a propaganda painting commissioned by Napoleon during the bubonic plague. sponsored. ARTBLOG | NATALIE SANDSTROM Natalie Sandstrom is a writer and educator based in West Philly. As the Program Coordinator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, UPenn, she provides planning and support on public programs, community outreach, and audience development. Natalie has also championed ASL interpretation and captioning, website updates, and other accessibility-focused initiatives at the ICA. ARTBLOG | DAVID HUGGINS David Huggins is a 68 year old painter who lives in Hoboken, NJ. He studied at the Art Students League in New York City, and he’s been divorced for a little under ten years, with a 27 year old son who lives in Thailand. David concentrates most of his talent on the creation of a series of testimonial paintings about his life-longexperience as
ARTBLOG | PICASSO, MUSIC AND NEGATIVE SPACE; THE GUITARS Pablo Picasso “Guitar” (1912) paperboard, paper, string, wire 25 3/4 x 13 x 7 1/2" MoMA * Negative space is an oxymoronic term, but the one commonly employed in all art foundation courses and much criticism.It refers to the space around and between forms — the intervals, rather than the space occupied by matter — when that space is activated as a compositional element. ARTBLOG | DVD REVIEW \'Fold, Crumple, Crush\' is a quiet, charming documentary directed by Susan Vogel examining the life and work of Ghanaian-Nigerian artist El Anatsui. The film begins at the 2007 Venice Biennial where Anatsui is overseeing the construction of an exhibit of his work. Vogel then follows Anatsui to his home in Nigeria, gaining insights into the artist and his art from his colleagues at the ARTBLOG | TRENTON AVENUE ARTS FESTIVAL Fine Art made its way into the Kensington community last Saturday at the Trenton Avenue Arts Fest. The weather was indecisive, the hand-crafted goods and local music were abundant, and two Kensington-area Artist Communities were on the scene: Little Berlin and FLUXspace. Both groups put together installations for the festival, and found their own unique way to engage the community ARTBLOG | AN ONGOING CONVERSATION ABOUT ART AND COMMUNITYFEATURESREVIEWSNEWSCOMMUNITYREADER ADVISORVIDEO Features Pandemic conversation, Imani Roach and Janyce Denise Glasper talk about art, life, flowers By Janyce Denise Glasper and Imani Roach May 28, 2021. Navigate the Scene. Artblog Radio. Artblog previews Philadelphia Latino Film Fest’s 10th year festival, a conversation. ‘A Phonebook’ centers place and people in award-winning oral ARTBLOG | PAUL STRAND, “BLIND WOMAN” (1916)PAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY IMAGESPAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY STYLEPAUL STRAND PHOTOSPAUL STRANDWEBSITE
Paul Strand, “Blind Woman” (1916). From a semiotic point of view, the sign reads like a label that reduces her identity to the visual perception of those who have the power to observe her. In this sense, the sign is as much an accusation as a proclamation, suggesting that the voyeur who “sees” her is blind to her humanity. ARTBLOG | BLACK ABSTRACT ART TAKES CENTER STAGE IN Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs reports back from ‘Generations: A History of Black Abstract Art’ at the Baltimore Museum of Art. The exhibition is sourced largely from the collection of Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida, who have been collecting the work for thepast 20 years.
ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | ART EXPLOITED AS PROPAGANDA AFTER OUTBREAK OFANIMAL FARM NAPOLEON PROPAGANDANAPOLEON BONAPARTE PROPAGANDA Art exploited as propaganda after outbreak of bubonic plague in Jaffa in 1799. By Andrea Kirsh May 3, 2020. In the second post in a new series, "Art Following Epidemics," Andrea Kirsh uses her knowledge of Art History to explore a propaganda painting commissioned by Napoleon during the bubonic plague. sponsored. ARTBLOG | NATALIE SANDSTROM Natalie Sandstrom is a writer and educator based in West Philly. As the Program Coordinator at the Institute of Contemporary Art, UPenn, she provides planning and support on public programs, community outreach, and audience development. Natalie has also championed ASL interpretation and captioning, website updates, and other accessibility-focused initiatives at the ICA. ARTBLOG | DAVID HUGGINS David Huggins is a 68 year old painter who lives in Hoboken, NJ. He studied at the Art Students League in New York City, and he’s been divorced for a little under ten years, with a 27 year old son who lives in Thailand. David concentrates most of his talent on the creation of a series of testimonial paintings about his life-longexperience as
ARTBLOG | PICASSO, MUSIC AND NEGATIVE SPACE; THE GUITARS Pablo Picasso “Guitar” (1912) paperboard, paper, string, wire 25 3/4 x 13 x 7 1/2" MoMA * Negative space is an oxymoronic term, but the one commonly employed in all art foundation courses and much criticism.It refers to the space around and between forms — the intervals, rather than the space occupied by matter — when that space is activated as a compositional element. ARTBLOG | DVD REVIEW \'Fold, Crumple, Crush\' is a quiet, charming documentary directed by Susan Vogel examining the life and work of Ghanaian-Nigerian artist El Anatsui. The film begins at the 2007 Venice Biennial where Anatsui is overseeing the construction of an exhibit of his work. Vogel then follows Anatsui to his home in Nigeria, gaining insights into the artist and his art from his colleagues at the ARTBLOG | TRENTON AVENUE ARTS FESTIVAL Fine Art made its way into the Kensington community last Saturday at the Trenton Avenue Arts Fest. The weather was indecisive, the hand-crafted goods and local music were abundant, and two Kensington-area Artist Communities were on the scene: Little Berlin and FLUXspace. Both groups put together installations for the festival, and found their own unique way to engage the community ARTBLOG | SONYA CLARK DISENTANGLES AMERICA’S RACIST Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs visits \'Sonya Clark: Tatter, Bristle, and Mend,\' the first survey of Sonya\'a 25-year career. The exhibition (which Susan calls \'life changing\') examines America\'s history of racial violence and oppression. It is currently on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. throughJune 27, 2021.
ARTBLOG | SENGA NENGUDI’S ‘TOPOLOGIES’ AT THE PHILADELPHIA Andrea Kirsh follows up with Part 2 of her review of \'Senga Nengudi: Topologies,\' which is currently on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through July 25, 2021. Andrea believes the show is a rare museum exhibition that appeals to people of all ages and interests. If you missed Part 1, you can find it in the Artblog post! ARTBLOG | RESTORE FUNDING TO THE PHILADELPHIA CULTURAL City Hall, Philadelphia, pictured from North Broad Street. Photo courtesy M. Edlow, Visit Philadelphia. Why is The Philadelphia Cultural Fund crucial to Philadelphia’s reopening and recovery from the pandemic? The PCF is an independent non-profit fund created 30 years ago to combat rampant Philadelphia cronyism in arts funding. ARTBLOG | GRAND BALLROOM OF DOOM 20 hours ago · Grand Ballroom of Doom Restore funding to the Philadelphia Cultural Fund and help the City recover, Write your Council Members Today Incarcerated creatives voice urgent truths in ‘128-G: Art and Writing from a California State Prison’ The 3:00 Book Sonya Clark disentangles America’s racist history at the National Museum of Women in the Arts ARTBLOG | WOMEN FIGURATIVE PAINTERS IN ‘RISING VOICES’ AT 19 hours ago · Aneka Ingold, “Postpartum” Mixed media on paper, 72 x 48 inches, 2018. Image courtesy of RJD Gallery, Bridgehampton, NY. The gallery at Studio Incamminati recently hosted an exhibition Rising Voices, the work of the ten finalists for the inaugural 2019 Bennett Prize.The Prize, $50,000 to be awarded biennially to one woman painter, was established in 2018 by San Antonio, TX realist art ARTBLOG | “TEARS OF HONOR” RECOUNTS INTERNMENT AND HEROISM Artblog contributor Michael Lieberman reviews newly published book "Tears of Honor" by James A. Ardaiz, former prosecutor and judge in California. Michael says the book-- a historical fiction about an entirely Japanese American division of the U.S. army during World War II-- is artfully authored, but detailed to a fault. sponsored. ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | PHILADELPHIA ARTISTS RESPOND TO RACISM IN Four Philadelphia artists appear in a new book \'We Are the Story: A Visual Response to Racism\' by Carolyn L. Mazloomi. The book documents the 100 quilts included in group and solo exhibitions curated by the author, currently on view in Minneapolis, MN. GROUPS TRY TO REBOUND FROM THE PANDEMIC OTHER CITIES ARE 6/4/2021 Philadelphia arts groups need more public-sector funding to rebound, advocates say https://www.inquirer.com/arts/philadelphia-arts-budget-covid-19-recovery ARTBLOG | JACQUES LOUIS DAVID Artblog contributor Janyce Denise Glasper reviews the book “128-G” — a collection of photos, paintings, letters, writings and more, from incarcerated men in ARTBLOG | AN ONGOING CONVERSATION ABOUT ART AND COMMUNITYFEATURESREVIEWSNEWSCOMMUNITYREADER ADVISORVIDEO An Ongoing Conversation about Art and Community in Philadelphia andthe World
ARTBLOG | BLACK ABSTRACT ART TAKES CENTER STAGE IN Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs reports back from ‘Generations: A History of Black Abstract Art’ at the Baltimore Museum of Art. The exhibition is sourced largely from the collection of Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida, who have been collecting the work for thepast 20 years.
ARTBLOG | PAUL STRAND, “BLIND WOMAN” (1916)PAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY IMAGESPAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY STYLEPAUL STRAND PHOTOSPAUL STRANDWEBSITE
If it weren’t for the hint of the half-closed eye and the shout of the sign emblazoned on her breast, you’d hardly get it. Her eyes dart to the left, as if her peripheral vision has picked up movement. For a second, you wonder what she’s looking at, then realize that your experience of trompe l’oeil is only one of the many ironies this iconic photograph poses. ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | “TEARS OF HONOR” RECOUNTS INTERNMENT AND HEROISM Tears of Honor by James A. Ardaiz. Pace Press, an imprint of Linden Publishing, February 16, 2021. ISBN 978-1-61035-900-9. FICTION / Historical / World War II ARTBLOG | DAVID HUGGINS by Corey Armpriester (ED. NOTE: THIS POST BY COREY ARMPRIESTER WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED AUG. 14, 2011. Huggins has since been written about on Vice, and his story has been made into a documentary called Love & Saucers.). David Huggins is ARTBLOG | PICASSO, MUSIC AND NEGATIVE SPACE; THE GUITARS Pablo Picasso “Guitar” (1912) paperboard, paper, string, wire 25 3/4 x 13 x 7 1/2" MoMA * Negative space is an oxymoronic term, but the one commonly employed in all art foundation courses and much criticism.It refers to the space around and between forms — the intervals, rather than the space occupied by matter — when that space is activated as a compositional element. ARTBLOG | DVD REVIEW \'Fold, Crumple, Crush\' is a quiet, charming documentary directed by Susan Vogel examining the life and work of Ghanaian-Nigerian artist El Anatsui. The film begins at the 2007 Venice Biennial where Anatsui is overseeing the construction of an exhibit of his work. Vogel then follows Anatsui to his home in Nigeria, gaining insights into the artist and his art from his colleagues at the ARTBLOG | TRENTON AVENUE ARTS FESTIVAL Fine Art made its way into the Kensington community last Saturday at the Trenton Avenue Arts Fest. The weather was indecisive, the hand-crafted goods and local music were abundant, and two Kensington-area Artist Communities were on the scene: Little Berlin and FLUXspace. Both groups put together installations for the festival, and found their own unique way to engage the community ARTBLOG | WEEKLY UPDATE Pepón Osorio, Badge of Honor, 1995, son. Shown in Philadelphia in 2007. The room is a fiction created by Pepón. While it may have some of the trappings of a boy’s bedroom it is so over-the-top crazy-filled with bric-a-brac and posters and stuff that it’s ahallucination.
ARTBLOG | AN ONGOING CONVERSATION ABOUT ART AND COMMUNITYFEATURESREVIEWSNEWSCOMMUNITYREADER ADVISORVIDEO An Ongoing Conversation about Art and Community in Philadelphia andthe World
ARTBLOG | BLACK ABSTRACT ART TAKES CENTER STAGE IN Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs reports back from ‘Generations: A History of Black Abstract Art’ at the Baltimore Museum of Art. The exhibition is sourced largely from the collection of Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida, who have been collecting the work for thepast 20 years.
ARTBLOG | PAUL STRAND, “BLIND WOMAN” (1916)PAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY IMAGESPAUL STRAND PHOTOGRAPHY STYLEPAUL STRAND PHOTOSPAUL STRANDWEBSITE
If it weren’t for the hint of the half-closed eye and the shout of the sign emblazoned on her breast, you’d hardly get it. Her eyes dart to the left, as if her peripheral vision has picked up movement. For a second, you wonder what she’s looking at, then realize that your experience of trompe l’oeil is only one of the many ironies this iconic photograph poses. ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | “TEARS OF HONOR” RECOUNTS INTERNMENT AND HEROISM Tears of Honor by James A. Ardaiz. Pace Press, an imprint of Linden Publishing, February 16, 2021. ISBN 978-1-61035-900-9. FICTION / Historical / World War II ARTBLOG | DAVID HUGGINS by Corey Armpriester (ED. NOTE: THIS POST BY COREY ARMPRIESTER WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED AUG. 14, 2011. Huggins has since been written about on Vice, and his story has been made into a documentary called Love & Saucers.). David Huggins is ARTBLOG | PICASSO, MUSIC AND NEGATIVE SPACE; THE GUITARS Pablo Picasso “Guitar” (1912) paperboard, paper, string, wire 25 3/4 x 13 x 7 1/2" MoMA * Negative space is an oxymoronic term, but the one commonly employed in all art foundation courses and much criticism.It refers to the space around and between forms — the intervals, rather than the space occupied by matter — when that space is activated as a compositional element. ARTBLOG | DVD REVIEW \'Fold, Crumple, Crush\' is a quiet, charming documentary directed by Susan Vogel examining the life and work of Ghanaian-Nigerian artist El Anatsui. The film begins at the 2007 Venice Biennial where Anatsui is overseeing the construction of an exhibit of his work. Vogel then follows Anatsui to his home in Nigeria, gaining insights into the artist and his art from his colleagues at the ARTBLOG | TRENTON AVENUE ARTS FESTIVAL Fine Art made its way into the Kensington community last Saturday at the Trenton Avenue Arts Fest. The weather was indecisive, the hand-crafted goods and local music were abundant, and two Kensington-area Artist Communities were on the scene: Little Berlin and FLUXspace. Both groups put together installations for the festival, and found their own unique way to engage the community ARTBLOG | WEEKLY UPDATE Pepón Osorio, Badge of Honor, 1995, son. Shown in Philadelphia in 2007. The room is a fiction created by Pepón. While it may have some of the trappings of a boy’s bedroom it is so over-the-top crazy-filled with bric-a-brac and posters and stuff that it’s ahallucination.
ARTBLOG | SONYA CLARK DISENTANGLES AMERICA’S RACIST Artblog contributor Susan Isaacs visits \'Sonya Clark: Tatter, Bristle, and Mend,\' the first survey of Sonya\'a 25-year career. The exhibition (which Susan calls \'life changing\') examines America\'s history of racial violence and oppression. It is currently on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. throughJune 27, 2021.
ARTBLOG | SENGA NENGUDI’S ‘TOPOLOGIES’ AT THE PHILADELPHIA Andrea Kirsh follows up with Part 2 of her review of \'Senga Nengudi: Topologies,\' which is currently on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through July 25, 2021. Andrea believes the show is a rare museum exhibition that appeals to people of all ages and interests. If you missed Part 1, you can find it in the Artblog post! ARTBLOG | THE 3:00 BOOK Incarcerated creatives voice urgent truths in ‘128-G: Art and Writing from a California State Prison’ The 3:00 Book Sonya Clark disentangles America’s racist history at the National Museum of Women in the Arts Senga Nengudi’s ‘Topologies’ at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Part 2 Pandemic conversation, Imani Roach and Janyce Denise Glasper talk about art, life, flowers ARTBLOG | INCARCERATED CREATIVES VOICE URGENT TRUTHS IN Artblog contributor Janyce Denise Glasper reviews the book \'128-G\' -- a collection of photos, paintings, letters, writings and more, from incarcerated men in Calipatria State Prison, Southern California. Janyce says the book is poignant, inspiring, and articulates urgent truths about structural inequality. Book purchase details in thispost!
ARTBLOG | RESTORE FUNDING TO THE PHILADELPHIA CULTURAL City Hall, Philadelphia, pictured from North Broad Street. Photo courtesy M. Edlow, Visit Philadelphia. Why is The Philadelphia Cultural Fund crucial to Philadelphia’s reopening and recovery from the pandemic? The PCF is an independent non-profit fund created 30 years ago to combat rampant Philadelphia cronyism in arts funding. ARTBLOG | ARTISTS IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS, AN ONGOING Our twenty-eighth post of the series, Artists in the Time of Coronavirus includes Adriana Moa, Kathleen Shooltz, Dudi, Margot Carr, Marina Braine, Janis Pinkston and Ruth Miller!Thank you for all who submitted! And if you want to participate, send your statement (250 words max) and 2 photos to support@theartblog.org.More details here.Stay safe and stay positive, and come back in the days to ARTBLOG | PHILADELPHIA ARTISTS RESPOND TO RACISM IN Four Philadelphia artists appear in a new book \'We Are the Story: A Visual Response to Racism\' by Carolyn L. Mazloomi. The book documents the 100 quilts included in group and solo exhibitions curated by the author, currently on view in Minneapolis, MN. ARTBLOG | “TEARS OF HONOR” RECOUNTS INTERNMENT AND HEROISM Tears of Honor by James A. Ardaiz. Pace Press, an imprint of Linden Publishing, February 16, 2021. ISBN 978-1-61035-900-9. FICTION / Historical / World War II ARTBLOG | ART EXPLOITED AS PROPAGANDA AFTER OUTBREAK OF Antoine-Jean Gros “Napoleon Visiting the Victims of the Plague at Jaffa, March 11, 1789” (1804), oil on canvas, 5.23 m x 7.15 m, Louvre Museum, Paris GROUPS TRY TO REBOUND FROM THE PANDEMIC OTHER CITIES ARE 6/4/2021 Philadelphia arts groups need more public-sector funding to rebound, advocates say https://www.inquirer.com/arts/philadelphia-arts-budget-covid-19-recovery* Features
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