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  • Some Of The Whys Of Being Discovered | Raina Lee | Episode 830


    Raina Lee is an artist based in Los Angeles and works in clay and experimental glazes. Raina’s practice draws from ceramics history, archeology, and burial objects, and objects from her family’s past. Raina began in clay making functional works and has recently started making sculptural pieces.



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  • A Great Kit for ‘The Anarchist’s Tool Chest’

    A Great Kit for ‘The Anarchist’s Tool Chest’


    The 2025 chest in Eastern white pine and some mahogany scraps – ready for work.

    Last week, we sent the revised edition of “The Anarchist’s Tool Chest” to the printer. It will be released in late June. The book has been updated throughout, including the section on building the chest. The new chest holds more tools and takes about half the time to build (sacrificing nothing in the process).

    If you’ve ever thought about building one of these chests, I have good news. Alexander Brothers now offers a kit of wood for the chest in gorgeous and perfect Eastern white pine. Check out the details here, but everything is milled so you can get started. Price: $575. (Alternatively, they will sell you a bundle of rough lumber if you want to save money and do that work yourself.)

    This pine is fantastic. I bought the pine for the new chest from Alexander Brothers (at full price – this boy doesn’t take discounts). They have access to clear and wide stock that we simply do not.

    Eastern white pine is – hands down – the best wood for this chest. It is lightweight, strong and a joy to saw and plane. Highly recommended.

    And because the internet sucks, I have to mention this: We don’t get any royalty, kickback or affiliate money from Alexander Brothers, a family-run business in Virginia. Like Alexander Brothers, all we care about is getting good material in the hands of people so they can build stuff. 

    — Christopher Schwarz



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  • Where in the World is Charley?


    <img decoding="async" src="https://www.linesandcolors.com/images/2025-05/vermeer_map_soldier_and_laughinggirl_450.jpg" alt="Officer and Laughing Girl

    My apologies for the extended and unannounced hiatus. I’ve been dealing with personal issues that have kept me unable to attend to the blog. I’m fine, just overwhelmed.

    Hopefully, I’m back and will be able to pick up speed as I go. Thanks for your patience.

    -Charley

    (Image above: detail crop from Vermeer’s Officer and Laughing Girl)



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  • Meet the Author: Philippe Lafargue

    Meet the Author: Philippe Lafargue


    Editor’s Note: Philippe Lafargue, along with Michele Pietryka-Pagán and Don Williams, are the folks we have to thank for “To Make as Perfectly as Possible: Roubo on Marquetry,” which we first published in 2013, and “With All Precision Possible: Roubo on Furniture,” which we first published in 2017.

    Those editions are now sold out. However, the new deluxe edition of “With All Precision Possible” is now available, and we plan to offer a deluxe edition of “To Make as Perfectly as Possible” soon.

    Philippe, Michele and Don are also working on more volumes of Roubo, with a focus on interior carpentry, garden carpentry and carriages.

    Philippe Lafargue was born in the southwest region of France, in the Basque country, in a town called Biarritz.

    “It’s called the little California of France,” Philippe says. “It resembles the California coast because of the cliffs, beachgoers and surfing. The weather is pretty mild all year round, and you have mountains in the background. I was lucky to be born there and raised there. I had access to the natural beauty of the environment, which was very nurturing.”

    Philippe lived with his parents, grandparents and older brother in a small, one-floor house with a basement.

    “I would find refuge in the basement because we were crowded in the house,” he says. “I remember the winter months when I sheltered there. The furnace was there so it was warm and I could see the rain falling but I was protected.”

    In the basement was an old workbench, anchored to the wall. Philippe worked on projects on that bench, imprecise but creative work that he loved. He also spent a lot of time at his uncle’s farm.

    At times, Philippe found it difficult to feel motivated in school outside of the more artistic classes. He loved hands-on classes that inspired new ways of looking at things and doing things. He connected with a teacher at school who helped him get started in airplane model making.

    Early on, Philippe knew he wanted to be a cabinetmaker.

    “I was fascinated with the work of a cabinetmaker,” he says. “I wanted to be a true cabinetmaker, making case furniture. I don’t know where this came from.”

    He wonders if he was, in part, influenced by all the furniture, made by a local cabinetmaker, in his parents’ house.

    “You could buy what you could afford at the time, so it’s not very attractive,” he says. “But it’s very well done.”

    As a teen, he was set to study cabinetmaking at school, theory and practice. But three months before the course was slated to begin, academic offerings shifted regionally. Suddenly, cabinetmaking wasn’t available based on where Philippe lived, and none of the other options offered to him interested him.

    “I told the staff of the school that I didn’t see cabinetmaking there so I wasn’t interested,” he said. “I started looking for an apprenticeship.”

    While looking, Philippe was offered an opportunity to attend a school two hours away from his hometown.

    “Life is about opportunities,” he says, “but it’s also not being afraid to take the train when it’s going full steam.”

    Becoming a Cabinetmaker

    Before being accepted into the school, Philippe had to complete a series of tasks and projects. Philippe wonderfully shares that experience in an essay in With All Precision Possible.

    In short, that summer he found a cabinetmaker who agreed to take him under his wing. In addition to helping the cabinetmaker with odd jobs, he worked through his tasks and projects, the cabinetmaker serving as mentor.

    For his first task, Philippe dressed up the face and edges of rough lumber, making it perfectly equal in thickness and length, with hand tools only. Next his mentor taught him how to cut dovetails and he built a jewelry box and bread basket out of mahogany and cherry, using a set of provided blueprints for reference. He also learned how to sharpen chisels and hand plane blades.

    This, from his essay:

    That summer was an eye-opener in many respects and it cemented my desire to work with wood in some capacity. When fall arrived, I enrolled in my new school as a cabinetmaker. The school was training young fellows like me to be ready to enter the workforce quickly and thus the training was more focused on knowledge and use of equipment than on hand skills. After a summer of working with my hands, I balked. Two weeks into the school year I was certain that this was not the path I was seeking. I asked for an audience with the school director and shared him my dilemma. I told him I wanted to work with my hands and chairmaking would work better for me. I asked to be transferred and bid farewell to cabinetmaking. It is amazing what you can do when you are very motivated and stubborn.

    I began my education in chairmaking the following week and while machinery was part of the training, there were many parts of a chair that could only be accomplished by hand, and that suited me just fine. So for the next two years, I learned the art of chairmaking, “industrial style,” which also included making beds and end/pier tables. There was a pretty straightforward approach to accomplishing such tasks. Now I was able to read a set of blueprints and from it, trace all the required contours and profiles used to cut out the necessary chair parts from the lumber. Thinking back, I am still amazed that in that class, all of us could produce an armchair in 24 hours, ready for finishing.

    At the end of two years I had a diploma in my pocket and some experience under my belt. Now I could return to my mentor’s workshop and turn on and use all the power tools to my heart’s content, something I had earned and did proudly. I had a great summer in the little workshop that year.

    During that summer, a friend told him about the esteemed École Boulle in Paris, which has offered higher education in applied arts and artistic crafts, including cabinetmaking, marquetry and restoration work, since 1886. To enroll, Philippe first had to pass a two-day exam, which included creating a full-size set of technical drawings with accurate dimensions of a Louis XV-style chair. He was accepted.

    “It was another world,” Philippe says. “You’re learning about a lot of things, all around.”

    After two years at École Boulle, he worked out a deal with the director. He would come back a third year, tuition free, and help fabricate everything that came out of the design workshop.

    “That was very cool because they were doing some very interesting stuff, combining not only wood but metal and plastic,” he says.

    Now he was firmly planted in hands-on learning and he loved it. But the dream situation was short-lived.

    Mobilier National

    A couple of weeks into his third year at École Boulle, a teacher told him about chairmaking job openings at Mobilier National, that manages the furniture of the French State, such as the furnishing of ministries and embassies, its storage, its restorations, and its design, notably with the Research and Creation Workshop. It was an opportunity Philippe couldn’t pass up. So he and a friend decided to apply. But first, they had to pass an exam.

    When they arrived, they were given an armchair and a stack of wood. On day one, they were tasked with drawing the chair to scale. On day two, they were tasked with using their own drawings to each build an armchair in 24 hours. They both were hired.

    Philippe worked there for three years.

    “It’s like the history of France in all kinds of objects,” he says. “It was incredible. I saw all the campaign traveling furniture of the Napoleon War.”

    Here, for example, Philippe worked on chairs stamped by famous chairmakers of the 18th century. The “users,” often high-ranking government officials, didn’t want reproductions. They wanted original pieces, signed and perfectly restored. It was all cyclical, too. For example, a canopy bed might be used by the president of France while elected for seven years and then returned to be left in storage.

    Philippe questioned the restoration work at times, ripping off nails, redoing this, fixing that.

    “But there’s so much, that you don’t even consider when there will never be enough one day,” he says. “That’s the problem. You value it differently.”

    After three years, Philippe realized the job came to him too young. He could envision himself as head of the section in which he worked, but he wanted more out of life.

    “If you stay in a job like that young, you are going to lose everything you have to offer,” he says. “There is no room to express yourself. There’s no room to grow. It’s very limited.”

    Philippe went back to South France. He felt boxed in. In France, work is quite compartmentalized and segmented, he says, to the point of being rigid. He knew if he stayed that trying anything new would be complicated.

    “So in 1987, I took my bag and went to the U.S.,” he says.

    An Internship at the Smithsonian

    “In the U.S., I realized quickly that first I had to learn English,” he says. “And I had to think out of the box because I could not just be a chairmaker. If you’re going to be a chairmaker in the U.S., you’re only going to be a chairmaker if you make things that are exceptional. You’re going to find a clientele that wants your stuff and that’s it, but that’s going to be rare.”

    Eventually he landed an interview at the Smithsonian Museum’s Conservation Analytical Laboratory (now called the Museum Conservation Institute). The job – the museum’s first wooden objects intern. At the time, Don Williams worked in the lab and Mark Williams was head of the lab.

    “I remember the interview in the meeting room,” Philippe says. “I was at the end of the table. I was shaking like a leaf. I knew 200 words of English. I had a little portfolio of photographs. And all these heads of all these sections were bombarding me with questions. It was freaking me out.”

    He got the internship.

    In his first week, he ended up in New Orleans at a convention for conservators from around the world. His eyes were opened to how other countries view the roles of conservator, restorer and curator. In the U.S., he says, you respect the stain as much as you respect a brand-new piece.

    “You respect the history because everything is telling you something,” he says. “We’re just only passing information. We are not here to change information. That’s the big difference. You restore to have something look good. In the U.S., you encapsulate this moment and pass it along. And you remember that the best is always the enemy of the good.”

    One day at the Smithsonian he saw someone had left three volumes of Roubo on his desk. Don and Mark asked Philippe if he could translate them.

    “I said no. I won’t. It’s impossible,” Philippe says. “I didn’t know enough English at the time and I didn’t think I would have been able to manage that at all.”

    While protesting, Philippe opened up one of the volumes and found a plate that shocked him. It was an illustration of a workshop and it looked identical to his workshop in Paris.

    “It was and still is exactly the same,” he says. “It’s a row of workbenches. Windows on the left, big windows, floor to ceiling. The same spacing between each bench, the same lineup. On the right you have space to have small sawhorses or your glue pot. And you have an equipment room on the other side. When I saw these pictures, I couldn’t believe it. We haven’t moved from that yet. To me, it was unbelievable.”

    In the beginning, Philippe worked closely with Mark, who hired and supervised him. When Don took over as head of the lab, he and Philippe worked well together, connecting over a shared taste in music.

    No longer stuck in the role of chairmaker, Philippe decided to spread his wings even more.

    Tryon Palace

    In 1990, Philippe found a new opportunity as a conservator at Tryon Palace in New Bern, North Carolina. He enjoyed this work for a while, but eventually realized he was missing something.

    “I was lacking communication with what I was doing because those objects, they never talk back to you,” he says. “It was a bit too quiet.”

    He switched gears to technical services manager, taking care of the well-being of its collections and buildings and its day-to-day operations. He worked up to the role of deputy director, which involved more finance work and human resources, and then helped build the N.C. History Center.  In 2014, he was named executive director, a role he had been filling since the 2012 death of the previous director.

    During this time, Philippe realized that all of his education, hands-on experiences and exposures to new opportunities had prepared him well for such new and varied work.

    “Suddenly, you have all these resources that help you find a solution,” he says. “It’s like when you are building case furniture and you have something that doesn’t work, you find a solution. There is something, a mechanism in place that – click – it goes in. If you’re in a field that’s not quite yours, you use your mechanical skills to resolve stuff. It’s in place. You have learned how to make it work. You pull on your resources. I was glad to have my training because I can visualize things in three dimensions. I can see things very quickly.”

    Philippe has found his professional journey gratifying.

    “I was able to start from a wooden block but it’s not a block anymore,” he says. “It becomes whatever you want it to become. But you still have this hands-on quick understanding and then up, up, up and you work with people. It just happened to be that way. Primarily, I was able to open my mind. And it’s not always easy. But you make a mistake and you start again.”

    Working on Roubo

    Over the years, Philippe and Don kept in touch, somewhat sporadically. One weekend, Don called Philippe and told him he had started the translation of Roubo’s books. Don once again asked Philippe for help. This time, Philippe agreed.

    Don asked immediately if he’d like to be named as an author.

    “I said, Don, I don’t know. Send me stuff. If you like what I do, that’s fine with me. If you don’t like what I do, don’t put me on. So that’s the way it ended up being,” Philippe says. “I had no expectations. I was just doing it to help and for the fun of reading historical documents.”

    They found a rhythm. Don and Michele completed their work, then sent everything to Philippe to look at it from the perspective of someone whose native language was French and who had a breadth of knowledge in French historical craftsmanship.

    The first book took a while. Philippe worked on it every night after work, for two to three hours. The second one was a lot faster – it took Philippe about six months to complete.

    After the first edition of “To Make as Perfectly as Possible” was printed, Philippe joined Don at Woodworking in America 2013 in Cincinnati for a book signing.

    “I thought I was on another planet,” Philippe says. “I said, ‘What the heck is going on?’ It’s one of those feelings like you don’t know where you’ve landed. It was funny. Don gave a lecture. I bumped into people like Roy Underhill. I ended up staying with Megan [Fitzpatrick] in her house. She was trying to finish her house. Is she still? I’m sure she is, with all the work she puts in at Lost Art Press. Anyway, Don and I got to see all the beautiful furniture she’s made. That was a lot of fun.  It was all very strange but it was one of those moments in life that stays always engraved. You have these beautiful vignettes in life where you cross paths with people.”

    Philippe is now back in France, in Saint Nazaire, a small town of about 2,500 people. He’s 20 minutes away from Spain, surrounded by mountains and the Mediterranean Sea.

    He’s working with Michele and Don on new Roubo translations.

    “That team is very relaxed,” he says. “This is the type of project you don’t get ready for. You can’t work ahead of time. You just wait for it to fall in your lap and then you go.”

    ‘Life is to Discover Yourself’

    Having spent many years living and working in France, and many years living and working in the U.S., Philippe finds the differences quite interesting.

    “In the U.S., there’s this quest for success and not being afraid of it,” he says. “There is a lot more freedom available where you pursue things or dream of things.”

    It’s an attitude of, Why not? Let’s try, he says.

    “What I did in the U.S. professionally is impossible to do in France. You could do it in France, but only if you had the right diplomas. In the U.S., I was not judged by my diploma. I was judged by my character, by my work ethics, by all these things that we should be judged on.”

    These days, Philippe had rediscovered the joy of model making (with a nod to his childhood) and he’s tapping into more creative work, creating folk art. He works in a room that is a bit less than 10 square meters, with a tabletop as a workbench. He’s content.

    “I’m very curious by nature,” he says.

    For example, when making a model sailboat, he also made the sail.

    “I pulled out a sewing machine and I sewed the sail because the process was a mystery to me,” he says. “I’m attracted to all those things that are new to me. I have a desire to surprise myself and discover other matter.”

    He’s also being mindful about sharing what he’s learned over the years.

    “That is also something that is more common in the U.S. than here,” he says. “Here, people retire and are finished. A lot is lost, really. The mentality is really different. In the U.S., when I was working in the museum, we had a lot of volunteers. They don’t want to just stop and do nothing. They come and share their stuff, they participate in life. I don’t know. It’s another way of looking at things. I’m not saying one way is better than the other, but for me, I was glad to be exposed to that way of looking at things because it made me bigger, bigger in looking at things and accepting things and opening up my mind. That’s what I like.”

    Living life this way has required him to make some hard choices, he says.

    “I’ve learned when you go down river, it’s always easier to go with the flow,” he says. “There’s always something you’re going to be able to catch on the side of the river to make a pause. When you try to go against the current, that’s where you’re drowning and you’re missing all the opportunities.

    “You can fight all the time but life is going to take you where it’s going to take you. It’s up for you to go for it, to be quick to accept and change. And you are always part of it. That’s the beauty of it. No matter what happened, you are part of it – 50 percent is your choice. The rest is to accept that you have decided to do this or not. That’s the difficult part. But life is short. Life is to be lived. Life is to discover yourself.”



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  • Gallery Tour—Line, Form, Qi: Calligraphic Art from the Fondation INK Collection


    Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…

    Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…

    Tuesday Matinees

    Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…

    Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds

    LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…

    Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…

    Rain Room

    Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…

    Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…

    Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…

    LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…

    LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…

    Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council

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    Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer

    Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…

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    In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…

    Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…

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    Barbara Kruger: Thinking of You. I Mean Me. I Mean You. is a major exhibition de…

    Featuring Ai Weiwei, Huang Yong Ping, Wang Guangyi, Xu Bing, Yue Minjun and more…

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    LACMA marks the 500th anniversary of the fall of the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan…

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    Scandinavian Design and the United States, 1890–1980 is the first exhibition to…

    In the work of American artist Sam Francis (1923–1994), Western and Eastern aest…



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  • A Talk In The Lobby | Jody Lewis

    A Talk In The Lobby | Jody Lewis


    Jody Lewis | Episode 1028

    Born and raised in Alabama and Tennessee, Jody Lewis is a transplant to Canada. Having earned a bachelors in biology and  a master’s in public health, Jody assumed that he didn’t have a single creative bone in his body. But things started to change for Jody when a friend showed him all the work she had in a pottery class and he knew he had to give it a shot. After talking a 10 week course, Jody was obsessed! Jody has since turned this new passion into a small business venture that is thriving.

    SPONSORS

    Image result for Patreon logo  You can help support the show!

    Skutt Logo

     

     

    Number 1 brand in America for a reason. Skutt.com

     

     

    Georgies Logo

     

    For all your ceramic needs go to Georgies.com

     

    Do you have a making calendar for your year?

    Yes, I have a few. I am not an organized person but I try to fake it as best I can and I just have to have physical things to write things out. So I do have calendars, I have a yearly over arching where I write in the month what I want to do in those months and then I have weekly where I go Monday through Friday what I am actually going to do. And then I do a daily. What are my todays tasks.

    Could you do what you do and be profitable if you were willy nilly in your schedule?

    Oh man, I hate to say no because I know some people are. But there is a practical side of my brain that I try to fight that with everything. A lot of potter friends who are willy nilly , I don’t know, we talk about this a lot because people think I am so organized. But it’s the only way I can function. I can’t see making your income year to year if you are just changing all the variables. You have to keep some variables the same to carry over to the following year.

    How do you balance out your income when you come to months like January and February?

    I think this is probably a good point to bring up my partner. She is great for me and the business, she’s a huge supporter. She is sort of the reason I started doing this and she encouraged me to do it. She has helped so much with this business so I am in a privileged position that the pottery doesn’t have to pay all of our bills so it allows a lot of freedom to be able to kind of structure the business.

    Do you do things related to ceramics, like teaching or demos to make ends meet?

    I do teach. I love teaching. I don’t have the space for it so I have to work with my local community studio to do classes. I want to do more classes but it’s such a high demand teaching wise. The teachers have been there many years teaching their classes. There is a bit of shortage of that. I know virtual classes is something else to do. So I don’t really do a whole lot of that but I would like to get into that more.

    As a creative how do habits make you a better and more creative maker?

    Yeah, so I think structure for a lot of people feels like boundaries and it feels like limitations of them, but for me structure allows more time for creativity. So if I don’t structure the things I need to do, like making mugs or glazing or going through the process, if I don’t stick with the basics then I won’t have the time to make vases or have the more creative time. I am not sure if that really makes sense but in my brain it is like, Yes that is exactly how I work. I don’t know if there is a better way to say it but structure makes me be a better creative.

    Book

    Atomic Habits by James Clear

    Contact

    goodwheelceramics.com

    Instagram: @goodwheelceramics





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  • Gallery Tour—Line, Form, Qi: Calligraphic Art from the Fondation INK Collection


    Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…

    Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…

    Tuesday Matinees

    Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…

    Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds

    LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…

    Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…

    Rain Room

    Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…

    Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…

    Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…

    LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…

    LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…

    Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council

    Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…

    Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer

    Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…

    Create+Collaborate

    In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…

    Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…

    painting conservation,paper conservation,object conservation,textile conservation,conservation science,conservation imaging

    Barbara Kruger: Thinking of You. I Mean Me. I Mean You. is a major exhibition de…

    Featuring Ai Weiwei, Huang Yong Ping, Wang Guangyi, Xu Bing, Yue Minjun and more…

    Beyond the concrete materials of ink and paper, there is an intangible spirit un…

    To complement the presentation of The Obama Portraits by Kehinde Wiley and Amy S…

    From the moment of their unveiling at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Galler…

    (Los Angeles, CA—January 13, 2022) – The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA…

    (Los Angeles, CA—December 14, 2021) The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)…

    Mixpantli: Contemporary Echoes showcases the lasting impact of Indigenous creati…

    LACMA marks the 500th anniversary of the fall of the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan…

    Since the mid-20th century, California has been a beacon of both inventive desig…

    Revealing insights about family life and the quotidian in the 21st century, Fami…

    One of the most significant contributors to fashion between 1990 and 2010, Lee A…

    Comprising approximately 400 works, including an unprecedented number of loans f…

    Archive of the World: Art and Imagination in Spanish America, 1500–1800 is the f…

    Scandinavian Design and the United States, 1890–1980 is the first exhibition to…

    In the work of American artist Sam Francis (1923–1994), Western and Eastern aest…



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  • The Cup Show | NCECA 2024

    The Cup Show | NCECA 2024


    NCECA is always a blast and has so much to see and do that it is completely impossible to show up and do it all. With that in mind, I tended to miss the annual NCECA Cup Show just because I was so busy doing other things. This was to be different… Not only did I add a cup to the show, I also attended and interviewed a number of people. Below are some pictures from day. Sorry, a couple are little blurry, but it gives you sense of the event. Included is a picture of the cup I added.

    SPONSORS

    Image result for Patreon logo  You can help support the show!

    Skutt Logo

     

     

    Number 1 brand in America for a reason. Skutt.com

     

     

    Georgies Logo

     

    For all your ceramic needs go to Georgies.com

     

    Instagram: @nceca_ces





    Source link

  • Gallery Tour—Line, Form, Qi: Calligraphic Art from the Fondation INK Collection


    Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…

    Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…

    Tuesday Matinees

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  • the Absolute Eye Exhibition – Veronica Winters Painting

    the Absolute Eye Exhibition – Veronica Winters Painting


    If you’re in Naples, Florida, stop by to see the retrospective exhibition of Victory Vasarely that displays over 100 serigraphs, lithographs, gouache paintings, drawings and a few small sculptures. Hosted by the Naples Art Institute, the art show offers a beautiful look at Op Art you can rarely see around here.

    Hungarian-French artist, Victor Vasarely (1906-1997) is the leader of the Op Art (optokinetic art) movement, and his innovations in color perception and optical illusion had influenced numerous artists to come. Today his hand-pulled art prints sell for $4,000-30,000 a piece. Vasarely was 90 years old when he died in Paris, France.

    Victor Vasarely, Op Art, The Absolute Eye exhibition, Naples, FL 2024

    Better known as OP Art, Optokinetic art movement relies on mathematical principles to construct repetitive abstract shapes, stripes, grids or spirals to catch the involuntary eye movements we make when following moving patterns. In other worlds, this art stimulates the optokinetic response in us. Op Art takes this response as the basis to visually trick us but normally explores a wider artistic vision and techniques in art.

    Victor Vasarely, Op Art, the Absolute Eye exhibition, Naples, 2024

    5 Facts about Victor Vasarely and his Op Art:

    1. From Medicine to Mastermind 

    Before becoming the father of Op Art, Vasarely actually pursued a career in medicine! He switched paths mid-study, drawn to the power of visual communication.  Later, he studied graphic design at the private Műhely School in Budapest and in 1930, he moved to Paris to work in advertising and design.

    “Vasarely’s early geometric abstract research was inspired by purely abstract elements in nature and urban spaces. In 1947 he spent the summer on a small island off the coast of Brittany, called Belle-Île-en- Mer. He observed the polished stones in the sand, examined the prismatic behavior of the sea, as well as the refraction and reflection of light, the effect of creating space by shifting the viewer’s point of vision on a flat surface and the contrast of light and shadow that generates a vibration in the sight. This would mark the beginning of a true abstract approach for Vasarely. Although he later referred to this time in his life as “the wrong path,” it resulted in an important evolution in his work. It added more rounded elements to his paintings. When he returned to his previous geometric style, it was with the inclusion of dynamic rounded forms that seemed to bulge outward from the painting or collapse inward from the surface. These forms tricked the eye into experiencing that the image was moving. That kinetic illusion, combined with the three-dimensionality of the images on Vasarely’s canvases, became the foundation for the iconic aesthetic we now call Op Art.”

    Naples Art Institute

    Victor Vasarely, Op Art serigraph at the Absolute eye show, Naples, 2024

    ‘The extreme variety of its form leads the advertising designer to mute his personality.’

    Victor Vasarely

    2. Architect of 3-D Perception

    Vasarely didn’t just paint illusions; he aimed to engineer them. His works use geometry, repetition, and color play to manipulate how viewers perceive depth, movement, and even color itself.  Thanks to his jobs in advertising and graphic design the artist learned enough about human psychology to understand how we process visual information.

    “Our eyes are subjected to a constant flood of visual stimuli. In order to process and interpret them, the subconscious brain compares the images with memories and experiences. That’s what distinguishes personal perception from the actual physiological image. Large objects in the foreground, small objects in the back and lines converging at a vanishing point. As soon as the eye receives signals like these, it perceives even a two-dimensional image as spatial. That is why artists usually use so-called central perspective for their naturalistic depictions – not least of all in pictorial representations of cities. They work with lines that converge as they recede into the depths of space, just as they seem to do in the perception of reality. Vasarely, for his part, made frequent use of axonometric projection a geometrical method of constructing three-dimensional forms. The parallel side lines are drawn tipped over to one side at equal angles. This has a bewildering effect on visual perception: does the picture really depict a three-dimensional object?”

    Naples Art Institute

    His serigraphs depicting Zebras are considered the earliest examples of Op art. In the left corner we can see that this print is numbered and signed by the artist in graphite pencil.

    3. Op Art for Everyone

     Unlike much avant-garde art, Vasarely believed in democratizing art experiences. He embraced public art commissions and architectural integrations, bringing Op Art to everyday spaces like buildings and metro stations. Influenced by the Futurists, Constructivists and Dadaists, Op Art spread all over Europe and came to the US in the 60s.

    Victor Vasarely-op art-absolute eye show-blog
    Victor Vasarely, Op Art, The Absolute Eye exhibition, Naples, FL 2024

    Vega Structures

    “Vega Structures is one of the best-known and most emblematic series produced by Vasarely at the height of his career named after the brightest star in the northern hemisphere’s summer night sky. Inspired by contemporary news reports about mysterious signals received from distant galaxies, Vasarely named many of his works after stars and constellations. The Vega pictures rely on convex- concave distortions of a grid-like network, a sophisticated combination of the cube and the sphere, symbolically referring to the two-way motion of the light that emanates from pulsating stars, and to the functioning of condensing galaxies and the expanding universe.

    Through works such as “Vega-Fel-VR” (1971) and “Trivega” (1981), Serigraphs, the artist seeks to evoke the elusive universe of the galaxies, the cosmic pulsations and the biological mutation of the cell. The common denominator in these works is Vasarely’s realization that two dimensions can be expanded into three simply by deforming the basic grid, and that, depending on the degree of enlargement or reduction, the elements in the deformed grid can be transformed into rhombuses or ellipses.”
    Naples Art Institute

    Victor Vasarely, Op Art, The Absolute Eye exhibition, Naples, FL 2024

    4. More Than Meets the Eye

    Vasarely saw his art as a bridge between science and art. He incorporated mathematical principles and studied perceptual psychology to achieve the dynamic, almost psychedelic optical effects in his Op Art. 

    In 1955, Victor Vasarely published his thoughts about Op Art in the Yellow Manifesto. In his writing, the artist recorded his ideas that he called Kineticism. He believed that art should be based on scientific principles to create a sense of movement, energy, depth expressed in geometric forms and optical illusions, rather than copying nature.

    5. Beyond Canvas

    Op Art wasn’t just about grid-like paintings. According to Tate, Vasarely experimented with various mediums, including sculptures, tapestries, and even architectural facades, creating illusory, flickering effects of depth, perspective, and motion. There are a few small sculptures presented at the show illustrating his interest in other materials and techniques.

    Victor Vasarely, Op Art, The Absolute Eye exhibition, Naples, FL 2024
    Victor Vasarely, Op Art, The Absolute Eye exhibition, Naples, FL 2024
    Check out this cool shop Custom Creative Custom Creative, where you can custom-design gifts for yourself, family, and friends. They offer custom-printed t-shirts, coasters, picture frames, tumblers, and more! Take a look!” 

    What is a serigraph?

    In the ” Absolute Eye” the majority of art we see are vibrant serigraphs produced by the artist. A serigraph is a a stencil-based printing process normally called the silkscreen printing. Warhol is the most famous modern artist who used this printing method to create his art. Roy Lichtenstein comes in second.

    1. Stencils: A separate stencil is created for each color used in the artwork. These stencils typically use a photo-sensitive emulsion on a fine mesh screen (originally silk, now often polyester or nylon). Areas left open on the stencil will allow ink to pass through moving it with a squeegee.
    2. Layering Ink: Each stencil is placed on a frame and ink is pushed through the open areas onto the substrate (usually paper, but other materials can be used too). This process is repeated for each color, building up the image layer by layer, resulting in thick, vivid colors to complete the image. Each layer must align and print perfectly to create a finished artwork, which requires some skill and patience from the artist. The high-quality inks produce rich textures and colors.
    3. Hand-Crafted Touch: While automated machines exist, silkscreens are usually made as limited editions because each layer is hand-pulled, each stencil is hand-made, and each full-color serigraph is numbered and signed by the artist. Therefore, such prints are limited editions by nature and have the appeal to art collectors. Subject wise, this latest form of printmaking is the easiest to learn and doesn’t usually have the refinement of image like lithography or intaglio do.
    Victor Vasarely, Op Art, The Absolute Eye exhibition, Naples, FL 2024

    After walking through the exhibition and getting to know the artist, I was impressed with Victor Vasarely’s ability and mathematical precision to draft geometric forms – this is something I find very difficult to do in my art. As I’ve done silkscreen and other printmaking methods, I can appreciate the artist’s attention to detail and precision with which he worked to produce his op art prints.

    More importantly, his thorough understanding of geometry and mathematical perspective led him to discover his own ideal of beauty comprising the Universe. Instead of copying visual cues from Nature like trees or birds, the artist studied nature to see the underlying structure of everything living. While Op Art or geometric abstraction is not my favorite art movement, I can see how it can play its role in other artists painting including mine.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oIlBPI3tzUQ

    Sources:

    Naples Art Institute, The Absolute Eye, retrospective art exhibition, January 2024, Naples, FL.

    The Art Story, Britannica, My Art Broker, Tate



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