Archive for the ‘Lectures’ Category

Apocalypse Soon: 2012 @ Da Vinci Art Alliance

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

DoN Brewer I Was Here Apocalypse Soon: 2012

 I Was Here, DoN Brewer, digital photograph @ Da Vinci Art Alliance’s Apocalypse Soon: 2012.

With money bombs, pandemics, oil spills, World War III fresh in our consciousness and the 2nd Wave Depression looming, Apocalyse Soon: 2012 is prescient, nihilistic funk-a-rama drama.  Curator Dr Deb Miller and Juror & Awards Judge, Elin Danien, Consulting Scholar, University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology gleaned a strange harvest of occult dreamscapes, blob-a-zoid sculptures and paranoid visions of the end of the future.

“I know it’s the last day on earth
We’ll be together while the planet dies
I know it’s the last day on earth
We’ll never say goodbye

Marilyn Manson - The Last Day on Earth

Curator’s Tour, Lecture, and Opening Awards Reception:  Sunday, August 8, 1pm-4 pm(doors open at 12:30)

Brujo de la Mancha, Mexican Identity in the XXIst Century
Debra Miller, PowerPoint lecture, Calendar Cycles of Creation and Destruction in Pre-Columbian Art
Debra Miller, Curator’s tour, Apocalypse Soon:  2012

 

Photo by DoN Brewer.

The Sargent Method presented by Paul DuSold - A DoN Brewer Video

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Paul DuSold and DoN have been working on this video since the Winter.  From a lecture series presented in artist Francis Galante’s uber-cool studio / loft in Old City, Philadelphia, the video is a glimpse into the five hour demonstration Paul presented to a class of about 25 lucky artists.  DuSold explains the Sargent Method of painting and gives a superb painting demonstration while talking - a trait found in PAFA trained teachers.

The High Definition version of the Paul DuSold movie is on DoN’s YouTube channel.

The Sargent Method presented by Paul DuSold - A DoN Brewer Video

 

Envisioning Henry IV, Part 1 @ Lantern Theater - Da Vinci Art Alliance

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Ona Kalstein - Henry IV, Part 1 @ Lantern Theater Company

Ona Kalstein by her three entries in the Envisioning Henry IV, Part 1  in the Black Box Gallery @ St. Stevens Theater @ 10th & Ludlow Sts, Lantern Theater Company.  Ona designed images signified with memes, language and typography in a trio of drawings; child-like blood drops spurt from the cracked crown, a “garment made of blood” is saturated with droplets while the King wails and blood soaks the pea fields of the Battle of Shrewsbury with red tear-drops, the simple shapes communicating on multiple levels.  Ona designs hippy-style typography into the image as if they are pages in a coloring book for kids with sophisticated adult language.

June Blumberg @ Henry IV, Part 1

June Blumberg’s exuberant composition of the hard partying gang hanging around Prince Hal are a buffoonish bunch of clowns - thuggish, scary clowns with swords and big smiles.  Blumberg won an honorable mention for her painting from the jury committee…the naive primitivism & quirky composition is fun but not jokey.

Alden Cole @ Henry IV, Part 1 Lantern Theater Program

Alden Cole attended Lantern Theater Company’s Art Director, Charles McMann’s, lecture @ Da Vinci Art Alliance in late February since the play had everyone scratching their heads, Henry IV, Part 1 is not one of Shakespeare’s better known plays, and the lecture sent Cole into an exploration of the Seven Deadly Sins and how they relate to the characters in the play - Hal is slovenly, Falstaff is corpulent and Hotspur is haughty - all based on self-portraits.  To develop the composition Alden acts out the facial expressions, photographs himself, composes the scene in Photoshop then paints in oils on an enormous canvas.  Acedia Luxuria Superbia.

Envisioning Henry IV, Part 1 - Da Vinci Art Alliance @ Lantern Theater

Lilliana Didovic, Lilliana Didovic & David Foss @ Envisioning Henry IV, Part 1.  Didovic painted abstract weapons and Foss layered and destroyed paint to visualize wounded flesh, the metaphors and significations are not forced but real.  The exhibition is loosely divided between “abstract” and “representational” art, like a battle of the art styles, David’s painting is visceral and scarred like a mutilated warrior and Lilliana’s gentle coloration is a contradiction in terms - beautiful weapons.

 Mina Smith-Segal @ Henry IV, Part1

Mina Smith-Segal with her award winning painting, the brutalist watercolor truly captures the tension & fear of battle.

DoN Brewer @ Henry IV, Part 1 Lantern Theater Company

Hal by DoN, oil on canvas.  Photo by Morris Klein.  DoN Brewer used a variety of media to draw from such as fitness magazines, hairy bear blogs and Google to find inspiration for a new painting based on the play, after being creatively blocked around painting, having a theme to work inspired DoN to paint again.  DoN saw Hal through Jersey Shore eyes with “the situation” and “GTL” representing the young prince, the hairy bear as Falstaff and a leather bar of conspirators based on a painting by John Cawse.

Envisioning Henry IV, Part 1 in the Black Box Theater in the Saint Steven’s Theater is running in conjunction with the Lantern Theater Company’s production of the Shakespeare historical play.

 Envisioning Henry IV, Part 1 - Da Vinci Art Alliance @ St. Stephen’s Theater

 

2010 Philadelphia Open Studio Tours

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

2010 Philadelphia Open Studio Tours

 

2010 Philadelphia Open Studio Tours -  pdf

Register @ http://www.philaopenstudios.com/Opportunities.aspx

 

 

Kim Martin & Karl Olsen @ The Plastic Club

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

Karl Olsen & Kim MartinMAKE ME CRAZY MAKE ME THINK
Location:  Plastic Club, 247 S. Camac St., Philadelphia
Opening Reception:  Saturday Sept 26th 6pm - 8pm
Reception and Presentation:  Sunday September 27th 1pm - 4pm
The “Make Me Crazy Make Me Think” exhibition is the culmination of ten months of collaborative work by Karl Olsen and Kim Martin. The concept was to paint our individual self portraits together, side by side at the same time, on the same canvas. The process of painting “ourselves” in this relative setting, the work reflects those dynamics in subtle and sometimes dramatic ways. How we worked, discussed, and managed the totality of each painting was tense, thought provoking, stimulating and included continual compromise with individual and collective interpretation.The result was 11 highly differing pieces averaging 6′ x 6′.

Karl Olsen

Images courtesy of www.coldnose.org - Kim Martin’s website.

 

Dr. Debra Miller on Andy Warhol & His Critics @ Fleisher Art Memorial

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Dr Deb Miller on Andy Warhol @ His Critics @ Fleisher Art Memorial.

Dr. Debra Miller presented an informative, witty, insider view to Andy Warhol and his critics as compared to past masters like Caravaggio who was also harshly and publicly criticized by his contemporaries.  Dr. Deb writes arts reviews for the Inferno and like DoN prefers not to write bad reviews, but, some reviewers get more exposure for being nasty and saying dismissive statements in the press.  Andy Warhol would have now have been 80 years old, Dr. Deb’s slideshow included lots of clues and tips to the content of his work, it was great seeing the Andy Warhol Superstars being compared to Birth of Venus and Vermeer’s use of the camera obscura compared to Andy’s appropriation of newspaper images for his Death & Disaster series.

The Sunday afternoon lecture was fun and interactive, Dr. Deb Miller’s fact filled, myth busting monolog followed with a great Q&A is a terrific way to pick up quips and quotes:

  • image hunger of the masses
  • the cheaper more despicable the better - Lucy Lippard
  • the reason Andy painted soup is because he ate it everyday