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DUFFY'S CULTURAL COUTURE
Monday, 22 December 2014
Brilliant Brunch
Topic: ART NEWS


 

During the holidays we all have our traditions we participate in. We go to visit family, friends and attend a multitude of other holiday affairs.

This year brought a very special treat. One of my significantly talented friends, Mark Kostabi held a brunch at his new home in NYC. The invitation stated there would also be a concert. 

 

Mark Kostabi rose up in the NY art scene in the 1980's along with Keith Haring, Jean-Michel Basquait and others. Kostabi is not just a painter but is also a musician. Rita Kostabi, his mother, taught him how to play the piano. He has released several CD's of his music and has collaborated with the likes of Ornette Coleman, Jerry Marotta, Tony Levin, Tony Esposito, Kristjan Jarvi, the Estonian National Symphony Orchestra and many others.

During the 80's Baird Jones, another dear friend of mine, wrote art criticism for all the downtown papers.   Baird's genius in writing educated the public about the forces that focused on the Lower Eastside's unexpected burst into art world prominence. He was one of the people who discovered Mark. It was Jone's father, who was the editor of Time and one of the founders of People magazine, who told Baird to go and check out the graffiti scene in the Bronx and downtown area as well. He did just that, fearlessly and became one of  "the" art curators in NYC. 

In the 1980's, there was a lot of creative genius that came onto the art and music scenes. The talent was fearless. Baird Jones, Mark Kostabi, Warhol, Cyndi Lauper, Annie Lennox and Suzanne Vega were some of the most noted fearless artists who came onto the world scene. The art and music world were changed forever by many, but these people stand out for me. The female musicians in particular were and still are fearless and amazingly talented.  

Yesterday, at a holiday brunch hosted by Mark Kostabi we all got quite the treat. He serenaded the audience with his music. One surprise guest, Suzanne Vega, serenaded us with her disarmingly powerful a cappella of Tom's Diner. 

There are three women that stand out for me from the 1980's. They would include, Cyndi Lauper, Annie Lennox, and Suzanne Vega. These women are all amazing songwriters and their contributions to music massive.

Suzanne Vega rose to fame in the 1980's as a leading figure with hits like Luka and Tom’s Diner. Her distinctive, clear vibrato-less voice is mesmerizing. To hear her sing 10 feet from me in the classic way, the a capella version of Tom's Diner, was epic and a true holiday treat.  As I left the concert, Suzanne was sitting in front of me. I whispered into her ear,"Thank you for your singing today, it was lovely." 

 Here is a link to the epic surprise concert yesterday by Suzanne Vega. 

 https://www.dropbox.com/s/f34nf9cr4gh7v54/20141221_124259.mp4?dl=0


Posted by tammyduffy at 6:17 AM EST
Updated: Monday, 22 December 2014 6:28 AM EST
Sunday, 21 December 2014
The Lightening Thief
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

Hero Percy Jackson Takes on Greeks Gods in “The Lightning Thief” at MCCC’s

 


 

 

Young Percy Jackson is about to embark on the adventure of a lifetime as he tries to set things right in the mythological world of the Greek gods.  Young audiences will thrill to the new musical adaptation of “The Lightning Thief,” to be presented by Theatreworks USA at Mercer County Community College’s Kelsey Theatre Saturday, Jan. 17 at 2 and 4 p.m. Kelsey Theatre is located on the college’s West Windsor campus, 1200 Old Trenton Road.

Adapted from the book by Rick Riordan, "The Lightning Thief" stars Percy Jackson, a young man whose irrepressible spirit and newly discovered powers have gotten him into hot water at his boarding school...again. But that’s the least of Percy’s troubles. Lately, mythological monsters and Greek gods seem to be walking straight out of his textbook and into his life.  Zeus’s master lightning bolt has been stolen and Percy is the chief suspect. He has just ten days to find and return Zeus’s stolen property and bring peace to a warring Mount Olympus.

Recommended for ages 8 and up, the show has earned glowing reviews.  “The Lightning Thief is an action-packed musical with heroic battles and mythological beasties,” wrote Elizabeth Vincentelli of the New York Post.  “Everyone enjoyed the loud, funny, fast-paced, wonderfully imaginative musical.  This show is a true family-pleaser,” wrote Theatermania’s Pete Hempstead.

Based in New York City, Theatreworks USA is America's largest and most prolific professional not-for-profit theater company for youth and family audiences.  Since 1961, the company has enlightened, entertained and instructed more than 90 million people in 49 states and Canada.  It is the only children's theatre to receive both a Drama Desk and a Lucille Lortel Award.

Tickets are $10 for children and seniors, and $12 for adults. Tickets may be purchased online at www.kelseytheatre.net or by calling the Kelsey Theatre Box Office at 609-570-3333.  Free parking is available next to the theatre.  Kelsey Theatre is wheelchair accessible and provides assisted listening devices upon request.  For a complete listing of adult and children's events, visit the Kelsey website or call the box office for a brochure.


Posted by tammyduffy at 12:01 AM EST
Saturday, 20 December 2014
New Portraiture Exhibition "The Bigger Picture"
Topic: ART NEWS

Arts Council of Princeton presents

New Portraiture Exhibition "The Bigger Picture"


 

 

The Arts Council of Princeton (ACP) presents its newest exhibition, "The Bigger Picture," a collection of distinctive portraits curated by Maria Evans. Join us for the Opening Reception on Saturday, Jan. 17, 2015 3-5pm. The artists featured in "The Bigger Picture" are: Mary DeWitt, Elise Dodeles, James Doherty, and Kim Alsbrooks. "The Bigger Picture" will be on view in the Taplin Gallery from January 17 - March 14, 2015 at the Paul Robeson Center for the Arts, 102 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, NJ. Parking is available in the Spring and Hulfish Street garages as well as at metered parking along Witherspoon Street and Paul Robeson Place. To learn more, call (609) 924-8777 or visit www.artscouncilofprinceton.org.


A Gallery Talk with participating artists 
Mary DeWitt and Kim Alsbrooks is scheduled forSaturday, February 7 at 1pm. A second Gallery Talk with participating artists James Dohertyand Elise Dodeles is scheduled for Saturday, February 28 at 1pm. Both of these free Gallery Talks will take place in the Taplin Gallery at the Paul Robeson Center for the Arts.

 

Each of the four portraiture artists in "The Bigger Picture" collection approaches his or her subject in an unconventional fashion. All of these artists' subjects easily invite the viewer to ponder the much bigger picture that lies just below the surface.

 

By depicting her portraiture on pieces of trash, Philadelphia artist Kim Alsbrooks challenges the "American mythology" and widely accepted ideals surrounding wealth and affluence. Her original series, "White Trash," included Civil War scenes, garden landscapes, fine houses and their interiors, and miniature portraits. Alsbrooks then began painting portraits of her own family members, calling the collection "White Trash Family," and soon went on to depict other privileged, wealthy families or the politically elite. Alsbrooks finds the beer and soda cans after they've been flattened in the street. She has tried to flatten them herself, but finds the trash is only "perfect" and wrinkle-free when she finds it already flattened. Cans must be found so that there are no wrinkles in the center area and so that the graphic can be well-placed to compliment the portrait. Portraits are chosen specifically for each piece of trash.

Since the late 1980's, Philadelphia artist Mary DeWitt has painted the portraits and recorded the thoughts of a select group of incarcerated women serving life sentences. Recently, she began to document the development of each portrait by taking still photographs of the work as it develo
ps. She then adds the voice of the subject with narrative to create a video. Most of her portraits are of women sentenced to life without parole in Pennsylvania. Together these videos document the radical change in prisons from the 1970's to today. The portraits can be viewed accompanied by audio or video at http://www.marydewitt.net/MaryDeWitt/

Audio_and_Video.html.

 

Elise Dodeles, an artist based in Lambertville, NJ, received a 2013 Artist's Fellowship from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts and is included in an international survey of women artists published by Rizzoli. Dodeles uses such a large quantity of paint in her application that her surface resembles a painter's palette, built up with years of layers dried over time. She has shown her art in New York, Canada, and Europe. Exhibitions have included a solo show as part of the New Jersey Artist series at Johnson & Johnson World Headquarters and the prestigious Aljira National Five. In 2011 she was selected by juror Zoe Strauss for a solo exhibition at the William Way Community Center in Philadelphia. Raised in New York, she did her undergraduate work at Carnegie-Mellon and New York Universities, and obtained her Masters in Fine Art from the New York Academy of Art. Her artwork can be found in personal and institutional collections, including the Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital in Hollywood, Florida.

 

James Doherty is a contemporary figurative painter who lives in Lawrenceville, NJ, with his wife and two boys in a 1920's "Center-Hall Colonial" that is also the location of his studio where he paints daily. Jim Doherty depicts delicate women on wood he finds at a building site or at the flea market. He believes that a painting should look like it has been painted—and not like a photograph. You should see each brush stroke, each drip of paint, and each layer of color. He often leaves the bottom of his paintings unfinished so you can see the process. Doherty's work has been part of the Arts Council of Princeton's Pinot to Picasso exhibitions for the past several years.

The Arts Council of Princeton (ACP), founded in 1967, is a non-profit organization with a mission of Building Community through the Arts. Housed in the landmark Paul Robeson Center for the Arts, designed by architect Michael Graves, the ACP fulfills its mission by presenting a wide range of programs including exhibitions, performances, free community cultural events, and studio-based classes and workshops in a wide range of media. Arts Council of Princeton programs are designed to be high-quality, engaging, affordable and
accessible for the diverse population of the greater Princeton region.

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 8:09 AM EST
Tuesday, 16 December 2014
Link to DUFFY's Media Publications
Topic: DUFFY Media Publications

Click this link below to see Duffy's 2014 newspaper and magazine publications 

 

http://www.tammyduffy.com/duffyphotography/id11.html


Posted by tammyduffy at 5:31 PM EST
Updated: Wednesday, 17 December 2014 6:11 AM EST
Monday, 15 December 2014
When A Town Ignores Patient Privacy Rights
Topic: REEALY?

 

When A Town Ignores Patients Privacy Rights

 

By Tammy Duffy

 


 

 

 

Imagine going to an Aids clinic, an ob/gyn clinic or any kind of disease clinic and that night, you see yourself on the evening news. Imagine  buying your newspaper in the morning after the prior day having gone to a clinic; and you see your face posted all over the internet, in the local and national newspapers. If you do not think this can happen, it can, if you live in Hamilton, N.J., Mercer County. This recently occurred during two Hepatitis clinics in December.

 

( I will not repost the links to the area newspapers and news crews that were filming and photographing at the clinics in respect of the privacy of the patients)

  

In 1996, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA was established. It is a set of laws passed by congress in part to protect people’s medical privacy.

 

As you know we live by HIPAA in the USA. If you have a friend or family member in the hospital and they have not told the hospital you are allowed to get their results, you cannot get them. If you do get them, the hospital is hit with very large fines and the person who gave them instantly fired in most cases. Hospitals and outpatients have policies established that they implement to ensure they follow the HIPAA guidelines. It is the law.

 


 

 

 

What happens when a town’s leadership thinks they are above the law and have no concern for anyone’s privacy around you? What happens when there are no policies to protect patient’s rights at the health clinics performed by the town? 

 

Recently, in Hamilton, NJ, there was one food  handler who was diagnosed with Hepatitis A. The restaurant involved was dragged through the mud by the media and the township officials. This has created a large economic hardship for the restaurant. Is it no coincidence that the restaurant is owned by one of old Mayors of the same town. Being an observer of this behavior has been quite despicable for residents in the town. There were 35 people who contracted the enterovirus at restaurant in Princeton. The same media mayhem was not evident.

 

The township of Hamilton set up two hepatitis clinics to give everyone hepatitis A vaccines. We won’t go into how poorly this was all orchestrated, for that would need to be another column. However, I will share one tidbit. The Hamilton Township Health director was telling those of us who already had gotten the HepA vaccine in our lifetime, a vaccine that is good for life, to get a booster shot. However, there is no booster shot available. There is not one manufacturer of hepA vaccines that has ever created a booster. This information comes from the 2 manufactures of the vaccines (Merck and GSK), the CDC and a physician in Princeton. The vaccine is only effective if given within two weeks of first onset of symptoms by the host. The clinics were set up and the public was notified three weeks after that first magic day of symptom onset. When false information is given to the public it creates confusion and social unrest.

 

The media strolled into the hepatitis clinics with cameras, videocameras, etc and videoed and photographed all the people who attended the hepatitis clinic. Google this and you will find the video and photos. The people waiting in line were also videoed and photographed. I have always been taught from my 30 years of working in a hospital settings, NEVER photograph or video a patient, against HIPAA. Unless of course there is a release from the patient allowing this to happen. There were no releases signed by the patients who attended these recent clinics.

Several months ago there was a press conference for the unfortunate loss of a little boy in the same town from EVD68. The school nurse that attended a press conference and was on stage, left a file on the stage after the press conference. This file was picked up by the media and demonstrated the township files and medical information on children from the school. This nurse should never  have even been at the press conference. When this issue was brought to the attention of the towns leadership, there was no response.

 

Facilities, hospitals, clinics, outpatient centers all have policies that ban photography and video from being done in their establishments without written permission from the facility and the patients. I question why the town felt it was more important to photograph the mayor and all those who attended. The mayor has rights to her privacy as well. It’s her health record. Why does the township not have any policies that protect the rights of people who attend the clinics? This is quite disturbing. This will cause people to not use the clinics due to fear that their medical information will end up on the national news. 

 

One of the hepatitis clinics was performed at a local firehouse. Clearly, they have no policies about media involvement during healthcare clinics. There clearly needs to be optimization of the health clinics that the town is involved in. Recently, in October there was a flu clinic held at an event in Hamilton where the vaccines were not refrigerated. I also noticed in the media photos and video on the hepatitis clinic that there the vaccines were on the table. I did not see any coolers to keep the hepatitis vaccines that need to be kept at 36-46 degrees F. I can only hope they did not make that same mistake again. If so, then everyone like at the flu clinic will have to get the vaccines again.

 


 

The public’s medical privacy should never be ignored. Congress implemented laws in 1996 to protect the public. HIPAA is a law.  You are your own best advocate for privacy when it comes to ensuring the rules of HIPAA are being followed both inside and outside of the doctor’s office.  Only you can protect yourself, do not expect leadership to do it. 

 

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 7:04 AM EST
Updated: Tuesday, 16 December 2014 6:11 PM EST
Saturday, 13 December 2014

Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 

Battle of Conscience for Sir Thomas More in “A Man for All Seasons” at 
MCCC’s Kelsey Theatre Jan. 9-18
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

When one’s own conscience proves stronger than the strongest political pressures, a high price is bound to be paid. Join PinnWorth Productions at Mercer County Community College’s (MCCC) Kelsey Theatre for “A Man for All Seasons,” based on the life and times of the British Lord Chancellor Thomas More.  Dates and times for this award-winning historical drama are: Fridays, Jan. 9 and 16 at 8 p.m.; Saturdays, Jan. 10 and 17 at 8 p.m.; and Sundays, Jan. 11 and 18 at 2 p.m. Kelsey Theatre is conveniently located on the college's West Windsor campus, 1200 Old Trenton Road.  A reception with the cast and crew follows the opening night performance on Jan. 9.

Matters of politics, religion, friendship and loyalty collide as Henry VIII contemplates divorcing his barren first wife, Catherine of Aragon, in order to marry Anne Boleyn and produce an heir to the throne of England.  Henry’s loyal chancellor, Sir Thomas More, is a deeply devout Roman Catholic and cannot make peace with the plan, putting him squarely at odds with the King and numerous rivals in the court, most notably the formidable Thomas Cromwell. Can More stay true to his beliefs without paying the ultimate price?

Says LouJ Stalsworth, who directs the production, “We live in an age of compromise and revenge, where doing the easy thing is often the choice that is made instead of doing the right thing.  More, a man of morals and principles, refuses easy compromise.”  Adds John Shaken-Kaye, who plays More, “The show chronicles the age-old conflict between duty to the State, as personified by Cromwell, and adherence to personal conscience, as personified by More.”

Stalsworth notes the central role of The Common Man, who appears as narrator, household servant, boatman, innkeeper, juryman and executioner.  Through him, the audience becomes part of the story; his refusal to take action that could have changed More’s fate is a point that remains relevant for citizens today.

“A Man for All Seasons” premiered in London in 1960 and later came to Broadway, where it enjoyed critical and commercial success.  In addition to several revivals, “A Man for All Seasons” was made into an Academy Award-winning film in 1966.  It has been performed by theater companies throughout the country and on television.

The cast stars Julian Azan of Chesterfield as King Henry; John Shaken-Kaye of Huntington Valley, Pa., as Sir Thomas More; and Rupert Hinton of Princeton as More’s nemesis, Thomas Cromwell.  Also featured are Alana Caraccio of Doylestown, Pa., as Lady Alice More; Krista Coleman of Somerset as Lady Margaret More; Jeff Dworkin of Somerset as The Common Man; Andrew James Gordon of West Windsor as William Roper; Laura B. Lowrie of East Windsor as Catherine Anger; Stephen Pie of Hamilton as Master Richard Rich; John Pinto of Yardley, Pa., as Signor Chapuys; Barry A. Schreier of Princeton as the Duke of Norfolk; William Walters of Columbus as Cardinal Wolsey; and Russ Weiss of Princeton Junction as Bishop Cranmer.

In addition to Stalsworth, the production team includes set and costume designer Kate Pinner and sound and light designer Robert Terrano.  The stage manager is Rachel Piscopo.

Tickets for “A Man for All Seasons” are $18 for adults, $16 for seniors, and $14 for students and children.  Free parking is available next to the theater.  Tickets may be purchased online at www.kelseytheatre.net or by calling the Kelsey Box Office at 609-570-3333.  For a complete listing of adult and children's events, visit the Kelsey webpage or call the box office for a brochure.

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 4:32 PM EST
Need a Break from the Cold Outside? Warm Up at the Zimmerli!
Topic: ART NEWS

Need a Break from the Cold Outside? Warm Up at the Zimmerli!

 

This winter, the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers offers a diverse schedule of programs and events for all interests. Activities take place at the Zimmerli, located at 71 Hamilton Street in New Brunswick, on the Rutgers University College Avenue campus. The museum is closed December 25 and January 1. The Zimmerli is open regular hours on December 26, 27, 28, 30, 31, as well as January 2, 3, and 4. Admission to the museum and all activities is free. For more details, visitwww.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu.

 

2X: Paintings, Pairs, Twins, and Diptychs spotlights five large-scale contemporary works, both loans and from the permanent collection, that examine the concept of doubling. In Western art, interest in the double has a long history, beginning with depictions of Narcissus and his reflection. In modern and contemporary art, artists have incorporated the double (or copy) for a variety of purposes: to juxtapose two states of mind or matter; to complicate notions of time and place; to explore the multiplicity of identity; or even to allude to the moral implications of cloning. These thought-provoking paintings by David Diao, Fariba Hajamadi, Joan Snyder, and Martin Wong will be on view from December 20, 2014, through July 31, 2015. 

 

The Music at the Museum concert series continues this winter. The Young Artists Program on Saturday, December 20, features small ensembles, offering works by Respighi, Weill, Borodin, and Beethoven. The performance begins at 2 p.m. In addition, students from the Mason Gross Extension Division (www.masongross.rutgers.edu/extension) present their recitals on Saturday and Sunday, January 17 and 18, 2015, beginning at 12:45 and 3:00 p.m. each day. These family-friendly weekend concerts are organized by the Extension Division and hosted by the Zimmerli Art Museum. Admission is free for the concerts, but seating is limited. For the complete schedule, visit bit.ly/ZAMMatM.

 

Kick off 2015 at Art After Hours: First Tuesdays by stopping in on the first Tuesday of the year, January 6. The evening includes a curator-led tour of the new exhibition 2X: Paintings, Pairs, Twins, and Diptychs, as well as the galleries that showcase George Segaland Abstraction in Sculpture, beginning at 6:00 p.m. The tour is immediately followed by the next selection in the Big Ten: Art series, which spotlights one intriguing work of art from the collection each month. The New Brunswick Jazz Project presents vocalist Najwa Parkins, joined by Dan Hanrahan (guitar), Chris Simonini (organ), and Kevin Ripley (drums). A graduate of the Temple University Boyer College of Music and Dance, Parkins frequently performs throughout the greater Philadelphia region and has appeared at jazz festivals in the Hague and Detroit. Her album Not the Next Someone Else features jazz standards and her original compositions. The quartet performs two sets, beginning at 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. Art After Hours takes place from 5:00 to 9:00 p.m., featuring free admission and complimentary refreshments. To learn more, visit bit.ly/ArtAfterHourZTues.

 

The New Brunswick Chamber Orchestra (newbrunswickchamberorchestra.org) brings its salon series to the Zimmerli in 2015. The first performance takes place on Sunday, January 11, beginning at 3:00 p.m. Musical selections are interspersed with wine, cheese, and conversation, inviting guests to chat with the musicians about what inspires them and the process behind their art. Future performances begin at 7:00 p.m. on Saturday, March 7, and Friday, May 8. Admission is free for the salon series.

 

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 4:06 PM EST
Thursday, 4 December 2014
Brooklyn Fashion Development
Topic: FASHION NEWS

New York City is investing $3.5 million into a fashion incubator at the Liberty View Industrial Plaza in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.

 

 



 

 The investment by the NYC Economic Development Corp enables the Manufacture New York incubator to be expanded into a full-fledged Manufacturing Innovation Center for Apparel, Textiles and Wearable Tech.

The announcement is being made by New York City Deputy Mayor for Housing and Economic Development Alicia Glen and NYCEDC President Kyle Kimball, accompanied by Manufacture New York CEO Bob Bland and Salmar Properties Co-Founder Marvin Schein.

Manufacture New York is a hybrid fashion incubator and factory space for independent designers in the NYC fashion industry. They just moved the incubator from Manhattan’s Garment District to the new Brooklyn location in Liberty View Industrial Plaza.

The navy building (formerly Federal Building #2) was sold by the U.S. GSA to the NYCEDC, which then picked Salmar Properties to redevelop the 1.1 million-square-foot empty warehouse into an eight-story modern industrial center.

The Manufacturing Innovation Center for the fashion industry in the building’s fifth floor is offering leasable manufacturing space between 1,500 to 25,000 square feet for a wide range of fashion, textile and apparel manufacturers and suppliers.

The space will include an on-site R&D center that will support development of innovative wearable technology. The complex includes plans for everything from automated freight shipping and receiving facilities to a food court, informal meeting space, day care, gym, on-site parking and bike facilities.

The factory floor was built as a green design that lives up to LEED Commercial Interiors Gold Certification standards, and the building shell is also LEED Silver eligible.

More importantly, the Manufacturing Innovation Center’s tenants will be provided assistance in securing NYC economic development incentives. Manufacture New York, Salmar Properties and the Southwest Brooklyn Industrial Development Corporation (SBIDC) will help tenants access various incentive programs available for manufacturers and tenants in the development.

This includes relocation tax credits (REAP and IBZ), low-cost electricity under the City’s Energy Cost Savings Program (ECSP) and Con Edison’s Business Incentive Rate (BIR) Program, and property tax abatements under the ICAP program.

The project has also been granted a PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) agreement with New York City. The tenant attraction package that Manufacture New York is offering therefore includes the possibility to negotiate significantly reduced real estate tax liability.

Fashion is a $98 billion industry in New York City that provides employment to more than 180,000 people, generating $10.9 billion in wages and nearly $2 billion in annual tax revenue.

 

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 7:27 PM EST
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Henri Matisse: The Cut Outs
Topic: ART NEWS

Henri Matisse: The Cut Outs

 

By Tammy Duffy

 


 

 

 

 

Henri Matisse was born in the North of France in 1869.  Unlike the stories of many artists, there are no stories of childhood drawing. It was actually when he was recovering from an operation to remove his appendix at the age of 20, when his mother gave him a box of paints. He would  use his new paint set to escape into a kind of paradise where he was free to be who he wanted to be.  

 

Matisse traveled the world during his career. These very travels are what fed his creativity, color palette and designs.

 

In the final years of artist, Henri Matisse’s life, he invented a groundbreaking method of making art. Beginning in the 1940’s he began to make art by cutting shapes out of paper and distributing them in a lively fashion on boards and walls. He described his technique as, ”drawing with scissors.”  These  works became known as cut outs. They represent a brilliant chapter in the creative life of one of the most significant artists of the 20th century.

 

The Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art in NYC is hosting the exhibition, Matisse: The Cut-Outs. The exhibition runs from October 12, 2014–February 8, 2015. It is one not to miss.

 


 

 

 

Early in Matisse’s cut out process he designed book covers and designs for the ballet without really knowing that this was going to be a new medium. One of the pieces in the exhibition entitled, Two Dancers circa 1937, demonstrates an incredible texture and depth.  The work is not flat  it has an incredible depth.

 

Matisse does not know what he was making. He was cutting paper and making arrangements and  some were for a book, Jazz.  He compared the action of cutting paper to flying. He created a  liveliness to flat paper.  Matisse created Jazz when he was living in France. His wife and daughter were arrested for doing work with the résistance. He was very worried about that. He was working on Jazz at this time.  Some of the iconography can be viewed as ominous and certain images are directly related to German aggression. The wolf is supposed to represent the Gestapo.  There are wonderful bursts of light that have been seen as shells or ammunition blasts. The context in which these pieces were created allow one to understand the history of that time.

 


 

 

 

 

The range and intensity of Matisse’s palette is quite extensive.  He was incredibly aware and exact with the use of color.  There were 17 different oranges that he used. Studio assistances would paint his paper in advance.  They would use large sweeping strokes to create the correct color he wanted.  Matisse would then cut the pieces.  He used a fishing rod to place things on the wall to display his cutouts.

Perhaps unexpectedly for a painter who was so completely motivated by color, Matisse’s genius is never so evident as in his drawings—in a few beautifully balanced lines he can express perfectly the character or beauty of his sitter. His works as a sculptor also became of increasing importance to him, and many believe him to have been as gifted a sculptor as he was a painter. 

 

Time Life commissioned Matisse to create the Piece Christmas Eve.  He never made his stars by cutting them out individually. He would cut out numerous triangles and then build the star from the triangles. He used his cut outs as a form of sculpture.

 


 

 

 

The female form was an important piece of iconography for Matisse throughout his career.  He made the body out of color with the sweep of his scissors. He united color and drawing by this process.  He would build the figures out of his cutouts. If he had difficultly with a piece he would stop and then do a drawing and use the drawing to help him create the form.  Matisse would spend time outdoors drawing the movement of objects, trees, plants, birds, people, etc. He would then use these drawings to help create his cutouts to create works of art.  He was drawing with scissors.

 The chief function of color should be to serve expression as well as the possibility of thought. Matisse put down his tones without a preconceived plan. If at first, and perhaps without  him having been conscious of it, one tone would particularly seduce or catch him. He would respect this tone while progressively alter and transform all the others. The expressive aspect of color imposed itself on him in a purely instinctive way.  When he would paint an autumn landscape  he would not try to remember what the colors were of the season.  He would be inspired by the sensation that the season aroused in him, the ice purity of the sour blue sky would express the season just as well as the nuances of foliage. 


 

 

 

Matisse’s dedication to his art throughout his life was total and every painting, every work, was the product of painstaking care and thought.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 11:01 AM EST
Updated: Thursday, 27 November 2014 11:08 AM EST
Wednesday, 19 November 2014

Solar-Powered Stone Bike Path in the Netherlands Celebrates Van Gogh

 

To celebrate the life and work of painter Vincent van Gogh, Dutch artist and designer Daan Roosegaarde has created an illuminated bike path inspired by one of van Gogh’s most famous works; “Starry Night”. The path honors the 125th anniversary of Vincent van Gogh’s death in a spectacularly beautiful way. The kilometer-long bike path features 50,000 glow-in-the-dark stones, which have been embedded in the ground.

 


 

 

 The solar-powered stones soak up the sun’s rays by day, resulting in a breath-taking swirling pattern of glowing fragments reminiscent of Van Gogh’s “Starry Night”.

 


 

 

The installation is part of the larger Van Gogh Cycle Route, which is free of charge and open to the public year round. The entire route measures 335 kilometres and is split into five individual day trips, which connect several Van Gogh heritage sites.

 

Throughout the year, additional cultural events will take place in the Netherlands, Belgium and France to celebrate the life and work of Van Gogh.

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 5:51 PM EST

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