Categories
Subjects
Abstract Acrylic Art Bible Bicycling Birds Calendars Caricature Cartoons Cats Christianity Commercial Art Definitions Documentary Dogs Drawing Exhibited Expressionism Free Thinker Futurist Homelessness Music Oil Paintings Oregon Painting Personal Philosophy photo Podcast Pop Portraits Publications Realism Religion Review Shows Sketching Spirituality Spring Suicide Transgender Travel Twitter Watercolor
Tag Archives: Shows
Artist’s Reception
Sadly, it turns out that I will not be attending my own reception at The Center For Fine Art Photography in Fort Collins, Colorado on the 4th. I wanted to go but work schedule and finances are not going to allow it. I didn’t know this until yesterday. For those expecting to see me there, I apologize.
I will do better next time. Hopefully someone will get pictures of the reception and displayed work for me!
In other news, Thursday is anniversary of the death of FloJo the Cat. And we’re having a winter storm this late with 50mph winds and 4 inches of rain. I guess this isn’t the best time of year.
Abstract Paintings at The Show, New Art
I had a great one-person show at the Inn At Cape Kiwanda – not a lot of people there, but the management clearly has a good understanding of art, far beyond the usual riff-raff we see here in our little part of the WORLD.
I’ve got some new abstracts that I haven’t been able to photograph …it’s tough with huge paintings (96 x 84) because I don’t have real studio space. I can only photograph them the same way I paint them: outdoors. And the weather hasn’t been amenable to that.
Tierra Del Mar Summer Art Fair In Pictures and Words
The Tierra Del Mar Summer Fair is over so I thought I’d share some pictures and thoughts with you. I apologize for the quality of the images: I’m still having some problems with my overpriced digital camera. I’ll probably have to replace it at some point. *sigh* Tierra Del Mar is a little community just north of Cape Kiwanda/Pacific City Oregon and their annual art fair helps fund the community center. I was put in based on the recommendation of one of their musicians but I think they regretted it.
Anyway, let’s get started…
The space was okay, but I had too many large format paintings and not enough smaller ones for the shape of the spaces I was working with. The organizer went out of her way to help, however – and the people were nice.
So you can hardly tell, due to the bad images, but they got a good mix and there were lots of compliments. A few people – – even admired and complimented my my work. Amazing.
Of course, I wasn’t the only one at the show! They were all very nice people (the artists, I mean) and are very very good at what they do.
Charlie Gibbs does many interesting things with glass, and is quite charming too. His work shows he has a real head for art.
Pat Schultz does amazing needle work – she teaches too. Her collection features Brazilian Needle art, and it sold well during the show.
This lady does Pastels and fabric art. Her fabric collages look a little like oil paintings. It’s very impressive. I don’t think the pastels sold well, although they are very competent renderings. Personally, I loved them. It was the fabric art that really was the rave of the show.
You know, I never thought of fly tying as an art, but rather as a skill. But this gentleman has managed to turn his craft into an art. People love his hand-tied flies in Christmas ornaments.
I enjoyed meeting local artists, including Rose Perez, who dropped by to say ‘hi’. I’m not much of a socializer and I don’t consider myself to be an artist in the same way as Rose or some of these other people, but it was fun anyway. And I don’ think the people who ran the event liked me. I’m not sure why. They just didn’t.
Object Oriented Abstract Museum Piece
“Old Snow Tires In Two Asymmetric Stacks”
Featured at Oregon’s Pioneer Museum for the month of September 2004, Old Snow Tires is the quintessential object-oriented abstract, illustrating both the method and the power of my object-oriented approach.
At 72×60, this free-hanging canvas has it all, and even though I’m still barely scratching the surface of the power and depth of object-orientation, I’m still very proud of this piece. Be sure to see this work in person if you can …
Composition through the arrangement of the subject matter was the key: I spent quite a bit of time finding just the right layout of my objects and then even more time selecting just the right colors. Planar and non-planar applications were used, with initial transparent layering followed by more opaque effects.
Meditation is the key to the visual journey. By letting yourself bond with this painting, you will suddenly see the shapes of the two stacks of tires come to life. As your brain creates new neural pathways to accommodate the visual information contained in this painting you may find yourself achieving a powerful altered state of consciousness.
Enjoy!
– Chriss Pagani












