Tag: artist

  • Sarah and Pickle by Kristin Bauer

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    Sarah and Pickle by Kristin Bauer

    A recent eLIFE study that found "two dog owners who don't even know each other have about as many of the
    skin bacteria in common as a married couple living together…consistent with a common occurrence of oral–skin transfer between dogs and their owners," aka doggie kisses.

    The bacteria is harmless and may actually boost the immune system.  Not surprisingly, there was no "analogous germ signature for cat owners." 

    The study reminded me of one of my favorite dog paintings of one of my favorite people, Sarah Bibb, friend, fashion designer, and owner of the the lovely Folly boutique in Portland, Oregon.  The intimacy of dog and owner that many of us share doesn't always find it's way into pet portraits.  

    The artist is actress Kristin Bauer of HBO's True Blood.  Visit her website to see more of her work.

    Hat tip to Gregory Han.

  • Call of the Mild by David Corcoran

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    Call of the Mild, Acrylic on Plexiglass, 60" x 33"

    San Francisco readers, David Corcoran is showing new works this weekend at Mercury Cafe.  Stop by the opening party on Saturday, April 6, 2013, from 4-7 and meet David.   He told me Call of the Mild is the only dog art work in the show.  But at this scale, what more do you need?  All beers are happy hour prices, too.


    You might remember David's Man's Best Friend I posted the day after Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy 2008.




    Mercury Cafe


    201 Octavia Street


    San Francisco, CA 94102


    415.252.7855

  • Tribute to Cassie – Beth Stafford’s Mentor and Muse

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    Orange Spot No. 1

    Cassie, one of my favorite dog artists passed away on September 22, 2012.   She was North Carolina artist Beth Stafford’s 13-year-old Airedale.  She was also Beth’s collaborator, art teacher, and non-traditional muse.  Together, Cassie and Beth made paintings and digital artworks, sold under the name PicassieO, inspired by Cassie’s nose smudges on Beth’s windows.  

    In those smudges Beth, who is an accomplished artist on her own, saw Cassie’s passion for life, her love of squirrels, deer, birds, and scents of the seasons.  And she also saw an avenue to experiment with the abstract and the organic in ways that are, in my opinion, reminiscent of Georgia O’Keeffe, Matisse, Jackson Pollack, and the duo’s namesake, Picasso.  I wanted to share some of my favorite PicassieOs with you and check in with Beth to send her my condolences.

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    Cassie at Work

    Moira McLaughlin: I was so sad to hear of Cassie’s passing.   I have been a fan of you both since I wrote about PicassieO in 2008.  I wanted to celebrate Cassie’s life and share your story with new Dog Art Today readers, many of whom have their own non-traditional muses sharing studio space with them.  How did you Cassie come into your life?

    Beth Stafford: I found her through the old Mid-Atlantic Airedale Rescue. Her owners divorced and gave her up.  She was 16 months old when I adopted her on September 6, 2000.  She was a wild child until she finally settled down as much as an Airedale can.  We were able to celebrate her twelfth “Gotcha Day” last month. We had a dozen great years together, but it’s still too short.

    MM: How long after you adopted her did you begin collaborating?

    BS: I didn’t recognize her talent until six years after I adopted her.  She had been marking the windows for years before my “aha” moment.  It happened one day when I was taking a break upstairs and looked at my west windows which are behind the couch where Cassie liked to perch to see what was happening outside.  The sun was beaming in and hit the marks just right.  I was really blown away by the beauty and freedom of her “brushwork”.  I grabbed my camera and photographed away.  Then I started playing with the pictures in Photoshop Elements, filtering and coloring until I liked the results.  At first that’s all I did.

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    Pink Lady

    MM: Were you struggling with your own art, looking for inspiration at the time?

    BS: Yes.  My style for 20 years was very precise, hard-edged, and mostly involved architectural subjects.  I was really good at it, but I was getting bored.  I had been experimenting with different mediums and subject matter for several years, but I found it challenging to turn loose my inhibitions until Cassie set me free.  She was an expressionist master!  Using her totally uninhibited reactions to life around us as a starting point, I was able to concentrate on my love of color and composition and produce the wild art that I am doing as PiCassieO, and I was able to honor my mentor by putting her in the center of the name of another fun artist.

    MM: Did your collaboration with Cassie represent a creative breakthrough?

    BS: Most definitely.

    MM: Did you put your own ideas on hold or ever second guess working with Cassie?

    BS: Her “ideas” were the starting point for my new art.  At first I stuck to what she had done and just cropped and altered the photos.  Then, a few years later, I got a stylus and began to draw on the marks, which was a big change in the look.  Lately I have been outlining her strokes and lifting them by cutting and pasting into new files.  Then I cut and paste other elements of the photo and do a virtual collage with all of it.  An example is Matisse Collage (see below).  That’s what I was doing when Cassie got sick, so I haven’t done many of them.   Meanwhile, I was branching out into painting again, using the prints as inspiration. Orange Spot No. 1 (see above) is one of them.  That’s the direction I plan to explore, solid colors and sharp lines, far from where I started.

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    Cassie’s Nose Garden

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    LOST Abstract No. 3

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    Matisse Landscape Painting

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    Matisse Collage

    MM: Are you able to create now? Or has grieving impacted your creativity?

    BS: I am still trying to catch up on all the things I neglected while she was sick (and while I was recuperating from breaking my wrist in February when slid off the dog ramp in the rain), but I have managed to make some of our PiCassieO jewelry, which doesn’t involve a lot of time and helps me concentrate on something besides missing her, at least for a little while. Every time I go to my photo organizers there are dozens of pictures of Cassie, so I usually wind up crying instead of working.  I’m trying to get all those photos organized and saved onto jump drives.  It’s necessary if I am ever going to get back to serious work.  I say “serious” but this is really the most fun I’ve ever had with my art, thanks to my goofball dog!  She was my best teacher, as well as my best friend.

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    Beth and Cassie: the artistic duo known as PicassieO

    MM: I am so deeply sorry for your loss, Beth. I know no words can help, but I hope each day gets a little easier and you can find inspiration in Cassie’s photos in new and joyful ways.  Rest in peace, sweet girl.

    Cassie-on-back-of-couch

    Cassie, April 12, 1999 – September 22, 2012


    See more of Cassie and Beth Stafford’s work or buy your own PicassieO:

    http://www.airedale-art.blogspot.com
    http://www.bethstafford.com
    http://www.picassieo.etsy.com
    http://www.zazzle.com/picassieo
    http://www.cafepress.com/PiCassieO_Art
    http://www.facebook.com/BethStaffordArtAdventures

  • Patti Haskins Offers Free Shipping for Plushies

     

     

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    You don’t have to be a plushie to get free shipping (what you do in your private life is your own business).  You just have to pick a plushie dog, cat, fish, or pig from Pattie Haskins’s etsy store and enter coupon code “dogart.”  Patti is a self-taught artist from Dallas who crochets these soft sculpture animals without using patterns.  I think that gives them each an individual character, just like every animal you ever met.   My favorite is the apple green and brown striped Dachshund.  His Doxie expression is just perfect. 

    Lately, I’ve been reading a lot about the fibershed movement, people attempting to clothe themselves using textiles sourced within 150 miles of their homes.  It would be interesting to combine the stuffed animal market with the fibershed folks and bring back the locally-sourced toy.  Just try finding a sock mokey that isn’t made in China.  Until then, visit Patti’s etsy store, website or blog for homegrown American plushies.

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    Patti also offers custom crocheted critters.  You send her photos like this…

     

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    And she makes this…

     

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    Darling…omg…am I a plushie?!

  • Dog Art Christmas Card by Dog Art Now

     

    * Sponsored Link *

     

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    Jean Summerville has a charming selection of dog art Christmas cards at her website Dog Art Now, including this sweet reindeer dog.  All cards are blank inside and printed with a glossy finish on premium 80 lb. card stock.

     

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     Click here to order this card.   View all her cards here.

    Jean also offers commissions, necklaces, t-shirts, and flower paintings "bursting with color, inspiration, and smile-creating flavor."  Visit Dog Art Now to see more.

     

  • Pet Portraits by Happy Menocal

     

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    Loose and lovely pet portraits by Happy Menocal.

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    Visit Happy Menocal's website to commission a portrait of your pet.  Via Dog Milk.

  • Emily L. Eibel’s Rural Dogs

     

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    Her bio reads, “Emily L. Eibel wants a cabin in the woods, but for now, she lives in Brooklyn.”  If sewing is a form of casting spells, a rustic life is not far off.

     

     

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    Visit Emily L. Eibel’s website for more information.  Via The Jealous Curator.

  • Dog Pantings by Sebastiàn Chillemi

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    I received a nice note from Argentinian artist Sebastiàn Chillemi with 11 of his dog paintings attached.  All of them were wonderful, but these are my favorites.  I am especially drawn to the first one.  The little guy reminds me of John Singer Sargent's Pointy, a portrait I consider one of the best dog art works of all time.

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    Visit Sebastiàn Chillemi's blog to see more.  His non-dog subjects are exquisite too.

  • Dachshund U.N. by Bennett Miller

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    Via Gawker:

    For his new installation, Australian
    artist Bennett Miller has assembled a meeting of the U.N. Commission on
    Human Rights in the Melbourne Museum plaza. The part that is "art" is
    that all of the delegates are dogs. All together: Awwwwww.

    Dachsund U.N., part of the Next Wave Festival,
    is a "meditation on the utopian aspirations of the Commission on Human
    Rights, and our capacity as humans to imagine and achieve a universal
    system of justice." It is also way more cute than gory ol' Francis
    Bacon.

    Miller, a 29-year-old artist from Perth, chose Dachsunds for their
    similarities to humans: "They have their own racial diversity – black,
    brown, red. Also, even though they're restricted in their movement,
    they are quite determined and proud." He was able to put together his
    U.N. assembly with the help of the Dachsund Club of Victoria, whose
    initial skepticism was overcome once Miller was able to demonstrate
    that he wouldn't "portray the dogs in a demeaning way."

    Hat tip to Nag on the Lake for sending me this link.  Genius.

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    Bennett Miller wrangles his art

    Images courtesy of Getty.  See images of the Doxies next to photos of the ambassadors they represent at Gawker.

  • Ooh La La: Paris Dogs

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    A cozy cafe and a warm pink blanket.  How civilized.

    Artist Carol Gillot over at Paris Breakfasts has a terrific post about the fabulously chic life of Paris dogs.  Go there now and pretend you’re on a “mini break” (as Bridget Jones would say).  April in Paris with your dog, even if it’s just pretend, c’est magnifique!

    Visit Carol’s etsy store to see her lovely Parisian city-scapes.