Tag: Brian Rubenacker

  • Adrianna Button at The Dog Show

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    English Bull Dog

    Charlotte, NC artist Adrianna Button’s works will be featured tomorrow night at Green Rice Gallery’s exhibition, The Dog Show.  Three of her magnificent oil painting will be on display alongside 11 other dog artists (including Brian Rubenacker whom I featured here back in May).

    While Adrianna refers to her paintings as Contemporary, I am struck how much they remind me of late19th/early 20th century artist John Singer Sargent’s work…well, specifically one of his pieces.   Her brush strokes and energy capture the same essence I see in Sargent’s Pointy, one of my all time favorite dog paintings. 

    Adrianna studied painting as a girl alongside her artist father, and says,  “My undergraduate work painting and illustration was spent exploring figures in all types of mixed media, but my love of dogs has captured my creative spirit.”  Maybe it’s the spirit of love that ties Sargent and Button together.  Pointy was painted for a woman Sargent was enamored with and Button’s dogs glow with a women who’s found a subject she is enamored with.  Or maybe Button is simply a super-talented artist in the classic oil on canvas tradition and Sargent was way ahead of his time. 

    Regardless, I would love to see her paintings up close and really experience them.  If you’re in the Charlotte area, you get the chance to do so tomorrow night at Green Rice Gallery.   Sounds like a great night!

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    Golden Retriever

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    Black Lab

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    Italian Greyhound

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    Goldendoodle

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    Cavalier King Charles Spaniel

    Information:

    The Dog Show
    Opening Reception: July 18, 2008
    Time: 7–9 pm

    Green Rice Gallery
    451 East 36th St.
    Charlotte, NC 28205
    704-344-0300

    Show runs until August 31, 2008

    For more information about Adrianna Button or to commission a portrait of your pet visit her website Year of the Dog.

  • Brian Rubenacker’s Precocious Dog Art

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    I almost didn’t post about Brian Rubenacker’s wonderful dog paintings today.  Something about them — their color palette, the dogs’ heads under the graphics, the shape of the canvases – seemed too similar to the Nepalese dog art I featured on Tuesday.  And I like to mix things up.  Then, I remembered the art history class staple of the split screen critique where two styles of art are compared and contrasted.  So today, I’m getting professorial and looking at Rubenacker’s work in light of the Nepalese dog art tradition.

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    The dog art from Nepal might be classified as naïve art, defined as untrained, awkward, charming, and simple but no less powerful.  Rubenacker’s work could be called pseudo naïve, a term used to define a formally trained artist (Rubenacker is) who consciously ignores traditions of fine art.  But I don’t think it’s quite the right classification for him.  He doesn’t exactly fall into the pop surrealist movement either, lacking the Boschian darkness common to it.  So for Rubenacker, I’m coining a new classification: "Precocious Art."

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    His dogs are naughty and knowing.  They are childlike with their toys, and as cool as Rat Packers with their martinis and highballs.  They are up to no good, smoking cigarettes and getting into the cookie jar, but they are certainly not primitive in the naïve tradition, or terror-filled, hopeless, nihilistic and gruesome in the pop surrealist one.  They are simply precocious.  And judging from Rubenacker’s success in this style, his work is found in private collections around the world, they are quite popular.  Maybe "Pop Precocious" is a more accurate term to capture his unique style.  Just remember you heard it here first.  Class dismissed.

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    Rubenacker lives in Waterford Michigan with his lovely wife, René, and his two Boston Terriers.  Visit his Etsy shop and his blog to learn more.