Tag: dog artist

  • Charming Baker’s Dogs

     

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    Dignity Rides a Tricky Pony

    London artist Charming Baker is influenced by “cheap books, heroes, girls, Zulus, odd-looking women, suburbia, da riddum, family, stories, horses, dogs, packaging, summer holidays, the smell of make-up and cheap perfume, powertools, tea, tomatoes, Britain in colour.”

    He’s been painting pretty much unnoticed for over 20 years.  Then in 2009, he signed with music manager Pat Magnarella and became an overnight sensation at age 47.  Read about Baker’s path outside the traditional gallery system here.  I found his work at Viennese artist Petra Hartl’s truly awesome dog art blog Hundkunst.  Translation here.  

     

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    The Establishment Looks on in Wonder

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    That Wish Drives Us (Is Beyond Our Control)

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    The God Given Pleasure of Another Man’s Nightmare

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    What a Strange & Beautiful Thing (Grey)

    Charming Baker’s website.

    Seriously, visit Petra’s dog art blog.   I think you will love it.

    Petra Hartl’s website, too.

  • 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?!

  • Pen + Ink Dog Portraits by Jo Chambers

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    Bath, UK artist Jo Chambers likes to tell stories with her work.   And when it comes to her custom dog portraits, with a good photo from the client and a brief description, she tells the story of your pet’s “personality” with simple lines and pen and ink.  Her whimsical drawings are so rich they are often mistaken for watercolor paintings.  It’s not too late to order a Jo Chambers original of your dog, but act now because Martha Stewart recently featured her in her gift guide (yay Jo! but so bummed I was scooped by Martha).

    Visit Jo Chambers’s blog Studio Legohead to commission a portrait.  An 8.5 x 11″  pen and ink drawing is $140.   You can tell her what your dog would like to wear; hat, bow tie, tiara, or au naturale.

    Jo also sells postcards and greeting cards of her pen and ink drawings at her etsy shop.  These would be great holiday cards or hostess gifts.  And stop by her blog to see what she’s up to.  Tell her Moira, not Martha sent you.

     

     

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  • Eileen Blodgett at the Nevada City Artisans Festival

     

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    Black Dogs, Red House

    I've been meaning to write about Nevada City, California artist Eileen Blodgett since August when I met her at a local show and discovered dogs in her work.  I had admired her art since I first saw her Queen of Hearts, #2 in the ASiF (Artists' Studios in the Foothills) "Art of Love"  show here in February.  She won first prize.

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    Queen of Hearts, #2

    During our chat last August, Eileen explained how the Queen of Hearts, #2 was one of a series of the 52 card deck that she began when she turned 52.  She confessed it was a much larger undertaking than she had expected.  Several years had passed and she was not even at the half-way point.  But, because she does not go in order of suits or numbers, the experience of being drawn to a certain card and discovering its meaning has been endlessly inspiring to her as an artist and a person.  Like getting a Tarot reading before embarking on a new project.  As a Tarot card reader myself, I spent a while circling her booth and turning her card rack in my own trance before picking the Ten of Diamonds to purchase.  She graciously waved away my money and told me it was a gift.

     

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    Ten of Diamonds

    Then, she turned over the card and showed me its meaning written on the back…

    One phase of life is ended and another is about to begin.  A journey combines business and pleasure and will bring a reward.  Off with the old and on with the new, fear not new beginnings.  The Titanic was built by professionals, but the Ark was built by a volunteer.   Go ahead, try whatever it is that is calling you.

    I was teary-eyed and elated.   The week before, I had mentally shut down some projects that weren't working for me to make room for new for new ones, scary ones, I had less confidence in myself about accomplishing.  This card and this artist were telling me to go for it.  I accepted the gift and the wisdom. Then, Eileen said that this was the first card she ever created.  The first in her own 52 card project.  The one that opened the door to years of inspiration, direction, accolades, and compensation.  How perfect, I tried to tell her.   How grateful, I tried to show her.   I don't know if she understood.  But it mattered to me on many levels and the Ten of Diamonds hangs framed on my wall, its printed message posted in my art studio, a daily reminder to "fear not…and go ahead."   Thank you, Eileen.

    Now some more dogs…

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    Four of Spades

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    #26

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    River Folks

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    A Lot Going On

    Eileen Blodgett will be at the Nevada City Artisans Festival next weekend at the Miners Foundry, November 25 through November 27, 10am – 5pm, admission is $3.  This show is a 35 year-old tradition and the quality of artists are excellent.   There is also live music, foood, drinks, and a fire in the fireplace.  Like the tulips of Ananda it is one of the events that drew me here.

    Visit Eileen Blodgett's website to purchase originals and prints online.

    Also, speaking of Noah volunteering to build the Ark, we are looking for volunteers to help decorate the Nevada City Miners Foundry for the holidays on Tuesday November 22, Adults 9am – 12pm and children welcome from 12pm – 3pm.   If you can't make it, but would like to sponsor a tree or a wreath or an amaryllis flower. Or donate something from our wish list, please email me.

    Information about the Miners Foundry Decorating Schedule and Wish List

    Here is our Pinterest inspiration board.   I call it "miners first Christmas chic."

  • UK Dog Artist Sally Muir

     

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    Back in October of 2010 I featured Sally Muir and Joanna Osborne’s book Best in Show: Knit Your Own Dog.   I had no idea that Sally Muir is also a talented painter of dogs.  So happy to share her work, but so difficult to select favorites.  Click through to Sally Muir’s website to see all her dogs.

     

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  • Studio Spotlight: Nancy Schutt

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    Nancy Schutt and her Chihuahua Pablo

    Seattle-based artist Nancy Schutt is the winner of this year's Mutt Lynch Winery – Dog Art Today Wine Label Contest with her entry "Out of Reach."  Nancy has a BFA from Colorado State University and an MFA from the University of Oregon.  Before devoting herself to painting dogs, she was courtroom artist, a drawing instructor, and a general contractor.  She will be joining us at this year's Mutt Lynch Winery Dog Days of Summer event in Sonoma on August 6, 2011 to unveil the wine that was inspired by her winning entry.  She will also be selling prints, sketching dogs, and signing bottles of "Out of Reach."  To me, Nancy is one of the most inspiring dog artists working today.  I think her use of color, composition, and, most of all, humor, are simply brilliant.  I am so pleased to share her work and her process with you in this studio spotlight.    — Moira McLaughlin.

    How did you get started as a dog artist?

    If one wants to be an artist, it's very difficult figuring out what to do with that desire and how to make a living with it.  I started out painting metaphorical images that came to me (some of which are in my Early Work Gallery on my website), but one day I did a watercolor of my sister's dogs, and my mother said, "Honey, you could make money doing this."  Magic words to an artist!  I painted the dogs of my friends and had a show at a small gallery in Seattle, and people called me asking for paintings of their dogs.  I showed in cafes for years to get commissions.  Now I primarily get business through my website, and often never meet the dogs or people.

    Tell me about your studio.

    I built this studio in my backyard ten years ago.  I mean I built it with hammer and nails and the help of two teenagers.  No rent!

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    Nancy's studio

    What is your favorite medium and why?

    Acrylic on canvas or board.  I like how it dries quickly and I can rework an area fairly soon.   I like the vividness of the color.   I like that though it is not entirely benign, acrylic paint is fairly non-toxic, and because it is water based, I use no solvents.

    How would you describe your art?

    Colorful, playful, humorous.  Hockneyesque.  David Hockney is my favorite painter.  My initial goal was to paint dogs like David Hockney paints interiors, or swimming pools, or landscapes.  It shows, but now the paintings dictate themselves rather than strive to be similar to those of another artist.

    I am most concerned with color and composition.  The dogs are a wonderful vehicle for allowing me to create color compositions that have meaningful content as well as energetic color relationships.  For me, the dogs are important and portraying them in all of their uniqueness is the main purpose of the paintings, but I spend most of my time on a painting working out the color composition.  Colors are capable of creating a three dimensional illusion just by their relationships to each other.  To the human eye, colors may reach forward or extend back into a painting, and this motion creates a pulsation of energy in the painting.  That is the heartbeat of the painting, and making it visible, rhythmic, harmonious, enticing, is the ultimate objective for me.

     

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    Heidi, with a hint of David Hockney

    Please share three of your favorite pieces and why you chose them.

    I chose these three because they are some of my most recent works, and two of them incorporate people, which is a new direction for me.  Also, the one entitled Bob, Fay, and Polo is a portrait of one of my favorite artists, Fay Jones, who lives and works in Seattle and whose work I greatly admire.

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    Rebel

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    Lynn, Bertie, and Pia

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    Bob, Fay, and Polo

    You have over 30 "bad" dogs on your website.   How did you select which one to submit to the Mutt Lynch Winery – Dog Art Today Wine Label Contest with the theme of "naughty" this year?

    I was working on a series of paintings of dogs doing things that I found humorous, though to them they are just being dogs. Then, I actually painted Out of Reach specifically for the contest, based on a similar painting I did previously.  Of course in Out of Reach, the dog isn't after the wine, which kind of amused me too, since we humans would find the wine a more valuable prize.  So it's just a bit askew that this image is for a wine label with a dog theme, but to the dog it's all about the butter.

    My Chihuahua, Pablo, always amuses me how he tries to get his nose up to counter top level where things are happening.  But, no matter the effort behind the stretch, he can only reach so far.  That doesn't stop him from trying again next time!  Dogs are pretty hilarious really, so like us in their behaviors but with none of the subterfuge, or shame, or concern for polite company.  Their blatant efforts to get what they want without hiding their true intentions can be very funny.  To a human, crawling under a table for a micro-crumb of cookie or rummaging through garbage might feel a bit degrading, even if we really wanted something that was there.  To a dog it's the most sensible thing in the world to just go after it.  I had a dog before Pablo who was CRAZY for balls.  I can't imagine having to be so forceful in my NO MOREs with a human who was after me to do something for them.  It used to crack me up how insistent she was even after strong rejections.

     

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    Out of Reach, Mutt Lynch Winery – Dog Art Today's 2011 winning wine label entry

    What are your thoughts about winning the contest?

    So fun!  What a treat to have one's artwork on a wine label!  And as a person running a small business, it's wonderful marketing and exposure for me.  The wine isn't available in Washington State, so I will do what I can to help find a distributor and hopefully see it on the shelves of some of my favorite shops.  And many thanks to you, Moira, for the brilliant idea of having this contest and to Mutt Lynch Winery for making it a reality.  The contest has brought many artists out into the public eye.

    Would you like to share any upcoming projects or goals for the future?

    I have recently been interested in painting multiple dog portraits that include the humans in the painting. Personal environments have always been a part of my paintings, which I think it part of what makes my work unique.  The humans are certainly a part of that environment too, and including them brings another level of interest to the piece.

    Otherwise, it's always the same project — trying to make a living as an artist.  I will continue primarily doing commissioned paintings, but I will soon be offering a new line of prints on my website which will be much less expensive than anything I am currently offering.  It would be wonderful to create more wine labels! And always in my mind is the idea of a book, but it's still brewing.

    And finally, is your Chihuahua and muse, Pablo, named after a famous artist?

    Yes, a verrrrry famous artist.

    Thank you, Nancy, for sharing your work.  You are a true inspiration to all dog artists, including me.

    Mutt Lynch Dog Days of Summer:

    Date: August 6, 2011
    Time:  11:00am – 4:00pm
    Ticket Price: $20 if purchased online here before August 4.  $25.00 at the door.  A portion of admission and sales will benefit the Healdsburg Animal Shelter
    Location: 602 Limerick Lane, Healdsburg, CA 95448
    Dogs on leashes are welcome

    For more information visit Mutt Lynch Winery.

    To order a bottle or case of Out of Reach after it is released on August 6, 2011 click here.

    Visit Seattle dog artist Nancy Schutt's website.

    Photo of  Nancy and Pablo by Seattle family photographer Anita Nowacka.

  • Ammi Phillips: Early American Dog Artist

     

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    Child in Pink with Dog by Ammi Phillips

    Ammi Phillips was a self-taught Early American portrait artist who lived from 1788-1865.  Dogs, symbols of fidelity, sometimes appear in his work.   I’ve featured him before on July 4th, in 2007, with a portrait of a Girl in a Red Dress that looked surprisingly like my niece, Lucy.  I  couldn’t resist featuring him again after discovering one of the best collections I’ve ever seen of his work at Barbara’s blog, 19th-Century American Women, a fascinating blog to poke around if you’re looking for something to do this weekend.  I especially like her post on 19th-century women playing tennis.

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    Mrs. Stephen Nottingham Ostrander with Child and Dog, 1837

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    Andrew Jackson Tenbreoke, 1834

    Happy 4th of July!  Have a great weekend.

  • Kat Corrigan: 30 Dogs + a Dog Show

     

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    Giacco

    Minneapolis artist, Kat Corrigan, is diving in the deep end this summer when it comes to her dog art.   First, there is her “Dog Show” exhibition that opens tomorrow night, June 30, at the Key North Boutique.  Then, on July 1, she commences 30 Dog in 30 Days, an ambitious project she describes as “a dedicated painting practice, where the commitment to painting every day positively (and sometimes profoundly) affects the quality of the overall work.”  Half-way through the painting marathon she will give an artist’s talk on July 14, once again at Key North Boutique.  Then, she will mount an exhibition of all 30 dog paintings on August 19 at Diamond’s Coffee Shop, where she is also creating a space where the actual dog muses can attend.

    If you’re not in Minneapolis to see this dynamo in action, visit her blog,  My AUTOBI-DOG-RAPHY, where she will be posting her completed dog each day.  If you are in Minneapolis, stop by one of her events with banana, some Gatorade, and a foil blanket.  Go Kat!

    The paintings in this post are from Corrigan’s 30 Dogs in 30 Days 2010.  See them all here.

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    Max

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    Calypso

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    Tighe

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    Che

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    Sasha

    Kat has two spaces left for the 30 Dogs in 30 Days project. Email her for price and availability.

  • Dog Painting by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

     

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    Follette by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

    Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec is mainly known for his 19th century Parisian women.   Ballerinas, can-can girls, and laundresses all were subjects of his work.  But he was also a very sensitive dog artist.  And he was quite resourceful.  This piece, Follette, 1890, is oil painted on cardboard.   It is part of the Philadelphia Museum of Art's collection, not currently on view.  But you can see it and enlarge it on their website.

    Touc, Seated on Table is another dog painting by Toulouse-Lautrec.  It is one of my all-time favorites.  A postcard of it has been hanging on my refrigerator for years.

  • Contest: Win Scottie Christmas Cards From Art Paw

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    One of my favorite artists and bloggers, Rebecca Collins, is giving away a set of her Big Tommy Christmas cards.  Stop by her Art Dog Blog and enter to win. Hint, it’s all about spreading “Joy.”

    Rebecca will select the winner this Saturday, November 20, 2010.  Good luck!