I love everything about this photo taken in downtown Charleston, SC… the oldness, the uniqueness… I simply cannot imagine walking around downtown Charleston without a camera! Beauty everywhere!
Have a great weekend ~ Catch you back here tomorrow!
I ran across another very cool artist… I was on Maine HOME + DESIGN’s Facebook page. They always have the coolest posts. I ran across an image of a painting by artist Craig Mooney. His work is wonderful, and diverse. Landscapes, Cityscapes, Florals, Figures as well as his newest work. Most of Craig’s landscapes appear to me to be very peaceful. This one has bravado. A bit more dramatic, the darkness in the clouds, it’s almost as if you’re floating (or flying) overhead and catching the view while moving. Very different. I like it!
Here’s a blip about Craig from his website (including image)…
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Craig Mooney makes paintings of dramatic moments and heightened emotionality that are known for being expansive and expressive. Though a representational painter, the artist incorporates a myriad of abstract qualities throughout his paintings. In his figurative work, Mooney romanticizes his subjects and presents them in an atmospheric lens that is best described as dreamlike. His paintings appear to be capturing a moment suspended in time. While his work feels familiar, it is not specific. Rather it is , on a very basic level, symbolism of what could have been, has been or will be…
Times Square always has the coolest things going on… like New Year’s Eve where you could write your wish for the new year on the confetti that fell from the sky. Awesome! You’ve got to read more on this, and if you’ll be in NYC click the link below to see the schedule of who’s playing! Click HERE for more info… check out their site, it’s amazing!
Here’s a blip from Times Square Official Website:
This new program is presented by the Times Square Advertising Coalition (TSAC), Times Square Arts, the public art program for theTimes Square Alliance. The initiatve is a collaboration of the Coalition and the Alliance, with additional partners of participating signholders and artists.
Each month, the program will present a new selection to be screened every day in a countdown to Midnight. Creativity always has been at the forefront of the Times Square signs and their presence is now so integral to the identity of this iconic public space, that they are required within zoning regulations. This level of signholder’s commitment to synchronize their daily programs to feature the artist work throughout the year is unparalled. Every night in Times Square will feature a spectacular.
The preview during the month of April 2012 showcases Ori Gersht, a London based artist from Tel Aviv and an edited version of his 2006 filmBig Bang 01.
May 1, 2012 represents the official launch featuring the Robert WiIson Video Portraits. The series of work from this renowned American artist are HD video that blur time-based cinematography with the decisive moment of still photography. For a few minutes, Times Square will feature a different potrait gallery of actors, artists, dancers, writers, athletes and animals.
Click Now Playing for the current program.
Click Proposals for the submission process.
Catch you back here tomorrow!
Image: TimesSquareNYC.org
“Gardenias” by Mary Sheehan Winn
Gardenias make me smile. When Reginald (our 14.5 year old Jack Russell) went to the “Rainbow Bridge”, a friend sent a gardenia plant. With each blossom we had happy thoughts of Reggie. It lived for a while in the house and then started to look stressed. We wanted that plant to continue to produce those gardenias year after year so we planted it outside and crossed our fingers… it lived! It produces flowers every spring… since that time we’ve planted several more. A bloom or two can make the house smell intoxicating. A sure sign of spring and happy days. Our gardenias are full of buds, so soon they will be blooming like no one’s business! This sweet painting makes me happy… A great job by artist Mary Sheehan Winn, an artist from Massachusetts.
Another favorite… you can feel the sheer happiness of this dog! I love it!
“Joy” by Mary Sheehan Winn
Mary is a member of the GIRLS JUST WANNA PAINT group (image from their website). They have a great blog with a monthly topic which they all paint in their own way. I urge you to take a minute to check it out, great job by all of them!

“The Scream” by Edvard Munch (1895) – Image HERE
Can you believe that “The Scream” sold for 119.9 Million dollars? It’s hard to fathom isn’t it? Here’s a blip from an article in the Detroit Free Press (click for entire article!)
A few blips from the Detroit Free Press article, but I encourage you to read it in it’s entirety, it’s fascinating!
“The Scream” achieved another milestone: It now ranks as the most expensive drawing publicly sold. For this version of “The Scream” — one of four — is best described as a crayon or pastel drawing, not a painting, on board. The Munch Museum in Oslo owns a pastel as well as a painted version, while the National Gallery of Norway holds the earliest painting, dated 1893.
A little about the history of what was happening in Munch’s life… from the same article… (and if this wouldn’t make you scream I fear to know what would!)
The central image is the gaping-mouthed, skull-like face and twisting torso that people know so well from reproductions, cartoons and a seemingly endless stream of merchandise, from shower curtains to neckties. The location depicted is Ekeberg Hill, an overlook point in the south of Oslo that was known as the scene of suicides.
Some read the image as a symbol of modern existentialist anguish, expressing fear of a hostile universe and perhaps even anticipating the horrors of the world wars. Others view it more specifically as an expression of personal suffering.
Munch’s mother died of tuberculosis when he was 5; his sister Sophie died when he was 14; his father died when he was 25, and shortly after that, his sister Laura was institutionalized.
According to Munch’s biographer Sue Prideaux, Laura was committed to an asylum in Ekeberg for schizophrenia, and from the vantage point depicted in the artwork, you could hear the screams from the asylum patients as well as of the animals from a slaughterhouse nearby.
Well, now you know! You probably know a little more than you really wanted to, but those are the facts… catch you back here tomorrow!
“Big Sir” by Clyde Aspevig
I have not seen Clyde Aspevig’s work in person, but flipping through the pages of Plein Air Magazine (oh how I love that magazine!) I ran across a snow scene of his that was magnificent. I love snow scenes… however a snow scene didn’t seem appropriate when the weather is mid 80’s and climbing, so… I thought this one was so nice. I absolutely love the color of the water and the fabulous looseness of the brush strokes, especially towards the bottom. LOVE. IT. I look forward to seeing Clyde’s work in person one day…
Here’s a blip about Clyde from his website (images also from his website):
Clyde Aspevig’s personal and artistic horizons have unfolded expansively since his childhood on a Montana farm near the Canadian border. That period of geographical and cultural isolation was in retrospect a blessing for the artist he recalls. “Because I grew up in a vacuum in Montana, I wasn’t taught the cliches.”
He sees such naivete as allowing him to be more open to everything around him, which is especially evident in his latest works. His peripatetic field easel now ranges across the wild mountains and prairies of Montana, Death Valley, Adirondacks, rocky North Atlantic coast, Scandinavian fjords and the well-tended hillside estates of Tuscany.
Growing up, he witnessed the alternatingly painful and joyful cycles of agricultural life. He was unusually fortunate to be encouraged by his family in the pursuits of art and appreciation of music. Clyde learned early on to work hard and persevere against obstacles natural and manmade. Rather than scoffing at or demeaning Clyde’s interests, Clyde’s father, the practical but open-minded farmer, bought his twelve-year-old son’s first painting.
He considers his paintings as old friends and visual souvenirs of places experienced in his life. The viewer, too, shares in Clyde’s magical evocations of the landscapes that touched him.
While his early efforts attracted awards and critical praise from the regional or “Western” sector of the art community, Clyde’s work has since emerged to be highly sought after by world class collectors. In a culture notorious for nourishing illustration of stereotypical, iconic subject matter, Clyde fearlessly departed whenever he felt the call, and resisted early attempts by Western art dealers to label him and restrict him to the saleable panoramic scenics.
His paintings of the West are not theatrical sets intended to reinforce regional mythology, but rather evocations of places that he perceives as already disappearing during his own lifetime, subjects worthy of both artistic and societal preservation.
The paintings reflect Clyde’s intense days of absorbing his natural surroundings, days which shaped a philosophy: “I see nature as being so much more powerful than we realize.” He sees the true value of preserving the last islands of wilderness, agreeing with the late writer Wallace Stegner that just the fact of knowing it is out there is important to the human spirit.
To Clyde Aspevig, painting expresses human emotion better than any other medium. The divine nature of light reveals to the receptive eye the timeless interaction of land forms and sky, water, flora, soil and rock. If he has any “mission” beyond the canvas in his creative endeavors, it is simply a wish to call attention to the timeless, intrinsic worth of our natural environment.
The image resolves from a deliberative yet intuitive process of the artist, seeing. Nature, undistorted by the filters of acculturation.
Clyde’s intent is to create something beautiful and harmonic. While subject matter is of prime consideration, further contemplation of the painting eventually yields its subtle nuances of texture and rhythm. His paintings possess qualities meant to outlast the viewer’s initial infatuation, qualities that will endure well into succeeding generations.
Each painting is a struggle and a journey for the artist, the destination a prolonged feast of discovery for the viewer. While his mastery of the medium is apparent, the desire of the artist is that technique shall never override the painting’s essential concept.
His own physical and spiritual connection with the subject’s place and time emerges on the canvas, a transformation intended to be savored as long as the work exists. As far as Clyde is concerned, some of the most powerful representations he developed were those that left something out. That the viewer notices a sense of space, rhythm and harmony is no accident.
All the while, there is the composer, with brush and palette knife, conducting, refining, coaxing, interpreting his own score. As he explains, “I use music all the time in my paintings.” The discerning viewer sees and feels the brushstrokes corresponding to musical notes and movements — legatos broad and delicate, an adagio of cured prairie grasses, a swirling vivace of light and clouds over the marcato of mountain granite. Clyde’s music touches the eyes with distinct rhythmic textures, letting the canvas reflect how earth and sky are interwoven. The result is the artist’s ethereal yet tactile manifestation of natural forces: “Paintings become symbols of all that we are.”
Clyde Aspevig is acutely conscious of the forces constantly at work sculpting the earth; erosion from rain and melting snow, wind, extremes of heat and cold. While the evidence so far suggests that the earth has endured millennia of human folly, he is aware of the fragility of life and how industrialized civilization has so rapidly altered entire mountains and rivers and displaced ancient buffalo ranges and forests.
And yet the artist moves on, seeing, feeling, preserving on canvas what is best that remains of the New World, while absorbing excellence from masters of the Old World. If we, too, allow ourselves to look carefully, we may all become a little richer.
Catch you back here tomorrow!
Last time we were at Bowen’s Island we met the coolest group of women. They were out on the dock fishing and having the time of their lives. They had such a great attitude. It was chilly, it was windy, and eventually they all left, EXCEPT for this lady… she stayed to catch all the fish. I hope she did, she was a trip!
I love people who have great attitudes, what a difference they can make in other people’s lives! It’s not what you have (materialistically), its all about what you have in your heart, and this woman had plenty!
Catch you back here tomorrow!
Is this not the most hilarious dog you’ve ever seen? It truly looks like an old fashioned mop… maybe dreadlocks? I don’t know, but I’m thinking if it were my dog I would name it SWIFFER…? Ha ha… What a sweetie this dog is! This image isn’t from the Charleston Dog Show, it’s an image that’s been circulating Facebook, so I’m not sure who to give credit to, just know that I did not take this photo, wish I did, but…
Well, it’s that time of year… the Charleston Dog Show is TODAY. The location is at Marion Square (downtown Charleston, SC) and the time is from 9AM – 2PM. Click HERE for the Class Schedule! Admission is free, there are ‘canine concessions’ and a good time is to be had by all! Bring your dog (must be vaccinated and on a regular (non-retractible) leash. From the Charleston Dog Show website:
We are pleased to invite you to the 9th year celebration of the Charleston Dog Show…….a fun family event for Lowcountry dogs and their owners.
We will begin with a Blessing of the Dogs, followed by friendly canine competition, dog vendors and silent auction with pet art, microchipping and dog demos in our new Show Ring, dog rescue village, children’s activities, educational booths, canine concessions and much more!
Back by popular demand, the Bambu Best in Show Bash offers fashionista canines the chance to rock the red carpet in a spring fashion show.
Tickets are $35 in advance and $40 at the door and include appetizers, beer and wine. Canine model entry fee is $15.
All proceeds benefit the Charleston Dog Show. Tickets can be purchased at etix.com.
Click HERE for more info! Catch you back here tomorrow!
“Working South” book by Mary Whyte / Image: SC.edu
Mary Whyte is the most talented watercolorist I think I’ve ever seen. Her work is so amazing, I can’t even figure out HOW she can paint what she does. With watercolor HOW do you paint a persons arm so that you can see how humid it is, you can see the moisture… ? Fred and I have watched Mary paint at the plain air event in Charleston and it truly takes your breath away. She is gifted beyond words. You can see Mary’s work, in Charleston, SC, at the Coleman Fine Art Gallery!
T H E B O O K
The book “Working South” can be purchased at the gallery (with the bonus of Mary’s signature and little drawing inside the front cover), or from other booksellers such as Amazon, Barnes and Noble, etc. It is a staggering group of the hardest working people, you can feel their strength, exhaustion, excitement and frustration. It is truly a book you can FEEL and you won’t be disappointed . Here’s a blip about the book from SC.edu:
In Working South, renowned watercolorist Mary Whyte captures in exquisite detail the essence of vanishing blue-collar professions from across ten states in the American South with sensitivity and reverence for her subjects. From the textile mill worker and tobacco farmer to the sponge diver and elevator operator, Whyte has sought out some of the last remnants of rural and industrial workforces declining or altogether lost through changes in our economy, environment, technology, and fashion. She shows us a shoeshine man, a hat maker, an oysterman, a shrimper, a ferryman, a funeral band, and others to document that these workers existed and in a bygone era were once ubiquitous across the region.
“When a person works with little audience and few accolades, a truer portrait of character is revealed,” explains Whyte in her introduction. As a genre painter with skills and intuition honed through years of practice and toil, she shares much in common with the dedication and character of her hardscrabble subjects. Her vibrant paintings are populated by men and women, young and old, black and white to document the range southerners whose everyday labors go unheralded while keeping the South in business. By rendering these workers amid scenes of their rough-hewn lives, Whyte shares stories of the grace, strength, and dignity exemplified in these images of fading southern ways of life and livelihood.
T H E E X H I B I T
Here is the exhibit schedule. I hope you will be able to check it out, I personally cannot wait! It will be here locally beginning today through September 9, 2012 at the Gibbe’s Museum of Art in Charleston, SC!
EXHIBIT SCHEDULE
May 4–September 9, 2012
Gibbes Museum of Art
Charleston, South Carolina
www.gibbesmuseum.org
October 5, 2012–February 24, 2013
Telfair Museum of Art
Savannah, Georgia
www.telfair.org
April 6–July 7, 2013
Penninsula Fine Arts Center
Newport News, Virginia
www.pfac-va.org
ART WALK tonight if you’re in Charleston, SC! Here’s a blip from Lowcountry.com, click for more info including a list of galleries!
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Stroll the cobbled streets and gas lit alley ways to discover the works of well over 500 artists representing a diverse variety of styles and mediums from traditional to contemporary. All galleries of the French Quarter will be open with artists on hand and refreshments. Held seasonally the first Friday in March, May, October and December. The French Quarter is located within the original walled city of Charleston between S. Market and Tradd, and Meeting and the waterfront past E. Bay.
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Catch you back here tomorrow!
Nope, but Ken DeWaard came to town and got me to paint! A miracle? Yes, indeed! If you aren’t familiar with Ken’s work, check it out! He’s got a great website… http://kendewaard.com !
I was quite thankful that I had backup… had a great time no doubt! My painting was more of an exercise, takes the pressure off, well, for the most part anyway!
Ken’s painting… genius! AND it looked so easy… If you look closely you can probably see steam coming out of my ears I’m thinking so hard… but had the best time! Thanks Ken! (And thank you Fred!!)
Hey, this is the perfect opportunity to mention Florida’s Forgotton Coast Plein Air Invitational – Ken will be participating in this plein air event, and from the photos of last years work WHOA!… so be checking his website after the event is over for the latest pieces!
Hey! I want to also give a shout out to Carlisle Stroud… (Fred’s dad)…
H A P P Y B I R T H D A Y ! ! We wish you the happiest birthday. EVER! xxoo us
Catch you back here tomorrow!
Official Kentucky Derby Poster for 2012 by artist Robert Joyner
Image: The Kentucky Derby online store
Ahhh, the Kentucky Derby. It’s this coming Friday and Saturday (May 4th and 5th, 2012), so mark your calendar! Robert Joyner was selected to do the Kentucky Derby art this year. Fabulous and loose, these posters (and much more) are a nice addition to any room. Check out the Kentucky Derby online store as well as Derby Art Gifts website, there are so many “Derby gifts” available for purchase!
Robert has a wonderful website and blog … his work is wonderfully loose! Robert is located in the Chasen Galleries in Richmond, VA. If you’re in the area, stop in and take a peek, otherwise they have a wonderful website!
Here’s a video demo he did of the Kentucky Derby 2012 poster.
Catch you back here tomorrow!
We have the coolest restaurants in Charleston, SC. Some are fancy and expensive, some are cheap and bare bones… then we have some really creative people that come up with the coolest concepts. As Holly Herrick described Jack’s Cosmic Dogs “where the Jetson’s meets “Happy Days”!” The other day when we were there we each got a hotdog, shared (which was hard because they were really good) fries, coleslaw and an iced tea. It was too tasty! Here are a few quotes from Jack’s Cosmic Dogs website , photos from their website, photo above is from their Facebook page! If you haven’t been… go now!
“Jack’s serves up the best hot dogs I’ve ever had. Ever.
”Food Channel star Alton Brown

“Out-of-this-world dogs, flash back to the fifties at
this hot dog shack, and enjoy heaven on a bun.”
Southern Living Magazine- November 05
“The Jetson’s meet ‘Happy Days’ at this hip, hot dog joint.”
Post and Courier Food Critic Holly Herrick
“The Cosmic Dog…almost a new food group.”
Channel 2 Reporter
“This retro slice of American nostalgia, Voted Best Hot Dog in Charleston last 5 years.”Charleston City Paper
Catch you back here tomorrow!
“Glorius Fall” by Nancy Colella
Facebook. It’s an amazing way to discover new artists… I’m thrilled to have found artist Nancy Colella! She’s wonderfully talented. Her paintings are happy… you can tell that she’s studied from some of the greats… such as Charles Sovek, Tim Horn and Colin Page (among others!). Those three are just amazing to me and Nancy has that same ‘amazingness’. You must check out her work, it’s brilliant! Fresh, colorful, different and LOOSE! I love “Glorious Fall” (pictured above), I love the contrast! It really stands out, this painting won Honorable Mention at the Duxbury (MA) Art Association Winter Juried Show! In addition to Nancy’s wonderful website she maintains two blogs, both are fabulous, one is SIMPLY PAINTING, it’s a journal of sorts, including her paintings and wonderful stories as well as great bits of information, I’m thrilled to have found it! Another blog entitled PATIENCE WITH PATIENTS just warms my heart to no end. Here’s Nancy’s description:
A year ago, I was asked if I’d like to give “art” lessons to Alzheimer patients. I am not an art therapist and have no experience with Alzheimer’s patients, but I strongly believe “art” opens doors, in some way, for everyone. I took this on as a challenge and started this blog with the hope that sharing my journey would help care givers and family members use “art” to open new doors of communication.
Talk about amazing! You can see how her art lessons open doors, lets their creativity rein free… I couldn’t help thinking if I were in their position how much an art lesson would mean to me… it would definitely be the bright spot in the day! I think it’s fabulous that Nancy makes the effort because it clearly makes a difference in so many people’s lives… hmmm, a lesson we can all learn from? What can you do to help make someone’s day/week/month better?
A blip about the artist from her website… “Glorius Fall” by Nancy Colella / Image from artist’s website

About the Artist
Nancy was a painting major at Muskingum College and graduated with a BA in Art Education, then continued her studies at the Aegean School of Fine Arts in Paros, Greece and at the Instituto de Allende in San Miquel Mexico. After a career in the Hospitality business and while raising her two children, she began studying again at Mass College of Art in Boston, MA and at the North River Arts Society in Marshfield Hills, MA. She has studied with numerous contemporary impressionist painters; Charles Sovek, Peggi Kroll Roberts, Ken Auster, Kim English, Colin Page, Carol Marine and Karin Jurick, to name a few. She is a gallery artist and faculty member at the South Shore Art Center in Cohasset, MA and a member artist at the Copley Societyin Boston. She exhibits regularly in her gallery/ studio where visitors are welcomed.
One more because I just love it… This painting reminds me so much of Charles Sovek and his wonderful work! (All images from artists website):
Your art is amazing Nancy! Catch you back here tomorrow!
Fabulous, right? Look at this entrance to one of the downtown homes. Stunning! A gorgeous setting with the added benefit of the late afternoon sun streaming in creating beautiful shadows and lighting the house up in the most beautiful way!
I mean really! Look at the details… stunning!
Catch you back here tomorrow!
Another few photos from the walk on Easter late afternoon… Funny these two shots are all animals… DOG AND HORSE GALLERY… they have some incredible art, not all the typical art, it’s absolutely amazing as you can tell from this peek inside the door…
and… Goat. Sheep. Cow. (A fine cheese shop). See what I mean… two photos, five animals… ha ha… need to get in to check this place out… everything was closed on Easter. Have you been here? Any recommendations?
Catch you back here tomorrow!