Friday, December 13, 2013

Myles Roznowski- Myles in Yellow And Red-Violet, A Self-Portrait


Myles Roznowski
Myles In Yellow And Red-Violet, A Self- Portrait
Intro to Painting
Acrylic on Canvas
Fall, 2013
Current BFA Applicant


 If you’ve met Myles Roznowski then you already know that he is the artist of this portrait. The resemblance is stunning, right down to his signature smile. What initially draws the viewer to this piece is Roznowski’s use of yellow and red violet. The colors together create a feeling of warmth that spreads over the whole canvas. When asked about his work, Roznowski said, “I tried not to use tints or shades of either the yellow or red violet because it would've taken away from the very saturated look I was going for. So instead, I would add more orange to the yellow or more blue to the violet for the shadows and leave the two colors in their natural state for the highlights. I did end up having to use a little white for the extreme highlights though.” This technique is apparent in Roznowski’s piece by the effective shadows and highlights he creates that define the face and neck.
Paying careful attention to human anatomy, Roznowski captures the bone structure of the skeleton underneath the skin. Creating the image of his face and upper body in perfect proportion. For this piece, Roznowski also creates a central composition, with horizontal bands of color as the background. The composition is also weighted more towards the bottom of the canvas, but the eye is drawn upward from the face to the thick red violet horizontal bands near the top. Roznowski’s gaze is direct on the viewer, he smiles slightly, just enough so that the viewer doesn’t look away.
Ellsworth Kelly, LACMA Exhibition, 2012
When asked about his choice of background, Roznowski replied that because there were no requirements for the background, he chose a geometric approach. He continues to say that geometric designs are appealing to him, and it is apparent that he incorporates them into his work. Roznowski also adds interest to the background by using a variety of thickness when creating the bands of color. Creating less negative space between the bands at the bottom and more towards the top. The background also remains somewhat ambiguous, like the works of hard edge painters, there is almost no distinction between foreground and background. The bands of color also meet with sharp, precise lines, much like the works of Ellsworth Kelley and other Hard Edge Painters.  Overall, the painting gives you a feeling for Roznowski, warm, precise, and cheerful, a true self-portrait. 




Alison Bur
Gallery Assistant
University Art Gallery
Saginaw Valley State University

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Miles Nitz- The Ascension


Miles Nitz
The Ascension
Wood, fabric, metal brackets, screws and wood glue
Intro to Sculpture
Fall, 2013
Current Bachelor of Art Student


Nitz’s piece The Ascension stands a little over 5ft tall in the lobby of Arbury Fine Arts, clearly visible with its sleek and modern design. Giving the piece stability is its wooden frame that is completely made of stained wood, screws, and metal brackets.

Creating a contrast to the stable looking frame, are the open holes and the holes covered in fabric. Based off the work by Zaha Hadid, Nitz was interested in her angular and sleek architectural designs. Inspired by her conceptual design for the Preforming Arts Center in Abu Dhabi, Nitz abstracted her work into sharp angles and triangles, creating an abstract piece that conveys the initial feeling of Hadid’s designs. 

Zaha Hadid, Abu Dhabi
As part of the project assigned Nitz was instructed to use an element of transparency. By covering some of the holes with fabric Nitz has accomplished a sense of movement that invites the viewer to walk around the piece. Encouraging the viewer to experience each side and move their eyes through the open holes. Overall, Nitz has given his piece a duel sense of stability and transparency with his choice of materials, and a sleek and modern design much like Hadid.




Alison Bur
Gallery Assistant
University Art Gallery
Saginaw Valley State University

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Jon Elliott: Bachelor of Fine Arts, Painting

Left to Right: Pistola, Favorite Things Series, Superior, and Battle Axe, Favorite Things Series by Jon Elliott

While Jon Elliott’s concentration is in painting, his works spans many forms and mediums. His Favorite Things series, featuring fragmented and distorted images of pin-up girls, is created digitally before being printed onto canvas. Using appropriated images, Elliott combines sexually charged images of pin-up girls with masculine weapons such as machine guns or axes. His compositions have an “all-over” sense, which keeps the viewers’ eyes from settling on one focal point. This also creates an intricate sense of depth and layering throughout the surface of the piece.

Also showcasing Elliott’s ability to work in a variety of materials is his mixed media photograph sculpture Superior. Using a large amount of small photographs, about 4 by 6 inches, Elliott recreates a landscape by suspending the photographs from the ceiling via fishing line. Different views of the same location, which has personal significance to the artist, create a single composition by layering the photos at different depths and heights. Hanging beneath the photos to anchor them are rocks and pebbles from the featured location. The hanging rocks echo the closest point to the viewer in the photographs, incorporating function with design and creating a floor to ceiling installation.

B2S2 and Weird Fishes from Back to School Series by Jon Elliott. 
Elliott’s exhibit also features a more traditional concept of painting with his Back to School series, which all share the slightly abstracted form of hammerhead sharks. His oil painting B2S2 features a range of colored squares from bright orange and yellows to deep green and blues as a background for the creatures, while the larger Weird Fishes has the bright orange forms swimming across a blue-green cityscape.

Jon Elliott is graduating at the end of the semester with his Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting and Drawing. His work, along with the other three graduates of the BFA program, will be on display until December 13th, with a reception on December 5th from 4:30 to 7:30 pm.


Amy Gibas
Gallery Assistant
University Art Gallery
Saginaw valley State University

Monday, December 2, 2013

Samuel Dantuma: Bachelor of Fine Arts, Painting

Left to right: Vertical vs Horizontal, Zig-Zag, and Star
Samuel Dantuma


Stepping far beyond the traditional concepts of painting, Samuel Dantuma’s Bachelor of Fine Arts exhibit features a series of compositions created with cut and reconstructed fragments of wood. By utilizing the condition of the wood as it was found, Dantuma creates a variation of edge relationships using natural tones and textures.

During his collage-like process, Dantuma uses traditional techniques of illusionism, normally used in drawing, to create illusion in his own work. According to Dantuma, techniques like hatching are used to create a “gradual transition between planes by having staggered or broken edges of wood.” This type of edge also allows for his work to become integrated with the wall, by creating the illusion a soft edge and less visual distance between the object and the wall.  This contrast of edges can be seen in the piece Zig-Zag, where Dantuma uses both a staggered and solid edge to create a varied relationship to the wall and an illusion of depth.

Zig-Zag and Composition 3 by Samuel Dantuma
Depth is also created within the images through the use of paraline or isometric perspective. According to the artist, the use of parallel diagonal lines implies depth, but unlike traditional perspective, the lines never converge to a vantage point, leaving ambiguous space. In the piece Star, the parallel diagonals are interrupted and continued by a section of lines in the opposite direction, suggesting a continuation of the same shape and an implied sense of depth.

Incorporating the space surrounding the piece of artwork is an important concept behind Dantuma’s work. While many pieces incorporate the surrounding wall into the composition, like Vertical vs Horizontal, others break away from the wall completely. Composition 3, a tall and slender piece, simply leans against a pillar, while Trip-dik is a freestanding structure.

Also included in Dantuma's exhibit is a self-produced mini documentary featuring the artist discussing his own work. This video has been made available by the artist to view at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cy9c2HwPk04. 

Samuel Dantuma is graduating at the end of the semester with his Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting and Drawing. His work, along with the three other graduates of the BFA program, will be on display until December 13th, with a reception on December 5th from 4:30 to 7 pm.


 

Amy Gibas
Gallery Assistant
University Art Gallery
Saginaw Valley State University

Monday, November 25, 2013

Patricia McDonald: Bachelor of Fine Arts, Sculpture

Left to Right: The Boccioni Defense: The Durability of Movement, Untitled (Garden Piece), Venus
Patricia McDonald


Patricia McDonald
Fragment I, Fragment II, Fragment III, Fragment IV, Fragments V
with detailed drawings
Originally attracted to sculpture through architecture, many of McDonald's pieces convey a sense of simple and clean design. In her pieces titled Fragments I through Fragments V, she breaks up simple shapes into fragments and carefully balances each piece to create a continually moving and changing form.  McDonald strives for simplicity and precision, which is reflected in her color choices as well as construction. Restricting her pieces to black, white, and red elements, space and form remain the primary concern of her sculptures.

While her Fragments series relies on chance to create a continually moving sculpture, McDonald has also used motors to create moving pieces of art. Revolution in Black and White uses a small battery powered motor to rotate a triangular form balanced on a pyramidal base. Her outdoor sculpture Umbra, located outside University Art Gallery, relies on solar power to rotate two metal arms extending from a base constructed of I-beams.

Although Patricia McDonald’s sculptures vary in size and content, she embraces the medium of each of her pieces through the form and texture used. Her large scale Untitled (Garden Piece) utilizes form and scale to create a space of its own that the viewer may interact with. Although it looks weighted and heavy, it is actually constructed of Styrofoam and clay with a wooden base. The clay applied to the surface and painted white creates an interesting texture reminiscent of interior spaces, reinforcing the space that the sculpture creates.

McDonald also embraces material in her figural sculptures, titled Venus and The Boccioni Defense: The Durability of Movement. In Venus, she uses plaster casts to create fragments of a human figure, which are then connected to be in proportion to an actual figure. The exterior is smooth, much like a classical sculpture of a figure, but the interior is exposed to be a rough and unworked interpretation of plaster. The Boccioni Defense is cast as a more complete figure, but with the head and torso hollow from the front view. She creates texture on the exterior of this piece with plaster and paraffin wax, allowing the material to drip and run down to the base.

 Patricia McDonald is graduating at the end of the semester with her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Sculpture. Her work, along with the three other graduates of the BFA program, will be on display until December 13th, with a reception on December 5th from 4:30 to 7 pm.



Amy Gibas
Gallery Assistant
University Art Gallery
Saginaw Valley State University

Great Places to Sell Artwork Online


In this day and age instead of carrying around a portfolio of work, artists are posting online, creating websites, and using social media. If you are interested in selling your work online here are a few great websites to get started.

  Rebubble
       Great website to create a portfolio and sell your work. This website allows you to sell your work as prints, canvas prints, t-shirts, iphone cases and ipad cases. While also functioning as a great artist community, by being able to submit work to online groups, and receive comments from other members. However, when you sell work on Redbubble, they will take a commission for every product you sell. All products start at a base price, and you control the percentage you make by raising the price of the product.

Saatchi Online
        Sattachi is a great place to sell work online in a fine art setting. Work can be sold in print or as the original piece, and are sold at a great price. However Saatchi also takes a commission and you have to include it in your taxes? But it is a great way to get your work out to potential buyers and clients that are looking for original work. 

Etsy
         Recently, Etsy has been really growing in popularity, but I would only recommend it if you are willing to do all of the work yourself! Including matting, framing, and shipping! As an art student I don’t have the time or the money to sell my work on Etsy, but a lot of people have had success on this site!

Zazzle
          Another great place to sell work is Zazzle, where you can upload designs and sell them in a variety of cool ways, from t-shirts to lunch boxes! They have great products and for an affordable price. However, they will also take a commission.

If you're looking to sell work online there are many websites to chose from, it’s all about finding the right one for you. And if you have any other suggestions please comment!




Saatchi Online: www.saatchionline.com


Alison Bur
Gallery Assistant
University Art Gallery
Saginaw Valley State University