Tag Archives: COLORFUL

ARTIST OF THE WEEK : ADRIAN NEGENBORN

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Adrian Negenborn is a painter and 2010 MFA graduate from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design.

Whether isolating thick swipes of paint or mingling fluid lines with chancy splices, Adrian Negenborn strives to find the significance in gesture and mark making. “My process is characterized by excavation,” says Negenborn. “Oscillating from visceral to analytic, spontaneous to meditated, I respond to the initial flurry of marks laid on the canvas. I am always trying to make something from nothing, to dig something out of the mass of gestures.”

Interested in transparency and contrast, Negenborn’s paintings can also give the illusion of exuding light or being lit from behind. His method of layering various colors or shades of colors allow his works to possess a distinctive push-pull effect. In more than one work, I almost thought that a brush stroke was floating in front of the painting itself – which of course it’s not.

Primarily using acrylic paint on canvas and/or paper, Negenborn’s works are at once abstract, energetic and spontaneous. “I never fully know when a painting is done until it feels right; it reaches an in between state somewhere amidst harmony and disharmony. Eventually, a glance at an experience coming into being reveals itself out of the mass of gestures.”

Beautifully put, Negenborn. We’re excited to see what ‘reveals’ itself next!

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ARTIST OF THE WEEK : MAX GLASER

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Max Glaser is an 2011 graduate from the School of Visual Arts in NYC. The artworks shown are made with a variety of organic components such as food, plants, wood, glass and even blood (see below for artwork details).

1. The Large Plexiglass, 2010, Bulletproof Glass, Lumber, Artifically Dyed Flowers, Honey, Bird, 38x26x3.5″

2. Wasp Honey, 2010, Plywood, Lacquer, Stain, Glass, White Bread, Honey, Latex Paint, 52x27x.75″

3. Untitled, 2010, Glass, Eggs, Vaseline, Grape Jelly, Motor Oil, 72x20x.5″

4. Georgian Scrotemic, 2010, Plywood, Stain, Lacquer, Glass, Mirror, Epoxy, Latex Paint, 147x45x34″

5.  Grape, 2010, Grapefruit, Honey, Bulletproof Glass, Lumber, Barcode, 30x20x3.5″

6.  Cut to Nothing, 2010, Plywood, Found Cutting Board, Blood, Lacquer, Latex Paint, 38x26x1.5″

Food has been an integral subject in art for centuries. We’ve seen it portrayed in still lifes, as sculptures, in photography and in performances. In contemporary art , artists such as Ed Ruscha (who has colored his paintings with spinach, wine, and bolognese sauce), Vik Muniz (who has created artwork using chocolate syrup) and Antony Gormley (who made a bed out of toast for Tate Britain in 2004) found ways to incorporate ‘live’ produce and food into their work.

By immortalizing what has essentially become decomposed, Max Glaser is able to present wasteful byproduct as a rich, colorful and abstract body of work. There’s also something sneakily ironic about turning a worthless material no longer pleasurable to the senses into something beautiful which you can purchase and admire.

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