Showing posts with label PAINT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PAINT. Show all posts

Monday, March 28, 2022

Piggy Paint

 


Adorable name and packaging, Piggy Paint is perfect for adults, kids and animals alike! Non-toxic with no chemical fumes, each nail polish is fully odorless, water based, children-friendly and cruelty free. With a wide variety of fun colors - some glittering, others even glow in  the dark - you're sure to have the cutest nails around.


To learn more, see more and to shop for Piggy Paint, click here.

Big Thanks to the team over at Light Years Ahead for making this feature possible!


xx.

M

Monday, November 23, 2020

Ned Martin: Spirits Through Time

Ending this week, on November 29, this exhibition is one you will want to fit in this holiday week. Ned Martin's "Spirits Through Time" is a truly breathtaking series of portraits that not only mend both humans and nature together, but use traditional and contemporary methods which make for special, one-of-a-kind works. On view at Robert Berry Gallery, the pieces are as outstanding as the stories behind them. 


 Belles&Rebelles: I see you are based in Brooklyn. While reading that you were raised in PA

and MD, how has living in Brooklyn shaped you and your art in any certain

way? How long have you been based in New York?


Ned Martin: In the suburbs you are judged by how green your lawn is, and by how

much your riding lawn mower costs. Before moving to New York, I was

heavily influenced by the likes of Andrew Wyeth’s rustic nature, and

focused on the realism of textures of a fence posts or a rusty chain. The

creative sources were always external.

Now after living in New York City for 14 years, I have total freedom to be,

say, and do what I wish. My creative source has switched to internal.

Memories, experiences, and my relationship to the city environment has

become my focus.


B&R: What is the New York experience to you and how has that altered (IF it has

altered)?


NM: My art has remained my central focus. Staying focused on the work, and

creating new ideas and work, is more important than ever.

Normally, I’m very social by nature and enjoyed seeing friends for dinner

and drinks. Today, Zoom is the new normal, and my hair has been longer

than it has been in years.

It has been more conducive to work as an artist. Distractions can be

eliminated and focus can be put completely into work now that my home is

my studio.


B&R: Has living in a pandemic changed your work at all? 


It’s changed my work and my life. At the beginning of the pandemic, I got

stuck in Bolivia for over 6 months with my girlfriend. The quarantine there

was very strict with military soldiers on the corners and ID checks to see if

you were supposed to be outside. I could only leave the apartment for 4

hours, 1 day per week.

With my girlfriend working all day, I was alone in an empty apartment, and

it became an internal search for meaning—which for me resulted in

connecting with the death of my mother and sister—and creating this series

of paintings dedicated to women as well as landscapes.


NM: Are the women in your works portraits of actual people? If so, who? If not,

whom do these women represent?


Yes! They are faces of real women who lived in the 1800s. I wanted to

bring them back and make them relevant today, and in the future, not just

forgotten because they are not here anymore.


B&R: What do you see in the future for art and artists? 

As this exhibit is entitled "Spirits Through Time," can you please elaborate on the meaning of this and if/how it will be different 

in a century from now?


NM: The future of art is bright! The art world is in a quagmire of its own starting

with the artists like Caravaggio and Manet. They shocked the art world’s

aesthetics. Through time the notion of shock as an artistic element was

replaced with movements like DADA where shock was the art.

My hope for Spirits Through Time is that people can truly connect and feel

meaning.

I see an era of enlightenment on the horizon when people begin trying to

do something. This is a more arduous path. It takes a skill set, a creative

source inspired by imagination far removed from the constant

bombardment of information of this day. Most importantly, the new

movement will come about by a few artists with foresight,

wisdom—regardless of age—and a good measure of pure guts.


To learn more, see more and to visit this exhibition, click here.

Big Thanks to Deborah of Geiger Communications for making this possible!


xx.

M

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Olympio


 
Olympio by Andrew Reilly

As one of eight children in a family whose roots are in Africa, the artist known as Olympio is truly one of a kind. Born and raised in Togo, West Africa, Olympio is a real creator. While his beginnings as an artist lie in sculptures made of found objects, his passion lies in painting.
A worldly man, Olympio left his home in the early 2000s for the artisan city of Paris. From there he leaped over to the United States to further his flourishing career. Based in Minnesota for ten years, as this is where a friend of his living at the time and proved to be the best key into the USA, Olympio finally found the best weather of the west in Los Angeles, where he is currently settled. For the past five years, Olympio has been a contributor to the thriving art scene in LA.
Colorful, lively and visually stunning, his works are all paintings of himself. "I inspire me," the artist explained when asked where he draws inspiration from. Each gorgeous piece is captivating, yet exemplifies the artist and man that Olympio is becoming and evolving into every day. Exploding with energy and 
With Art Basel Miami and plans to show in Europe and Africa, this well-spoken, intellectual, well-traveled and beyond talented man is destine to make a name for himself in across the world.

To learn more, see more and to purchase art by Olympio, click here.
To follow Olympio on Instagram, click here.
Big Thanks to Beth Brett for making this feature possible!

xx.
M

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Art Studio: Horses & Ponies




There are few animals more beautiful than horses. They are the perfect art subject and Art Studio: Horses & Ponies helps to teach you how to bring these gorgeous and fascinating creatures to life in art. With step-by-step tutorials, easy to understand instructions and over 50 options pieces to create, with a variety of techniques, the love of art and the love of animals is combined to result in noteworthy projects. 

To learn more, see more and to purchase this book, click here.
Big Thanks to Lydia over at NetGalley/Quarto for making this feature possible!

xx.
M

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Canvas Squiggles



 Olef Breuning's Canvas Squiggles, to brighten this frigid day.

To learn more, see more, and to shop for art at Exhibition A, click here.
To purchase Canvas Squiggles by Olef Breuning, click here.
To see more Belles&Rebelles coverage of Artist Olef Breuning, click here.
Thanks to Michelle Finocchi over at Exhibition A for sending this my way!



xx.
M

Monday, January 17, 2011

Exhibition A


Three more reasons why Exhibition A is the bomb.

To learn more, see more, and to purchase art from Exhibiton A, click here.
Thank you to Michelle Finocchi over at Exhibition A for sending this my way!
See another Belles&Rebelles Exhibition A favorite here.


xx.
M


Monday, August 30, 2010

Ken+Dana Design & Launch Party


Everything that is of the ken+dana design brand is crazzzzy creative and can be described as the "jewelry that takes chances, has a voice and looks fly." With an urban feel, and an extremely diverse design team that heirs from Hong Kong, Maine, and Brooklyn, k+d designs are non-traditional and unlike any accessories you have ever seen before. By focusing on exploring art and its relationship with body decoration, the designers experiment with materials and techniques that are way, way, wayyyy outside the normal "box" of jewelry making. With two labels, a beautiful, elegant fine jewelry line and it's opposite, yet complimentary, "b-side label," which references the "b-side" of a cassette tape -the place where artists are known to execute experiments- ken+dana aims to create a wide variety of pieces that are as diverse as their team is. For their newest collection under the "b-side label," entitled "Graffiti 2.0," the designers channel their urge to "paint on stuff." As an encore and follow-up to their extremely popular "Graffiti" collection, their ideas stem from their artistic backgrounds in painting what can be ever-so-time-consuming, street murals. Now, with the use of stencil techniques their graffiti art comes straight off of the walls and right onto the jewelry. This immediately helps to achieve both multiplicity and accessibility, and certainly gives them the ability to reach the masses in a much, much, much more timely fashion. The end product? An inssssssanely SICK collection of statement pieces that are all at once an exuberant mix of funky, bold, edgy and sexy with a straight-up city-street vibe. Dig it ALL.

Check out some pages from their dope look book below, and scroll down for an EVENT that you will NOT want to miss.

NEED to get my hands on these pieces in particular:


EVENT.
Itching to be the first get your paws on a piece of the NYC streets and anything and everything from ken+dana's awesome urban-chic "Graffiti 2.0" collection? Come out to the Launch Party this coming Wednesday, September 1.


All jewelry by ken+dana designs are handmade in NYC.
Custom made pieces can be made upon request.
To learn more, see more, and to shop for ken+dana design, click here.


xx.
M