PAAR artist honored

May 25th, 2010

view-from-the-orange-groveSusan De’Armond, a member of the Plein Air Artists of Riverside (PAAR), participated in the “Working Properties” plein-air art show co-sponsored by the Redlands Conservancy and the Redlands Art Association. During the May 2 reception for the show, De’Armond was awarded first place for her painting, “View from the Orange Grove”.

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Be sure to check out another piece, “Sanctuary”, which has just been accepted by the National Orange Show for their California Juried Art Exhibit taking place from May 27-31.

Congratulations Susan!

Day 2 of Sumi Ink Club @ RAM

May 11th, 2010

Sumi Ink Club Day 2

Day 2 of the creation of the Sumi Ink Club Exhibition has officially come to an end. For those of you who have not yet participated, all is not lost. Here are some photos from today, and I am here to share a few stories with you now.

It begins

The walls started out white. Here we have the beginning of what would become today’s creation.
art stuff

more art stuff

even more art stuff

And here is our own curator Lee Tusman himself taking part in the exhibition’s creation.
curator at work

Lets sneak in for a closer look to see what Lee is concentrating on so intently…

Keeping an eye out...

I also made my own small contribution to the art world this afternoon. And it seems that I and my colleague were not the only ones documenting the experience today…

picture in picture

It must be noted that this was my first time having any experience with the Sumi Ink Club or with painting on walls in general, barring early childhood of course. And even then I’m pretty sure it was crayon. That being said, I definitely enjoyed the experience; not only was I adding my own thoughts, expressions, and illustrations to the exhibit, but I also got to watch as my own creations got absorbed into the larger mass conglomeration of illustrations as other artists made additions, alterations, adjustments and sometimes complete re-imaginings of my work and the work of others.  Remember, tomorrow from noon to 4pm is the last time for participation in this collaborative exhibit.
-Ben Hatheway, RAM Intern

Day 1 of Sumi Ink Club @ RAM

May 10th, 2010

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Day 1 of Sumi Ink Club @ RAM. Check out the progress in these photos and come join us from noon to 4 on Tuesday and Wednesday May 11 and 12th if you can!

Make Art With Us!

May 4th, 2010

Grab your brush, grab your inspiration, grab your friends and plan on being at RAM. On May 10th, 11th, and 12th the Sumi Ink Club will be visiting RAM to not only exhibit their work here but to create it here as well. And it will not just be the visiting members of the Los Angeles based group that will create the art, it will be members of the public, it will be members and employees of RAM, and it could be you too. Remember when you were a young child and your inner artist was struggling to express itself through works such as that brilliant landscape you drew all the way up and down your parents’ hallway with a crayon? If you do remember that, it is likely you also remember their close minded and hostile critique of your brilliant work of art, they just didn’t understand your genius. But fear not, the time to draw on walls has returned! Featuring performances by DJs including Demon Slayer, HusNi, and Tina Yonas from KUCR Radio.

Here are a few samples of the Sumi Ink Club’s work:

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More info about Sumi Ink Club http://sumiinkclub.com/


Watercolor demo April 21

April 19th, 2010

painting by Joseph Stoddard
Plein-Air Artists of Riverside
in affiliation with the Riverside Art Museum
Wednesday, April 21, at 6:30 pm-8:30pm

A watercolor demonstration
by plein air painter
Joseph Stoddard

Joseph Stoddard in studio

Never let reality stand in the way of a good painting. This has been Joseph’s goal for the past twenty years as he has struggled with the challenging medium of watercolor. He wants people to get an emotional response from his paintings and sketches and to be charmed and surprised by his interpretation. He loves to work outside in the beautiful Southern California sunshine, trying to commit to paper the sensations he experiences, in order to offer that to you.

Joseph has produced paintings for a number of Pasadena events, including the Bungalow Heaven Annual Tour, The Colorado Street Bridge Party, the Pasadena Showcase House of Design, the California Art Club Artists for Architecture Painting Project, the Pasadena Symphony and the Pasadena Pops Orchestra.

His work has also been on the covers of numerous publications including Pasadena Magazine, a book series published by the Historical Society of Southern California and the Lost and Found series by Many Moons Press. He also has several books to his credit that include Pasadena Sketchbook, Redlands Sketchbook and Expressive Color, a painting instruction book.

You can see his work at Galerie Gabrie in Pasadena, Bottoms Art Galleries in Santa Barbara, Segil Fine Art in Monrovia, Chemers Art Gallery in Tustin and on his website: josephstoddard.com

Joseph is donating a signed poster for an opportunity drawing ($1 for one ticket, $5 for eight, and $20 for an arms-length (from one hand to the other).

This will be an exciting program!
Fee: Free for all PAAR members
$5 admission for non-PAAR members (applicable to the $30 fee to join PAAR).
PAAR members must also be members of Riverside Art Museum.
We will accept membership fees for both RAM and PAAR at the door.

Place: Riverside Art Museum (upstairs) Information: Susan De’Armond
3425 Mission Inn Avenue
Riverside, CA 92501 951-684-7111 sdearmond123@aol.com
www.riversideartmuseum.org 951.603-3198

Sumi Ink Club

April 16th, 2010

sumi3Exhibition: May 10, 2010-July 31, 2010

Collaborative Art Creation: May 10, 11, & 12, 2010 from noon-4 p.m.

Reception: May 22, 2010
JMS Reception 6:00-7:00 p.m.
Public Reception 7:00-9:00 p.m.

Sumi Ink Club is a Los Angeles-based drawing collective founded in 2005 by Sarah Anderson and Luke Fischbeck. The group holds regular open meetings to execute topsy-turvy, detailed, collaborative drawings using ink on paper. In each of its permutations, Sumi Ink Club uses group drawings as a means to open and fortify social interactions that bleed into everyday life. Sumi Ink Club is non-hierarchical: all ages, all humans, and all styles.

This exhibit offers the chance for museum visitors to witness the creation of art and participate in its creation as well, thereby providing a very clear and distinct departure from the standard museum experience. We are excited to give the public the opportunity to make choices and engage in activities that will vary the experience from person to person. Visitors are invited to participate in workshops, performances, and other hands-on events.

Join the Sumi Ink Club on May 10, 11, and 12 from noon to 4 p.m. to collaboratively create the exhibit. No experience necessary, but enthusiasm helps!

Please join us on May 22, 2010 for the opening reception for both Sumi Ink Club and Seeing and Saying. The event is open to Julia Morgan Society members only from 6:00-7:00 p.m. RAM members and the general public are invited to join us from 7:00-9:00 p.m.

Make art at RAM! See you there!

Spring Garden Tour

April 16th, 2010

The Art Alliagarden-correctednce of the Riverside Art Museum (RAM) wants to take you on a visual stroll through Riverside’s most talked about gardens. Located in the historic Rockledge area of Riverside on Ivy Street, seven gracious homeowners have agreed to share their garden culture and heritage just as the blossoming season begins. The Spring Garden Tour includes a tour of the original Priestley Hall home, built in 1889, one of Riverside’s beautiful historic gems. What an inspirational way to experience spring with family and good friends!

The tour takes place Saturday, May 1, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Tickets are required and can be purchased for $35 at RAM, 3425 Mission Inn Avenue or by calling (951) 684-7111. The tickets may also be purchased by going to http://www.riversideartmuseum.org/events and clicking on the Buy Now button. Tickets will be held at the Evans Residence, 5195 Victoria Avenue. Refreshments will be served and garden-related items will be available for purchase.

Proceeds from the event support the museum.

See you there!

Washington Elementary opening at Arts Walk

March 25th, 2010

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The Riverside Art Museum (RAM) Youth Education Department is proud to present the creative endeavors of the children of Washington Elementary school during the April 1, 2010 Arts Walk from 6-8 p.m. Over 600 paintings, clay sculptures, prints, drawings, and collages will be on display in RAM’s Taylor Family Gallery, Printmaking Center, and children’s classroom. All of the art pieces were created as part of RAM’s Art-to-Go program where RAM Youth Education teachers come to your school to introduce students to the various principles and techniques of studio art. For more information on RAM’s Art-to-Go program, visit our website at www.riversideartmuseum.org and click on the Education tab.

See you at Arts Walk!

PAAR 2010 Paint Out

March 5th, 2010

ram and rac

The Riverside Art Museum in partnership with the Riverside Arts Council presents the PAAR 2010 Paint Out.

The Plein Air Artists of Riverside will have their 2010 Paint Out exhibition at the Riverside Arts Project Gallery, at 3545 Central Ave. Suite 508, Riverside Ca. 92506. The exhibit is the culmination of a 9 day paint out through out Riverside. The show will showcase two paintings from each artist who participated in the paint out, including their Quick Draw painting featuring the Riverside Plaza.

A Gala reception and Awards Ceremony will be on Sat. Mar. 6, 2010 from 6 to 9 pm. at Riverside Arts Project, the judge for awards will be plein air artist William Wray from Sierra Madre, CA. The public is invited. The exhibit will be from March. 5 through May 5, 2010.

Riverside Arts Project

www.pleinairartistsofriverside.blogspot.com

www.inlandarts.com

Arts Walk

March 2nd, 2010

March 4, 6 - 9PM

Contemporary Choreography and Performance by UCR MFA Dance students.

YemayaJacmel

Ann Mazzocca is in the Dance MFA program at UCR. Mazzocca’s work is rooted in Afro-Caribbean folkloric dance, most prominently Haitian dance, through Western contemporary dance methods. These works are inspired by communal partnership and intimacy that she has experienced in Haiti, but are also conscious of her position as both an outsider and insider within the Haitian folkloric dance community. Mazzocca mixes and recombines movements to evoke memory and imagination of experience within Haitian cultural communities in New York and Miami as well as in Haiti.

In “Skirts,” a quartet of female dancers use improvisational methods to generate material inspired by Afro-Caribbean movements and gendered identities that leave space for individual experiences and interpretations of gendered movement, labor, and play. In “Ogou, Ossagne, Ocean Remix,” a solo framed by two duets, dancers explore the energies of three lwa (Haitian Vodou deities) without the use of Haitian movement. The result communicates the solitary, technological, and manic elements of the artist’s visits to Haiti, negotiating the conflict within of romanticizing Haiti’s communal living, privileged mobility, and current difficulties.

Choreographed by Ann Mazzocca in collaboration with dancers: Manny Gutierrez, Adanna Jones, Ryan Morris, Hannah Schwadron, Crystal Sepulveda; drummer
Husni Abu Bakar. Music by Hang Around (Karizma Kaytronic Dub Remix) by Ben Westbeech. Camino del Sol (Joakim Remix) by Antena. Edited by Ann Mazzocca.


Closed #336

Mark Indig: New Works

Reception: Thursday March 4, 2010
Opening during Riverside Arts Walk
6 - 9PM

Great photographers are like our best teachers. They pick out something we’ve missed and get us to notice it. They challenge us, confuse us, push us out of our bubble of comfort. In a perpetual show-and-tell, they encourage us to ask questions of our environment. In Mark Indig’s works, the prints are carefully-composed, existing in a space without people but with the feeling of human presence. These are lived-in environments, altered by their inhabitants, and unique. The stillness belies their sometimes handmade, improvised nature: the hand-painted murals, graffiti, signs, advertisements and even the choice of dresses in the windows. Like an urban anthropologist of our own present day, Indig gets us to notice this world.

On exhibition at RAM are selections from Mark Indig’s Closed on Sundays and LA River Project series. Closed on Sundays serves as a visual documentation of a contemporary “folk” style taking place on avenues and streets across the country. These photos are all shot on Sunday mornings. Their beauty encourages us to wake up early, if only to get us out of bed, onto the street. The LA River Project series focuses on the life and spirit of a maligned river in a frenzied city.

Indig asks us to look past the “ugly” association of a concrete river. Slicing through the thick air with his camera lens, he pares down images with an almost minimalist feel. Colors, reflections off the water, metal patterns, decaying letters, and weathered walls have the feel of a mid-20th century colorfield painting. The huge variety of scenes captured are surprising given that the photographer strayed no more than 100 yards from the river. It is this focus on capturing the inner life of the tributary that compels us to see more.

In presenting Mark Indig’s work, the Riverside Art Museum continues its dedication to exhibiting the work of important artists living and working in Southern California.


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Intimate Distance: The Modernism of Schuyler Standish

Reception:
March 13, 7 - 9PM

Los Angeles native Schuyler Standish has been an artist for nearly all his 83 years - but a visual artist only for the last 60 or so. Standish, who lives in Tujunga, was an accomplished professional musician by the age of 13, at which age he entered UCLA. He was also an accomplished Hollywood actor, having appeared in everything from a Ruby Keeler-Dick Powell dance movie to Wuthering Heights and Blood and Sand. It was after the Second World War that he picked up a brush and never looked back.

Standish, who taught art at the Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy in the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s, is an unabashed modernist in a post-modernist age. Best known for his landscapes, Standish is also adept at abstraction and figuration; but in all genres he betrays a loyalty to the principles of dynamic form, luminous color, and transformative imagery that motivated the giants of modern art from Monet to De Kooning.

Standish’s landscapes, acknowledging the plein air tradition, clearly recapitulate the lessons of Paul Cézanne. Standish painted in the Hollywood Hills and Highland Park, rendering the houses and streets nestled on the verdant mountainsides as Cézanne might have. At the same time, Standish depicts space with dramatic recessional structures reminiscent of the Bay Area Figurative painters.

As a figurative painter and draughtsman himself, Standish has worked naturalistically and expressionistically with equal deftness and confidence, evincing a wide familiarity with modernist examples, from Picasso and Léger’s Cubism to Dali and Tanguy’s Surrealism to the Bauhaus figuration of Klee and Schlemmer to the American approaches of Diebenkorn, Guston, and Saul Steinberg. If anything, Standish’s abstractions even more widely embrace the entire modernist, from Futurism and Dada to Constructivism and Hard-edge painting. As such, they may constitute his most distinctive achievement, showing him to be a master of texture, tone, and line, able to elaborate upon the simplest of arrangements - and, conversely, to elucidate the most complex arrangements with a self-possessed forthrightness.