11.27.2009

ARTIST: Matthew Cusick






Born in NYC in 1970, Matthew Cusick attended the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, BFA, 1993. Cusick has been exhibiting his work since 1996. Cusick is a multimedia artist whose collages using maps are intensely intricate. He creates portraits of people and landscapes using Maps in a Collage. Cusick also employs book pages, coffee, magazines, ink, etc. The pieces are gorgeous at first glance and then upon closer examination I was mesmerized by the intricacy of the lines of the maps he used to compile his compositions, fascinated by the new worlds the many maps created within the imagery. Cusick also has some digital videos and drawings on his website. His drawings are in a series called "Defacements" where he had "defaced" his old text books with drawings.

11.20.2009

ARTIST: Eleanor Wood





Eleanor Wood is a young artist whom I am having trouble finding information about on the net. She is in her mid-twenties and creates collages inspired by dreams. She is currently in Brighton, UK. She has a blog which she doesn't keep up with-I assume she is too busy making art to keep up with her blog www.jolly-good-show.blogspot.com
Arlie found this artist for me and despite the lack of info I can find I really enjoy her works. Wood's work is simple yet it resonates and I love how she incorporates the sleeping dreamer into her works. Wood's imagery is almost cliche with the dreamer and then the dream cloud, but they work and speak about more than dreams-for me I think they become psychic manifestations of thought rather than just dreams. Also each piece has a circular object or shape which I believe refrences the moon or another celestial body and I believe that to be important since I do the same thing-being incorporating the heavens into the dreamworks

11.17.2009

I AM THE ROAD


I AM THE ROAD, 24x8, GRIFFINDREWDAVIS.2009


I was literally raised on the road. My father has traveled across the globe and has made his living as a Truck Driver since before I was born. As an infant, of less than a year old, Mom and Dad took me with them on a cross country road trip. Growing up, Dad was always on the road either for work or for the love of it. All my memories of our family together has been in an automobile. We would ride with Dad in the Trucks hauling wood-chips and sometimes even ride down to Florida for produce during the winter. The Blue Ridge and Shenandoah Valley is nationally known for it's scenery and as a family we would just ride the back roads.

I feel the safest in a moving vehicle.
I love to drive places I never been.
I am obsessed with maps: Jedediah Hotchkiss, Google Maps, US. Geological Survey.
By the time I am 30 I plan on having the entire Commonwealth of Virginia's Roadway System memorized-All Towns, Cities, Routes, State Roads, National Parks, Local Cultures, History, sights and sounds.

Page Bond Gallery: Diego Sanchez, Mary Scurlock




Chomsky’s idea about discovery is the overarching concept that drives Diego Sanchez’ artistic process. Surface, repetition, color and spatial relations are carefully developed onto each canvas. Sanchez is constantly re-inventing his approach and technique. His intent is for the psychical qualities of his paintings to posses as much significance as the formal and representational elements.

Born in Bogota, Columbia, Diego Sanchez lives and works in Richmond, Virginia. He received his MFA and BFA in Painting and Printmaking from Virginia Commonwealth University. His work has been exhibited in Virginia and internationally. His work is in
many private and public collections including, Capital One, Media General, First Market Bank, and the Federal Reserve Bank.

Mary Scurlock is interested in memory and the transformation and distortion of an event as it is recalled in our minds. Her recent work on panel is of layers of facts and projected truths that develop into memory. Her chosen medium, encaustics, reveals
the environment of these abstract concepts. Embedded beneath the surface are images that reference both the past tangible experience and simultaneous internal perceptions.


Mary Scurlock lives and works in Richmond, Virginia. She received a BFA in Arts Education and a BFA in Painting and Printmaking from Virginia Commonwealth University with additional studies completed in Toulouse, France. Her work has been exhibited throughout the east coast and is included in numerous private and
public collections including, Federal Reserve Bank, First Market Bank, Markel Corporation, Media One, and Capital One.
(Facebook-Page Bond Gallery Event)

Diego Sanchez mentioned how he began his process by choosing a color with no preconceptions and then building upon this through gesso layerings and then becoming happy with the piece and then continue building more layers. He would employ grids, lines, drafting sketches, geometry, 3D forms, lines, patterns, and language within each painting. His subjects would be focused on Architceture (The Coliseum), furniture (chairs), and boats. Sanchez employed BOLD colors and uses symbols from other cultures. His goal is to find a happy middle ground between physical representation and geometric pattern with a main focus on "building surfaces"
Sanchez began adding elements called "floaters" which represent the floaters of light in one's vision when dizzy. Sometimes his work is planned and sometimes it just happens with an emphasis on space and how he approaches space. Sanchez likes to take something mundane, make people look at it so it becomes special.

Mary Scurlock began working on paper employing painting, pastel, graphite, and mixed media. She had a hip operation which changed her processes and she moved away from paper and onto panels. when first creating her panels she included paper in the process, but move away from this. Her imagery focused on trees and she used subdued organic forms in her works. During her operation she told the therapist that "one leg felt like glass and the other leg felt like wood" This is represented in her process. Scurlock builds up gesso layers(5) then digs into the layers to create her forms, adds wax, then sands it back down giving the image a glossy or "glassy" sheen. Her trees and there forms were from intuitive memory with no direct refrences. She is still working on her process.

Leonid Meteor Shower


Leonids are bits of debris from Comet Tempel-Tuttle. Every 33 years the comet visits the inner solar system and leaves a stream of dusty debris in its wake. Many of these streams have drifted across the November portion of Earth's orbit. Whenever we hit one, meteors come flying out of the constellation Leo. The first stream crossing on Nov. 17th comes around 4am EST. The debris is a diffuse mix of particles from several old streams that should produce a gentle display of two or three dozen meteors per hour over North America. A remarkable feature of this year's shower is that the Leonids will appear to be shooting almost directly out of Mars. It's just a coincidence, this year, that Mars happens to be passing by the Leonid radiant at the time of the shower. The red planet is almost as twice as bright as a first magnitude star, so it makes an eye-catching companion for the Leonids.

Amber, Tawny, Nathaniel, and I drove out to the Blue Ridge Pkwy to view the meteor shower ontop of Raven's Roost in hopes that the Mtns would break through the cloud cover. It was perfect up there and we did have an amazing view of the night sky with the new moon(no moon) I saw about 6 faint meteors and 5 "holy cows"
We were viewing the shower from 3:30am-4:30am arriving back in RVA at 6am.

Meteor showers, Astronomy, and the Universe all remind me of how insignificant we are on this little blue planet, however at the same time the overall chances of our existence here now is a million to one and that is very significant. For a moment Life was put into perspectives that faded away on the drive home...

11.13.2009

Artist Lecture: Jeffrey W. Allison & Kevin Morley

VMFA Paul Mellon Collection Educator
Jeffrey W. Allison, a VCU MFA Graduate, works for the VMFA as the Paul Mellon Collection Educator. The Paul Mellon Collection was funded by Paul Mellon-philanthropist/millionaire/art collector- who built and funded the new wing opening in 2010. Allison does lectures, workshops, events, juries shows, curates shows, teaches studio school, and has traveled 25,000 miles for work last year. Allison is the "worst writer in the world" yet is in charge of writing the labels for the artworks. The artist statements are required to be written at a 9th grade reading level and cannot be no more than 250 words.

Allison was contributing expert for Photobook: "Show Me America-Dorothea Lange". Organized the "Poverty In Virginia" Exhibition at the Scott House in Richmond. Allison had a solo show at Nesbit, a hair salon here in Richmond and was in a show at Mary Washington University, "Artists that Still Make Art though they Work in a Museum" Next year at the VMFA will be the year of the Woman Artist, "Minds Wide Open" and will be showing the work of photographer Sally Mann, who is from Lexington, VA.

Kevin Morley: Richmond-Times Dispatch

Kevin Morley is one of 6 Staff Photographers for the Richmond-Times Dispatch and has been for 25 years. According to Morley a photojournalist takes pictures that tell a story and his goal everyday at work is to take at least one strong photograph. A photojournalists job needs flexible creativity, always prepared for the unexpected, and needs to be able to write. Photojournalism has its perks such as a company car, paid for equipment, 401K, get in free and get to sit up close, tuition assisstance, and a decent salary, however it can be dangerous. Morley's assignments range from everything good, bad, happy, sad, and requires lots of travel. Morley also gives himself personal projects to accomplish in his free time, such as photographing his kids everyday for the first year of their life and creating a personal work of art.

A photojournalist's dream is to be invisible and to capture a wide emotional spectrum.