This is a Charcoal Drawing that Curt Mullins from Pikeville,Kentucky made for Me in June of 2011. I give it 2 thumbs up and I look forward to seeing his next Drawing of Me. He's mailing it to my parent's house now so I'll have a scanned version of it up here soon.
Monday, June 27, 2011
Daniel Kimery's Artistic Criticism Inspires Paul Cooper's Fans to become critics themselves
June 21 at 4:22pm via Android · Share
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Saturday, June 25, 2011
Must see Art House Shows
Alfred Hitchock Presents
Curb your Enthusiasm
Good Times
Night Gallery
Six Feet Under
Tales from The Crypt
Curb your Enthusiasm
Good Times
Night Gallery
Six Feet Under
Tales from The Crypt
Curt Mullin's is nearly through with his first Drawing of me
Now all he hast to do is narrow the bridge of my nose then finish the rest of my clothes and it will be perfect. http://www.facebook.com/curt.mullins
In all honesty I love Richard Gipe
I must say when I worked for Richard Gipe I thought that he was The Donald Trump of The Art World. He had huge warehouses full of Art and a $50,000.00 Diamond encrusted Rolex Watch. He is an extraordinary public speaker. He's very charismatic and inspirational. This man taught me more about The Art World than I had ever known and he is the foundation of everything that I am as an International Art Broker. With that said... he is an International Criminal that is guilty of Consumer Fraud and Trademark Infringement. He has defrauded over Ten Thousand Artists out of Tens of Millions of Dollars. Richard Gipe has destroyed the lives of many many Artists. He must be stopped and he must atone for his Crimes.
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002250779141&sk=info
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002250779141&sk=info
Friday, June 24, 2011
2011 Agent Reviews for Russellville, Arkansas
Janet Donnangelo - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating: 2 Stars
Affiliation: Owner of Donnangelo Pottery
Dossier: Available soon
*
Niki Sanders - City Rating: 3 1/2 Stars / U.S. Rating: 3 Stars
Affiliation: Curator for Electric Moo
Dossier: She has great taste in Art, Music, and Fashion. She is drop dead gorgeous. She is so sexy that she could sell ketchup popcicles to a man wearing white gloves.
*
Affiliation: Owner of Donnangelo Pottery
Dossier: Available soon
*
Niki Sanders - City Rating: 3 1/2 Stars / U.S. Rating: 3 Stars
Affiliation: Curator for Electric Moo
Dossier: She has great taste in Art, Music, and Fashion. She is drop dead gorgeous. She is so sexy that she could sell ketchup popcicles to a man wearing white gloves.
*
2011 Artists Reviews for Russellville, Arkansas
Janet Donnangelo - City Rating: 4 Stars / U.S. Rating: 3 1/2 Stars
Affiliation: Owner of Donnangelo Pottery
Dossier: World Famous Potter from Miami, Florida.
Style: Ceramic Artist
Medium: Clay
*
Affiliation: Owner of Donnangelo Pottery
Dossier: World Famous Potter from Miami, Florida.
Style: Ceramic Artist
Medium: Clay
*
2011 Art Gallery Reviews for Russellville, Arkansas
Dragon Fly Cottage - City Rating: 2 Stars / U.S. Rating 1 1/2 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
*
Electric Moo - City Rating: 3 1/2 Stars / U.S. Rating: 3 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons - 4 Stars: This place has some great Glass Art, Jewelry, Wood Carvings, and Poster Prints.
*
River Valley Arts Center - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating: 2 Stars
Type: Nonprofit
Artists: Available Soon.
Patrons: Available Soon.
*
The Copper Pig - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating 2 1/2 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons - 3 1/2 Stars: It was an excellent blend between an Art Gallery and a Furniture store.
*
The Frameshop and Gallery - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating: 2 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
*
Electric Moo - City Rating: 3 1/2 Stars / U.S. Rating: 3 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons - 4 Stars: This place has some great Glass Art, Jewelry, Wood Carvings, and Poster Prints.
*
River Valley Arts Center - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating: 2 Stars
Type: Nonprofit
Artists: Available Soon.
Patrons: Available Soon.
*
The Copper Pig - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating 2 1/2 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons - 3 1/2 Stars: It was an excellent blend between an Art Gallery and a Furniture store.
*
The Frameshop and Gallery - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating: 2 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Bentonville, Arkansas is set to become The Art Mecca of the entire Midwest
As seen in The Seattle Times June 18th 2011
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/thearts/2015353963_waltonmuseum18.html
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/thearts/2015353963_waltonmuseum18.html
Billionaire shapes an art museum for the heartland
The era of the world-class museum built by a single philanthropist in the tradition of Isabella Stewart Gardner, John Pierpont Morgan Jr. and Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney may seem to have passed, but Alice Walton is bringing it back.
By CAROL VOGEL
The New York Times
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BENTONVILLE, Ark. — The era of the world-class museum built by a single philanthropist in the tradition of Isabella Stewart Gardner, John Pierpont Morgan Jr. and Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney may seem to have passed, but Alice Walton is bringing it back.
Yet her mission is unlike those of her predecessors, or of more recent art patrons such as Ronald Lauder and his Neue Galerie. They set out to put great works on display in cultural capitals such as New York and Boston. Instead, Walton's Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art — the first major institution in 50 years dedicated to the vast spectrum of American art, to be housed in a building more than twice the size of the current Whitney Museum of American Art — seeks to bring high art to Middle America in Bentonville, a town of 35,000 that is best known as the home of Wal-Mart.
Walton, daughter of Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton, has worked on the museum for nearly a decade but has said little about it in public until now. In a recent interview at Town Branch, her family home, she said she wanted to turn Bentonville into an international destination for art lovers when the museum opens Nov. 11.
At the moment the most significant nearby cultural attractions are two hours away: a museum of Western and American Indian art in Tulsa, Okla., and, in the other direction, the country-music magnet of Branson, Mo.
"For years I've been thinking about what we could do as a family that could really make a difference in this part of the world," said Walton, 61. "I thought this is something we desperately need, and what a difference it would have made were it here when I was growing up."
The 201,000-square-foot museum was designed by the Boston architect Moshe Safdie for a site around two ponds on 120 acres of former Walton family land. Named for the nearby Crystal Spring, the museum will display top-flight works by American masters from the Colonial era to the present, with the largest concentrations coming from the 19th and 20th centuries. Although the collection — about 600 paintings and sculptures — is small by the standards of big museums, it is growing at a steady clip.
"She has not just been concentrating on what could be perceived as the greatest hits in American art," said John Wilmerding, an art historian and professor at Princeton University, who has been advising Walton for seven years and is on the Crystal Bridges board. "She has collected the work of some of these artists in depth," quietly amassing substantial bodies of work by figures such as Martin Johnson Heade, Stuart Davis, George Bellows and John Singer Sargent.
Walton, who has been an art collector most of her life, turned to buying art specifically for the museum in 2005, resulting in a years-long spending spree that has made her a recognized force in the art market. She has been one of those mysterious anonymous buyers at auctions and at galleries who often pay top dollar and has spent many tens of millions of dollars on works such as Gilbert Stuart's portrait of George Washington from 1797 ($8.1 million), Asher Durand's "Kindred Spirits" from 1849 ($35 million) and Norman Rockwell's 1943 "Rosie the Riveter" ($4.9 million).
She has also bought more recent works, including a Jasper Johns "Alphabets" painting from 1960-62 (priced at $11 million) and a 1985 Andy Warhol silkscreen of Dolly Parton and a 2009 Chuck Close triptych depicting Bill Clinton (prices unknown). (She is hoping that Parton and Clinton, a friend, will attend the opening.)
Her museum has commissioned several major site-specific works, including a giant silver tree by Roxy Paine that sits at the entrance and a hypnotic large-scale light installation by James Turrell. The museum's director, Don Bacigalupi, recruited nearly two years ago from the Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio, is a specialist in contemporary art and has been encouraging Walton to expand the museum's holdings by living artists.
Museum officials said they were planning for about 250,000 visitors in their first year and expect an annual operating budget of $16 million to $20 million. In addition to the 120 full-time jobs the institution is creating, they said, it will pump millions of tourist dollars into northwest Arkansas.
Walton started thinking seriously about building an art museum in the late 1990s and brought it up a few times at the meetings the family holds three times a year. She thought she needed the backing of her nieces and nephews, she said, because the land would have eventually become theirs. Walton, who is divorced, has no children.
"That decision brewed for a year and a half," she said, before there was unanimous agreement.
She had the means to realize her vision. According to calculations by Forbes, her net worth is $21 billion, making her the ninth-richest person in the United States and the 21st richest in the world. A celebrated horsewoman who seems more comfortable in sneakers than stilettos, she is the youngest of four children; while her eldest brother, S. Robson Walton, is chairman of Wal-Mart, and another brother, Jim, is a member of the board, she is not involved in the company's daily operations. (A third brother, John, died in a plane crash in 2005.) Although she started and ran an investment company in the late 1980s and '90s, she now divides her time between Bentonville and Millsap, Texas, where she breeds cutting horses and runs the 1,600-acre Rocking W Ranch.
Along with family approval of the project, there has been some financial help. Last month, Crystal Bridges said the Walton Family Foundation had pledged $800 million to the institution for an operating endowment, acquisitions and future capital improvements, a gift believed to be one of the largest ever to an American museum.
The museum's board, meanwhile, includes members well-equipped to chip in, such as John Tyson, chairman of Tyson Foods, and C. Douglas McMillon, president and chief executive of Wal-Mart International. Although Alice Walton took only one art-history course in college, she said, she has spent much of the past 25 years reading about the subject, and — according to advisers and others who have spent time with her — she is a savvy collector.
"Often when something would come up privately she'd say, 'Wait, it will come to auction where we can get it at a better price,' " Wilmerding recalled. "And she'd be right."
John Richardson, the Pablo Picasso biographer, met Walton through friends during one of her frequent trips to New York, and visited the Museum of Modern Art with her. "She knew exactly what she was looking at," Richardson recalled of their walk around the show "Abstract Expressionist New York."
"I was surprised," he said. "When we were looking at a painting by Norman Lewis" — an African-American painter who is relatively obscure compared to many of the other artists in the show — "she not only recognized his work but said the museum already had bought something of his, which is quite adventurous."
At least one aspect of her approach to art sets her apart from most collectors of her financial muscle, who traditionally gravitate toward the European Impressionists and early modernists or international contemporary art stars.
"I never would have thought of collecting anything but American, truly," she said. "This is the heartland of the country. It's what should be here."
Walton acknowledged that in the beginning it was not always easy dealing with members of the East Coast art establishment. "A lot of people there don't really know this part of the world, really don't know the people here and the desire and the need for art," she said. "But once they come and see what's here and what we have, their attitudes will change."
She is realistic enough to know that a world-class museum can't be created overnight, or even over a decade. "We want to share; we want to borrow; we want to loan; we want to have really active partnerships with museums worldwide," said Walton, who has talked with Henri Loyrette, director of the Louvre, and who, until recently, lent Durand's "Kindred Spirits" to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
"We'll be opening without a lot of things," she added with a smile. "But that's just fine."
Yet her mission is unlike those of her predecessors, or of more recent art patrons such as Ronald Lauder and his Neue Galerie. They set out to put great works on display in cultural capitals such as New York and Boston. Instead, Walton's Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art — the first major institution in 50 years dedicated to the vast spectrum of American art, to be housed in a building more than twice the size of the current Whitney Museum of American Art — seeks to bring high art to Middle America in Bentonville, a town of 35,000 that is best known as the home of Wal-Mart.
Walton, daughter of Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton, has worked on the museum for nearly a decade but has said little about it in public until now. In a recent interview at Town Branch, her family home, she said she wanted to turn Bentonville into an international destination for art lovers when the museum opens Nov. 11.
At the moment the most significant nearby cultural attractions are two hours away: a museum of Western and American Indian art in Tulsa, Okla., and, in the other direction, the country-music magnet of Branson, Mo.
"For years I've been thinking about what we could do as a family that could really make a difference in this part of the world," said Walton, 61. "I thought this is something we desperately need, and what a difference it would have made were it here when I was growing up."
The 201,000-square-foot museum was designed by the Boston architect Moshe Safdie for a site around two ponds on 120 acres of former Walton family land. Named for the nearby Crystal Spring, the museum will display top-flight works by American masters from the Colonial era to the present, with the largest concentrations coming from the 19th and 20th centuries. Although the collection — about 600 paintings and sculptures — is small by the standards of big museums, it is growing at a steady clip.
"She has not just been concentrating on what could be perceived as the greatest hits in American art," said John Wilmerding, an art historian and professor at Princeton University, who has been advising Walton for seven years and is on the Crystal Bridges board. "She has collected the work of some of these artists in depth," quietly amassing substantial bodies of work by figures such as Martin Johnson Heade, Stuart Davis, George Bellows and John Singer Sargent.
Walton, who has been an art collector most of her life, turned to buying art specifically for the museum in 2005, resulting in a years-long spending spree that has made her a recognized force in the art market. She has been one of those mysterious anonymous buyers at auctions and at galleries who often pay top dollar and has spent many tens of millions of dollars on works such as Gilbert Stuart's portrait of George Washington from 1797 ($8.1 million), Asher Durand's "Kindred Spirits" from 1849 ($35 million) and Norman Rockwell's 1943 "Rosie the Riveter" ($4.9 million).
She has also bought more recent works, including a Jasper Johns "Alphabets" painting from 1960-62 (priced at $11 million) and a 1985 Andy Warhol silkscreen of Dolly Parton and a 2009 Chuck Close triptych depicting Bill Clinton (prices unknown). (She is hoping that Parton and Clinton, a friend, will attend the opening.)
Her museum has commissioned several major site-specific works, including a giant silver tree by Roxy Paine that sits at the entrance and a hypnotic large-scale light installation by James Turrell. The museum's director, Don Bacigalupi, recruited nearly two years ago from the Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio, is a specialist in contemporary art and has been encouraging Walton to expand the museum's holdings by living artists.
Museum officials said they were planning for about 250,000 visitors in their first year and expect an annual operating budget of $16 million to $20 million. In addition to the 120 full-time jobs the institution is creating, they said, it will pump millions of tourist dollars into northwest Arkansas.
Walton started thinking seriously about building an art museum in the late 1990s and brought it up a few times at the meetings the family holds three times a year. She thought she needed the backing of her nieces and nephews, she said, because the land would have eventually become theirs. Walton, who is divorced, has no children.
"That decision brewed for a year and a half," she said, before there was unanimous agreement.
She had the means to realize her vision. According to calculations by Forbes, her net worth is $21 billion, making her the ninth-richest person in the United States and the 21st richest in the world. A celebrated horsewoman who seems more comfortable in sneakers than stilettos, she is the youngest of four children; while her eldest brother, S. Robson Walton, is chairman of Wal-Mart, and another brother, Jim, is a member of the board, she is not involved in the company's daily operations. (A third brother, John, died in a plane crash in 2005.) Although she started and ran an investment company in the late 1980s and '90s, she now divides her time between Bentonville and Millsap, Texas, where she breeds cutting horses and runs the 1,600-acre Rocking W Ranch.
Along with family approval of the project, there has been some financial help. Last month, Crystal Bridges said the Walton Family Foundation had pledged $800 million to the institution for an operating endowment, acquisitions and future capital improvements, a gift believed to be one of the largest ever to an American museum.
The museum's board, meanwhile, includes members well-equipped to chip in, such as John Tyson, chairman of Tyson Foods, and C. Douglas McMillon, president and chief executive of Wal-Mart International. Although Alice Walton took only one art-history course in college, she said, she has spent much of the past 25 years reading about the subject, and — according to advisers and others who have spent time with her — she is a savvy collector.
"Often when something would come up privately she'd say, 'Wait, it will come to auction where we can get it at a better price,' " Wilmerding recalled. "And she'd be right."
John Richardson, the Pablo Picasso biographer, met Walton through friends during one of her frequent trips to New York, and visited the Museum of Modern Art with her. "She knew exactly what she was looking at," Richardson recalled of their walk around the show "Abstract Expressionist New York."
"I was surprised," he said. "When we were looking at a painting by Norman Lewis" — an African-American painter who is relatively obscure compared to many of the other artists in the show — "she not only recognized his work but said the museum already had bought something of his, which is quite adventurous."
At least one aspect of her approach to art sets her apart from most collectors of her financial muscle, who traditionally gravitate toward the European Impressionists and early modernists or international contemporary art stars.
"I never would have thought of collecting anything but American, truly," she said. "This is the heartland of the country. It's what should be here."
Walton acknowledged that in the beginning it was not always easy dealing with members of the East Coast art establishment. "A lot of people there don't really know this part of the world, really don't know the people here and the desire and the need for art," she said. "But once they come and see what's here and what we have, their attitudes will change."
She is realistic enough to know that a world-class museum can't be created overnight, or even over a decade. "We want to share; we want to borrow; we want to loan; we want to have really active partnerships with museums worldwide," said Walton, who has talked with Henri Loyrette, director of the Louvre, and who, until recently, lent Durand's "Kindred Spirits" to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
"We'll be opening without a lot of things," she added with a smile. "But that's just fine."
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
2011 Art Gallery Reviews for Little Rock, Arkansas
Arkansas Arts Center - City Rating: 4 Stars / U.S. Rating: 3 1/2 Stars
Type: Museum
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons - 4 Stars: I was very impressed.
*
Gallery 26 - City Rating: 4 Stars / U.S. Rating: 4 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon
Patrons - 4 Stars: Where has this Gallery been all my life?
*
Greg Thompson Fine Art - City Rating: 4 Stars / U.S. Rating: 4 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons - 4 Stars: I was in awe of this Gallery
*
Hearne Fine Art - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating: 2 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: 3 Stars: This is the best African American Art Gallery in Little Rock
*
Local Colour - City Rating: 2 Stars / U.S. Rating: 1 Star
Type: Cooperative
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
*
M2 - City Rating: 2 Stars / U.S. Rating: 1 Star
Type: Cooperative
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
*
Stephano's Fine Art Gallery - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating; 2 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
Type: Museum
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons - 4 Stars: I was very impressed.
*
Gallery 26 - City Rating: 4 Stars / U.S. Rating: 4 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon
Patrons - 4 Stars: Where has this Gallery been all my life?
*
Greg Thompson Fine Art - City Rating: 4 Stars / U.S. Rating: 4 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons - 4 Stars: I was in awe of this Gallery
*
Hearne Fine Art - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating: 2 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: 3 Stars: This is the best African American Art Gallery in Little Rock
*
Local Colour - City Rating: 2 Stars / U.S. Rating: 1 Star
Type: Cooperative
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
*
M2 - City Rating: 2 Stars / U.S. Rating: 1 Star
Type: Cooperative
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
*
Stephano's Fine Art Gallery - City Rating: 3 Stars / U.S. Rating; 2 Stars
Type: Commercial
Artists: Available soon.
Patrons: Available soon.
Monday, June 20, 2011
Sunday, June 19, 2011
The Tin Grizzly Website
Great news Art Lovers now you can purchase The Art of The Tin Grizzly Gallery from the privacy of your own home.
http://thetingrizzly.com/
As seen on The Tin Grizzly Website.
http://thetingrizzly.com/
As seen on The Tin Grizzly Website.
Here at The Tin Grizzly we take great pride in offering our clientele remarkably beautiful Wildlife and Western themed décor pieces. We have a vast variety of nature’s beautiful creations, captured by artists to share with you in your home. Whether, in a framed art print or one of our beautiful bedding ensembles, linens, tapestries, decorative throw pillows, a lighting fixture, or one of our accent décor pieces. You can be assured we have selected affordable quality pieces for you to choose from for your home. Many of our items are made or created right here with in the United States, and even some by local artisans.
Please take a few moments to peruse our expansive collection of Wildlife and Western pieces. We invite you to explore our items and let us help you decorate your home in that Old World and Wildlife theme you have come to like, and love. As you will see we have something for everyone. We are the Man’s store, where the Women like to shop! Thank you and enjoy your venture through the collections we have brought together for you!
- The Tin Grizzly Team
Saturday, June 18, 2011
Must see Art House Films
Architectecture of Doom
Batman 1989
Batman Returns
Beetle Juice 1988
Bong Water
Cecil B Demented
Cigarette Burns 2006
Crumb
Dead and Buried 1981
Dread 2008
Edward Scissorhands 1990
Enter The Void 2009
Freddy got Fingered
H.R. Giger Revealed 2010
H.R.Giger's Sanctuary
Martyrs 2008
I shot Andy Warhol
May 2002
Midnight Meat Train 2008
Night Gallery 1969
Scanners
Sick Girl 2006
Vault of Horror 1973
White Oleander 2002
HotSpringstrips.com reviews of local Art Galleries
This nameless Eunuch was wrong about everything. I suspect that one of Richard Gipe's employees was behind this. Notice the part where it says "Legacy Fine Art 804 Central Ave. Hot Springs, Arkansas 501-624-1044 legacyfineart.webs.com Legacy Fine Art claims to have the distinction of being Arkansas' top selling gallery. Every month in preparation for the Hot Springs Gallery Walk the entire gallery is re-hung to rotate works and to display new art." As seen on http://www.hotspringstips.com/art_gallery.htm | ||
Hot Springs, Arkansas - Art Galleries / Gallery Walk | ||
|
http://www.hotspringstips.com/art_gallery.htm
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