Contemporary Art - Buying For Pleasure, Buying For Profit

With the internet making it easier than ever to source artworks, it's relatively simple these days to build up a great-looking collection.

While prices for unique works are increasingly beyond the reach of many, limited editions of, say, 150 plus are financially and widely accessible, making it possible to acquire pieces by major artists for reasonable prices.

There can be a downside, however. While little beats the pleasure a signed work can bring, generally speaking, the larger an edition, the less likely it is to appreciate in value quickly - or even substantially.

Nevertheless, the contemporary art market is full of contradictions, and with growing demand at all levels, recent trends have often seen this assumption overturned.

As an obvious example, Damien Hirst's early prints for Eyestorm consistently fetch $10000-$16000 at re-sale, a very substantial profit on their original price. More recently, prints by Banksy and other urban artists have proved equally lucrative.

In other words, it's becoming increasingly possible - although by no means a certainty - to make profits quickly with relatively little outlay; although the trick, as always, is knowing what to buy and when to sell.

Buying for fast profit

The art world has a curious attitude to speculation. Buying and selling purely for profit is still regarded as just a little unsavory, even though the entire art market is dedicated to this pursuit. Perhaps it's because art has such a curiously dual nature, combining aesthetic and cultural worth with a commercial value that can reach very high sums indeed.

Whatever the case, it would be difficult to consistently make money from art without some genuine appreciation and an insight into what will stand the test of time. And many dealers are themselves collectors, at least partly funding their own acquisitions through trading.

Yet it's certainly true that, with contemporary art consistently showing remarkable returns on investment, it's also become an attractive proposition to a very wide range of buyers.

In general, non-specialist speculators often trade in the work of artists whose frequent media coverage makes them well known to the public. And as shown by the two examples mentioned above - Hirst and Banksy - this can certainly reap substantial rewards.

But it's also important to remember that, in an increasingly novelty-driven world, the next big thing is usually just around the corner. 'Celebrity' artists often take on the nature of a trend, and fads can become outdated with dramatic speed. Knowing when to sell such work is vitally important.

Ups and downs in the market aren't just related to artists with familiar public profiles, of course. The art world itself frequently generates its own, 'flavor of the month' buzz. A few years ago, Martin Kippenberger's prices rose dramatically, then leveled just as quickly. Chinese and now Indian contemporary art have been subject to the same kind of intensely fashion-led markets.

Clearly, money can be made through quickly identifying and speculating on trends, but you'll need to have your finger firmly on the pulse. Knowing what's considered exciting is essential, but you'll also have to determine how long this excitement is actually going to last.

Long-term investment - knowing your artists

When it comes to collecting art, you'll often read the following: the safest way to build a collection is simply to buy work you really like.

Such advice seems tailor-made to shield less knowledgeable collectors from potential disappointment, and perhaps even encourage sales of less desirable work. Buy a piece you love and if the value falls no harm has been done. If it gains in price, that's a bonus.

I prefer to look at buying art a little differently.

Of course it's important to purchase work you want to own and view.

But since contemporary art presents real investment opportunities, it makes sense to think carefully about what to add to your collection. After all, look at almost any online art site, and you'll see that prices for fairly standard pieces are often equivalent to what you'd pay for work with far greater investment potential.

Although there's obviously no way of predicting future value for sure, the key is to familiarize yourself as much as possible with the background of artists you're drawn to.

How long have they been practicing? Is there a theme or thought process behind their work? Has this evolved coherently over the years?

Artists with at least some degree of complexity and persistent 'vision' are generally more likely to gain steadily in appreciation and price.

You'll also want to know if the artist has achieved some kind of recognition. Is their work held by collections, galleries or museums? Has it been exhibited consistently?

Professional opinion is yet another important factor in trying to determine an artist's long-term prospects. If a large number of critics and academics coincide in their high opinion of an artist, this is another good sign that they will retain or even gain value.

Mid-career artists can be judged much more easily in relation to their existing work; and after all, good art isn't just about something that happens to look nice on a wall.

It's about a certain kind of commitment and an obvious path of development. If all these factors are present, buying probably makes sense. Limited editions by Jeff Koons, for example, were relatively inexpensive 5 or 6 years ago, but with recent record-breaking prices for major works, have also shot up in value.

Even artists who disappear temporarily from the art market radar are much more likely to re-emerge at a later point if they show the 'right' kind of commitment and passion.

Emerging artists and the schlock of the new

New young artists are often fizzing with ideas, many of which can seem ground-breaking or even radical, but the problem is that they have yet to prove their long-term worth.

This said, you can certainly gain an insight into potential by applying the criteria above. It's especially important to determine if they have something genuine to express or are simply employing methods that could, over time, increasingly be seen as just a gimmick.

Of course, if you're looking to make a high return on investment, rapidly emerging artists can prove highly lucrative.

In such cases, it's probably a good idea to invest in as substantial a piece as possible, although as we've seen, editions and multiples can also prove money-earners.

But keep a close eye on auction prices and signs of market fatigue. Such artists might be the talk of the town right now, but will they fulfill their early promise?

If, after a few years, their work appears stuck in a rut and prices seem to be leveling or even dropping, it's time to think twice about their long-term appeal. On the other hand, if they do continue to create great work, any pieces bought for relatively low sums at the start of their careers should steadily rise in value.

Spreading your bets

If you're lucky enough to have substantial sums of money to spend on art, newer artists, as we've just seen, can produce significant return on investment.

But perhaps the best way to offset the risks that they may never fulfill expectation is to 'spread your bets' across a selection of up and coming names.

Buying the work of several different artists might mean settling for less significant works, but with the right kind of knowledge - and luck - hitting a jackpot is still potentially viable.

If you've done your research, the chances are fairly good that at least one - and hopefully more - of your chosen artists will gain in recognition.

And given the phenomenal increase in prices for contemporary art, if that happens, eventual profits could far outweigh the costs of initial purchases, even if other works fail to make the grade.

It's worth remembering that many well-known collectors buy huge amounts of work by new, 'promising' artists.

Charles Saatchi is a particularly good example, and although he is famous for the apparent strength of his collection, a sizable proportion consists of artists who have now faded into obscurity (you won't see these listed on the website).

However, the phenomenal rise in value of those who became major names - Peter Doig, for example - have reaped him many millions of dollars in profit at auction.

And if those are the rewards, you can probably afford to make the odd mistake.


Author Info:

Mike writes for modernedition.com, a resource providing articles and news on contemporary art, as well as limited edition prints and multiples by leading contemporary artists.

Providing a Unique Perspective to Art

If you imagine meeting artists and studying their work personally then visit the art fairs. Art fairs are a festival where various art forms: both visual and other forms of art, are showcased to public. In such fairs, the participation of artists can also be marked.

The art fairs are held annually or at uneven period of time by internationally recognized curators selected by a committee of elite persons. For persons who admire art and artists will find the art festivals as niche in the world of art. The art lovers can acquire knowledge and have a vivid insight into the artists mind. By perusing the works of the artists they will also evaluate their skills and techniques of shaping ideas. Art fans will have a great opportunity to learn about the adroitness of artists. Art fairs also act as the platform to develop skills for young artists. For fresh artists these fairs of art act as the career launcher where they can exhibit their art. Artists of both local and worldwide admiration also display their work for sale or public interest.

Now-a-days the practice of displaying art has undergone changes. With the help of the hi-end technology art aficionados and artists can upload the images of their work and send it to friends and dear ones. Using the same provision artists can sale their work and also enable them to collect feedback to improve their work in a better way. The main objective of such art fairs is to encourage the species of young artists and art lovers. These art exhibitions also cultivate showdown to inspire art among the people by providing scholarships and other forms of support.

So, if you want to know more about art and artists just collect information about art fairs and pay a visit.


Author Info:

The best place to meet artists and have an unforgettable insight to the artists mind is by visiting art fairs Various forms of arts are displayed in the fairs for public entertainment and to promote art among people.

Tips on Pencil Portrait Drawing - The Hands

Drawing hands takes much practice. Hands are typically quite complex with many smooth transitions between darks and lights. Shapes overlap and need to be studied very carefully to yield acceptable realism. There are also lots of edges, crevices, and creases.

It is imperative that you do not ignore the many angles that are present in the hands. Hands are much more angular than our ingrained memorized image would suggest. Therefore, it is very easy to make the mistake of portraying the hands too chubby and rounded which leads to an unnaturally rounded.

Here are a few pointers that will give you the basic memory pack for drawing hands. When I say "memory pack", I mean a set of memorized issues about drawing hands that should be in the foreground of your thinking whenever you draw hands. This is a facility you should develop with each feature of a portrait such as eyes, ears, etc.

* Simplify Generally, any kind of photographic subject will have so much detail that it becomes necessary to simplify, i.e., leaving out much detail. Of course, you must develop a facility to leave out the right details and keep the important ones. This is where your artistic sensibilities play a major role. Making the right choices makes all the difference.

It is a good exercise to look at pictures in magazines and practice the simplification process. Ask yourself the question: What can I eliminate in this picture while still retaining the essence of the subject? In fact, as you get more experienced you may ask yourself the question: What should I add to obtain an even more convincing rendition of the essence of the person I am portraying?

The same is true with drawing hands. The hands have usually so much detail in them that you must discard the unimportant details. At first, keep your eye on the major shapes, the so-called large masses. You do not want to miss those.

Remember, at this stage, try not to think too much of how a hand is supposed to look like, just draw the shapes as they are.

* Males and Females There are many differences between male hands and female hands. On average, male hands are larger and squarer. For example, the fingers are less tapered and thicker than those of the female. The female hand is slender and the finger tips are much more tapered compared to the male fingers. The fact that females (generally!) do not have hairy hands adds to the lightness in color.

* Values First, avoid outlining the hands at all cost. Let the edges be formed by applying the correct contrast in values. Study the hand very carefully. Note where one finger overlaps another and be sure to include all the cast shadows.

Also, it is very important to render the reflected light on each finger because that is what will give the finger its roundness and three-dimensional look.

* Angles and Planes Hands are surprisingly angular, not as much rounded as we sometimes think they are. The joints and knuckles have various planes to them which need to be carefully rendered.

* Blending Keep the blending of the hands very smooth. Blend the darks into the surface they belong to. This way there is no confusion as to which surface the dark line belongs to. Again, do not forget the reflected light between the fingers. This will create the illusion of roundness of the fingers.

The hands can be used to enhance the visual impact of your pencil portrait drawing. For example, the addition of hands to a baby picture makes the whole thing much more endearing. Therefore, adding hands to a portrait is always something to consider. With this, I think you can have a good start at drawing hands. And remember, practice, practice, and practice some more. Drawing is a hands-on art, so to speak.


Author Info:

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. Samples of Remi's pencil portraits and other articles can be found at Remi's Pencil Portraits.

Tips on Pencil Portrait Drawing - The Eyes

As with all features of the human face, it is important that we do not draw the preconceived ideas we have about eyes. The eyes are the windows to a person's soul and reflect much of the emotionality and personality of that person. Therefore, they must be drawn exactly how they are.

There is much to be said about the different parts of the eye, but here are a few guidelines that will get you started in the right direction:

* Complexity Like the ears, eyes are rather complex forms and therefore we need to be patient and spend the necessary time to draw them as realistic as we can. Here are the important parts of the eye:

- The surrounding bone structure
- The eyebrows
- The eyelids
- The eyelashes
- The eyeball
- The iris
- The pupil

* Eye Structure The eyeball sits deep inside the eye socket. The eye socket has a protruding rim at the top on which the eyebrow is situated. You can trace your finger all around the eye socket and get a good idea of its shape. It is within this rather rectangular shape that we will draw the eye.

* Eyeball The eyeball has a rather large spherical shape. In front there is a protruding egg shaped bulge where the lens is located. The eyelids are stretched over the eyeball.

For drawing purposes we are interested in that part of the eyeball that we usually refer to as "the whites" of our eyes. Now, those whites are in general not white at all but have shadows on them which, at times, can be quite dark. Remember also that the whites are part of a spherical surface. So when shading the whites, we should think of the elements of shading that are applicable to a sphere.

* Eyelids The eyelids are stretched over the eyeball. Therefore, the curvature of the eyeball gives the eyelids their shape. This is something to understand and memorize.

It is important to capture the exact shape of the eyelid lines and to recognize that they follow the curvature of the eyeball. Also, when the upper eyelid is retracted, it leaves a clearly visible crease which must also be rendered accurately.

Finally, notice the peculiar little shape in the inside corner of the eye where the upper and lower eyelids join. Be sure to draw this corner as observed in your particular subject.

* Eyelashes The eyelashes sprout from the eyelids. They grow in clumps and should be rendered that way. Spend some time observing how eyelids grow and are directed. Notice that very often the lashes on the upper eyelid are much larger than those on the lower lid. Eyelashes belonging to a particular clump are frequently entangled. The eyelashes are usually drawn at the very end.

* The Iris The iris is the circle of color in the middle of the eye. It is crucial for a good likeness that the value of the color is rendering correctly. A dark brown or a pale blue, for example, will appear very smooth and even. Green and deep blue irises, on the other hand, will have the most design and contrast in it.

* The Pupil The pupil is situated exactly in the middle of the iris. As is the case with the iris, the pupil is an exact circle (if a frontal view) and is always black.

Very often there is a circular highlight situated just where the iris and pupil meet. This highlight adds quite a bit of life to the portrait. Look for it and add it to your drawing.

* Eyebrows The eyebrows play a very important part in the appearance of a person. They also have a lot to do with the expression on the person's face. They follow the shape of the upper rim of the bone structure in which the eye is placed.

* Placement The distance between the two eyes is on average exactly equal to one eye-width. Drawing a vertical line from the inside corner of the eye down to the nose should touch the outside of the nostril. Of course, these are average values and there are individual differences.

It is important to get a good impression of the shape, angle, width, and exact location of the eyebrows. Carefully observe the direction of the hairs and how they are intertwined.

Much can still be said about drawing eyes. For example, we could talk about the differences between the eyes of men, women, and children. Or, we could talk about capturing expressions of anger, laughter, or sadness, and much more. But the above guidelines will give you a good start. Later, you may want to undertake a more thorough study of the eye and how to draw it.


Author Info:

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. Samples of Remi's pencil portraits and other articles can be found at Remi's Pencil Portraits.

The Late Colin David

Colin David's mortal body left this world on 25 Feb., 2008, but his soul breathes in his art and people. Colin was one of those good adroit painters who fashion human anatomy with their skill and imagination. Just like Ustad Allah Baksh, Sadqain, Shakir Ali, Saeed Akhtar, Colin portrayed women figure as a special element in his painting. He was a superb draftsman with a technical perfection that is all too rare. According to an art critic Marjorie Husain, Colin used to paint non traditional style in the restricted ambiance of Ziaul Haq era which consolidated his position as most popular artists in time.

Colin was born in Karachi in 1937; he began his art education at the University of Punjab when the fine arts departments opened its door to male students in 1956. According to Niilofer Farrukh he once ran away from home because his father, a journalist, did not allow him to take up Art as a profession. Colin David was among the first group of three young men who were taught by Khalid Iqbal, and by Anna Molka Ahmed who was hugely pleased by the talented trio. She included them in many of the Department projects and in later years, spoke of their success with pride. After doing masters Colin got opportunity to study in UCL where he was guided by sir William Cold Stream, an artist who painted in "Euston Road" group style. There Colin got opportunity to paint from life and found his artistic meter. It was a time when Naz Ikramullah was taking a course of Lithography at the Slade, and Colin mentioned meeting her in letters home.

Returning to Pakistan in 1962 Colin rejoined the faculty of Fine arts department of Punjab University, and remained there until 1964, but differences with Anna Molka Ahmed caused him to leave the department and join the National College of Arts, where Shakir Ali was the Principal. Colin remained there, an integral part of the college for 25 years.

In those times of experimentation Colin developed a unique, distinctive style which showed his own inclination. His first solo exhibition, a collection of figure studies in oils painted with great luminosity was held in Karachi in 1970 at "The Gallery" where Colin hailed great appreciation. His work in the genre of the nude inspired new art collectors. The element of design in a form of "figure" always creates balance and harmony in his compositions. Sense of space was an important subject in his paintings. Colin explored the female figure as a symbol of beauty and presented "women as a women"

Colin successfully portrayed the sensitive studies of children at play. In one of his painting he portrayed a child while eating toffee while un wrapping it, chubby fingers persevering, and an expression of total single mindedness on the child's face. It increased the UNICEF interest in his art. Many of his art pieces went to foreign art collectors.

It was ironical that in his life many times he was obliged to hold exhibition in his home and unnamed spots for selected audience since he was unable to show his work publicly. Once he said "In the earlier stages of my career when figure painting was artistically acceptable, my exhibitions were always highly successful. The public understood and appreciated my work. They still do of course, but it means my exhibitions become elitist."

In last days of Coulin, despite of bad health he continued to work and exhibited his art work in Karachi and remained popular.

Time goes, you say? Ah, no! Alas, time stays, we go.
- Henry Austin Dobson


Author Info:

Sehrish chauhdary
Artist and an art teacher.

news paper, books, magazines, internet.

How to Make Extra Money As an Artist

Making your work available for sale as a high-quality reproduction makes good business sense -- especially if you are trying to make a living as an artist!

So what is a giclee? It is a high-quality print made on fine art paper or canvas that can faithfully represent your work when done correctly. Many fine art museums have giclees in their collection.

So, if you are a painter or a photographer and you don't want to make your own giclee prints, then you will need to evaluate a giclee printing service.

Selecting a giclee printer is a very personal choice. In certain ways, it is like choosing a doctor. You need to be able to trust their experience and their judgment. After all, your printer will be, in many ways, an extension of your work. Some artists will feel more comfortable working with their printer in person. Others don't mind working remotely with printers via the Internet. Wherever they are located, you will need to know that you've made the right choice.

So, how do you begin? There are three main criteria: quality, cost and value-added services. The most important starting point is cost.

Cost: The rule-of-thumb is that you should be able mark-up your giclee prints a minimum of at least two-to-three times your cost. If the cost of making a giclee reproduction is too high, it probably isn't worth your while -- especially if you are trying to make a living as an artist. The higher your costs, the more difficult it may be to sell.

So, when you evaluate a giclee printer based upon cost, you need be aware of the fees that they may charge. One is called the "setup fee". A setup fee is a very broad term. It can include the cost of scanning and proofing your original work or it might just mean the time it takes to open your file on the computer and change the media (paper or canvas) on printer. Some printers charge for that effort, whereas others don't. Another major cost "hurdle" is the "minimum order". Some printers won't even talk to you unless you plan to spend a minimum of at least $250! It would be difficult to inexpensively evaluate their quality if they charge so much up front.

Additional fees to look out for are storage fees (to keep your files on record), copying your work onto a CD or DVD and any other rush fees. They can all add up. If you work with a remote printer, you also need to consider the cost of shipping (which is usually offset by not being charged any sales tax).

Quality: So now you have a short list of contenders that meet your cost criteria. Evaluating the quality of their work is the next step. If you are a photographer or a digital artist, you can place a small order - perhaps one or two different images - to check their quality. If you are a painter, you will first need to have your original art scanned or photographed. Then you will need to have the image proofed.

Some giclee printers offer scanning services (capturing your artwork digitally) and build the proofing cost into the fee. Others only offer printing. But the important thing, and this is very critical, is if they understand and know what to look for when making a reproduction of your work. If they have your original work of art as a reference, that would be best. The next best thing would be to provide them with a "match" print, which they can use as a guide. If they have no reference, they can still provide you with a proof to check against your original. It is during this proofing process that you can evaluate the skill and the quality of the printer.

Value Added Services: There are some additional things you should consider. For example, if you sell your work via your own web site or another site, can you rely on your printer to send the work directly to your customer? If they can "print-on-demand" and "drop-ship" to your customer, that would save you a certain degree of time and money - a definite advantage. Also, do they save your final "approved" image for future orders? Do they backup their files regularly? Do they charge you for that service? Do they have a gallery of their artists work available for sale? These are all important things to consider in the mix.

If you go through these steps and perform a thorough evaluation, you should be set for a long time.


Author Info:

The author is the owner of Picture Salon - a fine art giclee printing service in Madison, WI.
http://www.picturesalon.com

Tips on Pencil Portrait Drawing - Supplies

Whether or not your pencil portrait turns out to be a masterpiece depends to a high degree on the type and quality of your drawing tools. This is true for any craft. In this article, I will present an overview of the tools the professional pencil artist uses when drawing a pencil portrait.

What do you need to draw pencil portraits? The bare minimum, of course, is a pencil and a piece of paper. Needing hardly any equipment is simultaneously a plus and a challenge. Drawing is to the arts what boxing is to sports. The fewer tools you have the more skilled you need to be to stand out. Therefore, it is particularly important that, as a pencil artist, you not only use the right tools but also the right quality tools. Below, I present just about every piece of drawing equipment you will ever need. Study the list and then pick and choose depending on your style and ambitions:

* Pencils. Drawing pencils, in general, come in degrees of softness and hardness: 9H, 8H, ..., 2H, H, F, HB, B, 2B, 3B, ..., 8B, 9B where 9H is the hardest and 9B is the softest. The F pencil is the odd duck in the line but yields fairly fine and soft lines and is often used to draw hair. The HB pencil separates the hard H pencils from the softer B pencils.

To start with, you may try 2H (hard), HB, 2B, 4B, and 6B (soft) pencils. Later, you can always adjust your choices depending on your style and technique.

* Paper. Try out a number of differently textured papers. For portraits, I prefer a 2-ply Bristol, acid-free, heavyweight, smooth surface. But your choice should be dictated by your own style or just by whether or not you enjoy a particular paper surface.

* Drawing Board. A 1/4 inch tempered Masonite or Plexiglas board of at least 16 x 20 inches will do.

* Clips or Masking Tape. You use these to fix the paper on your drawing board and come in handy in all sorts of other situations. I use a lot of them.

* Maulstick. This stick is used to steady your hand and to avoid smudging of your work (Figure 1.).

* Broom. A desk broom is used to occasionally brush debris off your work. This also avoids smudges and save time because you have to erase less (Figure 2.).

* Sheet of Bond Paper. You put this sheet under your drawing hand, again to avoid smudging your drawing while you are working.

* Pencil Sharpener. You will need a sturdy small one for the road and an industrial strength electric one for your studio.

* Workable Fixative. This is a spray used to fix the finished portrait. This protects the drawing and makes it safe for future smudging (Figure 3.).

* Erasers. You need two types: 1. A vinyl one and; 2. a kneaded one. A vinyl eraser is the usual hard rectangular kind. A kneaded eraser is the gray kind that acts like putty (Figure 4.).

* Ruler. A regular 12 inch metal ruler will do. Make sure you can easily read the divisions on the ruler.

* Blending Tortillons. These are spiral-wound cones of paper used to blend a darker region into a lighter one (Figure 5.).

* Paper Tissue. You use tissue paper as another blending tool.

That's about it. As you practice (yes, practice), you should try out some of the above tools and see if they fit with your mode of drawing. Be flexible but try to work towards a final style of pencil portrait drawing that feels comfortable to you and involves a subset of the above mentioned tools used in a practiced and almost unconscious manner.


Author Info:

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. Samples of Remi's pencil portraits and other articles can be found at Remi's Pencil Portraits.

From Vinci to Manet - The Artistic Journey

The Renaissance movement spanned over a period of roughly from 14th to 17th century began in Italy and spread to Florence and the rest of Europe. With the renaissance movement the artist began to reproduce different kind of classical paintings, they do not stick further to their religious portraiture and shift their thoughts to other things like antique statues etc . Their perception of beauty is little different and vary with time and culture of different cities. There always exist a dilemma between beauty and perception just as realism and idealism. The same image of "Venus" portrayed by Botticelli is different from the image that has been drawn by the Lucas Cranach. Idealization of female beauty is another significant factor of the renaissance art.

We all know the great painter Leonardo da Vinci and his world famous painting "Monalisa" but we are unaware of the great artist's other excellent works. Have you ever carefully watched the Virgin of Rocks isn't it spellbound and heart warming? You know the original title of the painting is the Madonna of the Rocks. Basically there are two identical paintings; one is in Paris and the other at the London museum. Leonardo was asked to deliver an altarpiece which will decorate the chapel at a church at San Francisco. Leonardo completes this marvelous painting in 1490 and he started it at 1483, a long period of three years is needed to complete this piece of art. History believed that Leonardo was assisted by his brothers in the execution of this painting.

Modern art differs a lot from the renaissance art. Manet is the father of modern art and inspired many painters to change their thoughts and feelings. A painter explores his dreams, thoughts in a modern art. Actually his unconscious mind reveals itself in his art. The religious war and struggles of war are also portrayed brilliantly by the artist. Cubical cones, cylindrical and cubes are also very popular among modern painters. This type of art is better known as Cubism and Picasso is the genius behind it. Nowadays there is great advantage of getting paintings online. You can buy art online by choosing from the online art gallery.


Author Info:

Jennifer Salerno is a veteran in Internet marketing and a wordsmith par excellence with countless articles on a wide range of subjects to his credit. Online Art Gallery You can also view the article here

Working With a Freelance Graphic Designer - From a Client's Point of View

I was working with another creative freelancer a while back. I'd noticed she wasn't getting her work done on schedule so I'd sent her email inquiring if everything was okay. She first reassured me that everything was okay. A few more days had passed - no follow up on her past, and of course no progress and I am starting to get worried.

I sent her another email, and she replied with this, "As an FYI, I have a full-time freelance gig and I'm taking classes at the local college as well, so I've already got a lot on my plate. Your project is very important, so please do not fret. I understand your concern, but I'm not trying to create a panic here, I'll do my best to get the work back to you asap."

Hmm, as you might have guessed, I really wasn't thrilled with this reply. In this case I was the client rather than the designer, and I had deadlines and commitments to keep that this designer was jeopardizing by screwing around. Business people frequently comment that this is all too common in dealing with graphic designers (and it shouldn't be). Here are a couple of points you should keep in mind in dealing with clients:

  • Clients/your employer won't care about your schedule, excuses or your other commitments; it's unprofessional and a bit amateurish to bring them up. If you have too much on your plate, don't pick up the project in the first place.
  • You'll piss clients off by telling them to "relax". You might not know what kind of deadlines your clients or employer is up against so telling them to "chill out" might not be received well.
  • If you've committed to a deadline, keep it. Recognized that you have committed to a deadline and indicate it's important to you as well, saying, "asap" is a cop out.
  • I can't tell you the number of times over the years that I've met clients that were upset at their current...I mean previous designer that had poor communication skills, didn't check in and was difficult to get a hold of. If you are strong in these areas, let your potential clients know during the sales process - they love proactive, effective communicators they can rely on.

In fairness, there might have been more to this freelancer's story and excuses, but as the client they're none of my business - my business is...well running my business, so that's where my focus is. You'll find most of your clients with this perspective as well.

In case you were curious, here was my response back, "Again, I know you've got a lot going on - I feel your pain but I've kept the deadlines we agree upon before the project began. If you're not able to hit them because of other commitments I understand but we'll need to make arrangements for you to back out of the project. I'd love to work with you but we need to make sure this is the right fit for both of us."

Eventually I had to let the designer go.


Author Info:

Are you a starving graphic artist?
Are you having trouble finding clients?
Do you wish you knew what to say to clients and how to say it so you sound more polished and professional?

Learn specific approaches that will make you stand out as a freelance designer from literally hundreds of other designers just like you that potential clients can chose from. And get more clients and more projects; stop wishing and become a success now.

Visit http://www.beingastarvingartist.com now, register to take the Designer Challenge and see how you stack up against the competition, AND your 2 free complementary chapters of the Being a Starving Artist Sucks book, AND an additional bonus surprise - all for FREE. These are insider secrets from successful, money-making designers you're not going to learn in a college or online course.

Change your destiny as a freelance designer, become the successful artist you always hoped you would. Visit http://www.beingastarvingartist.com now

Designing Full Color Brochures

Designing your own full color brochures can be intimidating when you realize how much of an impression these marketing tools can leave on a client. A brochure should enhance the professionalism and integrity of your company, convincing the client of your ability to provide them with top quality products or services. Below are ten design tips to creating a high quality brochure that promotes the excellence of your company.

1. Brochures can be used for many different purposes, but choose only one or two main purposes for a single brochure. Your purpose may be to inform the public of your business, to introduce a new aspect of your company, or present company products or services.

2. Next decide on the use of your brochure. You may want to use the brochure as a direct mail piece or a handout at a trade show or business meeting.

3. Write the content of the brochure next. Avoid long sentences, advanced vocabulary, and bulky paragraphs. Not many people desire to read a small novel about your company. Simplicity is best.

4. Use headers and sub headers to organize your text. Many people do not have time to read all of the text but will skim the bold words. Therefore, be sure the headliners convey your entire message.

5. Avoid adding images merely for their aesthetic qualities, even though this is important. Images need to support the content. Place the graphics strategically alongside text to convince readers of the validity of your message.

6. Contrasting colors capture attention more easily but be careful to not overdo the color scheme. Choose three to four colors to use throughout the brochure. Make sure the text stands out from the background and the headers pop out from the rest of the content.

7. Choose a size that fits your content well. Avoid both overcrowding and too much white space. The size should also accommodate your purpose. An 11x8.5 brochure allows for easy mailing, while a 33x11 works well when doubling the brochure as a poster.

8. Choose a paper type that will fit your purpose and quality. A heavier stock can look more professional but can crack on fold seams. If choosing a heavy stock, be sure your text or images do not cross the fold lines. Another option included in paper type is a coating. Uncoated paper can be written on but gloss gives a high quality appearance.

9. Know how you will fold your brochure as this will help in organizing the layout and promote your message. Text and images can cross fold lines for a more unique appearance, but using the fold lines for natural columns with which to align the content insures clarity.

10. Before ordering your brochures, be sure that the printing company you choose uses the full color method. Also known as four color, this technique is used by commercial printers to insure the highest quality color and images in your printed products.

The most successful brochures were procured through trial and error, which unfortunately takes time and testing. Hopefully, though, these tips will give you a good place to start in designing full color brochures that stand out and produce results.


Author Info:

Janice Jenkins is a writer for a marketing company in Chicago, IL. Mostly into marketing research, Janice started writing articles early 2007 to impart her knowledge to individuals new to the marketing industry.

For comments and inquiries about the article visit: Full Color Brochures, Brochure Printing

Logo Design Creative Ideas

A creative logo designer will need a computer, digital camera, printer, and design software to get started. But outside of these expenditures, start-up costs are minimal, as are the ongoing fixed overheads to operate the business because the designer can work from home and the majority of jobs can be serviced using e-mail and fax. The better known the designer become for the incredible design work and logos that perfectly describe what they represent, and the more well-known the customers are, the higher the fees will go.

The design development is generally the next stage in a creative logo design process. Here designs are composed with images from our investigation to create some logo design creative ideas.

The first creative ideas that the designer think of are not usually the most original. The reason they are already in the imagination is because the designer have seen them before in some form or other.

The best logo design creative ideas are those that the designer discovers by trial and error through composing the images from the investigation.

There are many composition techniques that the designer can use to help the designer to generate the logo design creative ideas.

Techniques, such as welding, tiling, subtraction, layering and framing the images often give rise to creative ideas with more subtle layers of meaning.

When bringing the creative logo design idea to life, the designer want to make sure this is done the right way; using the technical experience of a design firm specifically geared for inventors. This means using mechanical engineers, industrial designers and a company like Design My Creative idea which always remembers the designer are trying to get the creative logo design to market. This keeps the creative logo design consistent by using a single company, making the invention more professional and marketable.

Simple, Efficient & Effective Invention Partner

In conclusion we can say that regardless of where the designer are in the design process, save time and money by ensuring that the creative logo design, packaging design, branding and website are created by the use of a creative design idea. Companies usually act as the designer's silent partner throughout the entire process, taking no royalties and allowing the designer to retain control of all aspects of the invention. The services are clearly defined and our desire to work with the designer every step of the way ensures the designer's invention's utmost potential. We at creative logo design truly reaches the clients with success, with the belief that the more successful the designer are, the inventor, the more successful we, the designers product design firm, will be as well.


Author Info:

Erica Mike wrote this article on behalf of Mighty Logo Designs website. For more information on very low priced logos and brochure designs, you can visit mighty logo design.

Find more information about cheap and best logos here.

What is Passion in Art - Does Desire Elude Or Even Scare You?

Passion in art, do you know it? Do you long to melt into the colors of red and dance with the latest voice expressing desire? Does it penetrate your very being, till you feel you can barely breathe? Do you feel restless and think that you will never 'get there'?

I know what passion means to me, and I find the very word abused and over used.

I decided to do a search on passion art, passion images. I wanted to see what passion means to other artists, maybe fulfill my need for going through a gallery. I typed said text in on google and saw image after image of nothingness. I became bored after the 5th page of square after square, of work that presented what others had decided to label as passion.

So what is it?

Why does it elude so many?

Maybe you do in fact feel blood rushing to your head at the sight of a still life. I can only express the fact that I have been searching for passion for art, all my life, it is the very core of my work, yet I know, I will never obtain its secrets.

I guess I am on a soapbox for passion.

The dictionary describes passion as a strong and barely controllable emotion; a state or outburst of emotion; intense sexual love; intense desire or enthusiasm for something.

More over used words: intense; emotion; desire.

Somehow I just don't think those emotions can be stirred up, within anyone's being, while viewing a bowl of fruit.

There is a real dichotomy with art. Some want to understand it; ask it to give them more; enlighten them towards some electric realization of cosmic fortitude.

And some people seek it out to place above their couch, match its color; stay in its place never asking anything but calmness ... with no questions asked.

Of course there are some questions people are prompted to ask if they are in love with those little cottages, light coming from the windows with a path leading to peaceful spots of a tired mind. People ask themselves, (and I am supposing here) "What do you think the people in that little cottage are having for dinner? Or is it a family like mine or wish I had?" Memories and nostalgia are stirred in some people, I am guessing. Is that passion though? I concede, maybe to some, but not one single bit to me.

I met a man who told me that he only likes poems that rhyme. Humm, I thought... limericks then? How mind bending. I am suggesting that if you feel that way, that a poem is not a poem unless it rhymes, or a painting is only blessed if it matches your couch, that you challenge your mind to hope for more.

Every single painting or sculpture, every poem or story I create, makes me feel uncomfortable and discontent. If you are an artist, or a lover of art, I believe you want that. It is passion reaching back at you, taunting you, to feel heights you have not yet reached.

While sex can and often does include passion, or at least we hope it does! I am not writing about sex per say, I am suggesting that passion, in its rawest form, should not be misconstrued as something that does not elude to something more. It should compete with ideas already set in your mind and cause you a sense of abandonment of your own being, if not for a moment.

Passion is emotion that is ready to explode and there is no resting place in sight. I want that! I want every stroke on canvas to exhume that. If you are a love of art or an artist of any genre at all, you should want that too. To find a resting place in art is to find boredom in the end. Can you soften your mood with art? Can you mend your own wounds while painting a vase of flowers? Of course you can. But, seek out passion, know it, embrace that elusive treasure. It will not cause you to feel 'comfortable', no, but it shouldn't, that is not its definition. Will you ever get there? I would answer no as well.. it is just barely out of reach, so keep reaching!

by Kathy Ostman-Magnusen
copyright 2008


Author Info:

ABOUT Kathy Ostman-Magnusen

I paint and sculpt female fantasy art and map fairy tale adventures. I dream of beautiful women on canvas and art of exotic women.

I have illustrated for Hay House Inc.,"Women Who Do Too Much" CARDS, taken from Anne Wilson Schaef's book. I also illustrated for Neil Davidson, who was considered for the Pulitzer Prize in feature writing, and several other publications. My paintings are collected worldwide.

Giclee canvas art work, greeting cards and posters are available for sale on my website:

http://www.kathysart.com

Sign up for my mailing list for FREE ART GIFTS suitable for children: Drawings of whimsical angel pictures, legends of mermaids and fairies in art. Tiny angels whisper fantasy art for shrink art, or coloring pages. Also a "Letter From the Tooth Fairy", ya just never know when you might need one!

I am Represented by:

Monkdogz Urban Art, Inc., 547 West 27th Street, 5th floor, New York, NY 10001

ORIGINAL ART may be purchased through Monkdogz

http://www.monkdogz.com

Learn How to Use Oil Paint

Oil Paint has been used by many of the most famous painters. It is a great medium that isn't hard to use and has many exceptional qualities. Before you begin painting, you need to make sure you have all the supplies including paint, brushes, terpentine or another oil paint solvent, canvas to paint on, and anything else you might need.

Begin by very lightly drawing out what you are going to paint. This is optional, but if you are doing a realistic intricate painting, you will probably benefit from this first task. Make sure it is very light with pencil so that it doesn't show through the painting. You don't have to be detailed, just get the general layout. If you want, you could even do an intricate pencil drawing on another paper first to get the feel for it.

Next, you will do a light wash of the lightest colors in all the areas. Use white paint only on the white spaces. Mix a little paint with more terpentine or solvent to make it a thin wash. If you use too much paint, it will take forever to dry and you'll never finish it.

Follow with the next darkest layers and work your way through. Continue using thin layers, but not as thin as before because it isn't a wash. You can become more and more intricate as you go through. What is great about oil is that it doesn't dry quickly, so you have time to work with it. Be careful, though, because you are more likely to mix the colors, so make sure you know if it's dry or wet and what you are supposed to do with it.

If you are doing more of an abstract colorful painting that doesn't require intricate detail, you can be less precise, although I would still recommend starting with a wash. If you are doing a Pollack style drawing, than, of course, this probably isn't necessary. What's great about abstract is that you can do what you want and you don't have to follow the laws of paints if they don't suite you.

For intricate paintings, I recommend waiting until it is completely dry or almost dry before starting the very intricate stuff. Of course, I suggest playing around with it. For example, I wait until a human face is completely dry before I do the intricate detail of the eyes, but not when I do the detail of the nose because I want to do more blending with skin.

The best way to learn how to paint is by trying and practicing it on your own. There is no right or wrong way to paint; it is an art. Experiment and you will find yourself with your own style before you know it!


Author Info:

Do you need more oil paint instruction? Go to BeginninginArt.com for more information about oil painting, drawing, art supplies, and more. Start painting and develop your own artistic style today!

Know Better the Mind of Artists

In comparison with the early decades the practice of communication has improved a lot. People are now connected with their dear ones in a better way and even see each other making gestures while chatting. The entire process of live chat is based on technology. Using this advantage, people can expand their business and convey their messages in a more expressive way.

The live chat provides various benefits that are worthy:
• The live chat have simplified and made interesting the process of communication making it easy to understand for persons of both sides.
• At a low cost you can communicate your dear ones.
• To derive the provisions of chat live installation of software is not always necessary.
• A person can operate multiple chat sites at one time

This provision of live chat also benefits art aficionados and artists. They can communicate each other in a better and reliable way sharing their interest and promote art. The chat live help artists also express their ideas and theme of their work. Through online mails they can get the feedback that encourages them to perform the work in a better way. The feed back enrich the artists with the changing taste of public. Using the online device an artist can upload the images of their work and send them to his friends through emails and e-cards. Many renowned art galleries have adopted this real chat tool to promote art among the public. Art lovers can collect information of the recent development or any art festivals with the help of this live chat.

Chat live can also be regarded as the real time communication. The users can see each other making gestures and also save the conversation for future reference. You can also regard chat live as the ultimate way to date online. So, this amazing and interesting communication means have made life easier.


Author Info:

To collect information about art and artists you can consider the chat live provision. Chat live gives a clear insight about the artists' ideas and theme of the work and also removes their perplexities in an easy time.

You Can Learn to Paint

We all admire paintings. Our tastes may very our preferences be diverse but we all like to look at paintings. Secretly we wish we could produce the kind of work our favourite artists seem to be able to churn out at will. Well the good news is you can. Painting, contrary to the popular myth is not some secret gift given by the gods to a select few. It is simply a skill that can be learned by anyone who is prepared to put a little time and effort in.

Most people are intimidated from picking up a brush. Their self confidence about their ability to paint has probably suffered a number of knocks beginning at the school art class where they may have been led to believe that they didn't have the "gift". That mysterious "gift" that doesn't exist. This belief may have been reinforced by others so they go through life been able to learn new skills for their job but not daring to pick up a paint brush.

They may learn complex engineering skills, computer skills become successful in business but mention art and they can't do it, because art, so the myth goes, requires a special gift. This is one of life's greatest myths. Learning to paint is just like learning to drive. Nobody jumps into a car on their first lesson and drives straight for the motorway.

Remember when you first started to learn to drive. How complex everything seemed to be. The clutch control that you thought you would never be able to master, the gears, that three point turn. After a few years on the road driving becomes automatic. Because driving is a skill. And like all skills it can be learned by anybody.

Art is the same. It is just a skill and nothing more. Learning to draw requires the student to learn to master certain techniques. With a little time and effort these techniques are easily mastered and was seemed out of your reach becomes second nature to you. If you haven't picked up a brush since you were at school you are missing out on a wonderful experience. If you've always wanted to learn to paint but are intimidated from going to an art class then there are numerous other ways to learn.

Art instructional dvds are a great way to get to grips with the basic techniques. It was this method that got me back into art. I too believed that art required a special gift and that only a few people could do it until I bit the bullet and had a go. I soon realised that the techniques of painting are easily learned and I surprised myself at how quickly I was learning. If only the art class at school had been so instructive.

Art instructional dvds are a good way to get back into art. You can play them on your computer with an easel set up at the side and follow the artist as he instructs you. If you don't understand some point you can replay it until it sinks in. Within a short space of time you will surprise yourself at how fast you can acquire the skills to paint a good painting. Before starting though, the first thing you have to do is dump the belief that been able to paint requires some special gift. It doesn't, like anything else in life it's just a skill that can easily be mastered.


Author Info:

Paul Merry runs http://www.artscraftsandhobbies.co.uk/

The Internet Emerges As a Rescue For Contemporary Art and Artists Worldwide

Art on the Internet is the cultural reproduction of artistic merit, where the internet primarily serves as a medium for the artists to display their work. An Online art gallery may seem to be an analogy to video art or something akin, but there is a major line of distinction between the two, as video art primarily uses video as its medium.

Online Art Gallery is a means to exhibit the artistic talent of numerous talented artistes, who otherwise go unsung in the crowd, as not everybody can manage to bask in the limelight. A form of display of art, most net artists perceive the Internet as a component of the entire system.

The Internet transpires as a cost effective medium for the artists, as it saves them a lot of incidental costs, such as holding exhibitions in order to showcase their work. Through Online abstract art gallery platform, the artists have their own private spaces and this serves as their exhibitions. It is a very personal approach as it allows the patrons and consumers to get acquainted with a particular artist's style and theme of work. Online art gallery also helps the artists sell their works and saves them the trouble of reliance on destiny to find patrons.

The effects of online abstract art gallery have been surfacing numerous rescued artists, as general public is realizing the rather inexpensive talent hidden across the globe and inexpensive too. Also, there are many websites engaged in promoting Australian art online. These websites also aim to bring forth various art forms, otherwise currently entangled in legal webs. This is mainly due to the laws of censorship for art, which is a recurring phenomenon around the globe.

Australian art online is an endeavor to allow art to take its own course and achieve the sublime vision of the artists without the hindrance of legalities and censorship. This provides for unadulterated art to live up to the artists' vision and perspective.

The Australian art online is a striking online art gallery that is making its presence felt through the showcasing and distribution of worldwide artists and forms of art, as well as, native Australian and aboriginal art.


Author Info:

Smit Mathur is an expert for writing Articles and is currently working for Compassion Art. For more information related to Online abstract art gallery, art by Kerri Koczanowski, Original drawings for sale, Modernism paintings, Landscape art please visit http://www.compassionart.com.au/

Tips on Pencil Portrait Drawing - Clothing

Drawing clothing can be quite challenging. The challenge usually centers on the drawing of the folds. There is a lot of reflected light, lots of darks, and many lights. But it is exactly this variety of values that makes the drawing of clothes very attractive but also challenging. Learning to draw fabric well requires a concerted effort and a good deal of practice.

Here are a few tips to memorize:

* Folds There are five types of folds we must recognize when drawing clothing:

1. The column fold
2. The drape fold
3. The inert fold
4. The coil fold
5. The interlocking fold

Of course, in a typical situation, more than one of these fold types are present. Here are the definitions:

* Column Fold This type of fold is the most common and is typified by its cylindrical shape suspended or originating from one point. The value pattern is that of a cylinder which involves a hard edge followed by a parallel line of reflected light, a shadow edge and a soft edge. The column fold also shows highlights here and there depending on the location of the light source. You can find such folds frequently in scarves, curtains, and skirts.

* Drape Fold This fold comes about when a piece of fabric is suspended from two opposing points. The fabric in between the two points is long enough so that it can hang freely and form a somewhat semi-circular shape. The picture is that of a series of alternating narrow dark and light semi-circular strips that begin and end at the two points. This type of fold is often found in blouses.

* Inert Fold This type of fold occurs in a piece of fabric that is not suspended but lies on a surface without being stretched. Here, the folds can go in many different directions. However, each fold relates to its neighbors in a particular manner. You should study these patterns and render them in a consistent way although the whole thing seems at first to be a mess. You can observe this type of fold when a woman's dress is partially resting on the surface she is seated on.

* Coil Fold A piece of fabric that is wrapped around a circular rod will invariably show this sort of fold. It has a spiral-like appearance and it can be found in sleeves and pant legs when the sleeve or pant leg is somewhat twisted around the arm or the leg.

* Interlocking Fold - Fabric that is piled on a couch or is wrapped around someone's neck will often show folds within folds or on top of each other. With this sort of fold it becomes imperative that you trace how each fold works itself into the other and apply the appropriate cast shadows.

As mentioned above, in a typical pencil portrait involving fabrics, you will find combinations of these different types of folds. It is important that you recognize each type instantly and that you have practiced drawing them.

You should identify the areas where the fabric is in tension and where it is not and see where the darks and lights are. In addition, there will always be hard edges and soft edges that must be rendered faithfully for your drawing to look realistic.

Finally, there is also something called: "lost and found" edge. A lost and found edge is an edge that, at first, can easily be seen, but then peters out and becomes invisible, only to reappear a little further down the line. Although the edge consists of two disconnected lines, the eye through the brain recognizes that the two disjointed line pieces belong together and form one edge.

As you can see, drawing clothes is not all that simple. Sometimes clothes are dismissed and often underestimated in their difficulty to draw. But, if you know that they are not so easy, you should not feel bad if, at first, your clothes drawings do not look very realistic. Sorry to say, but learning the art of drawing clothes requires much practice and careful observation.


Author Info:

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. Samples of Remi's pencil portraits and other articles can be found at Remi's Pencil Portraits.

Get Into Painting

I've always loved art. Always admired people who could seemingly with ease turn out wonderful looking paintings and wished I could do it. My own experience with art consisted of a few art classes while I was at school. These usually ended with disapproving facial gestures and body language from the teachers, leaving me to believe that I didn't have that mysterious "gift" that only a certain few could possess. I left school believing that artists were born not made, and that I could never join the ranks of painters or turn out a good drawing.

The need to express myself through art never left and I couldn't pick up a piece of paper without doodling on it. I had been conditioned to believe that I could never draw or paint and quickly forgot about trying to do so. I got on with my life and raised my children, losing myself in work. But the urge to paint was always in the background, gnawing away at me.

With age comes greater confidence. And as I grew older I began to question everything I'd been told about needing a gift to paint. Who were these mediocre teachers that were destroying the urge to be creative in children. Sending them into the world with false beliefes about their lack of competence to acquire certain skills. What was this so-called "gift" referred to by a few smug people?

Once my children had grown up I decided to challenge the belief that I didn't have the abiity to paint. I looked for an art class but because I work shifts this made it difficult for me to attens so I bought a few books and practiced the techniques and discovered that I could turn some good pictures out.

Books are great, I love them you can learn lots of wonderful information from reading them. But they lack the competence of showing you how to perform a certain technique. If you are interpreting something the wrong way, you have no way of knowing without being able to see the artist perform the technique.

The best way would be to attend a class but this is not always possible if you have a heavy work schedule. This was frustrating. Then I discovered a whole new method of instruction. The Dvd. I discovered the art instructional DVD and I suddenly started to learn faster than ever. I love Art instructional DVDs . You can watch your favourite artist on the screen showing you how to perform certain techniques. And the best thing is, if you don't understand it the first time, you can replay it until you grasp the technique.

Through books and DVDs I have been able to realise that I did have the ability to paint all the time. It was always there, suppressed in childhood by mediocre teachers and held down by a false belief. Now I love to paint. For my own pleasure no one else's. I don't need anyone's opinion to tell me what's good and what isn't because as long as I'm happy with what I do, and as long as I enjoy doing it that's all that matters. I know I'm not brilliant, but so what.

It's the same for many people. They would like to try painting but are afraid because of negative experiences. They are afraid to join a class because they believe that everyone will be better than themselves, a belief that is usually wrong.


Author Info:

I started my business http://www.artscraftsandhobbies.co.uk an online art store to gather a wide range of quality Dvds and books catering for the learning artist and have built up quiet a large customer base. Don't be afraid to have a go at painting. If it's something you've always fancied doing but are afraid to start. Forget your fear it's illusionary. Just have a go. You'll surprise yourself.

Creating Wooden Arts, Find Your Creative Niche

Using wood as an art medium is nothing new. The availability, variety, and beauty have always attracted many woodworking artists and craftsmen of every kind. The ability to cut, shape and manipulate it in various ways, revealing its awesome color and grain patterns is very appealing to wood artists, designers, art collectors and home owners alike.

The wide appeal and variety of wooden arts are evident everywhere. You see wood incorporated in design and decoration applied in various ways (making bold statements not only in structural design and interior design, but also used as an accompanying complementary function in décor). There is always a place for the beauty of wood and its warm soothing effect on our everyday lives.

For the Designer, Craftsmen or Artist incorporating and creating wooden art is a matter of taste and skill. Creating wooden arts have limitless possibilities. The types of tools available today are unmatched in availability, quality and specific purpose. With so many tools and information available, shaping and creating unique works of wood art has never been so popular. Along with that, there has been a tremendous increase in the variety of wood that is available to the serious craftsmen and hobbyist alike.

Finding your niche in this popular medium will take some analysis and development of skills in your desired direction. Determining tools and supplies needed, experimentation in design and technique, testing the marketplace and pricing will all come in to play. Last, but not least, is persistence and determination. This will be needed to hone and develop your skills. With that you will certainly develop your unique style and impact this growing art form.

Tips To Get Started

1. Build on the skills you already have (if you paint use paint in some way in your design)
2. Find ideas in books, magazines and the internet (find other art done in another material and recreate it, incorporating wood)
3. Use found material and develop ideas with them.
4. Start small and go from there (Ex: bookmarks, to wall art)

There are many resources available for the Wooden Arts Craftsman. Flood your mind with creativity, use books, the library, magazines and the internet for fuel. Carry a small notebook and record ideas and information as it hits you.


Author Info:

There has never been a better time to expand and develop your creative and artistic skills to include the beauty and flexibility of wood. Visit http://www.LearnFineCrafts.com now and get the techniques, resources and new ideas to make Wooden Arts your passion.

Tips on Pencil Portrait Drawing - Composition

Composition refers to the manner in which your subjects are positioned relative to each other on the page. More formally, it is the arrangement of forms and spaces within the format of the page.

* Balance The main characteristic of a good composition is that it creates a feeling of balance in the viewer's mind. This balance should be present on at least two levels:

First, there is the balance of position. This means that the forms and spaces out of which the portrait is made up should be balanced relative to the vertical and the horizontal going through the center of the page.

Second, there should also be a balance with respect to value. The darks and lights should balance each other out in an overall sense. In other words, having too much black on one side or a complete lack of it is not the recommended course to take.

* Experiment Having said that, do not be afraid to experiment with the distribution of forms, spaces, and values. Sometimes an unexpected deviation from the perfect balance gives excitement and interest to a drawing.

Follow your artistic sensibility. With practice, this sensibility can be developed and soon you will acquire a natural sense for good composition and how and where to surprise the viewer.

* Shapes When considering the composition of your drawing you should think in terms of four major shapes: the triangle, the circle, the rectangle, and the square. Any of those shapes can be the point of interest of your portrait.

All other shapes should be arranged in support of that point of interest. Essentially, this means that the viewer should be led or guided towards the intended focal point of the drawing.

* Focal Point One common compositional mistake occurs when the subject matter outside of the focal point is arranged in such a manner that the viewer is led in a direction away from the center of interest. In other words, the viewer is discouraged from looking at the area the artist thought was the most interesting.

In this regard we should remember that in the West, the viewer's eye tends to enter a drawing or a painting from the left (just as we do when we read from left to right). Therefore, a good composition often has an entry point on the left of the drawing and from there leads the viewer's eye to the focal point.

* Detail The focal point should also be the area where you add the most detail to your portrait drawing. Areas deemed less important can be less developed and left to be finished by the viewer's imagination.

Don't forget, a portrait drawing should not be a copy of the photograph. Ideally, the personality of both the subject and the artist should be reflected in the end product.

* Check Balance Another way of assessing whether or not you have a good composition is to cover up one shape or another and see if it improves the balance or not. A good composition is such that if you remove one shape, the whole drawing is clearly thrown out of balance. If you feel that by removing a certain part of your drawing the balance improves, by all means, leave that part out.

Much more can be said about composition. Entire volumes have been written about compositional rules and processes. However, developing the idea of balance on the levels of position and value will give you a very good start.


Author Info:

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. Samples of Remi's pencil portraits and other articles can be found at Remi's Pencil Portraits.

Finding the Style of Art That is Right For You

One of the most wonderful things about art is that there are literally hundreds of different styles and forms that one can study and enjoy. Unfortunately, this same diversity that attracts many people to art and artists can also be intimidating to the newer explorer of artistic expression. If you've made the decision that you want to get involved in some kind of art appreciation, but you can't decide what kind of artwork to concentrate on, there are plenty of resources available to help you narrow down your options.

Before we get into different methods of exploring the many types of art available to new students, we should stress that there really isn't any reason why you should have to chose a single form of artwork over any other. In fact, many artists and fans of art concentrate on more than one subject (for example, classical painting as well as sculpting) and are still able to learn to enjoy the subjects just as thoroughly.

Many different types of art can overlap, such as literature and poetry, and there's nothing at all wrong with choosing two or more kinds of art to focus on in your studies. There are few true artists who really limit themselves to a single discipline, and as with most creative people, you may find that studying one art form will gradually lead you into the aspects of another similar topic, too.

If you're having a difficult time identifying the main types of artwork in the first place, one of the best resources available to you might be your local community college or university. Regardless of your age or education intentions, you can always take a class or two on basic art appreciation to learn more about the topic. Remember: the only students in intro-level college classes aren't just those who are seeking their undergraduate degrees. Art lovers of all ages have signed up for college classes and discovered a whole new world of artistic possibility and expression, and you can do so every bit as easily. And often, those classes don't cost as much as you think they will.

If enrolling for an art class at a local college is not in your tastes, however, you can just as easily research different art forms at your local library or museum. When looking for a book on art, try to stay clear of books that concentrate on a single style, and instead choose books that cover a broad range of artwork.

And the same goes for museums, too; make sure you don't only visit just one wing of the museum or have a look at one single style of art displays. By staying inquisitive, having a desire to learn as much as possible about all artwork, and matching what you learn to your particular interests, you should be able to quickly define what type of art best suits your talents and abilities. When it comes to art, there's really something for everyone!


Author Info:

You can find lots of great online art contests to enter on our free forum. And be sure to check out our network site for free samples and free stuff.

Tips on Pencil Portrait Drawing - Montage

A montage is somewhat like a collage. On one piece of paper you put together any number of related subjects. However, instead of pasting them onto the paper you will draw them.

A montage is often used to tell a story about the person you are drawing. It includes references to well-known events that happened in that person's life and that were special to him or her.

Here are a few tips on how to go about putting together a montage:

Subjects Do not overdo it. The subject surrounded by a few references will do just fine. It is easy to end up with a crowded montage that contains too many subjects and objects. So, be critical of what you put in it and of what you do not put in it.

Focal Point Do not forget that the person who is being honored should remain the center of attention. Make sure you do not let the secondary drawings overwhelm the person who is being honored. A viewer should first and foremost see the honoree.

One way to ensure that your subject remains the focal point is to place him or her right in the center of your drawing. In addition, make sure that you use a smaller scale for the surrounding subject and objects. Another trick is to draw the surrounding object somewhat lighter and also with less detail. Reserve the full detail drawing for the person of interest.

Values It is also important that you create an overall unity in terms of values. Often you will use a variety of photographs to construct your montage. These photographs will usually have different intensities and different light source locations.

So, before you start your drawing pay some attention to where you will put your darkest darks and lightest lights so that the final product has a consistent value distribution. If the values are not consistent throughout your drawing you will end up with a funny looking result.

This is particularly true if you show inconsistent cast shadows. Just imagine one light source and draw on your experience for how to change the shadows in your photographs so that they all go together in your drawing.

Sizes The sizes of the subjects and objects in the different photographs will not be consistent either. So, some will have to be drawn larger than in the photograph and others will have to be drawn smaller.

Here is where the grid technique can be very helpful. By scaling the grid size you can fairly easily scale the subjects and objects as well. If the object is to be smaller on your drawing you can draw a scaled-down grid on drawing paper first as compared to the corresponding grid on your photograph. The same is true in reverse. You can easily increase the size of a subject or object by drawing a scaled-up grid on your drawing paper. This is the old grid trick which was used by many great masters of the past.

A montage can be a precious gift to the person who is being honored. Be forewarned however, that a montage usually involves a lot of work. Therefore, make sure you make a careful estimate of the time you will spend so you can charge accordingly if this is part of how you make your living.


Author Info:

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. Samples of Remi's pencil portraits and other articles can be found at Remi's Pencil Portraits.

Tip on Pencil Portrait Drawing - Multiple Subjects

When it comes to multiple subjects in one pencil portrait drawing, there are two possibilities:

(1) all subjects appear in one photograph;

(2) the subjects appear in different photographs.

We will be concerned with the second possibility.

It will not take long before you will get a request to make one portrait out of several photographs. This often happen when grandma wants to have a portrait made of all her grandchildren. This can be done but you need to be aware of a number of issues.

Here are a few guidelines to follow when combining photographs:

* Lighting Check the light source in each of the photographs. Your portrait drawing needs a unified light source. Hopefully the light source is the same in all the photographs.

However, this is unlikely and, therefore, you will have to adapt the lighting in some of the pictures when you draw your composite portrait. This is a difficult but necessary challenge.

All shadows and tones have to be consistent otherwise your composite portrait will have a strange look to it. This, now, is a matter of experience and knowing how a subject looks like when lighted in a certain manner. There are no shortcuts here.

You may try to find a photograph or image of some other subject where the light source is located in a suitable location and deduce from that how the shadows and values are distributed.

* Gaze Try to make all your subjects gaze in the same general direction. You can do this by adjusting the location of the irises. You do not want each subject staring in a different direction because this will make them look disjointed.

* Composition When you have different photographs you have the opportunity to create your own composition. The standard overall compositional shapes are: the circle; the rectangle; the triangle, and the square. Choose one of these and arrange the subjects within it. Start with the largest subject and arrange the others around it in a pleasing manner.

* Size Another problem you will encounter is that the subject in the different photographs will be portrayed in different relative sizes. One subject will be small, the other will be large.

Therefore, you will need to go through the process of reducing all subjects to the same scale. To this end, start with the largest of the subjects and measure the distance from the mouth to the eyes. Then try to reproduce this measurement in all the other subjects.

If the subjects are of different ages, say a child and an adult, adjustments must be made in the measurements according to the known average differences of such subjects.

For example, a child's head has different average measurements than that of an adult. If you have a photograph of the two together then you can study the differences and draw accordingly.

Much more can be said about merging different photographs into one pencil portrait drawing. The above suggestions represent a strong start.

Again, it must be said that your success will depend primarily on experience. So do not be discouraged if things do not work out the first few times around. Practice makes perfect.


Author Info:

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. Samples of Remi's pencil portraits and other articles can be found at Remi's Pencil Portraits.

Ten Pictures You Shouldn't Miss at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

In Philadelphia on business last week, Emsworth, a self-confessed art museum junkie, was able to spend a pleasant afternoon at one of his favorite museums, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, where he found the usual visitors posing for souvenir photos at the top of the famous steps in triumphal "Rocky" poses. Unfortunately for the photos, most of this fine building is temporarily covered with scaffolding.

Inside, the collection is as rewarding as ever, but it can't be seen all in a day. If you have a chance to visit, Emsworth offers a modest list of ten pictures at this museum that he wouldn't want his friends to miss.

1. Interior (Degas). Never mind the famous paintings of ballet rehearsals and nudes getting into their baths - this is the Degas painting that appeals to me most. There's a story here, but what is it?

The room, with its old-fashioned wallpaper, looks like a set from a play. The painting has been subtitled The Rape, as if the stone-faced man has just robbed the unfortunate, half-dressed woman of something she can never get back. Is this the story of Amnon (son of King David), who tricked and raped his half-sister Tamar? "Then Amnon hated her exceedingly; so that the hatred wherewith he hated her was greater than the love wherewith he had loved her." 2 Samuel 13:15 (KJV). But what to make of the oddly lit jewelry box on the table in the middle of the room?

2. Rhetoricians at a Window (Jan Steen). Even without a Rembrandt or a Vermeer, the collection of Dutch and Flemish old masters at the Philadelphia Museum of Art is outstanding. It includes at least half a dozen riveting genre paintings by the Dutchman Jan Steen, of which Rhetoricians at a Window, painted in 1661, is my favorite by an eyelash. Most of these feature middle-class citizens, although one illustrates the Exodus scene of Moses striking the rock in anger to get anger for the Israelites.

3. A Temperance Meeting (Homer). But Dutch genre paintings have nothing on American genre paintings. The Dutch peasant with the cup in Steen's painting isn't drinking milk, but the American farmboy in Winslow Homer's scene, painted in 1874, surely is.

4. Christ Bearing the Cross (Murillo). The gospels tell us that, after his trial, Jesus was forced to carry his own cross to Calvary, where he was to be executed by crucifixion. In this large picture by the great Spanish master Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, Jesus meets his mother Mary and kneels to rest, with his cross on his shoulder. Mary holds out her hands as if to ask Jesus whether he truly must give up his life, a conversation she must have had with her son long before his arrest at Passover. Jesus confirms his mission with an expressive look.

With Jesus and Mary as the only figures in the picture, the scene is not literal. Jesus was guarded and whipped along by His tormentors on his way to Calvary, and it seems unlikely that they left him alone for a private minute with His mother.

I interpret the picture figuratively rather than as an attempt to portray a scene on the road to Calvary. Jesus surely knew long before his arrest that He had been sent to yield up His life as a sacrifice for the sins of mankind, and in a real sense He was carrying the cross throughout the years of His ministry. None of the many works of art with Christian themes in the Philadelphia Museum of Art will speak more movingly to a believer than this 1665 picture.

5. Pont Neuf, Afternoon Sunshine (Pissarro). The Philadelphia Museum of Art has a spectacular collection of French impressionist paintings, but the sheer pleasure afforded by this heavily textured view of the most famous of the Paris bridges that cross the Seine is unmatched. Every part of this 1901 painting, from the colorful wagons and figures on the bridge to the fantastical greens and mauves of the river itself, is a sensual treat. To my great disappointment, it was not on the gallery walls during my mid-July 2008 visit.

6. Nude Descending a Staircase (No. 2) (Duchamp). This cubist painting made a stir when it was first exhibited nearly a century ago (in 1914). Anyone expecting a salacious picture will be disappointed, as it's difficult to find the nude subject of this monochromatic painting at all, let alone identify any particular parts of her figure. Nude Descending a Staircase may be the best-known cubist painting in the world, although the Philadelphia Museum of Art has an excellent collection of other cubist works, especially by Picasso, Leger, and Juan Gris.

The museum has devoted an entire gallery to Duchamp. What a sad case study this man makes! Some early paintings by Duchamp, in what might be considered a post-impressionist style, make it clear that he had exceptional talent. These include, for example, a fine portrait of his father. But Duchamp was caught up in the rapidly changing artistic and intellectual movements of the day. First, in a cubist phase, as represented by Nude Descending a Staircase, he abandoned representational art. Then, perhaps finding that celebrity and notoriety suited him more than artistic achievement of any kind, Duchamp abandoned his discipline altogether. He gave up painting, bought a bicycle wheel, mounted it on a pedestal, and announced that it was art.

Duchamp repeated the trick over the years with a urinal, a comb, and other objects, a number of which are exhibited in this gallery. Remarkably, people took these stunts seriously; apparently some still do. The gallery chronicles Duchamp's fall. The visitor will marvel at a century of public gullibility.

7. William Rush Carving His Allegorical Figure of the Schuykill River (Eakins). In the shadows, the famous sculptor chips away at his masterpiece. Neither Rush nor the elderly chaperone look at the nude model, who holds a box on her shoulder to help hold her pose. The model's clothing, laid on a chair, is by far the brightest part of the painting.

8. The Large Bathers (Cezanne). It's the picture that's large, not the bathers. This painting is 83 by 93 inches. Cezanne painted three versions of The Large Bathers, one in the London's National Gallery, one at the Barnes Foundation, in the Philadelphia suburb of Merion, and this 1906 work, which is the finest of the three.

Paul Cezanne's masterpiece can be seen 50 yards away down the long gallery lined with impressionist masterpieces that leads to the circular fountain court gallery.

9. The Rialto (Sargent). If Emsworth ever visits Venice, it will be because of John Singer Sargent's paintings of scenes from Venice.

Visitors to the Philadelphia museum who want to see all the Sargents are led a merry chase. The curators have hung The Rialto among the works of late 19th-century European, presumably for no other reason than that it is a European scene. Portrait of Lady Eden is in the same gallery, presumably because the subject was British. But other Sargent paintings, including several fine portraits and a striking late landscape, are found among the works of Sargent's fellow Americans.

10. Mademoiselle Yvonne Landsberg (Matisse). In 1914, while Picasso and Braque were painting the same Cubist painting over and over again, Matisse was using art's new-found freedom from representation to paint this unique portrait. As an afficionado, Emsworth was frustrated no end to find on his recent visit (July 2008) that this and almost every other Matisse masterpiece were not on the walls.

These are not necessarily the finest or the most famous paintings in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. I have not forgotten Van Gogh's Sunflowers, Rubens's Prometheus Unbound, Renoir's Large Bathers, Eakins's The Gross Clinic, or Monet's Japanese Footbridge and Lily Pool. But you'd see them anyway.


Author Info:

http://emsworth.wordpress.com

Tip on Pencil Portrait Drawing - Cropping

Cropping is a presentation technique that displays a subject within the borders of your paper and often involves a truncation of some parts of the subject. For example, part of a hat or an arm may be truncated or cropped.

Cropping is a device that can often be applied to great dramatic effect. It usually brings the subject much closer to the viewer and makes the portrait more intimate. As the viewer you almost feel like you are violated the subject's space.

Here are a few ideas when applying the cropping technique on your pencil portrait drawings:

* Balance Cropping immediately presents you with a compositional puzzle. You must exercise good judgment in what to crop and what not. You must make sure that you preserve the balance in the drawing both from the perspective of shape and in terms of values. It is a good idea to stand back a little and judge your drawing from a distance.

You can usually determine by gut feeling whether or not you did a good job. If the result feels right then it generally is right. If not, you should try to determine what exactly is wrong. Mind you, some subjects or situations are not suitable for cropping and are better left whole.

* Border Sometimes it may be beneficial to the overall look of the finished product to use border tape or actually draw in a border. Border tape can be had in any art store and comes in many different colors and various widths. Border tape is generally only used for artwork from which you will make prints because with time the tape on the original will almost certainly loosen and maybe even ruin the picture.

* Variant An alternative to actual cropping is letting the drawing run all the way out to one or more of the edges of the paper. This often creates a triangular composition with pleasing results. It can also help you in balancing the values if there are no other alternatives to do so.

I regularly use this technique when the subject's upper-body clothing is of interest. I usually draw the head life-size on a 16" x 20" ground. By letting the drawing run out to the bottom and side edges I am able to gain enough room to also draw the upper-body clothing.

* Imagination Cropping is an interesting compositional tool. It can also be used to lead the viewer's attention in a particular direction off the page and force him or her to think about what is not drawn in that direction.

For example, part of the back of a horse-drawn cart could be cropped. A smiling good-looking gentleman could be sitting up-front in the cart gazing towards the unseen backseat of the cart. In this way, a viewer is invited to wonder what sort of person could be sitting in the back of the cart that can attract the rapt attention of such a fine gentleman. I admit, this example does not leave much to the imagination of the viewer.

Cropping is interesting and adds to the drama of the composition. It is something you must try at least once.


Author Info:

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. Samples of Remi's pencil portraits and other articles can be found at Remi's Pencil Portraits

Understanding Art With Spray Paint

Art with spray paint is an emerging urban art form that utilizes spray paint as its medium. It is an art form that often depicts science fiction scenes or fantasy environments; the art relies highly on random effects produced by the spray paints. It is similar to graffiti in the fact that it incorporates the use of aerosol paints, but it also differs in the fact that the art is painted on more traditional art surfaces like poster board rather than walls or trains. Also it is often painted for commercial purposes.

Usually a glossy white poster board is used as a painting surface, though; almost any flat surface can be used. The artist will usually perform in a well ventilated area but will still also suit up with a gas mask and a pair of gloves to minimize exposure to the harmful vapors and irritants (For a list of materials click here: spray paint art). Layers of paint are sprayed down unto the poster board surface, usually in order of lightest color to darkest. The artist will then take a magazine page and place it unto the fresh paint. After a second or two the artist will remove the magazine to create a random texture.

Afterwards they will usually lay down any predefined stencils; the stencils can be anything from intricate cutouts to ice cream lids that are used to make planets (To see examples, visit awholenotherstudio.com). After desired stencils have been laid the artist will then proceed to add the next layers which will be seen as the back ground. After a background has been laid the artist will go on to create the bulk of the picture consisting of anything from a mountain range and a forest to a futuristic city.

Art with spray paint is usually performed quickly in front of a large crowd in busy metropolis areas. A full sized painting can usually be made in 15 minutes and then sold to bystanders at a price usually around 20 dollars. On busy days an artist could earn anywhere from 200 to 1000 dollars, which massively outweighs the cost of paint supplies (40 -50 dollars). Overall,this art is relatively simple and is even often considered low art because of its lack of detail.


Author Info:

Jim is an advocate of art and particularly enjoys it with spray paint. His blog is about Spray Paint Art, at his blog you can find more information and some beginners techniques. For inspiration in painting Jim uses quotes like at this website: Fun Life Quotes.