MASTER STORYTELLERS EXHIBIT has been extended through June 27, 2015.
read the interview with the artists here on this blog click HERE.
Michael Patrick Hearn, guest speaker for the show is scheduled to speak at the Brooklyn Central Library for the show I curated on Fairy Tales, Sept. 19. Fairy Tales, a CBIG group show will be on view June 11- Sept. 25, 2015 in the Youth Wing.
Elizabeth Sayles, children's book author/illustrator co-curated an exhibit that included her father's artwork for the WWII Ghost Army. The exhibit The Ghost Army of WWII, will be on view at Salmagundi Club in June click here and read my interview with Liz on this blog here.
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Sunday, April 5, 2015
ART - Artists from the Master Storytellers Exhbit
MASTER STORYTELLERS
illustrations inspired by Hans Christian Andersen, the Brothers Grimm, Kenneth Graham, Shakespeare and more master storytellers. Curated by Donna Miskend.
On view at
Poe Park Visitor Center
2540 Grand Concourse, Bronx
through May 30, 2015 EXTENDED THROUGH JUNE 27, 2015
CLICK here for a schedule of events or call the gallery 718. 365.5516
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Yuko Katakawa 2015, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs |
DM: What story did you illustrate and why
did you choose it?
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. I thought it might be
fun to show this popular story in a different cultural context (Japanese). - Yuko Katakawa
Humpty Dumpty. I grew up with Mother Goose rhymes and this one was fun to add a twist to. Humpty is an egg who had a great fall, so he should be covered in yolk! - Clare Pernice
I chose Red Riding Hood because there is just so much drama and
tension happening throughout the story. As a child reading this story, it's
impossible to forget the moment when you realize this little girl in red is about to be eaten by a wolf. The color red is also so intense and iconic (Good
marketing strategy on whoever chose the colors) that it just becomes extremely
memorable. - Hyo Taek Kim
The story I did my illustration for is The
Nose by Nikolai Gogol, because it's such a strange, memorable, and
inspiring story. It's sad, but it's so funny, too. For this, I was thinking back to
graphic artists who did satire, such as England's William Hogarth, who lived in
the 18th century, and New York's Thomas Nast, who lived in the early 20th
century. The story of the nose pokes fun at corrupt bureaucrats and shows great
sympathy for the poor.Those artists did the same thing. Artists and writers
have been doing that throughout history, and continue to. - Vicky Rubin
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Sonnet 147, Dave Kopka 2015 |
I illustrated The Reluctant Dragon, By Kenneth Grahame. In the story the little boy was able to communicate and understand the dragon. I chose this because I used my imagination to create my own pictures. - Robin Meeks
The Dark Lady Sonnet 147 by Shakespeare. I felt that this particular sonnet of the series would present an interesting and engaging challenge if I were to reinterpret the words. The man who is writing the sonnet is no longer the victim of this woman's taunting allure, but rather the victim of his own poorly-chosen actions. - Dave Kopka
DM: Did you read the story as a child, in school or as an adult?
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Hyo Taek Kim 2015, Brazilian Red Riding Hood |
- Hyo Taek Kim
I read (or was read to) the story as
a child. I remember being puzzled by the tale of not so friendly animals, with
their absurd designs and schemes, as they are trying to arrange Thumbelina's
future for her. - Delphine Hennault
I read Jack and the Beanstalk as a child, over and
over again - the giant's world always fascinated me. - Candace Lee
DM: Who are the artists that influence your work?
I actually hadn't heard of either
story until my second year in college. There was a History of Illustration
course that had exposed me to a good number of fantastic old school
illustrators. With that came some of the stories that they had illustrated for,
and that's how I happened across Wind in the
Willows. The Shakespeare sonnet was apart of another assignment, but the
imagery for both stories became sharp enough for me to want to try and make my
own pictures for them. - Dave Kopka
DM: Who are the artists that influence your work?
There are many, but Matisse is one of the most influential. His work is about line, pattern and most of all color. I haven't done collage in many years, but after seeing Matisse's cut paper collage show at MOMA I was inspired to return to it. This series is simpler with a more graphic quality to it versus my earlier collages which were layered with symbolism. - Donna Miskend
Growing up in France I was most
influenced by caricaturists like Honore Daumier, and comic book artists like
Claire Bretecher or Herge (the author of Tintin). - Delphine Hennault
I have been influenced by the artwork
of Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, Faith Ringgold, Ezra Jack Keats, and Eric
Carle, among many others.
- Nancy Doniger
There are so many artists I find inspirational, but to name some: Arthur Rackham, Harry Clarke, Kay Nielson, Amy Reeder, Winsor McCay, Greg Manchess, and Diane & Leo Dillon. Though a few approaches are similar to each other in appearance, in all the work the differences are very noticeable and I find each artist's work moving for its particular reasons. - Dave Kopka
There are so many artists I find inspirational, but to name some: Arthur Rackham, Harry Clarke, Kay Nielson, Amy Reeder, Winsor McCay, Greg Manchess, and Diane & Leo Dillon. Though a few approaches are similar to each other in appearance, in all the work the differences are very noticeable and I find each artist's work moving for its particular reasons. - Dave Kopka
I currently am enamored with Emily Carroll's style of
work: she can convey genuinely haunting tales from her comics, and they all
seem to have this rich history she creates with her words. Also, in the more
traditional vein, Stuart Immonen is an amazing Marvel artist whose characters
are so expressive and well-rendered that I hope to absorb some of that in my
own work. - Candace Lee
DM: What else would you like people to know about you or your work?
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Nancy Doniger 2015, The Peacock and the Crane |
- Nancy Doniger www.donigerillustration.com
I make prints, pillows and other
things on my spare time, they can be found at www.society6.com/hyos . . . and my website is hyotk.com - Hyo Taek Kim
The first book I illustrated, Write Out of the Oven! by Josephine Waltzis a collection of letters and recipes from more than 50 well-known and award-winning children's authors. I also have one non-fiction short true story, Standing Up, that has been published, in Chicken Soup for the Child's Soul, Character-Building Stories to Read with Kids Ages 5-8, May 2007. When I not illustrating or writing, I am a teaching artist with the Vermont Arts Council and the New England Foundation of the Arts.
Visit www.christinemixart.com - Christine Mix
The first book I illustrated, Write Out of the Oven! by Josephine Waltzis a collection of letters and recipes from more than 50 well-known and award-winning children's authors. I also have one non-fiction short true story, Standing Up, that has been published, in Chicken Soup for the Child's Soul, Character-Building Stories to Read with Kids Ages 5-8, May 2007. When I not illustrating or writing, I am a teaching artist with the Vermont Arts Council and the New England Foundation of the Arts.
Visit www.christinemixart.com - Christine Mix
My first book, Circus Girl was released recently in 2014. It is a story of make-believe and childhood dress up. Currently I'm working on a companion book, Adventure Boy. My second book of fractured rhymes in the same style as Humpty Dumpty is The Real Mother Goose and will be published soon. - Clare Pernice
I have been working on a rhyming picture book written by my uncle, Steve Kopka, a writer currently working on his own YA series (http://www.cometjack.com). I am also involved in private commissions ranging from poster art to portrait paintings, but my main focus has been on building up my portfolio. There are many projects I am excited about enveloping myself in and even more I am itching to start. - Dave Kopka
The next show I am curating, Fairytales, will be at the Brooklyn Public Library and run throughout the summer. News will be on my blog along with more exhibit and illustration info. In addition to writing and illustrating, I am also a teaching artist on the rosters of Arts Westchester and recently accepted to Lifetime Arts. I work with children, adults and seniors through these programs and in independent workshops. Thank you to all the artists who participated in Master Storytellers, and sharing their thoughts about their work here. Join several of the artists from the show for an artist panel on April 11 at noon, followed by a conversation with Michael Patrick Hearn, children's literary historian about the stories illustrated in the exhibit and our opening reception.
- Donna Miskend, curator
I have been working on a rhyming picture book written by my uncle, Steve Kopka, a writer currently working on his own YA series (http://www.cometjack.com). I am also involved in private commissions ranging from poster art to portrait paintings, but my main focus has been on building up my portfolio. There are many projects I am excited about enveloping myself in and even more I am itching to start. - Dave Kopka
The next show I am curating, Fairytales, will be at the Brooklyn Public Library and run throughout the summer. News will be on my blog along with more exhibit and illustration info. In addition to writing and illustrating, I am also a teaching artist on the rosters of Arts Westchester and recently accepted to Lifetime Arts. I work with children, adults and seniors through these programs and in independent workshops. Thank you to all the artists who participated in Master Storytellers, and sharing their thoughts about their work here. Join several of the artists from the show for an artist panel on April 11 at noon, followed by a conversation with Michael Patrick Hearn, children's literary historian about the stories illustrated in the exhibit and our opening reception.
- Donna Miskend, curator
Friday, November 21, 2014
ART - AUTHOR: Clare Pernice
CLARE PERNICE is a children's Book author/illustrator and we share a passion for children's books. Clare's book, Circus Girl (published by Simply Read Books) just out this year is a must have for little one's who dream big.
DM: What made you choose to pursue children's books?

DM: What was your inspiration for Circus Girl?
DM: Which comes first, the words or the images?
DM: Do you use a computer?
DM: Did your work in film have any influence on your picture books?
CP: Yes, I think that working on a film from it’s original concept through research, production design, directing, editing and the final result have a parallel pace to making a picture book. My enjoyment and satisfaction comes from being involved in the book’s creation from start to finish.
DM: What are you working on next?
DM: What made you choose to pursue children's books?
CP: My childhood memories and reading to
my children have inspired me to create picture books. I love books with unique
characters and expressive words. I collect picture books of every shape, size
and genre.
DM: What were your favorite books growing up?
DM: What were your favorite books growing up?
CP: There are three that come to mind. Firstly, Babar, it was my father’s tattered copy from his childhood which he read it to me when I was very, very young. Many of the B&W spot illustrations inside were colored in by him when he was little and then more coloring was added by me, we both had an exuberant scribbly style. I loved this story of the little orphan elephant who was taken in by the rich, old lady. When she took him to be fitted for clothes it was so enchanting because he anthropomorphically transforms and he has all sorts of adventures thereafter.
The Necklace of Raindrops was a book that I discovered by myself at the library, I was about 7. I just loved the stories and especially the Necklace of Raindrops. I dreamed of having such a necklace. The illustrations were also intriguing. Alice in Wonderland is the classic that I’ve never grown tired of. Others worthy of a mention would be Wind in the Willows and Pooh Bear stories as well as Everything written by Enid Blyton.

DM: What was your inspiration for Circus Girl?
DM: Which comes first, the words or the images?
CP: I think that both come together. First the idea germinates, I write it down and begin doodling characters. Then I write some words and more images spring to mind, back and forth. It is definitely a partnership of words and pictures.
DM: What is your favorite medium?
CP: I love colored pencils and watercolor paints, pans, tubes and inks. My favorite brands are from Japan and Germany and England.
DM: Do you use a computer?
CP: I do like my Macbook and I know I could do a lot more on it besides emailing, researching and exercising a couple of fingers but I haven’t found time yet to learn all the amazing design programs available. One day I’d like to but I derive too much pleasure from art materials!
DM: Did your work in film have any influence on your picture books?
CP: Yes, I think that working on a film from it’s original concept through research, production design, directing, editing and the final result have a parallel pace to making a picture book. My enjoyment and satisfaction comes from being involved in the book’s creation from start to finish.
DM: What are you working on next?
CP: Currently I’m finishing up artwork
for my Mother Goose book which will be published next year and I’m working on
Adventure Boy, the companion book to Circus Girl.
DM: What else would you like people to know about you or your work?
CP: Our dog Milo is famous in Weston, he is the mascot for my son Oliver's sports teams. My daughter Mia is musically gifted and is at a school for the arts. Circus Girl was published by Simply Read Books this year and it has been a wonderful experience to do book signings and read my book to children. I am thrilled to have the opportunity to converse with Donna about being a picture book author and illustrator. Thank you for interviewing me.
ABOUT CIRCUS GIRL:
When a little girl plays dress up in her leotard and socks she becomes Circus Girl star of the show. read more HERE.
You can learn more about Clare by visiting her web site at www.clarepernice.com
If you're in the Charleston, SC area she will be signing books at Blue Bicycle Books Dec. 6th.
Clare will be speaking on the artist panel Saturday, February 7th in an interview with the artists for the exhibit Dickens: A Celebration In Pictures. Both our work is included in a selection of work from the bicentennial celebration exhibit of Charles Dickens' classic books on view at the Poe Visitor Center February 3 through 21, 2015. Bring your kids and enjoy a Dickens Character Paper Puppet workshop with us too, see schedule for date info. For schedule information CLICK HERE.
CP: Our dog Milo is famous in Weston, he is the mascot for my son Oliver's sports teams. My daughter Mia is musically gifted and is at a school for the arts. Circus Girl was published by Simply Read Books this year and it has been a wonderful experience to do book signings and read my book to children. I am thrilled to have the opportunity to converse with Donna about being a picture book author and illustrator. Thank you for interviewing me.
ABOUT CIRCUS GIRL:
When a little girl plays dress up in her leotard and socks she becomes Circus Girl star of the show. read more HERE.
You can learn more about Clare by visiting her web site at www.clarepernice.com
If you're in the Charleston, SC area she will be signing books at Blue Bicycle Books Dec. 6th.
Clare will be speaking on the artist panel Saturday, February 7th in an interview with the artists for the exhibit Dickens: A Celebration In Pictures. Both our work is included in a selection of work from the bicentennial celebration exhibit of Charles Dickens' classic books on view at the Poe Visitor Center February 3 through 21, 2015. Bring your kids and enjoy a Dickens Character Paper Puppet workshop with us too, see schedule for date info. For schedule information CLICK HERE.
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Theater - Robert Greer
Robert Greer is Artistic Director of the August Strindberg Repertory Theatre in New York. He and I met many moons ago at a NYC Ballet production. We were standing next to each other in the standing room only tickets section. Happily, today we sit!
DM: You used the Pink Pig Ballet company in your production of Strindberg’s Casper’s Fat Tuesday. What was the thinking behind this and is this a direction you’d like to explore again?
DM: When did you start directing?
RG: I studied directing at Emerson College in Boston and began directing Equity casts while still in grad school at CUNY and Columbia, where I kept directing professional casts after finishing my Swedish studies in the early 90s. I’ve belonged to the Stage Directors and Choregraphers Society since 1998.
DM: What is your approach to directing your actors?
RG: I was taught that the first three rules of directing are:
choose the right play
choose the right cast
stay out of their way
To which I would add one more between rules ii and iii - choose the right ground plan
DM: What drew you to Strindberg?
RG: I bought a paperback collection of his one-act plays less than a week after graduating college and was so struck by his often brutal honesty that I read them all in one sitting.
DM: What do you think people should know about Strindberg and his work?
RG: Strindberg is simply the most important writer since Shakespeare and not merely for his plays. He would be still more famous as a novelist had he never written any drama, a fact that is not true of any of his more famous contemporaries.
DM: Strindberg’s work was written in the 19th century Sweden and takes place in that era as well. Your production of Playing with Fire was set in 1920s Martha’s Vineyard in an affluent African American community and played with an all African-American cast. Talk about why you decided to go in that direction.
RG: The class structure of XIX-century Sweden is even more remote to Americans than the British, to which they’ve had some exposure by way of the BBC’s excellent programming. A direct parallel in American society is the division between the races. I try to make one adjustment, however major, to a script and allow every other choice follow as a consequence of that one change.
DM: Are you hoping to engage a new audience of theater goers by having some Strindberg productions set in more contemporary times and using casts that reflect the diversity of cultures here in New York?
RG: Absolutely! There is no reason to set productions of his plays in a foreign land – Sweden – nor necessarily in the time at which they were written. When they were originally performed the action took place in the present. That doesn’t mean they have to be played in the New York of 2014, rather that thought must be given to the when and where.
DM: I’d like to touch on another interest of yours. How does ballet figure into your life?
RG: Until the Strindberg Rep began taking all my waking hours, I wrote about New York City Ballet – and some other – on Wikipedia. I’d been keeping programs and my personal notations and decided to keep them in public instead of in private. Very few people write about ballet on Wikipedia and City Ballet has an enormous repertory, so there was a lot to do.
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Donna Miskend |
RG: Casper is a puppet play written to be performed by living actors. The connection between dance and mime and puppetry spans cultures and centuries. In European culture, the tie between ballet and mime is particularly tight, so using ballet dancers to play the puppets was a small step.
DM: To Damascus will be performed in 3 parts, beginning with To Damascus Part One this season. Why are you telling it in 3 parts?
RG: To Damascus is a trilogy which has not been performed complete in 99 years and never done without major cuts in English. Each part is a full-length play and deserves to be rehearsed and presented as such, not turned into a club-sandwich.
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Donna Miskend 2014 |
RG: To Damascus is a trilogy which has not been performed complete in 99 years and never done without major cuts in English. Each part is a full-length play and deserves to be rehearsed and presented as such, not turned into a club-sandwich.
DM: What is your next production?
RG: Miss Julie, set in Louisiana in the year it was written, with a mixed-race cast. We will have ballet dancers again as the farmhands who drunkenly storm the mansion’s kitchen, something Strindberg wrote in the original manuscript and which has never been done.
DM: What else would you like audiences to know about your production?
RG: With the sole exception of Miss Julie, it is our intent to perform the plays of Strindberg that have not been done – or done recently – in English. Some – Casper’s Fat Tuesday and Mr. Bengt’s Wife – have never before been translated.
DM: As Artistic Director of the company, what is your vision for the future for The August Strindberg Repertory Theatre?
RG: Strindberg wrote sixty plays, almost all of which would be of interest to an American audience if brought into its context. We should choose the major works and those unjustly neglected first and see how far we get.
Visit their web site for a schedule of performances at www.strindberg.org
Sunday, June 30, 2013
ART- ARVIND GARG PART II
Arvind Garg is a photographer living in New York. This is part II of a two part interview. Do read Part I first - CLICK HERE
DM: Your book on Marina is a lovely tribute to your wife who died of cancer. It is a celebration of her life with you, her craft as a writer with the inclusion of pages of her manuscripts with handwritten notes on them, and an indication of her struggle with her illness. It's a very personal book. Would you say that this is an example of a project that you thought might not be embraced by traditional publishing, but one that as an artist yourself you had to share? Or do you simply prefer the creative freedom of self publishing?
AG: I met Marina in 1986 in New York and we started living together right away. Officially we married in 1994, just four years before she passed away. She was a person of incredible personal beauty and moral integrity and she had a vision of an active and meaningful life as a poet and an arts enthusiast. Despite her uncertain health throughout our life together, she was unstoppable in doing things she wanted to do, for realizing one’s potential to her was a moral obligation.
all images Arvind Garg and may not be reproduced without permission.
DM: You have chosen to go the self published route with your photography books. Why?
AG: There have
always been photographers and other visual artists who had to self-publish
their books, for it is almost impossible for anyone without a celebrity name to
find a commercial publisher who will risk money on a book by a relatively
unknown artist. But to publish a
book yourself you needed lots of money, and then there was the problem of
distribution.
I never thought
of self-publishing books of my work until the digital revolution came out with
the technology that made it possible to do it without spending much money. My
friend Dennis who did a few books and was thrilled by the experience encouraged
me to do the same. I did my first in 2008, a small format (7x7) book of my
black and white images taken in Japan in 2002. Since then I have published
fifteen books in different formats and sizes and on subjects ranging from focus
on places (Egypt, India, Tunisia, Syria and Jordan, New York, Turkey) to fine
art images (The Eucalyptus Way, Gallery Light), to memoir and biography
(Marina) and portraits (Facing the Creator). DM: Your book on Marina is a lovely tribute to your wife who died of cancer. It is a celebration of her life with you, her craft as a writer with the inclusion of pages of her manuscripts with handwritten notes on them, and an indication of her struggle with her illness. It's a very personal book. Would you say that this is an example of a project that you thought might not be embraced by traditional publishing, but one that as an artist yourself you had to share? Or do you simply prefer the creative freedom of self publishing?
AG: I met Marina in 1986 in New York and we started living together right away. Officially we married in 1994, just four years before she passed away. She was a person of incredible personal beauty and moral integrity and she had a vision of an active and meaningful life as a poet and an arts enthusiast. Despite her uncertain health throughout our life together, she was unstoppable in doing things she wanted to do, for realizing one’s potential to her was a moral obligation.
Her pre-mature death left me not
only with folders and boxes full of her writings and journals, but with an
experience and indelible memory of having shared part of my life with a woman
of extraordinary beauty and depth and passion. For more than a decade I knew no
way to mourn her or to memorialize her and her life the way I wanted to. I did
not have funds to create an arts
organization in her name or to sponsor a poetry scholarship named after her or
to fund a corner of Central Park’s Observatory Garden that was one of her
favorite spots in the city, or any of the other ideas that would preserve her
name and be her legacy.
I always knew I would do a book
on her. I had photographed her from the first day we met and until the end. She
was my wife and companion but she, with her irrepressible nature and changing
moods, was also a mystery to me. She was always searching for something, mostly
looking for ways to give expression to her own inner nature and vision, for
there was no peace for her without
it.
Finally doing a book on her became my way to mourn her. Once I started working on it, it took me six months to finish, because it was like re-living our whole life together. I read every piece of her writings and kept finding more and more of her photographs in my files and folders and boxes. The layers of memory became deeper and deeper with each new find, helping me to feel her presence in my life once again.
I never even considered that a commercial publisher might do the Marina
book. It is a very personal thing, and had to be done by myself in every
detail. In a way it made itself,
as it grew and flowered organically watered by Marina’s own words. The
photographs are mere foundation for the project. I also think of the book as a
fountain, like the Arethusa, which
was the name Marina gave to the organization about Italian art, history and
life that she founded.
DM: You were in Syria a month before the war broke out. What are your thoughts about what you experienced and the situation today from the perspective of having just done a photographic essay there?
AG: Yes, I traveled in Jordan and Syria just before the fight against Assad's regime took off. It took me by surprise as much as it did the rest of the world, for as a tourist I detected no sign of any looming political or social unrest. In fact I felt that the country and its people were remarkably civil and polite, and there was a sense of vibrancy in the local life in Damascus and particularly in Aleppo's famed picturesque castle as a site of fighting and destruction. I had enjoyed entering it through its humungous doorway and climbing the steps inside to go to the top where, sitting at a cafe smoking a hookah I had a bird's eye view of the whole city, a sight as memorable as any in my travels.
DM: There are two photos in particular from that group that I like. One is the photo of the men on a motorcycle against the ancient ruins. It seem symbolic of an ancient culture thriving against the surge of the modern world. The other one is the photograph of Assad attached to a post in an alleyway. It feels as if it is a reminder that Assad must be revered and present even as one walks through an otherwise nondescript, out of the way route. What do these photos say to you and what other photograph stands out for you from that group?
AG: The photo of two Bedouin men on a motorbike in the dusty and dusky landscape of Palmyra ruins evokes for me the surreal reality of the past and the present seen and felt at the same moment. The other photo with Assad's image on a pole in a dark alley in the Old Town in Damascus is also surreal in its own way. In most countries under the rule of a dictator or an autocrat, you will always see the propaganda portraits of the leader in every imaginable place, whether in markets or billboards along the roads or train and bus stations, even temples and mosques, but this felt like an odd choice for a venue for the leader's image, right in the middle of a narrow alley in an isolated corner of the old town. I guess I like images with a little surreal element to them. But I also like, while traveling in a foreign country, to find a moment of everyday ordinary life that says something about the culture. From that angle I like the double spread in the book on Jordan and Syria of men smoking sheesha (Hookah) in a tea house in Damascus, which, despite its ordinariness, is fascinating to me as a glimpse into a foreign culture.
DM: What is your favorite subject matter to photograph and why?
AG: I really don't have a favorite subject. Almost everything with an interesting light on it is made visually attractive and a subject for a photograph for me. For this reason I find myself taking photographs wherever I happen to be, including my own apartment where the late afternoon light coming in from the Western window never fails to surprise me with its intensity and beauty. My latest book for this reason is about patches of light in art galleries that I found visually more interesting to photograph than the art works themselves.
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Arvind Garg, Venice 1978 |
DM: What are some of your favorite images from your work and why?
AG: A black and white photo I took in Venice in 1978, soon after I started to photograph, has remained a personal favorite of mine. It is an overview of silhouettes of people and pigeons and their long shadows in St. Marks' Square that I shot from the balcony of the cathedral. It is also perhaps the first abstract image I made (without knowing, safe to say, what I was doing) from a real life scene.
Among my work in color, a constant favorite is the image of a traditionally dressed and veiled woman walking down a dusty trail in Rajasthan with a tree at the bottom left corner. It is just the color and composition that makes the image but for me it evokes the landscape and the rhythm of life in this part of India.
DM: Black Thorns is a photo with a graphic design sensibility in black and white, and the photos you did on eucalyptus trees with the abstract patterns in color highlight your interest in pattern and design. Is this the type of work that in particular made you want to explore painting?
AG: I have thought of trying my hand at painting several times in my life, but somehow never got to do it. Unless now, partly encouraged by my artist friend Beverly Brown whose watercolors of fashion figures I truly admire. But my photographic series on eucalyptus tree bark also is a catalyst in my finally picking up a painting brush, for images in that series are mostly about color and abstract and organic design. They appear to be asking to be painted, so how could I not start painting?
DM: You are using your photographs as reference for your paintings. What difference does the choice of medium, photography or watercolor make to the image, or does it make a difference?
AG: Well, photography is a very precise medium where sharpness traditionally is valued, whereas painting, especially watercolor, is a medium that allows more freedom of execution. But trained as I am as a photographer, I am finding it a challenge to be loose in painting and let the brush and paint guide the imagery. I still find myself trying to make my painting look like a photograph, which defeats the whole purpose. I recently went to see Sargent’s watercolors in a big show at the Brooklyn Museum. His work took my breath away. I could see that he is precise in some places and totally free at other spots in the same painting. The way he paints light and shadows and water reflections, even architecture, combining both realistic and abstract elements, is fascinating. I felt very inspired and moved.
DM: What else would you like people to know about your work?
AG: I have been mostly lucky in that whenever I have made the effort to show my work to editors and curators I have found them attentive and appreciative. WIthout much effort I have had my photographs acquired at major institutions like the New York Public Library and Brooklyn Museum as well as academic institutions like the Herbert Johnson Museum at Cornell University in Ithica, NY. I hope that my books will find an audience one day that will lead to more of my artwork seen. But I am just enjoying the process of making books as well as paintings and drawings. And the joy of doing it seems to be enough reward for now.
DM: What is your next project?
AG: I have a long way to go with my drawing and painting, so the next few years I hope to devote to this utterly fascinating medium.
DM: Thank you for joining me.
To view more of the photographs we discussed and to purchase Arvind's books click HERE
To purchase art prints click HERE
To view/license images click HERE
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Arvind Garg, Rajasthan Woman |
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Arvind Garg, Zen Garden |
DM: Black Thorns is a photo with a graphic design sensibility in black and white, and the photos you did on eucalyptus trees with the abstract patterns in color highlight your interest in pattern and design. Is this the type of work that in particular made you want to explore painting?
AG: I have thought of trying my hand at painting several times in my life, but somehow never got to do it. Unless now, partly encouraged by my artist friend Beverly Brown whose watercolors of fashion figures I truly admire. But my photographic series on eucalyptus tree bark also is a catalyst in my finally picking up a painting brush, for images in that series are mostly about color and abstract and organic design. They appear to be asking to be painted, so how could I not start painting?
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Arvind Garg, Christo Gate |
DM: You are using your photographs as reference for your paintings. What difference does the choice of medium, photography or watercolor make to the image, or does it make a difference?
AG: Well, photography is a very precise medium where sharpness traditionally is valued, whereas painting, especially watercolor, is a medium that allows more freedom of execution. But trained as I am as a photographer, I am finding it a challenge to be loose in painting and let the brush and paint guide the imagery. I still find myself trying to make my painting look like a photograph, which defeats the whole purpose. I recently went to see Sargent’s watercolors in a big show at the Brooklyn Museum. His work took my breath away. I could see that he is precise in some places and totally free at other spots in the same painting. The way he paints light and shadows and water reflections, even architecture, combining both realistic and abstract elements, is fascinating. I felt very inspired and moved.
DM: What else would you like people to know about your work?
AG: I have been mostly lucky in that whenever I have made the effort to show my work to editors and curators I have found them attentive and appreciative. WIthout much effort I have had my photographs acquired at major institutions like the New York Public Library and Brooklyn Museum as well as academic institutions like the Herbert Johnson Museum at Cornell University in Ithica, NY. I hope that my books will find an audience one day that will lead to more of my artwork seen. But I am just enjoying the process of making books as well as paintings and drawings. And the joy of doing it seems to be enough reward for now.
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Arvind Garg, Village Door |
DM: What is your next project?
AG: I have a long way to go with my drawing and painting, so the next few years I hope to devote to this utterly fascinating medium.
DM: Thank you for joining me.
To view more of the photographs we discussed and to purchase Arvind's books click HERE
To purchase art prints click HERE
To view/license images click HERE
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