Archive for the ‘featured artitions’ Category

Artition: Interview with Xavier Robles de Medina

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

I am very pleased to introduce Xavier Robles De Medina. His skills in drawing and painting are extraordinary and have been promoted very early in his live, during school, where I was fortunate enough to have experienced his development already. As far as I can look back Xavier was always fascinated in portraying people as well as himself. His greatest artinsary would certainly be the classical drawing, however to a much more deep-going way. When he portrays he wants to transport the feelings that are collected in the face, such as anger or happiness, but with a definite focus of only transporting what he sees: Reality. Have a read through the interview with Xavier to understand his works better:

Artition: How would you describe your work/art/style?

XRDM: My work is almost always representational. I work from the three dimensional form, which means I try not to use photographs. It is hard, especially with commissions and portraits, but ideally I work from life. In my work I try to portray the subject exactly as I see it, without exaggerating and romanticizing. I think there is a beauty in observing reality, rather than interpreting and changing it somehow. In my still-life compositions I usually do have a narrative in mind, and a concept or message that I try to communicate through inanimate objects. In Reaching, for instance, I used objects that are commercially manufactures, but trying to imitate humanity in their appearance. The idea is that they are reaching up to something that they aspire to be, which literally, is humanity; I would like to think that my drawings could be interpreted allegorically for many situations other than the literal situation portrayed in the piece.

“Monochrome-Self”

Artition: What or who inspires you?

XRDM: In terms of my technique Baroque, and Neo-Classical painters most often inspire me. Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Jacques-Louis David, and Ingres are really big inspirations. I also love Käthe Kollwitz, Paul Cadmus, and James Ensor. The reason many of my compositions are square is mostly because of my admiration for Andy Warhol’s ideology of Pop being a universal art, which is something I try to recreate. I am very much inspired by Walt Disney, Andy Warhol, and Lady Gaga, not so much for the content of their work, but because I am absolutely obsessed with The Factory environment and try to recreate that for myself. Thus, I have to mention, that I surround myself purposely with people I admire greatly, which varies from Fashion designers to Musicians. Alexander McQueen’s show, Plato’s Atlantis, absolutely blew me away and the way the show incorporated the fashion, with the make-up and hair, and the music, and the stage and production design was phenomenal and one of the most inspiring things I’ve ever seen. Similarly, Matthew Barney’s Cremaster Cycle is something I really love for the same reason. Ultimately, I’d like to work in a way in which I could incorporate all types of art, because everything inspires me. Recently I designed and executed a drawing for the band AmPm, which I was really excited about because I felt I was somehow recreating Andy Warhol’s collaboration with The Velvet Underground. I am inspired by a very wide variety of things. Music seems to inspire me the most and I have many drawings that are directly based on contemporary music. Musicians like Fever Ray, Björk, Kraftwerk, David Bowie, The Beatles, and many other musicians often inspire me to create and often determine the subjects of my drawings. One thing that people tend to overlook, and I feel I need to make more obvious, is the inspiration and content of my art, which more often than not, is Pop. Films really inspire me as well; most notably the work of David Lynch, Michael Haneke, and Stanley Kubrick.

Artition: Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

XRDM: I’ve probably answered that already. Yes, there’s always a message I try to communicate in my art. In my portraits and figure drawings I usually just try to show reality. And although I do think that in a very subtle way, light can have meaning and be metaphorical, I usually try to create a more calculated message with my still-life pieces because it is more accessible or more obvious to interpret subjects rather than light. It is imperative to me, that there be a message, and I try in my still-life compositions to make that as apparent as possible. For instance for Venus, my main inspirations were Paul Cadmus, and Jean Paul Gaultier’s collaboration with Madonna during the Blonde Ambition period. Paul Cadmus is one of the most fascinating painters to me, and I am particularly fascinated with his marks and the way he describes form. Jean Paul Gaultier’s pieces, I realized, have a similar aesthetic in terms of how his corsets shape the Female figure. Ultimately, the piece took a life of its own and I think it represents the ambiguity of iconography and how a Venus figure can elude both to Antiquity as well as Madonna.
In Eye of David, cash inspired me. I examined the dollar and decided to juxtapose the Eye of David with a feather, which subject-wise was inspired by the back of a one-dollar bill, where the Pyramid is shown below the all-seeing eye, and the Eagle on the other side of the word One. Of course the story of David provokes a world of interpretations and symbolism as well.

“Taylor”

Artition: How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

XRDM: I honestly really like Artition as it is and the community seems immensely talented. One thing I had trouble with was creating different galleries. I would like to keep my sketches in a separate gallery from my finished pieces, and never quite figured out how to do that.

Artition: Who would you like to change life with for one day?

XRDM: If I could choose anyone from the past or the present I would definitely choose Napoleon Bonaparte. I think the way he formed his image through art and iconography, and collaborated with painters with political objectives is absolutely brilliant. But if I had to choose a contemporary figure I would have to say Lady Gaga, because she’s the most famous.

Artition: Who is your favorite artist?

XRDM: I really don’t have a favorite artist. It depends on my mood, on what I’m working on, and on the medium I am most fascinated with at the time. In terms of painting, I would probably narrow it down to Jacques-Louis David, Rembrandt, and Caravaggio. My favorite musician right now is Kraftwerk, but two weeks ago was Bjork, and before that was The Beatles. I also started listening to a band called Best Coast who I really like a lot. I have been fascinated with David Lynch for quite some time and am tempted to call him my favorite director.

Visit Xavier’s profile on Artiton

Visit Xavier’s blog

Visit Xavier on tumblr

“Reaching”

Artition: Interview with Niclas Winters

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

The young and extraordinary talent Niclas Winters creates work that is powerful both in texture as well as composition. While you feel rawness in his pieces the progress in his development of different skills and techniques is tremendous and continually increasing. His brand-mark might be the chimpanzee mainly throughout his drawings, which would metaphor his recent artistic status quite well: playful but very clever!

Artition:
How would you describe your work/art/style?

NW:
My art is an illustration and comment on my surrounding and state of mind. I am bringing my urban environment mixed with my personal comment on the canvas. In various ways I am reflecting my personality and using different characters to represent these factors.

Artition:
What or who inspires you?

NW:
Everyday life inspires me, the street art scene and various artists such as Shepard Fairey (Obey), Takashi Murakami, Sam Flores etc. Everything is an inspiration if you make something out of it.

Artition:
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

NW:
The messages I am trying to make are conflicts in my surrounding and possibly of various other people. Stating the ovious in different forms and styles.

Artition:
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

NW:
Artition is a great medium of displaying your art and bringing it out to the people. It is also great to have the possibility to communicate with other artists and view their art works, their styles, their stories.

Artition:
Who is your favourite artist?

NW:
Most inspirational artists which influenced my art a lot are Takashi Murakami, Banksy and Shepard Fairey although various other artists impress me with their work and help me find my own way in my art
.

Visit Niclas’ profile on artition

Artition: Member interview with Moses Foster

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Moses Foster is an artist with complex abilities. His use of colour is very elaborate and he has a certain ‘swing’ in his pieces, creating great patterns, as well as figures and shapes. I guess some of his works with white background look great in real. Read more in my interview with him:

Artition:
How would you describe your work/art/style?

MF:
I´ve been asked this question quite often… at bars, gallery openings, occassional interests from people who meet me on the street…. I´ve come to a conclusion… I don´t worry about the style… I just create and continue creating from the source which is my daily life.

Artition:
What or who inspires you?

MF:
Touch and go…. that´s the type of question this is….
Inspiration for me is also very personal. I´ve been painting since I was 5 years old… long before I beheld the massive paintings of Caravaggio and Reubens in various international museums. Light and shadow inspires me…. How do I portray light and shadow without giving away too much. The subject matter varies….color in my opinion are like piano keys…and I´m still the 5 year old… Playing with the fire of construction in the face of all the hot heads of the university whom I sum up as Nay sayers….

Rebellion inspires me… The fight to get it down on canvas in which ever medium suits the subject.

Artition:
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

MF:
Lately my work is moving at such a rate until I´m not so sure how to answer this question. I try to title the single pieces but sometimes I´m stuck with the mental connection I have with the works… I don´t want to trap my ideas with names or zealous titles anymore… I´ve had enough of trying to communicate on terms of public awareness. I´m making the work…. I´ll let it do the job of communicating with whom it desires. I say this because most times… I get the feeling that when people check out a painting…. they either want more than what´s physically there…or they´re projecting their own fantasies… All fine by me… but I think the only people who really understand the language of babies are mothers. It´s not until the child is at a certain age that it´s able to reach out and take account of its own existence. Translate that to painting and other creative functions !!


Artition:
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

MF:
I woke up this morning and found this interview in my inbox….
I like that. I´ve been so busy and wanted to put it to the side…but I decided.. it´s for my future that I sit here and answer these questions as best I can…

Artition:
Who would you like to change life with for one day?


MF:
I would never consider this.


Artition:
Who is your favourite artist?

MF:
Nature

Visit Moses’ profile on artition

Visit Moses’ website

Military Fall Down – Léo Caillard

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Let me introduce a great photographer from Paris: Monsieur  Léo Caillard

His most recent project is showing US military vehicles such as tanks, fighters or submarines that are invading Paris.

Leo Caillard / New Artwork : ” War Games “

Photography and 3D / Diasec 48×72 inches / Limited edition of 6.

Leo Caillard
Phone: +33 (0)6 83 82 33 86

Artition: Member interview with Vladimir Hristov

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Vladimir Hristov joint us recently and instantly caught our attention with his provocative works, that are in the same way so harmoniously and illustrative. The compositions, the colors and his attempt to create abstract atmosphere will define him as an expressionist, such as Macke or Chagall; but by modern influences in beauty as well as bloodiness he defines himself as a contemporary expressionist, absorbing our daily nature into an aesthetic matter.

Artition:
How would you describe your work/art/style?

VH:
Mix of traditional methods with contemporary and modern way of painting. On a contrary of being afraid of heaving different styles in one painting, I love having all those diametrically contrasted genres mixed up in one piece. What really matters is which emotion and/or which visual impression the work evokes in the viewers minds.

Artition:
What or who inspires you?

VH:
Mix of: Botticelli and Kandinsky with Nick Cave & Sonic Youth, that might be about where I want to go…
Starting with Byzantine and Renaissance art, going forward through: Klimt & Schiele, Oskar Kokoschka and Chagall, plus Russian Avantgarde & Pop Art altogether with music & PoP Culture. There are many sources from where I feed my inspiration.

Artition:
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

VH:
Sex & religion… death, love, hope, fear, serial killers & guns, gods and angels… are, among others, the objectives that I am fascinated with. My paintings are not made in representational manner. Instead of putting up one image that represents this or that specific matter I prefer to play with the uncertainty of the forms and the transformations of one shape into another, and the free associations that they might bring up. I try to put all this together in a way that whenever the viewer pays some attention to the painting, he/she will always have some new feelings and new things to discover.
I intent to leave the painting “open” enough for ones perception and translation of its message.

Artition:
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

VH:
Since I am new member of artition I am still discovering what this site is offering and until now I am delighted with it’s content.

Artition:
Who would you like to change life with for one day?

VH:
Well this is the far most difficult question to answer… first thing that comes to my mind is to have the chance of being The Art Agent of some most successful artist today and discover the art of Hristov, or just being Silvio Berlusconi for a day and have all the fun…

Artition:
Who is your favourite artist?

VH:
I am hugely impressed with Christian Boltanski lately, I love his work.

Visit Vladimir’s profile on Artition

Visit Vladimir’s homepage

Artition: Interview with Victoria Febrer

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Victoria Febrer is one of our keenest members. Most of her works express a certain angle of perspective towards a landscape, the sky or the composition between an object and a panorama of the ocean, the mountains or any matter that creates the floor of the painting. What I really value in her works is the constant development of skills in exploration with colour or different media. Her recent project “Vistas Y Vinografias II” are works created solely with red wine on paper and reflect her great attitude of experimentation with the goal to underpin feelings and emotions that thrive in her, as well as in all of us, when we get in contact with something familiar.

Artition:
How would you describe your work/art/style?

VF: My work is an attempt to recreate those spaces which exist only in memory, which take on characteristics of all the places we’ve seen or visited and become something which is paradoxically both unique and universal. Through a simplification of color and form I attempt to return the viewer to these idyllic spaces.

Artition:
What or who inspires you?

VF: The city and the sea.

artition:
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

VF: I am currently more interested in conveying feelings and sensations through my work, rather than explicit messages.

Artition:
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

VF: I think artition is a wonderful resource for dialogue among the different participants in the art world. The only change I would suggest would be more fluid categories for medium. The barriers between mediums such as painting, drawing, and printmaking are ever-changing and perhaps a new system for categorizing works is needed.

Artition:
Who would you like to change life with for one day?

VF:
It would be interesting to change with a person visiting New York for the first time, I have never been able to experience my birth place as a newcomer and am curious as to the experience.

Artition:
Who is your favourite artist?

VF:
There are many artists whose work I love to revisit time and again. A few are Goya, Dali, Durer, Hokusai, and Sorolla.

Visit Victoria’s profile on Artition

Visit Victoria’s website

(Français) VISIONAIRS GALLERY a le plaisir de vous inviter* au Vernissage de ANDRES GINESTET

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

Sorry, this entry is only available in Français.

Artition: Interview with Patricia Shin

Monday, February 1st, 2010

I am delighted to post an interview with the great Artist Patricia Shin. Her way of drawing lines and circles is very sophisticated. She is great in creating patterns in black and white and most of her works really create a 3-dimensional sphere. Read more to understand her works better:

Artition 
How would you describe your work/art/style?


PS: My artwork is mainly music based. I was trained to be a musician from my early childhood, and I later discovered that I could use my musical intuition in my paintings. I try to translate the music into visual images based on the rhythm of the music I hear.

Artition: 
What or who inspires you?


PS: I am inspired by people who pursue their passions and are driven to accomplish their goals in life. I believe that this world is filled with uninspired people who are full of lost potential. It is those who have a passion for something that truly make this world beautiful. 

Artition: 
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art? 

PS: I want to communicate that music is not only something you can hear, but something that you can feel and is visually pleasing.

Artition: 
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?


PS: I think artition as a concept is a great idea. I would like to be able to replace flash with html5 on the site. 

Artition: 
Who would you like to change life with for one day?


PS: My 2-year-old nephew. It would be fascinating to see the world in the eyes of a child. 

Artition: 
Who is your favourite artist?


PS: Liubov Popova

Visit Patricia’s profile on Artition

Visit Patricia’s website

Victoria Febrer – Vinografias y Vistas II

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Vinography

Victoria Febrer is exhibiting the works of her recent project “Vinografias y Vistas II” in Valencia, Spain on

Saturday, 6th February 2010 at 8 p.m. until Tuesday 23rd February 2010, 9 p.m.

All Artitions are herewith more than welcomed to join the event and see some of here great works that are made uniquely with red wine on paper.

Galería Artis
C/ Cirilo Amorós 78, 46004 Valencia SPAIN
+34 96 351 37 61

show on map

Visit Victoria’s profile on Artition

Visit Victoria’s website

Artition: Interview with Shaun Gribouski

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Starting off this week with Shaun Gribouski and his interview with Artition.

Shaun seems to be fascinated by humans and urban lifestyle in our modern society. He draws with charcoal and pastel and paints with acrylic in a fascinating way. Creating shadow and light is one of his greatest talents and certainly his brand-mark in the works.

Artition: 
How would you describe your work/art/style?

SG: I view my art as a cross between expressionism and realism, created by fusing passion with technical calculation. My work usually focuses on people or some aspect of human society because I believe that they are the most powerful and interesting subjects. Humanity, from its beauty to its brutality, is one thing that any viewer will relate to.

Artition: 
What or who inspires you?

SG: My greatest artistic inspiration is Hip-Hop music. The best Hip-Hop is to me the epitome of that fusion of emotion with the technical. Aside from that, humanity is my inspiration. I draw inspiration from vast and varied sources, some of which directly translate into my art, while others fuel the emotion that drives me to create. A quick list of a few of these many diverse sources: strong and beautiful women, the AK-47, Rio de Janeiro, the legacy of slavery, the Boston Celtics. As you can see, there is little overt connection between all of these things.

Artition: 
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

SG: It can be debilitating to art when the artist focuses too much on the message because it often sacrifices quality in an attempt to say something specific. I might have some idea in mind as I’m making art, but my energy is directed at the process of creation. If a message comes through, so be it, but people can take whatever they want from it. All I hope to communicate is the passion that went into making it, because there is an interconnectedness of all people, regardless of nationality, ethnicity, religion, or any of the other lines we divide ourselves along. I’m not saying that in a “peace on earth”-type way, just that raw feelings are pretty much the same. Anger is anger and joy is joy, regardless of how disparate the triggers of such feelings are.

Artition: 
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

SG: I like that it is designed in an attractive and unpretentious manner and that it is user-friendly. It is excellent as is and at the present time, I don’t see anything that warrants change.

Artition: 
Who would you like to change life with for one day?

SG: It sounds a bit cliché, but I’ve never wanted to be anyone else.

Artition: 
Who is your favourite artist?

SG: My favorite artist is Nasir Jones. He is not a visual artist, but I’ve never felt more moved and inspired by anyone else’s work than I have by his. Nas excels in every aspect of his art. He has every unteachable quality that an artist could ever want. For me personally, his album Illmatic is the single greatest piece of art ever made.

Visit Shaun Gribouski’s profile on Artition