Archive forDecember, 2008

Bettie, We Hardly Knew You

Scott Goodwillie here:

Thinking back to when I was about, oh 13 or so, my father while working on the base of my bed found a drawing I had done from a photo of Bettie Page. He promptly called me into my room, told me what he’d found and congratulated me on my good taste. He then helped me find a better hiding place for the drawing so my mother wouldn’t find out.

The photo I had found of Page wasn’t even her most provocative but there was just something about her demeanor, her good-natured joy which captured my heart. Her curves of course had already captured my raging hormones. As I later came across more of her images, I realized she seemed happy and natural even tied up in knots not even a boyscout could undue. It’s been said that she was always comfortable in her own skin which I believe encapsulates it nicely. She also looked like someone who would talk to you if approached, just a nice girl next door with a secret or two!

When I heard of her death last week, I felt a moment of sadness in her passing. I hadn’t really thought of her in a long time even though she’d become a cultural icon and photos of her are at your fingertips in abundance online. I do wonder what she looked like as she aged. I don’t think I’m alone in this but there is a feeling I get from her better photos of intimacy and sharing in a good time. Feeling sad and nostalgic for someone you’ve never known and who was only known as eternally young. Feeling a sense of loss for someone you only knew as a photograph, that’s crazy. Right? We’ll miss you Bettie, we’ll miss you.

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Inteview with Iranian Artist Nazanin Pouyandeh

[Editor Note: This interview was originally translated from French]

A relative unknown in the United States, 27 year old Iranian native painter Nazanin Pouyandeh is taking the traditional nude in different directions with her charged dreamscapes, filled with symbolism and personal imagery.

When The Great Nude.TV came across her work at the 2008 Asian Contemporary Art Fair we were immediately drawn to the expressive qualities of her recent paintings, and the powerful use of the human form in her symbolism and personal narrative. Represented by LTMH Gallery domestically, we are fortunate to be able to interview Nazanin about her work.

Nazanin Pouyandeh Pardiss (2008)

Pardiss, 2008

The Great Nude: Thank you for taking time with us at The Great Nude to talk about your work. We were immediately interested in how gender politics affects your work. What does the use of the female form mean to you as a woman and as an Iranian Artist?

Nazanin Pouyandeh:
The use of the female figure as one of the main topics of my work is a fairly recent phenomenon (since the end of 2007). Instinctively, since the beginning of this series of paintings, I felt the need to have around me, female masks and to cover part of their bodies with made-up tattoos, inspired by the Persian and Indian miniature. The characters that I chose to paint, were exclusively women that were part of my entourage. I realized some time after this series started that this was an indirect way of my introducing me in my paintings as a woman and as an Iranian artist. I have always refused to work (on a piece) having to do with my origins, on the position of women. I do not appreciate stereotypes in art. For awhile, I even intentionally refused to paint Iranian faces to avoid all cliches. After painting for several years, spaces and characters from the Western world, I think today I’ve arrived to having some distance to my home country and am able to address it subtly in my paintings. Painting naked women is not a provocation but a way to make me naked through the images of my friends.

TGN: Many of our viewers are artists themselves, and we’d all be interested in hearing about the process from a technical perspective. Can you tell us about the process of creating your paintings?

NP: I paint my characters from photographs. For my recent paintings, I organize staged scenes with the necessary accessories, my friends arrive, and then I ask them to pose in ways that I have already imagined. The areas in which the scenes of my paintings are held are often imaginary, influenced by different sources. I paint my characters with light strokes. I like transforming reality by painting. The photo remains the source of an image, but I do not try to reproduce it. I’m inspired by it. The collage is the basic construction of my paintings. The various characters and objects come from multiple sources. What is important for me is to imagine and not to just reproduce it.

Nazanin Pouyandeh Setareh (2008)

Setareh, 2008

TGN: We saw your painting “Setareh” at the Asian Art Fair last week, can you tell us about the meaning of and inspiration behind this painting?

NP: Despite the very strong figurative meaning in my painting, it is not illustrative. We would not find a distinct meaning or a unique story. In the painting entitled Setareh, as in most of my recent portraits of women I’ve painted, there is a confrontation between popular Iranian mythology with a contemporary character. I think we are more or less haunted by the myths and the fiction which has become legends in human civilization. Setareh is a character in a relationship of pleasure and pain as opposed to the small male counterparts, soldiers inspired by popular Iranian painting. And, at the same time, despite the air of melancholy on the woman’s face, there is humor in this painting, a disparity.

Nazanin Pouyandeh Leila 2008

Leila, 2008

TGN: What was your artistic training, and how has living in the West affected the way you see your career as a figurative artist?

NP: I arrived in France at age 18. The following year, I had the wonderful opportunity to enter to L’Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux Arts de Paris. At that time I was doing collages with images from magazines. Arriving in France, the world of invasive pictures fascinated me. The choice of images in Western newspapers and magazines, ripping them and diverting their meaning in my first creative works, was an unconscious way of belonging to this new culture. Gradually, I transformed these collages without this notion disappearing from my work. My first paintings were executed quickly. The subject and treatment would make one think of movie posters painted by hand in the Eastern countries. After returning from my first trip to Iran, I realized that my painting was heavily influenced by film posters and portraits of monumental propaganda on the facades of buildings in Tehran. This was obviously difficult for me to accept, the images I despised the most in the world were a source of influence for me. Gradually this influence has disappeared in my painting. What is interesting in the artistic process is the whole part which completely escapes artist. The faces that I paint, whatever their origins have large eyes and well marked traits, such as those of my country. But this transformation comes despite me. I’m thirsting for the image, it fascinates me. Living in Paris has allowed me to feed my thirst – feeding it with a whole new visual universe. This has completely influenced my work. The unlimited access to the image (cinema, photography, advertising, painting, etc.) opens more possibilities for creativity in this area. I use this opening while coming from a country where the visual world is totally different. My visual memory is itself a collage.

More Info:
Official Nazanin Pouyandeh Website
LTMH Gallery

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The Fantastic Work of Juan Medina

Merrel here:

My taste in figurative work doesn’t come from a place of traditional art study. Largely it comes from Japanese and American comic-art, which frames my appreciation for more exotic and fantasy-influenced figure works. It is a shame that “Fantasy Art” (I hesitate to use the term, as the breadth of figurative art that features fantasy and surrealist elements is so immensely wide) has been relegated to the dark corners of figurative art.

Juan Medina The Moiras

Juan Medina "The Moiras"

I was flipping throught the December 2008 issue of ARTNews and was struck by the alluring art of Juan Medina. Medina’s paintings are super-detailed and hyperrealistic, all while being wholly surreal.  Some of his work echos Salvidor Dali (like “Handrail“) while others evoke imagery of the works of Michael Parkes.

Juan Medina is currently showing in New Orleans at The Bryant Galleries along with several other strong artists.

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The Figure in American Art at Eleanor Ettinger Gallery

From January 8 2009 to February 1 2009, the Eleanor Ettinger Gallery will be hosting their 12th annual exhibition, “The Figure in American Art”. Location: 119 Spring St, New York, NY 10012

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The Figurative Arts holds its own during Art Basel Miami 2008

With the team at The Great Nude now back in the studio here in New York City, it’s time to take a look back at our week-long excursion to Art Basel Miami 2008. Overall, we found the figurative arts were sparsely represented at the larger fairs. At some of the bigger fairs the nude was treated as a fashion bauble, used more for shock value.

However, we did find some extremely talented and dedicated figurative artists hidden in the quiet corners of many of galleries in the smaller fairs. Some of them are exploring new and unusual ways to use the human figure in their art. We’re going to introduce you to them and bring their works to you over the course of the next few months here at The Great Nude .

Artists Interviews

Beyond the main Art Basel festivities on South Miami Beach were the several smaller artist’s fairs. In our search to find the dedicated figurative artist we found ourselves off the beaten path at Art Now Fair where we chanced upon the impressive, large-scale works of Victor Grasso now exhibiting with the Soma New Art Gallery. Stay tuned for an exclusive The Great Nude video interview with this self-taught painter from New Jersey, describing his various works, including the visually jolting “The Catch.”

Victor Grasso - The Catch

Victor Grasso - "The Catch"

Over at The Artist Fair, we caught up with the representational painter Anthony Ackrill. Some may recall his stunning works from last years RAM (Representational Artists Movement) Show at the Miami City Ballet during Art Basel 2007. As Ackrill himself puts it, he takes a “traditional approach to the craft of painting, in that they were all painted from life, with careful observations of nature and requiring a live model to pose in the studio.” Stay tuned for an exclusive The Great Nude video interview with Ackrill about his techniques and the meaning behind the iconic figures in his paintings.

Anthony Ackrill - Faith

Anthony Ackrill - "Faith"

The Sketch Sessions: Miami.

During Art Basel festivities last weekend, The Great Nude set up an artist’s atelier in the heart of South Miami Beach. Stay tuned for a new series of videos from the Sketch Sessions: Miami. With a lush, tropical set and two dynamic models, we created a mysterious jungle dreamscape from which to stage our figures.

Subscribers to The Great Nude can get a sneak-peek at the upcoming videos and a chance to win one of the original drawings.


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Live Blogging From Miami: Healthy Showing at the Bridge Art Fair

Hello from Miami!

Tonight The Great Nude toured the Bridge Art Fair at The Catalina Hotel. Despite less than optimistic projections for sales at Art Basel Miami this year, the place was lively and the mood was optimistic.  Artists and galleries appeared resilient in the face of the current market and happy to talk about art.

Silvina Mamni
Represented by Susan Elay Fine Art

The Argentinian born Silvina Mamni paints small, playful figurative studies filled with the joy of life.  Her paintings depict various shaped women. Her work is poetic and warm, “Fiesta”, for example, is a lively and spirited painting which captures the figure in dance. There’s a wonderful energy and sense of motion in her work.

Phillip Thomas
Represented by Still Life Modern

Phillip Thomas’ work was a wonderful discovery for us as we made our way through the Bridge Art Fair.  A senior at the New York Academy of Art, this up-and-coming Jamaican-born artist is talented and appears well-versed in the traditional academics of figurative drawing.  His narative is unique to his experience now that he’s a New Yorker, and his work shows the powerful influence of his current environment. We’re going to be keeping and eye on Philip Thomas.

Tomorrow, we’ll be checking out Scope and Pulse looking for more great nudes.

And don’t forget, if you are in the area come to our MIAMI: SKETCH SESSIONS live Drawing Event tomorrow night and Saturday!

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Come Join Us in Miami for a Live “Sketch Sessions”

Attention all figurative artists! Join The Great Nude for an evening of drawing and painting from live nude models during the Art Basel Miami festivities. This Friday and Saturday, December 5th and 6th!

Professional models will be posing in a tropical setting accompanied by music and drinks. Art supplies will be provided. All attendees must R.S.V.P to [email protected].

For more information please download our flyer or Subscribe to TheGreatNude.tv. See you there!

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