giovedì 21 luglio 2011

Interview with Katerina Gorokhova






q) Please tell us your name and where you practice.


a)Katerina Gorokhova, Moscow area.


q) Why do you make art?


a)It is an output for ideas.


q) How do you work?


a)The way I work always mutating, so each time it can be different. I take photos from which I work, or I can find a picture on internet or in a magazine, and use it for my paintings.


q) What´s your background?


a)I got my BA and Postgraduate of Fine Art at the Byam Shaw – St.Martin’s in London.


q) What role does the artist have in society?


a)Artist decides for himself/herself what role he/she carries in the society. I personally think that artist should be careful about subjects that he/she portrays. It is important to what we, as artists, give an advert to...


q) What was a seminal experience for you?


a)Coming to London...


q) Has your practice changed over time?


a)For the last ten years that I’ve been practicing art, I’ve done sculpture, installation, video-art, digital collages and painting.


q) What art do you most identify with?


a)Figurative, colourful, social...


q) What´s your strongest memory of your childhood?


a)When I was eight, I killed a mouse by spaying it with hairspray.


q) What themes do you pursue?


a)Family, society, truth, something that is real


q) Describe a real life experience that inspired you.


a)Working nights at London Astoria and Jazz Cafe, listening to the best bands alive, and then making art at the Byam Shaw daytime


q) What´s your most embarrassing moment?


a)I killed a mouse by spraying it with a hairspray.


q) What jobs have you done other than being an artist ?


a)Barmen, Bar Supervisor, Babysitter, clerk in the fashion showroom, I sold swimming suits, then I curated an exhibition at the R.K. Burt gallery in London, I was a curator at the Russian Academy of Arts, and now I will pursue teaching art.


q) What responses have you had to your work?


a)Good ones and bad ones, I am grateful to all sorts of comments!!


q) What do you dislike about the art world?


a)The art world is no different from the rest of the world. One can ask what I dislike about the world?!


q) What research do you do?


a)It depends on the type of series that I work on. I can search on internet or go to the library, or just take my camera and go outside. Usually when I travel by train or in subway, I can get ideas just by being around ordinary people. I get inspired by simplicity.


q) What is your dream project?


a)The one I am working on at the moment.


q) What´s the best piece of advice you have been given?


a)Don’t think!


q) What couldn’t you do without?


a)Love


q) What makes you angry?


a)Most of the time I feel sorry for people, rather then anger.


q) What is your worst quality?


a)I am not money driven


q) Dogs or Cats?


a)Both, every living creature on this planet, exept for bugs, I have a slight fear of them.


q) Making art is a lot like being on lsd. Know what I mean ?


a)To my mind, art resembles a scientific process with an enlightment, then one needs to put a lot of hard work. So, I can’t realy compare it with an effect of being on a drug.


q) What does “copy” mean to you?


a)I can not relate to the word copy, as I’ve never done any copies. My pencil drawings from Durer and Bosch, still carry a different manner.


q) What´s your favourite cuss word?


a)I don’t like swearing and I don’t like when people swear around me. I think it’s a weakness.


q)Your contacts….


a) http://www.katerinagorokhova.ru

giovedì 30 giugno 2011

Interview with Kimi Pryor






q)Please tell us your name and where you practice.


a)My name is Kimi Pryor. I currently draw/paint in the spare bedroom of the old Victorian apartment I share with my boyfriend in Columbus, OH, but we are moving to Philadelphia, PA next month and are very excited to be going to the East Coast.


q) Why do you make art?


a)I have gone through long phases where I haven't, and I feel that my life is much more interesting and exciting when I am making work. Plus, it is curious to me to see what I end up producing as I often work instinctively and do not compose in advance. It is encouraging to me to see direction and hopefully improvement in my pieces.


q) How do you work ?


a)Well, this past year it has been intuitively. I create a lot of awful 'discard' drawings that I am initially frustrated with and then go back to salvage and try to find worth in them.


q) What´s your background?


a)I was born and raised in Los Angeles, CA, and studied at Oberlin College in Ohio before getting my BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2002. I've been living and working in Columbus, OH for the last four years, where I took courses in fashion and children's book illustration at the Columbus College of Art and Design. I currently write for and curate the HAND Drawing Collective, a contemporary drawing blog my boyfriend and I started two years ago.


q) What role does the artist have in society?


a)To gentrify neighborhoods? Ha! Well obviously it has changed, from craftsmen creating something perceived by others to be beautiful, natural or holy, (whether through study, symmetry or an actual sense of transcendence), to today's work, which is often quite entrepreneurial, 'provocative', or produced on a factory-made or grandiose scale. Art can mirror our own reality and sense of ourselves back in an illuminating or thought-provoking way, or provide a unique and never-before-seen point of view, whether worldly or otherworldly.


q) What was a seminal experience for you ?


a)The first art studio I ever went to as a child told me to "Always start with the eyes" when drawing, so all of my pictures had eyes (cats, unicorns, dragons), at the center of the page. The second art studio I attended told me to "Never start with the eyes." It was a technical school, where I learned how to oil paint. I was a bit shattered that everything I knew about art seemingly was incorrect, but I have to say I liked my drawings a lot better when I always started with the eyes. There was much more imagination involved to fill up the rest of the page.


q) Has your practice changed over time ?


a)Yes, I used to rely much more heavily on source material. My materials change frequently. Currently I favor pen, markers and gouache. I love gouache, watercolors and spray paint. I would love to start working on a larger scale when I have more room.


q) What art do you most identify with ?


a)I don't know about 'identify with', but I am usually drawn to contemporary drawing and painting, folk and visionary artists, illuminated manuscripts, and certain children's book illustrators. I really like The Royal Art Lodge, The Mission School artists, spiritual Surrealists such as Remedios Varo and Leonora Carrington, and illustrators Winsor McCay, Errol LeCain , Edmund Dulac,

Lisbeth Zwerger,

and Maurice Sendak. My all time favorite is Henry Darger. I'm also a big fan of

Aleksandra Waliszewska, Olaf Hajek, Frohawk Two Feathers, and Simone Shubuck.


q) What´s your strongest memory of your childhood ?


a)I could probably recall most of my childhood pretty well but was often playing in corners, under tables, and in trees. I daydreamed in school and during sports, which I disliked. My family took yearly trips to a rustic California lodge called Montecito Sequoia where we did nothing but explore, build forts, snowshoe, get lost in the woods, watch '80s VHS tapes of teen movies, and drink lots of hot chocolate. That ruled. It wasn't fancy, but there was an unusual amount of freedom for a kid, by today's standards. My parents made my childhood very magical, thanks Mom and Dad!


q) What themes do you pursue ?


a)The interior life and the search for the extraordinary.


q) Describe a real life experience that inspired you.


a)I found that I couldn't register for art classes while attending Oberlin College as they filled up too quickly, so I walked over to the art building, into an instructor's office, and convinced her to be my teacher for an independent study. The instructor became my first art/writing mentor and I am grateful to her for putting me on a more fitting path.


q) What´s your most embarrassing moment ?


a)My mother dropped me off at junior high school one day and I turned around and walked into a pole, in front of my entire class which was waiting to be picked up for a field trip.


q) What jobs have you done other than being an artist ?


a)I have worked as a Visual Merchandiser, Stylist and Boutique Manager for high-end stores in Chicago and Columbus for the past ten years. I have also worked at a coffeehouse, a spa and a vintage store, prescribed Chinese herbs, sold jewelry and fixed watches, been a rehearsal guard at the Hollywood Bowl, worked as a prep and grill cook, DJ'd punk bars, and interned for an entertainment start-up website.


q) What responses have you had to your work ?


a)I have fortunately had positive feedback in the past two years but definitely caught flack in art school for 'illustrative' tendencies.


q) What do you dislike about the artworld ?


a)1. Teachers who abuse their power in a negative way. There is nothing more useless than a bad teacher.

2. Artists who make work for fame and are rewarded for audacity instead of talent or imagination.

3. Shallow, conceited, or annoyingly ambitious artists who are all about 'connections.' - Ugh!

4. Overly digitized illustration, quite often.


q) What research do you do ?


a)I don't research before drawing, but I do a lot of online collecting of images from artists whose work I admire. Flickr, Pinterest, etc., are great ways to keep track of your favorites and stay continually inspired and informed of new work.


q) What is your dream project?


a)I'd love to work larger for a solo show, or contribute work to something really beautiful in print. It would be great to be able to gather all of the HAND contributors together for one drawing exhibition-extravaganza. (They are all over the world, so the coordination might be difficult.)


q) What´s the best piece of advice you have been given ?


a)I had one wonderful painting teacher at SAIC who, after chatting with me in studio, diagnosed that I was bored. She told me to go out and get a pedicure , which I didn't do, and buy new wild, illicit paint colors, which I did do. I came back to the studio with fluorescent and metallic gouaches and made a totally new body of work.


q) What couldn’t you do without?


a)Lists. Yoga. Hot Sauce. Home-cooked vegetarian food. Coffee (or tea). Exploring. (My boyfriend might say 'YouTube'.)


q) What makes you angry?


a) Hmm. Being transferred numerous times by utility companies, Tea Party lunacy, the American health care system.


q) What is your worst quality?


a)I hate to talk on the phone so unfortunately I am not great at keeping up with people. :(


q) Dogs or Cats ?


a)I'm quite allergic to cats so definitely dogs.


q) Making art is a lot like being on lsd. Know what I mean ?


a)I guess it would depend on what type of art you produce! I think that if you produce something organically, then yes. A lot of art is so mechanized, or digital. Some would compare certain types of art to prayer or meditation as well.


q) What does “ copy” mean to you ?


a)To make work with the intention of consciously replicating or referencing someone else's.


q) What´s your favorite cuss word ?


a)I say "Frick" a lot, but I don't think it's my favorite. I'll have to get back to you.

mercoledì 11 maggio 2011

Interview with Logan Crable






q)Who are you? Where are you from and where do you live now?


a)I am a young photographer who grew up in Richmond, Virginia. I currently live in New York City


q)What is it that you do? What media do you use?


a)I am a photographer that works primarily in digital


q)What do you think sets your work apart?


a)The strong sense of narrative and mystery. I want my images to appear alive with energy and

An ethereal element.


q)How long have you been showing your work for? Did you have a “big break?”


a)Been showing my work for about 2 years now. I have had one picture featured in National Geographic and been in some smaller art publications but I would say I haven’t had my break yet. Still have a lot more pictures to make before then I think.


q)What are some things that have inspired you?


a)Things that I look at and go “ Holy shit!”


q)What have you been working on recently?


a)I am currently working on expanding my “Blowjobs” series by adding different elements. I want to take it to the next level with more theatrical qualities added. I want to really push the envelope.


q)Do you listen to music while you create your work? If so, would you give some examples?


a)I like to have my images read as music. So I model some of my images after the vibe I get from some of my Favourite music… Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Grateful Dead etc. I strive to invoke the same feeling one gets from listening to a solid piece of music.


q)Do you do work in any other media? Other projects not necessarily related to your main body of work?


a)I am also a musician. I have some of my music as background for my portfolios on my website.


q)What advice do you have for artists looking to show their work?


a)Get to Work!


q)Do you have any upcoming exhibitions of your work that you can mention?


a)I have a show at The Camel in Richmond, Virginia on June 1st. Then a joint show with my girlfriend, Chloe Cryan, sometime in August here in the city.


q)Where can people see more of your work on the Internet?


a)www.logancrable.com

My new blog: www.sickynarnar.tumblr.com

venerdì 15 aprile 2011

Interview with Billy Norrby






q)Who are you? Where are you from and where do you live now?


a)My name is Billy Norrby, I'm a fine artist and oil painter based in Brooklyn. I was born and raised in the city of Stockholm, Sweden but also spent a period of my childhood in a small village in western Norway.


q)What is it that you do? What media do you use?


a)My work is created using oil paint, typically with nothing more than a little cold-pressed linseed oil as a medium. I paint on linen canvas or gesso primed boards.


q)What do you think sets your work apart?


a)Depends on what you compare my paintings with. My art looks with admiring eyes at older art movements such as the pre-Raphaelites, romanticism, symbolism as well as old masters and painting. The golden age of illustration has also been very influential. Art enthusiasts familiar with these categories will probably find such echoes in my work.

Looking at where my paintings have been featured thus far, I think my sources of inspiration might distinguish the paintings I do from some of the rest. Across galleries of the low brow hemisphere, there is a prevalence of trendy, pop saturated art. This is all fine of course, but not so much what my work is about. As some of the visual elements in my paintings are concerned, there are certainly many artist now who express themselves by evoking semi-apocalyptic imagery and scenes of urban decay. You see a lot of environmental concern throughout the field. But when I started this latest series I couldn't help but notice how our news cycles were constantly bombarded by footage of riots, protests and increasingly divisive rhetoric. This anger and the unrest it generated seemed to me a very obvious element for artists to work with, but I was surprised when I looked around and found almost no-one addressing what we've seen daily over the last few years. I decided to explore the anger/protest issue and create depictions of a human landscape that is just as tormented as those of nature. The visual vocabulary of riots and demonstrations was something that merged quite well with my artistic ambitions. Off course, by the time I was nearly done with the series revolutions suddenly flamed up all through the middle east, and the Wisconsin union protests began. These current and stunning events has made me even more respectful of the subject matter.

I am not interested in "dark" as an overall direction or stylistic choice for my work. I find however, that the images and stories that linger in my mind are usually the ones that are bittersweet, longing or somewhat melancholy in nature. So when the time comes for me to think about the concept or narrative suggestions of a new painting, It's usually such territory I wander into without any larger, preconceived intentions.


q)How long have you been showing your work for? Did you have a “big break?”


a)Not terribly long as a painter. I'm a recent graduate from an art program. However, before going to back to education in order to re-invent myself, I had spent the years since high-school working as a designer at a video game company, and also done some varied illustrations for magazines. I wasn't a painter at all back then then, these were drawings done in pen and ink or similar and couldn't be more different from what I do today. Towards the latter half of my program, the Society of Illustrators awarded some of my student paintings, which bolstered my confidence. Shortly before graduation, I was offered group shows and a solo exhibit at the Copro Gallery in Santa Monica. Ever since it's been a steady stream of group showings. As far as a "big break" goes, I can only wish that one is unfolding right now!


q)What are some things that have inspired you?


a)Too much to mention. I gained an increased knowledge and appreciation for the history and craft of oil painting through my veteran instructors to whom I owe a lot. Here in the city I frequent the many museums and exhibits on realist painting. Outside of old paintings, cinema history for sure, and especially the vintage stuff such as universal horror movies, film noir, german expressionism, the works of Fellini, Bergman and Kurosawa to name just a few. Many black & white movies have such wonderful compositions and progressions between dark & light. Movies today are very flat in comparison. Where I'm from obviously plays a big part. The look and feel of my native Stockholm with it's beautiful old architecture and long winters. The fjords and dark mountains of Norway. As much as I'm reluctant to admit it, I think there's a certain "Swedishness" in my art since it is a country marred by the absence of sunlight, quiet restraint and moodiness. One notable influence is my older brother Jimmie who was the one that introduced me to any type of fine art in the first place. I remember sitting in his room and listening to Pink Floyd albums while flipping through books on Francis Bacon, HR Giger, and Dali. Even though my work never was very derivative of those artists on a conscious level, I still try to tap into the feeling I had back then of standing before a profound mystery and a vast and dark world outside my safe little haven of comic books and cartoons.

Today I'm inspired by Brooklyn and it's amazingly creative milieu.


q)What have you been working on recently?


a)Trying to wrap up my show "Of the Vanguard" at Copro and beyond that a few paintings and drawings for group exhibitions. I had pieces at the Corey Helford and Wendt Gallery now just recently.


q)Do you listen to music while you create your work? If so, would you give some examples?


a)Yes, I try to attach appropriate soundscapes that fit what I'm currently working on so I put together little playlists for each piece. Oftentimes it's instrumental and classical because catchy tunes and lyrics can be a little distracting and pull me out of the moment. I recently went though some soundtracks of Tarkovsky films such as "Stalker" and "Solaris" that were composed by Edward Artemyev. Just an example. My "work music" isn't necessarily what I listen to when I'm kicking back or heading out to a concert, but rather what I might need to help me find an a suitable atmosphere while working.


q)Do you do work in any other media? Other projects not necessarily related to your main body of work?


a)I would love to do more work outside of oils. I adore water colors and wish I was better at it. However, trying to master oil paint is a task you can fill several lifetimes with so every other technique and medium beyond that has been on a back burner these last few years. There is only so much time sadly. I taught a little portrait painting class together with my dear buddy and studio mate Martin Wittfooth recently. I love painting from life and hope to always do it on a regular basis. Back in the day I used to write a lot of stories and through making videogames participated in creating wild imaginary worlds. That more fleshed out story telling aspect is something I can miss at times. Matt Rota, another artist I share my studio with, sits up all night drawing clever comics which makes me more than a little jealous. Nothing beats oil painting though at the end of the day, so I'm content for the foreseeable future.


q)What advice do you have for artists looking to show their work?


a)First, the crucial stuff. Make sure that you have a solid body of work. Be really objective about your pieces and how they measure up in quality against what's out there. Isolate the areas where you can improve and work with determination to become better. Be willing to pour endless hours into your art making and be ready to sacrifice social time as an expense. It is a test of endurance after all. Networking is always important, but to be frank I never had to approach any galleries to get started. I had friends who were working artists that brought my work to the attention of curators and directors. What I would like to say in this regard however, is that it was my huge, prolonged interest in painting and image making that lead me towards other artists and people of a similar mindset. Some of whom ended up giving me the crucial connections I needed once my work had gotten more sophisticated. For me, getting in touch with the right people that led to the important gallery introduction was not a matter of showing up at openings or some strategic social networking on my behalf, but rather a natural outgrowth of my heartfelt passion for painting. After attending countless of drawing and painting sessions and asking many many talented people about their technique and approach, I got to know others who were similar in interest and felt as strongly about art I did. It certainly helps being in a place like New York where there is so much incredible talent around.


q)Do you have any upcoming exhibitions of your work that you can mention?


a)"Of The Vanguard" now first, then a few group shows over the spring and summer in Los Angeles in New York. I do have my next two solo shows lined up already over the next 18 months and I will be announcing all of it soon on my website. Sorry that I can't say more right now, but many things are coming!


q)Where can people see more of your work on the internet?


a)Since I'm new in the game still, there's not a huge catalog of my work out there yet. What student paintings I had online has quietly faded from the web. New work is always in production and I look forward to unveiling more in the coming weeks. Keep an eye on my website for further updates!