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In the Far East ~ Where Dragons Roam and Lions Roar

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Art

Your Opinion

To My Artistic Readers, what do you think? Is this true?  I’m not so sure. . . 

“No great art has ever been made without the artist having known danger.”

**Rainer Maria Rilke

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Posted in Musings and tagged Art, Artist, Culture, Heritage, Quotes, Rainer, Rilke, Struggling Artist, Suffering on March 23, 2015 by deceptivelyblonde. Leave a comment

Citywide Art Festival to Celebrate Rangoon’s Heritage

“Citywide Art Festival to Celebrate Rangoon’s Heritage”

by San  Yamin Aung via “Irrawaddy“

A painting from one of several art exhibitions to be held next month in Rangoon. (Photo: Steve Tickner / The Irrawaddy)

RANGOON — Galleries in downtown Rangoon are preparing to jointly host exhibitions as part of the Yangon Art and Heritage Festival, which will be held across the city next month.

Part of the larger festival organized under the theme “My Yangon My Home,” more than 10 art galleries will celebrate the beauty of Burma’s biggest city, its timeworn architecture and the people that call it home.

“I am living in Yangon and working here. The value of the buildings downtown can’t be assessed. I worry that those buildings might disappear and I love Yangon, so I am participating in the festival,” said Ko Sid, founder of the Myanmar Ink Art Gallery.

During the whole of March, Ko Sid said he will separately show collections from three artists under the unifying theme “We Love Yangon.” About 50 paintings depicting the colonial architecture of Rangoon and its bustling street life will be on display.

The Yangon Art and Heritage Festival will run from March 1-22 and will also include photography competitions, cartoon and sculpture exhibitions, and musical performances at a variety of public venues, as well as at the residence of the British ambassador, whose embassy is supporting the event.

Aung Myint Tun, manager of the Lokanat Gallery, said they will have a solo show of gallery member and artist MKM, who specializes in artistically rendering the buildings of the downtown area. The show, “About Yangon: Extension,” will be held from March 1-7 as part of the festival.

“It’s good to have this kind of festival. We will be more mindful of the surroundings in which we live and be cognizant of [the value in] preserving the city’s ancient buildings. Instead of neglecting them, we can be more aware of them thanks to this festival,” MKM told The Irrawaddy. The painter’s works depict downtown streetscapes and scenes from Shwedagon Pagoda, Burma’s most sacred Buddhist shrine.

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Posted in Art & Cultural History, Asia, Burma (Myanmar), News and tagged Art, Art Festival, Burma, Culture, Festival, Rangoon on March 19, 2015 by deceptivelyblonde. Leave a comment

The 10 Most Popular Street Art Pieces of January 2015

“The 10 Most Popular Street Art Pieces of January 2015”

via “Street Art News“

February has just started and it's time for our monthly top 10 street art pieces (ranking based on StreetArtNews' unique page-views), with a brilliant piece from Levalet in Paris, featuring as number one for January 2015.
1- Levalet – Paris, France
February has just started and it’s time for our monthly top 10 street art pieces (ranking based on StreetArtNews’ unique page-views), with a brilliant piece from Levalet in Paris, featuring as number one for January 2015. This new year brings us a wide variety of styles, and several talented artists are appearing for the first time in our rankings – Irony, Gris1 from DMV, Morfai and Vermibus.
Second place this month goes to Irony, one of the rising stars of the UK scene, who achieved the runner up position with his fantastic fire piece. Polling third and fourth are Invader and Gris1 in Tanzania and Paris.
Did your favorite street art piece make our list this month? Stay with us till after the break for a selection of the amazingness included in January’s top 10, and be sure to drop your thoughts down in the comments section!

2- Irony – London, UK
3- Invader, Tanzania
4- Gris1 DMV – Paris, France
5- L7M – Maracay, Venezuela

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Posted in Pieces and tagged Art, Graffiti, Pieces, Street Art, Street Artists, World on March 18, 2015 by deceptivelyblonde. Leave a comment

Art I Love: Going Home

Going Home by HRFleur

“Going Home” by HRFleur

 

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Posted in Art & Cultural History, Pieces and tagged Art, Art I Love, Asia, Cultural Heritage, Pieces on March 10, 2015 by deceptivelyblonde. Leave a comment

Coming Exhibition: THE WONDERFUL LAND ARTISTS IN EAST PRUSSIA

“THE WONDERFUL LAND ARTISTS IN EAST PRUSSIA”

Who:  

Lithuanian Art Museum

When: May 8, 2014 – May 8, 2016 (Hours Vary)

Where: 

Lithuanian Art Museum
Liepu Str. 33, LT-92145
Klaipėda, Lithuania

More Information: Here

The Society of East Prussian Art Lovers’ Nidden was founded in 2009 in Klaipėda by a small group of ethnography and history lovers. The aim of Nidden is to search, collect and promote paintings from East Prussia that picturesquely portray the nature, history and inhabitants of this region.

Aleksandr Popov, the chair and an active member of the Society, has been collecting paintings related to East Prussia for almost a decade. To date the collection has nearly 1,000 works of fine art and graphic art by almost 300 painters. Nidden promotes and presents its collection to the public, and it also organizes exhibitions – with over ten held so far in Nida, Rusnė, Kaliningrad (Russian Federation), Klaipėda, Kaunas and Vilnius. The success of and public involvement in the exhibitions, and the information and experience gained while searching for new works served as encouragement for the Nidden Society to release an educational publication – The Journey to the Prussian Barbizon, based on Popov’s collection of paintings.

Members of the Nidden Society have drawn-up a list of painters: over 400 that created works in East Prussia. Popov’s collection is continually updated by paintings and graphic art works, and newly purchased items are awaiting research and revision of dates and authorship.

The fine art of East Prussia reflected many international cultural connections, interweaving many styles and trends of European art. Due to the complicated history of the region, many artists were forgotten, many works were lost, some became private property, and only a few ended up in museums. Thus Popov’s collection is valuable not only aesthetically, but also historically and educationally.

Over 100 artists are presented in the exhibition, and over 200 paintings and graphic art works are to be displayed. They were created in the 19th century and in the first half of the 20th century, during the blossoming of fine art in East Prussia, when the region was a centre of attraction for many painters.

These oil, tempera, water colour and pastel paintings, prints made using various graphic art techniques, drawings and reproductive prints represent the most significant phenomena of fine art history in East Prussia – the Königsberg Art Academy and the Artists’ Colony of Nida (Nidden), as well as the works of painters that were born, permanently lived or occasionally visited this region.

The exhibition is mainly composed of landscapes that depict the motives of various East Prussian locations (the coasts of the Semba peninsula, the Vistula lagoon, the Curonian Spit and others). These landscapes reveal the beauty of forests, fields, waters and dunes – sometimes severe, sometimes mysterious or remarkably explicit. In addition to the landscape works there are also figural compositions, still life works and portraits.

Artists from the 19th to the first half of the 20th century often changed their place of residence, and were not afraid of taking long journeys. The biographies of local and arrived artists feature cities and countries where the artists spent time learning, studying, holding exhibitions, and in the works we see motifs reminiscent of other countries, alongside images of East Prussia. The characteristic mobility of artists from this period, their exchange of ideas, and the recognition of new art styles contributed to the variety of East Prussian art and its popularity far beyond the country’s borders.

The spectrum of the styles of work in the exhibition is very wide: from Academism, sentimental Realism, late Impressionism, and Naturalism, to Expressionism and New Objectivity. Some works, created in the second half of the 20th century and which represent late Expressionism, reveal a phenomenon of East Prussian fine arts post-1945: unable to return to their beloved places, painters created paintings by memory, based on their impressions deep in their minds.

The eloquent works of this long term exhibition are in show in the gallery alongside the Pranas Domšaitis permanent collection of works, and allow us to gain a better understanding of the creative origins, influences and historical context of these painters hailing from Prussian Lithuania. Many of the artists presented in “The Wonderful Land” were contemporaries of P. Domšaitis: teachers, colleagues, friends who he studied with at the Königsberg Art Academy, painted with along the coasts of the Semba peninsula, visited the Curonian Spit, and discussed art, participating in exhibitions in Königsberg, and other cities of Germany and Europe.

Kristina Jokubavičienė

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Posted in Art & Cultural History, Art & Culture, Coming Exhibitions, Europe, Lithuania, Museum News and tagged Art, Collection, Coming Exhibition, Exhibition, Lithuania, Lithuanian Art on March 5, 2015 by deceptivelyblonde. Leave a comment

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