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Explore the Utrecht Learning Center, a place where both novice and
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Art & Ed:
Adding a Hand Touch to Digital Prints Tips & Instructions: Creating a Hand-Torn Deckle Edge Artist Spotlight: Jody Dole About Utrecht
In 1949 Utrecht Art Supplies set out to provide artists with the finest Artist Canvas, Linen, Acrylics, and Artist Oil Paints available. Now, over 50 years later, our comprehensive art supplies catalog not only provides Paints, Canvas and Linen but over 15,000 professional quality art materials and supplies for artists in every discipline.
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Steven Walker has studied drawing, painting, and printmaking at Hunter College, Wagner College, and at the Art Students League of New York. He is also on the board of New York Society of Etchers and a Who’s Who in American Art. His collections can be found throughout NYC as well as the rest of the country. He is internationally known with group exhibitions in Hungary, France, Ireland, Czech Republic, Peru, Japan, and Australia.
I have been purchasing art supplies at Utrecht since the 1980s. As a printmaker, I find it reliable and economical source of inks, grounds, tools, and papers such as Arches, Rives, and American Masters. As a painter, I have long used Utrechrt oil paint, brushes, raw and primed canvas, and recommend them to my students. My weathered outdoor easel, purchased at Utrecht in 1990, is still on its feet. Examples of Steven's work: (click to enlarge)
You can find more of Stevens's work here.
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Permalink - 04.27.2007 | 04:21 PM | Artist Spotlight Add Comment (0) | Send to Friend | Print
Marie Sturken is a papermaker and printmaker who has exhibited extensively in solo, group, and juried shows. Her works are included in many public and corporate collections. She is one of the founding member of the Princeton Artist Alliance and has been a part of their shows. Her handmade paper works are created at Dien Donne Papermill in New York City.
She has taught papermaking workshops all over the state of New Jersey. She feels that “artists today no longer define paper as a sheet on which one places an image, but instead, use paper as a flexible, pliable medium in which the image is part of the paper itself.” Some examples of Marie's work: (click to enlarge)
To view more of Marie's work visit her website mariesturken.artspan.com
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Permalink - 04.10.2007 | 03:06 PM | Artist Spotlight Add Comment (0) | Send to Friend | Print The works you are seeing here are scanned photographs of paintings, drawings, and prints. So you are looking at an electronic/digital representation. In the actual works themselves, you can see and feel the texture and scale of the cotton, linen, paint and charcoal. The tradition of an art that is made with hands, and that you can touch, is essential and human. But the website gives a good overview. Both my mother's mother and father's father could draw very well. I was mesmerized by a drawing my grandfather had made on cardboard and given to me for my birthday. But to me, as a child, it all seemed new. I felt that I was in my own world and blazing my own path, although I had many wonderful teachers and friends. In grade school, I was fortunate to study with George Chaplin, Stanley Lewis, and Roger Oberlie, and at boarding school with Mike King. Beginning with my college years at Stanford University, in Palo Alto, CA, I studied with Frank Lobdell, Nathan Olivera, and Keith Boyle. The sense of light in the Bay Area and the legacy of Park and Deibenkorn were influential. (I became interested in Beckmann then, who had been one of Olivera's teachers). At RISD, I studied with Victor Lara, Dean Ricardson, and Richard Merkin. (At the time, I was looking at Soyer, Benton, Henri, Bacon, Chagall, Giacometti, and Picasso). I painted on my own for two years after my undergraduate years. (I looked at Carra, Morandi, Sironi, and de Chirico). At Yale, my teachers included William Bailey, Bernard Chaet, Rackstraw Downes, Gretna Campbell, and Lester Johnson. (Added to my mentors would be works by little-known Haitian artists from the nineteen-twenties to which my brother Leland introduced me. And I admired Hopper and Balthus). At the Woodstock School of Art, I learned a lot from Bob Angeloch. The teachers at WSA would actually work along with their students. That made a lot of down-to-earth sense to me. (I liked the work of Utrillo, Canaletto, Gerard David, and Stanley Spencer). Finally, there is a French connection with my longtime favorite artists: Van Gogh, Gauguin, Cezanne, Matisse, and Picasso, all of whom worked there. Throughout most of my life, I have enjoyed interactions with many amazing artists and friends. They mean a lot to me and it is largely for them that I felt inspired to create this site, as a way to keep the dialog going. I lived in Brooklyn, NY for eleven years, in a little garret that was my studio, before moving to Woodstock, NY (where I had spent a few weeks each summer for about ten years) to live full time for two years. Finally, I came to Farmington, CT to live and teach at Miss Porter's School. I am interested in the world within, the psychology of being, the spiritual. This is a devotion, and a process. Interiors and buildings interest me. There is a parallel. Light comes into a place. There is depth. Many of the images are of places where I have lived and worked. The work is metaphorical. The ideas that come, seem to me to be a gift, and my job is to serve as a conduit for them, in reverence to the creative force. Those whom I love, those who affect me, are here in my work. Some examples of Grier's Work: (click to enlarge) Please visit www.griertorrence.com to see more of his work. The work shown on this site currently spans thirty years. The home page is a self portrait from 1974. There are recent works here from 2006, and works from along the way. They represent a small selection of pieces from each of the chapters of my life. The works result from a combination of perception, imagination, memory, translation, and improvisation. The landscapes are mostly done on the spot, whereas the studio pieces have a more varied and possibly complex evolution. Drawing often plays an important and fundamental roll, and so the drawings are here too. Hopefully there is a balance of form and content; the abstract elements of pictorial construction and the narrative.
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Permalink - 04.09.2007 | 03:06 PM | Artist Spotlight Add Comment (1) | Send to Friend | Print |
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*Utrecht Art Supplies is not responsible for any damage to personal property that may result from use of any of the above articles. These documents are intended for reference only.
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