Sunday, January 31, 2021

who sneaks a peek in pink?


                                                            p jaisini 
                                                      profile picture 
                                                          gif edition 
                                                     pink hearts texture

Friday, January 29, 2021

So I was asked why I would selflessly promote another artist, what’s in it for me


So… So… So I was asked why I would selflessly promote another artist, what’s in it for me, and all kinds of silly, cynical crap… First of all, Paul Jaisini has gained a pretty impressive, solid following and mostly underground fame for his very original and awesome concepts. 
It will be milleniums before the masses “get it” and catch up (as always). I, along with other *fans* (look this word up), never promote anyone but am simply sharing my taste of what I consider to be superior fine art— what moves my soul— what fascinates, illuminates, inspires me. As an artist myself, I take my admiration to the next level and turn it into “hommage art” and if I am “promoting” something, it’s a radical idea of a new art movement, a new and improved vision of art, that will save the dying art world and everyone in it. My reply to the question asked is: I actually don’t do anything different from you or anyone else. Everyone posts content of famous people—songs, images, videos, text, etc—as well as viral content, so I could say you’re either promoting that or simply sharing your taste like me, your favorite things as a fan. Just because someone is unknown or not famous enough yet to be a household name doesn’t mean they can’t have fans who are inspired by their talent enough to share it with others. Its already been established countless times as a hard fact that fame does *not* give someone worth, so worshipping non/semi famous people vs super famous ones is *no difference* whatsoever. Famous is a very loaded word. Everyone is “famous” in their own right and some people couldn’t care less if they get plenty of attention or an ocean of fans for their work because they do it for themselves and are happy regardless. More people need to understand and respect that.

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

HOT DOG PATROL Jaisini

related


art collage in neon glitch







Tony Shafrazi

Tony Shafrazi Gallery 

Artwork by Tony Shafrazi, the famous art dealer and owner of Tony Shafrazi gallery.

Materials: acrylic polyurethane, water based printing medium with pure pigments, waterborne polyester resin base with pure pigments, urethane primer, and epoxy resin on fiberglass.' The scale for each work is about 60 x 36 x 6 inches.

How do you Like it??? 


Art dealers are people too. 
If Tony Shafrazi grew to be the artist, he 
should close his commercial famous 
gallery for now and go to the streets.
 Tony, don't forget the brushes...

internet friendly fine art!

painting of stelly riesling in glittered frame for online presentation internet friendly

painting of stelly riesling in glittered frame for online presentation internet friendly

Monday, January 25, 2021

stellycious: Virtual friends invade my dreams...




stellycious: Virtual friends invade my dreams...: "GET HIM" When Facebook friends--or those of other social networking sites--decide to crash your unconscious party, that's when...
                                    

Saturday, January 23, 2021

It's a silly enough picture... by Stelly Richie The problem with people... Paul Jaisini said



Stelly Richie It's a silly enough picture to make one think. Could there possibly be a deeper meaning to the silliness? There must be! Anything that is glorified as an artistic creation must be quite meaningful no matter how random, abstract, whimsical, or mysterious. Otherwise, what's the point? Just because you can't think of anything doesn't mean the answer is not there. The correct answer is inside of YOU and what the creator was trying to depict is irrelevant, especially when they weren't trying to depict anything at all.



Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Behind The Stage.Review of Julie Schenkelberg Bad Blood @ Asya Geisberg Gallery.




Epigraph
All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players.


I don't often write art reviews. Once I was called by my inner voice to go see an opening at the new gallery of Ms. Asya Geisberg. My viewing of the show was random, without any hint from a press release. I spoke to the artist, Julie Schenkelberg impressed by her "true artist" sincerious and magnetic persona. Later in a comfort of my home, I reviewed the videos and pictures. This was when my "aha moment" happened. I no longer looked at the installation show that was not entirely unconventional, rather mainstream of postmodern deconstruction that plays out similar response on encounter. Was the installation a correction of real or it was the real correction of surreal... Each piece Cowered, In the Supper Rooms, Streetcar showed a point of breakage, obscured composition but held it together in a fragmented mode. I had a feeling that flatness was in fact the desired effect with the artistic striving, crave to bring as much life as possible out of the flat picture space, have the images literally jump off the canvas.
to me I probably would of walked I dare not say that from the conceptual installations this one was my favorite. The art about fragmented, distorted nature of perception. How far could one go to create a coherent concept of memory, a story of memory, or illustrate what hardly could be put in shape and form, fleeting unstable process of remembering.

Happy Art, Optimism by Jeff Koons



Jeff Koons show "Jeff Koons" at the Fondation Beyeler, Basel, a photo by gleitzeit2012 on Flickr.

#endless #possibilities #of #the #art #gif #girl #glitter #elements #silver #tinsel #collage #mix #art

















ART 43 BASEL

Basel, Switzerland
June 14-17, 2012

The color of hope, the color of happiness.
An epoch of optimism in art.


A prevailing tendency in art to entertain the viewer could mean one thing: we enter a new epoch of optimism with the art trend defined as Optimistic. 

"Happy pill" art from the postmodern depression with its dark labyrinths of cerebral pluralistic pessimism. 
Happy -- Optimistic art is here not to preach, not to enlighten, not to call for rebellion or cause shock effect, but simply to entertain.