Artist Creates App to Promote His Abstract Works

ARTISTS. Here is a brilliant example of an entrepreneurial artist who using today’s technology to create his own opportunities for greater exposure and sales.

The “Goldberg Lite” app created by artist Colin Goldberg lets art lovers use some of his original artworks as wallpaper for their iPhones, iPads, and iPod Touch devices. It is also the first app that combines wallpaper functionality with the ability to purchase signed limited-edition prints of each piece via the Etsy online marketplace.

App created by artist Colin Goldberg
Goldberg Lite app features works by artist Colin Goldberg

Goldberg’s artwork (some of which is currently on display at his “Paint and Pixels” solo exhibition at the Yes! Gallery in Brooklyn) explores the abstract imagery of the future. His influences include the New York School Abstract Expressionist painters of the 1950’s, graffiti art, and Shodo, the art of Japanese calligraphy.

The artwork images included in the app are based on works Goldberg has created over the past 12 years. The works featured in the “Mixed Media” section features Goldberg’s signature blend of painting and digital art. The pieces in the “Digital” section are abstract digital compositions drawn using a graphics tablet and vector-based imaging software.

Goldberg not only created the artwork for the app, but also designed the interface and functionality of the mobile application. The free app is now available in the Apple App Store. An ad-free version (simply called “Goldberg”) sells for $1.99 and includes 65 additional artwork images.

Paint and Pixels Exhibition at Yes! Gallery

The “Paint and Pixels” exhibition of Goldberg’s work at the Yes! Gallery opened December 17 and runs through January 13. At the exhibit, you can see the unique, multi-dimensional effects created when Goldberg superimposes computer-assisted strokes on traditionally painted surfaces. You may sense that we’re entering a new era, in which paint and pixels are merging to form a new visual language.

Over the past 20 years, Goldberg’s works have been exhibited across the United States, including shows at the Roberson Museum in Binghamton, New York, the Parrish Art Museum in Southampton, New York, and the Boston CyberArts Festival.

While living in Manhattan, the artist was commissioned by the Earth Day Network to create digital artworks which were projected 200 feet tall onto the Empire State Building during the Earth Day festival.

One of Goldberg’s canvasses resides in the permanent collection of the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center in Springs, New York, the former home and studio of painters Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner.

Audiovisual Art

In the Installations section of Goldberg’s website, you see several audiovisual pieces, including “Metavision,” which he created in collaboration with the German electronic musician Intersolar. For “Metavision,” Goldberg separated 12 of his abstract digital drawings into layers and used motion graphics software to create animation segments. These segments were then edited together in a video sequence. Intersolar created an original score for the piece, which was exhibited in 2011 on a projection-based video installation. Goldberg published the work as a limited-edition DVD.

LINK

iTunes Preview: Goldberg Lite Free Abstract Art Wallpapers for iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch

Website: Colin A. Goldberg

Paint and Pixels Exhibition: Yes! Gallery

See Digital Canvas and Other Advanced Displays at Miami Art and Design Shows

ARTISTS. DESIGNERS. The art lovers gathering in Miami this week for Art Basel Miami Beach, Design Miami, PULSE Contemporary Art Fair, and Artexpo’s Miami SOLO show will see some innovative digital displays and concepts specifically for the fine art market. The displays feature specialized optical enhancements and  electronics, as well as frames designed to appeal to institutional or individual art collectors.

Planar Systems, a leading provider of specialty display systems and an innovator
in architectural displays, will be supporting the exhibits of 50 artists at Design Miami, Miami SOLO show, and PULSE. Some of their displays will feature creatively designed video walls; others will incorporate Samsung’s new SM’ART liquid-crystal canvas panels.

 

"Flowers" by Simon Bull on Samsung Sm'art Liquid Crystal Canvas panel

Liquid Crystal Canvas Panels

At Artexpo’s Miami SOLO show, Planar and Samsung Electronics will be displaying the works of 30 emerging artists on Samsung’s SM’ART “liquid-crystal canvas panels.” Samsung’s canvas panels are designed to capture the brushstrokes and colors of original paintings with LED backlighting. Planar has fine tuned the panels to capture the brilliance of each painting.

“We believe that the digital fine art market has a great opportunity to create a new ecosystem for consumers and collectors to be able to select, purchase, and then enjoy art just like they do in a gallery today,” said Scott Birnbaum, vice president of new business development for Samsung Semiconductor, Inc.

"Sunny House" by Kent Wallis on Samsung Sm'art Liquid Crystal Canvas panel

In Miami, Planar and Samsung will not only be showcasing their innovations, they will also be exploring the many ways artists, gallerists, and collectors might want to use digital displays. For example, here are some of the possibilities.

  • Collectors will be able to own the digital rights to “ageless” limited editions. The art can be selected, purchased and delivered seamlessly from archives stored in the cloud, without the risks associated with shipping and physical deterioration.
  • Wall art displays can easily be changed electronically according to the art buyer’s mood, design décor, party theme, or season.
  • Veteran and emerging artists alike can expand their exposure and initiate “digital collector clubs” that put them directly in touch with digital buyers from around the world.

“Samsung Sm’art LCD technology has broken through the barriers of technology and art,” said Eric Smith, CEO of Artexpo’s Miami SOLO. “We believe it heralds a new paradigm for collectors, publishers and institutional buyers.”

At the Artexpo-sponsored show, Planar and Samsung will present art by Artexpo studio artists such as Malena Assing, Michael Bedoian, Jeanne Bessette, James Caldwell III, Charles C. Carter, Lynette Joel, Roland Morin, Kristen Naugle, Tina Palmer, Hans Petersen, Lisa-Anne Rego, Ilene Richard, Suzanne Strock, and Kent R. Wallis. Their art will feature multiple paint mediums and styles from traditional to contemporary.

Samsung’s  liquid-crystal canvas panels will also be used to highlight a new type of “moving art,” that fuses traditional painting techniques with cutting-edge digital effects. The moving art of Steve Matson will be exhibited.

“Planar’s 28-year history in displays for specialty applications and Samsung’s
SM’ART technology well-equips us to respond to the needs of the fine art community who require exceptional art reproduction,” said Jennifer Davis, vice president of marketing for Planar Systems. “From our pioneering work in home cinema to demanding signage applications, our display products illustrate the creativity, reliability, and image performance that will make Planar displays the artist’s choice for digital canvas.”

After exhibiting at Artexpo’s Miami SOLO show, Samsung’s liquid crystal canvas,
will be showcased at Artexpo New York in March.

Art organizations and artists who are interested in participating in one of Samsung’s SM’ART electronic galleries are invited to contact Scott Birnbaum by email at: [email protected].

Creative Variations of a Video Wall

At Design Miami, Planar is supporting the Avant Gallery pop-up venue produced in partnership with Surface Magazine. Planar is providing 10-ft. high architecturally designed video walls that will be used to exhibit the works of top industrial and furniture  artists Chad Jensen, Michael Philip Wolfson and Pryor Callaway.

“We are excited to explore the digital display realm with noted artists and  Planar video walls for the very first time at our new gallery,” says Dmitry  Prut, founder of Avant Gallery in Miami Beach.

At the PULSE contemporary art fair, the Cristin Tierney Gallery is using Planar’s Clarity™ Matrix LX-46 media wall to exhibit “No Feeling is Final,” a work by multi-media artist Yorgo Alexopoulos. The installation will be for sale in limited edition through the Cristin Tierney Gallery.

Planar can create digital displays that go beyond traditional signage or television formats

“Planar is envisioning new ways to utilize technology in design,” said Jennifer Davis, Vice President of Marketing, Planar. “Our products are enabling designers and artists alike to utilize our digital canvases in architectural  concepts, even sculptural implementations that were never before possible.”

Beyond the traditional black rectangle, Planar’s video wall array can be configured into structural, sculptural shapes that serve as a digital container for creative content for the retail, hospitality and corporate environments.

LINKS

About Planar Systems

 

Billboard Art Project Offers Visual Relief from Ad Messages

ARTISTS. Would you like to see your work displayed on a roadside billboard? If so, watch for the 2012 schedule of the Billboard Art Project. The project is run by a nonprofit organization that acquires digital billboards normally used for advertising and repurposes them as roadside galleries.

The types of work displayed include images created specifically for the billboard as well as images that have been adapted to the format. Each show is open to all individuals and groups who are interested in participating.

The first Billboard Art Project debuted in Richmond, Virginia in October 2010. Since then, shows have been scheduled in Duluth, Chicago, Reading, New Orleans, Baton Rouge and San Bernardino. No two Billboard Art Project shows are alike. Each city features new work.

The show’s founder, David Morrison, was inspired to create The Billboard Art Project after seeing some test images on a newly erected LED digital billboard while he was driving to work. He said the images were like the desktop wallpaper pictures that come preloaded on your personal computer, but “they carried a striking resonance when displayed on a billboard.”

He found it refreshing to see something other than advertising posted on the billboard. Now that advertising messages are everywhere we look, he says “When you see a billboard that isn’t telling you what to buy or who to trust, it carries the impact of the unexpected.”

Visit The Billboard Art Project website for more information about applying for the show. To see work that has been displayed and announcements of upcoming shows, visit the Facebook page for The Billboard Art Project.

LINKS

Website: The Billboard Art Project

Facebook Page: The Billboard Art Project

 

Online VIP Art Fair 2.0 Scheduled for February 3-8, 2012

ARTISTS. VIP Art Fair, the world’s first contemporary art fair held exclusively online, has announced that its second fair, VIP2.0, will be held February 3-8, 2012. Top international galleries will offer artworks from $500 to over $1 million.

Launched in January 2011, VIP Art Fair leverages Internet technology to create a live, online marketplace to view, learn about and purchase artworks by leading artists from around the world.

Fair Director Noah Horowitz explains, “VIP takes the successful model of physical art fairs and opens it to a much broader audience, empowering the connection between the engaged art community and the world’s most prominent dealers.”

Already 100 galleries from 32 countries, including additions from Latin America and Middle East, have registered to exhibit. Galleries include Zwirner (NYC), White Cube (London), Pace (NYC, Beijing), Hetzler (Berlin), Ropac (Paris, Salzburg), Fraenkel (San Francisco), Goodman (NYC, Paris) and Hyundai (Seoul).

The company’s new VP of Engineering Severin Andrieu-Delille states, “At our inaugural fair, systems struggled with high traffic volume, and the site experienced technical issues. In response, we’ve completed major upgrades, adding substantial server and bandwidth resources. Significant load testing makes us confident we’ll meet peak demand, delivering a flawless, content-rich experience for our exhibitors and visitors.”

A new Museums and Editions Hall will enable visitors to purchase editions from top international institutions. Enhanced social media integration with Twitter and Facebook will invite visitors to join conversations and share favorites. The VIP Art Fair will support all web-browsers, iPad, and mobile devices.

Popular features such as interactive Booths and a VIP Lounge will be retained, with enhanced Chat functionality.

Demographics from the inaugural VIP Art Fair show that moving the art fair online is a welcome innovation. The week-long event in January, 2011 drew an audience of over 40,000 visitors from 196 countries who spent more than an hour on the site viewing over 200 unique artworks.

As a portal to the world’s premiere contemporary art galleries, VIP Art Fair enables dealers to connect with existing clients, would-be collectors to discover the art world, and students, educators, critics and curators to access contemporary artists.

LINK

VIPArtFair.com

 

Streaming Museum Gives Artists Worldwide Exposure

ARTISTS. DESIGNERS. Have you heard about the Streaming Museum? I hadn’t, until I received a news release from Brazilian architect and urban planner Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta. The news release describes his vision of a new approach to designing Earth-orbiting structures, such as hotels and observatories that would accommodate larger numbers of space tourists. His ideas are depicted in the “Kairos” exhibition which opened at the Streaming Museum earlier this month.

About the Streaming Museum

Launched January 29, 2008, Streaming Museum is a hybrid museum that presents multimedia exhibitions in cyberspace and public space on seven continents and live programming at partnering cultural centers. The exhibitions are generated in collaboration with international cultural, educational, and public centers and artists, curators and visionary creators.

Streaming Museum is produced in New York, and broadcast to sites such as the city’s Big Screen Plaza. The museum’s exhibitions have been seen on big, outdoor screens in cities such as Milan, Italy; Seoul, South Korea; Melbourne, Australia; Bucharest, Romania; Port Elizabeth, South Africa; and in multiple cities in England. Exhibitions have also been streamed to South Korea, Norway, Greece, and Argentina’s Jubany Scientific Base in Antarctica.

Screen in the Piazza Duomo, Milan, Italy

One goal of the museum is to emphasize the role of the arts and technology in global society. Art of all cultures is presented side-by-side symbolizing society’s global interconnectedness and the valuable contributions that all cultures provide.

The inaugural exhibition of the Streaming Museum honored pioneering video artist Nam June Paik and his 1970s-era prediction of an electronic superhighway as a free medium for imagination and the exchange of cultures. This first exhibition was viewed at one public-screen location on each of the seven continents at precisely the same time. Since then, Streaming Museum exhibitions have been viewed at over 45 locations worldwide.

According to Streaming Museum’s founder and creative director Nina Colosi, the idea for creating an ongoing international distribution network for art and culture originated in 2004 when she was working with media artist, curator, and professor Zhang Ga on his global public artwork: “People’s Portrait.” Zhang Ga installed picture-taking kiosks next to large screens in major international cities and connected them to a central server via the Internet. People could snap their pictures and view them on the adjacent screen, along with portraits of people from the other cities.

Colosi describes the Streaming Museum’s exhibitions as “a mash-up/sampling/remix of fine art and pop culture that make up a portrait of the contemporary world.”

She said the museum curates exhibitions of emerging and established artists. In addition to exhibitions similar to those you can see in the museum’s archives, the museum is planning new exhibitions of interactive work, augmented reality, gaming, and performing arts.

“We keep a file of work by artists who submit to us, with special consideration given to artists recommended by colleagues.” said Colosi.

Exhibitions can circulate for an indefinite period, and artworks can be exhibited across multiple platforms—online, in public spaces, and at partnering cultural and commercial centers.

“For example,” says Colosi. “Over the course of three years, Mark Amerika’s ‘Immobilite’ remixes and John Simon’s ‘HD Traffic’ and other artworks have been viewed throughout the global network and also presented in a live performance at Juilliard at Lincoln Center and exhibited at The Project Room for New Media at Chelsea Art Museum.

Colosi reports that artists whose work has been featured in the Streaming Museum have gained the attention of other curators and have been invited to participate in other projects. She considers one of the best benefits of exhibiting art through the Streaming Museum is “enriching a global demographic that may not have the opportunity to see art.”

LINKS

Streaming Museum

The Project Room for New Media and Performing Arts

About the Kairos Project

Kairos represents a new approach to architecture that imagines a time when architects are asked to design buildings that don’t have to consider Earth’s gravity. As architect Emanuel Pimenta points out, “Until now, the entire history of architecture is based on the force of gravity.” But there may come a time when human expansion on Earth will no longer be possible. Thus, Pimenta says Kairos is “also a questioning about a new civilizational leap.”

“Until now, we have had no example of true architecture in space,” he explains. “Buildings related to satellites or space stations have been focused on tubular systems—a heritage from missile design.” The type or orbiting structure that Pimenta has envisioned is totally tensioned, with flexible, antiballistic fabrics and internal movable walls.

"Kairos" by Emanuel Pimenta

“We could call it a water building, because all walls are filled with water,” he points out. “It is completely deprogrammable, which means the original program, the functions of each internal space, can be easily and quickly changed at low cost.”

Pimenta views his architectural design as conceptual artwork. But the building design also takes into account technological challenges such as energy, water, exposure to space junk, and how the absence of Earth’s gravity will affect the spatial orientation of building occupants. To help others understand his vision, Pimenta has produced a series of drawings, digital images, a movie, and book.

After being launched at New York’s Streaming Museum, Kairos will continue on a year-long tour through the Streaming Museum’s global network of screens in public spaces. In October, the exhibition will also be shown at the Robotarium contemporary art and technology center in Lisbon, Portugal. The book, “Kairos: A Bird Orbiting Planet Earth” will debut on Amazon.com in November.

LINKS

“Kairos” by Emanuel Pimenta

About Emanuel Pimenta

 

Online Art Gallery Helps Emerging Artists Gain Exposure

ARTISTS. The Light Space & Time Online Art Gallery was created to help new and emerging artists gain experience in applying for and participating in art competitions. Light, Space & Time also strives to help artists gain exposure to decision-makers from the art world.

Each month, Light Space & Time Online conducts a themed online art competition. The winners of each competition are promoted on the gallery’s website and featured in an email to gallery owners and directors, corporate art representations, and others from the art and design world.

The theme for the August competition is “Seasons.” The competition is open to all 2D artists (including photography, but excluding video). The top five finalists will be featured in a group exhibition in the Light, Space & Time Online Art Gallery during the month of September. The deadline for entering is August 29. All winners will be announced on September 1.

The gallery and monthly competition were founded by John R. Math, an art photographer who successfully sells his work through art galleries and art representatives. He recalls how hard it was to break into the art market, and thought to himself, “There must be an easier way.” So, he formed the online gallery to help give talented artists an opportunity to develop their art resumes and quickly and economically get wider exposure for their work.

LINK

 Light Space & Time Online Gallery

 

See New Forms of Art at Boston Cyberarts Festival

Logo for Boston Cybertarts FestivalDozens of events at the Boston Cyberarts Festival scheduled for April 22 through May 8 will challenge the public to look at art in whole new ways. For example, events include: an interactive, virtual-reality visit with an Egyptian oracle; an exhibition of dynamic digital paintings; and two demonstrations of how augmented reality can be used for public art projects.

Virtual Reality Exhibit
Commonly used in gaming, virtual reality refers to computer-simulated environments in which a physical presence is simulated in a real or imaginary world. The Egyptian Oracle event at the Boston Cyberarts Festival will use a virtual-reality, interactive narrative based on the Egyptian tradition of the public oracle to help audiences develop a deeper understanding of Egyptian culture.

Vitural Reality
Courtyard of the virtual Temple of Horus

Scheduled from 2 to 4 pm on Sunday, May 1 at the Cyberarts Central headquarters at Atlantic Wharf, the event will focus on an important religious event from the Ptolemic Period.  An expert puppeteer will virtually control an avatar of an Egyptian high priest, who will collaborate with live educators, other figures in the virtual Temple of Horus, and the audience. The event will be filmed for a general discussion afterward.

Augmented Reality Art Projects
Augmented Reality provides rich, interactive experiences to smartphone users by overlaying images, information, and graphics on top of our real-time view of the world around us. During the CyberArts festival, augmented-reality art projects will be demonstrated to smartphone users at two popular sites in Boston.

See Aliens Invade Boston’s Greenway Park: Mark Swarek and Joseph Hocking will present an augmented reality-experience at Boston’s Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway Park. Entitled “Occupation Forces,” the art project enables people who have downloaded a special “alien detection app” to see invading aliens that will go undetected by the unsuspecting public. App users will encounter the invaders at multiple locations and watch the occupation intensify as they near the center of the park.

Occupation Forces Augmented Reality Project at Greenway Park

See Virtual Public Art at the Institute of Contemporary Art: The artists’ collective Manifest.AR has produced an augmented reality app that uses geolocation software to superimpose a virtual exhibition of computer-generated art objects in and around Boston’s Institute of Contemporary Art. From 3 to 5 pm on Friday, April 22, the artists will be on hand at the ICA to demonstrate how to access the work and talk about individual projects.

Image of iPad showing virutal art at Institute of Contemporary Art
“Parade to Hope” is one of the virtual art projects that will be installed by Manifest.AR and viewed through a Layar augmented-reality app at the Institute of Contemporary Art.

Participating artists include Mark Skwarek, John Craig Freeman, Will Pappenheimer, Tamiko Thiel, Sander Veenhof, Virta-Flaneurazine, Patrick Lichty, Lily & Honglei, Christopher Marnzione, Arthur Peters, Geoffrey Alan Rhodes, Nathan Shafer, Joseph Hocking, 4 Gentlemen, and Damon Baker.

Dynamic Digital Imagery
In the “Fluid Perimeters” exhibition of dynamic digital imagery, festival-goers can see examples of dynamic digital painting, digital animations, and algorithmically generated software that explores digital and artificial life.

A dynamic digital painting is one in which a static digital painting slowly, but continuously morphs into something slightly different. (For a demonstration of a dynamic digital painting, watch the YouTube video on the website of the artist San Base: www.sanbase.com)

At the Boston CyberArts Festival, the “Fluid Perimeters” exhibition will feature works by Brian Knep, Robert Arnold, Dennis Miller, Andrew Neumann, Mark Stock, and Dan Hermes.

About The Boston CyberArts Festival
The biennial Boston Cyberarts Festival showcases the rich and vibrant world of art and high technology in New England. Cyberart encompasses any artistic endeavor in which computer technology is used to expand artistic possibilities.

LINKS

The Boston Cyberarts Festival

Egyptian Oracle Virtual-Reality Interactive Narrative

Occupation Forces: an Augmented Reality Experience

Manifest.AR: Interventionist Public Art

Fluid Perimeters: An Exhibition of Dynamic Digital Imagery

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