Search results for: “Ryan Myers”

  • An Interview with Ryan Myers

    We asked Art Star artist, Ryan Myers, to create an exclusive piece for us & I love what he came up with: Naptime Was His Kryptonite, oil on canvas (below). The original can be purchased for $350 or you can pick up an archival pigment print for just $25!

    "Naptime was his Kryptonite", oil on canvas

    I thought this would be a great opportunity to highlight Ryan & his work! Check out my interview with him below.

    What is your art background? Where did you study?
    Art has always sort of been part of my life. I can’t think of a time growing up where I wasn’t at the very least drawing. I have a degree in illustration and art history from Hartford Art School in Ct..

    How long have you been painting?
    I started painting in college. I got serious about showing my work the way it looks now in about 2004.

    Have you always painted children? How much of your own childhood inspires this imagery?
    I definitely haven’t always painted children. I came out of art school content on being an editorial illustrator, so my work was focused on whatever the job required. There wasn’t a lot of personal work then. I am not sure there’s a lot of my childhood in the kids I paint now, but obviously all my experiences help inform the paintings.

    "Adoration of the Snozzwanger", oil on wood

    The way that you draw the children & the overall color palette is very cute & sweet, but I get a deep sense of sadness & loneliness when looking at your work. I am assuming that is intentional? Do you have back stories for these children? I am curious why they are so sad.
    This is a tough question with a few parts, so I’ll do my best to tie this one up with a nice little bow. The cute and sweet colors matched against the feelings of sadness and loneliness are definitely intentional. To use a loaded art word it’s basically for the juxtaposition of the emotions. I don’t typically think of the kids as sad. There are some of the teary-eyed exceptions, more typically though I like to think they are just completely indifferent to everything going on around them. They may not be happy, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they are sad. I feel like much more emotion can be attached to a non-smiling face. Obviously I have some sense of a story when I begin work, but they don’t really have back stories. I like to include just enough in the paintings to hint at a back story, but leave the scene open to interpretation. The viewers are interrupting something that’s going on in the painting and it’s their job to figure out what.

    How much of the work is autobiographical? I notice that your dog makes a bunch of appearances with a little boy, which makes me wonder if that little boy is supposed to be you.
    I wouldn’t say that the little boys are me beyond the dark hair and eyes. I use some aspects of my daily life to inform some of the symbols and elements that reoccur in my paintings. It’s more like a familiarity that I am comfortable with, like keepsakes in a curio cabinet, than an autobiography.

    "The House Call", oil on canvas

    You are a father with two small children now, correct? How much is your imagery inspired by them?
    Yes that’s right, I’m blessed with two beautiful children. I’m not sure that they themselves inspire my imagery, it’s more like their stuff does. The tiny clothes and toys usually give me a good jumping off point. Having two big eyed models at my disposal certainly helps though.

     

    What is your artistic process like? Do you begin with an emotion / story & then go from there?
    I’ve never been really good at explaining the process, but I can give it a go. I really always start off with an idea that makes me laugh – it’s sort of strange to say that though considering people so often speak of the sadness or haunting feelings of the paintings. For a long time I came up with the titles for paintings first and then worked out an image to suit. Occasionally I still do that, but more typically now I’ll get myself in the mood to work with music and depending what I am working on I’ll either start a drawing on paper or work things out right on the canvas.

    Are there any particular artists that you are inspired by?
    Inspiration is a funny thing… I feel like I am probably more inspired by Pee Wee Herman or something than another artist, but there are a few artists I really enjoy who have probably helped me towards my style. Artists like Giorgio de Chirico and Magritte really did a lot for the weird stillness I use in my paintings. I have got a few others, but I can’t give away all my secrets. Contemporarily though, I really like artists who work graphically, Toki Doki (Simone Legno) comes to mind first.

    Do you paint full time? If not, what do you do for a day job?
    I don’t actually paint full time. I work for the Post Office and am one of those rare people who really enjoys their job.

    Any upcoming shows on the horizon?
    I do have a few things lined up for the future – some I can’t talk about yet, but coming up soon I’m going to have a few pieces in a group show in Santa Fe.

    What are you working on right now?
    It always feels like I am juggling a few things. Right now I am working on some new types of images, but I’ve got a backlog of canvases that I’ve been working on in my studio for a while that I will try and wrap up soon. I also have some private commissions as well as some fun give away plans in the works.

    Check out our collection of Ryan’s paintings & drawings
    visit his website

  • Meet The Maker: Kristin Myers

    Me and Dagmar

    Hello! Greetings from an 18 mile sandbar that hugs the Atlantic Ocean. My name is Kristin, and I am a visual artist living in Surf City, NJ. It’s a beautiful place to live and is a constant source of inspiration. I haven’t always been an ocean inspired artist, however. In fact, I grew up outside of Philadelphia, and had early ambitions of becoming a cartoonist like my favorite artist, Charles Schultz.

    While I spent the majority of my youth drawing cartoons, I also spent my summers at the beach fine tuning my deep appreciation of the ocean. I have been a surfer since before I wore a training bra and always figured I would grow up to be a famous beach loving, surfing cartoonist. Well, that sort of happened…

    KM_A Sea of Secrets copy

    I received my BFA and MFA from great art schools where I studied the masters of art throughout history, the rules of color theory, compositional techniques, the theory of art (a whole lot of b.s. in my opinion) and why every artist feels the need to use the word “juxtaposition” to describe their art. I loved being an art student, even though I wasn’t the best student. If I’m being honest, I would have to admit that I regularly cut class to go surfing whenever the swell was up. What can I say? The ocean and art have always been my two greatest loves. After a total of seven years in an academic setting, three years working in a gallery, three years teaching college level classes, countless travels to foreign countries with coastlines still striving to find that perfect wave, I think only recently have I finally started to figure out what makes an artist, and more importantly, who I am.

    KM_Shark Bite! copy

    Not surprisingly, my art has always been about the ocean. Drawing and the ocean are my true passions, as they are intricately connected. My drawings are about fusing that connection with meticulously detailed lines and an attention to the fluid spontaneity of the ocean. (there’s the art school/academic coming out in me!) Sometimes my art incorporates some of my favorite ocean themed stories such as: Moby Dick or Jaws. Other times, I am more interested in describing my last perfect wave or a recent trip to a new coast in as much detail as a .005 micron pen will permit. Almost all of my art is in some varying color blue and involves ink salt washes, repetitive wave patterns or an obscene amount of detailed lines. I also build my own frames, which are made from found and scavenged wood. I am always on the hunt for unique and weathered looking wood. A sea weathered piece of driftwood makes an absolutely perfect frame to display the great white whale attacking the Essex and if you don’t know the reference, I can’t help you.

    KM_The Orca's Last Voyage

    When I’m not hunched over a new drawing in my studio, I can be found walking the shores of my local beach, surfing or playing with my dogs. And if you are wondering what happened to that little girl who wanted to create the next generation of Snoopy and share it with the world, don’t worry, she is still very much apart of who I am today. In fact, I love dogs and doodles so much that I even paint doggie portraits in my spare time. So maybe I didn’t become a famous cartoonist, but I am still the beach going, surfing, doodler that I was so long ago.

    KM_The Fate of the Essex

    This will be my first Art Star Craft Bazaar and I’m stoked for this new experience. I will be selling original paintings and drawings, prints of my originals and handmade frames, so come out and visit me at booth #79 this Mother’s Day Weekend.

  • New Items Arriving Daily!

    Thanks to everyone that supported us this holiday season.  We are feeling very thankful for wonderful, loyal customers!  The holiday shopping madness left our stock looking a bit picked over, so we have been working to replenish our inventory.  New items have been arriving daily.  Here is a peek at some of the new goodies we got in the last few days.  They are hitting the floor today & will be added to our online store soon!

    Original pencil drawings by Ryan Myers.

    Children’s books from our friends at Buy Olympia


    Porcelain Votive Candle Holders by Miss Millie.

    Jewelry + Soap Dishes by Miss Millie


    Sublime Stitching’s new line of Embroidery Floss in the most amazing color palettes like Frosting, Breakdance, Flower Box + More.

    and stunning tops & skirts by Malagueta

    We have so much in store for you in 2013 – please check back often!

  • ASCB Vendor Spotlight: Everyday Balloons

    We are excited to welcome new vendors Becki Hollen and Chris Bencivenga from Everyday Balloons!  Visit them at Booth #76!

    Becki + Chris from Everyday Balloons

    Did you go to art school? If so, where did you study?
    We both have BFAs from Edinboro University. That’s also where we met!

    What types of items will you be selling at the bazaar?
    We will have a variety of items screen printed with our original illustrations: t-shirts for people of all sizes, handmade totes and bottle bags, paper prints and more.

    Yellow Bunny Wine + Whiskey Bag by Everyday Balloons

    What materials do you work with?
    We will try to print on just about anything we can get our hands on, but mostly we stick to paper, fabric, and ink of course. Something we’ve been experimenting with is screen printing on shrinky dinks.

    a print in the works

    How are your items made? Describe your process.
    Initially everything starts with a drawing, sometimes we incorporate found patterns and textures. Then we make the layers for printing by cutting ruby lith and using paint markers. All our prints are hand pulled by us regardless of the material we’re printing on. Our handmade totes and bottle bags are cut out and individually pieced together. Each one is one of a kind.


    Are you able to make your work full-time?  If not, what do you do for your day job?
    Right now, Everyday Balloons is our after hours gig. We both have full-time printing jobs. Chris works at Commonwealth Press, a screen printing shop, and Becki works at Sapling Press, a letterpress printing shop.

    Robots & Satellites TShirt by Everyday Balloons

    Who are some of your favorite artists?
    Jay Ryan. The Little Friends of Printmaking. We’re big fans of Wes Anderson and we’ve recently started a small collection of My Paper Crane pieces.

    What are you reading/listening to right now?
    The Zombies, First Aid Kit, and The Beach Boys. We wish we had more time to read. Right now there’s a few cooking blogs we frequent (Shutterbean and The Kitchn to name a few) to support our other hobby, cooking.

    Bunny Onesie by Everyday Balloons

    Where would you like to see yourself and your art/craft business in the next 10 years? 
    We would love to be working for ourselves, making our art full time, and raising a family (and maybe some chickens) in a cabin in the woods.

    Visit their blog to learn more! http://everydayballoonsshop.tumblr.com/
    + become their fans on Facebook

  • Meet Rachel Sherman of Malagueta

    Rachel Sherman makes impeccably crafted clothing and accessories under the name Malagueta. Her surface manipulation on each garment is pretty amazing.  Learn more about her techniques & what inspires her.  And be sure to check her out at the bazaar at Booth 48 – all of her items are always neatly displayed by color!

    Art Star: Did you go to art school?  If so, where did you study?
    RS: I went to Moore College of Art and got my BFA in Textile Design.

    AS: What types of items will you be selling at the bazaar?
    RS: Skirts, tops, dresses, and wristlets….all of which will display some type of surface manipulation.

    AS: What materials do you work with?
    RS:
    Lots of jersey and woven fabrics all of which are plain on the surface, nothing printed, and textures are kept to a minimum. Whenever there is any leftover, which there usually is, I save it and use it for appliques, piecing, etc.


    AS: How are your items made? Describe your process.
    RS
    : I buy limited amounts of yardage that I first cut into the pattern pieces. Some styles I assemble COMPLETELY before I add any surface detail to them, while others can only be assembled AFTER the pattern pieces are cut then covered with surface work.  The techniques I use are found in traditional folk textiles such as Kuna Molas, Rahasthani dresses, and Korean Bojagi cloth.  Those techniques are reverse applique (layering fabrics then removing one layer at a time to reveal specific colors underneath), couching (sewing yarn onto fabric with thread, either by hand or sewing machine), piecing (gathering fabric pieces of different shapes and colors and sewing them together to emphasize bold color compostions or using the opaque seams to emphasize line compostions).


    AS: Are you able to make your work full-time?  If not, what do you do for your day job?
    RS: Malagueta is almost full-time work, however I do squeeze in block-printing one day a week, the occasional sewing project for someone, then top it off with a samba performance or a gig teaching design to high school students.


    AS: Who are some of your favorite artists?
    RS: EVERY SINGLE ONE OF MY ARTIST FRIENDS of course and Lee Bontecou, Friedrich Hundertwasser, Francoise Gilot, Jay Ryan of The Bird Machine

    AS: What are you reading/listening to right now?
    RS
    : Chet Atkins, The Might Sparrow, Jorge Ben and other Brasilian Artists.  I will be reading Bossy Pants as soon as my sister is done with it.

  • Eling of Migration Goods Shares Her ASCB Shopping List

    Hi everyone! Eling from migration goods here. As a maker I rarely get enough time to properly shop at the events I am vending at, and this is doubly so during the fall + holiday seasons. I am always kicking myself at the end of a show because I haven’t had enough time to complete my own shopping!

    This year I decided I would try to organize + plan my holiday shopping ahead of time for events that I know will have really great vendors– like, yup, the upcoming Fall Art Star Bazaar!

    Here’s what’s on my list (so far)!

    All of Dirty Ass Soap‘s soaps are so fun, but this ramen soap is definitely tops on my list for gifts this year (hope none of the potential recipients are reading this)

    Also on my list for gift shopping (and in the category of food related accessories): The everything bagel necklace from inedible jewelry

    and the amazing Old Bay Seasoning earrings from Flat Rat Studio. (Their pet portraits are totally on my own wishlist too).

    I’m obsessed with paper goods & can never find enough time to look at them all! But I’ll be making a point to find Bowerbox Press next weekend for this card & to check out all the rest of the lovely work in person.

     More paper goods please! I can’t wait to see Sarah Ryan‘s sweet cards + illustrations up close!

    For my book-loving friends (and me too), I’m very excited to pick up these bookmarks from New Academy Press, and this super-cute tote from Common Rebels too.

    Common Rebels also makes a ton of cute cat items, which I will be shopping for my cat-loving friends. Speaking of those cat friends, I’ll also be looking for this sweet cat lover scarf from Red Prarie Press.

    If my friends/family are very very good, they might find themselves the recipients of one of these gorgeous spoons or sake cups from Melissa Weiss Pottery (I’m coveting these ramen bowls for myself).

    And how cute is this stegosaurus from By Yivvie? Some tiny (or not so tiny) people I know may need a few of these plushes…

    A couple other items I will be checking out for some potentially very lucky folks include this beautiful whale skeleton necklace from J.TOPOLSKI (I am saving up for this sloth bracelet for ME!)

     and the beautiful printed work of Bonnie Kaye Studio — so good!


    Finally, I’m really excited to see these diorama & miniature pieces from metamorphosis metals up close!


    And I won’t be leaving without a print for myself from Naughty & Nice. I’m pretty sure I want Tag You Are It (below), but I’m also eyeing The Terror of the Sea

    really hope I get a chance to see all of these things in person next weekend, but at least I’ve made my list, right? There are SO MANY talented artists + makers vending at the Fall Art Star Bazaaron November 8th + 9th. Don’t forget to check them out ahead of time here & make your own list!

    ———————————————————————————————————-
    Thanks to Eling from Migration Goods for sharing her Art Star Craft Bazaar Shopping List!  Be sure to stop by her booth to check out her line of adorable felt accessories and illustrated paper goods.


  • Get to know Mauro Baiocco, the artist behind Naughty & Nice

    We are so excited to be carrying the Naughty, yet Nice line of work by Mauro Baiocco.  He first caught our eye when he participated in our May bazaar.  We completely fell in love with his work and we were curious to learn more about him.  Enjoy our little interview + be sure to check out our full stock of his paintings here.  Meet him in person at this weekend’s Art Star Craft Bazaar. He is just as charming in person as his work (I know, how is it possible?!)

    Art Star: Tell us a bit about your work.  What inspires your imagery?
    Mauro Baiocco: I paint silliness. I guess the best way to summarize my process is this: when i was a kid, there was a catch-all, make-no-sense TV line up every Saturday from 2:00-8:00pm called “Super Action Saturdays”. A typical programming will be something like “Plan 9 from Outter Space”, followed by “Spartacus”, “Motra vs. Godzilla” and “Valley of the Dolls” -I know! So awesome! By the end of it, I was so stimulated and exhausted I used to merge all the plots into one long movie and that’s how I remembered it: Hellen Lawson kicked Godzilla’s ass, married Spartacus and helped him liberate the world from zombie aliens (which would be a blockbuster by the way). I try to tap into that old way of seeing things when I’m painting.

    AS: Are you formally trained? If so, where did you study?
    MB: No formal training at all.

    AS: You currently live/work in Brooklyn, correct? Where are you from originally?
    MB: Yes, that’s correct. I have been in NYC for 15 years and in downtown Brooklyn since 2006. I’m originally from Buenos Aires, Argentina.

    AS: What are some of your favorite places in NY to go for inspiration?
    MB: Hands down the Metropolitan Museum. I have visited so much and still always find some amazing piece that i overlooked before and it blows my mind. And also I keep coming back to the dioramas in the American History Museum. If it is a nice day to be out, i’ll just walk around the city or sit in a park and people watch.

     AS: Are you able to focus on your work full time?
    MB: I have been painting silliness full time since 2008. Sometimes I even get to pay all my bills!

    AS: What materials do you primarily work with?
    MB: I enjoy working with bright colors in any shape or form, and I love using vintage photographs and antique frames in my work.

    AS: Aside from Art Star, Where else do you show/sell your work?
    MB: Right now I’m gearing up to open my booth in the Winter Village at Bryant Park starting October 21st till January 4th. It is a joint venture with a fellow artist friend and we decided to name our holiday shop “Gomez & Petrov” as a wink to our respective latin and Russian origins. Also, I will be participating in One Of A Kind Chicago from December 4th-7th. Busy times are a-coming!

    AS: Who are some of your favorite artists?
    MB: Oh God, so many I don’t know where to begin! Photography is really dear to my heart and I enjoy a really wide spectrum from Berenice Abbot to Ryan McGingley. I also have a soft spot for pop surrealism, so Gary Baseman, Mia Makila, Anne Faith Nichols, Camille Rose Garcia, Marion Peck, Elizabeth Mcgrath,  Jose Rodolfo Loaiza Ontiveros, Alex Gross, the Clayton Brothers, Martha Rich, I mean  I can go on and on…

     

  • Upcoming Exhibition: Hoots and Howls

    We are thrilled to announce our next exhibition which features a handful of some of our favorite Art Star artists. The show is titled “Hoots and Howls” and each artist is including a couple original pieces that are woodland themed and explore all things related to nature. You can expect to see starry night skies, wooded hideaways, animals both real and imagined, rolling hills, forests thick with trees, and more, in a variety of styles and mediums. Escape and enjoy the magic of the woods!

    Participating artists include:
    Inés Chapela
    Jen Corace
    Faryn Davis (art titled “Northern” pictured above)
    Aaron James Powers
    Sarah Ryan
    Julianna Swaney
    Kerry & Neil Stavely
    Squirrel Tacos
    Whittled Inklings by Alisha Baker

    September 8th through November 4th, 2018
    Opening Reception: Saturday, September 8th, 6-8pm

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