Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts

Monday, August 27, 2012

Minneapolis, I am a Compositionalist - Goodby and thanks for the dreams.

Today I am leaving my adopted home town of Minneapolis, MN.  My beautiful wife Athena ( of Such Good Dogs :)  ) and I have decided to try and live our dreams.  Athena wanted to become a professional dog trainer, and I wanted to become a professional artist.  We are now the people we have always wanted to be, and knowing that, we understand how much more we can become.      


Both of us have had the pleasure of truly knowing some of the coolest people in this city.  We both would not be the people we are without the true friendships we have built here in Minneapolis.  We love you all, and we are very sad to leave you.  Albeit, we are family, and we will never simply leave you behind.  Our home is yours.

I moved to Minneapolis in the fall of 1996 to become an artist.
This is my last oil painting I will complete in Minneapolis.  It is meaningful to me if only for that reason.  
During the last 17 years I taught myself how to oil paint anything I want, anything my mind can see.  I have total control of my medium, and with that I am able to truly use my philosophy to communicate through the aesthetics of composition.  Now I am going to speak my mind.



 My current paint pallet.

A portion of my current subject matter.


BitTorrent #13  "Penitent Magdelene"

Thanks Minneapolis, I have been able to live the life of interesting dreams.  For everything you have given me, I am continually grateful.  I should be arriving in Maui, Hawaii in a few hours.  Athena and I are going to build a beautiful life together...a life of happiness and productivity in our chosen fields.  










Minneapolis, I am a Compositionalist - Goodby and thanks for the dreams...
...Maui, Hawaii here we come, welcoming the challenge.

Friday, August 10, 2012

The new Website has gone LIVE!

This last month has been very busy completing the last things for our move.  It is no small task to move your entire family off the continent.  Things are going well, and I will arrive in Maui, Hawaii on the 27th of this month.  

One of the big tasks to complete was my new website.  Thanks to Huck Tate, my web-designer who was able to fulfill all of my wishes for the site.  My goal was to make a site that was easy to navigate, could be viewed on a mobile device, and still retained the design elements for my old flash site.

We just uploaded the new website and it looks great.  



I will have the store running in about 3 to 4 months.  In the store you will be able to buy originals, prints, and other fun and useful products I have been working on.


Go surf the new website...
...let me know what you think.



Wednesday, June 20, 2012

The success of an artist. ???

My time in Minneapolis is about to come to an end as my wife and I are going to move to Maui, Hawaii at the end of August.  Our hopes for Maui are simple; I am going to make art and work on tattooing, while Athena prepares to open her dog training facility with boarding and doggy daycare.  We have been working toward this for a very long time, and we are grateful for this amazing opportunity.

Looking back over the last 17 years of my life here in Minneapolis, my reason for moving here (to become an artist), and how it all played out, I find myself retrospectively looking at my own personal success as an artist.  So I ask...

...How do we measure the success of an artist?

1.  The obvious yard stick is money, are you making any?
I have sold nearly everything I have ever painted.  Sometimes for good money, and others for greater than was deserved.  I have taken financial losses, but my finances always balanced themselves out.  Regardless, I feel that sales and financial prosperity are not the "end all" of an artists success.
 Van Gogh was poor, crazy and not well liked in his time, but everyone knows his name now.
Let us say that the financial success of an artist is not simply wealth, but the means to support oneself by the production and sale of original works alone.

2.  Quality of the work itself?
When we consider the quality of a work of art the variables are so subjective that we can only look toward the total development of an artist.  That said we can not lie either.  Some artists are very very good, masters even.  Others just suck and the art world needs to leave subjective critique behind and label bad artists bad artists.  As we measure the quality of an artists work we inevitably look inward to our own tastes at first, and if we can move past our personal bias, we can then honestly critique a work of art.
Outside ourselves we look for content, aesthetic, talent, honesty within the work, and possibility.  I spent 16 years developing a language that I call compositional oil painting, naturally exploring what I enjoyed about painting.

3.  Philosophical and spiritual growth?
I see being an artist as being a philosopher.  Philosophically evolving as your work evolves is a definite measure of a successful artist.  When honest, the work is revealing in a way that no truth sayer, psychologist, or loved one could ever be.  It can be expected that an artist will grow philosophically.

4.  The social popularity of an artist?
Who does your work speak for?  Who are our fans, your clients, your patrons?  Who is moved by your work and is anyone influenced artistically by what you do as an artist?  Having influence is important in that ideas must be viral in order to be effective.
Regardless of all of those reasons, It is the timelessness of the work that defines the success of an artist. Having a following while you are alive is great, being remembered for the rest of time for what you created is better, remember Van Gogh.

5.  Are you happy?
The answer to this ought to always be yes.  If the answer is not yes, then something is wrong.  Regardless of any measures of success, being happy is by far the most important idea.


I like to think of myself as a successful artist.  In 1996 I set out to become an artist, and other than that I had no profound goals.  I simply wanted to create works of art as often as possible.  I became that, I sold my paintings (nearly everything I have painted has sold), built up an extensive and constantly changing portfolio, developed my own language as an abstract artist, and truly became more than the artist I expected to be.  

Now what?

I have no idea what happens next...
...I have no expectations other than becoming a new artist.
  

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

One way tickets!!!

Athena and I purchased our one way plane tickets to Maui, Hawaii in August.  
We are moving with 4 suitcases each, our car, our two dogs and some art supplies.  I intend to paint a complete series of new oil paintings while we are there.  Hopefully my work will change in ways I can not see in my mind at the moment.  

Our new life on the island will be good, with a place in New York and a place in Minneapolis we can go visit our favorite haunts anytime we want to.  We both are very excited.


I have three oil paintings to finish here in minneapolis before we move...
...so check back soon.


Saturday, March 17, 2012

My grandfathers drafting table

My grandfather Greg was an engineer, a problem solver for Honeywell.  In his spare time he did fine woodworking.  Pop built clocks, most of the furniture in his house, tools to do things he needed, and he designed it all.

This drafting table is one of his designs and it has been mine for the last 15 years.  
I use it for everything.


Its height is adjustable from 36 inches and it can extend to 60 inches tall.  Making it comfortable to work on sitting in a chair, a tall stool or standing.  I do most of my work on it these days standing.

The bottom of the legs are held by peg braces so it is easy to disassemble.

The adjustments are made by simple bolts and fly nuts.

                
The top can rotate its angle almost 180% and adjust to be flipped completely for working on complicated and tight compositions.  


His brother Rodney passed on a few years ago and I got his drafting tools.  This drafting arm is perfect for design and basic drafting.  I used it mainly for laying out tricky compositional elements when I wanted forms to coincide with one another.


I love this drafting table...
...I will be used until I die.


Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Artwork of the month: Catherine A. Palmer.

I met Catherine A. Palmer in 1997 at Cafe Wyrd.  I was exhibiting my latest landscapes and she was commenting on them.  I pretended to not be the artist, she caught me in the lie, and then we talked for several hours about art and life.

We have been good friends since.  I would in fact consider her family.

I love her work, and I have been fortunate enough to exhibit with Catherine sine 1997.  Catherine has exhibited everywhere you can think of in Minneapolis since 1997.  Her work is in private collections throughout the U.S. and I happen to own several.  

I love coffee and I love this painting.

I own this painting.  It was one of my favorites so she gave it to me.


I have a lot of history with Catie, and I can say that she is one of the hardest working artists in Minneapolis.  


"Don't eat the paint."


Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Artwork of the month: Fernand Léger.

I have been contemplating this work of art at the Minneapolis institute of arts for several years now.  Up close and personal this oil paining looks vibrant and alive while muted and soft.  Compositionally this painting is bold and subtle.  The subject matter is plainly laid out for the view to understand through the abstraction.  

The impact that this has had on my own compositions is telling in my art three studies.  The example that Leger leaves behind for abstract painters is one of simple bold daily life.  Besides life is more interesting than stories, and this painting tells us no mythology, but only presents its subject.

Fernand Léger
French, 1881-1955
"Table and fruit"
1909, oil on canvas


Thanks for checking in with the blog...
...I will post more of my ink studies soon.

Saturday, November 5, 2005

Welcome to my new Blog

HI,

I am Adam M. Considine and here we go...
...Welcome to my blog.

"The Aesthetics of Composition in Abstract Oil Painting"


Today is November 5th, 2005 and it is my birthday.  To celebrate I worked on an oil painting for the last three days straight through.  I completed it several hours ago.  I stared at my new work for several hours just thinking, and I decided to start a blog.

In the next few years we are going to talk about art, my life as an artist, my ideas about what art means to me, and who knows?  I honestly have no expectations about where this blog will take me and what I will be interested in over the course of the next 5 years or more.  I am not even sure that I will continue to blog in 5 years, but I am sure that I will still be working within the arts in some manner.  I am a frequent flyer of museums and I will also be writing about what I see and what I like.

As it stands now I am an out of work artist that is trying to find my own voice in modern art.  Not the first time you have heard that, its not going to be the last.  I see myself as a compositionalist, as the composition of an oil painting is my main focus.

So if you are reading this, have no expectations because I have no idea where this is going to take me.  Albeit, I do hope you enjoy my blog "The Aesthetics of Composition in Abstract Oil Painting"


Thanks for showing an interest in my work...
...welcome to my blog.