Daily Archives: August 25, 2009

Park West Foundation Participates in Peace Day

THE PARK WEST FOUNDATION, formed in 2006 by Albert Scaglione, CEO of Park West Gallery, and his wife Mitsie, provides assistance to children and families including foster care, family preservation, family life education, counseling, teen parent services, residential placement and adoption. 

Pioneers for Peace, Park West Foundation, Park West Gallery

In honor of Weusi Olusola, over $3700 raised for the Pioneers for Peace Program

DETROIT, MICHIGAN — The first annual Weusi Olusola Peace Day was held at the Rehabilitation Institute of Michigan (RIM) on Monday, August 10, 2009. The Park West Foundation participated, sending members of its recently launched Blue Babies initiative to help out with the festivities. The Blue Babies participated in all of the events held throughout the day from distributing Peace buttons to serving free refreshments to attending a Peace Day Celebration.

Over $3700 was raised, not including the vacation days that some RIM employees generously donated. All of the donations will support RIM’s Pioneers for Peace program, which works to spread its message of peace throughout the community.

Peace Day was created to honor the memory of former President and Program Director of Pioneers for Peace, Weusi Olusola. Weusi passed away earlier this year after battling cancer. His life’s mission was to educate and reach out to the community in the hopes of ending violence.

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Artist Birthdays – August 25: GEORGE STUBBS

GEORGE STUBBS (August 25, 1724 – July 10, 1806)

  • Nationality: English
  • Field: Painting
  • Art Movement: Romanticism
  • ARTiFact: Known for precise draughtsman-like skill in portraiture and great anatomical knowledge, in 1766 he wrote the widely acclaimed treatise The Anatomy of the Horse.
  • Important Artwork (shown below): Whistlejacket (detail), 1762

George Stubbs. Whistlejacket. 1762.

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An Interview with Legendary Artist Peter Max

PARK WEST GALLERY has enjoyed a relationship with Peter Max since the 1970s, and is the artist’s largest and longest-running dealer in the world. To stay updated on the latest Peter Max news, visit our Park West Gallery art blog.

Peter Max, Park West Gallery

DENVER, COLORADO — The Denver Egotist recently interviewed Pop icon, Peter Max, about his past, present and future as a legendary artist. Following is part of that interview:

How does New York, the home of your studio, influence your work?

Max: It probably does indirectly. Like living in any big city, with everything a minute away and access to everything. I have a beautiful studio right by Lincoln Center. Every morning, I can’t wait to get there, and at night I don’t want to leave. I have a gigantic painting room, there’s 18 TV monitors, a meeting room… it’s a very pleasant place, inductive to creativity. I go every day. I call up my buddies sometimes to open the studio on a Saturday. It’s like my playground. We have events there at least once a month. I’m very involved with animal protection and the Humane Society.

Most artists would kill to be able to make a living if only for a few years as a fine artist or commercial artist. You’ve been at it for 50 years. To what do you attribute your longevity in this business?

Max: I got out of art school in the late 60s and, like most kids, I was nervous and a little scared. Will I ever succeed, will I sell my paintings? Then it just suddenly exploded. My style and look was gravitated to. I never realized that my drawings had such an impact on the country. Suddenly I was on the Ed Sullivan Show, Johnny Carson… I was so young. Of course now, I am very comfortable with it. Sometimes I have to pinch myself.

What role did art play in successfully getting President Obama into office?

Max: It definitely had an impact. I painted 44 Obamas for the museum installation (since he’s the 44th president). For me, it was beyond my dreams when he won the election. I have done a few extras for some people who wanted one. It’s a very interesting time in our history for an African American man to become president.

In your mind, who are the most inspiring artists alive and working today?

Max: All the pop artists, they are all good friends of mine… Andy Warhol, Lichtenstein…. Every few decades there are always a few artists who make the scene, and museums pick them up. Artists get into galleries, and then collectors pick them up, then museums and auction houses. More and more artists are getting recognized in the media.

You love and thrive off painting to music. What’s your favorite music to paint to?

Max: I love all music. Led Zeppelin, Chris Cornell, jazz, rock, I like it all. There’s not a genre of music that I don’t love. Music is one of the greatest things on this Earth.

Do you ever tire of the Peter Max color palette and splashy style that has been prevalent in your work from the beginning? As an artist, do you ever want to work with a somber palette or do something tight and intricate?

Max: I’ll sometimes move in that direction. I can go somber, I can go colorful, loud or minimal… extreme in different directions. I love doing drawings in black and white. I like all of these things.

Once you hit on a successful technique do you ever want to try something else to see if it can become popular as well?

Max: The techniques and styles evolve on their own. I kind of inherit them. Something new will come about and I will gravitate toward it. I’ll stay with it until something else happens.

You say every painting is your favorite while you’re actually painting it. If all of your works were on a sinking ship and you could only save one, which would it be and why?

Max: (Laughs) I don’t know. It would be hard to say. I look at each and I can recognize the moment. If a father had 12 children, which one would he save, right? It’s hard. I have an emotional relationship to all of them. I’d want to save the ship itself!

Read the full interview >>

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