Monthly Archives: April 2010

Park West Gallery Co-Sponsors ALIVE 2010

Benefit for the Donate Life Coalition of Michigan honors Park West Gallery CEO Albert Scaglione and wife Mitsie Scaglione

ALIVE 2010, a benefit for the Donate Life Coalition of Michigan, is being held Friday, May 7 at the Birmingham Bloomfield Art Center from 6:30 to 10:00 p.m. The night will be filled with fun and friends; fabulous food and drink; live music by Lyin’ Dogs; auction and celebration as attendees work towards inspiring all in Michigan to join the Michigan Organ Donor Registry.

Park West Gallery is the print sponsor of the event, providing all of the invitations, RSVP cards, envelopes, programs, and signs. Two artworks have also been donated by Park West Gallery and will be included in the Silent Auction.

Park West Gallery Founder and CEO Albert Scaglione and his wife Mitsie Scaglione will be honored at ALIVE 2010 during an award ceremony for their continued support of the Donate Life Coalition of Michigan. The Scagliones will receive the Visionary Award; L. Brooks Patterson, Oakland County Executive, will receive the Crusader Award; and Patricia Montemurri, Detroit Free Press Reporter, and Glenda Lewis, WXYZ TV 7 News Reporter, will receive awards for Outstanding Media.

Tickets are $75 per person, and $125 for two (valet parking included); discounts are available for groups of 10 or more. For tickets, please call Peggy Burkhard at (248) 770-5172. For more information on ALIVE 2010 and the Donate Life Coalition of Michigan, please visit www.donatelifemichigan.org.

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Park West Gallery Exclusive: An Interview with Dynamic Abstract Artist Tim Yanke

Park West Gallery Exclusive! Rob Ducat  interviews artist Tim Yanke regarding his exciting and dynamic abstract works—find out where his art is taking him next!

For more information about Tim Yanke and to view his artwork in the Park West Gallery Collection, please visit www.parkwest-yanke.com

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Landmark Picasso Exhibit Opens at the Met

Park West Gallery, Pablo Picasso“Standing Nude and Seated Musketeer (detail),” 1968, Pablo Picasso.

NEW YORK—Picasso in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, a landmark exhibition of 300 works by Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881–1973), will provide an unprecedented opportunity to see one of the most important collections in the world of the artist’s work. On view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art from April 27 through August 1, 2010, this is the first exhibition to focus exclusively on the remarkable array of works by Picasso in the Met’s collection. The exhibition will reveal the Museum’s complete holdings of the artist’s paintings, drawings, sculptures, and ceramics—never before seen in their entirety—as well as a significant number of his prints.

The exhibition encompasses the key subjects for which Picasso is so well known: the pensive harlequins of his Blue and Rose periods, the faceted figures and tabletop still lifes of his Cubist years, the monumental heads and classicizing bathers of the 1920s, the raging bulls and dreaming nudes of the 1930s, and the rakish musketeers of his final years. Picasso in The Metropolitan Museum of Art will feature 34 paintings, 58 drawings, a dozen sculptures and ceramics, and an extensive selection of prints (some 200 from a total of 400), all acquired by the Museum over the past 60 years. Importantly, the exhibition includes many works on paper by Picasso that have rarely, if ever, been exhibited before at the Metropolitan. Read the full press release >>
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Park West Gallery has become one of the longest running and largest dealers of Picasso graphic works internationally. Our current collection, both archived and actively offered, includes over one thousand five hundred works, including drawings and mixed media unique works, etchings, aquatints, linoleum cuts, lithographs, and ceramics, all rigorously authenticated, guaranteed and selected based on the highest quality and value.

Learn all about the Park West Gallery Picasso Collection at http://picasso.parkwestgallery.com

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Romero Britto Creates Art Poster for 2010 FIFA World Cup

The FIFA World Cup 2010, which begins in 48 days in South Africa, marks the 70th anniversary of the first FIFA World Cup held in 1930. Since then, the international championship has been held every four years, except in 1942 and 1946 due to World War II.

There has been a lot of press and publicity leading up to the FIFA World Cup 2010, including the campaign for the Official Art Poster Edition 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa™, which internationally acclaimed pop artist Romero Britto participated in. Britto’s art poster, “South Africa 2010,” has finally been unveiled, and the Park West Gallery bloggers are excited to provide you with a glimpse of it here.

Congratulations to Romero Britto for another job well done on creating an upbeat, distinctive art poster for an international event! Visit the official FIFA World Cup website for more information on the championship, and read the exclusive FIFA.com interview with Britto regarding his art, football, his motivations and the FIFA World Cup.

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Happy Earth Day from Park West Gallery!

25th Anniversary Earth Day Artwork. Peter Max.

Today is the 40th anniversary of Earth Day, so plant a tree, watch a green movie, or recycle something – do anything that interests you and contributes to this important day!

A Park West Gallery artist who is sure to be doing something impactful today is Peter Max. As a passionate environmentalist and defender of human and animal rights, Max has donated his time and money to many noteworthy causes – he has even directed his artistic energy towards them.

Max created the very first Earth Day poster in 1970 and has continued to raise awareness for Earth Day ever since. He is often called upon by environmental organizations to create their promotional materials, and as their official artist, he brings to the table his vision of hope for the future. Rather than depicting the environmental disasters that could lie ahead as many other artists do, Max always creates bright, uplifting imagery that celebrates the environment.

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Park West Gallery Artist Interviews: Leslie Lew Part 2

In Part 1 of Park West Gallery Director Morris Shapiro’s interview with renowned artist Leslie Lew, the artist discussed her artwork and thriving career. Following is Part 2 of this fascinating interview in which she discusses her history as an artist…

Morris Shapiro: I know you have a really amazing resume and you have shown in some of the finest galleries in New York. And, you’ve shown next to artists like Andy Warhol, Lichtenstein, and Keith Haring.

Leslie Lew: I knew Andy and I knew Keith.

MS: And you’ve shown side-by-side with them, as well as in some of the most prestigious galleries in New York and elsewhere. The choice to come to Park West is an interesting because I think it says something about your philosophy of art.

LL: As an art student early on, I would visit museums and high-end galleries, but I always had a little bit of a problem with the way they present their art, or even the approach that they take. Often they are very elitist; it’s almost like you are intimidated when you go in a place… you can’t touch anything. And I’ve always felt that art was supposed to be something that would reach everybody, not just a few people.

I think that’s why I am really, really thrilled with Park West. Your approach is to educate, to deliver, to present and have fun with the art, and to include, not exclude, people. I’m noticing as I go through these events and exhibitions with Park West that it’s a different approach, and it’s exactly what I want to do with my work.

My long term plan is to try to reach as many people as I possibly can. And I think a great way to do this is working with Park West. Yeah, my pieces get into museums…at the Guggenheim or some other high-end gallery, and that’s great. But the people that I’m meeting with Park West are from all over the place, all over the world basically.

MS: And with different levels of artistic sophistication.

LL: Exactly. And you know what, art isn’t just for the few. Take Rembrandt…he wanted to make art approachable. They didn’t have TV…art was part of their communication. And I feel that is really important.

MS: Well I think you are a perfect fit for that because you have such a wonderful energy yourself and so much enthusiasm about your work. That’s such a great combination…people just adore you and your work. So many artists have difficulty in really communicating about their work and sharing their personal side because it is just the way they are, but you have such a wonderful, outgoing personality and people are just delighted to meet you.

Let’s talk a little bit about your past, your background. I know that you come from a family of girls. You have four sisters?

LL: Yes, I am the oldest…I have three younger sisters.

MS: And your father was a pretty famous advertising executive, and his name was Leslie also.

LL: That’s right…I’m Leslie Jr., as I always tell everybody. My parents are a little unconventional…they were kind of like old beatniks; they had a spirit about both of them. My mother used to wear a chignon, big earrings, and funky shoes. I used to be embarrassed when I was a kid…I wanted her to look more like the Dick, Jane and Sally mom, you know with the flip haircut, but she didn’t. She had leotards, she was very dramatic. I probably got a little of that from my mom.

And my dad, of course, was an artist in his own right. But when he got married he needed to take the route of supporting his family; that is why he went into advertising. He drove to New York and got a job at J. Walter Thompson. He’s responsible for all of the coolest ads that we grew up with as Baby Boomers.

MS: Can you tell us some of them?

LL: Alka-Seltzer commercials…the Marlboro Man.

“Oh I can’t believe I ate the whole thing,” “marshmallow meatball,” you know, that kind of thing. There was one with a newlywed who was cooking for her husband and she was a really bad cook… Dad did that one.

And the Marlboro Man. Dad went down to Kentucky. You know that guy just died recently from smoking. He was a really young guy though; he was only about eighteen at the time, even though he looked a lot older.

MS: And some of the famous breakfast cereals?

LL: Oh yeah. When dad passed away a couple of years ago, I decided to do a dedication to him. I recreated one of the Sugar Smacks boxes that he invented. He did the Smackin’ Brothers, which would be so totally inappropriate today…so “politically incorrect.” But what I did was paint a really big—about 90 by 60 inch—sculpted oil, based on Dad’s ad, and I had an exhibition called “Snap, Crackle, and POP” and I did a big POP. He has influenced me a lot.

In the old day with the ad layouts, they used those great Pantone markers. He had thousands of colors…and it was almost like a watercolor process. He had his own little studio in our house and I used to sit underneath his drawing table. He was really persnickety about his markers, and if they were the least bit worn or dry, he would give them to me. So I would sit there and actually copy my dad’s ads. I still have some of them.

MS:  So you were also drawing at a really early age?

LL: Oh yeah, absolutely.

MS: So then your father kind of packed it in; he kind of just turned his back on the advertising world and took your family to Oregon right? And you guys were living kind of as “bohemians” in Oregon?

LL: Yeah. What happened was that my parents got divorced, but we all ended up following my dad. My dad didn’t want to get divorced, but my mother, I guess she just couldn’t handle it. It was a time in the 50’s where she wanted to be more creative. She needed to “do her own thing.” She didn’t want to be a housewife. Ultimately, she ended up working as a writer for the Chicago Tribune and then later for the Oregonian. Even thought they got divorced, they remained friends. Dad went to Oregon, and I went to Oregon with him. Then my sisters followed. Then, my dad invited my mom to come, so everyone ended up in Portland.

MS: And this is about the time when you decided to become an artist, right? You moved to Chicago and went to The Chicago Institute, the School of Art Institute, which everyone knows is one of the greatest art schools in the world. Some of the work that you do today still has images that originated from your Chicago Institute days, right?

LL: Yes, the first piece that ever was in a museum is one of the etchings that I released through Park West. I had never sent them out…they’ve always been just with me in my studio. But, I love that you guys have great, beautiful etchings like Rembrandt, Goya, and I thought, you know what, I’m going to release these…this is the right place for them now.

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Stay tuned to the Park West Gallery blog for Part 3 of this absorbing interview with Leslie Lew, and review Part 1 here!

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Reality TV Show for Art Lovers Coming Soon

With the numerous reality TV shows out there covering just about any and everything, it was only a matter of time before an art-themed reality show came into existence. While the Park West Gallery bloggers are surprised that the reality TV craze has been going on this long without a show targeted to art enthusiasts, it looks like we won’t have to wait that much longer!

This summer Sarah Jessica Parker’s production company, Pretty Matches will unveil its new reality show, “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist,” on the Bravo channel on June 9 at 11 p.m. The show will feature 14 artists competing against each other for a $100,000 cash prize and a solo show at the Brooklyn Museum.

The show’s organizers have said that for each episode, contestants will be required to create unique pieces of art in different media, such as painting, sculpture and photography.

Check out Bravo’s preview for Work of Art: The Next Great Artist below, and don’t forget to tune in for the premiere on June 9th!  

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Park West Gallery Tours Dominic Pangborn’s Studio

The Park West Gallery bloggers recently visited artist Dominic Pangborn at his studio in Detroit, Michigan…..and we have brought back photos to share with everyone!

What was most evident during the studio visit was Pangborn’s unwavering passion for art and for life in general; he never stops creatively exploring new mediums, new techniques, and new ideals. He generates over 2,500 to 3,000 drawings per year, which serve as inspirations for his paintings. His paintings are diverse, ranging from non-representational abstracts to photo realism. His favorite style to work in is his own: personal figurative expressionism in multi-media.

Dominic’s images capture his imagination and unending creativity no matter what medium he chooses to work in. For him, it’s all about expressing his inner soul. When Dominic looks at his drawings from the past, he looks at them with the same curiosity as other onlookers; he often wonders what he was thinking of while he was creating them.

Visit Flickr for a photo tour of Dominic Pangborn’s Detroit studio!

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