Monthly Archives: September 2011

September Thoughts: Reflecting on 9/11 and Public Art

Written by MORRIS SHAPIRO, Park West Gallery Director*

9/11 series, peter max, park west galleryAs the month of September draws to an end, it seems inevitable that we reflect back on the apocalyptic events that took place on the 11th day of this month in 2001, and our perspective now, ten years later.

I was in New York on the ten year anniversary of September 11, and spent that morning at the studio of Peter Max with a group of Park West Gallery collectors.

Max, as everyone probably knows, is the American artist most associated with raising funds for various 911 relief funds by selling his American-themed imagery through his website and donating his proceeds. He also painted a portrait of each firefighter who perished at the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, and gave the paintings to the surviving family members.

Being there with Max, all of us with our individual memories of where we were that day, and taking it all in, was riveting and emotional. The city itself was on alert and there was a palpable collective consciousness of poignancy, edginess and melancholy permeating.

Another significant event which took place the weekend I was there was the opening of the September 11 National Memorial, first privately opened to the families on the 11th and officially to the public on September 12.

9/11 National Memorial

Designed by Israeli-American architect, Michael Arad, the monument consists of two square pools tracing the outline of where the towers once stood. These will eventually be flanked by 400 trees surrounding them. I didn’t visit the memorial, but as I observed all the media attention surrounding it, while being so close by on that day, I couldn’t help but reflect about public art and how it still retains a powerful attraction to us even in our current overly media-drenched and instantaneous society.

Art historian Nigel Spivey in his seminal book and video series, “How Art Made the World” (Basic Books; 2006), calls attention to the notion that art was the pathway to much of human technology through the millennia. He cites the probable cause of the invention of agriculture (where Homo sapiens abandoned hunting and gathering) as mankind’s need to stay in a singular location. He needed to invent the technology of growing his own food to achieve this goal, and the reason—to be in proximity of “public art” and the desire to be in its presence and to plumb its spiritual mysteries.

Even now, some 60, 000 years later, a work of art left open to everyone’s eyes who passes by, large and scaled to the enormous urban architecture which frames it and resonating with a shared meaning, can still hold our attention and move us in ways that nothing else can match. Our past is linked to our present. The mythology of our own time is communicated to us for reflection, contemplation and even perhaps, as in the case of the September 11 Memorial, healing.

It is comforting to know that as enlightened occupants of the 21st Century, we are still linked to the collective and embedded need for art to speak to us, just as it has done since the dawn of our consciousness. And just as it will always do no matter what befalls.

* To read more by Morris Shapiro, visit his blog: Who Killed Art?

Image credits:
- “God Bless America I, Detail Ver. 1 #4″ by ©Peter Max, 2011.
- Artist’s rendering of the 9/11 National Memorial (via www.911memorial.org).

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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. Peter Max fine art is available at Park West Gallery cruise art auctions throughout the world or may be purchased through our gallery in Southfield, Michigan. Browse selections from the Park West Gallery/Peter Max Collection online →

Around Town: ArtPrize, Detroit Design Festival, B’ham Art Fair

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This coming weekend is a perfect time to get outside and enjoy the first days of autumn. Fortunately, a variety of popular art events are happening all around Michigan, including:

Detroit Design Festival, Park West GalleryDETROIT DESIGN FESTIVAL
The DDF is a city-wide week-long crowd-sourced design festival developed to showcase the talents and abilities of Detroit’s creative community. A variety of happenings will take place, including studio tours, panels and roundtable discussions, fashion shows, and art battles. Detroit Creative Corridor Center established DDF to connect creatives with one another, expose them to new markets and consumers, and to display the creative talent that will help Detroit become a global center of creative innovation.

When: Wednesday, Sept. 21 – Wednesday, Sept. 28
Where: 50 venues throughout the Detroit Creative Corridor [map]
Website: www.detroitdesignfestival.com

ArtPrize, Park West GalleryARTPRIZE
Part arts festival, part social experiment, ArtPrize is an international contest decided solely by public vote. The competition is open to any artist in the world who can find space, anybody in the city who wants to create a venue and open to a vote from anyone who attends. It’s mission is to be a catalyst for collisions and connections between artists and communities, for the sake of infusing vitality and courage into culture. For two weeks, 1,582 artists from 36 countries and 43 states will show their work in 164 venues within three-square miles. Each artist will compete for the world’s largest prize for art, $474,000 ($250,000 to 1st place).

When: Wednesday, Sept. 21 – Sunday, Oct. 9, 2011
Where: Downtown Grand Rapids [map]
Website: www.artprize.org

Birmingham Art Fair, Park West GalleryBIRMINGHAM STREET ART FAIR
Birmingham’s 37th Annual Art Fair will feature more than 160 fine artists from around the country. Ceramics, painting, photography, glass, jewelry, sculpture, wood and more will be showcased, along with the annual art auction to raise funds for the outstanding work of Common Ground, Oakland County’s nonprofit agency providing emergency help for families in crisis.

When: Saturday, Sept. 24, 10 am – 6 pm; Sunday, Sept. 25, 10 am – 5 pm
Where: Downtown Birmingham [map]
Website: theguild.org/art-fairs/common-ground-art-fair

And if you’re in the neighborhood this weekend, stop by for a visit! Park West Gallery will be open Friday, 9am – 6pm and Saturday, 11 am – 6 pm [map].

Park West Gallery Blog Wins 2011 CBS Detroit MVB Award

CBS Detroit's Most Valuable Blogger Awards 2011, park west galleryCBS Detroit's Most Valuable Blogger Awards 2011, park west galleryThanks to you — our loyal blog readers — “The Official Blog of Park West Gallery” has been chosen as the People’s Choice in CBS Detroit’s Most Valuable Blogger Awards 2011!!

Park West Gallery very much appreciates each and every one of your votes in this year’s inaugural MVB contest.

We look forward to continuing to provide compelling art and artist news from all around the web, as well as keeping you updated on all the exciting happenings here at Park West Gallery.

To stay updated on all of your favorite artists and art world news, follow Park West Gallery on Twitter, join Park West Gallery on Facebook and subscribe to the Park West Gallery newsletter!

Experience Museum Day 2011

smithsonian museum day, park west gallery

Where can you spend the entire day experiencing exceptional works of art, without ever paying a dime for admission? At Park West Gallery, of course! And fortunately, we’re not alone…

On Saturday, Sept. 24, 2011, hundreds of museums and cultural venues across the country will also open their doors to visitors FREE of charge. It’s all part of Museum Day, the annual event hosted by Smithsonian magazine. Museum Day is said to be a “celebration of the dissemination of knowledge to anyone and everyone interested, without a price tag.” Take advantage of this wonderful opportunity to explore a new cultural institution in your town.

To participate, visit www.smithsonianmag.com/museumday to find a participating museum in your area. Then fill out the ticket request form online to receive your free admission for two.

Which venue will you most likely visit on Museum Day? Let us know in the comments below!

Yaacov Agam, the Rembrandt of Our Time

A modern-day Galileo, the 21st Century Rembrandt — as an innovator and artist, Yaacov Agam is often compared to historical men of genius like these.

Most recently, Israel’s best watched news broadcast, Channel 2 News, profiled Agam and his many achievements. From the ongoing restoration of his Fire and Water Fountain in Tel Aviv’s Dizengoff Square, to the re-installation of his work in the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, to the future Agam Museum in Rishon LeZion, don’t miss this fascinating look at the “Father of Kinetic Art,” Yaacov Agam.

*Exclusive artwork by Yaacov Agam is available for purchase through Park West Gallery and its cruise art auctions at sea. Visit the Park West Gallery Yaacov Agam Fine Art Collection →

Vote “4 THE BEST” – Park West!

PARK WEST GALLERY has been nominated for Best Art Gallery on this year’s 4 THE BEST list!

ClickOnDetroit.com’s 5th annual Vote 4 The Best will determine metro Detroit’s favorite local businesses, in categories ranging from Best Pizza Chain to Best Neighborhood Bar.

And — for the first time ever — Vote 4 The Best winners will be announced starting Thursday, Nov. 24 during Local 4’s all-day exciting live coverage of America’s Thanksgiving Parade.

In 2010, nearly 240,000 visitors to the WDIV Local 4 website voted for their favorites, choosing Park West Gallery as the #1 Art Gallery in metro Detroit!

Visit 4thebest.clickondetroit.com/place/1250-park-west-gallery to vote now.

Beyond Earth: A Park West Gallery Artist Exclusive

Written by PETER NIXON*

We often read Collectors’ comments on the Park West Gallery blog describing their pleasure at meeting artists at Park West Gallery events; this experience is reciprocated by artists. I have met many remarkable art collectors during the course of my association with Park West Gallery – all high achievers in their fields and all leading fascinating lives – but it is not every day that you meet an Astronaut.

"Beyond Earth" by Peter Nixon, Park West Gallery“Beyond Earth” by Peter Nixon | Park West Gallery Collection

Astronauts are so rare and legendary, like Rock Stars, it is hard to believe that they are actually real. So it was my great pleasure to meet Sherwood ‘Woody’ Spring, a decorated Colonel, test pilot, and an astronaut on the 1985 Shuttle Mission. Considering his career reads like “The Right Stuff” – he’s flown in space and performed two spacewalks hundreds of miles above the Earth whilst traveling at 17,500 miles per hour – he was very unassuming and modest about his achievements.

I met Woody and his wife, Debbie, at two Park West Gallery events; one a Baltic cruise in 2010 and again on a Mediterranean trip in 2011. On the second occasion we had several discussions about astronomy and space in general, with Woody indulging my enthusiasm but meager knowledge of astrophysics.

Even though he has military training and takes an incredibly detailed, pragmatic approach to his profession, I was struck by the degree of emotion Woody expressed when describing the wonder of gazing down on the Earth. Here was a life-changing event, that only a handful of human beings have experienced, and the thought of this fired my imagination.

The painting I created, illustrated above, was a collaboration between Woody and me, with many emails transmitted between the two of us; Woody providing reference material and technical advice.

The main subject of the picture is the beauty of the Earth itself. I wanted to capture an impression of what Woody might have seen from the dizzying heights of space and also present this in painterly terms. I have always enjoyed the rich textures and colors of satellite photographs and incorporated some of their abstract qualities into the painting. I had great fun finding the appropriate brush marks to represent clouds and creating the Earth’s deep “blueness” by building up layer upon layer of color.

One of the facts Woody told me that caught my imagination is that the Earth’s atmosphere has multiple distinct layers of blue when viewed from outer space. On his mission, he counted thirteen different bands. Whilst I didn’t feature this around the Earth, preferring a soft halo, the background blue is made up of thirteen layers producing the vibrant near-black of space. Another amazing fact is that the astronauts experienced a sunrise (and a sunset) every forty-five minutes as they orbited the planet every ninety-three minutes; this is represented in the painting by a succession of stylized suns.

There is always a figurative element in my paintings; in this case, the female figure represents intuition and the horse, the power of the imagination. Here, I placed the mythical figure on a horse, representing the spirit of endeavor, curiosity and the incredible vision of one day venturing into the larger universe that galvanizes the space mission. She rides the Milky Way across the top of the picture on a contrasting crescent to the Earth. This was done with a little artistic license, the scientist in Woody informing me that the Milky Way is actually all around us, but I persuaded him this format would make a more dynamic composition.

The small pictures or insets around the painting are iconic insignia and memorabilia provided by Woody. From top left, they are: an observatory he visited as a boy, Astronaut’s Wings, Woody in his spacesuit, and also his Space walk. Along the base of the painting are a Crew Patch from his mission and the five continents as seen from space. From top right are an EVA Patch and the “Earth rise” seen from the dark side of the Moon during an Apollo mission. There is a small visual joke at the base of the painting – I usually include in my paintings a silhouetted self-portrait in a Rembrandt hat, but on this occasion it is a self-portrait in an astronaut’s helmet.

I had fun designing and making this painting. Woody has also expressed his enthusiasm for it.

*The art of Peter Nixon is available for purchase through Park West Gallery and its cruise art auctions at sea. Visit the Park West Gallery Peter Nixon Fine Art Collection →

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Around Town: Arts, Beats & Eats 2011

Oakland County’s Favorite Summer Festival Celebrating Art, Music, Cuisine and Humanity returns September 2-5, 2011.

Arts, Beats & Eats, Park West Gallery

The 14th annual Arts, Beats & Eats returns to Downtown Royal Oak this Labor Day Weekend! The festival will offer more than 200 performances on ten stages, a highly ranked Juried Fine Arts Show and local restaurants offering some of the finest cuisine in metro Detroit.

Event Hours:
Friday, Sept. 2 • 11:00 am – 11:00 pm
Saturday, Sept. 3 • 11:00 am – 11:00 pm
Sunday, Sept. 4 • 11:00 am – 11:00 pm
Monday, Sept. 5 • 11:00 am – 9:00 pm

For more information, visit www.artsbeatseats.com.

And if you happen to be in the neighborhood this weekend, stop by for a visit! Park West Gallery will be open Saturday, 11:00 am – 6:00 pm. [Directions]