Showing posts with label Bakersfield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bakersfield. Show all posts

Monday, December 15, 2014

Art Parties, Art Hangouts, Figure Drawing Groups

Art Parties, Art Hangouts, Figure Drawing groups, the times artists get together and make stuff.





Alex talks about when artists create in social settings.

Alex's Figure Drawing Studies: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.839708952716420.1073741831.513768318643820&type=3

Project OH Magazine: http://projectoh.com/

Dr.Sketchy's Anti-Art School: http://www.drsketchy.com/

Painting Fun: http://youtu.be/D8ekmrzgdXg

Jenna's Drunk Art School: http://youtu.be/Fauml4AZpm8



Paint Off, Curated by Alex Ortiz August 2013: http://alexandraortizartist.blogspot.com/2013/11/your-mama-dont-paint-art-show-august.html


Saturday, July 26, 2014

First Friday now...





First Friday of Bakersfield is under new management, The Arts Council of Kern.

For full information visit KernArts.org.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Bazaar December

December was about adventures in vending at many Xmas holiday bazaars. Art makes the best gift. When someone buys a piece of art as a holiday gift they are getting a something unique, something made locally, and something from the heart.

In anticipation of the sales created new small items to sell. Baby canvases were created from scrap canvas I had, some cardboard for the base and a magnet on the back. These were fairly easy to make and were quick to paint. The size made it easier to paint what I wanted, like red trees, toast and bacon, ducks and crab. They were such a hit at the events that I made a second batch. I also made prints of my paintings from  Forbidden Forest.

In studio

The first art sale I participated in was the nXmas Art Sale at the nX CoffeeClub ArtHouse. That day I was able to listen to every Christmas/Holiday song Ever Made including my favorites, Donde Esta Santa Clause, the Charlie Brown Christmas song, and Mr. Grinch.

nX CoffeeClub ArtHouse

There were about seven artists in this event who brought a wide variety of things. The art was placed in every open nook and cranny. Even ornaments on the tree were for sale.

SANTA!

 Santa showed up for the middle part and there was So Much Coffee!

The next event I took my art to was First Friday. It has always been near and dear to me since I had first started showing my art in 2009. The connections I've made from that single corner in the Arts District have been highly influential to my career as an artist. It has been a major reason for me to strive to be a better artist and I wouldn't trade that for anything in the world. 

First Friday, too, has grown. More artists art participating in the street vending, the galleries are taking on better and better exhibits and it's being publicized loads more.  I can't wait to see the future of Bakersfield's First Friday holds.

First Friday December

The next place I took my art to was Santa's Sweat Shoppe Art Bazaar a the Empty Space. Every December The Empty Space has a holiday art sale to help raise funds to keep the place going. Inside the lobby they have Art gifts for sale and along with that they have a Bazaar with many artists / vendors. There were nineteen vendors at the Bazaar. I was lucky enough to setup next to some girls selling fudge. I had seen them at the Empty Space Bazaar last year and was glad to see they had grown as a business. 

Santa's Sweat Shoppe Bazaar

My last stop on the holiday sale binge was The Foundry's Christmas Art Bazaar. This happened along with the art exhibit Whimsy and Wanting by Rusty Hatfield, as well as the member art display in the windows. I've been a member of The Foundry since 2010. Since then they have changed locations twice from growth and now have made it to 19th and Eye next door to The Metro. They currently have 84 members of artists and art lovers. A dozen member artists brought tables of small art items. The Foundry did free gift wrapping all day. Artist Mickey Percy won the contest for best table display.


The Foundry: Give the Gift of Art!

What I love about the Arts District if the closeness of the community. Right next door The Metro Gallery had the AIDS Quilts, a collection of quilts made in memory of those  who passed from AIDS, on display for the public. People who were there for the Foundry were able to see the quilts and people who were there for the quilts were able to see the some art.

A Major Award

Also, during the Foundry Member Christmas Party, I received the award for Most Improved Artist of 2012. It did so much work, so many studies, this year and winning this award makes it all worth it.
Other winning Foundry Members were Joel Arvallo was awarded Highest Sales In a Solo Show. Diana Cambel Rice was awarded Most Valuable Member. And Jason Stewart was awarded Highest Sales Outside a Solo Show.




I consider these events a great success. I able to talk to so many great people. The holiday spirit was everywhere. I got an award and I even got a commission. There was so much art!





For Further Reading:


Thursday, October 18, 2012

Forbidden Forest


Forbidden Forest, Paintings by Alexandra Ortiz, 2012.


In the third grade my teacher traded with another teacher for the sections of science and art. One day my class was at the science teacher’s room but for some reason we were doing art.  We were drawing trees. If I recall correctly, the teacher told us to do whatever we want; that is never the case. There were a few trees on my paper. I decided to color the trunk of one blue.  Ms. C, we'll call her, found this completely unacceptable. She scolded me asking if I had ever seen a blue tree. I, being incredibly shy at the time, didn't have the time to answer that I had seen one on TV. She finished her own sentence, "NO, THERE ARE NO BLUE TREES." 


Trees were always a subject I avoided, but I thought if I was going to paint trees, they would be my trees. This body of work is an investigation of trees as I perceived them. I studied from life taking photos on my phone and drawing the ones I could get close enough to. Before this I only noticed trees from a distance. They’re different up close. The deeper you get into my forest the more magical things can happen. The closer you get to civilization, the more reality happens.


It felt like forever creating this show. I insisted on making my own canvases for nearly all the pieces in this body of work, but I'm glad I did. I otherwise wouldn't have been able to work on this scale. These are the largest paintings I've made so far, not to mention the most on one subject, eighteen pieces.





Flight, Acrylic on canvas, 24''x30''


I thought I'd talk about Flight first because it is the title painting of the show. In the Forbidden Forest there are many magical things that happen. Flight is what happens after the fish climb trees.  One of the fish thought climbing the tree was good, but more could be done. The leaves were all falling off the trees anyway, so this fish took two before they fell. When they were climbing trees the fish saw birds flying. The one who took the leaves flapped them like the birds did and took off. I decided to use this one for the title of the show because   it best showed what is in the rest of the show, and also has blue trees in it.


To Climb Trees, Acrylic on canvas, 24''x30''

To Climb Trees was the first painting I created for the series. In this painting the river the fish lived in suddenly dried up. They don't know why. It just did. One fish gives up and dies. Another fish gets scared and nearly faints. But since this forest is a magical one, the fish continue living out of water. The tallest fish sees a black bird sitting on a tree far away and gets an idea. The bird seems to be fine in that tree, maybe fish should climb trees.



Wednesday's Child, Acrylic on canvas, 32''x42''

Wednesdays Child is based on a song by Vermillion Lies by the same title. The song is about what children are supposed to be based on what day of the week they were born. 



Monday's Child is fair of face (narcissist)
Tuesday's child is full of grace (a little stiff)
Wednesday's child is full of woe (whatever)
Thursday's child has far to go (get out)

Friday's child is kind and giving (sucker)

Saturday's child works hard for a living (overachiever)

But the child that was born on the Sabbath Day
Is blithe and bony and good and gay

Through the whole song the singer sings about how the day she was born on wasn't her day and she was angry. She sings about things she would change if she could like rewriting story books and rewriting all the songs on the radio. Personally, I don't know what day I was born on. I would want to be Saturday's child because Saturdays are usually when I get the most work done. The fish in this painting are overachievers.





Charlie Brown, Acrylic on canvas, 3'x3'

There are boundaries to the Forbidden Forest. When there are walls or fences that is where the forest ends. Charlie Brown, the cartoon, is one of my favorites. He got lot of bad breaks in life and was generally insecure, but he had good friends. There are several comic strips with him sitting at a brick wall talking to his best friend, Linus. In this painting, the red tree tries to escape the boundaries but there is a fence in the way. One of the roots grows on the other side, but the rest is stuck in the forest. Colorful trees have to stay where the magic is. Magic stays in the forest. If the trees leave, they might lose their color.



Wire Fence, Acrylic on canvas, 3'x3'

Wire Fence shows another edge of the forest. One might find these trees and try to sneak in the forest, but there is a tall fence in the way.


For me this show has been a small rebellion, perhaps the smallest I could make. That science teacher may never hear of this art show, but still, eventually, I stood up to her in my own way.


About the Artist:


Alexandra Ortiz is a Bakersfield based artist who has been painting for five years.  At Bakersfield College she earned an Associate of Art with concentrations in Graphic Design and Art History. Alex currently attends California State University Bakersfield (Art Major). She is a member of the artist groups, The Foundry Gallery of Bakersfield and The Working Artist Collective of CSUB. She recently led a workshop, “Meditative Drawing” at the Art for Healing Center of Mercy Hospital.


About NX ArtHouse

"No Worries, just coffee art and love."

The nX is a place for art, poetry, music and coffee. It is a nonprofit based on an internet cafe LisaAnn Lobosso used to own. She has opened her own home up for the arts.  There are resident artists, a good espresso machine, and many events. Some events are Speakeasy, an open mic event for musicians and spoken word artists, On the Fly, a poetry event with dueling poets and a featured performer from out of town, and ROFL Comedy Night and many ongoing healing arts functions. It is located at 2995 North Baker, Bakersfield CA.





For Further Reading:


The Whole Show.


NX ArtHouse


Wednesday's Child, by Vermillion Lies


Walking Fish



Thursday, September 29, 2011

"Don't Panic"


     "Have a Seat for the Arts" is a charity group art exhibit. Metro Galleries and The Foundry gave artists the task of creating, painting, or sculpting a chairinto a piece of art. This is the story of my "chair."
     The search for an inexpensive wooden chair that I could dismantle for a sculpture was fruitless; I couldn't find any that I could bare to tear apart and I was ona budget. So I built one of my own in the boiling heat of my backyard on what were my last days of summer.
     I decided to make a spider out of my chair because there are things in this world that bug me. Sometimes I place spiders in the bug category, after all, they do bug me, but they are really in a category all their own: arachnids. The truth is spiders eat bugs and would be okay to co-exist with humanity, if they didn’t bite us too.
     Cutting some of the chair legs apart, unscrewing most attachments completely, it slowly formed a spider. It didn’t seem exactly right the first try, so I cut a few more pieces from similar wood for an extra set of legs.  The basic shape I made was clumsy and wouldn’t stand alone. To amend this problem, I nailed feet to each leg and reinforced every elbow and knee with extra nails.


Spiderchair Process

 With leftover chair-wood, I fashioned a face with screws for eyes and nails for pinchers.  After all the amendments, the spider still retained a bit of her personality by refusing to have all feet in a symmetrical order. For the color I imagined a light blue or a purple. When I arrived at the paint store, there were cans of black, red,gray, and brown spray paint. At the end of the aisle there was a can of CameoPink. Steering clear of a “Spiderman” or black widow theme, pink was the best choice.

Spiderchair

Creating this sculpture was about overcoming my fears. The whole time I was sawing, nailing, wiring, etc., I thought to myself: "This is a spider. You're supposed to stay away from these things." Even as I was in the middle of sawing, a little brown spider came to visit. I paused to stare at it for a moment, and them promptly retreated inside until he left. This sculpture had to become an exception to the rule because I knew every corner, every foot; I knew how it came to be. It was no longer alien, but something one could keep as a pet. The CameoPink only compliments that. I affectionately call my sculpture "Don't Panic." Had the sculpture remained a chair, it might not have been noticed, even though it was hand crafted by yours truly; It's better this way.

Have a Seat for the Arts

About the Exhibit:
"Have a Seat for the Arts" is presented by Metro Galleries and The Foundry Artist Collective. Each chair will be displayed at various places in The Arts District of Downtown Bakersfield, and will be for sale by silent auction where 30% of proceeds will go directly to charity. The exhibit is part of October's "First Friday," aka "Art-Walk," October 7, 2011, from 5-9pm.