Found this little Angel!

Yesterday morning on the way to my studio I found this little Angel roaming the streets in the vicinity of Ratzer and Mayfair Road in Wayne. I decided to pick her up as she obviously didn’t know the rules of the road and would eventually be hit and possibly killed. No one has claimed her yet. She is a beautiful dog and as of today looks like she’s homeless. Looks like a Cockapoo. I’ll hold on to her for as long as possible and can make arrangements through Wayne FOWA to have her adopted if anyone is interested. She’s a wonderful companion, totally domesticated and housebroken. She’s an older dog, a very deep sleeper, and slow moving when she wakes up. Would hate to see her put in a shelter so spread the word, there’s an angel looking for a home! Call Mike at 973-720-0001 with any info.

The future of science………is art?
Great article in seed magazine about how art can provide answers to fundamental questions in science by Jonah Lehrer, author of “How we decide”
http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/the_future_of_science_is_art/

The tragedy, 1903, by Picasso
Artists have known for a very long time that color and luminance can be treated independently. Our perception of depth, three-dimensionality, movement (or the lack of it), and spatial organization are all carried by a subdivision of our visual system that is essentially color-blind, and sees the world in shades of gray. This is an evolutionarily older part of our visual system. One cannot see depth or motion in the absence of luminance contrast. In Picasso’s The Tragedy, one can appreciate the three-dimensionality of the scene because, despite the peculiar choice of colors, the luminance is just right.—Margaret Livingstone, Neuroscientist, Harvard University ©

APF Munn Master Framemakers
I thought I’d share a valuable frame source I discovered recently. As a professional artist I’m always looking for a high quality frame source that’s pleasing to the customer and/or gallery owner and doesn’t break the bank. I recently had the privelege to purchase a few readymade frames from APF Munn Master Framemakers
located in Yonkers, NY.
. Their sales rep Jackie Lewis helped me find some fine quality frames at very competitive prices. There’s no financial incentive here for more nor is this some sales affiliate lead, just a satisfied customer that’s happy to share a good find. Jackie Lewis at jlewis@apfmunn.com or visit their website at: www.apfmunn.com
APF Munn Master Framemakers
60 Fullerton Avenue
Yonkers, NY 10704
973-518-4201
www.apfmunn.com


The Art of Andrew Loomis

About ten years ago I came across a hardcover version of Andrew Loomis’ Creative Illustration. It remains today as one of my favorite in my art library of books. Although Norman Rockwell held the spotlight as America’’s most revered illustrator in the 40’s & 50’s, Andrew Loomis kept quite busy producing magazine covers, billboards, calendars, and just about any print product imaginable.
Although Loomis was a successful and prolific commercial illustrator, it was his educational books that have had the biggest impact. These books are priceless in terms of the valuable information and instruction in drawing and painting, and thanks to the internet they are literally priceless, or without price! There are quite a few sites that have PDF files of his books free of charge. The site owners claim the books are public domain, so while they’re still available I highly recommend you dowload them ASAP. You can find them at: http://www.alexhays.com/loomis/ There is a nice bio of Andrew Loomis at: http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/loomis.htm
Some of the titles available:
Fun with a pencil
Figure Drawing for all it’s worth
Drawing the head and hands
Successful Drawing
Creative Illustration
The eye of the painter
An Andrew Loomis cover from June 1935

Saturday Evening Post,1935

A palette for painting the sea
Below is a photo of my palette of colors that I use outdoors. An artist can easily paint the shore with as little as *three pigments but I like using this prismatic based palette. The prismatic palette is one developed by Frank Vincent Dumond and was widely taught at the Art Students League. Dumond’s students such as Frank Reilly, Paul Strisik, and Arthur Maynard made this palette the foundation of their teaching the prism in nature. Maynard founded the Ridgewood Art Institute in Ridgewood, NJ where the tradition of the prismatic palette continues to be taught. I’ve modified this palette by: adding Yellow ochre and Burnt Sienna. I also two oranges, one that heads toward yellow and one more toward red. I also use a Algiers blue by Robert doak as a replacement for Manganese blue. Doak’s blue is an excellent paint with great tinting strength and much less expensive than Manganese due to it’s scarcity.
* The three pigments that can be used are: Ultramarine blue, Alizarin crimson, and cad yellow light, along with Tit. white and ivory black. I will post a chart and elaborate on this in the next post.

Free Color Palette Generator
Check out this Free Color palette generator at: http://bighugelabs.com/colors.php Just upload a photo and the software generates a series of color swatches from your photo. This is a great way to isolate colors so the paint enthusiast can see how close the values lie in a particular composition.

Sailing on Twilight Lake
I recently participated in an art exhibit in Bay Head, NJ. I went down the previous week and did some plein air sketches at the beach and at Twilight Lake. I wanted to do a moonlight or nocturne scene so I basically just sketched in the profile of the trees and did the rest of the painting in studio. Framed in a custom painted dark blue rustic frame this painting is for sale. For price e-mail at: mikemalzone@gmail.com

Surf’s up!
I’ve been working on some new seascapes recently and thought I’d post them here for your viewing. Most of them are for sale and the prices are quite reasonable, frame included. For price and availability you can contact me at: mikemalzone@gmail.com or call me at 973-720-0001

11" x 14" oil on linen, framed

Almost as good as painting!
It doesn’t get much better than painting outdoors, or (en plein air). One of the few sensations to top it is when you sell your painting wet right off the easel! In a recent trip to colonial Williamsburg while painting off the main road, I had the good fortune to find a buyer for my painting in progress. The client agreed to let me finish it up in my studio in which I would ship it to her in Pa. upon completion. The reason being that after almost two hours into the painting the picket fence was now in complete shadow as the rest of the painting done earlier was painted in direct light at about 10 am. In hindsight I would’ve eliminated the fence as it doesn’t add much to the composition visually. (16″ x 20″ oil on linen)

An Experiment
(from the New York Times-What makes a work of art “great”? A seven-part tale of the Nazi-era Vermeer forgeries of Han van Meegeren. )
Imagine that you could build a 3-dimensional copier. And could copy “The Girl with the Pearl Earring” atom by atom, molecule by molecule, such that there would be no way to distinguish between the two. Would I then have the same painting? The answer is: NO. The two paintings have a different provenance, and that provenance is crucial to understanding what makes a work of art what it is. One painting has a provenance going back to Vermeer, the other has a provenance going back to the 3-dimensional copier.
Furthermore, if the painting was not painted by Vermeer, if it doesn’t have that causal connection with the hand of Vermeer, then it doesn’t matter what it looks like. Vermeer could have produced a truly atrocious painting, but if it is he who painted it, then it is a Vermeer, regardless of what it looks like. Van Meegeren was aware of this. All you have to do is point to the forgery and say, “It’s a Vermeer,” then perhaps point to a signature, and the viewer does the rest of the work. Now for the surprise. There is no need to build a 3-dimensional copier – even if it were possible. Han van Meegeren has conducted the experiment for us in a much more clever fashion. There is NO difference between “The Supper at Emmaus,” before and after it was identified as a modern forgery, and yet it was seen in different ways. Only our beliefs about it have changed. Click to read article






