Tag Archives: Cow Palace

Grand National Art Show and Sale Review

2008 Grand National Art Show & Sale at the Cow Palace in Daly City

I must start by saying in my review, I am very grateful for having the very wonderful opportunity to be in an international art show with so many other very talented artists. That said, I must also say that the art director did not do the show justice by being so disorganized and the gallery space was cut in half at the very last minute. Not all of the art work submitted was actually put in the show. Several artists were very upset that it seemed disorganized and that only a few of each person’s art was actually on display.

However, the talent at the show was out of this world! Beautiful, very well executed Equine and Western themed art works from every one was on display from all over the world. Some very large works, like the drift wood sculptures of a bull and bear right down to the very small paintings. It seems that sales went very well and people passing by had lots of wonderful compliments to give to the gallery. This show was filled with such wonderful talented artists from all over the world even as far away as Italy, Canada, Australia and many other places. I wish all the best to every artist I met. It was a pleasure having my art displayed next so many other talented artists. Even though there were quite a few hick ups to the show, I would be more than willing to do the show again under the direction of another more professional art director. May the Cow Palace have many more Grand National Rodeos and Art Shows to come.

This was first time my family and I had ever been to San Francisco California and we had a lot of fun. Seeing the sites, museums, art, culture, aquarium, pier 39 with the sea lions and the plant life was so beautiful. We ate to much, and walked a lot, but still could not see it all. I want to go back one day to be able to go on one of the whale watching tours and maybe get even more inspiring photos to work from to create more art. So with that said, we will definitely plan another trip for the future.

Thank you,

Jodi Bauter

©Copyright 2008 by Jodi Bauter. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Jodi Bauter’s website.

Grand National Rodeo Western Art Show

The Grand National Rodeo Western Art Show & Sale opens this Friday, April 4.

The following six paintings are my contribution to the show. They include four small format paintings (After the Bath, Autumn Fields, Dinner With Friends and Working Class) and two miniature paintings (Flints Hills Landscape Study #81 2007 and Flint Hills Landscape Study #82 2007). The two miniatures are, in fact, a couple of ACEO landscapes created as part of my personal painting challenge for 2007.

Two of the paintings were designed and completed for this show.

This collection represents my first entry into a show of this caliber anywhere. Hopefully, they are only the first!

And now I invite you take a few moments to browse the paintings and imagine, if you will, the sounds of rodeo and livestock classes and all the sights and scents that go with such an event!

Enjoy!


After the Bath
5×7
Original Oil on Canvas Panel


Autumn Field
9×12
Original Oil on Raphael Linen Panel


Dinner With Friends
8×10
Original Oil on Raphael Linen Panel


Flint Hills ~ Landscape Study #81 2007
3.5×2.5
Original Oil on Triple Gessoed Mat Board


Flint Hills ~ Landscape Study #82 2007
3.5×2.5
Original Oil on Triple Gessoed Mat Board


Working Class - A Portrait
9×9
Original Oil on Artfix Linen

As of this writing, these paintings are available for sale. Purchase may be arranged by contacting show organizer Deena Barton by telephone at 951/574-2944 until April 12, 2008.

Additional information on the event in general may be obtained by visiting the Grand National Web site for rodeo information.

©Copyright 2008 by Carrie Lewis. See original post here.

Unsettled


Things seem a tad unsettled around here the last little while. I’ve been struggling with trying to meet art and show deadlines. Got one biggie out of the way today when I got the box with five artworks off to the Grand National show, now I have to get printing and framing my images for the local Gardenscapes show, which I will deliver later in the week. Also have a couple of mixed media collage commissions to get finished, although I’m in good shape on them and it shouldn’t be too hard to get them finished. They are the first I’ve done based on someone else’s photos *and* not animal based (family history images provided by my client). It’s been an interesting process and I’ve enjoyed the journey. Once they’re done, if my client agrees, I’ll post them here.

Unsettled would describe the weather. The day started with a beautiful clear blue sky and abundant sunshine, but by the time Mark (grandson, with me days this week during Easter school break) and I were heading out to shop at the local used book store later in the morning, it was snowing, at times quite heavily. Not sure what the forecast is for the rest of the week, but I’m glad the nice day yesterday didn’t trick me into taking Alpac’s blanket off. Guess we’re not ready for that yet. Since he is blanketed all winter, he never does grow much of a coat, so I try not to let him go naked until we can be pretty sure of decent weather. Apparently not yet.

The other unsettled area of life is horse related. There has been an outbreak of a contagious and potentially dangerous mutation of the equine rhinovirus (EHV-1) at one of the local stables. There was an article on it in the paper this morning
http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/news/third_page/story.html?id=60b6f3f6-c509-459a-8f92-9df51c8de0bb&k=73219 giving the outline of the situation. This is something that has occured in various parts of North America and other continents over the past few years. No-one knows where this outbreak originated, just that it showed up at this particular facility. It’s pretty much like lightning striking. It’s going to hit somewhere if it’s out there, and it’s the luck of the draw where it will occur. Given the on-going moving about of horses and riders to most training/boarding facilities, whether it’s visiting another barn, moving a horse from one facility to another, going to shows or clinics, it’s inevitable that “what goes around, comes around”. The best any of us can do is keep our horses vaccinated as is appropriate, see that they are well nourished, fit and in good health, and try to minimize contact with outside horses when possible. So far “my” barn has no symptomatic horses, and strict rules have been laid out to all boarders re taking all precautions possible to keep it from getting to our facility. Everyone in the horse world understands the seriousness of this outbreak and the potential health and economic repercussions for the horse industry.

The first shot for today shows the view outside our front window at noon. It’s pretty self-explanatory.

Shot number two is the final piece that I sent to the Grand National show. I was only going to send four initially, but this one is a favourite from a shoot last summer, and I wanted to try a different presentation with it. It is mounted on a 16″ x 20″ gallery wrap canvas, painted and collaged around the outside. Title is “Reubens’ Mares” as I felt these curvaceous girls were the equine equivalent of the lush and fleshy women featured in the artwork of Reubens.

©Copyright 2008 by Judy Wood. See original post here.

Grand National Rodeo art


For the first time this year, I am sending some work to the Grand National Rodeo, which will be held in San Francisco from April 4-12 http://www.grandnationalrodeo.com/. I’ve been working away off and on for the past several months, trying to get a few pieces done for this show. Finally (and not a moment too soon) I’m almost ready to ship the artwork.

We are allowed a base number of 5 pieces per artist, although there is the option of sending additional smaller works which will be displayed as space allows. I’ll have to make that decision at the last minute depending on available space in my shipping box. For the moment, I’m sending at least four works, possibly five if the one I just decided to add can be sorted out in time. The “for sure” ones are three photo works–one relatively straightforward and two photomontages, plus a mixed media collage on canvas with photo elements in it. Mostly I’m trying to stick to a “western” theme.

The collage is called “War Pony’s World”, one of the photos is a close crop of a quarter horse with western saddle and chaps, one is a photomontage of a Clydesdale “ghost” in front of an old abandoned house in a landscape (one of a number of “ghost horse” images I have done, with yet more in the planning), and a more elaborate photomontage called “Ranch Life”, mostly based on photos I took at the cowhorse training ranch I went to a few times last fall for photo shoots. This place is a visual goldmine for someone like me and I’m looking forward to getting out there once mud season has passed.

Today’s photos are of “War Pony’s World”, the mixed media collage (featuring the ineffable Homer, owned by the barn man at Ebon where I ride, and featured in other war pony works I’ve done in the past), and “Ranch Life”, which is fairly self-explanatory. The version I am sending of Ranch Life is mildly different due to complications with my mat and frame size, but this one is pretty close to the end product.

Trying to wrap and box artwork for shipping is a major ordeal for me, and it never seems to get any easier. To add insult to injury on this front, you never know whether or not the works will sell or will be returned, so I have to make preparations as if all the artwork will be coming back here, complete with return labels, forms for across the border shipping, and arrangements to pay for it all. Then we cross our fingers and hope for the best. In an ideal world, all the works will sell at the show and I’ll just get a nice cheque in the mail. No harm in hoping for the best! Worst case, everything comes back, and if the wording isn’t just right on the customs forms, I get to pay tax on my own unsold works returning to Canada! Generally this can be avoided, but there’s always a risk. No wonder I don’t care for this whole process.

©Copyright 2008 by Judy Wood. See original post here.

Abstractions

Well here’s something you don’t see every day!

An abstract anything bearing my signature!

While I can find abstract art that is appealing (there is one such painting hanging right in front of me as I write), I don’t generally find most of it motivating, inspiring or even enjoyable.

Today, however, the colored pencil circle met at the Carriage Factory Gallery. It was our first gathering in quite some time and I knew it was coming, but had not prepared anything to work on. No portraits. No landscapes. Nothing but some pre-cut ACEO cards in my colored pencil case.

But I did want to do something, so I took out one of the cards and just began layering color over it.

About half way through, I decided to impress some lines into the paper to see what sorts of interesting results I could uncover.

After a few more minutes, it was suggested I draw a horse. Since the background was already colorful, it was further suggested that the horse have wings.

Do I always do what I’m told?

No, but I was playing with colored pencils today, so I took their advice. Can you see the horse? It’s rather sketchy because it was drawn white on white, but it is there.

I want to work on this a little bit more, so I left it at the gallery. It will be my ‘when it gets quiet enough to make art’ piece, so it may take a while to finish.

Speaking of finishing…my third novel was finished last night. The two final problems were solved to my satisfaction and I am now considering Fine Lines (working title) complete. One or two more proof readings by me and by someone else and it will be ready to typeset.

The Cow Palace paintings are all boxed up and awaiting a trip to the nearest FedEx drop off point, hopefully tomorrow evening. So that project is complete, too. The only thing left to do is post the collection together at some point closer to the actual show, so be watching for that. It is, I think, the best collection I’ve put together since Village Place 2003.

There is something exhilarating about finishing things! Why, I can almost get back to the normal studio routine…whatever that is!

©Copyright 2008 by Carrie Lewis. See original post here.

In cold dark places I dream of spring- k.d. lang

I listened to the new kd lang cd while I was painting this and it seemed an apt title. I will be sending this one to the Grand National Art Show with 4-5 others this week for the show the first week of April.

©Copyright 2008 by Judy Johnson. See original post here.

“Pre Exhibit” Exhibit

In preparation for sending a collection of artwork to San Francisco for the upcoming Grand National Rodeo Western Art Show & Sale, Neal and I set up an exhibit of the paintings that will soon be going west.

The purpose of this exhibit was to give the members of the congregation where we attend the opportunity to see the work that has been made possible through their kind words and encouragements, not to mention prayers through the rough spots in creation and continued prayer support during the show. I could not have asked for more!

The exhibit also included other paintings, including those that made a much heralded and storied trip to Louisville, Kentucky in 2003, almost all of the remaining 315 aceo landscapes from a personal challenge in 2007 and quite a few new, small format landscapes.

Basically, every painting in our house made the journey to the church building, creating a very nice exhibit (but leaving our house looking rather, well, bare!).

Fifty or sixty people came by to see the exhibit, to share best wishes in the upcoming show and to enjoy the collection of horse paintings in oil, horse paintings in colored pencil, small format landscapes in oil and colored pencil, aceo paintings in acrylic, oil and colored pencil and one still life of an egg in colored pencil. (Yes, I did say an egg, the result of an online colored pencil lesson…rather out of step with the rest of the collection, but definitely an attention getter!).

My heartfelt thanks to those at First Christian Church, Newton, Kansas, who encouraged my participation in the Grand National show and to those who helped through the initial stages.

I also want to thank those who helped provide snacks and refreshments for visitors, for the two-part showing.

This coming week, there is paperwork to do, paintings to pack and a shipment to be made.

I would also like to sneak some painting (and writing!) into the week somewhere, but getting that artwork on the road is the top priority!

©Copyright 2008 by Carrie Lewis. See original post here.

Buddies, revisited

Cowboy and his bay western horse

I think I am done with this duo, there’s always room for improvement, but I am very happy with it. Learned some new things and I am moving on. Hope they like it out at the Grand National Rodeo and Art Show in San Francisco next month.

©Copyright 2008 by Judy Johnson. See original post here.

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