Ready, set, go…..

Hey everyone,

Ready ,set ,go…. Go, go,  go !!! ….  Seems to be the operative phrase these days…. Between painting time,  starting a new business,  negotiating contracts on a new studio space,  working at a large healthcare company, and of course keeping a eye on Sean, one has no time for anything….. after maintaining this pace for several years  I found it necessary to incorporate much needed  and necessary “battery recharge time” (BRT)…. Lol……so this weekend we are writing from Redondo Beach, CA…….just breathing some different air can work wonders on the creativity and the mind…. I think actually taking a dip in the ocean doesn’t hurt either… with keeping pace in our busy lifestyles its equally important to take a break and breathe… this is one aspect that we all tend to forget…

“The impact that taking a vacation has on one’s mental health is profound,” said Francine Lederer, a clinical psychologist in Los Angeles who specializes in stress and relationship management. “Most people have better life perspective and are more motivated to achieve their goals after a vacation, even if it is a 24-hour time-out.”

Clinical psychologist Deborah Mulhern of Bethesda, Md., also has found that people who don’t take enough time to relax may find it harder to relax in the future. “Without time and opportunity to do this, the neural connections that produce feelings of calm and peacefulness become weaker, making it actually more difficult to shift into less-stressed modes,” Mulhern said. “What neuroscience is showing is that we require down time in order for our bodies to go through the process of restoration. It is only when we are safe from external stresses that our bodies can relax enough to activate restoration.” So the evidence is there… we just need to continue to program ourselves that balance between the work life and the personal life are really the key to success…. Have a great week everyone… and just relax….

peace…

………..james

pics from the weekend relaxing in Hollywood, CA  at my favorite flea market..Melrose Trading Post.… almost forgot tomorrow is Monday…lol.. melrose trading post DSC_0874 DSC_0876   dragon

ha, ha, ha, ha… omg…. lol.!

Hey everyone… Hope your enjoying a great week…. lately i have noticed… just as you all probably have, that the news coming out is bleak and horrible… as one who sees the glass half full I decided to take a lighter look at the art world today… so many times we get stuck in deep and impending doom that we really forget to laugh… I think I have read somewhere that a daily belly laugh is the ultimate in a healthy lifestyle… I can’t agree more… for me laughter is a core necessity for my creative lifestyle.  Nothing can get me “unstuck” like a great laugh.  Seriously at the end of the day is all the stress and negative feelings really worth it?… nope not even close…. so enjoy a great laugh this week… if your struggling for a good one I have included some dumb and funny jokes to get you on your way…. Have a great week everyone… talk to you soon ………peace ……………….james You just might be an artist if….

  • You were more concerned about the color of your car than the fuel consumption.
  • The highlights in your hair are from your palette and not Clairol.
  • You are having lunch with some friends and the fragrance you wear is eau d’linseed oil.
  • The only piece of new furniture you have in your home is a $2000 easel.
  • You butter your toast with your fingers, just to feel its texture.
  • You are over 50 and still have no health insurance.
  • You know what shade of green the lichen on the trees is.
  • You can’t find any clothes for your date because everything has paint smears on.
  • Your date ends up with paint smears on her/him.
  • You’re late for the date because you suddenly knew exactly what that detail of your latest painting needed and just had to fix it while it was fresh in your mind.
  • When viewing a sunset, you think in terms of cadmium yellow (light hue), salmon and gold, a tinted teal mixed with gold for the water….”
  • There are Prussian blue fingerprints on your phone.
  • You clean your brushes in your coffee.
  • You have watercolor swatches on cardboard in your pocket.
  • You do judge a book by its cover.
  • You draw your letters instead of write them.
  • You like to get plastered and paint the town red.
  • You know that art does not match your sofa.
  • If dust bunnies are part of your mixed media.
  • You buy expensive brushes, and have nothing to do your hair with.
  • You get a feeling of calmness from holding and stroking the bristles of your clean paintbrushes.
  • You know the difference between beige, ecru, cream, off-white, and eggshell.
  • You know more than 28 colors.

My personal top 10…. #10 Why was the artist afraid he might go to jail? Because he’d been framed!

#9 Which barnyard animal is a famous painter? Vincent van Goat! (or Pablo Pigcaso!)

#8 What did the artist say when he finally finished his Bas carving? What a relief!

#7 What did the artist say to the dentist? Matisse hurt!

#6 What did the artist draw before he went to bed? The curtains!

#5 How many modern artists does it take to change a light bulb? Four. One to throw bulbs against the wall, one to pile hundreds of them in a heap and spray-paint it orange, one to glue light bulbs to a cocker spaniel, and one to put a bulb in the socket and fill the room with light while all the critics and buyers are watching the fellow smashing the bulbs against the wall, the fellow with the spray-gun, and the cocker spaniel.

#4 How do Japanese artists bid farewell? Cyan-nara!

#3 What do you get if you cross a painter with a boxer? Muhammad Dali!

#2 Haiku about getting out of bed: no no no no no, no no no no no no no, no no no no no.

#1 Why did the artist cross the road? To see the other side

Get your Kicks on Route 66

Hey Everyone…

Hope your enjoying a great week… I was online the last couple of days and noticed that there wasn’t much going on in the art world… funny enough I was reading the NY Times and the art section stated basically the same thing…. all is quiet and nothing new to report… I guess its the early dole drums of and very hot summer ahead of us, or a holiday hangover…lol….  Well I’ve been in the studio woking diligently on finalizing the last of a commission piece.  Should have it done and ready for your viewing next week…  Just finished up my second piece in my Americana Series… frequently I head down route 66 on my motorcycle and really enjoy the history and nostalgia… I find peace traveling down the road… as well as a great way to re- energize my batteries… so much history…. sadly it appears that slowly our history is deteriorating … love to see a national movement to see the is amazing road revitalized…. With all the move to technology and all things new,  there is a strength and wisdom in our history and our past……..and it needs to be preserved…. have a great week everyone… talk to you soon

………peace

………….james

recent photos from a drive down Historic Route 66

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time for some ZZZzzz’s

Hey everyone…

Hope all is well and your enjoying a great week…. Someone asked me the other day about about how I fit time to paint in my busy schedule.. it got me thinking about how I manage and what others might be doing as well and how they balanced the art/professional life.

Sleeping habits are very variable throughout our population – for some people, it is a simple balance and straightforward schedule, for others, strange hours and odd sleeping rituals are perfect. Though doctors have generally agreed that it is a healthy habit to get eight hours of sleep each night, many physicians and sleep experts emphasize that each and every body has different needs based on physical composition, diet, healthy or unhealthy habits, daily workload, and emotional or stressful triggers. Some people thrive on extra hours of sleep, claiming that it gives them more energy, while others note that it makes them sluggish and often increases the symptoms of being tired. There are many famous people of our past and present who have relied on their odd sleeping patterns for success – Imagine having absolutely no sleeping schedule – only resting when your body completely shut down against your own will, and resisting long periods of sleep in order to work around the clock. Most of us would agree that this would make us go insane – but for some of our greatest inventors of the past, it only contributed to their insane amounts of creativity.  Thomas Edison, the light bulb inventor, was infamous for falling asleep with his eyes still open. While in his office during the midnight hours, he would end up sleeping on his worktable instead of going home to get proper rest, and would awake as soon as possible in order to continue working. Elias Howe, the inventor of the modern sewing machine, claimed to have invented the proper needle-threading machinery through his intensive dreams during his odd sleeping schedule. Perhaps the oddest inventor sleep cycle was that of Leonardo da Vinci – who would sleep only 20 minutes at a time, napping just ever three hours in order to stay refreshed throughout the whole day and night.

Ernest Hemingway took a very strange approach to sleep – like many of his artistic and creative contemporaries, he would stay awake for days without sleeping, finally resting for an entire twenty-four hours of sleep or more before beginning the cycle again.  Edgar Allen Poe and Sigmund Freud were also known to follow these patterns, stimulated in particular by drugs like cocaine and opium and strong drinks like absinthe that made their waking hours far more psychedelic than a typical night of dreaming.  Salvador Dali, the famous surrealist painter, tried to wake himself up just as he began to dream in order to remember those fantasies and incorporate them into his work.   According to legend, he claimed to be fully refreshed by a very odd, brief kind of nap. The story goes that he would put a metal pan on the floor, and doze off in his chair, holding a metal spoon above the pan. When he fell asleep, he would drop the spoon, and then wake up an instant later, when the spoon hit the pan with a clatter.  A modern-day example, consider the amazing singer Mariah Carey, who has had a very strange sleeping pattern throughout her life that was dictated in part by her industry.  For years, she operated nocturnally, sleeping during the daylight hours and waking up in the evening to record all night. Now with her children, her sleep patterns have become more normalized to their schedules, but she prefers recording in the night hours.

In contrast with many of the celebrities mentioned above, many famous people have struggled to get as much sleep as possible to help their success. Rene Descartes stayed in bed as long as possible each day in order to write his philosophical texts – often eating a breakfast in bed at midday and staying in pajamas for the rest of his waking hours, writing from the comfort of his cot.  Albert Einstein loved his sleep: he claimed to need at least ten hours of sleep each night in order to function properly during the day, and he reported that he couldn’t think properly without sleep.

Benjamin Franklin, a true American patriot and Renaissance man, had trouble sleeping through the night. He, like many who face insomnia, could only sleep for a few hours before waking up in the middle of the night. He tried to cure this odd habit with a ritual: he would sleep for one half of the night with his head at the top of the bed, and then after he woke up a few hours later, he would turn his body so that his head was at the base of his mattress. Perhaps the changed position gave his body extra support and comforted his back and neck, or perhaps it was just a ritual that helped to calm his anxieties about sleeping.  Imagine if Benjamin Franklin had been able to search for a proper mattress online to comfort him when he woke up from his slumber.
Throwing myself in the mix,  I usually work in spurts which can last for a month at a time… During these creative episodes I usually sleep from 6 pm to about 10 pm.. then I grab some dinner and hit the studio until about 4 am … followed by a quick hour nap and then off to my other life…

Throughout history, we’ve certainly noticed many strange sleeping habits of individuals – and the fascination with sleep and dreams lives on. The moral of the story seems to be that we should find what works best for us – and make sure we find the right mattress and bed that support our bodies during our restful moments. Perhaps it is strange that these celebrities rested in abnormal ways throughout their lives and still managed to be successful – others believe that these odd sleeping patterns are in fact what have pushed these people towards fame and fortune.

Well if its a unusual sleep pattern that determines success… I am well on my way….lol…. have a great week everyone… take care

peace….

…………..james

I found a  graph of what normal sleep cycle should be… love to get there someday…lol.. talk to you soon

sleep_cycle_REM_8_hour_graph

bartender… I’ll have another shot…lol

Hey Everyone…. hope your having a great week… Memorial Day weekend is here…… Off on Monday!!!!… I was hoping to have several new works to show you today but I was slightly derailed in completing them this week……. My son graduated from bartending school yesterday and so he was able to show us…. or we were able to taste what he learned while in school….Although my son doesn’t aspire to be a painter, it is clear that he has an artistic gene when it comes to creating a great pour.. .. and yesterday we were the recipients from the budding Picasso  and his creative mixology…..now today I think we are all the recipients of a very creative hangover….lol…

People talk about how there’s no flair in bartending but there’s this other type of flair…….It’s so sexual and beautiful the way bartenders stir and shake their drinks and put the ingredients in the shaker. Think about how they raise the bottle high and the stream can be long or short but it’s always beautiful… and then putting the garnish in the glass.  It’s personal and intimate and that’s part of what makes it so incredibly special especially in this digital world….. in this post-postmodern age,  are bartenders great artisans and are craft cocktails truly an art?   I  think so….Some say bartenders are artists for the way they slowly pour their homemade grenadine into a glass creating layers of alternating colors.  Others insist they’re craftsmen and craftswomen;  choosing the label of “mixologist” in recognition of their recipe skills.

Quickly brush aside memories of the 1988 film Cocktail starring Tom Cruise and Bryan Brown as flamboyant bartenders who toss their shakers and themselves with Cirque du Soleil flair….. like a painter you really need to know and study your craft to obtain that level so many aspire to.

The whack of a large wooden mallet onto a block of artisanal ice brings extra drama and sexiness to the art being created and exhibited in front of you.

So without further delay I am heading to the studio to practice and perfect my craft… well as soon as I reach out to my artist bartender and order another shot!…..lol…. have a great week everyone… I should have several works out next week for all of you to see…talk to you soon

……peace

………………james

“remnants of graduation”…lol

remnants of graduation

don’t buy from the repo man!

Hey everyone… hope your week is going great… been gearing up in the studio… I am currently working on a commission piece…. and will be making more canvas’s this weekend…I know its a little time consuming but for me it increases the originality…….recently all the canvas’s I use are had made by me… which means that I start with a piece of cloth… build the frame and then gesso the cloth to get to the finished canvas… for me it really adds to the overall concept of every piece being an original… but it got me thinking about some recent art that I saw in a gallery here in vegas….there was some hype about this particular painter so I went to check it out and was really disappointed to find out it was a print… the artist had touched it with his brush, but nonetheless a print…… Today it seems that many painters, as well as the galleries that represent them, are turning to giclée prints.

Well, a giclée print is little different from the poster you hung on your college dorm wall.  Sure, it’s more (much more) expensive and made with archival inks.  But it’s still just a printed reproduction. They are not the same as monotypes, limited lithographic prints and the like, all of which are made through a printmaking process.  Wikipedia says that  “Printmaking normally covers only the process of creating prints with an element of originality, rather than just being a photographic reproduction of a painting.”  I don’t care if the giclée is hand-embellished, numbered and printed on canvas – to me, it’s an expensive poster.The point is this.  If you’re thinking of buying something that will have monetary value down the road, it’s not going to be giclée prints.  Those college dorm wall posters you had are worthless.  The only value they have is emotional and personal.  That poster that you had of Van Gogh’s sunflowers was a nice decorative piece but it’s now worth about five bucks, new.I just looked up Van Gogh sunflower prints on eBay.  The poster’s buy-it-now price is $5.  A giclée version on canvas, framed, is $69.95.  Both of these are described as “rare” in the text.  But compare these with one of the original sunflower paintings, which sold in 1987 for around $39,000,000 and is today estimated to be worth about $89,000,000.If you can’t buy the original, you’re better off buying an inexpensive offset print, not a giclée.  Giclées cheat the uninformed public, which is one reason why I don’t do them.In fact, I don’t sell prints of any kind…I am committed to ensuring that each and every piece I create is all original…  And wouldn’t you rather have the original, anyway?  As a student, you can study it in a way you’d never be able to study a print.   As a buyer, you’ve got an investment that a print will never be.I know the counter-arguments.  If you have one painting that you could have sold a hundred times, wouldn’t it make sense to make prints?  Sounds good financially, but some say it devalues the original.   I have collectors buy  paintings precisely because I don’t make prints of them.   Some artists will say prints increase the value of the original.  I don’t think Van Gogh’s original sunflower painting has a huge pricetag because of all those prints hanging up on dorm walls.Have a great week everyone…talk to you soon……….peace

……………….jamessummer splendor

This painting was sold in 2008 and is part of the permanent collection of famous magicians/entertainers  Siegfried and Roy… Oil, gold leaf… and yes…….all original…

summer splendor