Inspiring Quote On Art From René Magritte

“Art evokes the mystery without which the world would not exist.” – René Magritte

René Magritte (Belgian, 1898-1967). The Kiss, 1951. Oil on canvas. 59.2 x 77.2 cm. (23 5/16 x 30 3/8 in.). Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

René Magritte (Belgian, 1898-1967). The Kiss, 1951. Oil on canvas. 59.2 x 77.2 cm. (23 5/16 x 30 3/8 in.). Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

 

“Rene Magritte is one of the most famous Surrealist painters, but it wasn’t until his 50s that he achieved international recognition. In Surrealism’s progression into Pop Art, Magritte’s work was enormously influential and his images continue to be celebrated.”

“Magritte’s paintings challenge the everyday, the notion of common sense. By subtly rearranging recognisable forms and perspectives he forces the viewer to look more closely at what is generally taken for granted. He exploited the ambiguities between real objects and images of them and delighted in playing with the viewer’s expectations.” – artrepublic.com

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Food Photography Vero Beach – The Tides

Here are some food photographs from a recent shoot for Vero Home, Life & Design magazine celebrating food on the Treasure Coast. I was very fortunate to work with some of the most creative and talented chefs in Vero Beach including Chef Mark Edmonds of Patisserie, Chef Scott Varricchio of Citrus Grillhouse, Chef Joe Faria of Quail Valley Golf Club and Chef Leanne Kelleher of The Tides. These particular photos were created with Chef Leanne Kelleher at The Tides.

Food Photography Vero Beach at The Tides Restaurant by commercial photographer Aric Attas

Food Photography Vero Beach at The Tides Restaurant by commercial photographer Aric Attas

Food Photography Vero Beach at The Tides Restaurant by commercial photographer Aric Attas

You can see more delicious food photos from this shoot in the October/November issue of Vero Home, Life & Design or by visiting my commercial photography portfolio.

All of these chefs were VERY generous with their time and talent. I encourage to you visit their restaurants to experience some of the best food in Vero Beach and the Treasure Coast. You’ll be glad you did!

All photographs © Aric Attas. All rights reserved.

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Quotes On Color, Form And Art From Vasily Kandinsky

“Color directly influences the soul. Color is the keyboard, the eyes are the hammers, the soul is the piano with many strings. The artist is the hand that plays, touching one key or another purposively, to cause vibrations in the soul.” – Vasily Kankdinsky

Vasily Kandinsky, Several Circles, January-February 1926, Oil on canvas, 140.3 cm x 140.7 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.

Vasily Kandinsky, Several Circles, January-February 1926, Oil on canvas, 140.3 cm x 140.7 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.

 

“In 1922 Kandinsky joined the faculty of the Weimar Bauhaus, where he discovered a more sympathetic environment in which to pursue his art. Originally premised on a Germanic, expressionistic approach to artmaking, the Bauhaus aesthetic came to reflect Constructivist concerns and styles, which by the mid-1920s had become international in scope. While there, Kandinsky furthered his investigations into the correspondence between colors and forms and their psychological and spiritual effects. In Composition 8, the colorful, interactive geometric forms create a pulsating surface that is alternately dynamic and calm, aggressive and quiet. The importance of circles in this painting prefigures the dominant role they would play in many subsequent works, culminating in his cosmic and harmonious image Several Circles.” – Nancy Spector, Guggenheim Museum

“The circle,” claimed Kandinsky, “is the synthesis of the greatest oppositions. It combines the concentric and the eccentric in a single form and in equilibrium. Of the three primary forms, it points most clearly to the fourth dimension.”

Here are some great books featuring work by Kandinsky from my Amazon store.

                                        

To learn more about Kandinsky and see more of his work visit the Guggenheim website here: https://www.guggenheim.org

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Quote On Photography, Space & Time By Wynn Bullock

Here’s an interesting quote on photography, space and time from photographer Wynn Bullock.

“I feel all things as dynamic events, being, changing, and interacting with each other in space and time even as I photograph them.” – Wynn Bullock

Wynn Bullock, Color Light Abstraction

Wynn Bullock, Color Light Abstraction

 

Although primarily known for his Black & White photography Bullock created a stunning series of color light abstractions from about 1959-1964. “For about five years, Dad all but stopped making black & white photographs and became totally absorbed in the creation of his photographs of light. He felt that color helped him express the beauty, richness, and potency of light as a living force. Abstraction enabled him to get close to the essence of universal qualities. By choosing not to symbolize recognizable object-events – for example a tide pool teeming with a variety a familiar organisms – and by symbolizing instead vivid forms of light pulsing with energy and surging upward through unfathomable darkness, Dad believed he could evoke more directly and intensely the qualities which both pictures could represent.” Barbara Bullock-Wilson

To see the full range of Bullock’s photography including his Black & White work visit: http://www.wynnbullockphotography.com. There are also some insightful essays from his daughter Barbara.

To see more of Wynn Bullock’s beautiful color light abstractions check out this monograph at Amazon.

Image Copyright © Bullock Family Photography.

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Inspiring Photography Ideas From Creative Sparks Photographer Bill Lord

Here’s a fascinating color photograph from Creative Sparks photographer Bill Lord. Bill has been exploring the use of water droplets and color lights in his “science project” setup inspired by the abstract color photography of Wynn Bullock. I really like the sense of depth and movement in this photograph as well as the images within the water droplets. Nice work Bill!

Bill Lord, Untitled, Color Photograph, 2014

Bill Lord, Untitled, Color Photograph, 2014

 

Creative Sparks is a unique photography class and creativity workshop held on Thursday evenings in Vero Beach, Florida. Students are guided to discover their creative vision with nationally recognized artist/photographer Aric Attas in a small group setting.

Photographs © Bill Lord. All rights reserved. Photograph used by permission.

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Fine Art Photography Exhibition Opens Friday

I’m very excited to announce the opening of my exhibition of fine art photographs Seeking The Light this Friday at Lighthouse Art & Framing. This is brand new work exploring light and space inspired by Cosmology, Physics, Kabbalah and Meditation.

Lighthouse Art & Framing is located at 1875 14th Avenue in Vero Beach, Florida. The opening is from 5-8pm on February 7th as part of Vero Beach’s monthly Art Walk. Stop by and say hello! If you can’t make the opening the exhibition will be up for the entire month of February.

Aric Attas, Seeking The Light , No. 22, 12 x 18 inches, printed on Hahnemuhle archival matte paper, 2013

Aric Attas, Seeking The Light , No. 22, 12 x 18 inches, printed on Hahnemuehle archival matte paper, 2013

 

To see more work from this show please visit my online gallery Seeking The Light.

Special thanks to Gady Alroy at ArtMedia in Miami for his expert printing and to Barry Shapiro & Megan Hoots at Lighthouse Art & Framing for their help framing and hosting the exhibition.

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Inspiring Photography From Creative Sparks Creativity Workshop

Here are some recent photographs presented at Creative Sparks. The group continues to evolve as participants continue to challenge and inspire each other. Comfort zones get left behind and personal vision emerges.

Paul Simon, IR Windy Day, Infrared Photograph, 2014

Paul Simon, IR Windy Day, Infrared Photograph, 2014

 

Bill Lord, Untitled, Color Photograph, 2014

Bill Lord, Untitled, Color Photograph, 2014

 

Bob Webster, Untitled, Color Photograph, 2014

Bob Webster, Untitled, Color Photograph, 2014

 

Yvonne Tso, Untitled, Color Photograph, 2014

Yvonne Tso, Untitled, Color Photograph, 2014

 

Barbara Bogart, Dandelion, Color Photograph, 2014

Barbara Bogart, Dandelion, Color Photograph, 2014

 

Creative Sparks is a unique photography class and creativity workshop held on Thursday evenings in Vero Beach, Florida. Students are guided to discover their creative vision with nationally recognized artist/photographer Aric Attas in a small group setting.

Photographs © original artists. All rights reserved. Photographs used by permission.

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Ever Wonder How To Understand Abstract Art?

As a photographer who makes abstract fine art photographs the concept of abstraction in art is a frequent topic of discussion. I found this article from Jerry Saltz, Art Critic for New York Magazine to be an excellent conversation starter. It just may change the way you think about both abstract AND representational art.

Dear Jerry,

Over the past few years, I’ve noticed a lot more abstract art being made, and I often find myself stymied by something a little bit embarrassing. Jerry, is abstract art for real? I mean, I often don’t really get it. Isn’t it just smudges and stripes and squares and stuff?
—Embarrassed

Dear Embarrassed,

You are not alone. I too have heretical thoughts like yours. It can also take 30 years to understand why an all-white painting by Robert Ryman or a pencil grid on canvas by Agnes Martin is art.

I can’t tell you what abstraction is, but I can tell you a number of things that I think that it allows artists to do. What I say about abstract art could also be applied to representational art. With that in mind here’s “The Jerry Saltz Abstract Manifesto, in Twenty Parts.”

1. Abstraction is one of the greatest visionary tools ever invented by human beings to imagine, decipher, and depict the world.

2. Abstraction is staggeringly radical, circumvents language, and sidesteps naming or mere description. It disenchants, re-enchants, detoxifies, destabilizes, resists closure, slows perception, and increases our grasp of the world.

3. Abstraction not only explores consciousness — it changes it.

4. All art is abstract. A painting of a person or a still-life is a two-dimensional representation of three-dimensional reality and therefore infinitely abstract. Whenever an artist sets out to make something it turns into something else that he or she could never have imagined or predicted.

5. Think of an abstract painting as very, very low relief — a thing, not a picture.

6. Abstraction exists in the interstices between the ideal and the real, symbol and substance, the optic and the haptic, imagination and observation.

7. Abstraction brings the world into more complex, variable relations; it can extract beauty, alternative topographies, ugliness, and intense actualities from seeming nothingness.

8. Abstraction, like ideas, intuitions, feelings, and life, is not mimetic.

9. Abstraction is as old as we are. It has existed for millennia outside the West. It is present on cave walls, in Egyptian and Cypriot Greek art, Chinese scholar rocks, all Islamic and Jewish art — both of which forbid representation. Abstraction is only new in the West.

10. Abstraction gained ground in Western art after centuries of more perfected systems of representation. By the mid-nineteenth century, representation felt like a trap, and seemed empty, false, or limiting. A similar situation existed in the early aughts, after artists of the nineties re-deployed realisms in numerous ways. The field appeared closed off for younger artists. That’s why contemporary artists have not only begun to reexplore the possibilities of abstraction, they’re shedding much of the Greenbergian cant and academic-formalist dogma that attached themselves to it over the last 50 years. Abstraction is breaking free again.

11. Abstraction offers ways around what Beckett called “the neatness of identification.”

12. Rothko’s glowing floating rectangles of color are more than abstract patterns. They are Buddhist TVs or what Keats called “good oblivion. One sees what nothing looks like in them. They make you ask, “What light through yonder painting breaks?” (Now do you see how full emptiness and abstraction can be?)

13. Abstraction is just a tool. It is no less “real” than philosophy or music.

14. Abstraction is something outside of life that allows us to be present at our own absence or alternatively absent in our own presence.

15. Abstraction creates patterns of meaning and its own extremely flexible intricate syntax. It is astral synthesis.

16. Abstraction teeters on making empty gestures while also making deep statements.

17. The camera was supposed to supplant painting but didn’t. Instead, painting — ever the sponge, always elastic — absorbed it and discovered new realms.

18. Abstraction may speak in a sort of intra-species visual-electronic-chemical-pheromonal code, creating optical-cerebral networks and wormholes, organic maps of unknown yet familiar territories, may have a kind of plant intelligence that allows it to grow, proliferate, flower, change directions, and survive relentless aesthetic predation from a lay public.

19. Abstraction contains multitudes.

20. I’ve left out No. 20, because I want to hear your opinion: What else does abstraction do that’s special?

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Abstract Color Photography Exhibition in Vero Beach, Florida

Still buzzing from an amazing day in Miami printing with Gady Alroy at ArtMedia studios in Wynwood. We printed some 30 x 20″ prints and a phenomenal 40 x 60″ print for my upcoming exhibition Seeking the Light at Lighthouse Art & Framing in Vero Beach, Florida. The show opens February 7th. More details soon but here’s a sneak peak! Thanks again Gady!

Aric Attas, Seeking the Light No. 82, Archival Digital Print on Hahnemuhle FineArt Baryta 325 gsm paper, 30 x 20", 2013

Aric Attas, Seeking the Light No. 82, Archival Digital Print on Hahnemuhle FineArt Baryta 325 gsm paper, 30 x 20″, 2013

 

 

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Creative Inspiration From Recently Discovered Photographer Vivian Maier

This is a fascinating story about the recently discovered photographer Vivian Maier.

“She was a humanist in the best tradition. She showed real life, and that’s so difficult to do.”  – photographer Mary Ellen Mark

“Vivian Maier (February 1, 1926 – April 21, 2009) was an American street photographer born in New York City. Although born in the U.S., it was in France that Maier spent most of her youth. Maier returned to the U.S. in 1951 where she took up work as a nanny and care-giver for the rest of her life. In her leisure however, Maier had begun to venture into the art of photography. Consistently taking photos over the course of five decades, she would ultimately leave over 100,000 negatives, most of them shot in Chicago and New York City. Vivian would further indulge in her passionate devotion to documenting the world around her through homemade films, recordings and collections, assembling one of the most fascinating windows into American life in the second half of the twentieth century.” – from the Finding Vivian Maier website.

Vivian Maier, Black & White Photograph, New York, NY, Undated

Vivian Maier, Black & White Photograph, New York, NY, Undated

 

To learn more about this fascinating woman and her amazing photography visit http://www.vivianmaier.com and this article from Chicago Magazine http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/January-2011/Vivian-Maier-Street-Photographer/

                                        

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