Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Spirit


This is the painting I did about 2 weeks ago when I was under the influence of a nasty cold. As do most of my paintings, the result was a surprise. What's new about this one is that there is some transparency in the paint (you can't actually see the canvas but can see an undercoat of paint). I find this effect gives the painting an airy feeling.

I was reluctant to call this one "spirit" for fear of being seen as a new-age freak but I figure what the heck. It looks like a spirit to me (in front of a tree), so that's what I'm calling it. Feel free to interpret the painting to mean whatever you think it means.

For more information on "Spirit," click here.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Traits of a successful artist

I know, I should be painting, but I am just now getting my normal energy level back after this tenacious bug I seem to have finally killed off. But even when I can't create art, I think about it. Not all of the time, mind you. I went through a brief obsessive phase with the art (as I tend to do when I start anything new) but I think I'm over that now. None the less, I have been thinking about what leads to success in this crazy and whacky world of art into which I've recently entered as an artist.

I don't have the tiniest modicum of understanding as to why some artists become successful and some don't. Of course I'd love to land in the former category but don't have much of a clue how. I see so little logic to who gets shows, who becomes part of the buzz, or on the other hand who ends up with a house chock full of phenomenally good yet unsold work. What I have figured out is that among some of the more successful artists I know, I do find a few commonalities. And yes, I am generalizing here, so please forgive me on that account.

There always seems to be a bit of an ego, mandatory, I think, to not crumble under the weight of constantly having your work judged. Maybe part of that ego is a vision of oneself as destined to be something big. And when an artist sees him or herself in this light, everyone around the artist seems to pretty much buy into it. Which brings me to the next personality trait I see among sucessful artists-charisma.

Charisma-the ability to attract a following. Art affecionados seem to fall in love with not only the art but also the artist. If you buy a piece of art, you really do buy a piece of the artist. Yet charisma in the art world isn't like charisma among politicians or among sports or entertainment celebrities. You don't have to be powerful or beautiful or have superhuman powers in the art world to be one of the popular kids.

In fact, if you are any of those things, you might not be taken seriously as an artist no matter how great your art is. Think of the stereotype of an artist and you've nailed what art fans seem to connect with. Think intense. Misunderstood. Tortured. Self-obsessed. Alone. And throw in some general angst thrown for good measure.

So how wild is it that those kids who were the freaks and geeks and rejects in high school have ended up being the winners in the art world? And I suppose that's a good thing.

http://NaomiSilverArt.com

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Intimate Distance

I just created this video of the exhibit where my art is on display with the work of several other artists until January 12th.

Hoping to hit the studio today

Ok, I'm now on day 8 of this nasty cold. I won't even attempt to describe what's being produced in my sinuses but suffice it to say the substance could be used to create an unusual piece of art that would be classified as a bio hazard. Nevertheless, I very much hope to get back to the studio today. I miss my paints. Hoping the feeling is mutual.

Monday, December 14, 2009

My 2 most recent paintings













Sea of Fire and Sea of Light
Both paintings are on view in the "Intimate Distance" show until January 12th at the 5th floor gallery at The Syndicate Building, 915 Olive St. 5th Floor, St. Louis, Mo. 63101
Gallery open by appointment only: Contact Connie or Paul LaFlam at: artthngs@hotmail.com or 314.436.9374

NaomiSilverArt.com

Since when are you an artist?

This is the question I keep hearing from people who've known me for a few years. You want the honest answer? The art thing kind of crept up and bit me, well, you know where. This past August, feeling a bit burned out from 2 years of running my website CultureSurfer.com, I decided to take a stab at doing some painting. I'd been around a good deal of art and artists over the past two years & the thought hit me that maybe I could create some decent art, at least decent enough to show and maybe even sell.

Off I went to the Ben Franklin and picked up about 4 bottles of cheap finger paint along with a few super cheap brushes and a few canvas boards. I went home and hit an old piece of poster board with the paints. Ick. I didn't like it. Neither did my husband. The whole thing just looked like mush. Not good. But I kept at it.



Time to hit one of the canvases. Suddenly, I found myself doing what I now refer to as "grown up finger painting," a process I now use in many of my works. What can I tell you? There is something very child-like in my personality that just relates to squirting paint out of a bottle and getting down and dirty with paint all over my hands. It's such a direct way to connect with the creative process. No brush as intermediary.


A few weeks later, BAM! Art show #1. I answered a post on Craigslist & within 2 days had 6 pieces of my art hanging at a wine bar out in St. Charles, Missouri. Cool. The show was up for a month and nothing sold but hey, it was a start.

NaomiSilverArt.com