artists (6do encyclopedia)



Artists are creative individuals who use various forms of media to express themselves and their ideas. They can work in a wide range of mediums, including painting, drawing, sculpture, ceramics, photography, video, and performance art.

Historically, artists were commissioned by patrons or the church to create pieces of art that conveyed important religious or political messages. However, with the rise of the modern art movement, artists began to create works that were personal expressions of their own thoughts, emotions, and experiences.

Today, there are many different styles of art, each with its own unique characteristics and influences. Some of the most well-known movements include:

  • Impressionism: This style originated in France in the late 19th century and is characterized by its focus on capturing the fleeting effects of light and color. Famous impressionist artists include Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir.

  • Cubism: Cubism developed in the early 20th century and emphasized the use of geometric shapes to represent objects or scenes. The movement was heavily influenced by African and Native American art. Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque are two of its most famous artists.

  • Surrealism: This movement grew out of Dadaism and emphasized exploring the subconscious mind through dreamlike imagery. Salvador Dali, Max Ernst, and René Magritte are some of the most famous surrealists.

  • Pop Art: Pop Art developed in the 1950s and 60s and featured images from popular culture and consumerism. Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, and Claes Oldenburg were some of the key figures in the movement.

  • Abstract Expressionism: This style emerged in the 1940s and emphasized the spontaneous and gestural qualities of the artistic process. Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, and Mark Rothko were some of the most well-known abstract expressionists.

Of course, these are just a few examples of the many different art movements that have emerged throughout history. Regardless of the style they work in, artists are united by their desire to create something meaningful and powerful.

One of the most important skills an artist must possess is the ability to effectively communicate their ideas and emotions through their work. This requires a deep understanding of the materials they are working with, as well as an understanding of how those materials can be used to create the desired effect.

In addition to technical skills, artists must also have a strong creative vision and an ability to connect with their audience. This requires a great deal of self-reflection and introspection, as well as an openness to feedback and criticism.

Another important aspect of being an artist is the need to constantly push boundaries and experiment with new techniques and materials. This can be a difficult and sometimes frustrating process, but it is essential for growth and development as an artist.

In conclusion, artists are an integral part of our cultural and social fabric. Whether they are working in traditional media or pushing the boundaries of what art can be, artists play an important role in helping us to understand and interpret the world around us. If you are interested in exploring your creative side, there has never been a better time to start exploring the world of art.


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I discovered the secrets of the world’s happiest country

Telegraph

23-05-14 10:00


Finland’s capital, Helsinki, is a mecca for art lovers, according to a travel article published by The Guardian. The writer praises recent changes made at the National Gallery’s Ateneum in the city, including the renovation of the permanent collection, which curator Anu Utriainen said was refocused around the idea of “dualism”. The city has embraced the idea of public art so much that any new building project is required to devote one percent of construction costs to art acquisitions. The nearby underground contemporary art museum Amos Rex was lauded for its creativity workshop, which introduced participants to touching and describing materials to trigger ideas. The city is also the home of the Design Museum, the Aalto residence and studio, and the Duuri restaurant. Beyond the city, the town of Fiskars is praised for its ironworks-turned-artistic-hub, as well as its mills and red-painted homes.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/europe/finland/the-secrets-of-the-worlds-happiest-country-finland/
How pop stars like Beyoncé and Taylor Swift are embracing the social media concert

CBC

23-05-14 08:00


Social media, particularly TikTok, is changing how we consume live concerts, and pop stars such as Beyonce, Dua Lipa and Taylor Swift are now approaching their concerts with social media audiences in mind. Live shows have become a fruitful advertising venue for artists and Taylor Swift's infamously dedicated fan base have been razor-focused on finding "Easter eggs" at Swift's Eras tour, such as wearing T-shirts that hint at upcoming album releases or pairing thematically related songs together during her surprise two-song acoustic set, which features different tracks in each city.

However, concert spoilers are making it increasingly difficult to keep the surprise elements in a show new for each fan as social media continues to dominate how we experience concerts. John Mayer and Madonna have fitted lock boxes to curb video recordings and social media use that gives away the surprise of a show but has also created a less intimate, in-the-moment environment. Ticket resellers are further driving up costs with dynamic pricing and upselling, making it less affordable for fans looking forward to a surprise in their concert experiences.

As a result, fans are finding alternative methods to try and keep the surprises of a concert unique. Although Beyoncé’s Renaissance tour is being documented to the minutest detail on social media, some have paused following social media feeds until after they’ve seen a live concert in person. Nada, a Toronto marketing professional, flew just to see Beyoncé in Stockholm so she could avoid being ‘spoiled on the internet for months to come.’


https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/beyonce-taylor-swift-social-media-concert-1.6840464

How artists face unique mental-health challenges, and what P.E.I. is doing about it

CBC

23-05-13 16:37


A recent survey by Creative P.E.I. shows that almost 80% of artists said that poor mental health has negatively impacted them, with financial insecurity being the biggest cause of stress. The sector council, which works on behalf of P.E.I.'s arts, culture and creative professionals, received a three-year grant for $287,550 from the P.E.I. Alliance for Mental Well-Being to create an accessible and affordable counselling service that caters specifically to Island artists. Creative P.E.I. will also hire peer-support workers to assist artists with mental health challenges and provide counselling services to artists who need support and are familiar with their craft.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-edward-island/pei-artists-well-being-1.6842720
Winnipeg's tattoo convention makes a comeback

CBC

23-05-13 16:19


Winnipeg is holding its largest tattoo show in two years featuring the work of more than 300 artists drawn from all corners of the globe. Held at the city's RBC Convention Centre, the Winnipeg Tattoo Show celebrates the personal expression of tattoos and raises money for charities including Ride for Dad, which supports prostate cancer research. The show also features vendors, including kids' activities and entertainment.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/tattoo-winnipeg-1.6842712
The Last Dinner Party backlash shows strange double standard in music

The Independent

23-05-13 05:30


The success of UK band The Last Dinner Party has raised questions about the role of women in the music industry. The five-piece all-female quintet was signed by Island Records and is managed by QPrime, which includes Muse and Metallica among its clients. The outfit has only released one single, the heavily-anthologised “Nothing Matters”. The band is reported to have built up its fanbase using the gig circuit rather than an industry algorithm, but its success has made some commentators sceptical. Some have suggested The Last Dinner Party’s acceptance into the music industry demonstrates women artists are judged more harshly. The band has already answered claims it was created by a label or management team, insisting members have known each other since their days as university freshers and were signed after playing shows in unsigned bands. The question of whether a promising new female outfit is judged on its merits rather than gender fairness has come to the fore following outrage that no female artists were nominated for this year’s Artist of the Year award at the Brits.

https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/the-last-dinner-party-band-sexism-music-industry-b2337809.html
How Beyoncé makes her fortune – and how she spends it

Telegraph

23-05-16 12:00


Superstar Beyoncé could earn as much as $2.1bn through her Renaissance world tour, adding to the estimated $450m she currently possesses. The vast bulk of Knowles' fortune comes from her expanding beyond recorded music, including international tours, films, fashion and product endorsements. Knowles launched her company, Parkwood Entertainment, in the late 2000s as a creative agency, record label, production company and management company. She sought to control any Beyoncé-related project under the Parkwood umbrella, which has included films, sportswear partnerships with Adidas and endorsement deals with Samsung and L'Oreal.

The global entertainer, who found success at a young age, cofounded Destiny’s Child, managed by her father, Mathew Knowles. Through the popularity of the R&B group, Knowles received a solid financial foundation, enabling her to expand into various other areas such as the creation of her own entertainment enterprise. Now a self-made success, Knowles is almost legendary in status and minimal in her outward-facing social media presence, says Tatiana Cirisano, a music analyst at Midia Research.


https://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/artists/beyonce-billions-how-she-makes-it-spends-it/

At a runway show 65,000 years in the making, the clothes do the talking

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-17 07:36


Australian Fashion Week has made history as the first brand from the First Nations took a solo show after 27 years of the fashion event taking place. Ngali’s Denni Francisco founded Billiecart Clothing, a direct-sales children’s wear company and has won the National Indigenous Fashion Awards’ top prize for the past two years. Francisco’s five-year-old Ngali brand was an immaculate collection of contemporary prints executed on loose silk dresses, trousers and shirts, slouchy knitwear the color of ochre dust and hand-painted boots. Ngali’s motto is “together we create,” which enables attention to be deflected to the various artists behind the fashion brand.

https://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/fashion/at-a-runway-show-65-000-years-in-the-making-the-clothes-do-the-talking-20230517-p5d93r.html
Josephine Baker: Dancer, spy and activist

Deutsche Welle

23-05-18 11:03


An exhibition at the Bundeskunsthalle in Bonn, titled "Freedom, Equality, Humanity" and running until September 2023, is honouring the work of American dancer and civil rights activist Josephine Baker. Born in St Louis in 1906, she began her stage career at the age of 16 and first appeared in Paris in 1925, where her famous Charleston dance and "danse sauvage", in which she wore a skirt made of artificial bananas, assisted her rise to fame as a "Black Venus". A celebrated star in Europe, she faced racist hostility during a tour in the US. During World War II, she worked for the Red Cross before becoming a spy for the French resistance movement. General Charles De Gaulle awarded her the French Legion of Honour in recognition of her efforts. Post-war, Baker lived at Les Milandes, a 15th-century castle in southwestern France, where 12 children of different origins whom she adopted over the years lived. She died 12 May 1975 aged 68.

https://www.dw.com/en/josephine-baker-dancer-spy-and-activist/a-56220683
APY Lands art investigation the elephant in the Wynne Prize room

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-18 19:30


The controversial decision to award the prestigious Wynne Prize to pop star-turned-painter Zaachariaha Fielding has drawn criticism from some critics consistent with a broader dispute about the primacy of Aboriginal art and the prevalence of some white assistants in painting it. Fielding, half of duo Electric Fields, says he started painting during lockdown in 2020.

https://www.smh.com.au/culture/art-and-design/apy-lands-art-investigation-the-elephant-in-the-wynne-prize-room-20230516-p5d8nk.html
Morrissey and Marr brought misery to The Smiths – Andy Rourke brought joy

Telegraph

23-05-19 12:28


Andy Rourke has died due to pancreatic cancer. Rourke was a bassist for the iconic band The Smiths for whom he created the melodic backbone for many of their songs. Rourke's post-Smiths career saw collaborations with several other musicians, and he was seen being the “supremely gifted musician” by Johnny Marr and “the most talented bass player” by Mike Joyce. Rourke’s legacy, a unique style of playing the bass guitar, lives on in the music of The Smiths.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/artists/andy-rourke-the-smiths-bassist-death-tribute/
Caroline Polachek: ‘Beyoncé told me: Girl, that beat is hot’

Telegraph

23-05-20 09:00


Caroline Polachek has been making music in public for almost 20 years. From fronting experimental Brooklyn band Chairlift, to writing beats for Beyoncé, and collaborating with such colourful left-field pop stars as Christine and the Queens, Grimes, and Charli XCX. Since going solo in 2017 Polachek has accomplished a daring shift towards the mainstream through a combination of vividly original songwriting and extraordinary vocal ability with the glossy values and slick visuals associated with commercial chart pop. Her aim, she tells me, is to create music that is “a bit unhinged and chaotic,” adding, “like life”.

Her most recent album, Desire, I Want to Turn into You, met universal acclaim, hailed by Rolling Stone as “what happens when pop sets out to transcend its own limits”. Caroline attributes this late-blooming success to a change less in her approach to music than in the wider perception of it. “Coming up in a band on the Brooklyn scene, everything I did was seen through the lens of DIY ‘indie rock’,” she says. “No matter how pop or polished our music became, the industry refused to view it any other way. I felt a lot of freedom going solo, to finally be seen without that kind of thick, distorting lens.”

As a live act, she is something else: unafraid to use provocative costumes or her physicality to put across her music. Caroline believes we can all benefit from “living vicariously through experiencing another human being doing something well, which is why it’s so thrilling to watch figure skating or listen to opera. By witnessing, we have an extraordinary sensory level of empathy. I think about the way I present my body to express tension, or sensuality, or things that feel alien.”


https://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/artists/caroline-polachek-interview/

What we lose when the forests burn

The Globe and Mail

23-05-20 11:00


Environmental writer Amanda Lewis has called for action to protect North America's Champion trees, giant trees of different species recorded by the British Columbia BigTree Registry. Lewis praises their grace and beauty, and the new opportunities created by ecotourism, but says their preservation and that of other trees is being threatened by climate change. Wildfire and logging are seen as two of the main reasons that historic trees that have stood for centuries could be lost forever. Tourists are urged to consider contributing to conservation efforts, especially those that involve hands-on engagement and planting.

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-what-we-lose-when-the-forests-burn/
Spotify executive who signed Harry and Meghan exits as hundreds of jobs cut

The Sydney Morning Herald

23-05-20 19:00


Spotify's chief content and advertising officer, Dawn Ostroff, is leaving as part of mass job cuts resulting from a 6% reduction in the company's headcount. Spotify is cutting about 600 jobs as part of a restructuring process. Ostroff was the driving force behind Spotify's podcasting investment, spending about $1bn on exclusivity deals and acquisitions, including podcasting company Gimlet and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's Archetypes series in a reported $25m deal. Investors have begun to question the cost of the podcasting strategy, leading to cutbacks including several production teams in October. Spotify's stock rose 8% in trading in New York.

https://www.smh.com.au/business/companies/spotify-executive-who-signed-harry-and-meghan-exits-as-hundreds-of-jobs-cut-20230518-p5d9kp.html
Why a Grammy award-winning producer is opening a music venue in rural Newfoundland

CBC

23-05-21 11:30


Music producer Greg Wells, who has worked with Missy Elliott and Keith Urban among others, has spent a "lot of time" and his own money restoring a former Anglican Church in Winterton, Canada, to create a non-profit concert venue. Wells, whose mother has ties to the area, will host local musicians and workshops for people in the music industry as well as using the venue as a spot for up-and-coming artists. It will also serve as a recording studio through Wells' non-profit record label Scilly Cove Records, with 50% of profits go to local charities.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/grammy-winner-nl-1.6849740
How Tate Britain overhauled 500 years of art history

The Independent

23-05-22 05:30


London’s Tate Britain is overhauling 500 years of art history in a new display. The Millbank gallery is keeping its traditional favourites, including works by JMW Turner, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Henry Moore, alongside recent discoveries and newly commissioned contemporary works, which aim to offer visitors “a fresh perspective” on the world’s most comprehensive collection of British art, according to Tate Britain director Alex Farquharson. The new displays will focus on profiling British women artists, while also attempting to expand the canon and diversify British art history. Each room of the gallery will focus on different themes, including disease and migration, women’s rights, LGBT+ and black experiences, empire and the environment. Contemporary artists will stage “interventions” to bring together works from the past and present, with the aim of making visible neglected radical social histories, women’s history and working-class history, among other subjects.

https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/tate-britain-rehang-art-collection-curators-b2341989.html