Category Archives: editorial design

ROCO 6 x 6 x Infinity

I took a road trip to the Rochester Contemporary Art Center (137 East Avenue, Rochester, New York 14604) because today was the first day to peruse the annual 6 x 6 fundraiser.

Follow this link to reserve your favorites.  They are only $20 each, which is a bargain for my $75 heart paintings.  If you would like to reserve them, they are numbers 205, 206, 207 and 208.

See their website for more information including hours of operation.

Waxing Politic

I used to deliver newspapers – The Syracuse Herald Journal and the Sunday Post Standard.  I started as an eight-year-old, making $20 a week.  Back in the ’70s, that was a lot of money. I was able to buy a car when it was time for that, and other stuff, like a TV and stereo for my bedroom….

I always thought I’d be a writer, an artist too, but – I don’t know, I mean, I used to read the paper every day back then.  Was I going to be a Lois Lane?  Now the paper is a relic and maybe I am partly to blame because I write for fun, not for money.  And you can read it for free.

Years ago, Tim Atseff was hired as an artist for the Syracuse Herald Journal.  That job segued into political cartoonist and later upper management.  He was more recently instrumental in creating the Central New York Magazine and other publications that focus on local interests.

He’s still very much an artist and this exhibition at the Everson Museum of Art is a powerful homage to his career.  Atseff paints on bifold insulation boards in his basement studio.  The artwork is enormous and yet easily transportable, which I find genius.

The work focuses on the current political climate and incorporates assemblage, collage, text and a vibrant color scheme.

The paintings succeed in joining technical proficiency with abstract and graphic devices, which manifests into a Robert Indiana/Larry Rivers-type vibe, something akin to a powerful Americana symbolism juxtaposed with a feeling of unfinished business.

As well, I recognized that the artists’ own political views are not unclear yet, like the propaganda of politics, the work can justly be claimed by the opinionated based on perspective alone, if that makes any sense.

I loved the scale of it all, the large headline texts and the humor (calling the paper in one painting “The Daily WTF”), the giant -30- indicating the end of a news story….  The installation elements are full of smaller items, like the sand on the floor in the Final Edition piece had pennies sprinkled in – this was not lost on my eagle eye.  There is perfection in that rhythm.

There is such a strong message here about the loss of a media that at one time was our main source of information, given to us by just-the-facts-journalists.  Now who are we supposed to rely on for that info?  Lois Lane is out of a job and I am assuming there’s no pension.  Thank goodness I went the teaching route so that my art and writing stuff can remain in the realm of for-fun.

This show is about the end of an era, an American institution in rags, in shambles.  The newspaper thrown out like yesterdecade’s garbage.  It’s bittersweet and beautiful, and larger than life.  So SO GOOD!

Tim Atseff – Final Edition will be on view through December 29, 2024.  The Everson Museum of Art is located at 401 Harrison Street, Syracuse, New York, 13202.  See their web-site for further details including hours of operation and how to become a member in order to support the museum and keep up-to-date on future events..

Connected

3rd place – Chittenango Lions Club Peace Poster contest 2021 – “We Are All Connected”

My 8th grade accelerated Studio in Art students completed an intense nine weeks of creating these peace posters for the Chittenango Lions Club. The Lions sponsor an international peace poster competition for middle school aged children with a grand prize of $5,000.

It is an illustration lesson/editorial design project with some limitations – no words or characters of any kind, no trademarked items or advertisements. We used 16″ x 20″ white tagboard and Prismacolor colored pencils. The Lions Club generously donated enough sets so that my students could each have their own 48 color set. Thirty-eight students competed this year.

Students spent additional hours on these posters at home on the weekends to complete them in time for the contest deadline. The winning poster will go on to the regional competition and possibly the state one as well. The theme for this year is “We Are All Connected”. Now that we are all back in school full-time, this sentiment is truly apropos. <3

2nd place – Chittenango Lions Club Peace Poster contest 2021- “We Are All Connected”
1st place – Chittenango Lions Club Peace Poster contest 2021 – “We Are All Connected”

Kindness Prevails

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Kindness

Description

Kindness is a behavior marked by ethical characteristics, a pleasant disposition, and concern and consideration for others. It is considered a virtue, and is recognized as a value in many cultures and religions. Wikipedia

National dayObserved on February 17th, National Random Acts of Kindness Day has grown in popularity each year.

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kind·ness
/ˈkīn(d)nəs/
noun
  1. the quality of being friendly, generous, and considerate.
    Similar:

    kindliness

    kind-heartedness, warm-heartedness, tender-heartedness, goodwill, affectionateness, affection, warmth, gentleness, tenderness, concern, care, consideration, considerateness, helpfulness, thoughtfulness, unselfishness, selflessness, altruism, compassion, sympathy, understanding, 
    big-heartedness, benevolence, benignity, friendliness, 
    neighbourliness, hospitality, amiability, courteousness, public-spiritedness,
    generosity, magnanimity, indulgence, patience, tolerance, charitableness,
    • a kind act.
      plural noun: kindnesses
      “it is a kindness I shall never forget”
      Similar:
      kind act
      good deed
      act of kindness
      good turn

      favor

      act of assistance

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This year’s Doodle for Google competition has now closed.  All entries had to be postmarked yesterday.  These images are among the many I submitted – 8th graders from Chittenango Middle School.  The winner receives $30,000, and $50,000 in technology for their school.

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The theme of this year’s contest is “I show kindness by….”

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Do we have a winner?

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