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Newsletter



March 8, 2020

 

N E W S


 
Members Art Show

It's time to get your artwork ready! Of course, you have to be a MEMBER to enter your one or two pieces of art. Please register and pay your membership dues (if you haven't yet) by April 27.  In fact, why not do this at the meeting on Monday? If you wait until absolutely the last day (May 2) you will be there a while!  Because that is the drop off day as well.


Artists Needed

Karey Santos KareySantos@gmail.com is in charge of the Members Art Show. She needs to have some pictures of the art you intend to enter. The AIKEN CENTER for the ARTS is going to mail a postcard that promotes our event. They want to include on said card 3 to 5 photos of members' entries. So please send your photos to Karey no later than this coming Thursday, March 12.  If your art is selected, think of the free publicity!

More volunteers are needed to help with the show, with decorations, food, kitchen support (just a half-hour commitment), and the Peoples Choice Award.  Call Karey at (803) 270-9603.


Board News

Martha Fox, Membership Director, says that the current number of members is up to 96.

John Gordon, President, reminded the Board that elections are coming up soon for two slots: Program Director and Membership Director. Consider volunteering to help out!

The staff at the Aiken Center for the Arts has installed a framed "bio" of the AAG.  It is hanging in the AAG Gallery.  Thank you, ACA!

 
Exhibits

Pamela Moore is exhibiting at the Aiken County Visitors Center, 33 Laurens Street NW, during the month of March.  She was trained in Fine Art & Graphic Design in Germany, with summer studies in France and Italy.  She is now living in her native home of Aiken.

Her paintings are below.  She captured the spirit and fraternity of the English Foxhound perfectly.
 
Blessing of the Aiken Hounds
 
Wings
 
 
The next AAG meeting will be tomorrow
Monday, March 9, at 6:30 
Aiken Center for the Arts


Our Speaker will be Susanna King.  She is a technology expert, and she will explain how the Aiken Artist Guild website works, and How to Set Up your Biography and your Gallery.  Consider bringing a computer and you can follow along.  Currently there is a limit of four pictures per member.
 
 
ANNOUNCEMENT

The Aiken Center for the Arts needs VOLUNTEERS! The ACA hosts several events each year, and they could use some help. They help our group in many ways, so it would be nice to return the favor.

Please call Kayla Hitchcock
(803) 641-9094

AAG Critique
 

The next AAG member critique is scheduled for Thursday, March 12th at 9:30am in the Family Y boardroom.  All members are invited to bring one or two works of art, finished or not, to share and if desired for a gentle critique. It’s fun to see what our fellow artists are doing and to hear suggestions as to how we can improve. 

Questions:  
mabrock@mac.com    (Mary Ann Brock)
 
AAG Critique

LOCATION

>>>


 
Aiken County YMCA

621 Trolley Line Road

Graniteville, SC  29829

phone:  803-349-8080

Four Presidents who painted for fun and profit (courtesy of MentalFloss.com)

1. ULYSSES S. GRANT

 

The esteemed Civil War Union general and 18th president seems to have had a head start in the art world relative to his fellow president-painters. In 1840, when he was as young as 18, Grant had already completed a watercolor landscapeas a gift for Kate Lowe, his girlfriend at the time. Upon arriving at West Point Academy for cadet training, the future military hero more formally studied painting under Romantic artist Robert Walter Weir. As president, he took pride in his ability not only to command armies, but to create art as well.

2. DWIGHT EISENHOWER

Eisenhower, already having served as a soldier and the president of Columbia University in his time before assuming the United States presidency, came to painting later in life than Grant. While observing Thomas E. Stephens painting a portrait of his wife, Mamie, he was struck with curiosity, but not necessarily any desire to emulate the artist’s work. When Stephens optimistically sent the Columbia University president a complete painting kit of his own, Eisenhower enjoyed the challenge of experimentation, but remained unconvinced that he had the innate skill necessary to make it as a painter. Not until Eisenhower was 58 years old, Chief of Staff of the Army, and influenced by his good friend and fellow politician Winston Churchill—an avid painter himself—did he take up the hobby seriously. (He may also have been acting on doctor’s orders: Major General Howard Snyder is said to have advised the president to take up the leisurely pursuit as a means of relieving stress.) Once he did, he devoted serious attention to the work, sometimes spending up to two hours trying to get a color “right.”

Although Eisenhower’s artistic streak didn’t begin until his later years, over the course of his life, he produced at least 250 known paintings, many of them technically unskilled but demonstrating significant, sincere effort. He claimed to have had more time to paint as president than as a private citizen because his time was better scheduled, and the hard work paid off: In 1967, Eisenhower traveled to New York to visit an exhibition of his paintings at the Huntington Hartford Museum. Richard Cohen, a reporter who spoke with him that day, was impressed with his charm but was hesitant to praise the paintings themselves. When asked about the “symbolism” of one of his works, Eisenhower responded sharply, “Let’s get something straight here, Cohen. They would have burned this [expletive] a long time ago if I weren’t the president of the United States.” Always humble about what he called his “daubs,” Eisenhower certainly wasn’t your typical sensitive artist.

3. JIMMY CARTER

Of all the politicians-turned-painters on this list, Jimmy Carter is either the biggest sell-out or the biggest artistic do-gooder of all. After stepping down from the presidency, Carter founded the eponymous Carter Center; in partnership with Emory University, the human rights organization aims to “prevent and resolve conflicts, enhance freedom and democracy, and improve health.” To that end, the foundation organizes fundraising events like charity memorabilia auctions, selling luxury vacations, signed photos, fine jewelry, and Carter’s own artwork—a surprisingly popular draw for wealthy collectors.

Carter’s paintings seem to specialize in scenic and naturalistic imagery, like the portrait study of a bird pictured above, and the former peanut farmer also dabbles in woodwork, selling items like the above handmade black cherry wood stool. He’s also made the jump to stationery: I personally received a holiday card from the Carter Center two years ago, urging me to make a donation, with a neat illustration of the Carter family home printed across the front—a Jimmy Carter original that far outshone other generic Christmas cards (although I don’t remember donating any money).

Whatever the medium, Carter’s work can turn quite a profit, albeit for charity: In 2012, a Jimmy Carter original painting sold at auction for $250,000. It was a considerable victory for human rights, but perhaps less of a personal victory for Jimmy Carter when you consider that he was outsold in 2010 by current Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, whose photograph went to the highest bidder for $1.7 million. In 2009, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin also managed to score a $1.1 million sales deal for an original painting of his, which makes you worry that the next Cold War might be fought with charcoal and oil pastels.

4. GEORGE W. BUSH

Despite only having vacated the White House a single president ago, George W. Bush has since produced a considerable portfolio of amateur animal paintings. The existence of dozens of still lifes and sunsets painted by the same hand that so recently signed acts of legislation would have stayed under wraps if not for a hacker called “Guccifer,” whose early 2013 attack on email accounts belonging to the Bush family netted private photographs of the collection. While a handful of casual photos isn’t the best medium by which to admire the subtle nuances of the younger Bush’s brushstrokes, you get the gist anyway: George W. Bush really, really likes to paint dogs. Perhaps his best-known work is this painting of the family dog, Barney, which was published alongside an obituary for the late Scottish terrier in 2013:

It was the first of Bush’s dog paintings to make it into the public eye; thanks to Guccifer, it’s far from the last. According to Bonnie Flood, a Georgia artist who spent a month working exclusively to teach the former President how to paint, he’s painted over 50 dogs—really a staggering amount, on a ratio of dog per time spent out of office.

George W. may eventually have wearied of his canine creations, as his oeuvre shows an expansion into cats, landscapes, churches, fruit, and, courageously, nude self-portraits (SFW). There’s a lot to be said about these paintings, as appraisal of Bush’s painting skills seems to be as divisive as his presidency was, but for what it’s worth, Bush’s painting teacher thinks he has “real potential” and “will go down in history as a great artist.”

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