Monday, July 12, 2010

This Week @ BINDERS - July 12-18

ART SALES | ART CLASSES & WORKSHOPS | ART HAPPENINGS

All new classes coming up at The ART School at BINDERS! July 20th–22nd, bring the kids in for “Art and the Word: All About Me” with Sara Robinson and Sara Claire Chambless, where kids learn to share who they are through art and the written word. This dynamic mother/daughter team offers an interactive class where students write a poem, create a painting, act out a story, and make faces out of clay. It’s all about exploring what it is to be “me” in a fun, positive, safe environment where nearly anything goes! For those of you who have taken classes with instructor, Anne Elser, she will be offering her advanced courses, “Bookmaking 2: The Opened Book” starting on Tuesday July 20th, and “Calligraphy 3: Advanced Calligraphy” starting on Wednesday July 21st. Sara Claire Chambless returns on Saturday, July 24th, with her all-day workshop “Breaking The Rules: The Mixed Media Solution.” Sign up this week to reserve your space!

ART CLASSES & WORKSHOPS

Monday, July 12:
Guided Open Studio with Kay Powell
10:30am-2pm, Every Monday | Beginner to Intermediate | Fee: $17/per session. Please pay the instructor. No registration necessary


Tuesday, July 13:
Painting-Design and Technique with Charles Y. Walls
1-4pm, Tuesdays, 6 Sessions, June 8-July 13, Open to all levels | Fee: $140

Painting-Design and Technique with Charles Y. Walls
6-8:30pm, Tuesdays, 6 Sessions, June 8-July 13, Open to all levels | Fee: $140

Wednesday, July 14:

No special art events today.

Thursday, July 15:
Fearless Watercolor Landscapes II with Susan Bradford
6-8:30pm, Thursdays, 6 Sessions, July 8-Aug. 19 (No class July 29)
Intermediate | Fee: $155

Friday, July 16:
Paper Paintings: A Unique Figurative Collage Technique Workshop
with Elizabeth St.Hilaire Nelson
10am-4pm, Fri.-Sun., July 16-18, All levels: Some drawing experience would be helpful, but not imperative. Fee: $250

Saturday, July 17:
Paper Paintings: A Unique Figurative Collage Technique Workshop
with Elizabeth St.Hilaire Nelson
10am-4pm, Fri.-Sun., July 16-18, All levels: Some drawing experience would be helpful, but not imperative. Fee: $250

Sunday, July 18:
Paper Paintings: A Unique Figurative Collage Technique Workshop
with Elizabeth St.Hilaire Nelson
10am-4pm, Fri.-Sun., July 16-18, All levels: Some drawing experience would be helpful, but not imperative. Fee: $250

Please note: Classes on this schedule are in our Atlanta store unless otherwise indicated. For more information please email or call Eli Pelizza at 404.237.6331 ext. 203.


Check out the full list of our upcoming art classes and art workshops! Sign up for 5 classes, workshops or demos and receive 25% OFF of your next sign up.


ART HAPPENINGS | THE LIMELIGHT GALLERY

Summer Waterworks Two
an exhibit of paintings by eleven acclaimed local artists
July 6 - August 1

Artwork by: Kathy Butler, Marsha Chandler, Betty Derrick, Louise Faurot, Kathy Rennell Forbes, Pat Hahn, Deanna Jaugstetter, Linda LeTard, Marie Matthews, Mickey McConnell and Jane Springfield


Visit BINDERS website!

Friday, July 9, 2010

Artists and Instructors #3: A Profile of Elizabeth St. Hilaire Nelson

The art of collage has been working its way into the fine art world’s consciousness for almost a century now, but there still remains a few more miles to go before the medium will be truly accepted as an equal with the well-known forms of painting. Elizabeth St. Hilaire Nelson is a contemporary artist who is helping to bridge that gap through her innovative combinations of traditional painting techniques with glued on papers to create what she calls, aptly enough, “Paper Paintings.”

Nelson comes from a background in advertising design and is co-owner of a graphic design firm in addition to her fine art work. She currently resides in Florida, by way of New England, with a stint at Syracuse University to get her B.F.A. Although she had been doing art all of her life, Elizabeth did not enter the world of collage until 2005, when her first paper painting, Looking In on Jane, won best of show at the Orlando Visual Artists League. Since then, she has been exhibiting regularly and traveling to teach workshops that explore her innovative style. Earlier this year she published a book titled “Collage: An Overview to the Creative Process,” firmly establishing herself as a fixture in the collage world and helping to make the deeper concepts of the medium more accessible to the general public.

Nelson’s Paper Paintings are figurative in nature, meaning they have a recognizable subject and portray something that actually exists in the world. She is most well known for portraits of animals: cows and other farm animals, birds (especially peacocks) and dogs being common themes. These artworks use the traditional compositional structures of portraiture to convey the personality and uniqueness of the subject, allowing the viewer to really connect with them. Other subjects include flowers, fruit and other plant life, musical instruments, plus the occasional still life and contemporary genre scenes.

The appearance of these paintings is much like the modern use of acrylic paints in a Pop Art context: bright, saturated colors alternately clashing and harmonizing with each other in a flattened pictorial space with bold, thick brushstrokes that convey aliveness and motion. Indeed, these artworks begin their lives as standard acrylic paintings, as Elizabeth uses her skills to create simple underpaintings of the scenes before working them over in her own special way.

The originality of the work becomes apparent the closer one gets. As the visual field focuses on details, the viewer realizes that many of what appeared initially to be strokes of paint applied with a brush are in fact cut and torn strips of paper glued to the surface of the support.

Elizabeth draws her collage materials from a variety of sources: decorative papers, both colored and printed with designs, magazines, newspapers and other printed type pages, personal memorabilia (that first piece, Lookin In on Jane, was inspired by a box of old documents given to her by her father), and anything else that crosses her path that might look visually appealing. These found objects exist within the artwork primarily for their compositional possibilities, and the exact nature of the paper, or anything written on it, may or may not have any relevance to the subject of the painting.

Whereas in the original collages of Picasso and Braques a piece of oilcloth printed with a chair caning pattern would stand in for a painted chair, or an actual page from a newspaper would be used instead of painting the newspaper, Nelson seems to be more interested in how the visual aspect of things that we see every day can be turned on their heads and used to create something totally different than their actual form. Thus, snippets from a magazine article become the foliage of a tree in the background and photos of people and places can become the spots on the side of a cow. The resulting effect simultaneously establishes the time and place where the paintings were created, while also tearing apart the images familiar to that time and place and using them to create something more fundamental.

Elizabeth St. Hilaire Nelson will be here at The ART School at BINDERS for her Paper Paintings workshop July 16th-18th.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

This Week @ BINDERS - July 5-11

ART SALES | ART CLASSES & WORKSHOPS | ART HAPPENINGS

There are a few spots left in Paper Paintings, a unique figurative collage technique workshop with Elizabeth St. Hilaire Nelson on July 16th-18th! Sign up online or come into the store and talk to a BINDERS associate to reserve your space. Also Summer Waterworks Two, an exhibit of new works by eleven acclaimed local artists, is now showing in The Limelight Gallery. We'll see you soon, here at BINDERS!

ART CLASSES & WORKSHOPS

Monday, July 5:
Guided Open Studio with Kay Powell
10:30am-2pm, Every Monday | Beginner to Intermediate | Fee: $17/per session. Please pay the instructor. No registration necessary


Tuesday, July 6:
Painting-Design and Technique with Charles Y. Walls
1-4pm, Tuesdays, 6 Sessions, June 8-July 13, Open to all levels | Fee: $140

Bookmaking with Anne Elser
6-8:30pm, Tuesdays, 6 sessions, June 1-July 6, Beginner to Advanced | Fee: $140

Painting-Design and Technique with Charles Y. Walls
6-8:30pm, Tuesdays, 6 Sessions, June 8-July 13, Open to all levels | Fee: $140

Wednesday, July 7:

Silk Dye Painting Basics with Hellenne Vermillion
2-5pm, Wednesdays, 6 Sessions, May 26-July 7
Beginner to Intermediate | Fee: $155 (includes some materials)

Copperplate Calligraphy with Anne Elser
6-8:30pm, Wednesdays, 6 Sessions, June 2-July 7
Beginner to Intermediate | Fee: $140


Thursday, July 8:
Italic Calligraphy with Anne Elser
6-8:30pm, Thursdays, 6 Sessions, June 3-July 8
Beginner to Intermediate | Fee: $140


Fearless Watercolor Landscapes II with Susan Bradford
6-8:30pm, Thursdays, 6 Sessions, July 8-Aug. 19 (No class July 29)
Intermediate | Fee: $155

Friday, July 9:
No special art events today.

Saturday, July 10:
Leap Ahead Color Theory Workshop with Denise Nogueiras
10am-3pm, Beginner-Intermediate | Fee: $100


Sunday, July 11:
Leap Ahead Color Theory Workshop with Denise Nogueiras
10am-3pm, Beginner-Intermediate | Fee: $100


Summer Waterworks Two Opening Reception
Sunday, July 11 from 3 to 5pm


Please note: Classes on this schedule are in our Atlanta store unless otherwise indicated. For more information please email or call Eli Pelizza at 404.237.6331 ext. 203.


Check out the full list of our upcoming art classes and art workshops! Sign up for 5 classes, workshops or demos and receive 25% OFF of your next sign up.


ART HAPPENINGS | THE LIMELIGHT GALLERY

Summer Waterworks Two
an exhibit of paintings by eleven acclaimed local artists
July 6 - August 1

Meet the artists at the Opening Reception,
Sunday, July 11 from 3 to 5pm

Artwork by: Kathy Butler, Marsha Chandler, Betty Derrick, Louise Faurot, Kathy Rennell Forbes, Pat Hahn, Deanna Jaugstetter, Linda LeTard, Marie Matthews, Mickey McConnell and Jane Springfield


Visit BINDERS website!

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Tips & Tricks #9: Liquid to Solid – Understanding the Range of Acrylic Paints!

Acrylic paint has, over the course of the last 60 years, developed into one of the most adaptable mediums in contemporary art with a very wide range of applications and effects. In fact, the array of choices one faces in the acrylic paint aisle at BINDERS can be a bit overwhelming, but never fear! Once you understand the basics, it's easy to branch out into the advanced and subtle areas of this fully modern paint.

Just like any other kind of paint, acrylics are composed of two main ingredients: the pigment and the binder. The pigments are, in most cases, identical to those found in oils or watercolors, but the binder, the glue that holds the pigment onto the support, is a polymer emulsion (which is really just a fancy name for plastic).

Plastic, as we are all well aware, is a very adaptable medium, capable of being molded and shaped into just about anything with a full range of hardness to softness, stiffness to flexibility, and acrylic paint carries on those same characteristics. The first thing to understand about acrylic paint is that it comes in several grades of viscosity, which is the relative thickness and thinness, or fluidity, of the paint. The particular viscosity you choose significantly affects the way your painting looks and some techniques will be easier with a particular type of acrylic paint. So lets look at those types and see how they work!

Heavy Body Acrylics
The original acrylic paint came in a fairly thick formulation, softer than most oil paint, but not watery by any means, and that viscosity level, usually known as Heavy Body, is still the most commonly used. Both Liquitex and Golden make a wide range of colors in their Heavy Body lines and it is the typical thickness of other companies' paints as well, including Winsor Newton's Galleria, Talens' Amsterdam and Chroma's A2 lines.

The Heavy Body formulation of acrylic paint is the most suitable for expressive brushwork and Alla Prima style painting, in which paint is applied directly from the tube onto the canvas. Depending on how much you brush out the paint, it will either be very flat, or leave behind a low relief in the form of ridges of paint that squeeze out from under the brush. For more texture, you can layer the paint to create a thicker, more three-dimensional effect. All but the softest brushes are very suitable for working with Heavy Body acrylics, so you can choose soft brushes for a smooth appearance, or bristle brushes to get a rougher look with more visible brush strokes. As always, never use real sable hair brushes with your acrylic paints, as they will dry out the hairs and ruin your very expensive tools!

Super Heavy Body Acrylics
Liquitex has gone one step further on the thickness scale, creating a line of Super-Heavy Body acrylics that use a very stiff polymer emulsion that is similar to the high viscosity oil paints. Super-Heavy Body paints are ideal for creating almost sculptural textures and should be used with stiff brushes like hog bristle. This type of paint is also very suitable for painting with knives!

Fluid / Soft Body Acrylics
The second most commonly used type of acrylic binder is what is known as a Fluid or Soft Body paint. As the name suggests, the viscosity is considerably less than Heavy Body and the consistency is more like a thick liquid. Golden and Liquitex both have extensive color choices in the Fluid range, but there are not many other companies that produce it. Fluid acrylics are suitable for a range of techniques that are quite different than the Heavy Body lines.

The first, and most obvious difference is that Fluid acrylics are thin enough to be poured, allowing for all sorts of dripping and splashing to happen. Of course you can do this with Heavy Body paint by adding water to it, but that will reduce the intensity of the color because the pigment ratio will be lowered. With the Fluids, there is a maximum amount of pigment in the paint, which gives high impact color in a liquid form.

Fluid acrylics are also very good for glazing, a traditional technique of building up complex colors with layers of transparent paint. Typically, a glaze layer wants to be thin, so the paint will be mixed with a fluid acrylic medium to make it transparent and very flat, and since the Fluid acrylics are already so thin, they allow for a much greater amount of control over the intensity of color in the glaze. Fluid acrylics will always tend to level out on the canvas, erasing any brush marks and leaving no ridges behind, so they are great when you want a really flat surface, like when you are doing an underpainting. Soft brushes are best for this type of acrylic paint and the colors can be blended just as well as their Heavy Body cousins.

Acrylic Inks
The last variety of acrylic paint that we'll discuss here is the one that is most often missed, because it's not actually kept on the acrylic aisle with the rest of the paints! In the drawing aisle, along with all of the calligraphy supplies, you will find a wide variety of acrylic inks that are, in fact, just another variety of paint. In this case, the viscosity of the polymer emulsion is so low that the paint is effectively just like water (or ink in this case).

Nevertheless, the pigment load in acrylic inks are usually just as high as any of the other types, so you can still get very intense color from them. Liquitex has a line of acrylic inks, and you can also find the FW Series by Daler Rowney and Speedball's Acrylic Calligraphy Inks. Aside from the obvious applications in calligraphy, acrylic ink can be used much like a watercolor paint and is great for doing washes and other types of stains on paper or unprimed canvas. Use a soft watercolor brush with acrylic inks to do almost the whole range of techniques available to the watercolorist!

Finally, it's worth noting that all of these varieties of acrylic paint can be mixed together with no problem, they are made out of the same plastic after all! So, you can mix Heavy Body, Super-Heavy Body, Fluid and/or ink together to create your own custom blended viscosity level that may inspire you to create something totally original! The sky is the limit with acrylic paints, so experiment, explore and discover, now that you know the basics!

Do you have any tips to add for budding acrylic artists? Please share!

Monday, June 28, 2010

This Week @ BINDERS - June 28-July 4

ART SALES | ART CLASSES & WORKSHOPS | ART HAPPENINGS

There's still a little time left to sign up for July classes and workshops at The ART School at BINDERS! Fearless Watercolor Landscapes II, an advanced watercolor painting course with Susan Bradford begins on July 8th; Leap Ahead Color Theory Workshop with Denise Nogueiras begins on July 10th; Paper Paintings, a unique figurative collage technique workshop with Elizabeth St. Hilaire Nelson is happening July 16th-18th! Sign up online or come into the store and talk to a BINDERS associate to reserve your space. Also, a new exhibit goes up in The Limelight Gallery on July 6th: Summer Waterworks Two, an exhibit of new works by eleven acclaimed local artists. We'll see you soon, here at BINDERS!

ART CLASSES & WORKSHOPS

Monday, June 28:
Guided Open Studio with Kay Powell
10:30am-2pm, Every Monday | Beginner to Intermediate | Fee: $17/per session. Please pay the instructor. No registration necessary


Tuesday, June 29:
4 Day Watercolor Class with Judy Greenberg
9:15am-12:15pm, Tuesdays, 4 sessions, June 8- 29, Intermediate | Fee: $ 220


Painting-Design and Technique with Charles Y. Walls
1-4pm, Tuesdays, 6 Sessions, June 8-July 13, Open to all levels | Fee: $140

Bookmaking with Anne Elser
6-8:30pm, Tuesdays, 6 sessions, June 1-July 6, Beginner to Advanced | Fee: $140

Painting-Design and Technique with Charles Y. Walls
6-8:30pm, Tuesdays, 6 Sessions, June 8-July 13, Open to all levels | Fee: $140

Wednesday, June 30:

Impressionist Paintings From Photos with J.Z.Torre
1-4pm, Wednesdays, 6 Sessions, May 26-June 30
Advanced Beginner to Intermediate | Fee: $160

Copperplate Calligraphy with Anne Elser
6-8:30pm, Wednesdays, 6 Sessions, June 2-July 7
Beginner to Intermediate | Fee: $140


Thursday, July 1:
Italic Calligraphy with Anne Elser
6-8:30pm, Thursdays, 6 Sessions, June 3-July 8
Beginner to Intermediate | Fee: $140


Friday, July 2:
No special art events today.

Saturday, July 3:
No special art events today.

Sunday, July 4:
No special art events today. Everyone have a safe and happy 4th!

Please note: Classes on this schedule are in our Atlanta store unless otherwise indicated. For more information please email or call Eli Pelizza at 404.237.6331 ext. 203.


Check out the full list of our upcoming art classes and art workshops! Sign up for 5 classes, workshops or demos and receive 25% OFF of your next sign up.


ART HAPPENINGS | THE LIMELIGHT GALLERY

After Hours | Showing until July 2

Artwork by: Angela White • Carol Violanda Haslach • Chris Van Beneden • Dawn Kinney Martin • Gillian Theunissen Horsley • Elizabeth McAllister • Karen Barron • Kathy Vashaw • Marion George • Martha Elena Diaz • Sam Alexander • Suzi Howard • Terry Hamrick



Visit BINDERS website!

Thursday, June 24, 2010

The Subject Of Art #7: Drips And Squares - The Extremes Of Abstract Expressionism

It took a long time for art made in the United States to gain recognition in the rest of the world. There were a few painters who made their mark early, Benjamin West and Thomas Eakins being good examples, but for the most part America was seen as provincial and it's artists lagged behind the pioneering work that was coming out of Europe.

The famed Armory Show in New York, 1913, which brought paintings and sculpture by some of Europe's most progressive modern artists, such as Picasso, Kandinsky, Matisse and many others marked a turning point as American artists discovered non-objective art and unfettered expression for the first time. Although the art culture in the U.S. had been very conservative up until that time, many artists embraced the new ideas they were exposed to and began to explore the as-yet-uncharted realms of Modern Art.

It took a couple of decades for the Americans to really catch up and they may not have if it hadn't been for the cataclysmic destruction of Europe that resulted from two World Wars. As Europe lay in ruins after World War II, the U.S. remained strong and stood ready to take the forefront, economically and culturally. In addition, there were a number of influential artists who had fled Germany, France and other countries to escape the clutches of Nazi oppression. These expatriates, most notably Hans Hoffman, settled in America and, besides creating and selling art, began to teach a new generation of American artists.

In the 1950's, those artists came of age and banded together to become known as Abstract Expressionists. Backed by rich, powerful patrons like the Rockerfellers and the Guggenheims, these young artists became the new avant-garde, and their art and ideas would have a lasting impact on visual expression in both America and Europe. Though European concepts and teachers directly influenced Abstract Expressionism, it was the first truly American art movement that achieved prominence and respect throughout the Western world.

Among the most well-known and daring of the Abstract Expressionists are names like Jackson Pollock, Barnett Newman, Mark Rothko and Willem de Kooning. Pollock and Newman were born in America, while Rothko and de Kooning immigrated from Europe as children. These artists worked consistently on a monumental scale, creating huge canvases that would completely fill the visual field of a person standing before them, immersing that person in the environment of the painting. They all were also interested in bold, intense colors, often squeezed directly from the tube without mixing to maintain the saturation of the hue. However, there were major differences as well and, in many ways, the art of these painters might not seem to fit together into the same category.

On the one hand, painters like Pollock and de Kooning created works that used flowing, improvised brushstrokes to create a complex, organic composition that served to record the movements of the artist. While most of us are familiar with Jackson Pollock's method of working with long drips of fluid paint, it was actually a series of photographs by Hans Namuth of Pollock at work doing what seemed like a shamanic dance over a canvas laid flat on the floor, with drips of paint flying everywhere, that served to cement the reputation of the Abstract Expressionists in the mind of the art establishment. This was something new — a way of working that had never been accepted as art before.

On the other hand, painters like Newman and Rothko worked with geometric forms and flat planes of color to create more serene, meditative paintings. Barnett Newman systematically dissected the concept of visual composition until he arrived at the basic foundation: a ground, which was the entire canvas painted in one or two flat colors, and a figure, which was a vertical line (he called them "zips") painted in a different color that ran from the top to the bottom of the canvas. This primal figure-ground relationship served as a platform for Newman to experiment with color relationships and proportional compositions on the most basic level.

What united these two very different ideas about painting was the understanding that they were simply two different expressions, or perspectives, on the same thing: the relationship between the artist and the work of art. Abstract Expressionists helped to dissolve the traditional conceptions of what art is and how it should be made. Taking the paths of abstraction and expressionism to their fullest extremes, they brought Modern Art to it's end, as it seemed there was nowhere else to go from there.

Inevitably they were eclipsed by the artists that were to come after them in the movement known as Postmodernism, which attempted (and is perhaps still attempting) to make sense of what happened during the first half of the 20th century and understand what the role of art is in society.

What is your understanding of the role of at in our society? Please share! And don't forget to visit BINDERS website and get stocked on the supplies you need for your next masterpiece!

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

An Interview with BINDERS: Chad Cartwright

This blog post is the first in a series of interviews with BINDERS staff members and sales associates.

Chad Cartwright is a self-taught photographer and mixed media artist from New Jersey. Since July 2009 he has been working as a Sales Associate at Binders Art Supply in Charlotte, NC and in March 2010 Chad began working in The Frame Shop at BINDERS as well.

BINDERS: Tell us how you became interested in art.

Chad: As long as I can remember I've gotten a lot of pleasure from drawing - and I was good at it. I think most 7-year old boys want to be a scientist and discover dinosaur bones. I definitely had this dream for myself for a brief time, but by the third grade I remember that I wanted to be an artist.

As an adolescent, I remember being drawn to graffiti, but as a teen I don't think I really made much art - projects that had a beginning, middle, or end. I just doodled and sketched furiously and on everything. In high school I took up drafting but decided toward the end of my junior year not to pursue architecture upon graduating (though architectural drawing still floods my aesthetic). In my early 20's, I decided I wanted to be a graphic designer, so I would always sketch projects and play with ideas and share them with my best friend, who was also very creative. I mainly wanted to design t-shirts and album covers but I never did anything with the ideas.

When I was 23 a friend of my mother's piqued my interest in photography. I had some extra money so I bought a camera and started shooting. But still (outside of occasional days spend wandering and shooting pictures), anything related to art was something that existed mostly in my head and my sketchbooks. It wasn't until I moved to Charlotte in 2007 that I really began creating.

BINDERS: What types of things have you been working on lately?

Chad: I’m mainly working on creating a body of work and honing my creative process. I've been doing some mini-collages that I use just to get ideas out in a small and simple format. The small format allows me to experiment more, which is how I learn some techniques to apply to larger pieces.

I'm also trying to be more conscious of always carrying my camera with me - being more prepared to capture the moment. I am shooting more engaging portraiture and working on a series about beauty and culture.

When I moved to Charlotte, I started going to school for graphic design but couldn't afford to keep going. So now I'm also continuing my education in other practical ways - internships, a lot of reading and hands-on learning, and taking on jobs from established graphic designers and getting critiqued while getting paid. Currently I'm focusing on logo design.

BINDERS: That's one thing that we've all noticed about you here at BINDERS, that you really seem to enjoy your photography. Tell us a little more about that.

Chad: There are a few reasons why I love photography. First, when I shoot a picture I'm capturing something available for everyone to see and enjoy. I enjoy capturing images that highlights people's ability to look at the same thing and see it from a unique perspective. I especially love when I can take a subject out of context and create something fresh and interesting or beautiful that wouldn't usually be thought of as such.

Also, creating something takes time and sometimes I just need some instant gratification. When I just don't have it in me to create something I'll walk around and explore for a few hours and come home with a few new pieces of art, just by capturing things that I found interesting on my walk - and that experience (or the pictures themselves) will refresh and inspire me to create something new.

BINDERS: When you first started working at BINDERS, you came straight from an internship at a local gallery. Can you tell us about that? Would you recommend others complete art-related internships?

Chad: The internship was at one of Charlotte's premier galleries and came about through a relationship I created networking. The internship was a very positive experience for me because I got just what I wanted out of it. I wanted to see what the business side of the art world looked like and how it operated. I learned how to hang work and to maintain correspondence between artists and the gallery. Receiving, photographing, packing, and shipping artwork were among my responsibilities at the gallery. I edited photographs to be put on the gallery website and I put artist profile books and resumes together. I learned what makes artists attractive to galleries, how galleries determine the value of an artist's work, as well as how to approach galleries. One of the biggest things I learned is that a gallery is a business and not validation of whether you are a good artist. Every artist’s work will appeal to a specific audience. If a gallery doesn't think they will be able to sell your work to their clients they probably won't represent you. Rejection is not a statement about your skill or worth as an artist. You just have to find your audience.

I think my internship helped me immensely but I would offer a word of caution for those looking into any kind of internship. An internship is free work. You are not an employee, and many places look at interns as free labor. Even those situations can be positive but it's ALL about what you want to get out of it, and what you put into it. You HAVE TO make it your own. If you choose to do an internship, set some goals and make your goals clear to the person in charge of your internship. In your internship you might not be doing the job you want to do but you should be learning the skills that transfer into making you effective in that job.

BINDERS: Finally, tell us about your new position in the BINDERS Frame Shop. You started out on the sales floor but recently have been working in our frame shop. What attracts you about our Frame Shop?

Chad: I wanted to work in the frame shop because I figured it would be a good skill to have as an artist (knowing how to frame and present your own work). And it has already proven very beneficial. But the reason I enjoy working in the frame shop is because it's such a gratifying job. It's not easy to find words that express how much picking the right presentation for your art amplifies its beauty. I particularly enjoy when I've helped the customer select the framing for their piece(s) and I am there to see their face when they pick up the completed job. Even though they saw and selected their framing purchase they are blown away by how good the finished product looks. Framing can be pricey, but it really is worth the money. The framing process makes things so much more than they already were - and it makes the beauty last longer.

Check out Chad's blog at chdwck80.blogspot.com - it's also listed to the right under "staff blogs". If you'd like to include a link to your blog please email webmaster@bindersart.com with your name and blog address!