by Gregg Chadwick
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by Gregg Chadwick
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One year ago, our democracy was attacked and our Constitution faced the gravest of threats. But We the People prevailed.
— President Biden (@POTUS) January 6, 2022
Now, it’s up to us to choose what kind of nation we’re going to be. pic.twitter.com/gqg3BT3vw1
‘I will allow no one to place a dagger at the throat of democracy,’ - @POTUS pic.twitter.com/Fu2fbYP2mR
— Gregg Chadwick (@greggchadwick) January 6, 2022
You can’t love your country only when you win.
— President Biden (@POTUS) January 6, 2022
You can't obey the law only when it's convenient.
You can't be patriotic when you embrace or enable lies.
Last year, for the first time in our history, a president who just lost an election tried to prevent the peaceful transfer of power as a violent mob breached the Capitol.
— President Biden (@POTUS) January 6, 2022
But they failed.
And on this day of remembrance we must make sure that such an attack never happens again.
Tune in as I deliver remarks to mark one year since the January 6th deadly assault on the Capitol. https://t.co/nvklC2pgl8
— President Biden (@POTUS) January 6, 2022
On #January6th, the former President incited his supporters who used violence to try to nullify the election. His supporters assaulted 140 police officers in an attempt to keep the former President in power.
— Ted Lieu (@tedlieu) January 6, 2022
Those who continue to deny these facts are cowards and traitors. https://t.co/nvSkYQmHhK
In Japan the first dreams of the New Year, hatsu-yume ๅๅคข, traditionally provide markers for the dreamer's upcoming year.
In that spirit, perhaps the first artwork sold in a new year provides inspiration for the months to come. My painting Monk Station is the first sale of 2022.
I was honored that Saatchi Art included an artwork of mine in their new Seeds of Optimism collection.
"Manifest a happy and bright new year with a joyous artwork by one of our top artists from around the globe." Curated by Bethany Fincher - Assistant Curator at Saatchi Art
In my new interview with Art Squat Magazine, I discuss my Saffron Road series:
"Twenty years ago in Thailand, I woke up at dawn and spent the morning quietly and carefully observing the saffron robed monks on their morning pilgrimages. On my return to the U.S. later that week, I began to paint Buddhist monks, privately at first - as a form of meditation. Only later did I grasp the dharmic sense of responsibility inherent in this new body of work. I needed to paint these paintings. And I found that the audience I had developed over the years felt the need to see them also. They have given me their trust that I will create paintings that speak of our times but also provide clues to a future path into the unknown."
My painting Monk Station continues this theme and brings a saffron robed pilgrim into a 21st century urban moment. Inspired by a subway station in Montrรฉal, this painting looks at the place of the spirit in our fast paced lives.
More on Monk Station at https://greggchadwick.blogspot.com/2021/09/monk-station.html
Collection at https://www.saatchiart.com/.../Seeds.../1376557/638724/view
#HappyNewYear #SeedsofOptimism #SaatchiArt #HatsuYume #contemporaryart #contemporaryartist #saffron #artcollector #buddha #buddhism
Happy Birthday Hayao Miyazaki! https://t.co/UOHEpcCKo3
— Gregg Chadwick (@greggchadwick) January 5, 2022
Each year I am pleased to wish Happy Birthday to the amazing Hayao Miyazaki! My first birthday post to Miyazaki from 2011 (reposted below with updates) says it all:
“One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.” – Bob Marley pic.twitter.com/9UjV8UJIXQ
— Artists & Fans (@MySocialPoint) January 4, 2022
by Gregg Chadwick
"Thiebaud rims the objects he paints — often pies, cupcakes, ice cream cones or candy machines — with multiple lines of vivid, contrasting color. He does the same with their shadows.These lines mediate between the objects themselves and their surroundings until the whole ensemble starts to quiver, like a strummed chord."
"an interest for everyday objects, simplified so as to become purely formal elements, the tendency to align them in strictly ordered progressions, the apparent repetition of representations, the study of variants, the aesthetic isolation of objects or groups thereof, the search of strong visual impact through a deep attention to light, form and brushstroke quality. The juxtaposition of their work reveals a shared tendency to subjectively interpret and reconstruct visual reality in conformity to their inner vision."
"The color intensification is not affectless and artificial...Your perceptions don’t feel traduced. They’re heightened, as happens when you’re walking through the streets of San Francisco on a summer evening and golden, slanted light ignites everything it hits, casting dramatic, diagonal shadows, and you can’t believe how preposterously gorgeous it all is."
THIEBAUD VIA MORANDI from Victor Loh on Vimeo.
One of the great painters of the post-WWII era, and a wonderful man with whom to talk painting and art history. A titan. https://t.co/Qdj5GrMmcc
— Tyler Green (@TylerGreenBooks) December 26, 2021
“That’s what you do as a painter: You live on hope.”
— Austin Kleon (@austinkleon) December 31, 2021
—Wayne Thiebaud https://t.co/92G86na7F8 pic.twitter.com/t6IBWisU8C
Gregg Chadwick
Carpe Librum (Maastricht)
48"x36"oil on linen 2021
It is so wonderful when a collector shares their reactions and photos of new artworks in their home. Today @danialexlune was surprised by her amazing husband Dave with my painting "Carpe Librum (Maastricht)"
The painting is featured in @art_squat magazine's new interview with me in their 3rd Issue released today - December 25, 2021. Link at http://www.art-squat.com/articles3/Gregg_Chadwick/index.php
In the interview I explain that "in the past few years, a magnificent bookstore in Maastricht, The Netherlands (@boekhandel_dominicanen) has inspired a group of my oil paintings and works on paper. I exhibited my latest painting in this series, "Carpe Librum (Maastricht)", at The Other Art Fair at Barker Hangar in September 2021. I find that writers in particular are intrigued by this homage to the world of books and learning."