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Painter and Model: Lucian Freud's Benefits Supervisor Sleeping Sells for $33.64 Million

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Lucian Freud Benefits Supervisor Sleeping 59" x 98.5"oil on canvas 1995 The London Evening Standard has a nice interview with Sue Tilley who posed for the painting - In the article Sue Tilley explained the genesis of the painting: "The first time the artist met her, in a Soho nightclub 20 years ago, he criticised her lipstick. "He said it had too many blue tones. The next time we met was over lunch at the River Café and I wore a different lipstick," she said. She knew she was effectively being interviewed for the role of artist's muse and was briefed on how to behave by their mutual friend, performance artist Leigh Bowery. "But I just did as I wanted as usual," said Ms Tilley, who grew up in Sussex Gardens and now lives in Mornington Crescent. "Soon after, Leigh called me up and said, 'Lucian wants you to start work next week' and he made me practise stripping off on my settee at home before I went to Lucian's house in Holland Par...

Robert Rauschenberg 1925 - 2008

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Robert Rauschenberg October 22, 1925 - May 12, 2008 As Seen by Chuck Close 140 x 112 cm color digital pigment print 1996 On the New York Times website, dancer and choreographer, Paul Taylor has written a moving farewell to Bob: "Robert Rauschenberg’s work and overall spirit as an artist and human being had an ENORMOUS impact on shaping my own direction and conviction as an artist. I am deeply indebted to his liberating approach in working with any-&-all materials including other people. The R.O.C.I. period equally demonstrated his love for mankind through our creations and showed that we ARE all in this together after all. He changed my life and blew my mind and I am a better person/artist for having been touched by him (literally even). You were the BEST sir and I say God Bless You Bob! Goodbye." Michael Kimmelman's farewell: Robert Rauschenberg, Titan of American Art, Is Dead at 82 Christopher Knight from the Los Angeles Times writes: Robert Rauschenberg, 82; influ...

Hillary Skit on Saturday Night Live

Great to see that Saturday Night Live is relevant again. This clip gets my vote as the best political skit so far.

Fernand Léger's Étude pour 'La Femme en Bleu' sold this evening at Sotheby's in New York for $39,241,000

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FERNAND LÉGER ÉTUDE POUR 'LA FEMME EN BLEU' 51"x38" oil on canvas 1912-13 Lot Sold. Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium: 39,241,000 USD Fernand Léger's Étude pour 'La Femme en Bleu' sold this evening at Sotheby's in New York for $39,241,000. Painted shortly before the outbreak of World War I, Léger's painting is a masterful composition of blues and silvers. More at: Sotheby's Video

The Empire Strikes Barack

May the force be with you as you vote ...

Joseph Andrew's Inspiration

On My Switch From Clinton to Obama By Joseph Andrew I have been inspired. Today I am announcing my support for Senator Barack Obama for President of the United States of America. I am changing my support from Senator Clinton to Senator Obama, and calling for my fellow Democrats across my home State of Indiana, and my fellow super delegates across the nation, to heal the rift in our Party and unite behind Barack Obama. The hardest decisions in life are not between good and bad or right and wrong, but between two goods or two rights. That is the decision Democrats face today. We have an embarrassment of riches, but as much as we may love our candidates and revel in the political process that has brought Presidential politics to places that have not seen it in a generation, we cannot let our family affair hurt America by helping John McCain. Here is my message, explained in this lengthy letter that I hope is perceived as a thoughtful analysis of how to save America from four more years o...

Coldplay's Viva la Vida

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Frida Kahlo Viva la Vida 59 x 50.7 cm. oil on masonite 1954 Frida Kahlo Museum, Mexico City, Mexico. Coldplay's lead singer, Chris Martin, was inspired by the life and art of the Mexican painter, Frida Kahlo, while recording Coldplay's latest album: Viva la Vida . Martin was struck by the appeal to life gouged into the watermelon in the foreground of Frida's Viva la Vida which he viewed on a visit to the Frida Kahlo Museum in Mexico City, Both Frida Kahlo and her husband Diego Rivera were involved in revolutionary politics in the Americas. Both artists felt it was their responsibility to point out and help change the injustices in society. But the band has used another painter's work to stand in for their inspiration. Eugène Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People graces the cover of Coldplay's new album. Though, the painting has been tagged by Frida, Chris, Banksy or perhaps Ricky Martin in white paint with the phrase "Long Live Life!" The undamage...

Heiwa (for Masami Teraoka)

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Gregg Chadwick Heiwa (for Masami Teraoka) 24"x24" oil on linen 2008

Barack & the Boss: from Slate

A wee bit of humor before the Pennsylvania primary.

Prove It All Night Live - Thinking of Danny Federici

Filmed at Capitol Theatre, Passaic, NJ. 19-9-1978 A gray morning at the beach in L.A. I'm thinking of Danny Federici and the fragility of life. Sometimes you just have to crank up the music real loud and let the memories reverb around the room. At the 7 minute 35 second mark of this tape, Danny lets it all out. Warn your neighbors. Let the dog out. Pull a Spinal Tap and set the max at 11 and let the wake begin! Peace

Good on ya, Danny. Rest easy.

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Danny Federici January 23, 1950 - April 17th, 2008 "So we lose another friend... I have known Danny since he started playing at the Stone Pony back in the late 60s. He was always a crusty guy with a sarcastic sense of humor, so, of course, we got along just fine. I can recall many nights jamming on blues and rock & roll classics, then he and I,Garry, and whomever else was on stage would shift into some jazz standard or improvise on a chord progression. He was a much more advanced musician than most of us at the time, and he raised the bar for all of us. It was embarrassing to hear how good he already was and to listen to your own pitiful efforts. And, yes, for all you REAL early fans out there, Danny was the one who pushed the speaker cabinets over onto the chief of police who was behind the stage trying to cut the power on a Steel Mill concert. There were arrest warrants, so he always denied it, but I was back there and saw him get up and do it. No one was hurt, but it helped...

With These Hands: "A Great American Reclamation Project Needs to be Undertaken"

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Gregg Chadwick In the Basin of Angels 36"x36" oil on linen (1987-1992) My City of Ruins - Bruce Springsteen There is a blood red circle On the cold dark ground And the rain is falling down The church door's thrown open I can hear the organ's song But the congregation's gone My city of ruins My city of ruins Now the sweet bells of mercy Drift through the evening trees Young men on the corner Like scattered leaves, The boarded up windows, The empty streets While my brother's down on his knees My city of ruins My city of ruins Come on, rise up! Come on, rise up! Come on, rise up! Come on, rise up! Come on, rise up! Come on, rise up! Now's there's tears on the pillow Darlin' where we slept And you took my heart when you left Without your sweet kiss My soul is lost, my friend Tell me how do I begin again? My city's in ruins My city's in ruins Now with these hands, With these hands, With these hands, I pray Lord With these hands, With these ...

King 1929 - 1968

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King 36"x36" conte, charcoal, oil and wax on linen April 4, 2008

Martin Luther King Jr. - 40 Years On

John Legend's rendition of U2's Pride In the Name of Love.

Bill Moyers on Hillary's Vote for War

Bjork's New Video: Wanderlust

The New York Times on the making of Bjork's Wanderlust

Full Text of Barack Obama's "A More Perfect Union"

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Full text of Barack Obama's "A More Perfect Union" speech delivered on March 18, 2008 at the Constitution Center in Philadelphia. "We the people, in order to form a more perfect union." Two hundred and twenty one years ago, in a hall that still stands across the street, a group of men gathered and, with these simple words, launched America's improbable experiment in democracy. Farmers and scholars; statesmen and patriots who had traveled across an ocean to escape tyranny and persecution finally made real their declaration of independence at a Philadelphia convention that lasted through the spring of 1787. The document they produced was eventually signed but ultimately unfinished. It was stained by this nation's original sin of slavery, a question that divided the colonies and brought the convention to a stalemate until the founders chose to allow the slave trade to continue for at least twenty more years, and to leave any final resolution to future ...

March 2003 - March 2008

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Colors 40"x30" oil on linen

5 Years and Counting: Clinton's Vote For War in Iraq

The Dalai Lama Describes the Chinese Crackdown as Cultural Genocide

As the violent Chinese crackdown in Tibet continues, the Dalai Lama says, ""Whether intentionally or unintentionally, some cultural genocide is taking place. There is some kind of discrimination: the Tibetans in their own land quite often are treated as second-class citizens." Lhadon is blogging from China on the protests in Tibet and the Chinese reaction. Important reading in the run up to the summer Olympics: beijingwideopen

A Few Things

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A few things in the works: Coming out in May is Phil Cousineau's new book, Stoking the Creative Fires . My painting is illustrated on the cover and the book also contains two interviews with me about the creative process as well as two other paintings. Cousineau's Stoking the Creative Fires Inquiring Mind , a Berkeley based journal, will be using one of my paintings, A Balance of Shadows in their upcoming issue. I nquiring Mind An artist in Italy has created a project based on Raymond Carver's poem, The Painter and the Fish . If you go to the project website (link below), you'll see he includes my thoughts on Raymond Carver. “A SORT OF ARTISTIC EPIPHANY” Febbraio 15, 2008, 9:21 pm Archiviato in: Contorni | Tag: epifania, epiphany, Gregg Chadwick, Raymond Carver “While I’m working on an artwork I don’t just settle for the middle ground or main image. I work the edges and the spaces between. I am hoping to create works that breathe across the whole surface. I desire t...

Smoke on the Sumida

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-thanks to earthgoat

Drama and Desire: Japanese Paintings from the Floating World

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Drama and Desire: Japanese Paintings from the Floating World 1690-1850 opened Friday at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco and runs through April 2008. The exhibition of Japanese paintings from the permanent collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston has traveled from Kobe, Japan to Nagoya to Tokyo to the Kimbell Museum then back to their usual home in Boston and on to Ontario and now San Francisco. The exhibition is stunning. Hokusai's ukiyo-e woodcuts may be quite familiar but the chance to see his paintings on silk was revelatory. Two paintings in particular stood out: Hokusai's Woman Looking at Herself in a Mirror (Kyômen bijin zu) is a work of extreme elegance and beauty. A woman stands before a mirror, a cherry seductively lolls in her mouth, and in her right hand she holds a letter. A poem inscribed on the scroll by the poet Shima Tokki reads: Does that letter from the man she waits for promise a summer's night out? Katsushika Hokusai, Japanese, 1760–1849 Wo...

Support for Obama Grows in Texas and Ohio

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From the Los Angeles Times: I see more of myself in Barack than I do in Hillary," said Sergio Zarate, 46, who owns a chain of dry cleaning stores in the Rio Grande Valley in Texas. "He's not just going to crack a glass ceiling. He can really kick the door off its hinges, and clear the way for all of us, even Hispanics."

Yes, We Can - The Barack Obama Movement at Pauley Pavilion

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"Before the Obama rally at UCLA got into full swing, giant screens showed a video by will.i.am of the Black Eyed Peas. A visually diverse lineup of stars — the actresses Scarlett Johansson and Amber Valletta; the rapper Common; the singer John Legend; Kareem Abdul-Jabbar — recited and sang along with a film of Mr. Obama’s speech the night he lost the New Hampshire primary." Andrew Rosenthal in the New York Times writes "before the closest thing America has ever had to a national primary, four extraordinary women - Michelle Obama, Caroline Kennedy, Oprah Winfrey and Maria Shriver - put on the best campaign rally I’ve seen in 20 years of covering presidential politics." "The pitch-perfect event in U.C.L.A.’s Pauley Pavilion started like every other Barack Obama event — chants of “yes we can” and signs pitching the power of hope. Certainly, in that moment at the rally, the Obama campaign seemed to have a monopoly on what is hip, young and glamorous in California....

MoveOn Endorses Obama

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Poster designed by Shepard Fairey Dear MoveOn member, With hundreds of thousands of ballots cast across the country, for the first time in MoveOn's history, we've voted together to endorse a presidential candidate in the primary. That candidate is Barack Obama. Something big is clearly happening. A few weeks ago, MoveOn members we surveyed were split. But with John Edwards bowing out, progressives are coming together. Obama won over 70% of the vote yesterday, and he's moving up in polls nationwide. As comments poured in from MoveOn members across the country, the sense of hope was inspiring. Here's how Christine Y. in New Jersey put it: "I've never felt so strongly about any one candidate in my entire life. He's truly an inspiration to all of us—especially the younger generation. I will stand by him 100% for as long as he's willing to stand up and fight for this country!" What does MoveOn's endorsement mean? People-power. Together, we are 3.2 m...

El cambio..... es fundamental

Paintings at Night

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Chadwick's "Passports From the Realm" at Julie Nester Gallery

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Gregg Chadwick The Road to Mandalay 40"x30" oil on linen 2007 Gregg Chadwick's new exhibit "Passports From the Realm" opens January 4, 2008 at the Julie Nester Gallery in Park City, Utah. "In old Arabic poetry love, song, blood and travel appear as four basic desires of the human heart and the only effective means against our fear of death. Thus travel is elevated to the dignity of the elementary needs of humankind." - Czeslaw Milosz on the poetry of travel Movement, travel and pilgrimage are themes of the 21st Century that often appear in my paintings. Travel can involve a physical relocation or it can exist in the realm of the senses. Recently I attended "A Gathering of Hearts Illuminating Compassion," an interfaith meeting in San Francisco. The Dalai Lama was the keynote speaker at the event. He entered the packed hall, briskly moved up the center aisle, but stopped briefly to greet an elderly Tibetan woman a few feet from where I was sea...

Joyeux Noël

12/17 Paris, Palais Omnisports De Bercy

Getty Museum: 10 Years on the Hill (Dec. 16, 1997 - Dec. 16, 2007)

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Today marks the ten year anniversary of architect Richard Meier's Getty campus perched on the hills of Brentwood. Christopher Hawthorne in the Los Angeles Times explains: "The design seemed reflective of Los Angeles architecture in another, almost paradoxical way. If the whole idea of L.A. art and architecture was to ignore the idea of fitting in, to reject slavish conformism, then wasn't the Getty a supreme example of precisely that attitude? Turning its back on the notion that it needed to match the spirit of Los Angeles in some prescribed way -- didn't that make it somehow truer to the city than a row of palm trees or a red-tile roof?" "Perhaps more to the point, the Getty joined a long line of L.A. landmarks that sit at a dramatic remove from the city around them -- most notably Griffith Observatory and Dodger Stadium and houses by John Lautner, Pierre Koenig, Frank Lloyd Wright, Charles and Ray Eames, and many others." The Getty has not been immune ...

Marquis C.'s South Central Days

Online Videos by Veoh.com Marquis C.'s SOUTH CENTRAL DAYS. The Los Angeles Times has a powerful article on the power of art to speak of troubled streets and difficult choices. Budding filmmaker Marquis Calhoun found his passion for film at Camp David, the youth detention center not the presidential compound,during a filmmaking class taught by the award winning filmmaker Alex Muñoz. John L. Mitchell, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer writes,"Every year for the last five years, the class of teenagers has produced a number of dramatic scripts and, eventually, short films about the precarious twists and turns of a harsh life on the streets." "But this year, one student's story was different: Marquise Calhoun's screenplay focused on death -- his own." Watch the film. Read the article. And visit the website for Films by Youth Inside. Powerful stuff. Films by Youth Inside Scripting what he knows