Tag: Sheep Incognito

  • Winding Down the Year

    After being in more States than I care to remember, setting up more shows than I can count, and meeting more people than live in my town, we are finally getting to the last event of this year – it’s the big one!

    For a few more days, the Sheep Incognito Flock will be hanging out at the always phenomenal Southern Christmas Show at the Charlotte Expo Center. 12 Days of five buildings filled with any- and everything you might possibly associate with the holiday season. Comes complete with live music, roasted nuts, mulled cider, Dickens attired folk, and the new Sheep Incognito Christmas Painting “Fleece Navidad”.

    You don’t want to miss out on this one!

  • A New Sheep Art Flock Member!

    A New Sheep Art Flock Member

    Here is a preview of my newest sheep art painting I just began this week – it is a work in progress, so the final painting will be different:

    title: Dances with Wools
    size: 24″ x 48″
    media: Oils by Carlos Ruiz of V&S Artist’s Colours

    I will post more pictures of the process as I go along

    20130914-090301.jpg

  • The Big Ann Arbor Art Fair

    We finally made it into the famed Ann Arbor Art Fair – we’ve heard soooo many good things about it, we simply had to give it a try.

    It is one of the top three art fairs in the nation, certainly ome of the biggest with over 1200 artists exhibiting their work.

    Today is the first day – it is Wednesday – it is Very warm today. But apparently that is not a deterrent for the visitors, they are still meandering, even though it’s in the mid nineties.

    Us? We are camped in front of the fan, which seems to only make hot air. Someone turn off the heater!

    If you are looking for us in Ann Arbor- look on Liberty Street, in front of Jack’s, between 4th $ 5th Streets, Booth 274.

    Back to the fan – it’S what is helping us survive

    20130717-154617.jpg

  • When Sheep Leave the Fold

    One of the more difficult things about being an artist selling your own work, is the letting go process when a painting sells.

    Not only have you put your inner mind and thinking into a visual statement for everybody to see, but you also are srending that statement out into the world on its own, without hope of getting to revise it or even explain it.

    Of course, this makes artist very vulnerable – but it also is the one thing that makes art so intriguing, and it is what lets art critics earn a living: they get to come up with what they think the artist was intending to say out loud in his/her artwork.
    Which of course is, in very many cases, very largely guesswork and a big dose of speculation combined with imagination.

    Unless the artist has put his intentions and the mind behind the work into words somewhere, all one can go by is the visual statements the artist has made.

    This is why I find “the serious art worrld” so entertaining in many cases: who is to say, what was going through Piccasso’s mind when he decided to draw people out of proportion with really screwed up facial elements?
    Who says Pollock wasn’t just flinging paint at a canvas, just because it was a fun thing to do on a Thursday night?

    Hopefully someday there will be some art critics standing beside my “Haulin’ Ass” painting, trying to interpret it in some way other than it was intended – that is a tour in the museum I really would love to be on…

    It will be the perfect opportunity to play BS Bingo – mark off the words as the art critics and tour guides mention them; feel free to laugh loudly, as none of these were part of the statement I was making with “Haulin’ Ass”:

    “Social Influence”
    “Metaphor”
    “Subversive Political Commentary”
    “Artist’s Intentions”
    “Deeper Meaning”
    “Metaphysical Impact”
    Etc….

    Add more art world bs words liberally, and see how many you can find in the review and critics’s speaches…

    Don’t forget to yell BINGO! at the end….

    Too bad I won’t be around for that…the main reason dead artists are more famous than live artists, is that they shut up about what is being said about their work….

  • When Sheep Leave the Fold

    One of the more difficult things about being an artist selling your own work, is the letting go process when a painting sells.

    Not only have you put your inner mind and thinking into a visual statement for everybody to see, but you also are srending that statement out into the world on its own, without hope of getting to revise it or even explain it.

    Of course, this makes artist very vulnerable – but it also is the one thing that makes art so intriguing, and it is what lets art critics earn a living: they get to come up with what they think the artist was intending to say out loud in his/her artwork.
    Which of course is, in very many cases, very largely guesswork and a big dose of speculation combined with imagination.

    Unless the artist has put his intentions and the mind behind the work into words somewhere, all one can go by is the visual statements the artist has made.

    This is why I find “the serious art worrld” so entertaining in many cases: who is to say, what was going through Piccasso’s mind when he decided to draw people out of proportion with really screwed up facial elements?
    Who says Pollock wasn’t just flinging paint at a canvas, just because it was a fun thing to do on a Thursday night?

    Hopefully someday there will be some art critics standing beside my “Haulin’ Ass” painting, trying to interpret it in some way other than it was intended – that is a tour in the museum I really would love to be on…

    It will be the perfect opportunity to play BS Bingo – mark off the words as the art critics and tour guides mention them; feel free to laugh loudly, as none of these were part of the statement I was making with “Haulin’ Ass”:

    “Social Influence”
    “Metaphor”
    “Subversive Political Commentary”
    “Artist’s Intentions”
    “Deeper Meaning”
    “Metaphysical Impact”
    Etc….

    Add more art world bs words liberally, and see how many you can find in the review and critics’s speaches…

    Don’t forget to yell BINGO! at the end….

    Too bad I won’t be around for that…the main reason dead artists are more famous than live artists, is that they shut up about what is being said about their work….

  • Sheep Incognito is joining ePlate!

    just this month, Sheep Incognito joined ePlate as a rewards partner – so we are pretty excited!

    Here is the press release on Yahoo Finance:

    http://finance.yahoo.com/news/conni-togel-launches-sheep-incognito-133000894.html