Confrontation

Opposing Forces

Confrontation looks different to everyone. It varies in intensity, in meaning and in circumstance. In some situations, the idea of expressing one’s concerns in direct opposition to another is so intimidating, the very notion almost impossible to consider. In other situations, confrontation is a natural and healthy part of life.

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In the Flesh | Oil paintings conveying body language

33 Contemporary, with locations in Chicago and Miami, presents another exciting online exclusive hosted on Artsy.net. The show titled Flesh runs for almost the entirety of February, and features 20-plus artists who “work with the figure and use paint to convey body language,” notes the show curator, Didi Menendez.

Nicole Bishop

First Light, 2023

Oil on Dibond

36 × 20 in | 91.4 × 50.8 cm

In works like First Light by show artist Nicole Bishop, the body language is telling a story of healing after hardship—one piece out of a series that walks the viewer through stages of a female figures “metamorphosis and change,” says the artist. “Each piece stands alone and does not need to be seen with the others to be appreciated. First Light especially is a stand-alone piece and a personal favorite of mine.”

33PA Winter Catalogue

The January 2024 33PA catalogue of 33 Contemporary Gallery is now part of the #Polaris time capsule of the #LunarCodex!

Featuring interviews with Patti Schappler, Ingrid Capozzoli Flinn, Vivien Kabar, paintings representing current group shows by Steven DaLuz, Sarah Warda, Nicole Galt Finger, Kimberly Dow, Diana Carolina López, Pippa Hale-Lynch, Nanette Fluhr, Lisa L. Cyr, and featured artists Tim Okamura, Ellen Starr Lyon, Kate Van Doren, O'Neill Scott, and J Adam McGalliard; and essays and interviews by Sergio Gomez and Didi Menendez.

Kei J. Constantinov

I conjure neo-medieval, Magic Realist imagery and custom frames, using
time honored methods and materials, seeking to “edutain” my audience.
— Kei J. Constantinov

Best known for her neo-medieval “magic realist” paintings dealing with courtesans, organ grinder monkeys, Moors and vanished landscapes, Kei J. Constantinov’s work may be likened to historical fiction excerpts: gilded vignettes of a European dreamtime featuring Venice.

Her self-crafted oil panels embedded within frames redolent of 15thC Italy, enhance her narrative oil and egg tempera work, executed with time-honored Flemish and verdaccio techniques. In tandem with ancient materials she often uses contemporary methods and tools, such as CMYK oil glazing, for an indirect and jewel-like effect.

Conjuring influences such as Albrecht Durer, Rembrandt, Holbein and German illuminated manuscripts, she invites us to reflect on her imagined, nostalgic milieu, reconsidering the splendor of human folly.

What concept or narrative is behind your work?  When I was a lithographer everyone asked me “what’s the story here?”, so I came to understand my work was narrative, and began using triptychs with the beginning-middle-end model.  Now I am working serially and larger in painting, employing nostalgic, old world imagery – Italian, and (often) specifically Venetian.  Through the use of  metal foil gilding, high relief  frames and nostalgic imagery I create time capsules, often alluding to medieval courtesans, organ grinder monkeys, imagined cityscapes and palettes which I hope are evocative of the past, but with a contemporary spin.

What medium do you use for your studies, and how does that translate to the final painting or artwork?   Because each of my paintings are embedded into a Faux Relic, self-styled frame, the process is considerably longer – so my preliminary studies are often just dashed off on scrap paper, but then refined and drawn directly onto the image area.  In the old French method one would do many studies, but unless I received a large commission, which entailed showing the client the concept, I prefer to work directly.

What turns has your art career taken?  Following an MFA at Umass, Amherst, I moved to New York and taught for seven years at Bob Blackburn’s Printmaking Workshop in Chelsea.  At that time I also received a Revson Grant from the Art Students League, which enabled me to create an artist book with handset type and lithographic images – so I was very much identified as a stone lithographer.  Fate and marriage took me into the realm of interior design, where I had the opportunity to convert an historic church property into a B&B and cultural center on UM campus in Ann Arbor, which I ran for sixteen years, untold we sold in 2013.  So since then I have been painting almost exclusively, while keeping my hand in as a fiction writer.

Explain your process. Tempus Edax Rerum was executed in a CMYK oil process (cyan, magenta, yellow, key = black), a commercial method of color layering in printshops, which I teach as an oil approach.  Using transparent oil glazes one can achieve a stained glass effect, as the colors bounce up from the image below, creating a glowing effect.  The wood panel was embedded into the custom frame, prepared with oil ground, then secured and sealed from behind.  An antiquing process, corner bosses, gilding and forger’s varnish were used.  The same approach was used for Venetian Monkey and A Moor in Venice.  These works are all available at present, at Studio Krakow or through 33 Contemporary Gallery. Haven Gallery in Northport, New York also has some works available for purchase.

What is the impetus of your creativity?   I think many Creatives are blessed with excess energy, and perhaps my compulsion to paint many hours each day stems from a channeling need.  I do take infinite pleasure in it, and it is my “practice”, much as other people have yoga, religion, or cybergames for channeling.  Then there is that metaphysical explanation, the “je ne sais quoi” aspect which approximates a spiritual experience while working!  Habit forming . . .