Fine Art Friday: Johnathan Fletcher’s Super Mario Brothers

Related Posts

Hey readers! Welcome to the first installment of Fine Art Friday. Here on DeviceMAG we noticed there was a completely untouched portion of the gaming industry on the site specifically when it came to the wonderful art that populates it. So, we decided to add this new weekly segment to highlight a wonderful work of art that we’ve come across on the internet. There are many talented artists out there, both professional and amateur, that should not go unnoticed.

For our first week, we have an incredible spin on one of gaming’s favorite characters brothers, Mario and Luigi. Splash Damage’s environment artist Johnathan Flethcer designed this new iteration of the famous plumbers. One of the best things about the characters is the back-story that he developed for the overshadowed brother Luigi.

On the Polycount Forums he writes:

His jealousy of Mario and his success turned him to a life of alcohol and drugs, where he developed heavy mental damage and severe paranoia causing him to believe that ghosts are attacking him. He fights them off with his trusty Henry Hoover.

The designs for the characters are great and having a more mature spin on the Super Mario Bros. would make for an excellent game. He even made a video of the characters in motion and you’re just begging for someone to press the start button and explore this world.

Take note Nintendo! To see more work from Johnathan, head over to his website.

Let us know what you think of the art piece in the comments below.

Art review: Brian O’Connell at Redling Fine Art

In his exhibition at Redling Fine Art, Brian O’Connell creates mysterious objects and images that hark back to the Process art of the 1960s, a movement that encompassed the work of Robert Morris, Eva Hesse and Richard Serra. What united these disparate artists was their emphasis on process, not in terms of skilled artistic techniques, but in exploring the fundamental nature and behavior of materials.

In this vein, O’Connell uses concrete, cyanotypes (otherwise known as blueprints), and non-carbon transfer paper to convey a fascination with the basic forces of weight, pressure, light and sequence. To create a series of small wall pieces — reliefs, really — O’Connell poured concrete onto thin strips of wood laid side by side. The strips bowed under the weight of the concrete to different degrees, creating a variegated surface composed of arcs of various heights. Turned up sideways on the walls, some with bits of wood still attached, the pieces are mysterious protrusions but are literally a concrete record of gravity at work.

Fine Art Festival Returns to Oro Valley, Feb. 4 & 5

The Steam Pump Village Fine Art Festival returns to Oro Valley for its second time, Feb. 4 amp; 5, bringing with it even better quality artists and live music.

Over 30 fine artists, both national and local, will display art in various mediums includingceramics, fiber, glass, jewelry, sculpture, mixed media, paintings, drawings, photography, printmaking, wood and furniture. Price ranges from about $10 to $2,000.

Live demonstrations and booth chats are new this year, which will give festival-goers an inside look at what goes into making all the artwork.

The Arizona Theatre Company will be hosting a game of chance in which attendees can enter to win free passes to an upcoming performance. Patrons are also encouraged to stop in for some lunch at the nearby Baggins or Chilis located in the same shopping center.

We are really excited to present this festival to the residents of Northwest Tucson. We know there are many opportunities for local art lovers to attend these types of shows, but what is different about ours is that we focus on quality, not quantity. The public can expect to walk through our show and be wowed by the magnificent art that will be presented, says Matt Bowman, the Festivals Organizer. With many people hosting Super Bowl Parties that weekend, its the perfect time for patrons to pick up that one-of-a-kind conversation piece just in time for the party.

The Arizona Fine Art EXPO Comes but Once A Year, More than 100 Artists Working …

The opportunity to sit with artists and see into their world comes but once a year. This allows one to catch a small glimpse inside the creative process, and to be privy to the artistic expression of joy, love, sadness, and personal experiences the creator has lived through. To be handed these feelings and to be so affected by them that the viewer is compelled to respond and feel them too: that is art.

Scottsdale, AZ (PRWEB) January 26, 2012

Art has no boundaries and is the visual history keeper, the narrator of the human experience. The working artist has strived not only to express personal emotions amp; experiences but those of the heritage, culture and society as a whole.

In todays multi-cultural society, art in America runs the gamut from Abstract Impressionism to American Expression, from Art Nouveau to Realism, and beyond.

The Arizona Fine Art EXPO is art in the making, with the most glorious ingredients. Watching art being made in the heart of the Sonoran Desert only happens once a year. Like a magical carnival that yields memories of childhood, artists from across America travel thousands of miles to settle in the desert and make their art. Gathering inspiration from their surroundings, inspired by those they meet, remembering their experiences, they put their tools to work and patrons can watch – Art in the making.

How to make a perfectly unforgettable art experience:

INGREDIENTS:

A treasure chest of talented artists (at least 100 including painters, potters, photographers, sculptors, glass blowers, gourd artists, jewelers, hand crafted furniture makers, woodworkers, specialist in handcrafted kaleidoscopes)

A large quantity of art movements including, abstract, realism, contemporary, classical, southwest.

An collection of mediums: Acrylic, oil, marble, stone, clay, silver, semi precious stone, glass, canvas, paper, graphite, pencil, watercolor, bronze amp; copper.

And patrons!!

WHAT, WHEN, WHERE amp; WHO:

Arizona Fine Art EXPO, Opening Day January 19th for ten weeks!

Large White Tent, Sonoran Desert, Scottsdale, Arizona.

Free Parking

2- Acre Sculpture Garden

Art classes, Music, Creativity, Laughter, Imagination amp; Expression, Cafe

And last, but by no means least – Patrons of the Arts

Throw all the ingredients into a large pan and leave to simmer from January 19th to April 1st 2012.

###

For the original version on PRWeb visit: www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2012/1/prweb9130703.htm

Fine Art Festival Returns to Oro Valley, Feb. 4 & 5

The Steam Pump Village Fine Art Festival returns to Oro Valley for its second time, Feb. 4 amp; 5, bringing with it even better quality artists and live music.

Over 30 fine artists, both national and local, will display art in various mediums includingceramics, fiber, glass, jewelry, sculpture, mixed media, paintings, drawings, photography, printmaking, wood and furniture. Price ranges from about $10 to $2,000.

The Arizona Theatre Company will be hosting a game of chance in which attendees can enter to win free passes to an upcoming performance. Patrons are also encouraged to stop in for some lunch at the nearby Baggins or Chilis located in the same shopping center.Live demonstrations and booth chats are new this year, which will give festival-goers an inside look at what goes into making all the artwork.

We are really excited to present this festival to the residents of Northwest Tucson. We know there are many opportunities for local art lovers to attend these types of shows, but what is different about ours is that we focus on quality, not quantity. The public can expect to walk through our show and be wowed by the magnificent art that will be presented, says Matt Bowman, the Festivals Organizer. With many people hosting Super Bowl Parties that weekend, its the perfect time for patrons to pick up that one-of-a-kind conversation piece just in time for the party.

Sponsored by Evergreen Development Company,the festivaltakes place from 10 am to 5 pm, February 4 and 10 am to 4 pm February 5, in the parking lot in front of Basis Middle School near The California Design Center at 11155 N. Oracle Rd.

For more information about the Steam Pump Village Art Festival or Bowman Productions, please call 520.401.1290 or email matt@bowmanproductionsaz.com. Visit us online at www.bowmanproductionsaz.com or find us on Facebook.

If you go:

Where: Steam Pump Village Shopping Center 11155 N. Oracle Rd.

When: 10 am to 5 pm Saturday, Feb. 4 and 10 am to 4 pm Sunday, Feb. 5

Admission: Free

Info:www.bowmanproductionsaz.comor 520.401-1290

Incidentals: Several local restaurants to choose from

The fine art of Fibre Channel troubleshooting

This vendor-written tech primer has been edited by Network World to eliminate product promotion, but readers should note it will likely favor the submitters approach.

Troubleshooting Fibre Channel networks can be as much an art as it is a science, but there are some basic best practices you can follow to reduce the guessing and speed resolution. Here are 10 tips to help you get to the bottom of pesky problems:

1. Generally, problems are reported by the application user. As a first step, the SAN admin will usually gather dumps, logs and traces. At the same time, hell sometimes remove other users or applications that are less critical; perhaps hell stop backups, and remove other potential bottlenecks. While this may fix the immediate problem, it often stops the underlying cause from being discovered. If youve only removed the symptom and you stop there, youre likely to see trouble later on.

OUTLOOK:
Data center, cloud fabrics to heat up in 2012

To continue reading, register here to become an Insider. Youll get free access to premium content from CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, and Network World. See more Insider content or sign in.

Gymnast Frankie is a real work of art

A SCULPTURE of a county gymnast has been unveiled at Heathrow Airport as part of the build-up to the Olympics.

The casting of rhythmic gymnast Frankie Jones is part of a series of Olympic-themed artworks which have gone on show at Terminal Five’s Expo Fine Art Gallery ahead of the London 2012 Games.

The 21-year-old five-time British champion, of Wellingborough, is being tipped as one of the UK’s Olympic medal hopes.

She lives in the county, but competes for Wales due to her father’s roots in Pontypool, Torfaen.

Miss Jones was present for the unveiling of the carbon fibre resin sculpture by artist Eleanor Cardozo.

It includes a plaque stating: “This sculpture is dedicated to Francesca Jones, whose youth and talent embodies the Olympic spirit and the promise of a generation.”

Her dad Colin Jones said: “As her father I was very proud that the sculpture was unveiled, and she was very thrilled.

“She’s working very hard at the moment ahead of the Olympics. She’s flying out to Bulgaria tomorrow for five weeks training.”

The series has previously included a wire mesh sculpture of diver Tom Daley and a work in bronze depicting Paralympic gold medallist Lee Pearson.

Miss Jones, who earned a silver medal in the Commonwealth Games 2010, was joined by the Great Britain Senior Rhythmic Gymnastics Group for the opening of the new collection of art, which is being held to celebrate sports, including gymnastics, at the official Host Airport of the games.

Passengers can buy any of the 50 works of art on show at the exhibition, with proceeds split between the artist and the British Paralympic Charity.

A spokesman for the airport said: “This exciting new exhibition honours the best of Britain’s sportsmen and women as we eagerly countdown to the 2012 London Olympics.

“We are constantly looking at ways to make every journey better at Heathrow and provide passengers with an immediate taste of British sport and culture, and believe that this art exhibition will be as captivating as it is unexpected.”

Madison Avenue Art Dealer Faces Fraud Charges

A Madison Avenue art dealer, Robert Scott Cook, has been charged with defrauding a client of 16 artworks by Picasso, Manet, Matisse, Renoir and others worth more than $4.2 million, the United States Attorney’s Office in Manhattan announced on Thursday. Over a period of six years Mr. Cook, the principal of Cook Fine Art, secretly sold watercolors, drawings and photographs to galleries and auction houses behind the owner’s back, according to the attorney’s office. The FBI.s assistant director in charge in New York, Janice K. Fedarcyk, said the charge is that Mr. Cook is a crook.” If convicted he faces a maximum of 20 years in jail and a $250,000 fine.

The attorney’s office did not identify the client, but this past summer Courthouse News reported that a man named George Ball had filed suit against Mr. Cook and his wife in Manhattan federal court, in which he accused Mr. Cook of taking $5.3 million he got for selling works by Matisse, Picasso, Egon Schiele, and Wassily Kandinsky owned by Mr. Ball.

Mr. Ball’s suit stated that a lawyer who said he represented Mr. Cook had called Mr. Ball and told him “that Cook and his wife were not in the country, that plaintiff was expecting to receive a large amount of money, but that the money that plaintiff was expecting to receive would not be forthcoming because it has been spent. “

The lawyer, James Eisenhower, said that Mr. Cook was trying to raise $1 million to repay Mr. Ball and “that Cook hoped to avoid being prosecuted,” the suit said.

Mr. Eisenhower could not be reached for comment.

Texas and Western Art the Dallas Fine Art Auction

Dallas Fine Art Auction (DFAA) brings together three prominent members of the Texas, Western, and American art scene; David Dike Fine Art, Debbie Leeuw Fine Art, and Dallas Auction Gallery. Dallas Fine Art Auction presents a premier Western and Texas fine art auction annually. The DFAA partnership began in 2010 with a goal to provide both collectors and artists excellent service, personal attention, and scholarly knowledge about Texas and Western art. The annual auction will be held at Dallas Auction Gallery on Saturday, January 28, 2012.

The fine art of acting up

SINAD GLEESON

Whats it like to play the Virgin Mary? Does good writing make acting easy? And how do you screech like Eliza Doolittle? This years Irish Theatre Awards Best Actress nominees tell all

Amy Conroy

Amy Conroy is the only one of this years best-actress nominees who also wrote the work she was shortlisted for. She regards Gina Devine, the main character of her
Eternal Rising of the Sun, as a woman on the periphery of society. She is a rough, tough single mother in her late 20s whose life has been a litany of grimness. She enrols in a contemporary-dance class, and slowly a transformation begins. Shes one of what I call the invisible people: people who we see, make a snap decision about what theyre like and then never give them another thought. I was interested in scratching at the surface, of looking at a life like that and getting to the darkness or beauty underneath.

As dance is so central to the play, Conroy decided to immerse herself in it. She used an arts bursary to take lessons with Ponydance theatre company, in Belfast. I put myself in Ginas position, and although Ive done physical theatre in the past, this was about co-ordinated beauty. I could articulate it, but Gina couldnt.

She became very attached to Gina, and when she heard about this nomination she felt strangely proud of her. It was a huge surprise to be nominated, and it feels like recognition for my theatre company HotForTheatre and my work as a writer. I felt proud of Gina, as I had come to think of her as a real person.

Conroy saw several plays last year that really impressed her, including Mark OHallorans
Trade, Colm Tibns
Testamentand Druids version of
Big Maggie. All of that great work was Irish, and it really informs your own work as a writer. There were a lot of dark themes, too, but its really important to see work thats difficult to watch, as work that makes your soul soar.

Conroy, who is about to appear in her play
I (Heart) Alice (Heart)I at the Peacock Theatre in Dublin, regards acting as a craft. I think of the craft of acting as about learning. As an actor you can never think you know everything. Pretend you know nothing, and that way you will always keep trying to be better . . . Observation of the world around you is crucial. An actor has to be constantly watching and looking. It helps us to understand what we do.

Marie Mullen

The most experienced actress on the shortlist, Marie Mullen has been nominated before. The Tony-winner is nominated in this years Irish Theatre Awards for her role as the Virgin Mary in Colm Tibns
Testament. Garry Hynes [of Druid] and Anne Clarke [of Landmark Productions] asked me about the role, so I read it a couple of months before I committed to it. Mary is a figure who is always pictured at the bottom of the Cross, crying for her son, but Colm put breath and a brain into this woman. He brought her to life, which was so exciting.

Mullen has known Colm Tibn for more than 30 years and has enjoyed watching this smart, lovely man progress as a writer. With so many artistic representations of the Virgin Mary, it is difficult for any actress to know how to approach such a role. We took everything from the writing, says Mullen, and I loved that Colm wrote her as a woman in defiance and then added all these shades of loneliness. That was our starting point.

Was it a daunting role? Hugely. Not just because of the role of Mary but also because I had never performed a one-woman show. I remember leaving the house and seeing fear and terror on my face; I could feel it. I remember thinking in rehearsal, How am I going to be able to do this? When Im in a play, I have to make an audience comfortable. I dont care if they like me or not, once theyre comfortable. Acting alone means that all the attention is on you. You realise how much you depend on other actors, and much of the flavour of a scene comes from them.

Playing Mary was difficult, Mullen says, but I find that with extremely bright writers its always a challenge. You have to climb really high to see what they want. Tom Murphy is also one of those writers, and I love working with people like that. (This year Mullen will be appearing in two of Murphys plays, also produced by Druid.)

Mullen was delighted to be nominated. Its so nice that things get recognised, and as performers were always grateful for it. Ive been to the awards before, even when I wasnt nominated, and there is such a benevolent and positive feeling in the room. Its also great to see young people nominated.

Charlie Murphy

Charlie Murphy had never auditioned for the Abbey Theatre before the role of Eliza Doolittle in
Pygmalioncame up. The combination of a prestigious theatre, a revered playwright and his most famous work was intimidating. From the first time I did amateur drama, in Wexford, I was hooked. Acting was like an addiction, and I knew I didnt want to do anything else. I had grown up watching Audrey Hepburn in that role [in the film version,
My Fair Lady] and was ecstatic when I got the role.

Murphy starred in the RT drama
Love/Hate; the Abbey gave her far more time to prepare for her role. Her approach was to start with the text. I had real fear about all of the sounds she has to make. When I was required to do her famous squealing, it was literally just a load of vowels on the page. I wanted the performance to be about her as a person, to know that she was good enough. I tried not to overthink the idea of her going from feral to polished.

Murphys fears about such a big production were allayed by an experienced cast that included Risterd Cooper, Eleanor Methven and Lorcan Cranitch. Risterd was there for my audition, and I was in awe of all these actors I had previously seen on stage.

She was hugely encouraged by director Annabelle Comyns attitude. She always brought it back to the text, and it was important to forget the hype around it and just go through it scene by scene.

Does she regard acting as a craft? Every project is unique, and as an actor you bring different things to each role. Every actor has their own approach, and I feel like I havent found mine yet: Im still growing into it.

In Wexford, her parents run a hair salon that has been the family business for 40 years. When she heard about her nomination she was helping her mother fold towels. I was delighted, because Ive only been three years out of college, and my dad had said to me that hed pay if I wanted to go back to study, so hopefully with this nomination hell realise Im serious about acting.

Aisling OSullivan

Aisling OSullivan is one of Irelands best-known actresses, thanks in no small part to her roles in the RT dramas
The Clinicand
Raw. Last year she also starred in Carmel Winters film
Snap and had an epiphany after seeing a production of John B Keanes
The Field. I was so blown away by it and by Keanes writing, says OSullivan. It also made me a bit ashamed that, as a Kerrywoman, I had never paid much attention to his work. A while later I talked to Garry Hynes about Big Maggie, and when I was offered the lead role I jumped at it.

Maggie is one of Irish theatres greatest matriarchs. OSullivan was fascinated by her. When I read the play there was a lot I didnt understand. How could someone who was so bright and so cunning have been married to this man who treated her so badly? How could she be so trapped in this marriage?

OSullivan researched the role by looking at what life was like for women in Ireland in 1969. She also looked back at Oscar-winning actresses of the 1960s and found that revolutionary figures such as Anne Bancroft and Maggie Smith had won. Then she channelled the Italian actress Anna Magnani when she was playing Maggie.

OSullivan says she was careful not to overprepare. I knew that that family dynamic was important and that the life of the piece would hinge on the connection between the actors. I had a very healthy respect for the role of Maggie. Garry could see me in it, and I trust her and her taste.

Is it a difficult role? Im not sure. Once the characters come, you cant remember how difficult it was to get them there. Keanes writing and lines are so great that youve got a safety net theres a support structure built inside the play.

OSullivan says theatre is a unique discipline. Different things get flexed within the different media, but theatre is much more athletic [than television or film roles]. Its about things like breath and posture, but theres a freedom in that athleticism.

How does she feel about the nomination? Its a huge honour, no matter what. Its great.