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Art Diary - Seven

Added Feb 10, 2025

Gold Coast, Queensland series Artwork 3


I'm loving this Gold Coast, Queensland collection Art journey. It started with an idea at end of January. Now I'm on my way to finishing the third painting in this series. As the proverb says "A Journey of a thousand miles begins with a step"

I'm working hard. I'm encouring myself to keep on the creative energy. I must accomplish the Goal I've set for myself.

I have to make up to Ten paintings before the end of this week. 

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Art Diary - Six

Added Feb 9, 2025


On to the Third painting in the Gold Coast, Queensland series. I think I'm such a slow painter. How can I accomplish quarter of my Resolution challenge?! Or, I'm I over tasking myself.


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Art Diary - Five

Added Feb 9, 2025

The Second painting is done and it's my new favorite. The garden in the painting is very vibrant and full of nature allure. The painting really exhibit the beauty of cottage and garden in watercolors perfectly. 

Check out the photos I took from the Studio.

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Art Diary - Four

Added Feb 9, 2025


I'm sometimes unsure about many things my life right now. Especially in my life. How do you pursue a career that is so uncertain but your obsessed with it like a helpless lover. The fear of unknown and failure makes me anxious and suffer anxiety it weakens my creative energy at times. But, nevertheless I must finish this painting and keep moving.

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Art Diary - Three

Added Feb 9, 2025

First painting in the Gold Coast, Queensland collection.

I'm so excited to finish the first painting in the Gold Coast, Queensland series. So, I took a lot of photos to celebrate this accomplishments.



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Art Diary - Two

Added Feb 9, 2025

Art in progress in the studio.

I Started my First Art series of the year. It's called Gold Coast, Queensland located in Australia. The collection is inspired by a cottage gardener friend who photographs cottage lifestyle. I can't wait to turn her cottage garden into a watercolor masterpiece.

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Art Dairy - Page 1

Added Feb 9, 2025

 



 At the beginning of January, I promised myself to be consistent on my paintings. I had a resolution to create up to 1000 paintings by the end of 2025. I know it's unrealistic but I want to at least try to accomplish some of it. I want to paint a lot of Still life and some Garden paintings for this challenge. 

   Why did I choose Still life? Because it cures my anxiety and depression. When I see a Still life photography my creative light-bulb will switch on. Still life doesn't make me feel paranoid and helps with my mental health.


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Added Jul 5, 2024

My Most Photorealism Watercolor painting Progress

Added Jul 5, 2024

Working In The Studio for my new painting.

Even though I'm a very skilled impressionist painter. I still wish to have some photorealistic style in my Art. I think the mixture of both styles will be great. Especially with still life paintings. But, with watercolors I need a lot of patience and a keen eye for details, light and shadow. I only want to use the photorealistic techniques for the visible subject matter in the painting. Mostly with the more vivid flowers and objects in my Still life paintings. I want my vision of a strong visual effect to materialize in this painting.


These are the first half of the painting progress.

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Audrey Flack, the Pioneering Photorealist Who Elevated the Everyday,

Added Jul 3, 2024


Feminist painter and sculptor Audrey Flack, one of the founders of Photorealism, died in Southampton, New York, on June 28. The 93-year-old artist’s death was confirmed by her former dealer and longtime friend, Louis K. Meisel.

Born in New York in 1931, Flack studied at the city’s Cooper Union before receiving a scholarship to Connecticut’s Yale School of Art, where she had been recruited by Josef Albers, the educator and painter of geometric abstraction.

As a young artist, Flack was immersed in the downtown New York art scene, rubbing elbows with the famed Abstract Expressionists Jackson Pollock—whose advances she rebuffed—and Willem de Kooning at the 8th Street Club and Cedar Tavern. But she carved out a space of her own at the forefront of Photorealism in the 1960s after additional studies at New York’s Art Students League.

“Audrey Flack’s contribution to the history of art cannot be overstated,” Hollis Taggart, the artist’s gallerist, told Art and Object earlier this year. “Audrey has consistently been at the forefront of challenging the artistic trends of her time.”

Painting from her own photographs, Flack created over-size still life paintings that often focused on feminine personal effects such as jewelry, makeup, and glassware, as well as religious artifacts.

“I broke the unwritten code of acceptable subject matter,” Flack wrote in an artist statement for the Brooklyn Museum. “Photorealists painted cars, motorcycles, and empty street scenes. Cool, unemotional, and banal were the terms used to describe the movement. My work, however, was humanist, emotional, and filled with referential symbolic imagery.”


Some critics initially took umbrage with the elevation of such subject matter. In a review for the New York Times in 1976, Hilton Kramer called Flack “the Barbra Streisand of photorealism,” bemoaning that she was the first artist of the movement to have work purchased by New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

But with a career that ultimately stretched across seven decades, Flack’s groundbreaking approach was able to stand the test of time. That MoMA acquisition, Leonardo’s Lady, was prominently displayed when the expanded museum reopened in 2019.


She is also represented in the collections of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of ArtSolomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and Whitney Museum of American Art, as well as the Dallas Museum of ArtLos Angeles County Museum of Art, and Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C., among other institutions. Flack’s personal papers, meanwhile, will find their home at the Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art.

And Flack was recognized by H.W. Janson’s History of Art, where she was one of the first women artists added to the authoritative art history textbook when it published a third edition in 1986.

By that time, Flack had left Photorealism behind to break new artistic ground, moving into large-scale bronze sculpture depicting female goddesses. This reinvention led to prominent public art commissions across the U.S., including Civitas (1991), a gateway monument in Rock Hill, South Carolina.

“Flack is one of a group of early feminist artists whose work was crucial in generating new ideas concerning the representation of women, and her goddesses continue to chart new territory,” Patricia Mathews wrote in Art in America in 1994.

Photo of herself and her self- portrait.

Recent years saw Flack return to painting, in what she dubbed her “Post-Pop Baroque” period. She remained active in the studio, and in October, the Parrish Museum of Art in Water Mill, New York, will present work from the last four years in “Audrey Flack NOW.”

“When I’m painting now, everything is at my fingertips. It’s magical,” Flack told Vogue this spring. “They say before you die you see everything from your life. In my 92 years, a lot pops up.”

This year saw Flack publish a deeply personal memoir, With Darkness Came Stars, detailing the artist’s abuse at the hands of her first husband, and the challenges of raising a nonverbal daughter with autism.

Flack is survived by her two daughters from her first marriage, Melissa and Hannah, and stepchildren Mitchell and Leslie. After her first marriage ended in divorce, Flack married her high school sweetheart, Robert Marcus, who died this May.

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