06 June, 2014
05 June, 2014
One Day Only Auction
Valley Dusk
6" x 5.25"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
I will be painting daily through the month of June, and listing mostly small works in the auction format on eBay. Just follow the link below, and I will be posting the works here each day.
This unframed pastel is offered 1 day only.
eBay store.
03 June, 2014
eBay!
First Warm Day. 2014.
5.5" x 6.25"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
I will be painting daily through the month of June, and listing mostly small works in the auction format on eBay. Just follow the link below, and I will be posting the works here each day.
eBay store.
21 May, 2014
20 May, 2014
Was? Where? What? Is?
Was This Where? 2014
13.75" x 11"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
I am asking questions visually. Was this where you were? Is it new? Is the scenery changing?
Here is Bob Dylan, asking questions musically:
18 May, 2014
Wolf Kahn Obligations
Bravo, Mr. Kahn. I couldn't agree with you more about having a sense of obligation to our culture. Our better angels thank you.
17 May, 2014
Rocks and Rivers
Climber's River, 2014
9" x 12"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
It's fun to render rocks. This boulders and river scene is reminiscent of my rock climbing days and visits to Icicle Creek, in Washington. Maybe I'll get there this summer and do some more scenes.
10 May, 2014
09 May, 2014
Florence with Vianna Szabo
Vianna Szabo
Is Italy in your very near future? I want to bring Vianna's incredible workshop to your attention. It is at the end of May and is your opportunity to paint the figure in Florence. The hosts are native to the Florence region, and plan exciting art events to coincide with this 9-day figure/portrait workshop.
When you get back, tell me how everything goes. I plan to teach in the same venue in the next year or two!
08 May, 2014
IAPS TWENTY-FOURTH JURIED EXHIBITION in Boston
Shades Grand River, Canada
14.5" x 18.5."
Pastel
Casey Klahn
Thanks to Liz Haywood-Sullivan and the IAPS organization for exhibiting this pastel in Boston, May 10-June 21, 2014. Liz writes the following:
"Please Come to Boston in the Springtime" - Dave Loggins.
If you do be sure to see the 24th IAPS Juried Exhibition at Vose Galleries. The exhibition runs from May 10 through June 21. Vose Galleries has devoted all 5 floors to pastel! The two lower floors display over 30 antique pastels in a show called "Crystals of Pigment: the Power of Pastel, and the top three floors exhibit the 76 paintings from around the world that make up the IAPS exhibition. This is a must see show!
29 April, 2014
26 April, 2014
Blue Era
A Blue Room in the Forest. 2014.
@ 10" x 13"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
I love seeing young musicians doing well and being hip. Enjoy this live ensemble performing Erik Satie's Gn no.1.
Erik Satie - Gnossienne No.1 - Seth Ford-Young
Labels:
Blue Era,
Erik Satie,
Music,
my artworks,
My Landscapes,
pastel,
Video
25 April, 2014
Entr'acte Friday
24 April, 2014
Blue Certainty
"A certain blue enters your soul...a new era is coming. " Henri Matisse. 1952.
From the Tate:
A giant of modern art, this landmark show explores the final chapter in Matisse’s career as he began ‘carving into colour’ and his series of spectacular cut-outs was born.
Cinema event in the UK.
23 April, 2014
Matisse - Video Support
Henri Matisse's groundbreaking cut-outs were rendered in the last decade of his life, from about 1943 in Nazi-occupied France, till about 1953, when Snail was completed, and are in London now and will be in New York in October. My post from yesterday regarding the exhibit.
One of the enjoyable aspects of this exhibit is the film support that illuminates the story of Matisse's process in making these great collages. Posted today: Alastair Sooke and A Cut Above the Rest.
One of the enjoyable aspects of this exhibit is the film support that illuminates the story of Matisse's process in making these great collages. Posted today: Alastair Sooke and A Cut Above the Rest.
Study notes for Henri Matisse.
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22 April, 2014
Henri Matisse: The Cut-Outs at Tate Modern
Henri Matisse: The Cut-Outs.
Current Exhibition at the Tate Modern, London, and in October at the MoMA in NYC.
Dates:
21 April, 2014
19 April, 2014
18 April, 2014
13 April, 2014
Nobody Was Harmed In The Making Of This Artwork
Hanging Tree in Color
@7" x 15"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
How many people consider nostalgia to be the pinnacle of art? An astounding number in your circle, no doubt, see the number one function of paintings and drawings to be taking them back to a bygone era. The Victorian era, perhaps. Roaring Twenties, anyone?
Once upon a time, I showed a drawing of a tree that I had just rendered to this man I barely knew. He thought to compliment me by suggesting that there, on the branch, I ought to place a man hanging. That would amp the emotional appeal, I suppose.
That is precisely what practitioners of fine art are supposed to avoid: the appeal to sympathy or nostalgia. The reason is that it is an attempt to recruit the viewer based on an appeal to his feelings about something. How in Bloody Sunday am I supposed to guess people's feelings? Is it wisest for the artist to take a pole of the relatively specific feelings of the greatest majority of rubes who might wander past his artwork as it hangs, in perpetuity, seeking those whom it will conquer?
It's a rather progressive approach to marketing art, and altogether wrongheaded for lots of reasons. The most important reason it is wrong is that contemporary art should be my soapbox - my ideas. Not Aunt Sweeney's, and not Joe Q. Public's sympathies. My ideas are universal enough to appeal and conquer plenty fine, thank you.
No criminal needs to hang in a tree for the advancement of my art today. Live and let live, I say.
01 April, 2014
Italy!
Riva Sole Reviso
8" x 9.75"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
Here is a blurb from their website:
La Romita School of Art first opened in 1966, under the guidance of Enza Quargnali, as the summer art program of Rockford College in Illinois. For over 50 years people have stayed at La Romita, painting the landscape, people, and towns in the beautiful Umbrian hill country, whose radiant golden light has charmed artists since the days of Perugino and his famous pupil, Rafael.
30 March, 2014
March 30 is Vincent van Gogh's Birthday

The Vincent & Theo van Gogh Graves
Vincent was denied a church funeral because of his suicide. Those were the days when it was considered a sin. VVG had plenty of that. Sin. His mother wished him dead well before his actual demise, and his father disowned him.
In the list of shared background that I have with VVG, there is the matter that I have my BA in the Bible and theology. One of the things in the van Gogh story that has been bugging me is the art critics who write the histories of the old boy have him renouncing his Christian faith. I find no evidence of that. Yes, he most definitely strayed "off the reservation", and had unkind things to say about the church. He cohabits with, and consorts with, prostitutes. Then again, Hosea the prophet (remember, he has a whole book of the Bible) was married to one of those.
But I see no renunciation of Christ. In fact, I see evidence to the contrary. Unlike myself, Vincent was a Calvinist. Strictly speaking, these guys think that one is "Once Saved, Always Saved". Which means, once you have been compelled, via Holy Election, to accept Christ, you will not stray, in spite of any evidence to the contrary. For you non-theologically minded, let's put it this way: if you were VG's father, a Calvinist minister, you would believe in the secure salvation of Vincent, no matter what he did after accepting Christ.
His parent's ungracious behavior towards him was understandable, in sociological terms. The first people you lose when you leave behind your sanity are your family. Turns out, more tragically, that many of Vincent's immediate family had dementia in their final days, due to the ravages of syphilis.
Of course, van Gogh is a father of Modernism. Yes, he exalted self, art, and nature. Certainly these things may crowd out the heart's room for God. I see nothing in that, however, to irrevocably overcome his place in the eternal. God knows, not I.
For the irreligious this may be a painful and seemingly unnecessary post. But I don't know how, without bald redaction, one can study the artist van Gogh without his faith, or art history (western) without Christ. It would seem to be impossible.
Certainly, it needs to be said, that the trend among VG's historians to strip him of his salvation is probably ill-informed, at best. I don't think I would be too surprised, standing on the other side, that I should meet the great artist, Vincent van Gogh.
It appears that others have covered this same ground, and agree with my thesis.
See:
This article by Cliff Edwards on VG's faith.
Also: (In both articles the errors are left as is)
"Few images in modern art have so captured the attention of the public as Van Gogh's Starry Night, a painting that reveals all the light and glory hidden in an ordinary evening sky. In this very readable study of Van Gogh, essentially a spiritual biography, Kathleen Erickson explores the intense spirituality of the painter, from his early religious training and evangelical missionary work to the crisis that occurred when the church rejected his more radical way of following Christ. Erickson argues (against many Van Gogh scholars) that the artist's mature work reflects not a rejection of Christ so much as a rejection of a dogmatic church, seeing instead in the famous images of his art a profound connection to Christian symbols. Throughout, she helps us to discover the source of the power in Van Gogh's stars and sunflowers." --Doug Thorpe in this review of At Eternity's Gate: The Spiritual Vision of Vincent van Gogh.
From Publisher's Weekly:
"Erickson's account of the spiritual dimensions of van Gogh's work is an important corrective to two widespread assumptions: first, that his background was theologically Calvinist; second, that he abandoned religion when he began his professional career as an artist. Drawing extensively on van Gogh's correspondence, Erickson argues convincingly that the so-called Groningen school?(sic) more Arminian than Calvinist?was the foundation for van Gogh's religious outlook and that his abandonment of institutional Christianity (precipitated by disillusionment with his uncle and theological mentor, Johannes Paulus Stricker) was not so much an abandonment of religion as a move to synthesize Christianity and modernity via mysticism. Her discussion of van Gogh's late work is particularly compelling in this regard. Erickson's diagnostic discussion of van Gogh's mental illness is intriguing, though such extended discussion of whether he was epileptic, bipolar, schizophrenic or a combination is more of a distraction than a contribution to artistic or religious appreciation of his work. This work is a lucid and accessible contribution to understanding the religious character of van Gogh's artistic vision."
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. (Pasted from Amazon)
I won't argue the Arminian vs. Calvinist parts, here.
This post was first published in 2007.
29 March, 2014
26 March, 2014
25 March, 2014
22 March, 2014
Texas!
I just returned from teaching my See Differently workshop to an attentive and fun group in New Braunfels, Texas, which is between San Antonio and Austin.
Tall Tales Told To Texans
The second demo of three.
Casey Klahn
Big Bonus!
Musical accompaniment provided by Lyle Lovett,
That's Right, You're Not from Texas.
Austin is called a big music town, and I found out that is true.
One of the artists at the workshop told me about this song.
Labels:
Country Music,
Demo,
Lyle Lovett,
Photos,
Texas,
Video,
Workshop
13 March, 2014
I...don't like it when people write about art
Everyone is wise until he speaks. Irish Proverb.
"I refuse to confide and don't like it when people write about art," Balthus.
"Words may show a man's wit, but actions his meaning, " Benjamin Franklin.
"I had placed my stick on the table, as I do every evening. It had been specially made to suit my height, to enable me to walk without too much difficulty. As I was standing up, a customer called to me: 'Monsieur, don't forget your pencil.' It was very unkind, but most funny," Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.
"Words may show a man's wit, but actions his meaning, " Benjamin Franklin.
"I had placed my stick on the table, as I do every evening. It had been specially made to suit my height, to enable me to walk without too much difficulty. As I was standing up, a customer called to me: 'Monsieur, don't forget your pencil.' It was very unkind, but most funny," Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.
"But often it's doubtful whether the logic of the work itself and the words used to describe it really have anything to do with each other," Thom Mayne.
"Never trust the artist. Trust the tale," D.H. Lawrence.
"Stealing someone else's words frequently spares the embarrassment of eating your own," Peter Anderson.
"Hear the meaning within the word," William Shakespeare.
"Self expression shouldn't be the goal," Wolf Kahn.
"Self expression shouldn't be the goal," Wolf Kahn.
First published in 2010.
07 March, 2014
05 March, 2014
Sound Painting by Helen Davey
Musician Helen Davey, Switzerland. Helen originates from Australia, but makes her home now outside of Zurich. Her newest song, Waterpath to the Ocean, celebrates to mood of the river in a pastel work that I have done.
Helen Davey writes abstract and lyrical sound paintings. They are pieces responsive to another form of art, such as a painting. In this instance, Helen has created the water as sound, in it's progress from the river's source, to the ocean. Her inspiration is my pastel work, The Rain, the Light, and The River.
Here are 2 links for Helen's tracks.
Bandcamp.
Soundcloud. Listen to it here.
The Rain, the Light & the River
11.75" x 18.25"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
03 March, 2014
02 March, 2014
My Back Pages
The Fauvist. 2014.
14.25" x 13.5."
Pastel, Charcoal and Graphite.
Casey Klahn
Better formal photo record.
I intentionally went small with this video because I like live performances, but not necessarily slide shows. Great performance, and meaningful words. In related news, artist Helen Davey has written a song that responds to one of my artworks. That post next time.
Still need a live performance? This is a beautiful one. Martin Guitar anniversary performance:
I was so much older then. I'm younger than that now.
26 February, 2014
23 February, 2014
20 February, 2014
I Had a Dream Last Night
17 February, 2014
16 February, 2014
12 February, 2014
10 February, 2014
The Size is Right
Windswept Height
5.25" x 9"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
See Casey Klahn Art - Intimate Sizes, at smallpastels.blogspot.com, to find affordable sweeties.
07 February, 2014
03 February, 2014
Last Chance in Open Country
Bald Ridge at Dusk
12.75" x 10"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
I live in the country. Because I do, I like country music. Probably you do, too, and if you don't think you do, I can prove you're a liar soon enough. You like Bob Dylan, and Willie Nelson, and you like songs by Stephen Foster. That was easy.
This really big, formatted for the iMac screen, picture of my pastel, Bald Ridge at Dusk, is paired with the song Last Chance in Open Country, because I wanted the message to get across that this is open country and it is big. Western big.
Willie and Kid Rock are singing in this video about last chances, last dances, last stands, and western movies. Big ideas and big vistas. Remember the movies John Ford made in the Monument Valley of Utah? Breathtaking scenery was the foil for Ford's story lines about cavalrymen and Indians last-standing, galavanting, and grandstanding around the west. Big people doing big things in big ways, and in big places. Big, big, big, I tell ya. Bigger'n big's got any right to be.
You like western movies. Don't make me prove that, too.
01 February, 2014
FINLAND! You Heard Me.
August 4-8, 2014. See Differently and On Color! Workshop. Plus, plein air work.
Rovaniemi, Fi.
Not affiliated with Hello Lapland! Sounds like good people, though!
Rovaniemi, Fi.
Not affiliated with Hello Lapland! Sounds like good people, though!
28 January, 2014
The Art Noodge - Frosty Felicitations
By the breath of God ice is given...
Job 37:10.
You already know there are a number of blogs that emanate from this house. Now, new blogs are going from here into the ethernet, but not written by me! Introducing:
The Art Noodge, by Lorie Klahn. A blog where international relief and development ministries are supported. Buy Art! Help People!
My wife Lorie enjoys photography and manipulating photos with various software such as Photoshop and all manner of Apps. She is a talented photographer, and over the years her work has appeared on The Colorist. Do visit her new blog, and please follow as she posts fine art photography, fun crafts and activities.
26 January, 2014
21 January, 2014
AKA The Elbow
This post is formatted for the iMac / click the image to see the full crop.
Les Nabis
@14" x 9"
Pastel & Charcoal
Casey Klahn
19 January, 2014
11 January, 2014
10 January, 2014
2014 Inspiration For You Plus Some Art
You may now purchase a calendar of my art. The blurb is below.
A 15-month Calendar Book, with calendar pages from January 2014 through March 2015. The book features 27 paintings by artist Casey Klahn, who is a prolific Blogger at thecolorist.blogspot.com, and an international workshop teacher. Published as a paperback book, this calendar can serve as a wall calendar, a carry-along calendar, or a coffee table book. Many of the paintings are paired with a sampling of Casey's favorite personal and collected musings on art and color, bringing beautiful images and thought-provoking words together for an inspiring and illuminating presentation.
$15.00
CreateSpace Link.
09 January, 2014
07 January, 2014
Seasonal Ambiguity
Magenta Columns
4" x 6"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
Frosty Fence
Photo: Casey Klahn
I post the artwork, seen at the top, because I just got the formal photo taken. For those of you who are bothered by seasonal confusion, I add this snow photo to provide balance. You're welcome.
01 January, 2014
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Abstract Expressionism, Art Criticism, Artists, Colorist Art, Drawing, History, Impressionism, Modern Art, Painting, Pastel, Post Impressionism