
Friday, September 17, 2010
Charleston Rocks!

Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Day 6: Great friends & Great Art

Friday, September 10, 2010
A sucker punch
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/10/arts/design/10colen.html?_r=1&ref=todayspaper
Enough is enough, really. This guy is selling paintings made out of chewing gum and or grass stains or other ridiculous materials and claiming they are art work. And, remarkably people are buying them Well, B. T. Barnum was right.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Refuges From The Storm

for museum quality representational art.
I found it ironic, that after years of drawing the
parallels between over inflated financial derivatives and non representational art, we would find our selves financially entangled in a collapsed balloon of a
real-estate market. We knew based on our adamant stance & experience in the art world, carrying works of tangible value that escalate slowly but steadily in value, that are competence and skilled based works of art by living masters, that the consequences of this collapse would be long lasting and we felt we needed to depart our beloved Sarasota.
I never imagined I would feel at home elsewhere our art community in Sarasota was so strong & loving. The minute we settled in Charleston, it was as if we had always been here. Everyone is so friendly, so warm. There is great appreciation for the work we carry and we fit in to the
existing art venues comfortably. We feel a bit like refugees that have come into safe harbor from a financial storm of unimaginable strength. What a relief to be here.
As my friend Clayton Beck reminds me, in the last 2 centuries, since the development of photography in 1829 the purpose of Art and the commercial enterprise of Art has drastically
changed. Historical rendering of events, scenes & persons no longer was required
by painters. Photography could document history much more efficiently and
cheaply. The commercial proliferation of artists as documentarians of life was
no longer needed. Peggy Guggenheim, Sotheby’s and the vast gallery network in
the urban centers of the world began to market & promote art works which were no
longer skill based (much cheaper to make & required less training) as an
alternative to the mass production photographs offered. These schools of art:
cubism, expressionism, abstract expressionism, minimalism etc hijacked the idea
of art and turned it into a Ponzi scheme of selling valueless works which
required no skill for great amounts of money.
As a result the general public and the collecting public became very confused.
Academia and the museum establishments embraced the absolute non-sense of what
amounted to art derivatives and invested heavily. Now consumers of art were
befuddled and began to say words like: I don’t know much about art (meaning what
they were taught in school made no sense) but I know what I like (meaning beauty
and skill interest me but I am embarrassed to counter such an overwhelming
trend).
The emperor had no clothes.
presented by these schools of art are no more than hucksterism and what is
occurring as a result of this understanding is a great resurgence in
representational work: Skill based & aesthetically beautiful. M Gallery’s
mission is to provide a commercial venue for these works, reflecting one of the
greatest art movements of our time. Our painters and their peers are the
vanguards of an art movement which promises to change the direction of the
future, rewrite our understanding of art history and restore an understanding of
art for generations to come.
We are tickled to be in Charleston’s embrace.
M Gallery is located at 11 Broad Street in the Historic District of Charleston,
SC. Hours are Monday – Saturday 10 am to 6 pm; Sundays 11 am to 4 pm.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Life is so interesting I cannot imagine suicide, if only in order to find out what happens next.
I am sorry for this rambling content, but there are many things I want to say. After a very difficult couple of years, experiencing the complete collapse of the
As many of you who follow our undertaking know, I circumnavigated most of the US, towing a U Haul trailer, returning paintings, visiting artists, looking at markets in which to open an alternative location to our beloved but beleaguered Sarasota.
I settled on
We had not intended to exit
We simply cannot continue in
I was shocked at the difference in
It would be unheard of to turn the historic downtown of Charleston into a canyon of high rises with accelerated wind tunnels blowing customers literally off the streets as has happened to us in Sarasota.
The city of
My home is in
So, we are moving to
While packing and unpacking I have found great comfort in a favorite poem by Wisconsin Poet Laureate Ellen Kort:
Moving Slightly Left From Center
Once every five year Uncle Jake
Gave it all away cleared out
The house moved everything
From shelves out of cupboards
Letting go he called it
Starting over clean as clouds
They laughed when he came to the door
With boxes of mason jars old books
His collection of wishbones
He knocked on the window
Held up quilts spread his arms
Wing-wise offering his new blue jacket
And then there he’d be
In that emptiness only the bed left
Like some crumpled wounded animal
Like something waiting at the bottom
Of sleep The bareness I remember
As a child how lonely it felt
How afraid I was that he was getting ready
To die that this hungry house
Would swallow him leave me trying
To digest the way lives fill and empty
They gather up through long dry summers
Gulping the daililness spitting out
Thick heavy vowels worry words
That link us to that one place
We’re sure we can never leave
I think of you now Uncle Jake
As I measure myself against what I know
Will come the air in this house
Rubs against me like a grateful cat
Purrs darkness out of corners and crevices
Uncle Jake your voice lies damp
Your bones swing easy inside my flesh
Packing packing this heart an open box.
I think
Packing packing this heart an open box.
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Lifting Fog

Sunday, July 11, 2010
My Father's Gift

I have a tendency to work way to hard at things, long after they are quite hopeless. Described in race horse terms, I would be called a "mudder", slogging my way through adversity, even when all evidence pointed to the wisdom of throwing in the towel. As a result, I sit in SW Florida, with some of the most beautiful paintings in the world for sale, in one of the worst economies of recent memory. Many many businesses here have simply collapsed. Now with the uncertainty of the oil spill, real estate has screeched to a complete halt. Times are hard. This week my wine merchant had his air conditioners stolen (two very large compressors) from behind his store...the culprits were caught on tape, the over worked and under financed Sarasota police force didn't feel the theft of the merchant's livelihood was worth coming out to the crime scene. All of this guy's inventory is literally popping its corks in the 100+ heat. (I guess if they were investigating the loss of livelihood they'd have to stop at every other store front up and down the street) We did sell a couple paintings this week, miracle of miracles, and due to the patience of our landlord we manage to stay open. We are looking at additional art markets for a second location and hoping their economies will some how be better. I was sitting in the gallery mulling over "what to do, what to do" , beating my self over the head for not being clever enough to figure it out. I remember my father doing the same thing to himself, when the economic policies during Nixon drove small farmers out of business and we were forced to sell our family farms. Only one of the farms remain, and they raise confinement hogs, something my father would have never had the stomach to do. He took the whole mess of the farm very personally, as did most of our neighbors. One of them hung himself in his barn. Another drank himself to death. Although what was happening around them was neither their fault, nor under their control, they felt like failures. Time and historical perspective of course have absolved them. So I use their experiences as guidance, staring at this painting of Tony Pro's of the lovely Geishas in their imaginary garden and somehow know I will find my way through. I won't hang my self in the barn or drink my self to death. I will simply soldier on trying to figure out the best way forward. I have the wonderful gift of the lessons of my father's pain & history proving him blameless in the whole mess. He also showed me resilience: After we left the farm he went on to a new career as an inventor of farm automation equipment, a merchant in a small store, & in retirement a craftsman restoring old furniture. Tony's painting of the lovely ladies in the garden mesmerize me, remind me impossible things can come to pass (what could be more impossible than Geishas in a garden?). My father would have marveled at Tony's skill as a painter, his craft. I wish he was here to stand with me in front the painting, remind me this time, like all other times, will pass and be something different...and that I will still be obstinant and myself no matter what the circumstance.