Friday, April 4, 2014

What's up with the shortage of Kolinsky Sable Brushes

Sables Brushes
all ON SALE April, 2014 
UP TO 60% OFF LIST PRICES!

Kolinsky Sable Brushes

 

Many of our customers have become enamored with Kolinsky Sable Brushes - and for good reason!  So, we're offering a link for you to read - that comes from our International Art Materials Association.  It will explain the problems that have created the shortage.   
Please be aware that this is simply to educate you.  
The NAMTA Organization will not entertain any 
emails or inquiries from customers.

We hope this answers some of your questions:

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

The Story Behind MONUMENTS MEN (the movie)





From a fairy tale-inspiring castle in the Bavarian Alps to a serene sculpture of Mary and Jesus by Michelangelo tucked away in a Belgian church, sites and works of art across Europe can give travelers a glimpse of the heroic work done by the group depicted in the new movie "The Monuments Men."
The group's mission was to save cultural treasures during World War II. And just like the group's previously unsung accomplishments, many of the places and objects they saved have been "hidden in plain sight" for decades, said Robert Edsel, the Dallas-based author of the book "The Monuments Men," which inspired the movie starring George Clooney, Matt Damon and others.
Edsel talked about a few of the many places and artworks in Europe tied to the work of the 350 men and women from Allied countries, most of them already established as architects, artists, curators and museum directors when they reported for duty. Eventually, they returned more than five million cultural items stolen by the Nazis as part of a systematic looting operation.
WORKS OF ART IN BELGIUM AND THE AUSTRIAN SALT MINE WHERE THEY WERE HIDDEN
Visitors to the canal-lined, storybook town of Bruges, Belgium, may look in in awe at Michelangelo's marble sculpture "Madonna and Child" in the Church of Our Lady, but few know of its harrowing wartime journey. Taken from the church by German officers in 1944, the sculpture was eventually discovered by Monuments Men on a dirty mattress in a salt mine near Altaussee in Austria.
In the town of Ghent, not far from Bruges, visitors at Saint Bavo Cathedral can gaze at another work that was discovered by Monuments Men at the Altaussee mine: the Ghent Altarpiece. Made of panels painted by Jan van Eyck in 1432, the famous work of art was taken by the Belgians to France in 1940 for safekeeping. But in 1942 it was taken by the Germans.
Tourists can also visit the Altaussee salt mine where those works — along with 6,600 paintings, 140 sculptures and other pieces — filled more than 100 tunnels. The works stored in the Austrian mine about 45 minutes from Salzburg housed treasures Adolf Hitler wanted to one day fill his planned museum in Linz, Austria.
A PARISIAN MUSEUM AND A FAMOUS VERMEER
When the Nazis took over the Jeu de Paume museum in Paris, making it the headquarters of their looting operation, French art expert Rose Valland was allowed to stay. But Valland, who unbeknownst to the Nazis spoke German, managed to keep track of where the artworks — most stolen from Jewish families in France — were being sent. She passed that information along to Monuments Man James Rorimer after the liberation of Paris, directing him to Germany's Neuschwanstein Castle. Today, a small plaque on the southwest corner of the Jeu de Paume, located near the Place de la Concorde, recognizes her bravery.
To see a work of art with a history that encapsulates the Nazi looting machine, Edsel says, gaze upon Jan Vermeer's painting "The Astronomer" at the Louvre. "If we could take it off the wall it would have a Nazi inventory code on the back," he said.
"That one picture is stolen from the Rothschilds, goes to the Jeu de Paume. It's selected for (Adolf) Hitler's museum. ... It ends up in the salt mine at Altaussee, found by the Monuments officers, returned with all these other things to France, returned to the Rothschilds, donated to the Louvre," he said.
GERMANY'S FAIRYTALE CASTLE, CEILING FRESCO BY A MASTER
Visitors flock to tour "Mad" King Ludwig's Neuschwanstein Castle, nestled in Germany's soaring Bavarian Alps with dramatic turrets rising into the sky. But during the war, the castle was the Nazi's hideaway for about 21,000 items stolen from French collectors and records of the looting.
Monuments Man John Davis Skilton arrived in the German town of Wurzburg in hopes of saving the Giovanni Battista Tiepolo's ceiling fresco "Allegory of the Planets and Continents." The fresco in the Residenz palace dating back to the 1750s was in peril: The roof above the fresco ceiling burned off during Allied bombings, leaving it exposed to the elements.
Edsel said Skilton set to figuring out how to get a roof built over the fresco as soon as possible. "He sees how precarious it is, so he finds lumber, which was no easy feat," said Edsel.
"When you go walk through the palace Residenz, in the last room that you're in, there's a small shrine to John Skilton," he said.
FLORENCE'S BRIDGES, PISA'S CAMPOSANTO
In Italy, Florence's bridges today offer a look at cultural treasures that didn't survive the war. Except for the Ponte Vecchio — the city's famous covered bridge — other bridges over the Arno were destroyed by the Nazis as they made their retreat out of Italy in 1944. Pictures from the war show people walking across the rubble that was once the bridges. Edsel says the now rebuilt bridges are "part of the altered legacy that we live with today."
Monuments Man Deane Keller's work to restore the heavily damaged Camposanto building in Pisa meant so much to him that he was buried there after his 1992 death. During the war, frescos in the ancient cemetery located near the city's Leaning Tower were damaged from a fire during a fight for the city. Keller worked with a team to salvage and save what they could.

Read more here: http://www.bradenton.com/2014/02/05/4974102/european-sites-art-tell-tales.html#storylink=cpy

Friday, March 14, 2014

Natural Hemp - Jewelry Hemp Cords & All Sized Magnets

NEW from
NATURAL HEMP AND JEWELRY CORDS       
MAGNET SRTIPS & ALL SIZED ROUNDS
  
FOR YOUR PRACTICAL PROJECTS & ALSO - JUST FOR FUN!


Thursday, March 6, 2014

Claessen's Linen Rolls are here!

Claessen's Linen Rolls

Claessens's uses the very top quality fibers to make their linens. They principally produce canvas from flax (more commonly reffered as linen). This provides the best quality and 
is the most durable.  
 
Their products are meticulously inspected. It is first checked with great care for any weaving faults. Abnormally thick threads and lumps are removed. The cloth has to be flawlessly smooth, as any unevennesses might mar your painting. The cloth is then shaved and dusted.  Any final irregularities and bits of fluff are removed by machine, and the cloth is now ready to be treated. And it's great!

Single & Double Oil Primed! 

 

Friday, February 21, 2014

WHY USE A TONED PALETTE & SURFACE?


WHY USE A TONED PALETTE?
Adapted from literature from Jack Richeson Co.

"It is said that the warm neutral color of a grey palette, shows the actual paint color & each color mix to its advantage.  The special surface of a disposable palette, aids in the mixing of the color pigments as well as the removal of paint." 
 Stephen Quiller



COLOR BASICS
There are 3 parts to color:  Hue, chroma & value.  Value is the lightness or darkness of a color.  Chroma is a measure of how pure, intense a& saturated the color is.  Hue is the name of the color - red, blue, green, or purple.

Primary colors cannot be made by mixing other colors.  Secondary colors are made by mixing a primary color with a primary color lying next to it on the color wheel.  Tertiary colors are made by mixing a primary color & a secondary color that lies next to it on the color wheel.

Adding white to a color lightens the value & also alters the color by making the color's temperature cooler & in some cases changes the color's hue.  Adding black to a color will darken the color, but will also alter the hue of the color.

A colors complement color lies directly across from it on the color wheel.  Mixing a color with it's complementary color - greys or neutralizes the color.  Placing a color's complement near it in a painting will often add visual interest.

 proudly carries

GREY MATTERS PAPER PALETTES