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-   -   Garth Herrick's Apotheoun is a Smithsonian Competition Semifinalist (http://portraitartistforum.com/showthread.php?t=6450)

Alexandra Tyng 03-05-2006 02:50 PM

Garth, as I told you, I am truly sorry your Apotheoun didn't make it all the way! I was SO sure it would. It is a big disappointment. But semi-finalist status is not too bad. There are many, myself included, who would have been happy to make it to that point. So take the kudos and run with them!

Quote:

Originally Posted by Michele Rushworth
I do think Apotheoun has a "thinking outside the box" approach, though. Its composition puts it on the cutting edge of what a "portrait" is

I do agree with Michele and others--this painting draws on tradition but is not traditional per se. It does have edginess, but it is not the kind of edginess that is "in your face." I really admire that.

I'm beginning to think about "retina-burn" in relation to these particular judges. Maybe in-your-face edginess is what catches their attention. I guess we will find out soon enough. It does seem odd, though, because I would have said it's that particular combination of unusual composition and incredibly rendered foms, textures, and glowing light that would cause any judge to stop and look twice.

Portraiture seems to still be divided into two philosophies, "contemporary" and "traditional," and I think it's going to be a while before these start to really come together. You are one of those artists who bring them together, and I'm predicting your work will be appreciated more and more as time goes on, so just hang in there and don't doubt yourself.

Garth Herrick 03-05-2006 04:31 PM

One reason I entered this.
 
4 Attachment(s)
Dear Enzie, Kim, Michele, and Alex,

Thank you kindly. I guess this is a little outside the box for a portrait.

I believe one of the principal jurors (the artist component of the jury) was Sydney Goodman, a Philadelphia artist and teacher of international repute, that I once studied with at PAFA. 25 years ago, he'd wander into my student studio cubicle, not say a thing about my work, but praise the art postcards I had taped up to my wall. He took some of them for his own inspiration. In 1994 I painted the ancestral version of Apotheoun, "Apotheosis of the Chunnel". Sydney Goodman awarded this as the top prize best of show in a local exhibiton in 1996. Whenever we'd cross paths, we would nod hello to each other. He seems to remember me, and acknowledged that when he autographed his monograph book for me during a retrospective exhibition of his at the Philadelphia Museum of Art eight or nine years ago. Naturally I thought he might like Apotheoun if I entered it. Perhaps he did to an extent; it is hard to know what the other three judges had in mind for the final selection. I thought this painting would be as good a gamble as any, given his role on the jury. I have not personally been in contact with Mr. Goodman in several years. Some day it would be interesting to sit down with him and hear how he viewed this jurying process for the National Portrait Gallery.

Below is the original life-sized (1994) painting Sydney Goodman liked, and a detail. I think I have changed a lot in twelve years. Below that is a detail of Apotheoun (2004). And finally, Lesser Apotheoun (2006). Gosh, I have worked this subject to death! Time to move on!

Garth

David Draime 03-05-2006 05:13 PM

Hey, sorry your painting didn't make the final cut, but: top 100 out of 4000! - nothin' to sneeze at. And as I'm sure you are well aware, at that level, it's then down to the whim of the juror(s). Another jury and the final 50 would be totally different, with you getting the Grand Prize. Ultimately, it becomes quite a subjective affair. But keep entering these competitions because I want to see more of your work in person! :)

David

John Reidy 03-05-2006 10:59 PM

Garth-

I realize this sentiment is no consolation but I wanted to add my continued congratulations. It is always a mystery as to the final judging and what sways the votes. I do think David is right especially in this case. I also would like you to know that your work is truly worthy of this level and you (as well as many others on this sight) are an inspiration.

I will always paint because I am compelled to. You and others keep the banner flying while others, like myself, tread the path that you cut.

Please keep us informed of those others who dwell outside of our conection here and in PSOA. I don't think we're in Kansas anymore.

Tom Edgerton 03-06-2006 09:57 AM

Garth--

I've already expressed how stunned I am with the painting. It is an absolutely original and consummately realized image, whether it carries the requisite "edginess" or not.

But what also equally impresses me is the grace with which you've received this honor, and the way you move through our working world. You've always exhibited a quiet confidence about your work, but with a singular lack of either unbridled ego or paranoid defensiveness. Add to that a generosity of spirit and helpfulness to your fellow artists. We could all benefit from cultivating these spiritual skills--I know I could.

Folks, we don't know what the final array will be, and it's premature to assume that it will be a contest between traditional realism and other approaches. But I'm looking forward to it, because by the time you get to even the semifinal level, all questions of excellence have been satisfied. So it becomes, as David said, somewhat subjective, because judging a show is always a human activity, and will always reflect the preferences of the panel. It can never be otherwise. Garth knows this.

But again, to have reached this level means you're one of the best, period. Garth, your work and the spirit you bring to it will always be the "gold standard" that I aspire to.

Best--TE

Sharon Knettell 03-06-2006 10:48 AM

Garth,

Your Apotheoun is one of the loveliest and most impressive pieces of contemporary painting I have seen.

Unfortunately Contemporary Art is mired in the mind-set of it has to be cutting-edge to be important, if it is not ugly it can't be expressive or powerful. Which is why I do not like Hockney, Freud, Neel and love yours.

I saw the paintings they featured on the Smithsonian web-site. It is their loss.

Michele Rushworth 03-06-2006 12:16 PM

Quote:

I saw the paintings they featured on the Smithsonian web-site. It is their loss
Can you post the link? I went to their site and couldn't find it.

I did find out, however, that the lone artist on the jury is Sidney Goodman who teaches at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art. Do you know who he is, Garth? I'm not familiar with his work.

Garth Herrick 03-06-2006 04:03 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Garth Herrick

I believe one of the principal jurors (the artist component of the jury) was Sydney Goodman, a Philadelphia artist and teacher of international repute, that I once studied with at PAFA. 25 years ago, he'd wander into my student studio cubicle, not say a thing about my work, but praise the art postcards I had taped up to my wall. He took some of them for his own inspiration. In 1994 I painted the ancestral version of Apotheoun, "Apotheosis of the Chunnel". Sydney Goodman awarded this as the top prize best of show in a local exhibiton in 1996. Whenever we'd cross paths, we would nod hello to each other. He seems to remember me, and acknowledged that when he autographed his monograph book for me during a retrospective exhibition of his at the Philadelphia Museum of Art eight or nine years ago. Naturally I thought he might like Apotheoun if I entered it. Perhaps he did to an extent; it is hard to know what the other three judges had in mind for the final selection. I thought this painting would be as good a gamble as any, given his role on the jury. I have not personally been in contact with Mr. Goodman in several years. Some day it would be interesting to sit down with him and hear how he viewed this jurying process for the National Portrait Gallery.

Dear Michele,

Yes as I stated above I do know Sydney Goodman and he may know me as a former student. I have not been in contact with him for five years, so there is no conflict of interest in this competition. I would love to meet with him after the show opens and get his take on the whole process. As I said above, he greatly admires the earlier version of the painting that led up tp Apotheoun, which is the reason I entered it.

I don't know if he has a website, at least I could not find one. He tends to paint on a colossal scale both in conception and size. In school he always wanted me to simplify my modeling of form in paint. I found one web image. He frequently puts himself in his paintings. In this case he is holding the camera at the bottom.

Garth

Michele Rushworth 03-06-2006 04:21 PM

I must have missed your earlier post about him. (Hard to keep up with everything posted on SOG sometimes!)

It would be fascinating to hear his take on how everything unfolded at this competition, though I imagine he wouldn't tell any of the entrants about it.

John Reidy 03-07-2006 08:44 AM

Here is a web link to some of the artists and work for the exhibition.

http://www.portraitcompetition.si.ed...st/splash.html

It is interesting to see these pieces and I'm not surprised. What I see is that we are all serious artists, serious about our goals and sense of guidelines that we aspire to. Each of the featured pieces is art and I am moved by all of them, they just serve a different master than I, so to speak.

It is not up to me to judge if they are worthy of the exhibition because they are.

If I were the judge, the show would be different (but probably very boring).

Alexandra Tyng 03-07-2006 09:15 AM

Thanks for posting the link, John. It was interesting to see. There were some I could relate to, and some I couldn't. I guess it's different for everyone because art is so individual.

On a positive note, given the finalists, it is remarkable that realistic, representational work with more traditional elements made it into the semi-finals. Maybe some even made it to the finals. If they do this again in three years who knows how much will have changed in the art world!

Marcus Lim 03-07-2006 09:39 AM

2 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Garth Herrick
Dear Michele,

Yes as I stated above I do know Sydney Goodman and he may know me as a former student. I have not been in contact with him for five years, so there is no conflict of interest in this competition.

Dear Michele and Garth,
I'm very surprised to hear Garth's a former student of Goodman - not that i know him personally, but i did read his bio and see his images almost 5 years ago. In fact, Goodman's works set stage to thought-provoking images for me and my works, and the images i collected of his works become somewhat an endless encyclopedia for my own learning. So here, I would like to share more of his works with all of you here.

Garth's talents bloomed in the right nurture-r's hands alright! :thumbsup:

marcus

Sharon Knettell 03-07-2006 09:44 AM

I thought it was very sad. I think we are conditioned today to thing that ugly and discordant work ( every piece on that site) is to be treasured because it is new. It could be dog****, but it is 'cutting edge' after all. We think of work of high aesthetics and craftsmanship as boring.

Representational artists all too often repeat themselves and go for the hackneyed and trite, which is why we are so often and justly ignored.

Alexandra Tyng 03-07-2006 10:45 AM

I definitely know what you mean, Sharon, though I guess I probably sound wishy-washy to you. Nothing on that sight really grabbed me, though I liked a couple of things. At the other extreme, I agree with you that

Representational artists all too often repeat themselves and go for the hackneyed and trite, which is why we are so often and justly ignored.

That is exactly why Blake Gopnick of the Washinton Post wrote his article trashing traditional portraiture. I am not saying I agree with everything he said and the specific things he said, but it is important to know and understand what modernists hate about traditional realism, and why.

It is equally important for modernists to know what traditional realists hate about modernism, and why.

That is exactly why I said somewhere above that the kind of work (this piece of Garth's for example) that bridges tradition and modernism, that uses tradition to say something new, is, I think, the most powerful direction in art.

Garth Herrick 03-07-2006 11:45 AM

These aren't the finalists.
 
John, and everyone,

As far as I know, the selected ten artists featured during the competition have nothing at all to do with the judging and selection for the exhibition. They are just ten interesting artists the staff elected to promote the competition last summer and help set the pace for the submissions.

How did they all fare in the competition? I don't know for sure, but it seems only Armando DeJesus Dominguez was fortunate enough to become a semifinalist. I wonder if he is a finalist also?

So I am not sure how this artist selection can reflect upon what the exhibition will be. I just wanted to clarify my understanding.

Garth

John Reidy 03-07-2006 12:05 PM

Thanks Garth

I wondered how the 10 could be promoted earlier than the final opening and this explains it.

To be open-minded about this I will wait to see what form the finalists take.

Jean Kelly 03-07-2006 04:22 PM

Congratulations are still in order here, your painting is amazing and to be one of the finalists is an honor. I visited the site, and am really curious now to see the winners. I couldn't possibly keep a journal going as I'm not a "word" person. Do you keep one Garth? I'd also be interested if others do this.

Jean

Steven Sweeney 03-08-2006 09:36 AM

By any other name . . .?
 
Do you think there might be anything at all to a theory that some judges could be intimidated by a title (

Michele Rushworth 03-08-2006 10:50 AM

While this painting of Garth's would have received high accolades even if it was titled "A Kid Sunbathing," I often think there may be something behind the idea of intriguing titles.

Years ago I submitted a rather odd but mostly uninteresting landscape to a few shows and it was rejected every time. I had titled it something like, "California Sunset" or something similarly bland. Then my husband suggested the title "Left New York at 5:03". It was accepted into the next show I entered. Who knows!

Garth Herrick 03-08-2006 11:12 AM

Oh Steven, you are ever so insightful in what you say about titles. In my painful shyness I tend to give my works absurd and obscure titles for their abstracting and distancing qualities, as an alternative to "Untitled". I think I have already disclosed that there really is no sensible correlation between "Apotheoun" which is an old Geek word meaning deification, and "A Fair-Skinned Boy Reclining in the Noon Sun Risking a Bad Sun-Burn Upon a Concrete Pool Apron Beside His Mother's Fancy Espadrille Sandals and Well-Tanned Legs in June, 1981, During a Church Picnic Outing". :)

My daughter has the fortune of being named "Lachlan" which is equally unpronounceable, and not even a previously known girl's name. It may be unique. Imagine my horror when the receptionist at the pediatrician's office once called out "Latch-Lane"! :o She loves her name and wears it well, though.

Thanks for your wise insight and advice.

Garth (even my name was endlessly corrupted and tripped over until Garth Brooks came along).

David Draime 03-08-2006 11:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Garth Herrick
I think I have already disclosed that there really is no sensible correlation between "Apotheoun" which is an old Geek word meaning deification, and "A Fair-Skinned Boy Reclining in the Noon Sun Risking a Bad Sun-Burn Upon a Concrete Pool Apron Beside His Mother's Fancy Espadrille Sandals and Well-Tanned Legs in June, 1981, During a Church Picnic Outing". :)

Is this really an old Geek word? That's why I didn't recognize it!!! :)
It sounded Geek to me....

I also love the alternate title....kind of hard to fit on a slide though.

Steven Sweeney 03-08-2006 12:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Garth Herrick
"A Fair-Skinned Boy Reclining in the Noon Sun Risking a Bad Sun-Burn Upon a Concrete Pool Apron Beside His Mother's Fancy Espadrille Sandals and Well-Tanned Legs in June, 1981, During a Church Picnic Outing"

Actually, I rather fancy that one.

Garth Herrick 03-08-2006 12:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by David Draime
Is this really an old Geek word? That's why I didn't recognize it!!! :)
It sounded Geek to me....

I also love the alternate title....kind of hard to fit on a slide though.

Oops! It's both Greek and Geek! Thanks David!

Garth

Tom Edgerton 03-08-2006 12:24 PM

Whenever I judge shows, I don't read titles deliberately, as for me, the work should suggest or carry an idea without the attachment of language. If it says "Ecstasy," and doesn't LOOK ecstatic, well.....

But what do I know, this Art thing is all Geek to me....

John Reidy 03-08-2006 05:03 PM

As I understand it apotheoun is from the greek meaning to deify. Furthermore it is a topic of disussion or study in Catholicism concerning the nature of God.

I've not studied it whole but as I said, this is how I understand it.


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