MINGUSART-Annex
T h e M i n g u s A r t S t o r e
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The Mingus Art
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Index,Titles & Dimensions
Subject: Re: Did you get this?
Date: Apr 30, 2009 12:52 PM
Charles,
On a spur-of-the-moment trip to NYC my wife & I stopped by
the Thomas Jaeckel Gallery in Chelsea and saw your fine art exhibit.
I had read that though extended, it was closing sometime about or
around May 5th and thus did not want to miss an opportunity to attend.
We introduced ourselves to Thomas and spent about 1/2 hour viewing
your work. Both Barbara & I were extremely impressed. While I had
seen previews from the websites, there's nothing like seeing this art
in person. The colors, various details, themes & nuances - all were
mind-boggling.
After leaving Jaeckel we toured some other galleries in this Chelsea
area - quite honestly, I found nothing that could compare with the
multi-dimensional character of your work. It was a privilege to attend
and I thank you for inviting me.
All the best,
Rich
Digital Montages Giclée prints
Works for sale from my NYC Exhibition...Still making the STORE Website...
http://www.mingusart.com/futuregicleeprints-_40.html
Index of titles of the
Digital Montages as Ltd. Edition Giclée including dimentions of the works in the Butler show work is not yet linked
next page http://mingus.charlesmingus3art.com/i-appropriate-apportion--_871.html
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http://mingusart.com/ |
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Charles Mingus III
Paintings, Installations, Sculptures, Computer Generated Images
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One-man show, February 1, 2009
The Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio
Hooverthekid Copyright © Charles Mingus 2008
The Butler Institute of American ArtThe Butler Institute is the first museum of American art. The original Structure, dedicated in 1919, is a McKim, Mead and White architectural masterpiece listed on the National Register of Historic places. The museum's mission is to preserve and collect works of art in all media created by citizens of our country. The Institute's holdings now exceed 20,000 individual works, and the Butler is known worldwide as "America's Museum." The Butler collection spans works from four centuries and a short list of contemporary artists includes Georgia O'Keefe, Edward Hopper, Romere Bearden, Robert Rauschenberg, Chuck Close, and George Segal, all showing during their lifetimes. Check out the work of Case, the curent show at... http://www.butlerart.com
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Oct 12, 2008 Through Dec 31, 2008
This exhibition showcases works on paper and prints from the artists well-known American Icon series which includes imagery of Marilyn Monroe, Elvis and Barbie. Born in Watertown, NY, is work is represented in many private and public collections, including The Victoria and Albert Museum, London, The British Museum, London, The Solomon R.Guggenheim Museum, NYC, Boston Museum Of Fine Art, Boston, MA, and Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC. Reginald Case Beecher Center - Youngstown |
My parody of a MAGRETT Copyright© Charles Mingus 2008 CM3-08-XMAGRETTAroney 420x272 
Copyright© Charles Mingus 2008 CM3-08-XMAGRETTAroney 420x272 Work in progress 1.
 2.
 "seeing is beliving words2b the felicitous glitch mocks Illusion" Wed, 12/10/08,
3.
 "anon apon" From: Charles Mingus III Date: Wednesday, December 10, 2008, 11:55 PM "Seeing is believing a picture is worth a thousand words "
=================================================================== http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=allan%20stone&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi
 Allan Stone Gallery
Allan Stone Gallery web site is a dynamic web site that requires the latest Flash plug-in and latest browsers. If you were redirected to this page, ...
http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=allan%20stone&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
New U.S. Release
The Collector (Documentary)By JOE LEYDON
|
 Allan Stone stands in his art gallery with daughter Olympia, who directed docu 'The Collector.'
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A Floating Stone Prods. Produced, directed, written by Olympia Stone.
Watching Olympia Stone's affectionate and intelligent bio-docu about her father -- New York-based art dealer and collector Allan Stone -- is a pleasant experience, one roughly akin to viewing a casual acquaintance's unexpectedly witty homemovies. Provided, of course, said acquaintance is the child of a charismatic eccentric who was a friend and champion of such artists as Willem de Kooning and John Chamberlain. Just the right length at a smidge over one hour, "The Collector" will play best on homevid, and may sell exceptionally well in museum gift shops.
From the early 1950s, the elder Stone used his Manhattan gallery to showcase a roster of favorite artists (ranging from abstract expressionist Franz Kline to photorealist Richard Estes) while filling his sprawling Westchester home with an eclectic multitude of paintings, sculptures, kitschy knick-knacks and tribal totems. (His second wife, Clare, and their daughters, including Olympia, recall having to constantly forge new paths through the ever-expanding clutter.)
A self-described "obsessive" when it came to acquiring art in massive quantities, Allan Stone took as much pleasure in discovering and promoting artists whose works had been repeatedly rejected before they appeared at his gallery. Only half-jokingly, he claims an infallible instinct for knowing instinctively which artworks "cut the mustard." One of the pic's most amusing and illuminating sequences details how, at a time when Wayne Thiebaud couldn't generate interest elsewhere, the artist found a receptive audience for his deceptively simple paintings of cakes and pies at the Stone gallery.
As Olympia Stone fashions an intimate portrait from archival material and talking-heads interviews -- including several conversations with her gregarious dad, who died last December shortly after the pic wrapped -- "The Collector" sustains a tone of bemused admiration neatly complemented by Jason Graves' jaunty, jazz-flavored score.
"The art experience for me is a narcotic," Allan tells Olympia at one point. "The Collector" suggests that he never tired of seeking new highs.
Camera (color/B&W, DV), Daniel Miller, Lloyd Fales, Stone, Daniel Aklba, Vladimir Minuty; music, Jason Graves; sound, Miller, Ray Day. Reviewed on DVD, Houston, April 18, 2007. Running time: 62 MIN.
Variety is striving to present the most thorough review database. To report inaccuracies in review credits, please click here. We do not currently list below-the-line credits, although we hope to include them in the future. Please note we may not respond to every suggestion. Your assistance is appreciated.
http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117933415.html?categoryid=31&cs=1
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next page
http://mingus.charlesmingus3art.com/i-appropriate-apportion--_871.html
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Works for sale from my NYC Exhibition...Still making the STORE Website...
http://www.mingusart.com/futuregicleeprints-_40.html
Index of titles of the
Digital Montages as Ltd. Edition Giclée including dimentions of the works in the Butler show work is not yet linked
next page http://mingus.charlesmingus3art.com/i-appropriate-apportion--_871.html
| |
http://mingusart.com/ |
|
Charles Mingus III
Paintings, Installations, Sculptures, Computer Generated Images
|
One-man show, February 1, 2009
The Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio
Hooverthekid Copyright © Charles Mingus 2008
The Butler Institute of American ArtThe Butler Institute is the first museum of American art. The original Structure, dedicated in 1919, is a McKim, Mead and White architectural masterpiece listed on the National Register of Historic places. The museum's mission is to preserve and collect works of art in all media created by citizens of our country. The Institute's holdings now exceed 20,000 individual works, and the Butler is known worldwide as "America's Museum." The Butler collection spans works from four centuries and a short list of contemporary artists includes Georgia O'Keefe, Edward Hopper, Romere Bearden, Robert Rauschenberg, Chuck Close, and George Segal, all showing during their lifetimes. Check out the work of Case, the curent show at... http://www.butlerart.com
  |
Oct 12, 2008 Through Dec 31, 2008
This exhibition showcases works on paper and prints from the artists well-known American Icon series which includes imagery of Marilyn Monroe, Elvis and Barbie. Born in Watertown, NY, is work is represented in many private and public collections, including The Victoria and Albert Museum, London, The British Museum, London, The Solomon R.Guggenheim Museum, NYC, Boston Museum Of Fine Art, Boston, MA, and Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC. Reginald Case Beecher Center - Youngstown |
My parody of a MAGRETT Copyright© Charles Mingus 2008 CM3-08-XMAGRETTAroney 420x272 
Copyright© Charles Mingus 2008 CM3-08-XMAGRETTAroney 420x272 Work in progress 1.
 2.
 "seeing is beliving words2b the felicitous glitch mocks Illusion" Wed, 12/10/08,
3.
 "anon apon" From: Charles Mingus III Date: Wednesday, December 10, 2008, 11:55 PM "Seeing is believing a picture is worth a thousand words "
=================================================================== http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=allan%20stone&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi
 Allan Stone Gallery
Allan Stone Gallery web site is a dynamic web site that requires the latest Flash plug-in and latest browsers. If you were redirected to this page, ...
http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=allan%20stone&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
New U.S. Release
The Collector (Documentary)By JOE LEYDON
|
 Allan Stone stands in his art gallery with daughter Olympia, who directed docu 'The Collector.'
|
A Floating Stone Prods. Produced, directed, written by Olympia Stone.
Watching Olympia Stone's affectionate and intelligent bio-docu about her father -- New York-based art dealer and collector Allan Stone -- is a pleasant experience, one roughly akin to viewing a casual acquaintance's unexpectedly witty homemovies. Provided, of course, said acquaintance is the child of a charismatic eccentric who was a friend and champion of such artists as Willem de Kooning and John Chamberlain. Just the right length at a smidge over one hour, "The Collector" will play best on homevid, and may sell exceptionally well in museum gift shops.
From the early 1950s, the elder Stone used his Manhattan gallery to showcase a roster of favorite artists (ranging from abstract expressionist Franz Kline to photorealist Richard Estes) while filling his sprawling Westchester home with an eclectic multitude of paintings, sculptures, kitschy knick-knacks and tribal totems. (His second wife, Clare, and their daughters, including Olympia, recall having to constantly forge new paths through the ever-expanding clutter.)
A self-described "obsessive" when it came to acquiring art in massive quantities, Allan Stone took as much pleasure in discovering and promoting artists whose works had been repeatedly rejected before they appeared at his gallery. Only half-jokingly, he claims an infallible instinct for knowing instinctively which artworks "cut the mustard." One of the pic's most amusing and illuminating sequences details how, at a time when Wayne Thiebaud couldn't generate interest elsewhere, the artist found a receptive audience for his deceptively simple paintings of cakes and pies at the Stone gallery.
As Olympia Stone fashions an intimate portrait from archival material and talking-heads interviews -- including several conversations with her gregarious dad, who died last December shortly after the pic wrapped -- "The Collector" sustains a tone of bemused admiration neatly complemented by Jason Graves' jaunty, jazz-flavored score.
"The art experience for me is a narcotic," Allan tells Olympia at one point. "The Collector" suggests that he never tired of seeking new highs.
Camera (color/B&W, DV), Daniel Miller, Lloyd Fales, Stone, Daniel Aklba, Vladimir Minuty; music, Jason Graves; sound, Miller, Ray Day. Reviewed on DVD, Houston, April 18, 2007. Running time: 62 MIN.
Variety is striving to present the most thorough review database. To report inaccuracies in review credits, please click here. We do not currently list below-the-line credits, although we hope to include them in the future. Please note we may not respond to every suggestion. Your assistance is appreciated.
http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117933415.html?categoryid=31&cs=1
|
next page
http://mingus.charlesmingus3art.com/i-appropriate-apportion--_871.html
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Last Update 2009-12-12 | Copyright© Charles Mingus 2008 | |
