Meet the Turner Prize Nominees: A Q&A With Artist George Shaw



George Shaw, 44, was born and grew up in Coventry, and all his paintings picture the council estate where he spent his childhood and teenage years. Working exclusively with Humbrol enamel paint, which is traditionally used for model making, Shaw maps an urban dystopia devoid of human presence. Their generic red brick buildings could be found anywhere in Britain and yet Shaw's pictures are infused with a deeply personal sense of nostalgia. Shaw was nominated for the Turner Prize for his solo exhibition at BALTIC, Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead.
The Turner Prize 2011's shortlist also includes Karla Black, Martin Boyce, and Hilary Lloyd. The winner will be announced on the 5 December at BALTIC, Gateshead, where an exhibition of the nominees' work is currently held.

How did you react when you first heard about your nomination?
I was a bit surprised. I asked if I could think about it. It felt like a hoax. Of course I felt very honored. I couldn’t wait to tell my mum and I was sad because I couldn’t tell my dad.
Why and how did you get into art?
I was good at it.
What's the nearest you've ever come to giving it all up?
When all these sort of questions started coming.
What would you be if not an artist?
Unemployed.
With which dead artist would you most like to have coffee and a chat?
L.S. Lowry.
If you could, how would you edit your past?
I can and I’m doing it for a living.
For which piece do you think you'll be remembered?
I’ve come to think that all these paintings of the place I was brought up are one piece of work so it’ll be the one I’m currently working on.
What's your biggest disappointment?
Christmas.
You live in Devon because ...
I can see the sea without getting out of bed.
What does home feel like?
On a rainy afternoon sitting on my settee with a cuppa, a bag of minstrels and an old Ealing film.
Which piece of art would you take to a desert island and why?
The Hereford Mappa Mundi ... because it’s the whole world. I’d have a go at doing another before I starved to death.
Tell us something no one knows about you.
Deep down I’m very happy.
What's the best thing about being a Turner Prize nominee?
That the work I do is seen, and with luck, considered.

benetton unhate campaign features kissing world leaders




united colors of benetton advertisement featuring hu jintao, paramount leader of the people's republic of china, with barack obama, president of the USA


united colors of benetton has just unveiled its new 'unhate' advertising campaign in a handful,
of cities, featuring manipulated images that show unlikely pairings of international religious and
political leaders kissing one another.

the ad campaign supports the company's 'unhate foundation' think tank and arts research center,
designed to organize events and promote acts of intervention towards a more tolerant world.
as its first series of actions, benetton organized the hoisting of large posters and projection of digital
images of the controversial advertisements in public spaces in new york, milan, rome, tel aviv, and paris.

online, the organization's 'kiss wall' invites users from around the world to upload diptyched images
that mimic kissing duos, alongside a message of tolerance and 'unhate'.

'what does 'unhate' mean? 'un-hate. stop hating, if you were hating. unhate is a message that invites us
to consider that hate and love are not as far away from each other as we think. actually, the two opposing
sentiments are often in a delicate and unstable balance. our campaign promotes a shift in the balance
.'
- alessandro benetton, executive vice president



ad featuring pope bendetto XVI with ahmed el tayyeb, imam of al-azhar mosque in cairo



north korea's kim jong-ii and lee myung-bak, president of south korea



israel prime minister benjamin netanyahu and palestinian president mahmoud abbas



german chancellor angela merkel and french president nicholas sarkozy



US president barack obama with venezuelan president hugo chavez



'guerrilla intervention' in milan, piazza duomo



'guerrilla intervention' in milan's piazza affari (milan stock exchange)



'guerrilla intervention' in new york's times square

Courtesy:DesignBoom

The Weirdest Art Case Ever?: Breaking Down the He-Said-She-Said SpongeBob Ninja Gallery Attack Saga


Courtesy of Art Of White
Artist Todd White is suing gallery owner Margaret Howell for selling forgeries

By Shane Ferro

Published: September 1, 2011

White's brainchild, "SpongeBob SquarePants"
hite — the man behind the design of SpongeBob SquarePants — is one of the more unusual and outright incredible art cases in memory. A lot of accusations have been flying around in recent days, some of which involve, yes, ninjas. Howell filed a suit in California court in mid-August, alleging assault and art theft, among other things. Now, White has countersued in federal court, accusing Howell of copyright infringement and widespread fraud. After obtaining both legal complaints, ARTINFO offers up a guide to the bizarre ins and outs of the accusations on both sides of this strange affair:

THE CHARACTERS:
TODD WHITE — White worked on the television show Ren & Stimpy before becoming the head artist for Nickelodeon's cultural phenomenon "SpongeBob SquarePants." He's not just some wimpy comic-book guy, either: A fellow cartoonist, JohnK, claims on his blog that White is a black belt in Machado Jui Jitsu, once using his martial arts knowledge to help illustrate a cartoon fight scene. Several years ago, White made the jump to fine art. His triumphs, as listed on his own Web site, include being chosen as the official artist of the 2007 Grammy Awards, a deal with Coca-Cola to have his work seen on limited-edition Coke products, and being commissioned in the U.K. to paint a memorial portrait of Princess Diana. White's self-description in his own complaint also paints himself as a "respected philanthropist."
MARGARET HOWELL — The 62-year-old Howell is the owner of Gallery HB, located inside the Hyatt Regency hotel in Huntington Beach, California. She has owned and operated the gallery for eight years, according to her complaint. She also has a private art consulting firm, Fine Art Consulting Services, Inc., which is named as a plaintiff in her suit, and a defendant in White's. She claims to have sold White's art on a contingency basis, with the artist receiving a portion of the sale price, but also says she frequently "purchased White's art outright, and then resold it to customers at a markup." According to Howell's complaint, she was the first to show his work in a gallery setting. "Ms. Howell's efforts to market and publicize White's work... were pivotal to the artist's subsequent financial success and critical acclaim," writes her lawyer, Jonathan M. Jenkins.

KEITH M. DAVIDSON
— Davidson is named in Howell's suit as a defendant, having allegedly been one of the men who went to the gallery to intimidate her. But he's not just some muscleman: Howell's suit claims that Davidson is also White's attorney (Paul Berra is representing White in the current suit), though he is "presently on three years of post-suspension disciplinary probation with the State Bar of California," after he mishandled a medical malpractice case, deposited a payment from a client in his personal account rather than a client trust account, then bounced a check to refund the client from said client trust account. (His license to practice law has been reactivated as of November 19, 2010.)
BRYCE EDDY — "White's agent and martial arts sparring partner," according to Howell's complaint, and another one of the alleged assailants. This is, however, only "on information and belief."
"HIRED MUSCLES" — "Martial arts experts" allegedly hired by White to attack Howell, according to her complaint. The identities of the men remain unknown, but the complaint alludes to hotel security footage from the gallery that may yet be able to help uncover their identities.
PETER M. "CLYDE" LAVOIE — A former employee of Gallery HB, who Howell accuses of having served as an inside man at the gallery, and became an accomplice of White.
THE ALLEGATIONS:
ACCORDING TO HOWELL'S COMPLAINT: Several months ago, Todd White held an "opening gala" at his personal studio and sold art directly to customers. He found that he preferred the "direct sales business model" over selling through a gallery, and wanted to get rid of the middlewoman, that is, Howell. Then, the complaint alleges, White recruited Peter Lavoie, who worked at the gallery, to be his inside man. Weeks before the art heist of August 2-3, Lavoie quit his gallery job. Howell's complaint says that "on information and belief, Lavoie is now employed by White."
On August 2, Howell was "at the hospital attending to the bedside of her ailing mother." Four men hired by White showed up at her gallery, telling her "that they represented the Brazilian consulate and were interested in purchasing White's art." However, after she was lured to the gallery, the "martial arts experts" (referred to by the complaint as "hired muscle" and in the OC Weekly as "ninjas") "forcibly shut down the gallery, physically assaulted Ms. Howell, emotionally traumatized her, and... imprisoned her in her office for long hours by force."
The men then allegedly proceeded to steal over $1 million worth of art from her gallery, took her confidential customer lists, forced her to sign documents handing over the lease on the gallery to White, and "forced Ms. Howell to take them back to her home, where they removed and stole this additional artwork belonging to the Gallery and FACS [her consulting company]."
The next day, Howell's complaint goes on to say, "White or one of his associates" faxed the documents Howell was forced to sign and requested that the lease be transferred to White, noting that she would be "vacating the premises on or about August 16, 2011." Subsequently, the defendants have been using the stolen customer list to try to sell White's paintings directly to Howell's customers, which has resulted in several customer complaints to Howell, according to the legal document she filed.

ACCORDING TO WHITE'S COMPLAINT:
White's suit, for its part, focuses on another issue entirely, claiming that Howell has been copying, embellishing, and signing his artworks without permission — then selling them for a hefty profit. This scam, he claims, "caused millions of dollars of damage to him and his company." This information was established, in fact, "based upon Howell's own tearful admissions, the testimony of her top salesman, and the support of a number of defrauded customers."
White's complaint doesn't dwell on the evening of the alleged ninja assault, but it does detail the fact that the artist's "representatives confronted Howell at her gallery with undeniable evidence establishing her guilt. Realizing that she had been caught red-handed, Howell openly and readily admitted that she has copied several of White's paintings... because she was dealing with financial problems and was lured by 'greed' and the 'ease' of it all."
White's complaint goes on to state that Howell, despite claiming she signed documents under duress, "spent nearly 45 minutes reviewing... asking questions about... and making specific changes to" the documents she signed on the night of August 2. And finally, White demands that he be granted full access to her accounting books, "to figure out the full extent of Defendants' wrongful conduct."
PENALTIES:
SHE IS ASKING FOR: At least $7.5 million plus punitive damages for assault, battery, robbery, kidnapping, and emotional trauma.

HE IS ASKING FOR:
At least $5 million plus punitive damages for copyright infringement and fraud.

alexa meade: real-life paintings

alexa meade: real-life paintings





by painting directly onto her subjects and photographing them in a variety of constructed and real-world environments, artist alexa meade conflates the worlds of painting, photography, and performance
'transit', 18x24" limited edition chromogenic print

all images © alexa meade


american artist alexa meade creates her representational paintings directly on her subjects, covering people and objects
in layers of acrylic paint before photographing them. the works offer an unusual conflation of painting, installation,
and photography, as the three-dimensional forms are collapsed in space, taking on a 2D appearance in the prints.
in her exhibitions, meade frequently paints over small rooms in which a human subject sits for the duration of the show,
offering a performative aspect to her work.

meade:
'spending my formative years immersed in the world of politicians and PR led to a fascination with the possibilities
of repackaging source texts and adding superficial modifications that would profoundly alter perception.
what the audience ultimately unpackaged was a personal interpretation of an already mediated re-presentation.
[...] by using paint as a mask that mimics the surface attributes of my source materials, I repurpose the common codes
of painting
.'



full figure of 'transit'



'mediation'
19x24" limited edition chromogenic print




'natura morta'
18x24" chromogenic print




'natura morta' installation
8'x6'x4'




'framed'
24x18" limited edition chromogenic print



'bernie' study



left: 'auspicious', 24x18" limited edition chromogenic print
right: 'the trap', a model poses outside london's saatchi gallery




meade at work painting one of her subjects
image courtesy of dailymail



the artist poses with a completed installation
image courtesy of dailymail



'spectacle' installation/performance



'spectacle'
18x24" limited edition chromogenic print



via dailymail


Warrior Art


Hugo Claudin's Artist space
WARRIOR ART
ALEXANDRA FLUEGEL
THURSDAY AUGUST 24th, 2011

Hugo ClaudinWhen the idea was raised to remove benches from Pekich Park in an attempt to combat the illegal activities often taking place in the public ‘pocket park,’ Grand Rapids artist and community activist, Hugo Claudin, took a stand. “I thought it was a terrible idea. How is the park supposed to be inviting to the community if we remove the benches?”
Claudin’s live/work artist loft dubbed Mexicains Sans Frontieres, (translates literally to “Mexicans without Borders”), is located across the street from the park, and though he agreed that some action should be taken, he was adamant that bench removal was not the answer.
An active member and longtime resident of Avenue for the Arts, an area in downtown Grand Rapids along South Division Avenue that also encompasses the park, the painter/musician proposed a different idea. “Let’s have some concerts and use the space for something else that will hopefully stop some of that bad behavior,” said the artist/activist. Claudin, along with others in the community, worked together to secure grant funding and held the first concert in late July. Since then, shows have taken place every other week, and the benches won’t be going anywhere.
Hugo ClaudinClaudin has long been a catalyst for bringing music and other art into public spaces. He regularly hosts underground bands from all over the globe in his loft, and is a member of ArtPeers, a local nonprofit that encourages community patronage of the arts. The group holds a variety of events where exhibits and performances are held in local businesses, parking lots, and empty spaces. “I’m trying to meld the idea of being an artist and doing community-based things,” he said. Originally from Mexico, Claudin migrated to the United States following the death of his father to study art at Kendall College of Art and Design. Since settling in Grand Rapids two decades ago, he has become an important link between art and the community.
Claudin provides outreach service as a natural helper for the city’s Believe 2 Become Initiative, a collaborative effort of the Grand Rapids Public Schools, the Grand Rapids Student Advancement Foundation, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, and the Douglas & Maria DeVos Foundation.
The aim is to close the achievement gap between inner-city students and their suburban counterparts. The project focuses on engaging community members across four different neighborhood zones in Grand Rapids. Natural helpers serve as liaisons between the community and the programs offered through LINC Community Revitalization, Inc., one of the partner organizations involved with Believe 2 Become.
“I’m kind of like a foot soldier for the operation,” he explained. Foot soldier is an apt description for the artist whose work incorporates themes of revolution and ‘real life superheroes’. Claudin is engaging West Michigan’s Latino community, encouraging them to not let fear keep them from having active roles in their children’s educations. “The Latino community is kind of naturally guarded,” he said. But, he believes, as the program becomes more visible, these walls are coming down. “We’re working to engage the community through a series of meetings. We want to get a dialogue going about what the obstacles are that might be keeping the children from graduating.”
Hugo ClaudinHis current series of paintings bears the same name as his loft and deals with themes of immigration and the barriers frequently encountered by members of the Latino community. Claudin paints warrior-esque men and women, all of whom sport the traditional face-masks of the Lucha Libre wrestlers, an institution in national Mexican pop culture. Claudin describes the images as a metaphor for the unseen communities of undocumented people living in the US that go uncounted and misrepresented in the media.
Although his work with Believe 2 Become spans across the city of Grand Rapids, it is his own Heartside District, which continues to struggle to attract businesses and residents, that truly has his heart. “As a resident of this zone, of course I’m interested in the revitalization of this area. I think it will be a natural process,” he said. “Nobody expected this to be revitalized overnight. We’re very committed, especially the people who have been here a long time. We’re almost there. It’s a matter of persisting and getting the message out.”

A mobile laboratory - LAB

A mobile laboratory traveling
around the world to inspire
innovative ideas for urban life
BMW Guggenheim Lab
Send to a Friend | Subscribe to E-news | Unsubscribe | Privacy Policy
Open through October 16, 2011, First Park | Houston at 2nd Avenue, A New York City Parks property.
Visit us online at bmwguggenheimlab.org.

Bernhard Heiliger Award for sculpture goes to Argentina-born artist Fabián Marcaccio

Bernhard Heiliger Award for sculpture goes to Argentina-born artist Fabián Marcaccio

Fabián Marcaccio, CNN-Paintant, 2009. Pigmentierte Tinte auf Leinwand, Aluminium, Silikon, Alkydfarbe,

20 x 183 x 127 cm.
Courtesy: Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin.
  
BERLIN.- In 2011, the fourth Bernhard Heiliger Award for Sculpture honors the Argentina-born artist Fabián Marcaccio.
The award ceremony will be held on September 10, 2011, at the Berlin Academy of Arts at Pariser Platz.
The solo exhibition on that occasion at Berlin Georg Kolbe Museum opens September
11 and runs until November 20, 2011. The exhibition will also be shown at LehmbruckMuseum
Duisburg from March 15 to June 10, 2012.

Created in 1999, the Bernhard Heiliger Award for Sculpture is endowed with 15,000 EUR and is awarded by an
 independent jury. Jurors of this year's jury were Udo Kittelmann, director of the National Gallery in Berlin,
Prof. Dr. Raimund Stecker, director of the LehmbruckMuseum in Duisburg, and Dr. Anda Rottenberg,
independent curator and former director of the National Gallery Zachęta for Contemporary Art in Warsaw.
The intention of this prize is the appreciation of a sculptural oeuvre with intrinsic significance irrespective of
  art-market fashions, which has contributed considerably to sculpture or to the perception of sculpture as
an art form. Previous winners were Bertrand Lavier (1999), Fritz Schwegler (2003) and Antony Gormley (2007).

Fabián Marcaccio, born in 1963 in Rosario de Santa Fe in Argentina, has lived and worked in New York for more
 than 20 years. Since the early 1990s, Fabián Marcaccio occupies himself with the examination and extension of the
classical concept of painting. His "Paintants"—a neologism of the words "mutant" and "paintings"—merge the concepts
of painting, sculpture and object art. In Germany, his renown is based mainly on individual exhibitions at the
Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart (2000) and the Kölnischer Kunstverein (2001) as well as on his participation
in Documenta XI (2002). In recent times, the ever-increasing plasticity apparent in his works coalesced into large-scale
  figurative tableaus, "The Structural Canvas Paintants", whose sculptural quality was highlighted by the jury thoroughly.
 In this new series, Marcaccio takes on contemporary issues in politics, economy and society. These include globalization,
 the banking crisis, trans-sexuality, genetic engineering and terrorism as well as the role of the media. Akin to a three
dimensional modern history painting, Marcaccio narrates current events or recent historical moments, prompting
 his viewers to question their truthfulness at the same time.

The award ceremony and the exhibition at Georg Kolbe Museum is accompanied by a bilingual (German/English)
 publication with texts be Raimund Stecker and Marc Wellmann, edited by the Bernhard Heiliger Foundation.
The entire project is made possible through the generous support of the Stiftung Deutsche Klassenlotterie Berlin.
 
Courtesy: ArtDaily

Iraq's holiest Shiite city, Najaf, will become an Islamic Capital of Culture next year

Thursday, March 17, 2011
PRASHANT RAO
NAJAF - Agence France-Presse
Iraq's holiest Shiite city, Najaf, will become an Islamic Capital of Culture next year. The Najaf celebrations are part of broad efforts by Iraqi authorities to put the country back on the cultural map after the US-led invasion of 2003 to oust Saddam Hussein led to years of brutal sectarian war. Preparations, however, are running well-behind schedule
In 2009 the culture ministers of Muslim countries chose Najaf as one of three Islamic cultural capitals in 2012 along with Dhaka for Asia and Niamey for Africa.

In 2009 the culture ministers of Muslim countries chose Najaf as one of three Islamic cultural capitals in 2012 along with Dhaka for Asia and Niamey for Africa.





















A half-billion-dollar effort to showcase Iraq's holiest Shiite city to the world is coming down to the wire as many contracts remain unsigned and funds are hastily being reallocated.
Preparations for Najaf to become the Arab world's Islamic Capital of Culture next year are under way, but officials involved in its planning admit that time is short and much remains to be done.
"We don't have enough time, we need more time," said Nizar Hussein al-Naffakh, a Najaf provincial council member and one of the event's organizers.
"We only started work at the end of last year and Najaf will become the Islamic capital of culture from Jan. 1, 2012. There are real obstacles but we hope to overcome them in order to show our city in the most positive light," he said.
The Najaf celebrations are part of broad efforts by Iraqi authorities to put the country back on the cultural map, after the U.S.-led invasion of 2003 to oust Saddam Hussein led to years of brutal sectarian war.
Iraq is due to host an Arab League summit, initially scheduled for March 29 but now delayed until the end of May due to regional unrest.
Football's Gulf Cup is also to be held in the southern port of Basra in 2013, the same year that Baghdad becomes the Arab capital of culture.
"These kinds of events, they are like the Olympic Games," said Amman-based UNESCO cultural expert Tamara Teneishvili.
"They always contribute to the development of infrastructure and they provide wide international exposure. This is very important," she said.
In 2009 the culture ministers of Muslim countries chose Najaf as one of three Islamic cultural capitals in 2012 along with Dhaka for Asia and Niamey for Africa.
The year-long festivities include conferences covering topics ranging from the legacy of Imam Ali, to whom a major shrine is dedicated in the city, to modern-day Islamophobia.
Imam Ali, a seventh-century Islamic leader who was a cousin and son-in-law of the Prophet Mohammed, is revered among Shiite Muslims as the first imam of the Shiite order, as well as being a military leader and writer.
Authorities are also planning to translate 200 works of Islamic literature into English and French, as well as host recitals of traditional Islamic music, though there will be no dance performances.
The overall budget for the Najaf ceremonies, including capital investment and cultural activities, is 537 billion Iraqi dinars ($455 million).
But of more than 70 projects that have been planned to get Najaf ready – ranging from a $100-million cultural complex to new waste treatment facilities – a fifth have not yet been assigned to contractors.
The cultural complex, comprised of a 44,000-square meter building and 115,000 square meters (1.24 million square feet) of landscape, is on time, said Turkish site supervisor Oğuz Düzen.

Its roof is due to be completed by mid-May, when the number of workers on the project will quadruple to 600 and operations run around the clock to complete the "cultural city," a single building that includes a 1,500-seat conference hall and a 750-seat theater as well as a library and a museum.
According to Aqeel al-Mindalawi, an Iraqi Culture Ministry official who is part of the 10-member committee responsible for organizing the Najaf 2012 celebrations, the complex will be handed over at the end of the year.
But he admits that a contingency planning is under way in case it is not.
"If the cultural city is not ready by the end of the year, we will set up a temporary site in the Sea of Najaf," he says, referring to a swathe of agricultural land that abuts the holy city.
"We have alternative plans, but we are still optimistic."

Several other projects designed to upgrade Najaf's infrastructure and that of twin city Kufa, however, will either not be ready for the start of next year or are slated to be completed just before the ceremonies begin.
Of two major highways being constructed, one will be finished at the end of this year while the other will be ready in early 2012. Plans to upgrade Najaf's roads have been slowed by delayed improvements to the city's sewage system, according to Mindalawi.

He blames a combination of Saddam-era administrative regulations and new rules that require a public call for bids for projects, both of which he said took too much time.

Further complicating matters is the sudden prospect of local elections this year, with delays to the formation of a national government following March 2010 elections having already set back the Najaf planning.
In response to massive nationwide protests railing against corruption, poor public services and unemployment, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has backed early provincial polls for this year.

An ambitious $170 million cultural program has also been scaled back as money has had to be diverted to capital investment to upgrade the city's infrastructure and hotels.
In particular, funds have been redirected to build a five-star hotel after private investors pulled out of plans to build two such facilities in the city.
Indeed, one of the mooted benefits of the Najaf festivities – increased tourism – is limited by the lack of spare hotel capacity.

Among Najaf's 170-odd hotels and hostels is just one four-star facility, with overall city-wide capacity barely able to accommodate the thousands of Shiite pilgrims, mostly Iranian, visiting on a daily basis, principally to see the Imam Ali shrine.

The Najaf Chamber of Commerce expects 100,000 more tourists to visit the city for the 2012 ceremonies and notes few new hotels will be ready in time to accommodate the flow.
Officials are drawing up contingency plans, including one to ferry VIPs from up-scale hotels in Baghdad on day trips to Najaf, 150 kilometers south.
"There are several back-up plans," Mindalawi said, chuckling. "We have to – in Iraq, we have to."

Acrylic Brands and Types for Artists.

1.Acrylic Paints: Winsor & Newton Artist's Acrylics
W&N launched this range of acrylics in January 2009 to replace their Finity series. It is indeed a different product, having a longer working time (up to half an hour), minimal shift from wet to dry (because of a new binder), and a satin finish (rather than gloss). The tube labels have a painted color swatch rather than a printed one. 10 Finity colors have been discontinued and 17 new colors introduced.

I've found the longer working time removes the rush to blend colors before they dry, but isn't so long I'm twiddling my thumbs waiting for paint to dry (except on small-size paintings). The colors are rich, intense, and saturated, with a soft butter consistency that holds brushmarks.

Unrivalled in brilliance, Winsor & Newton’s new line of Artists’ Acrylics combines a revolutionary transparent binder that eliminates color shift from wet to dry with the highest-quality, maximum-strength pigments to ensure clean, strong colors with wonderful working properties.
Brilliance, defined as the richness, intensity and depth of a color, is possibly the most important quality of an acrylic paint. Consequently, in the development of Artists' Acrylics, Winsor & Newton combined its world-beating color-making experience to ensure an unrivalled brilliance and depth of color in the range. Brilliance does not mean the colors are garish. Rather, it pertains to clarity and purity of color, which should be evident when the color is applied straight from the tube as well as in the thinnest of films. Even the earths, blacks, and whites are clean and not dull.
Only the purest pigments are used in Artists' Acrylics, formulated individually to ensure the the cleanest, brightest, and strongest colors to give a wider choice and better color-mixing capabilities. Each individual formulation uses the maximum amount of pigment possible — without extenders — to produce a brilliant color with the broadest handling properties. 

Until now acrylic paints have tended to darken in tone as they dry, making color-matching difficult from wet palette to dry canvas. Color shift is due to the binder changing from white to transparent as it dries. As the white emulsion dries within the color and becomes clear, the paint becomes more transparent and therefore darker.
Winsor & Newton’s expertise in color-making and resin technology has resulted in a unique binder that is translucent when wet and dries clear — ensuring virtually no shift in color, and colors that remain as brilliant when dry as they are when wet. The result is a range that allows artists to match colors more easily from palette to canvas and see a painting as it will actually look when finished.





2.Acrylic Paints: Golden Artist Colors Heavy Body.
My long-term favorite brand of acrylic paint is Golden's Heavy Body acrylics. Golden is an American company created specifically to produce top-quality acrylic paints for artists. I love the range of vibrant colors, which includes an extremely useful set of neutral grays. The paint consistency is like smooth, soft butter, and it thins down for glazes easily, and dries rapidly. For serious impasto, you'll most likely want to add some medium (Golden produces a range of options, including gels and molding pastes)
Golden Heavy Body Artist Acrylics are known for their exceptionally smooth, thick, buttery consistency, and for their excellent permanency and lightfastness. These paints have the ability to "stand up" and retain brush strokes or palette knife marks on the canvas.
Heavy Body Artist Acrylics also contain the largest assortment of unique pure pigments in a 100% acrylic emulsion vehicle available to the professional artist. They contain no fillers, extenders, opacifiers, toners, or dyes.
Each Golden Heavy Body color is formulated differently depending upon the nature of the pigment. Colors that tolerate higher pigment loads dry to a more opaque, matte finish, while colors that are more reactive and do not accept high pigment loading dry to a glossy finish and tend to be more transparent. Since Heavy Body Acrylics contain no additives, such as matting agents, the gloss of each color will be different.
All Golden Heavy Body Acrylic colors are thixotropic in nature. This means that when brushing or stirring, the paints actually lose viscosity and feel much thinner. The faster the paints are moving, the thinner they feel. Returned to a state of rest, Golden Heavy Body Acrylic paints gradually increase in thickness until they are again restored to their formulated viscosity.
Golden Heavy Body Acrylics retain excellent flexibility when dry, greatly diminishing the possibility of cracking that occurs in other natural and synthetic polymer systems. They also can absorb the constant stress and strain placed on canvas when it is shipped, or as it expands and contracts with changes in temperature and humidity.

-Some colors contain pigments, such as cadmium salts, that are toxic, and should be used only by persons who are old enough to follow instructions for safe use and clean-up. Cautionary labels and warnings should be followed strictly. Do not apply toxic colors with an airbrush or sprayer.

(Golden Heavy Body Acrylics were the first products introduced by Golden Artist Colors, Inc., in 1980. Initially, the Heavy Body line was sold directly to artists in Manhattan in quart and gallon containers. Pints, 8 oz, and 4 oz jars soon followed, as the products gained more and more popularity with professional artists. Tubes of Golden Heavy Body Acrylics finally appeared on the market in 1990.
In 1980, it was considered unusual to contain a heavy body, high-viscosity paint in a jar. Almost all of the literature written about acrylic paints at that time implied that jar colors were thin, and tube colors were thicker.
Actually, the first waterborne acrylic paint was thin, similar in consistency to house paint. Only after technological improvements allowing for thicker paint formulations occurred could artist acrylics be sold in tubes.
Since Golden got its start by directly supplying professional artists, the company provided Heavy Body Acrylics in larger-size containers. As Golden products became widely accessible, jars and tubes provided more size and packaging options for a growing group of artists with a variety of needs.)
 



3.Acrylic Paints: Liquitex.
I like Liquitex's Heavy Body Professional Artist Colors for the paint's consistency (quite buttery and 'sticky', so great for using with a knife) and because they come in 'plastic' tubes which are incredibly robust. (To be technically accurate, Liquitex comes in Glaminate, tubes made from laminated layers of plastic, metal, and paper.)
Liquitex Heavy Body Artist Acrylic Colors (previously called High Viscosity) are professional-quality acrylics that have an exceptionally smooth, thick, buttery consistency, ideal for traditional art techniques that employ brushes and painting knives, as well as experimental, mixed-media, collage, and printmaking applications.
A high pigment load produces rich, brilliant, permanent color, combined with good surface drag that provides excellent handling and blending characteristics with increased open working time. When used for thick and impasto applications and techniques, Liquitex Heavy Body Acrylics retain crisp brushstrokes and knife marks.
Liquitex Heavy Body Acrylics remain flexible when dry, and thick films remain free of cracks and chips over time.




4.Acrylic Paints: M. Graham & Co.
If you wanted an acrylic paint with a long working time, them M. Graham & Co's would be top of your list (working in a hot, dry climate, they give me about half an hour). But as I'm an impatient painter and I work mostly in glazes which I want to dry quickly, I don't need to extra working time very often. The colors are sumptuous -- very strong and saturated -- and blend together beautifully. If you were used to working in oils and wanted to swap to acrylics, this would be the brand to try.

(Only pure, high solid resins are used, with no fillers, retarders, opacifiers, or bulking agents. Each pigment is present in the highest concentration possible consistent with good working properties. This gives each color outstanding tinting strength and mass tone.) 



 5.Acrylic Paints: Golden's Open Acrylics.
Launched in mid-2008, Golden's Open Acrylics have an extended drying time, making them the most comparable to oil paints amongst all acrylic paints. Open Acrylics stay workable on a normal palette for hours rather than minutes, eliminating the need for a moisture-retaining palette. Open Acrylics provide the ease of using water as a medium (and for cleaning brushes) with a long working and blending time. The color range isn't as extensive as for Golden's Heavy Duty acrylics, but the fundamentals are included.

Golden Open Acrylics offer an escape from the studio, allowing acrylic artists to experience the warm sun and fresh spring breeze of plein air painting.
This is a professional line of colors and mediums formulated with a unique, relaxed set of working properties that stay wet longer, even in outdoor conditions. Their versatility allows artists to explore a wider range of techniques that rely on softening, shading, glazing, and creating fine detail.
Open Acrylics remain wet on the palette for extended periods of time. This means that color mixes are usable longer, resulting in less waste. Their remarkable working time makes them an ideal choice for many techniques, including plein air painting, portraiture, monoprinting, and screenprinting. They may be used with natural fiber brushes, and also work well with more traditional painting techniques.



6.Acrylic Paints: Atelier Interactive.
The 'big deal' about these acrylic paints is that, according to the manufacturer, they "dry differently", that they don't form a skin as they dry so you can rehydrate them to keep working wet-in-wet by spraying some water on the paint or using a wet brush. I found I could indeed work back into the paint with a wet brush, which makes blending colors less of an urgency and easier. If you do a lot of blending of colors rather than glazing, consider this brand of acrylic.

Chroma Atelier Interactive Professional Artists' Acrylics are the world's only acrylic paints that can be used for conventional acrylic painting techniques, but when needed, artists can easily take advantage of their unique ability to rehydrate for blending techniques.
Chroma Atelier Interactive can be used for ordinary acrylic painting effects such as overpainting, scumbling, or glazing when used on its own — or for extraordinary wet-in-wet blending effects by simply using a water sprayer during a normal painting session. The next day — or days later — use Unlocking Formula to blend, reveal, or scratch back. The techniques and methods employed are readily accessible to beginners and professionals alike.
Atelier Interactive can be mixed with any other professional artist acrylic, but the paint will not rehydrate as when mixed with other Interactive colors.
Atelier Interactive is a world-class acrylic — archival and lightfast — with exceptional consistency, brushability, color load, and a satin finish. When purchased in 80 ml tubes, Interactive offers one-third more paint than standard 60 ml tubes — and it often costs less.
Whether creating a landscape, doing portrait/figurative work, creating a still life, or exploring abstract techniques, artists who use Atelier Interactive Professional Artists' Acrylics control the paint, instead of having the paint control them!

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 7.Acrylic Paints: Matisse Structure Formula.
Matisse structure paint is a 'normal' acrylic paint that does what you'd expect from a decent artist's quality acrylic. Probably the only unexpected thing about it is that it's made in Australia and has some unique color names (such as Southern Ocean Blue, or Australia Sky Blue). It has a soft, buttery consistency that will hold brushmarks if used undiluted, straight from the tube. It can be diluted with water and/or medium for painting without leaving brushmarks, for glazing, or for watercolor-type techniques. To increase the impasto effect, you'd mix it with impasto or texture medium.


8.Acrylic Paints: Sennelier.
Sennelier are fast-drying acrylics with a consistency that's on the soft side of buttery. The colors are strong and saturated, mixing is easy before of the soft consistency of the paint. The paint spreads smoothly and easily on a canvas. If you like glazing and blending more than textures, I think Sennelier would be an excellent choice. 

Since 1887, the Sennelier name has been synonymous with quality, artist-driven innovation, and an unfailing commitment to the advancement of art. Now, Sennelier has turned its expertise, experience, and unerring eye for color to creating a line of artist-quality acrylics.
Sennelier Extra-Fine Acrylique Paints contain only the highest-quality pigments, selected to assure clarity, purity, opacity, and stability over time. A broad palette of 120 colors, most made from a single pigment, includes all the colors that made Sennelier’s Artists’ Oils famous, including traditional Ultramarines, Earths, Ochres, Cadmiums, Cobalts, and colors based on Quinacridone, Pyrrole, Naphthol, and Phtalocyanine. The line also features four interference and six iridescent colors.
Sennelier maintains a tradition of artisanal fabrication, subject to strict and constant quality control. Each stage of production is rigorously tested in the laboratory.
With a texture that duplicates the rich, creamy working properties of Sennelier Artists’ Oils, Sennelier Extra-Fine Acrylique are ideal for working with layers or wash drawings; in combination with other techniques such as pastels, charcoal, or ink; in overlays; and for creating collages and inlays. They can be used outdoor as well as in the studio, and adhere well to non-oily surfaces, including paper, canvas, cardboard canvas, wood, fabric, cement, plaster, and some plastics and metals.
They can be worked with a brush, painting knife, metal spatula, fingers, or directly from the tube to obtain thick lines. Their excellent spreading properties make them easy to mix, allowing for an infinite number of shades without altering luminosity. They are excellent for coatings and can be mixed with Sennelier mediums and retarders to modify their texture, viscosity, transparency, or luminosity. They are low-odor and dry rapidly to create a permanent, insoluble, non-cracking, non-yellowing, water-resistant film.


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9.Acrylic Paints: Daler-Rowney
As Daler-Rowney artist's quality paints (Cryla) are generally cheaper than Golden, Liquitex, or Winsor and Newton, I use them if I've got a large area to cover, especially in an underpainting. I've found some colors (e.g. Prussian blue) are a bit darker than other brands, which can be useful. The consistency of the paint is stiff to buttery. (Daler-Rowney's student acrylic range is branded System 3.)

 
 10. Acrylic Paints: Utrecht.
This is an American brand of paint which seems to be distributed only in the US. I first bought various tubes from a Utrecht store in New York because the price was competitive with more familiar brands. The paint is thickly buttery but spreads easily when diluted. The colors are what you'd expect from an artist's grade paint: saturated, with good tinting or covering strength depending on what color it is. While I wouldn't make a special trip to get hold of it, if it's one of the options at your local store, it's worth considering.


11.Acrylic Paints: Winsor & Newton Galeria Flow Formula.
While I'm a great believer in using quality artist's paints sometimes it's too inhibiting because you're worrying about wasting the paint. Then it's better to use a good student's quality paint that enables you to feel free to experiment, to just see what happens if you do something, to scrape off paint and paint over something. Winsor & Newton's Galeria brand is an affordable or student's grade of paint that has good strength in colors and works easily (though you'll have to add texture paste if you want thick paint as it's quite soft paint). And it doesn't put too huge a dent in your pocket.
Winsor & Newton Galeria Acrylic Color is a high-quality acrylic that delivers professional results, ideal for artists who want good-quality color at an affordable price. The 59 colors in the Galeria range offer a wide spectrum of pigment characteristics to choose from as well as excellent brilliance of color, strong brushstroke retention, clean color-mixing and high performance. Galeria has a smooth, free-flowing consistency, making it easy for the artist to use and mix, while maintaining its body and retaining brush marks.
They brush straight from the tube or pot, making them accessible to beginners. The adhesive qualities and quick drying nature of these acrylics, overpainting is possible within 20 minutes.
Use Galeria Acrylic Colors on many surfaces, including paper, canvas, degreased leather, fabrics, masonite, wood, brickwork, and plaster.
They are not recommended for use on shiny, glossy, greasy surfaces such as glass, unprimed metal, or surfaces painted with oil colors.
Galeria paints are formulated to be compatible with water, other Winsor & Newton acrylic colors, and Winsor & Newton Watercolor Mediums. All colors conform to the European Toy Safety Standard EN71/3.
When diluted, they are suitable for a wide variety of techniques, from stenciling, collage, sponging, and airbrushing, to painting on canvas. Colors are weather and water resistant once dry, making them ideal for use in sculpture and mural work.



 
Every artist will have their own preferred brand of acrylic paint, based on things such as the colors available and the consistency of the paint, which ranges from extremely buttery to fluid. Rather buy a few quality colors of artist's quality acrylics than a whole range of cheap colors. (Remember, student acrylic paints are cheaper for a reason: they've usually more filler in them, or made from cheaper pigments.) Here are my personal favorites from the brands I've used in paintings.

 Pictures and Description by
 Compiled by Shama.



 Brands List By:

Marion Boddy-Evans
Marion Boddy-Evans
Painting Guide.
Courtesy: www.about.com

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