Monday, May 2, 2011

Palm Trees

For some reason I have another tropical palm tree piece stuck in my head. This painting stated with me greeting frustrated with the original canvas putting on too many layers of paint and just spraying it flat black and then this is what it came to.
Vod

Palm and Stars

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Another Tropic Piece

I was going to add a little more paint but decided to hold back. I couldn't do it to this piece. Hope you enjoy. -Vod



Black Palm: Acrylic on Canvas

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Currently Painting

I am currently painting something that started out a doodle on a newspaper. It was a palm tree. I then took a picture converted it into Photoshop and edited it to what I wanted. Just took a can of flat black to it and I am debating if I even add anything else.

I also found 2 canvases someone was throwing out and rescued them. Hopefully I can figure a way to get rid of the glue.






Marie Clayton – Barbie Killer
This stuff is pretty funny. I found my favorite PG one and posted it.

Art Show

It's been a while but my art is still up in the Philosophy house and it will remain until the end of the semester...

I have been very busy lately mostly now just writing down ideas to paint. Hopefully I will put one of my ideas on canvas. I am going to go overboard on pictures on my next piece so hopefully you enjoy the painting process.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

More Paintings

I was busy last weekend painting. I painted two new pieces you can see in the upcoming Molloy art show.





Night Forest













and some random flowers






Detail












Finally I painted a beach scene that always drifts through my head. This piece is on three canvases that will be separated.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Art Exibit: The Examined Life

Someone at school asked me to submit some of my artwork into a show. This show is called the Examined Life, it is being run by the Philosophy Department at Molloy College. This art exhibit opens on April 8th 2011 and runs through May 27th. The reception will be held on April 14th. Here are some of the following pieces I may submit. (There is a new piece I painted yesterday for this event called Night Forest. I used Acrylic & Marker in this piece.) Hope you check it out.

ATAT Bye-bye
Acrylic & Krylon





Beehave
Acrylic & Krylon




Untitled – B+R
Acrylic



Balloon Monsters
Mixed Media
















Night Forest
Acrylic & Marker
(Swing by to check it out)

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Twitter

I found a very interesting article on Twitter this week. I found some of the users surprising. Hope fully one day I can be on the list.
Vod


Microblogging platform Twitter has 32 million users, an increase from about 2 million a year ago, according to research mentioned in the Wall Street Journal. Some Internet measurement services show that figure increasing 50% to 100% month over month. While it is not clear that Twitter will become as large as social networks MySpace and Facebook or video-sharing site YouTube, the company could certainly have 50 million visitors by the end of the year.

Because Twitter can be used with ease on both PCs and mobile devices, and because it limits users to very short messages of 140 characters or fewer, it has become one of the largest platforms in the world for sharing real-time data. A number of large businesses and celebrities have hundreds of thousands of followers on Twitter. This includes personalities like Oprah and Ashton Kutcher. JetBlue (JBLU), Whole Foods (WFMI) and Dell (DELL), along with other multinational corporations, are among the most followed names on the service. (See the top 10 celebrity Twitter feeds.)

As Twitter grows, it will increasingly become a place where companies build brands, do research, send information to customers, conduct e-commerce and create communities for their users. Some industries, like local retail, could be transformed by Twitter — both at one-store operations that cater to customers within a few blocks of their locations and at the individual stores of giant retail operations like Wal-Mart (WMT). In either case, having the opportunity to tell customers about attractive sales and new products can be done at remarkably low cost while providing for greater geographic accuracy.

For Twitter to be a part of a company's efforts to communicate with customers, the customers must be willing to "follow" the company on Twitter. That allows the individual consumer to choose which firms he is willing to get messages directly from. It may not be surprising that "new age" brands like Whole Foods and JetBlue have large followings and older and much larger brands like Kroger (KR) and American Airlines (AMR) do not. Whole Foods and JetBlue have successfully marketed themselves as being "customer-centric" — the kind of companies that would not misuse the access to a customer's private Twitter information. (Read Ashton Kutcher's take on why the Twitter founders made the TIME 100.)

While there may be commercial value for using Twitter to communicate with customers, the danger is that the Twitter community could turn against a marketer viewed as being too crass by being relentlessly self-promoting. Twitter users have set up their own rules of conduct when using the service, not unlike those with MySpace and Facebook. These rules were not put together by Twitter itself, which mandates only rules of use. Like many social-network sites, Twitter is self-governed by its members, and companies must take that into account as they join the service.

Twitter is still in the early stages of developing a plan for making money as a company, but plenty of large corporations like Starbucks (SBUX) are already using it as a marketing tool. Twitter will probably evolve into both a community of individuals and a community of companies that provide goods and services for those individuals.

24/7 Wall St. has come up with 10 ways in which Twitter will permanently change American business within the next two to three years, based on an examination of Twitter's model, the way that corporations and small businesses are currently using the service and some of the logical extensions of how companies will use Twitter in the future. Some of these firms are already using Twitter, but their efforts are in the earliest stages of development. 24/7 Wall St. evaluated other sensible and potentially highly profitable ways Twitter's real-time, multiplatform presence is likely to be exploited — in the best use of that word — to expand businesses both large and small.



Read more: http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1901188_1901207,00.html#ixzz1Hus6XF96