La Familia Artist Career Opportunities

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Jeanette Jones Artist Profile by Intern Hannah Smith



Jeanette Jones is a Seattle Artist who grew up in Daytona Beach Florida, who is drawn to the stories of women in history. She creates the portraits with bold outlines of colorful spaces which are filled with flowers and other objects. Some of her paintings look like stained glass because of the lines, the rich color, and the contrast between the different spaces. In some of her past works she had painted Frida Kahlo and Georgia O’Keefe.

In her show I feel bad for you? she has created a series of portraits of Pablo Picasso’s mistresses and wives. After reading a biography about Picasso, Jones was inspired by the tragic ends of Marie Therese, Dora Maar and his other conquests. Picasso manipulated, mistreated, and tossed away many women destroying their self confidence causing them to kill themselves. Her paintings beautifully capture the melancholy of the women, and the crossing lines enhance the feeling of brokenness.

Jeanette Jones’ work tells stories about different women whose naiveté about love caused their ultimate downfalls.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Artwalk: May 2010

Join us May 20, at La Familia for our 2nd Opening!



KELLIE TALBOT

Stars and Type[s]

Jobs that produced tangible products of iron and steel are being pushed out, traded in grasp for the New. What remains is a language of artifacts in
the American landscape formed by signs and industry that communicates
through word, design, typography, color and the state of repair. It is
this language that conveys society’s economic, political, social and
moral aims.

SARA EVERETT
Pet Shop

According to the 2009/2010 National Pet Owners Survey, 62% of U.S. households own a pet,
which equates to 71.4 millions homes. Artist Sara Everett explores this
culture of household animals through oil painted portraiture. The show
features an assortment of creatures one would find in a traditional pet
shop, from birds & fish to rats & cats, including some
kinetically interactive works that blend her oil paintings with
animation.

JEANETTE JONES
I Feel Bad for You?

Picasso's relationships were complex. His women were manipulated and broken, in
life and on canvas. Nevertheless they willfully drew towards him thus
becoming immortal. Admittedly from a place of naïveté, Jeanette Jones
asks the question "I feel bad for you?"