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Visual Language Magazine Contemporary Fine Art Vol 3 no 9

Vol 3 No 9 Visual Language Magazine Contemporary Fine Art featuring Wildlife, Equine Art and more. Cover Artists is Texas Artist James Loveless. Featured are the VL top artists to collect Isabelle Gautier, Lelija Roy, Linda McCoy, Bob Coonts, and Alejandro Castanon; CFAI Colors on My Palette, Patricia A. Griffin; Visual Language studio visit with Marcia Baldwin, James Loveless, Milton Wagoner and J. W. Burke; Barry W. Scharf shares American Artist Today; Artspan Spotlight with Jan Sasser; CFAI.co Art Showdown; VL Photographer Fran J Scott. Visual Language Magazine published through Graphics One Design. Visual Language is the common connection around the world for art expressed through every media and process. The artists connect through their creativity to the viewers by both their process as well as their final piece. No interpreters are necessary because Visual Language Magazine crosses all boundaries.

Vol 3 No 9 Visual Language Magazine Contemporary Fine Art featuring Wildlife, Equine Art and more. Cover Artists is Texas Artist James Loveless. Featured are the VL top artists to collect Isabelle Gautier, Lelija Roy, Linda McCoy, Bob Coonts, and Alejandro Castanon; CFAI Colors on My Palette, Patricia A. Griffin; Visual Language studio visit with Marcia Baldwin, James Loveless, Milton Wagoner and J. W. Burke; Barry W. Scharf shares American Artist Today; Artspan Spotlight with Jan Sasser; CFAI.co Art Showdown; VL Photographer Fran J Scott. Visual Language Magazine published through Graphics One Design. Visual Language is the common connection around the world for art expressed through every media and process. The artists connect through their creativity to the viewers by both their process as well as their final piece. No interpreters are necessary because Visual Language Magazine crosses all boundaries.

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The Painter’s Keys<br />

Robert and Sara Genn<br />

The one-millimetre rule<br />

Robert Genn’s<br />

Studio Book<br />

Not long ago, while in the middle of a private easel disaster, the phone rang. “Did you k<strong>no</strong>w that Tony Robbins recently took<br />

up golf” asked a friend. She was calling from a new-age encounter session somewhere in the bowels of an inner city Marriott.”<br />

Apparently you can improve the accuracy of your swing by altering the angle of your club face by a millimetre or two.” I<br />

put down my brush in a previous resolve to scrape and re-mix. Things had gone from bad to worse in the space of a couple of<br />

millimetres. “I gotta go,” I said.”I have to make a small change.”<br />

<strong>Art</strong>, and making it a career, is one of those ever-evolving life works -- always in motion, growing wild or dying on the vine<br />

-- a work in constant need of pruning and care. “In business, you’re either growing or slipping,” said a dealer, once, just before<br />

he went into frozen yogurt. Here in the studio are brushes to clean, books to keep, galleries to care for. Habits clamour to be<br />

improved, and ideas lie waiting to be originated and cultivated, then executed with uniqueness and excellence.<br />

Often, artists entertain bold moves as a solution to floundering inspiration, disappointing work, or a lackluster bank balance.<br />

”Insanity,” said Albert Einstein, “is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” Maybe a softer,<br />

gentler way can improve outcome. Before a drastic act, might we merely nudge a millimetre or two in the direction of quality<br />

Here are a few ideas:<br />

The Painter’s Keys - Robert Genn<br />

What is uniquely yours and embodied in your work It’s priceless.<br />

What is the most lust-worthy quality in your work Make it obvious.<br />

Is there an area in your work where you’re cutting corners Identify it.<br />

Do you have a favourite brush size Go bigger.<br />

Do you have a preferred process Do it in reverse.<br />

Do you overwork your paintings Finish 10% underworked, rather than 1% overcooked.<br />

In the final presentation, is there an extra millimetre to give Give it.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

Sara<br />

PS:”Quality is <strong>no</strong>t an act, it is a habit.” (Aristotle)<br />

“Quality is always in style.” (Robert Genn)<br />

Esoterica: “Great things,” said Vincent Van Gogh, “are <strong>no</strong>t done by impulse, but by a series of small things brought together.”<br />

Motivational speaker and self-help author Tony Robbins was born Anthony J. Mahavorick in North Hollywood, California in<br />

1960. A self-described weakling, in pimples and poverty, Tony started selling seminars and embodying his own incantations.<br />

“Any time you sincerely want to make a change,” he says, “the first thing you must do is to raise your standards.”<br />

<strong>Visual</strong><strong>Language</strong><strong>Magazine</strong>.com - VL <strong>Magazine</strong> | 11

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