Cassie Stover and Sarah Atlee at 611 Creative, 11.21.2008
November 17, 2008

Flyer design by Dylan Bradway.
611 Creative is a sometimes-art space at 611 N Broadway in Oklahoma City. My friends Amanda and Dylan Bradway curate a show every month, with a one-night-only opening. Come visit us this Friday!
Red Shows Saturday 11.15.2008 in OKC
November 15, 2008
This’n: Red Dot Show, an annual fundraiser for the Individual Artists of Oklahoma Gallery (IAO). 811 N Broadway Ave, Oklahoma City. Saturday November 15th, 7-11 pm. Click here for ticket information.
At the Red Dot Show, in addition to auctioning artists’ works, IAO does something different. A group of artists (myself included) [scratch that, I wasn't included] has agreed to auction “blank canvases” — that is, they are selling commissions. When a buyer purchases a blank canvas from me, the artist agrees to paint them a commissioned work.
And That’n: The Red Show: What Makes You See Red? An annual fundraiser for the Red Line Foundation, a local organization promoting education and awareness about HIV/AIDS. AKA Gallery, 3001 Paseo, Oklahoma City. Saturday November 15th, 8 pm to midnight. Tickets available at Moda Salon, The Velvet Monkey Salons, the 42nd Street Candy Company, or at the gallery door.
My friend and colleage Ashley Griffith is a cofounder of Red Line, and is lending us her Paseo gallery space for this exhibit of red art. (The show guidelines stipulate that works must be at least fifty percent red.) Below are the three paintings I made for this show. I have included in-progress shots to give an idea of how I build layers in a painting. (Secretly I hope that in five years I look back at these and think, “Gracious Aunt Betsy, what was I thinking? I am SO much better at layering now.”)



I began with photos of my subjects, which I doctored in PhotoShop to shift the color balance toward the red end of the spectrum. I drew very basic pencil outlines on my blank canvases. The underpaintings are thin layers of red (cadmium and napthol), yellow (cadmium and naples), and sienna.

This is one of my palettes at the beginning of a painting session. I use styrofoam takeout trays. When they get full of paint, I let them dry and then apply a thin coat of gesso.
Top row: burnt sienna, cadmium red light, cadmium red dark, napthol pink (mixture).
Second row: burnt sienna (liquid acrylic), Golden glaze in rust, Golden glaze in yellow ochre, Liquitex portrait pink (mixture).
Third row: burnt umber (liquid acrylic), van dyke brown, unbleached titanium (mixture), cadmium yellow.
Bottom row: payne’s gray (liquid acrylic), neutral gray, titanium white.
Not pictured: alizarin crimson.

This is a different palette, after a painting session.
Recently I am taking a more painterly approach to my work. Looking back at the last couple of years I have felt like a drafstman who uses paint. I’ve missed the tactile and aesthetic pleasures of pushing paint around, building layers of color, and laying down single, decisive brush strokes.


The Dave painting was not fit to be photographed at this point. In the final piece, you will see that I changed direction somewhat. As a professor of mine says, every painting goes through an ugly stage.

Charlie: Stripes, acrylic on canvas, 2008 by Sarah Atlee

Dave: Red, acrylic on canvas, 2008 by Sarah Atlee

Trent: Halvsies, acrylic on canvas, 2008 by Sarah Atlee
A warm thank-you to my sitters, including Mr. Trent Lawson.
Refreshing the Palate: Titus
November 7, 2008
On Sunday, November 9, 2008, the Metro Wine Bar in Oklahoma City is hosting their second annual wine tasting and art exhibit, Refreshing the Palate. The Metro has commissioned twenty local artists to reinterpret the labels of their featured holiday wines. I was offered the 2006 Cabernet Franc from Titus Vineyards. How could I not riff on the deliciously gory Shakespeare tragedy of that same name?

Titus, collage and acrylic on Rives BFK, 2008. Click image to enlarge.
The artists’ labels will be sold by silent auction; proceeds will benefit the Oklahoma Visual Arts Coalition.
TAMORA
Know, thou sad man, I am not Tamora;
She is thy enemy, and I thy friend:
I am Revenge: sent from the infernal kingdom,
To ease the gnawing vulture of thy mind,
By working wreakful vengeance on thy foes.
Come down, and welcome me to this world’s light;
Confer with me of murder and of death:
There’s not a hollow cave or lurking-place,
No vast obscurity or misty vale,
Where bloody murder or detested rape
Can couch for fear, but I will find them out;
And in their ears tell them my dreadful name,
Revenge, which makes the foul offender quake.
TITUS ANDRONICUS
Art thou Revenge? and art thou sent to me,
To be a torment to mine enemies?
TAMORA
I am; therefore come down, and welcome me.
(Thanks to William Shakespeare Info. And thanks to Julie Taymor for making the colorful film version of Titus Andronicus.)
Afterthought: The body and limbs of this character were collaged from a copy of Woman Stabbing Herself (or Woman Next to Water) by Urs Graf. If you like this style, you might also like Durer, Cranach the Elder, and Goltzius.
“Know Thyself” Reviewed in Daily Oklahoman
September 30, 2008
Know Thyself, a show of self portraits by Oklahoma artists, is showing at the IAO Gallery in OKC through October 10. Here is a review by John Brandenberg for the Daily Oklahoman. Snip:
Sarah Atlee pokes fun at herself by exaggerating her laughing teeth to the point viewers may think she’s going to come out of the picture plane and bite them in her acrylic “Self Portrait: For the Record.”

rraarrr.
Special thanks to Romy Owens for inviting me to participate in this show.
RAINN Benefit Show Tonight at IAO in OKC
September 29, 2008

The IAO Gallery in OKC is hosting a one-night-only event of art and music to benefit RAINN, The Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network. This effort is headed up by the marvellous DJ Ostara and includes an auction, poetry reading, DJ sets, and more. Tickets are $10.
Here are just a few reasons to support RAINN through events like this.

Betty Louise, mixed media on masonite, 2007.
Betty here will be a part of the show tonight. There’s a secret little connection here that I’m going to go ahead and release. In 1994, musician Tori Amos* cofounded RAINN as a means to overcome the experience of her own sexual assault and to help others through that process. It happens that Betty Louise here is based on two themes: the suffragist Amelia Jenks Bloomer, and the lyrics of a Tori Amos b-side called Humpty Dumpty. There, it’s been said.
*Yeah, Tori and me used to be real tight. We grew apart over the years. I haven’t heard her latest album yet, so maybe a spark or two could be rekindled. Never say never…
Art 365 Documentary Preview Online
June 16, 2008
As part of the year-long Art 365 process, filmmakers Melissa Scaramucci and Cacky Poarch produced a documentary film about the seven artists. You can see a 15-minute preview online at Google Video. If you’re new to Art 365, this is a great introduction.
The film premiered in its entirety at the Art 365 opening in Tulsa last month. There will also be a screening in Oklahoma City on July 3rd.
Click here to read more about Normal, OK, my series for Art 365.
Related: Sonarta also has footage of the Art 365 process. Part 1 is below; here are parts two, three, and four.
Legion Arts of Cedar Rapids, IA Needs You
June 16, 2008
Click here to support the Iowa Artists’ Relief Fund.
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, is currently underwater. One of the institutions affected by this tragedy is Legion Arts, who was kind enough to agree to host the Art 365 show this coming Fall. Right now nobody knows exactly if or how that will happen, but that’s not our most pressing concern.

Legion Arts has set up an emergency fund to help Iowa artists whose lives and work have been affected by the flooding. Please give if you can, especially you Oklahoma artists: Legion Arts is like our OVAC. We need the help of support systems like these to make our unique, talented, relevant voices heard.
The above photo, taken by CRArtist, is titled June 12, 2008 (2). It is part of this Flickr set titled Flood of 2008.
Related: The Simple Dollar lists seven things you can do right now to help flood victims.
Red Line Foundation Presents: Infectious T-Shirt Fashion Runway Show
June 12, 2008

Sagrado Corazon, t-shirt design for the Red Line Foundation, 2008.
Red Line Foundation Presents: Infectious T-Shirt Fashion Runway Show. The party will be at Angles, 2117 NW 39th St, OKC, 7 to 11 pm tonight, 06.13.2008.
The T-shirt fashion show will benefit the Red Line Foundation, who seeks to increase public education about HIV/AIDS in the Oklahoma City area.
Last Chance: Art 365 in Tulsa
June 11, 2008

Lawton Amarillo, acrylic, ink and collage on canvas, 2007.
This Thursday, Friday, and Saturday are the last days that the Art 365 show will be on display in Tulsa.
My project, Normal, OK, is showing at Liggett Studios, 308 S Kenosha Ave. Betsy Barnum’s introspective self-portraits and Live4This‘ candy-coated wonderment are also at Liggett. Better get there by June 14.
One venue was not enough to hold all of the Art 365 awesomeness. Ashley Griffith’s large-scale photographic grids, Joe Daun’s kinetic sculptures, and Liz Roth’s exhaustive United States landscape survey are showing at Alexandre Hogue Gallery, University of Tulsa, 2930 E. 5th St., Tulsa (M-F 8:30-4:30) through June 27.
After this month, the Art 365 works will be put away until October, when they go on display in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Last Chance to see Idiolect @ AKA
June 11, 2008

Dum Dum, detail view, acrylic on paper, 2008.
This weekend is your last chance to see my current solo show, Idiolect, at AKA Gallery in the Paseo. This weekend is also the annual Prix De West Invitational Art Exhibition and Sale at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in OKC. Some of the Prix de West artists will have work on display at the Paseo this weekend, so it’s a great time to do the Paseo walk.

