Jamian Juliano-Villani-Rachel Cobb-Drawing I

Jamian Juliano-Villani is a thirty-one year old painter from Newark, New Jersey. Now living in New York, she draws inspiration from a wide variety of subjects ranging from things like art history to fashion. Her parents were both commercial painters, so growing up, Jamian spent quite a lot of time in their silk-screening factory and learning about graphic design. She later graduated from Rutgers University in 2013. Jamian had her very first solo art show at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit in 2015.

      She typically works with acrylic paint and uses airbrush techniques to create her eye-catching, colorful masterpieces. Approaching her work with a sense of humor and light heartedness, Jamian compares her art to jokes. She claims that the paintings are tricky and need to be made weirder or dumber or smarter. “You just paint a snowman in the desert… Thats it? Really? Like, there’s no other step, you know? It’s like some stupid one-liner.” As a notorious chain smoker and drinker, she says her body is just a vessel. She believes she should do and experience things now while she has the energy. This just adds to her unique character.

The Prophecy, 2016
Acrylic on canvas
48 × 40 

      In her teenage years, young Jamian Juliano-Villani remembers watching a documentary called Painters Painting (1973), which featured artist such as Robert Rauschenberg and Frank Stella. She was so inspired that she decided to movie to New York City.  She now has a studio in Ridgewood, queens. Her montra for advancing in her art? “You’re only as good as your last painting.” 

Roommate Trouble, 2013
acrylic on canvas
36 x 40.5 inches

      After her very first solo exhibition, Me, Myself and Jah, in 2013 at Rawson Projects, she did an interview with Johnathan Griffin. Featured on ARTnews is a quote of hers about her own work. She says, “My paintings are meant to function like TV, in a way. The viewer is supposed to become passive. Instead of alluding or whispering, like a lot of art does, this is art that tells you what’s up. It kind of does the work for you, like TV does.”[

The Breakfast From Hell 2014
acrylic on canvas
20.00 x 16.00 in

    She has recently had an art show in early 2018 called Ten Pound Hand that earned grand reviews such as this one from critic Zoë Lescaze, “In Gone with the Wind (all works 2018), a cartoon fish gluts itself on Coca-Cola while a helpless-looking firefighter floats above burning California. October depicts an ash-choked Pompeian infant blowing across an empty school hallway. The linoleum floor is littered with shattered glass, in an eerie evocation of recent school shootings. Together, these works convey a loss of control, of entropy overriding security, idealism, and best-case scenarios.”

Shut Up, The Painting, 2018
acrylic on canvas
40 x 48 inches

      My personal favorite quote of hers is about deadlines in art. She states that “Stress assassinates creativity.”

Self Portrait in Greece, 2017
acrylic on canvas
48 x 48 inches

Robert Rauschenberg

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Robert Rauschenberg was born in Port Arthur Texas October 22, 1925.  He is an American painter and graphic artist, closely following the pop art movement. He is fairly well known, mostly for his “Combines” in the 1950s. He used different materials and objects and arranged them in different combinations.

Rauschenberg shared the label “Neo Dadaist,” with the painter Jasper Johns. Neo Dadaist means that the artist puts more emphasis on the importance of the art produced rather than on the concept generating the work.  It uses modern materials, popular imagery, and odd contrast.

From around 1952 to 1953, Robert traveled through Europe and North Africa with his fellow artist, friend, and partner Cy Twombly. When they went to Morocco he made collages out of trash and anything he could salvage. He then took them to Italy and put them into galleries. He ended up selling alot of them and the ones he didn’t he threw into the river! Using trash as art is a weird concept, he claimed he “wanted something other than what I could make myself and I wanted to use the surprise and the collectiveness and the generosity of finding surprises. And if it wasn’t a surprise at first, by the time I got through with it, it was. So the object itself was changed by its context and therefore it became a new thing.”

He has a famous piece of work involving a stuffed goat connected to a tire, as shown below, called “Monogram”:

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Rauschenberg created the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation in 1990 to promote awareness of the causes he cared about, like world peace and the environment. He also set up Change, Inc., to award one-time grants of up to $1,000 to visual artists based on financial need.

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